The University Daily
KANSAN
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
Thursday, April 1, 1982 Vol. 92, No. 124 USPS 650-640
Tenure key to KU's future
By ANNE CALOVICH Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
If you could go through some of those files in the office of academic affairs—the ones that hold in print the careers of those candidates up for promotion and help find out a lot about KU's future.
On file are those who may stay at the University of Kansas until retirement—keeping a teaching position from someone else who may be better.
Therefore, selection by the University Committee on Promotion and Tenure must be done carefully, because more faculty members are tenured and fewer will be entering the ranks, according to Robert Cobb, executive vice chancellor.
To decide whether the University will keep a faculty member for the rest of his teaching
career or promote him to the highest degree, a committee of 11 tenured faculty reviews numerous materials pertaining to each of the courses offered and to the teaching, research and service performance.
THE PROCESS itself has changed in the last 10 years. It requires more documentation from faculty members and concentrates more on new programs. As a veteran of the committee and professor of law,
The decisions must be made more carefully but there are still problems interpreting different methods of teaching and research—a part of a diversified university such as KU, he said.
Usually, a professor is given tenure in his fifth or sixth year as a University, and if he is not appointed then he is usually not given tenure.
a promotion from assistant to associate
president normally accompanies appointees, and appears
in the annual reports.
five or six years after a faculty member is named an associate.
Each member of the committee reviews each candidate's file—this year there were about 70—and votes on whether or not the candidates should be promoted or tenured.
THE COMMITTEE'S final recommendations go to the vice chancellor for academic affairs, the executive vice chancellor and then the Kansas Board of Regents after he approves it.
In choosing faculty members for tenure, the committee faces difficulties, Heller said.
Teaching is by far the hardest aspect of a candidate's performance to judge, he said, and it has become the most important part of a faculty member's job at KU when it comes time to
"In the last six or seven years the committee has been reminded annually that teaching is
See TENURE page ?
Colleagues approve tenure selection
By ANNE CALOVICH Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
A faculty member too sheltered within his own department can learn what goes on with the rest of his colleagues at the University of Kansas if he serves on the University Committee on Promotion and Tenure, according to Francis C. Wilson, a law who has been on the committee for 12 years.
Frances Ingemann, chairman of the committee for the first time this year, she parried.
Faculty members often stay too close to their own departments, he said, and the committee is one way faculty can see the University on a wide scale.
"I enjoy finding out what other colleagues are doing," she said.
DEANELL TACHA, vice chancellor for academic affairs and chairman of the committee, said she thought the committee members had the hardest job in the University. They must decide the future job security and promotion of their colleagues.
This involves reading files submitted by all the candidates, 70 of them this year. There have been as many as 120 to 130 in other years, Heller said.
The files reach the committee after a faculty member is recommended for promotion and tenure by his department chairman and dean, or he can apply himself.
The files are packed with teaching evaluations, published works and lists of services that have been accumulated over the past years, and so the reviewing process takes time.
Individual committee members review each file.
Heller said he spent about 20 to 30 minutes on each file because he has had practice, but said he never took the training.
INGEMANN SAID she made preliminary decisions on each candidate and then went back and reviewed those she was uncertain of and those she decided should not be promoted or
After the initial review by the individual committee members, all the candidates' names are submitted.
The candidates they did not unanimously agree are discussed.
There are always faculty members, Heller said, who do not fit the mold and are real problem candidates who require much discussion.
For example, one professor in a relatively small department spent a great deal of time on an esoteric project. His colleagues in the department felt it was esoteric and their decision to work there was not well known; his name came up in the University committee, some of the members were familiar with the
See COMMITTEE page 7
I CAN'T GO HOME
JOHN HANKAMMER/Kansan Staff
Members of the KU General Union of Palestinian Students end their afternoon rally yesterday in front of the Kansas Union. Yesterday was the sixth anniversary of the killing of four Palestinian Arabs. The rally was also a protest against the killing of six people last week in the West Bank.
Weather
Carlin favors more Med Center funds
AAAAAHHH
Today will be mostly sunny and very mild with the high in the upper 70s, according to the National Weather Service will be from the south at 15 to 28 pm.
Tomorrow there is a chance of
Tomorrow there is a chance of showers and thunderstorms. The high will be in the 70s.
By TOM HUTTON Staff Reporter
KANSAS CITY, Kan.-Gov. John Carlin,
stressing his continued support for University of Kansas Medical Center payroll and scholarship increases, spoke yesterday to more than 200
Carlin, who was invited to speak at the Med Center by the Medical Student Assembly, acknowledged the Med Center's financial complains and promised to help save salary complaints.
"I'm aware of the budget problems here," Carlin said. "But it's difficult to predict financial outcomes when dealing with a Legislature that often rotates its policies."
Recently, a 8 million budget deficit at the Med Center, which was blamed on sagging occupancy rates at the hospital, caused a hiring freeze on employees.
BUT YESTERDAY the House Ways and Means Committee recommended that the Med Center receive no new funds for fiscal 1982, although it did advance the Med Center $1.2 million from its fiscal '83 budget to its 1982 budget.
Carlin, while on the subject of the Med Center basetext, emphasizes the impact of the recently defined criteria for carling.
"If we don't fund education properly," Carlin said, "we're all going to suffer, including the Med Care."
"We are the only oil-producing state that does not tax on the seafood industry, and weSeverance of funding problems in the state of funding problems.
Carlin broke from his approximately 15-minute prepared speech to field questions from
Mike McFarlane, Burlingame medical student and president of the House Staff Association of Resident Physicians, pointed out to Carlin the
Med Center's payroll deficiencies compared to other universities.
USING A CHART of 21 other university medical centers, McFarlane showed that the Med Center ranked 8th in starting salaries and the University hospitals for physicians with three years experience.
A recently graduated physician at the Med Center earns a $15,065 yearly salary, while a recent graduate at the University of Michigan receives $18,770. The difference for a physician at the University of Michigan is even drastic –$15,840 at the Med Center and $20,844 at the University of Michigan.
Carlin used McFarlane's question about increased salaries for physicians to explain a 10 percent salary increase for all classified state employees. Med Center workers are a part of the state, Carlin said, and must settle for this increase for the coming year.
Carlin had he realized the extra financial pressure on Med Center employees from private
hospitals would continue to aggravate the problem.
"If we don't approach the salary problem soon, the return on our millions invested in the Med Center will be less than desirable," Carlin said. "Salaries are an investment and if we are able to keep, to retain, a better force, we're going to be better off."
CARLIN ALSO defended an earlier decision to reduce medical school scholarships for students that agreed to work in medically understaffed Kansas towns. This scholarship program, he said, was evaluated thoroughly to assess its accomplishments before being cut.
The need for doctors in rural Kansas towns has decreased significantly in recent years, said Carlin, and the size of the program was becoming a financial burden.
"Adjustments looking into other areas are going to be made." Carlin said. "General funding and federal cuts--it's going to be tough times getting the necessary funding."
A woman sitting at a desk, smiling broadly while holding an open book. The background features a large stained glass window with abstract patterns and bookshelves filled with books.
Dine Schneider, KU student and a nun, talks about her studies while sitting in the Smith Hall library. Sister Diane is working toward a degree in occupational therapy.
JOHN HANKAMMER/Kansan Staff
Nun balances college studies with community service work
Bv JIM LEHNER
Staff Reporter
Diane Schneider is a KU student who daily pursues two roles, one getting a degree in occupational therapy and the other being a servant of the Lord.
Sister Diana, a 17-year member of the Franciscan Sisters of the Sorrowful Mother, decided to pursue her degree because she "got sick of being a certified technician for 10 years."
She said recently that her former job as a certified technician entailed working in a hospital operating room handing the doctors the instruments during an operation. She said she saw open-heart surgeries, operations on the brain and orthopedic operations.
"I decided two years age to change careers," the 34-year-old nun said. "I decided that I could use my skills in a professional manner as an occupational therapist."
AFTER LOOKING through many college catalogues, she decided that the University of Kansas had the best occupational therapy program. She said that she talked to her superiors in the community house where she lived and outlined her plans to them.
She said she told them how going to college would be beneficial to her order and how her field of study could best help people. Her permission did save ideas and granted her permission to attend KU.
The fact that no one fold her anything about
When she first arrived at KU, Sister Diane was astounded by the beauty of the campus.
"Being from Milwaukee, I had this vision in my mind that Kansas would be flat and boring. When I saw all these hills I was aweestruck," she said of her school where her was how neatly kept the University was.
how the University looked contributed greatly to her astonishment.
"It was like going to a surprise birthday party—I didn't know what to expect," she said.
SISTER DIANE said her first place of residence at KU was McCollum Hall.
"I felt that living in a dorm would be a good experience for me," she said. "The more people I lived with, I reasoned, the more people I could talk to about religion."
McCollum Hall was a good learning experience, but it placed a strain on Sister Diane's privacy.
The big problem was privacy—you didn't have too much of it," she said. "It was always noisy there. Even though I lived on a women's floor there never was a shortage of men wandering around. I don't dislike men but hearing them at all hours of the night can be a draw."
At the end of last semester, Sister Diane had moved to McColum Hall, so she moved into an apartment.
"I really think I gained a lot from McColum Hall," she said. "Foreign students would always come up to me, asking me what my religion is. I met many people that way. I also would confuse people by wearing my habit some days and not wearing it on others."
SISTER DIANE said what really amazed her all the people who recognized her when she stepped out of the room.
"People come up to me even if I'm not wearing my habit and say, 'Aren't you Sister Diane?' " she said. "It really makes you feel good that people know you.
"In Milwaukee, I was never afforded that pleasure—not as many people would acknowledge my presence like they do here in Lawrence."
See NUN page 5
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, April 1, 1982
News Briefs From United Press International Salvadoran Democrats accuse opponents of fraud
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador—The U.S.-backed Christian Democrats accused their opponents of fraud in elections that gave absolute control of El Salvador's new assembly to five right-wing parties, doubling American hopes of a moderate government in the battle-tern corner.
The Christian Democrats conceded, however, that whatever fraud was committed did not affect the outcome of the final election tally.
Final though still unofficial return from Sunday's election gave only 24 of the new constituent assembly's 60 seats to President Jose Napoleon Duarte's
Five right-wing parties led by the National Republic Alliance of Roberto D'Abuisson together captured 36 seats, giving them control of the government if they can negotiate a coalition.
The five parties have already announced their intention to do that, and their determination to exclude the Christian Democrat and reject the social-democratic opposition.
In Washington, President Reagan hailed the turnout of 1.2 million voters, twice as large as officials had expected, as evidence that Salvadorans are growing more independent.
White House officials refused to discuss American policy in the likely event the five extreme right-wing parties out the moderate Christian left.
Officials have expressed concern that the United States might be forced to halt aid to El Salvador if the next government is headed by D'Abuisson, who has been linked to right-wing death squads and was described by former U.S. Ambassador Robert White as a "pathological killer."
Brezhnev hospitalized in Moscow
MOSCOW- President Leonid Brezhny, in failing health at 75, has been hospitalized in Moscow. Soviet sources said yesterday.
However, foreign ministry spokesman said they had no information about Brechev's condition and they declined to confirm or deny his resignation.
But an indication that Brezhnev had been hospitalized came when uniformed Soviet militiamen barred all traffic from entering Granovskovo Street, which runs past the entrance of the hospital reserved for Kremlin leaders.
In Washington, the State Department said it was "aware of rumors and reports" of Brizhnez's hospitalization but was unable to coefect or deny
Army suspects wind foiled airdrop
FORT IRWIN, Calif. The Army is investigating the possibility that unexpected winds caused the deaths of four paratroopers and injured scores more during a massive training jump over California's Mojave desert, a spokesman said yesterday.
several members of the 82nd Airborne Division injured in the jump said earlier that gwings仕灾 at one of the five drop sites had been severe.
Mai.Jake Dye, a spokesman for the 82nd Airborne, said it was possible the men were trapped by a pocket of high ground winds that blew across nearby mountains.
Despite the four deaths and 156 injuries that occurred in the Tuesday morning jump, the 82nd Airborne proceeded with its training exercise. The drop was the largest in the country since World War II and was designed to test the effectiveness of the rapid deployment force.
Senate bill averts partial shutdown
WASHINGTON-THE Senate, after killing a move to repeal a congressional tax break, averted a partial government shutdown yesterday by approving a stopgap funding bill just seven hours before a midnight deadline.
The bill, passed on an 81-18 vote and approved in the House last week, would extend funding at current levels through Sept. 30 for the departments of Labor, Education, Health and Human Services, Treasury, Justice, Commerce and State and several independent agencies.
Any Senate amendments would have all but ended its chances of passage by the midnight deadline because they would have required a Senate-House
Militants take stand on West Bank
Debate on the emergency funding bill was stymied for two days while the Senate discussed repelling a congressional ban on fracking. The Senate voted to reject the ban and a 5-14 vote
YAMIT, Israeli-occupied Sinai - Israeli troops sealed off the occupied Sinai yesterday but militant squatters barricaded themselves inside the town of Yamit for a last stand against the return of the region to Egypt next month.
In Jerusalem, Prime Minister Menachem Begin told British Foreign Secretary陆卡里珊 that European calls for a Palestinian state were a "tried recipe for bloodshed" that Israel would never allow. Begin's spokesman said.
Carrington's meeting with Began capped a busy day of talks with Israeli policymakers. The meeting came in the midst of a new dispute between Israel and Western Europe over criticism of Israeli policies on the occupied West Bank.
A pro-Iraeli Palestinian was injured yesterday by a car bomb on the occupied West Bank as 300 veteran Jewish settlers streamed out of the Sinai, meeting a government deadline to evacuate the desert region.
Mexican volcano erupts; 50 killed
PICHUCALCO, Mexico—A volcano in southeastern Mexico erupted the second time in four days, after an initial eruption on Sunday killed 50 people.
The volcano, Chicou, which has not been active for centuries, exploded Sunday causing the evacuation of 20,000 people from towns on its slope and sloping sides.
Refugees in Pichiculca, who had not eaten for three days, said they did not think they would be able to go back to their village.
House supports drug dispensing bill
TOPEKA-House debate about a measure that would allow registered nurses in family planning clinics to dispense drugs under a pharmacist's supervision splintered off onto the issue of abortion, but still won House endorsement yesterday.
"There's nothing left on the mountain, only stones and ashes," one villager said.
The bill, endorsed on a 73-72 vote, changes a number of pharmacy-related statutes, but largely focuses on the issue of nurses dispensing drugs.
Under the bill, family planning clinics could continue operating as long as there was supervision by a pharmacist, who would not have to be at the clinic.
During debate on the bill, State Rep. Lloyd Polson, R-Vermont, said that although the family planning clinics do not perform abortions, they have to take a different approach.
After Polson's comments, State Rep. Rochelle Chronister, R-Nedoshea, who was leading the discussion on the bill, said the measure had nothing to do with the vote.
Correction
The Kanan yesterday reported that the Oread Neighborhood Association received $15,008 more than other groups in federal grant funds at the city commission meeting. Actually the Community Development Block Grant Funds the association received totaled $15,008.
Reagan supports limits on arms
WASHINGTON-President Reagan threw his weight behind a Senate proposal for a mutual and verifiable freeze on nuclear weapons, declaring it his aim to end the race for "monstrous, inhumane weapons."
By United Press International
Reagan, holding his ninth news conference of his administration and the first broadcast in prime time, issued a statement with remarks on the subject of arms control.
The Reagan administration opened talks with the Soviets in Geneva in November on limiting intermediate nuclear missiles in Europe, but strategic arms negotiations have been in abeyance since the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan scuttled any chance for ratification of the Carter administration's Salt II treaty with Russia.
"My goal is to reduce nuclear weapons dramatically, ensuring peace and security," he said.
Reagan commanded a resolution sponsored by Sens. John Warner, R-Va., and Henry Jackson, D-Wash, and William Carney, R-N-Y, that proposed negotiation now and mutual verifiable cutbacks later.
consistent with the goals of the administration.
ITS ELEMENTS, Reagan said, are
He also ruled out the immediate freeze in superpower arsenals proposed in a more radical resolution sponsored by the Senate and Oxfex, and Edward Kennedy, D-Mass.
"The truth of the matter is, on balance the Soviet Union does have a definite margin of superiority, enough so there is risk, and what I have called, as you all know, several times, 'a window of vulnerability.'"
"I think a freeze now would not only be disadvantageous—in fact dangerous to use with them in that position—but I
believe it would also militate against any negotiations for reductions. There would be no incentive to meet with us and reduce arsenals."
In other highlights of the news conference, Reagan said the United States and its allies were working on a cutoff of credit to both Poland and the Soviet Union, but would reject the plan if the Polish crisis eased.
Reagan also reaffirmed his conviction that the only way out of the current high unemployment problem was to stick with his recovery plan. He insisted he would not go with "quick fix" plans that increased inflation.
Senate doesn't follow yellow brick road
By KEVIN HELLIKER Staff Reporter
TOPEKA-A proposal to name a highway in Kansas the "Yellow Brick Road" died yesterday in a Senate committee that questioned linking Kansas to the movie, "The Wizard of Oz."
Saying the movie depicted Kansas as a "tornado alley," members of the Senate Labor, Industry and Tourism Committee voted against any further association of Kansas with the Land of Oz.
In 1800, Gov. John Carlin designated Liberal, in southwest Kansas, as the location of the Gateway to the "Land ofAh's" and Ox and as the location of the house of Dorothy, the main character in the movie.
"I get very tired of people from out of state asking me if my dog is named Toto," said State Sen. Jane Eldredge, R-Lawrence.
State Sen. Paul Burke, R-Leeway,
said that the movie not only influenced
people's attitudes toward Kansas, but it
did so adversely.
BUSINESS CARDS
"People view Kansas by what they see on TV-cowboys, Indians and Dorothy坏地 by a tornado to the Land of Ox$_2$." he said.
Frey said tourists from all over the country drove to Liberal to see a model of Dorothy's house, built after Carlin's designation of the city as Dorothy's
LETTERHEAD
But House Majority Leader Robert Frey, R-Liberal, who sponsored the house-backed proposal, said the federal banas as the Land of Oz (integrated people).
Advising the committee not to act as "hard-nosed legislators" when considering tourism bills, Frey said imagination was needed to appreciate the intricacies of a city designated the entire length of U.S. 54 in Kansas as the "Yellow Brick Road."
WHEN TOLD that the book, "The Wonderful Wizard of Oz" illustrated Mr. Marsh, asked Frey'ses, "I don't think those little technical aspects make any difference.
HOUSE OF USHE:
838 MASS. — 842-3610
"Tourism develops a huge amount of revenue."
The bill would not have called for state money to be used for purchasing
GAMON
NOW
15° DRAWS
75° BAR DRINKS
until 10:30
cover only $1
April 3—9:30- ?
April 4—12:00- ?
road signs for U.S. 54, Frey said. The signs probably would have been posted by private businesses along the highway.
But according to Cathy Kruzic, director of the recently-established state division of tourism, the situation hardly could be better.
But Burke said, "The state has already spent thousands and thousands of dollars on the promotion of Kansas as the Land of Ox. I don't want to be a party to making this any worse than it is."
requests for brochures and bumper stickers displaying the Oz theme.
For Information Call 749-1953
RESPONSE TO THE promotion of Kansas as the Land of Oz has been considerable, Kruzic said. Her department barely can keep up with
This year, the division's budget is $120,000 for printing these promotional items, she said.
Some of the criticism from legislators yesterday centered on whether Kansas should "trump up" promotional gummies when attractions such as the Eisenhower Library, Ablene, and the University of Kansas already existed.
Even the landscape of Kansas could be promoted, Eldredge said.
"There is something breathtaking about a field of golden wheat blowing in the wind," she said. "I never saw that until I came to Kansas."
ANDRÉ KOLE'S
THURSDAY, APRIL 1
FRIDAY, APRIL 2
HOCH AUDITORIUM
7:30 P.M.
WORLD OF ILLUSION
Krisbee Festival
16 Team Tournament
April 3 & 4 O-Zone
Fields
WILL BARKLE CLARK LOSE HIS HEAD???
(He has agreed to assist in a guillotine experiment)
ADVANCE STUDENT DISCOUNT . $4.00 with KUID
groups of 10 or more $3.50 SUA BOX OFFICE and KEIFS
Sponsored by New Life Christian Fellowship & Campus Cruade for Christ
1234567890
Tie In With Us Recreation Services
Wrestling Tournaments
- Entry deadline for both events is 5 p.m. TODAY in 208 Robinson. No entry fee.
- Individual Wrestling Tournament (open)
Saturday, April 3, 10 a.m., Robinson Gyms
- Team Wrestling Tournament
- Team Wrestling Tournament
Thursday, April 8, 6:30 p.m., Robinson Gyms
Greek & Independent divisions
- Entry forms are available in 208 Robinson. For more information call 864-3546.
9R
OPEN HOUSE
C
IDEAL FOR STUDENT OCCUPANCY
Sat. & Sun.
April 3&4
1-5 p.m.
A beautiful, affordable apartment is waiting for you at Meadowbrook. Just blocks from campus, nestled among 70 acres of gently rolling hills and trees, Meadowbrook offers both seclusion and convenience. We invite you to visit us during our open house . . . we will be showing studios, one and two bedrooms, and two bedroom townhouses. It's an ideal time to select your unit for the summer or fall semester . . . and begin to enjoy the good living at Meadowbrook.
meadowbrook
APARTMENTS • TOWNHOUSES • DUPLEXES
15TH & CRESTLINE 842-4200
University Daily Kansan, April 1, 1982
Page 3
Libraries need more funds
By DOUG CUNNINGHAM Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
A $197,000 increase next year in the University of Kansas libraries' acquisitions budget will keep the libraries from losing purchasing power, but more money is still needed, KU librarians said yesterday.
"We'll be pretty much able to keep up on our current purchases," said Richard Ring, head of collections development at Watson Library. "But we'll probably still have some minor shortfalls."
Jim Ranz. dean of libraries, said although the budget increase would make it more likely students would be able to find the material they needed for their classes, it did not represent progress in library purchasing power.
"These are difficult times," he said.
"There was a real possibility that the library was going to take a giant step backwards."
KU ADMINISTRATORS have responded about as well as they could have to the financial needs of the library, Ranz said. He said Chancellor Klass had tried to put extra money into the library acquisitions budget.
"It's just that inflation has eaten it all up and then some." he said.
The $197,000 budget increase is an addition to this year's library acquisitions base budget of $13. million. Grant Howard, acquisitions librarian.
Robert Cobb, executive vice chancellor, said he hoped an additional $100,000 in funds could be found to add to next year's acquisitions budget, but he could not say if that would be possible.
The library actually spent $1.9 million this year on books and periodicals, Howard said, because of a
one-time transfer of $80,000 from general University funds to the library. It was done to avoid a major periodicals cancellation.
TWO YEARS ago the library canceled subscriptions to 800 periodicals because of a large budget shortfall, Howard said. Even though the budget had increased you before, it did not keep up with the rate of inflation.
The current inflation rate for library materials is about 15 percent, Howard said.
"Library materials have typically inflated at a rate higher than the U.S. Consumer Price Index," he said. "But increases in these prices increase has become extremely rapid."
The average price increase last year among science publishers, Howard said, was 19.4 percent. Many publishers depend on short-term borrowing and have been hit hard by high interest rates, he said.
The average book now costs $73 and the annual periodical costs $74 a year. Howard said.
"Books that cost $100 are not all that uncommon anymore," he said.
Ranz said that if the University was to maintain a research-quality library, budget increases must not only keep up with the rate of inflation but should surpass it.
"We ought to be buying a lot more books than we presently are," he said.
BECAUSE KU library purchases have not kept up with student and faculty demand for the larger number of books and journals being published, but it is important to interlibrary loan system to see if some other library might have the material.
KU's libraries are the third highest in the country in loans through the interlibrary loan system. Ranz said.
Library figures show that borrowing
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
GENERAL AIRPORT DEPARTMENT
MONTREAL CANADA
Office of the Senior Senate
R-109 Kansas Union
Lawrence, Kansas 60445
1932-84-2710
The Student Body President is now taking applications for the positions of Administrative Assistant and Treasurer. Job descriptions and applications are currently available in the Student Senate office, B 105 Kansas Union (Third Level). Both positions require backgrounds in accounting and business procedures. Applicants must be in good academic standing and a working knowledge of university software. Each position pay $250.00 monthly. The appointees are effective May 15.
competed applications, which must include a resume and transcript, are due Thursday, April 15 at 5:00 p.m. in the Student Senate office. Interviews will be scheduled at a later date.
Should you have any questions call 864-3710
Funded by the Student Activity Fee
Dexter Shoemakers to America FOR YOUR INTERVIEW TRADITIONALS
You're always in style in the dressy traditionals from Dexter. Their lightweight soft leathers and great styling have the look you're looking for with whatever you wear.
Quasar technology in astronomy, for example, has experienced large growth in the past 10 to 15 years. It is library-oriented and can subscribe to any new journals in the field, he said.
Increasing library funding is a must. Davidson said.
He said that the library should be subscribing to more journals because of the growth in the number published and areas covered. Instead, the library subscribsions since the cancellation of 800 percals two years ago, he said.
John Davidson, chairman of the department of physics and astronomy, said that borrowing through the ILI, system had gone up treemont. KU parly because students could not get a journal or periodical they needed.
For $45, the all-sports package will include season tickets for football and basketball games and for the Kansas Relays. Singly, the tickets will cost $25 for football and $22 for basketball.
Students will receive a receipt for the all-sports ticket, which, with their student I.D., they can later redeem for the actual tickets. Students will still be able to buy blocks of tickets, and with the spring sale, current students will get first at the 7,000 available tickets.
During the 13-scheduled summer orientation sessions, the tickets will be available to incoming freshmen.
from other libraries has gone up 41 percent in the past three years.
The athletic department decided to sell the tickets at Wescoe this year after those students not living on campus could buy them. Field House was out of their way.
over winter break and the Kansas Relays.
By buying the all-sports package, students will save $2 and still be able to attend the three basketball games
"When they come up as freshmen, they buy everything in sight," Konzem said.
"The athletic department has sold tickets in front of Wescoe in the past," she said.
Ann Eversole, director of the office of student organizations and activities, said she does not think she will approve will pose a problem.
If the location is approved by the Student Organizations and Activities Events Committee next week, a spring sale of the all-sports ticket package will be April 19, 20 and 21 in front of Wescoe Hall, Richard Konzem, ticket manager, said yesterday.
THE ALL-SPORTS ticket package was introduced this year and was designed to remedy the declining student season-ticket sales.
She said she had not yet received a request, but added that she had spoken with an athletic department official by phone. She said the events committee would have to approve the request.
In addition to spring cleaning and spring training, the KU athletic department is adding a new event—a spring sale.
All-sports ticket sale set for April
Hrs. M-Sat. 9:00-5:30
By ANN WYLIE Staff Reporter
Parking board ponders permit discounts
819 Mass. Hrs. M-Sat. 9:00-5:30
Thurs. till 8:30 843-3470
Owners of cars and motorcycles have a special parking problem on campus; they have to pay for permits to park there. They also must only drive one to campus each day.
The Parking and Traffic Board used to allow people who own more than one car to purchase a permit for one car at the regular price and purchase ad-hoc equipment rate, with a stipulation that they only park one car at a time on campus.
Arensberg's = Shoes
That system caused a problem.
"Historically, what's happened is
both cars have come to campus," Tom Mulinazzi, chairman of the parking board, said yesterday.
That system caused a problem.
Yesterday Ron Shore, printing services employee, brought the problem to the board's attention at its regular meeting.
"As long as a person pays for one permit, there's no way he is ripping the University off," he said.
THE BOARD AGREED that motorcycles were different from cars, because motorcycles took less parking space.
"You're actually doing the University a favor by riding the motorcycle," Mulinazi said.
to.
"We'd like the idea of allowing the
A local photographic business needs to expand Its library of models for advertising and promotions.
But because it is so late in the semester, the rule change would cause problems for the board, Mullnazzi said.
Co-eds who responded and those who wanted o, a recent monthly magazine advertisement in this paper are encouraged to
IF KEARNS AGREES, the rules committee will meet Saturday to draft the regulation.
call 749-0111 for an appointment.
and to register motorcycles for an additional $5 each.
owner of a car to register a motorcycle for a few additional dollars."
The parking rules and regulations for next year need to be submitted to the University Senate executive committee by April 9, he said. The rules would then have to be amended if the proposal is adapted.
NOW OPEN
But the board could not make the decision to give the discount at its meeting.
Don Kearns, director of Parking Services, was not at the meeting, and Mulinazi said he wanted to discuss the idea with Kearns before deciding.
Mulnazzi said he would meet with Kearsna today to tell him that the board was in favor of a regulation allowing parking permits only for purchase parking permits for cars
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Page 4 University Daily Kansan, April 1, 1982
Opinion
New understanding
Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas is an active group. This week, it is sponsoring several of a host of Gay Awareness Week events.
But in the old days, many gay KU students were bona fide activists.
In the early 70s, the students published a voters guide that listed state and local candidate's stands on issues related to homosexuality. They pickeded a Lawrence real estate company that refused to rent an apartment to a gay couple. And they demanded that the University of Kansas officially recognize their organization.
When the administration refused, the students appealed their case all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court. They lost that battle, and eventually, they lost some of their fight.
Today, KU's gay students aren't the rabble-rouser that they were in the '70s. But then, are any of us?
GLSOK is now devoted to the quieter tasks of giving gay students emotional support and educating non-gay students.
It is much harder for people to hate and fear those that they understand. But in recent years, such understanding has faded.
Magazines report that in Utah, "gay bashing," the beating of homosexuals, is a frequent past-time for bored young men on their nights out. In Washington, Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, is sponsoring the Family Protection Act, which among other things, condemns "deviant" sexual behavior.
But now, it is not unusual for students to treat gay people as amusing anomalies. One worker at the KU Information Center often fields questions about gays like this one:
Lawrence traditionally has been an oasis of liberalism in Kansas ("Compared to Salina, this is heaven," one gay student said a few years ago.)
"Which ear do They wear an earing in?" After the worker answered, she heard snickers in the background.
Some would say that such questions are all in good fun. But the questions also reveal a core of insensitivity.
College towns like Lawrence bring people with very different attitudes into close quarters with each other. And in the process, the groups learn to understand each other.
With events like Gay Awareness Week, maybe we can make sure that the learning comes sooner—not later.
Spring breezes conjure up days on town ball diamond
Thirty years ago, Preacher Were a caget pitcher for the Brooklyn Dodgers who threw outaweed spitball and never got caught at it. Rowe grew up on the Missouri-Akansas border and still lives there. When Roger Kahn was writing "The Boys of Summer," Preacher took him down a dirt road to a clearing in oak woods to show him where he learned the game.
"This was my real home field," Preacher said. "Old backstapk gone now. There's some stones come up. Native flint rock. And as you see, it's all overgrown. Let a field be and the sage takes
All of us who loved to play baseball have a field like that hidden away in our mind's eye, going to sage with every passing year. Each spring when allying breezes return, the umbrella of grasses of
BEN JONES
"Can you imagine it?" Kahn asks. "Can you make it come alive?"
that remembered place come alive and whisper in the wind. We listen for the faint recollections and strain to see the dim images in faded sunshine.
"All of it," Preacher says, "one thing makes a feller sad is knowin' that behind, and what's wrong with him is nothing that giving back twenty years wouldn't cure." Cure they don't do that, do they? Say, we had some pretty good days."
The town where I grew up had a ball diamond at its east end. It was known as Christener Field during the days when Horton had a town team, but no one calls it that anymore. A white, half-breasted chicken with a scream of chicken wire stretched high on poles which supported a corrugated-tin roof. The roof sloped down and away from the field, so pop fouls that bounced off of it landed behind the stands, and kids would scramble after them, stand and set balls at the concession stand, and set a narter.
A fence of slim, wood slats held by twisted wire bounded the outfield. The field was set on good bottom ground, and on the other side of the fence a cornfield covered the outlying ground to the nearby creek. Mornings, the cornfield would sparkle with dew, and the willows lining the winding creek would stir slightly under the oicerine blue sky.
For years, I spent Saturday mornings shuffling the yellow dirt of the infield around with my sneaker, as I waited between pitches for a ball to hit. With my foot in the air and always the same: you smoothed arcs in the dirt
like those a wiper clears on a muddy windshell, and you studied the imprints your sole made. Then you crouched and went up on your toes as the pitcher released the ball.
Now and then you grabbed a handful of the
flowers, and slipped it through your fingers to
be thrown on the wind.
That feeling of release was the key, the source of baseball's magic. You felt it each time you slipped skinny young arms through a short-sleeved cotton jersey. The grey-wall jersey was loose on your limbs, and your skin tingled as you moved the air circulating through the pores of the fabrics.
You found the release when you hit the ball so sweetly it felt as though you had swung right through it. Then you saw the centerflereturn and race toward the fence, and just for a moment, your tongue fell to the side of your mouth as you watched the ball soar and forgot to run. The feeling was one of effortless weightlessness.
And, you felt the release also as you gloved a grounder at the start of the outfield grass. As you transferred the ball to your throwing hand, you took a couple of side steps, like a coli pulling up suddenly into a canter. Then you side-armed the ball to first, and it rolled off of your finger tips with a slow spin. The first baseman squeezed it in his mitt, and the runner was out by half a step.
There is something entirely graceful about the game of baseball, which harnesses the body in a supple rhythm that gathers the muscles and releases them smoothly. And in the feeling of release is pleasure. It's all in letting go, and feeling how.
There is an art to letting go, whether of a baseball or a friend, or a university. If the release happens with gathered smoothness, it makes you feel relaxed and free. Thinking involved; you just see the ball coming, and once it is in your glove, you don't watch it anymore, or think what to do. You feel for it and grip it across the seams instinctively, and then move on. It keeps going. You remember the feeling for a long time.
"The sun was lowering toward a line of oaks,"
Kram wrote. "Before we stuccured a wilde, bright
tree in the woods."
"How come that field's overgrown?" Kahn asked. "Where do the Ozark kids play baseball
"Don't, 'Preecher said. 'We got little league and school ball, course, but the old town teams is gone. We got all these new roads. And tourist business. People are eating better. But the young musicians are in pitching, drive over to Memphis, in three hours, and spend time listening to rock music.
"They tell me it's good for the region, but look at that field." The pale-green sage shivered in the wind. "Funny, isn't it?" Roe said. "Same thing in these woods as where ebbets Field was in Brooklyn. There'll never be a ball game here again."
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182 Boston 906
Week focuses on nuclear nightmares
By SUSAN AHERN MARUSCO Guest Columnist
It is May 9, 1982 and the sun rises routinely,
luminously over Mount Oread.
KU students from around the globe are breakfasting on pancakes and eggs in McColum Hall as other students sprinkled in apartments across Lawrence prepare for classes. At 8:30 Watson Library is busier than usual; finals have descended on KU.
Meanwhile, the farmland in East Douglas County, often peaceful and postcard-dreamy when viewed from the top of Frazier Hall, begins to vibrate.
A test tape depicting a Russian missile attack has been accidentally inserted into the Midwestern Air Defense Command's warning system. Although it is quickly jerked out, the tape ejects one of the United States' 9,480 nuclear warheads from a hidden silo designed to keep enemies guessing where the one megaton hydrogen bomb is burrowed.
Because of the inconsistent, weak launching signal, the six-ion mass of uranium and metal climbs out of the ground with only one thousandth of its normal speed. Instead of circular half the globe, the inter-continental Titan missile cruises five miles to Lawrence and detonates at 700 feet above The Wheel unleashing a million tons of TNT.
An iridescent white light pales the brilliant morning sunshine. Gamma waves, the dreaded initial radiation, burst on their mission to capture creatures from Clinton Lake to Leavenworth.
But those closest to The Wheel don't have time to worry about lethal radiation. A colossal magenta and red fireball instantly descends on the Wheel incinerating everything from Massachusetts Street to Hawk's Crossing and to 19th Street in the other direction. A pony-sophomore walking up 14th Street contemning her calculus final is vaporized into dust.
This heat wave, called the thermonuclear pulse, charms everyone for two-and-one-half hours.
The fireball swells, business students studying accounting in 403 Summerfield Hill are hit by a tornado.
And then, as horror lights up their eyes, the students' arms, legs, clothes and even eyes burst into flames. Soon after, the glass panel walls of Summerfield melt on professors and students passing through corridors. Fire trucks and stop signs drip metal as if they were in firefighters' ill cuddles. Ever-mountable is consumed by purple/yellow quivering flames.
living beings from Palmyra County in one direction to Lecompton County in another.
But the nightmarish visions of "Dante's Inferno" have become a reality even before the mass killer has struck. Immediately following the excruciating 10-second thermonuclear pulse, a shock wave blasts out as the blinding fireball bloats. Moving in all the 18-inch-an-hour lead column of air crushes forms, school buildings and levels "The Hill."
Sorry Chancellor Budig, this New York Times four-star-rated University will never become one of the top 10 schools in the country. A barren wasteland is more likely.
Everything happens so fast. In less than twenty seconds, Brian, a hard-working architecture student, is blown apart without a trace left. His mother won't know about it for hours. She is shrouded from the news, because electricity waves of electricity that burned out power lines, antennae and communication systems all over Kansas.
Remember Grandma over in Eudora, the one you never visited? Well you don't have to worry about her being lonely anymore. High Kansas winds blew gamma waves farther than projected for a one megaton bomb. Yes, Grandma's been radiated. She's not wearing a bracelet and her hair is falling out in clumps. Thank God she won't wake up in the morning.
As a final touch to the awesome power that annihilated Lawrence, a sooty gray mushroom cloud ascends heavenward. Tomorrow this cloud will hang over Kansas and spew highly radioactive debris into backyards and cow pastures.
Maybe all this is too horrifying to imagine.
But students will be reminded of such possible smoldering scenarios during KU's Ground Zero Week. Anril 5-11.
As part of a national nuclear-armawareness week, the KU political science department is sponsoring a teach-in on the prevention of nuclear war and a 16-panel meeting with experts in nuclear science and the devastating consequences of nuclear war also will be shown throughout the week.
Jonathan Schell, a nuclear disarmament proponent, thinks that people should be familiar with the grizzly aftermath of a nuclear conflagration. In his book, "The Fate of the World," Schell details the sorid and predictable stages of a one megaton bomb detonation.
Only by realizing the full horror of nuclear war, Schell says, will people understand how outdated the notion of winning a nuclear war has become.
Unfortunately, America has lagged behind
Europe in realizing this. But the European obsession with nuclear disarmament is spreading to America, and much of this new preoccupation with disarmament can be attributed to President Reagan's war-monger rhetoric. It can also be attributed to Reagan's plan to produce 380 more nuclear warheads than planned for by the Carter administration.
More bombs not only increase the chance of a nuclear accident occurring, but they also increase the possibility of resorting to nuclear weapons. America's 'vital interests' are tempered with.
The actions of a theatrical administration have not assuaged America's fear of nuclear war, either. An administration that stages public realitions events and that glibly entertains the possibility of a limited nuclear war, arouses suspicion that the deployment of nuclear arsenals may only be a flashy show of power.
It is no wonder, then, that Americans worry whether this actor-turned-president will be guided by the old histrionic maxim, which is: If there's a gun on the mantlepiece in the first act—you can bet it'll be fired before the final curtain goes down.
This concern that Reagan may be moving the country toward nuclear war has frightened Americans into debating nuclear freezes and disarmament on a local level.
In Vermont and Massachusetts, local governments recently approved non-binding resolutions to freeze the deployment of nuclear missiles. Also, according to Time magazine, a grassroots nuclear freeze campaign called the California governor lobby President Reagan and pressure him to stop stockpiling Minutene and Titan missiles. Time reports that such freeze resolutions have been passed in 257 town meetings in New England, in 31 city councils and six state legislatures. Lawrence is calling for the November election.
Helen Caldicott, initiator of a nuclear disarmment organization called Physicians for Social Responsibility, thinks Americans should continue discussing nuclear war on a local level. And like Schell, she thinks Americans should know exactly what would happen to them if a nuclear bomb detonated in their town.
Caldicott said in Time that a freeze was not enough to deter nuclear war.
"No one has the answers," she said. "But the issue of nuclear war will reach a critical mass and from that will emerge a solution. We must stirring the pot, for the issue is survival."
(Susan Ahern Marusco) is a staff reporter for the University Daily Kansan.)
Letters to the Editor
Campers careless with campus environment
To the Editor:
Those students braved cold and windy nights on the lawn in front of Watson Library. At times the wind reached such a pitch that large rocks, about 50 of it in all, were needed as anchors for all of the pamphlets and petitions available at the vigil.
It has been almost a week since several students here at the University of Kansas set upon a three-day campign vigil to remind us all about the disaster at the Three Mile Island Nuclear Power Plant and the environmental impact of nuclear power in general.
Although the vigil is over now, those students behind a part of their cause as a memorial: The Jews.
When I think back to my first issue of Ranger Rick's Camping Tips, I remember that Rick always said to leave a campfire cleaner than it was when you arrived. Maybe that principle does not apply here. What is a little dead grass when it is the environment that we are concerned about?
My thanks to FO.
The whole point is moot now, anyway.
Facilities Operations, as always, cleaned up those grass killing rocks early Tuesday morning. It is nice to know that someone is concerned about the ecology of this campus. With such weighty issues as the environment to shoulder, we do not have the time to clean up after ourselves. James Watt would be proud of us.
Daniel Dugan research assistant department of human development
A biblical view
To the Editor:
Homosexuals, be aware that:
It has come to my attention that this week has been designated "Gay Awareness Week." This is very timely indeed, since there are many people on the planet who mind when the issue of homosexuality arises.
Here are eight points that homosexuals need to be aware of.
2. Nineveh was indefolient because 'the people were women in their midst' and as a
3. Sodom and Gomorrah were destroyed because their people "inugled in gross imposition" (Namgol, 1948).
1. Homosexuality is an abination in the Lord God of Leviticus 18:22, I Kings 14:23.
2. Homoeroticism is an abination in the Lord God of Leviticus 18:22, I Kings 14:23.
4. The unrighteous shall not inherit the kingdom of God. Do not be deceived; neither fornicators, nor idolaters, nor adulterers, nor killers, nor sinners, nor inherit the kingdom of God (I Corinthians 6:9).
5. If you are honest, *with yourself*, you would
that your present *lifestyle* is not natural, it
lend favor to you.
6. There is hope of salvation through Jesus Christ. He stripped himself of glory and came to earth in the appearance of man. He never surrendered to anything, and their lives are like, could be brought back to God.
7. Jesus Christ carried your homosexuality to the cross so that it could be forgiven of your if you were not born with it.
8. When we have given all of our life to Jesus,
cast, all things become new and the old things
pass away.
Many of you believe that you are homosexual because God made you that way. As a result, you feel that there is no hope and that you will remain one all your life.
This is simply not the case. God made man and woman to be together and to go forth and multiply. Nowhere in Scripture does God condone homosexuality. As a matter of fact, homosexuality is always associated with sin and turning away from God's commandments.
However, Jesus' death was sufficient in God's eyes to cover that sin, as all other sins. If you will acknowledge it as sin and believe that by his presence you will be forgiven, he will have eternal life. Jerry Leeer,
Lincoln, Neb., sophomore
---
University Daily Kansan, April 1, 1982
Page 5
Nun
From page 1
Probably the most significant difference she was about this area from the end came from the fact that I hadn't been able to find her.
"I'm Milwaukee, Catholics are a very strong majority," she said. "I'm a German Catholic and there's plenty of us in Milwaukee." In the United States, more than one-quarter of the religious population.
"I think some of the attention that is given to me here is because I stand out more than I would if I was in a predominately Catholic community."
THE ST. LAWRENCE Catholic Center, 1631 Crescent Road, provides Sister Diane the important privacy she needs.
During the week she said many of her friends congregate at the center to share their thoughts with each other. However, she said it was the role that made the place something to treasure.
"It's the time when I can relax, kick off my shoes, read a book and especially close to the Lord." she said. "It's so quiet and peaceful and
"On occasions I've even gone up to the attic—it's really neat up there," she said.
the management lets you have the run of the place.
Sister Diane said that the St. Lawrence Center sponsored a weekend retreat that she enjoyed.
"We had a clay retreat in which we worked great working together with people and praying to
THEUGHTS TRESE days for Sister Diane
experiences, but vision of the future as well,
with bionics for the future as well.
She said that after two more years of working toward her occupational therapy degree, she would be assigned to a mission in the West Indies.
"That will be the first time that I will have
that job," she said, and I'm starting to look
forward to that right now.
Praying and studying are not the only activities that take up Sister Diane's time. Group organizations and social events consume much of her time as well.
"I've been working at different parishes in the area," she said. "I'm involved in teaching catechism classes at the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine. I also play softball for the St. Lawrence Center Saints. It's fun but unfortunately we've lost our first two ball games."
"There's two sisters who are living off campus here in Lawrence, and also two sisters from the Benedictine order who commute daily from Kansas City," she said.
ALTHOUGH ROMAN Catholic nuns are not known to frequent the KU campus, Sister Diane said that she knew of four other nuns attending the University.
The challenge that Sister Diane said she and all other Roman Catholic nuns must come to grips with is the fact that they do stand out in a crowd.
"I've been a nun for 17 years and I accept it when people stare at me and wonder why I dress so much differently from the norm," she said. "The problem that some sisters have is being stared at, but they should feel proud that people notice them, for they are a servant of the Lord."
Firm to study 'Salina Piece'
By LISA GUTIERREZ Staff Renorter
Staff Reporter
KU administrators have asked an area engineering firm to complete a study of the controversial "Salina Piece," but said details about the study were not available yet.
However, they hope the sculpture can be resurrected this spring.
"We had already contacted a private engineering firm some months ago and contacted them at the last week," Robert Cobb, executive vice chancellor, said.
"We hope the study will be completed by the first week of May, at best, the middle of May." COBE REFUSED to name the firm until final contract details had been worked out.
"But we would hope this would all be completed by this spring," he said. "The estimate we have of how long the study would take to complete is six weeks to two months."
Last Oct. 9, an attempt to install the 40-on black steel sculpture at the southeastern corner of the building.
to the ground after being elevated to its normal 45-degree angle.
Three faculty engineers examined the sculpture and recommended that the University engage an outside consulting firm to inspect the safety before attempting to install it again.
Since late November, the "Salina Piece" resting place has been near a facilities operations storage area on West Campus—disassembled.
"We found the basic structural design to be satisfactory," said Dave Darwin, associate professor of civil engineering and one of the faculty members who examined the sculpture.
BUT BECAUSE the sculpture, which had previously been displayed on private property, would now be displayed on public property, there is a liability that people would climb on it. Darwin said.
"I looked like a jungle gym," he said. "We were concerned as engineers that it could not fly."
SUA
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To show our appreciation this will be our Thursday night special for the Spring semester.
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10-6 Fri. & Sat. 1-5 Sun.
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HAPPY BIRTHDAY
GAMMONS
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Spring Fling! at carousel
Take advantage of the first 10 days of April to save up to 30% on our best Spring items.
SPRING JACKETS reg. to $50...29.99-39.99
ALL WEATHER COATS reg. to $80...49.99-58.99
SPRING DRESSES reg. to $50...24.99-39.99
RUFFLED BLOUSES reg. to $37...15.99-29.99
STRIPED T-SHIRTS reg. to $25...8.99-19.99
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Spring Fling! at carousel
Take advantage of the first 10 days of April to save up to 30% on our best Spring items.
Spring Fling! at carousel
Take advantage of the first 10 days of April to save up to 30% on our best Spring items.
SPRING JACKETS reg. to $50...29.99-39.99
ALL WEATHER COATS reg. to $80...49.99-59.99
SPRING DRESSES reg. to $50...24.99-39.99
RUFFLED BLOUSES reg. to $37...15.99-29.99
STRIPED T-SHIRTS reg. to $25...8.99-19.99
PRAIRIE SKIRTS reg. to $35...15.99-24.99
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New Hours!
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10-6 Fri. & Sat. 1-5 Sun.
711 W. 23rd St.
Lawrence, KS
Page 6
University Daily Kansan, April 1, 1982
Doomly Gaithaiah
JOHN HANKAMMER/Kansan Staff
Susan Davis, Topeka senior, pounds out a copper bowl at the silversmith shop by the art and design building.
Students create sterling designs
By GINA THORNBURG
Staff Reporter
Four people sit on stools around a cluttered table, each in their own work space. Lamps and blow torches are attached to the table at about three-foot-tall.
One person sketches a small design, while the others intently and delicately bend or polish small, shiny pieces of metal.
Is this Santa's workshop?
No, but the fine crafts made here would delight anyone who enjoys handmade precious and semi-precious ornaments, tableware or sculptures.
The four students are part of the jewelry and silversmithing department, which is part of the School of Design. The department is in the old broadcasting hall next to the art and design building. For three hours, three mornings a week, these students come here to work on their metal projects.
"The hardest part is thinking up things to do," Sharon Hughes, Lawrence freshman, said recently as she sketched a project that must have five moving parts. Her ideas usually come from nature.
MARK McNOWN, Lawrence freshman, said he experimented with drawings and cardboard or aluminum models for his assignments.
As he talked, McNown delicately bent a brass wire to fit into the frame of a brass box. He explained that if he bent the wire too much, a dark mark would show at the best possible angle; the patience these students need to complete a project.
McNown said there was a lot of waiting in between the different processes of metalsmithing.
"You can work and work and work on a piece and then you can melt it." The Bruce
Michelle Babcock, New Orleans said metalmithing was frustrated.
She used a blow torch to anneal her sterling silver piece. Annealing is a process that softens the metal to make it more workable.
Karl Palmquist, Lawrence freshman,
was also working with silver.
AS HE MADE a mold for an interlocking ring project, he held up a rough silver ring. This ring had a small chip in it.
"I have to redo it," he said, holding up the green wax mold that he was working on. "It gets expensive. This is $20 worth of silver."
Most students work in copper and brass, Jeanette Bair, Leawood senior, said.
"It's expensive to work in silver," Baire said, "so every woman of holds off a knife."
Bair held two shiny, silver smooth pieces with gently curving sides. These pieces cost her $40, the student. Saws and drill machines are student-run supply store in the department.
THE SILVER pieces will eventually be a cocktail dish that Bair is entering in the Sterling Silver Design Competition this year, which is sponsored by the Sterling Silversmiths' Guild of America.
Gary Mennchock, associate professor of design and head of the jewelry and silversmithing department, is one of the inodes in this year's competition.
The University of Kansas had five students in the national competition last year. Nemchock said.
Nenchock, who has been with the metalmithing department for 11 years, said that he and the other two
professors in the department, John Havner and Oli Valiannue, associate professors of design, tried to personalize the courses for the students.
KU was the first public university to have a jewelry and silversmithing workshop敲 said. The program was started in 1846 by Carlyle Smith, KU professor.
Nernchock said he taught students the fundamentals of basic design and smithing technology and then the students focused in the direction they
A STUDENT has several options after graduation, including opening his own shop, or teaching or designing for a company, Nemchock said.
"We give the option, and the students centralize," he said.
Nernchock, Haven and Valanne each have their own area of expertise as well as skill and instruction in the rest of the metalsmithing field.
Havner works directly with metalmismithing, Valanne concentrates in enameling, and Nemchock works with optronics and developing new materials.
John Peters, Lawrence graduate student, is one of the two graduate students in the department. Peters will be serving as mentoring student to design electronic pieces.
The students are exposed to more than one opinion on problems and projects as a result of this variety, Nemechock said.
PETERS USES light emitting diodes to make flashing pinpoints of light in some of his artwork.
*Peters held up a colorful, brass jewelry pin. He opened the back of it and revealed a watch battery and an intricate network of fiber optics. These
"With three LED's, I can get 96 light sources." he said.
fibres produce clusters of pinpoints of
flashing red light on the face of the pin
Peters, who is working toward a master's degree in metalsmithing and jewelry design, also teaches graduate courses.
courses.
"I teach them to be competitive," he said.
Although he does not like com-
parison, it was necessary in the
implementation it.
"I don't like competition because there's a lot of backstabbing," Peters said. "I'll still go ahead and compete, though. I'm going to try to go into the design business, which is really competitive."
"When it becomes competitive is when you go out and try to sell your piece and you're appealing to Mr. X's sense of esthetics." Sindt said.
"You don't find that at home. Very few people have a studio at home. You have to do your work here, so everyone else knows what you're doing."
Developing your own artistic sense and abilities is the object of solving problems experienced while working on a piece. Sindt said.
Working on individual pieces, instead of common assignments such as compositions in English classes, takes away the competitive element, sheb
IN ADDITION to the 25 undergraduate majors, such as Sindt and Peters, there are a variety of nom majors in the program, Nemchock
In Valanne's night class, 90 percent of the students are non-art majors and they are doing a very good job, Valanne said.
Group to stress nuke effects
A group of five KU faculty members against nuclear arms expansion has proclaimed April 4-10 Ground Zero a nuclear war on the United States.
The week, which will feature speeches by nationally known anti-nuclear activists, films and a panel discussion, was organized because of growing worldwide discontent over nuclear arms, Allan Hanson, Ground Zero committee member, said yesterday.
"There is a general increasing malaise in the world about nuclear war," Hanson, professor of anthropology, said. "This has become even more serious with his policies favoring nuclear war."
possible nuclear war and was not against all uses of nuclear energy.
"We think that nuclear power is
"But a nuclear war is just unthinkable."
The first planned activity of Ground Zero Week, which precedes a national nuclear awareness week, is a march around Lawrence to demonstrate the bomb bomb blast. The march will start in front of Strong Hall at 2 p.m. Sunday.
Monday, the group will sponsor a special prayer service for peace at 7 p.m. in Danforth Chapel. Following the service, a film showing the effects of the earthquake in Hiroshima, Japan, will be shown in the Forum Roan of the Kanasson Union.
Other films about nuclear war will continue through Tuesday in the Union, and another prayer service will be held that evening in Danforth Chapel.
HANSON SAID that the group was mainly concerned with preventing a
THE PANEL, which was designed to offer different viewpoints about nuclear war, will include Ground Zero committee members John O'Brien, associate professor of systematics and ecology, and Harry Shaffer, professor of economics and Soviet and East European studies. L.L. Col. Don Vaught.
But the high point of the week, Hanson said, would be the panel discussion on prevention of nuclear reactors. It would begin at 8 p.m. Tuesday in the Union Ballroom.
Howard Baumgartel, professor of psychology, and Jackson Baur, professor of sociology, are also on the Ground Zero committee.
a retired army officer, will represent the military, and Joseph Duksenk, a physician at St. Luke's Hospital in Kuala Lumpur, on the effects of radiation on the body.
THIS AIN'T NO DISCO
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Arthur Cox, a consultant to the privately funded U.S. Committee on East-West Accord for Arms Control, will speak Wednesday in Woodruff Auditorium. Cox, a former CIA agent published anti-nuclear author, will speak on U.S.-Soviet relations and the possibility of arms control.
Hanson said displays on the effects of nuclear war would be in the lobby of Watson Library, and related books at the Gread Bookstore in the Union.
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Barkley Clark, Lawrence city commissioner and professor of law, will appear with Kole for an experiment with the uillotine.
Illusionist Andre Kole will perform at 7:30 tonight and tomorrow night in Hoch Auditorium.
"The World of Illusion" is sponsored by the New Life Christian Fellowship and Campus Crusade for Christ. Kole is a special traveling representative for Campus Crusade for Christ International.
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University Daily Kansan, April 1, 1982
Page 7
Tenure
From page 1
our foremost mission and no one should be promoted without being demonstrably good."
Teaching evaluations can be obtained by student and peer evaluations, and there are problems with both methods, Heller said.
"Learning is also subjective."
"Ideally evaluations come from students, but it is difficult. We need evaluations of the here and now and has learned something in the course.
THEERE IS A danger, he said, in evaluating a professor who is entertaining. There is also the possibility that a student may not be able to gauge right away what he has learned from a course.
Heller cited a program in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences 25 years ago that asked alumni to name their five best teachers.
"One student had written down two names," he said. "He said that it was a very difficult question to answer, but he said that professor X was the lousiest human being he had ever met. The next letter said that the very best teacher that he ever had was the same professor X."
And then there are the different kinds of teachers—the ones who teach classes to hundreds of students at a time, and those who teach classes one-on-one or in studies, he said. Some faculty members think the questions on the University-wide teacher database discussion-type courses, so there is a value judgement made on what constitutes a good class.
Heller said he looked at overall computer printouts when reviewing candidates' files, but some committee members did not. Committee comment sheets were more important.
THERE ARE also problems with peer evaluations, Heller said, because they are usually colleagues looking for the best in a faculty member.
June Micheal, assistant to the vice chancellor for academic affairs and recording secretary for the committee, said peers could evaluate each other by visiting classes and reviewing syllabi and books read in a class.
"They also hear students talk," she said.
Faculty members use different strategies when deciding which evaluations to include in their dossiers. Some form of evaluation is required, but a suspicious eye is cast on those evaluated as it can indicate favorable evaluations. Michaal said.
"They ask for a complete response, not a selective response, but some people still haven't learned," she said.
Heller said evaluating research also was hard because it was unusual for faculty members to know about conditions in disciplines other than their own. He noted that students required in some disciplines, and articles must be published in prestigious,
hard-to-get-into-to journals in some fields, while others require creative performance in lieu of publication.
FOR THIS REASON, all dews make a presentation to the committee indicating standards within the different schools and then in different departments of different schools. Heller said. For example, the committee needs to be reminded that there is a difference between what happens at an event and the sequence of journalism and the news sequence of journalism do, he said.
Some deans are better at getting their point across than others, he said, and some forget they are not supposed to meet specific cases and spout off anyway.
Also, Heller said, job descriptions were now required for all candidates so that they are judged on what they were hired to do.
Service is relatively easy to evaluate and is also the least important aspect of the three categories in most fields, Heller said. But in social welfare, Michal said, service is the most important aspect.
Service includes committee work and
services on national organization.
Mary said.
THE FILES of all the candidates—books, evaluations, and letters—take up three cabinets and a wall.
And the process has become a lot tougher to handle in recent years.
The demand for university professors was insatiable at KU in the late 1950s and throughout the 1980s, according to the University's study. More than a hundred were hired then decided to stay, turned out to be good at what they did and have since been tenured, locking them into many slots throughout the University, thereby keeping the chairman of the English department.
The result is that the English department is tenured-in, meaning that all professors eligible for tenure in the department have been granted it. This leaves no room for new teaching positions, except on the graduate level and those who teach for limited amounts of time. Zuther said.
"Most (professors in the department) are agreed that we would like to have more young people, from what we call young academics, and generate." Zuther said. "We find
This has lead to lack of spirit in the department, he said.
some of this in the graduate students who teach, but they wish for a little competition.
"we regret very much we do not have an influx of new blood."
ZUTHER SAID the department was not young.
"The competition is in rather well-established channels," he said. "People are mature and the people with the good ideas now are not received much as well as young people with young ideas who have received. We could use a little stream."
unter is further discouraged by the fact that it will be a long time before there is a new infusion in the department. The department has experienced a reorganization and a resignation in the last few years and those positions were not replaced.
"It depends on how quick we die, and we don't wish that on anybody," he said. "We would have to have a very valuable enrollment to create any new positions."
Cobb said that KU would be shocked one day 30 years from now when it realized that all professors were either 40 or 60 years old. There will be a team of professors are hired in the 1980s and that age group is not represented.
THEREFORE, PROFESSORS considered for tenure and promotion are moved through the process at a higher rate than in previous years in to come. Zother said.
"There is an 'army of generals'—no nasty protection of status, but the pool is smaller if most faculty members are tenued. So the process is slower, and the pressure from understaff The whole process is less populated," he said.
Without that pressure from underneath and competition between each other, does faculty production fall off too?
For some, Zuther said, research unquestionably falls off when they reach a plateau and there is no higher level for them to attain. But most people do not retire before making it formal, he said. By the time a faculty member reaches the professor status, he said, he has established an area of expertise in research, and because he enjoys it, he continues.
Evaluations are also taken into consideration for merit salary inquiries.
esoteric project and voted for it, while the others did not
Committee
There was also one popular faculty member who was tenured but remained an associate professor for 28 years. The man was a great teacher, Heller said, but rarely published. He promoted three years before he retired.
"It was a matter of justice," Heller said. "This man did a fine job."
HE GAVED ANOTHER examn
professor who was a fine scholar but not
a very good teacher, and he had to wait
14 or 15 years before he was promoted.
Heller said the promotions were a way of saying, "You've done well, but you haven't done all the things faculty members are expected to do."
The promotion process sometimes puts the applicants under pressure.
"You always wonder whether your sense of achievement corresponds with another person's sense of achievement," said Bernard Hirsch, associate professor of English, who was tenured two years ago. "In an era of a tight job market it is very difficult to find other work, work at a comparable institution, so a lot hangs on it. It is your future."
He said he found that the committee's decision had been fair and open-minded.
As far as I've been able to see, the committees are not rubber stamps," he said. "They act independently."
HELLER AND Ingemann said they felt no pressure serving on the committee, even though they were making crucial decisions.
Ingemann said she did not feel pressured, even though this was the first year of the three-year appointment, because there were so many candidates for the job deciding—the department, the school, the committee—that one vote did not mean so much. There were relatively few candidates she felt uncertain about, but she did change her mind on some issues or discussion by the committees she said.
Heller said there were precautions against the threat of pressure when the committee was first formed.
Committee members serve for three years, and Heller said the rotation was good so that there was not a vested
interest and so that many faculty members could introduce themselves into the larger University community.
HELLER SAID some faculty members, when not promoted or tenured, raised and invaded, while some staff were already present. It was mostly deans who complained.
Robert Cobb, executive vice chancellor, said the process for deciding tenure was superior to any other alternative. He said he thought politics were more important as far as he knew, because the process was so thorough and protracted.
Heller said, "There are a number of people who wish the process was simpler, with not so much paper work and not so much time taken up by it. But there is not a sentiment that says, 'You want the process to office decding.' There is simply so much variety one simply can't drop the procedure.
"Having this work done by the faculty is of critical importance.
"Even though you spend a lot of time deciding, it would otherwise have to be made either arbitrarily or by people who are really not themselves a part of the enterprise, making a general decision.
Valium, pill prolong sedation
Bv United Press International
BOSTON—Women who take a combination of birth control pills and Valium are likely to have long-lasting sedation and might have to cut down their use. The tranquilizer, Tufts University researchers reported yesterday.
A hormone in the oral contraceptives increases the amount of time the Valium remains in the woman's system, which can cause side effects or heavier sedation, the report in the New England Journal of Medicine said.
Valium, said the study did not reveal any "significant clinical effects" between the two drugs, but said it had always supported the concept of physicians monitoring patients who take more than one prescription.
The researchers said physicians should monitor patients who are taking both drugs to determine the degree of valium if necessary, cut the amount of Valium.
VALIUM IS most widely prescribed tranquilizer in the United States with 33.6 million prescriptions for the drug written in 1880.
One out of every five women 18 or older will take tranquilizers at some time in a given year, according to the National Institute of Drug Abuse.
A spokesman for Hoffman-LaRoche Corp., the Nutley, N.J.-based drug company that holds the patent on
Women are prescribed twice as many tranquilizers as men and females take 71 percent of all anti-depressants, government figures show.
The Tufts study compared eight women of an average age of 27 who had been taking low-dose estrogen pills for six months with eight women not on the pill.
All were given Diazepam, Valium's
generic name, intravenously. The study
found Estrogen from the pill lengthened
the response to norepinephrine in
aogram by an average of nearly 30 hours.
Sarvin K. Abernathy, associate chief of the Tufts-New England Medical Center's Division of Clinical Pharmacology and chief author of the study, said the larger amount of Valium might cause side effects or heavier sedation.
"Reduced Diazepam dosage might be required in these individuals to prevent over-medication," he said.
The study described intravenous Diazepam only. But because the drug is rapidly absorbed and none is lost it taken orally, the same reaction would probably take place with Valium pills, the researchers said.
The contraceptives contained less than 50 milligrams of estrogen. Such contraceptives can contain up to 100 or more milligrams of estrogen.
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Thank you
Alpha Gamma Delta and Phi Gamma Delta would like to express their gratitude to those who helped to make the 1982 2nd Annual AΓΔ-FIJI Rodeo a success:
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The Board of Class Officers will hold Sophomore, Junior and Senior class elections April 21,22
Petitions and filing forms are available in the BOCO and Student Senate offices.
FILING DEADLINE—Tuesday, April 6
Page 8
University Daily Kansan, April 1, 1982
Selection process ends for residence hall staffs
By JAN BOUTTE Staff Reporter
The 1982-43 staffs for the eight University of Kansas residence halls were announced yesterday by the office of the College President. We were notified of the selections by mail.
All the hall directors from this year are expected to return, Ruth Mikkelsen, associate director of the office residential programs, said today.
Mikkelson said the number of applications was up significantly this year.
Eleven assistant resident hall directors were named and 66 resident assistants were selected from more than half of the graduating the two-month selection process.
"I think the student financial aid crunch and the employment outlook caused the interest," she said.
NEW RAs receive $700 and a single room contract in exchange for their services. Residential programs officials estimated the compensation at $3,500. Contract prices vary among the eight residence halls.
RAs who have already been part of a residence hall staff receive $756 for the year along with the hall contract. Thirty-seven of the 66 RAs for next year will be returning staff members, Mikkelson said.
She said that returning RAs generally help strengthen the staffs because of their experience.
"Occasionally, some get burned out, but most returning staff members have the edge of knowing the position, the background, and the real leaders 'n their staffs," she said.
For the 29 new staff members, the
residential programs office conducts special training sessions, and the RAs are required to enroll in a special two-hour class, "Study in Staff Skill Enhancement and Administration," during the fall semester.
during RESIDENCE HALL staffs must also report back a week early in the fall semester for workshops.
In addition to the 66 RAs selected, 43 applicants were designated alternates who would be considered for positions when openings in the staff occurred.
Mikkelson said that openings were not uncommon. Last year, 10 positions opened in the time between the beginning of the fall term and the beginning of the fall term, she said.
Applications for RA positions were accepted in February from students with at least a 2.5 grade point average and 30 credit hours. The applicants went through two rounds of interviews, the first with the selection committee and the second at the individual halls which the applicants applied to.
APPLICANTS WHO had been members of the staff this year went through a shortened form of the interviewing process.
Current members of the hall staffs, hall government representatives and hall residents took part in interviewing with applicants.
Mikkelson said evaluations by the interviewers were made available to the applicants who wanted to see them.
"At least 12 people's perceptions of how they've done, if they've made it all the way through, were available," she said.
Mikkelson said this open policy was important to the educational aspect of education.
"I really feel that we are an American nation," he said, one of its one way we can fulfill this mission."
THE STUDENT SENATE STUDENT 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 Recreation Sesame Team and TEAM WRESTLING TOURNAMENTS. Sign up in 2020 Robinson Center.
THE AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF UNIVERSITY PROFESSORS will meet at 7 p.m. in the Kansas Room of the Union.
TODAY
THE KU AMATEUR RADIO CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in 2028 Learned Hall. Members of the KU music faculty will perform a special program of VIRGIL THOMAS MUSIC at 8 p.m. in Saworth Recital Hall.
TOMORROW
on campus
THE CHAMBER OPERA "CABILDO" will be performed at 7 p.m. in Swarthout Hall.
Rock Chalk sweatshirts never arrived
THE UNDERGRADUATE BIOLOGY CLUB will meet at 4 p.m. in the Sunflower Room of the Union.
DA investigates Greeks' report of fraud
By BECKY ROBERTS Staff Reporter
Eight KU fraternities and sororites reported a fraud involving more than $3,000 to the Lawrence Police Department Tuesday.
Bruce Harris, Delta Upsilion house manager, told police that a Kansas City, Kan., commercial artist had taken orders for Rock Chalk sweat-shirts from each of the eight houses that he built. The artist did not deliver the product.
Mike Malone, Douglas County district attorney, said his office was investigating the case before it took any action.
The artist, Catherine S. Farley, was not available for comment yesterday.
HARRIS SAID Farley had offered to design the annual Rock Chalk sweatshirts for the eight houses.
"She came into town and talked to each house and took their orders. She promised the shirts on Feb. 3," Harris said.
The houses that ordered shirts were: Delta Upsilon, Kappa Alpha Theta, Phi Gamma Delta, Pi Beta Phi, Sigma Chi, Delta Beta, Beta Theta PI and Chi Omega.
Farley took checks for the purchases when she took the orders. But when the Feb. 3 delivery day arrived, none of the sweatshirts were delivered.
"We thought it was just taking a little longer because so many houses made orders," Harris said.
Margaret Kraemers, a Denver senior and Kappa Alpha Theta member, said, "Finally she called me on Feb. 5 and sent her the email." But she played in St. Louis because of the snow."
ON FEB. 5, Farley promised the houses the shirts would be delivered by Feb. 10. When the shirts had not arrived
"She promised me she'd have them here on the 13th," Kraemers said.
by Feb. 12, Kraemer called Farley's residence in Kansas City.
"We finally told her at one point that we wanted a full refund. And she promised that she'd have our shirts here or we'd get the money back."
On Feb. 13 the shirts still had not been delivered. Kraemers, Harris and members of the other houses involved repeatedly to get in touch with Farley.
"She wouldn't answer her phone and other times she had the phone off the hook. At one point we reported to the phone company." Kreemers said.
Anne Cortoppasi, Pi Beta Phi house president, said, "Eventually we did get a hold of her by calling her late at night."
FARLEY TOLD the houses that her brains were handling the matter. Kraema said.
On Feb. 16, Farley told Harris that she was having transportation problems and could not get the sweatshirts to Lawrence right away.
"It was the most frustrating thing I've ever dealt with," Kraemers said.
BEFORE SPRING BREAK began,
Harris and members of the other groups decided what to do about the money they had given Farley.
On Feb. 19 Kraemers again tried to call Farley. She got a telephone recording telling her the phone had been disconnected.
"We finally went down to Morris
lift, but he wasn't ready.
It kept wacky and were really pleased.
Harris filed the report with the police department and the houses are now waiting to see what action the district attorney's office will take.
"We're ready to go to court with the matter and press charges," Harris said.
School of Fine Arts takes on 13 advisory board members
Eleven KU alumni and two other people have joined the board of advisers for the School of Fine Arts.
The new alumni members of the board are Richard Star, Hays; Camilla Cave, City City; Barbara Nash, Cave Dodge, Foster; Jodie Slawson and Barbara Wagon, an Wichta; Marjorie Schnacke, Topeka; Barbara Nordling, Hugaton; Linda Stewart, Hugaton and Patti Johnson Wilson, Tusla.
The two new non-alumni members are Jean Hiersteer, Fairway, and Jerry Berkowitz, Kansas City, Mo.
The holdover alumni members of the board are Polly Bales, Logan; Richard Fanoil, Mike Mission; Anne Jeter, Hays; William W. Hambleton, director of the Kansas Geological Survey; and non-alumni Hans Archenbil, Shawnee Mission; Jack Coleman and Joseph Pichler, both from Hutchinson; and honorary Chairman Evelyn Swarthout Hayes, Washington, D.C.
JAMES MOESEER, dean of the school, formed the board in 1977, Jean Mattison, administrative assistant to Moeser, said recently. The school sought new members for the board after five members of the former 13-member board resigned earlier this year.
The holder members of the board and other KU supporters suggested that a new policy should be adopted.
recommended them to Chancellor Gene A. Budig, Mattison said. Budig sent formal invitations to them, and they all accepted.
"All have a very strong love for KU and interest in its well-being," she said. "They also have an interest in the arts."
MATTISON SAID the board was designed to provide the school with outside information on problems, possible new programs, private funding, expansion of existing programs and recruitment of students.
Moeser said the board met every fall and spring. At its meeting in February, the board suggested more tours by faculty and student artists and performers, and more recruiting publications about the school as ways to engage students in the state and region and the maintenance of current enrollment.
"One of the main goals of the board is to acquaint the people of Kansas with the school and its programs," Mattison said.
The new appointments took effect last month, Mattison said. The board members have no limit to their tenure.
On the record
Two 17-year-old juveniles, charged in connection with last Friday's $1,550 armed robbery of J.B.'s Big Boy Family Restaurant, 740 Iowa St., were detained yesterday in Douglas County jail.
The juveniles will remain in jail until they face disposition hearings, Mike Malone, Douglas County district attorney said yesterday.
Because the men are 17, their trial can be waived to adult court if they have long previous juvenile records, Malone said. Juveniles who are 16 or 17 can have their trials waived to adult court.
The Yello Sub *delivers*
841-3268
If the men are tried as adults, their charges will be one count of aggravated robbery and kidnapping each. As such, the men are charged with acts of deliquency.
Malone said officials were investigating another person involved in the case, but no arrests had been made.
Three people robbed J.B.'s Big Boy Family Restaurant, after following two employees into the manager's office, forcing the manager to open the safe and shutting the employees and the manager in a walk-in cooler. Two knives and a can of mace were used in the robbery.
BURGLARS STOLE more than $2,500
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worth of property sometime between
6:30 a.m. and 4:45 p.m. Tuesday from a
residence at 813 Garfield St., police said.
Burglaries entered through an unlocked garage door, forced an inside back door open and stole a microwave oven worth $900, a man's diamond ring worth $1,900 and some miscellaneous office said. There are no suspects.
THEIVES STOLE a letter "S" sometime between 1 and 6 a.m. Tuesday from a Hardee's sign at 2030 W. 23rd St. police said.
Thieves removed the 20-inch by 18-inch "S" and an apostrophe from the sign outside the restaurant. The letter outside the restaurant was $500, $500 police said. There are no suspects.
BURGLARS STOLE about $400 worth of stereo equipment sometime between 8 and 11:30 a.m. Tuesday from a parked car at 1814 Ohio St., police said.
Burglaries entered the vehicle with unknown tools and stole an AM/FM stereo and a powerbooster, police said. There are no suspects.
GAMMONS SNOW
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A Rafting Expedition
SUA TRAVELING COMMITTEE POSITIONS
Spanning the globe, traveling to new frontiers, capturing breathtaking sunsets, as far east as Boston and far west as Odesa, Texas... this and much more can be a part of your "worldly" college career if you join the SUA travel committee. We are looking for creative and dedicated people to help plan trips for you... come in to the SUA office on the 4th floor lobby of the Kansas Union and sign up for an interview starting this week.
Any questions, contact Gene Wee at 864-3477 or Jeff Brown at 843-1863.
We are looking forward to hearing from you.
We are looking forward to hearing from you!
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS THEATRE
AND THE SCHOOL OF FINE ARTS PRESENT
THE RAPE OF LUCRETIA
AS OPERATOR TWO ACUS
WITH LIBRETY RONALD DIN AFTER THE ANDROE ONLY PLAY
FRIDAY & NATRIDAY, APRIL 2-3 & 9-10, 1982
8:00 p.m. / UNIVERSITY THEatre
TICKETS ON SALE IN THIS WEB SITE ALL SEATS RESERVED
STUDENT AND SENOR CITIZEN DISCOUNTS AVAILABLE
FOR REMARKS CALL 913-664-1982
O
Enjoy one of life's little conveniences.
Watch for the Second Annual Moped Poker Run
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University Daily Kansan, April 1, 1982
Page 9
Police, city ready to bargain
By SUSNA AHERN MARSUCO Staff Reporter
It's bargaining time again for the city and the Lawrence Police Department.
Six members of the Lawrence Police Association met recently to prepare an employment proposal that would focus on insurance benefits, wages, sick leave provisions and how much back up they should give officers should have in an emergency.
Gary Sampson, spokesman for the LAPA said his group had not decided on any specific request, but he hoped to have the proposal ready for the city by the City will then review the association's requests and bargaining will begin.
"We hope they'll agree to our proposals in the first place," Sampson said, "so we don't have to talk much. But that never happens. Both of us will try to come up with something we can live with.
"Theen the city will consider the revised proposal and decide what they're willing to pay for. We'll take the new proposal to the Lawrence Police station for a vote. If they don't like it, they send us back to the bargaining table."
Sampson said negotiations had been controversial in the past. According to City Management Analyst Allen Loyd, a federal mediator was called in to settle disputes in the last round of negotiations two years ago.
"The mediator only stayed one day," Lydd said. "The groups felt they could reach an agreement without his help. Although after mediation the disputes still were not settled, the city did reach an agreement with the Lawrence Police Association without having to go to the city commission."
IF NEGOTIATIONS reach an impasse, the city commission has the final word on which version of the employment proposal will be used.
Under a city employee relations resolution, the LPA employment proposal must be presented to the city by April 14. The proposal on its notice must begin by April 20.
Sampson said money was not his primary goal in the negotiations.
"Our main concern is being the best force in the nation. We've already gotten national recognition. We have a good, quality staff, but we're having trouble with turnover. We want to provide a package that will retain officers."
Sampson agreed that it took money to keep "good people," but he said his association was not out for the "big bucks."
"We deal with work conditions and benefits to retain our people, but we're not out for union coffers like the other company," she service charges just to keep us going."
THE LPA IS a subgroup of Lawrence Lodge No. 2, which in turn is a member of the national Fraternal Order of Police.
Jackie McClain, director of the Lawrence Human Relations Department and spokesman for the city's negotiating team, said her main concern was the cost and quality of police protection for Lawrence residents.
"I try to listen to all issues, even those raised by patrolmen, which are management's responsibility," she said. "But it is the responsibility of the police to make sure that the police's. Our negotiating team will strive for a balance of interests."
"If I put all the city money into the police department, there would be no money left for fire protection, clerical workers or other city employees."
McClain said she had no idea what wage increase the LPA planned to ask for. She said that, while some unions around the country would inflate their requests hoping to compromise with a higher dollar figure, the LPA in the past has "been good about coming up with a figure within the bargaining ballpark."
MECLAIN SAID that the current top and bottom salaries for Lawrence police officers were $18,500 and $15,500 respectively. And, she said, all other city employees received a 9 percent cost of living increase in January, but she did not know what wage increase the cities would be willing to give police.
"It's not a great economic year," McClaim said. "The economic condition is not conducive to large packages such as the ones we've had in the past."
r general, state and local governments are all feeling the pinch. I'm sure the LPA will take this into account when drawing up their proposal. Everything negotiable costs Lawrence citizens money."
In addition to McClain and Loyd, the bargaining team for the city includes Lawrence Police Chief Dick Stankwell and Assistant Police Chief Ron Olin.
andiskssssssssss
According to the employee relations resolution, a final agreement must be accepted before June 1. After that date, the two groups will move into an impasse for three days and, if a compromise still is not reached, they will be called in discuss the fairness of both proposals and to make recommendations. The city commission will then make the final selection of one party's package.
BUT SAMPSON said that it was a conflict of interest for the city to make the final decision regarding either proposal.
"The resolution the city has is inadequate. It does not allow enough time to conduct meaningful talks and a passcode procedure is inefficient," he said.
He added that a professional arbitrator should choose the final employment proposal, not just make recommendations.
"That way, both sides would be kept honest," he said.
"Why should the city pick our contract?" the city staff knows that the city commission will back them. The city's philosophy under the present law could be. Why should I give them (LPA). Why should the commission's going to do what I tell them."
McClain said, though, that she thought the city should make the final decision in an impasse.
"The city commission has a financial responsibility to the citizens of Lawrence and it doesn't want to delegate authority to a neutral party that might not know the city's financial history," she said. "The commission is responsible for making such an offer." The commission holds itself back from the negotiating process so it doesn't hear both sides of the issues until an impasse is reached."
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The Student Senate budget subcommittee listened to requests last night from 11 student groups asking for their consent. The student groups last of six revenues of budget hearings.
"I can't ever yet. We gotta be here till all hours of the wee morning." David Zimmerman, the Senate's Finance and Auditing Committee cochairman, said about tomorrow night's meeting.
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- KU-Y requested $2,095 for film rental, office rent, phone usage and films.
Other sizes 40.90 to 55.20 Other sizes 3.13 to 8.2
CITI
The subcommittee will meet to determine its recommendations for allocations to the Senate. The Senate will meet next week to review the recommendations of its objectives to the committee's recommendations may appeal to the Senate.
FREE With Coupon
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- The KU Water Ski Club requested $1,756 for jumping skis, tournament fees and lake rental.
- The Minority Business Student Council requested $313 for office supplies and phone usage.
- Astronomy Associates of Lawrence requested $230 for office supplies and publications.
1008 W. 23rd St. Lawrence, Kansas
Phone No. 749-2941
THE SENATE also can allocate some funds next fall during supplemental budget hearings. Those hearings will be to allocate funds which groups do not use during this year. Unused funds revert to the Senate's holdings.
- The KU Science Fiction Club requested $945 to produce a magazine and film series.
The groups and their requests last night were:
- The African Students' Association requested $990 for advertisements, film rental and exhibition items.
- The River City Women's Health Collective requested $2,283 to provide information to women.
- The KU Committee on South Africa requested $469 for advertisements and film and projector rental.
In the six nights of hearings, the committee heard requests from 59 groups totaling more than $121,000. The
- KJK-FM radio requested $3,650 for a frequency oscilloscope.
- Women in Communications, Inc.
requested $250 for job seminars.
Sale Prices Good Now Thru Sunday
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Senate has only about $53,000 to allocate for fiscal year 1983.
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Page 10 University Daily Kansan, April 1, 1982
HARRY & JEREMY
JOHN HANKAMMER/Kansan Staff
Jayhawk golfers Rob Wilkin (left) and Brad Demo are two key people that have led to the turnaround in the KU golf program. Demo recently won the Gulf Coast Invittional.
Kansas City defeats Seattle
By United Press International
SEATTLE--Mike Woodson scored 20 points and Steve Johnson added 21 as the Kansas City City Kings upset the Seattle Supersonics, 116-98, last night.
It was only the Kings' seventh win on the road this season.
Woodson scored 22 of his points in the first half as the Kings rolled to a 63-51
halftime lead. Seattle pulled to within two points with one minute left in the third quarter, but never came any closer.
Ernie Grunfeld added 19 points for Kansas City, including 11 in the fourth quarter. Reggie Johnson also scored 19 and Larry Drew had 10. Lomie Shelton hit 36 times in double figures with 25. Fred Brown and Jack Sikrma each had 20.
Friends try to turn golf program around
On the golf course, they're the best of
them. On the tennis court,
golf course,
they're the best of friends.
BY BILL HORNER Sports Writer
Sound like a cliche? Maybe so, but to Kansas golf coach Ross Randall, the tandem of Rob Wilkin and Brad Demo is anything but blund.
Wilkin and Dermo are two of the mainstays of the ever-improving KU golf team with big reasons why they have a positive outlook on the future of Jawahawk golf.
"Since they've been here, the spirit of the players on this team has really improved," said Randall. "Golf is a team sport. You have to manufacture a team togetherness. Rob and Brad have really helped with that."
BUT THAT'S not all they've done.
Since transferring from Coffeville Junior College this past fall, the two Arkansas City juniors have made their way to the NBA team in scoring in three of the four fall tournaments, and in the first tournament this spring, Wilkin topped the field with a five-stroke medalist win at Invitational at Padre Island, Texas.
"They've had good backgrounds and good experience," said Randall. "It depends on how hard they work, but the team has to be as strong. They can rise as far as they want to."
Since they met as sophomores at Arkansas City High School five years ago, Wilkin and Demo have followed similar paths on the golf course, leading them both to success and friendship.
“One day, I picked up my dad's old clubs and started hitting balls up against the side of the house,” Wilkin said. “My dad came out to see what the noise was and saw what I was doing. He told me he would hold the club and things like that.”
Wilkin learned the game from his
WILKIN BECAME good enough to be the number one man on Arkansas City's nine grade team and continued to hold down the top spot when he started playing on the varsity team the next year.
Demo, on the other hand, got interested in golf at the age of six when his family lived in Emporia. His mother played golf and the junior golf program in Emporia.
father after his family moved to Arkansas City from Iowa when he was 13.
When his family moved to Arkansas City, Demo was a sophomore and took over the number two spot on the varsity team. He and Rob immediately became
"When we used to be in high school," Demo said, "it felt so good to shoot better than Rob. But now it doesn't. We're playing with our team we're both playing for the Jayhawks."
When the pair reached their senior year, Demo took over as Arkansas City's number one golfer even though Wilkin had been first runner-up in the tournament before force of the season before, and had tied for sixth in the State 5-A golf tournament.
DURING THEIR senior season, Demo captured the conference medalist crown. Wilkin was runner-up again, and won the regional medalist title as well. He finished the year with a 73.2 stroke per round average, still a state 5-A record and won the 5-A State Championship.
From there, it was time to choose a college. Demo was the more heavily recruited of the two and his choices were greater than Wilkin's. But the pair decided that where one went, the other would follow.
"we really wanted to stick together," said Demo.
"We sort of talked it over and decided to go to Coffeville." Wilkin added.
"They have a really super golf program."
Coffeyville has the reputation as having one of the better JuCo golf programs around. Their graduates include former KU golfer Mark Crow, who all-Big Eight golf honors two years ago in the Big Ten. Jim O'Brien, Overland Park senior, and Tad Fugate, Wichita junior, Wilkin and Demo only enhanced that reputation.
AS FRESHMEN, both were all-conference. Demo was the conference's third leading golfer while Wilkin was an All-American and all-All-American honors by a single stroke.
From there, it was on to KU. They chose the University because of the academic program, the closeness to home and, of course, the soil program.
The following year, both repeated as all-conference. Demo was the conference's second leading golfer, while winning the tournament, winning All-American borgs as well.
Can golf at the University of Kansas
basketball in a major sport like football
or basketball
"Yes," answered Deno. "If Ross Randall continues to do the job he's been doing, it will. He and assistant managers are just unbelievable people."
ROOMMATES SINCE THE Cofe-
fice's days, pair live in
upstate New York. Demi
said, they receive a lot of their inspiration.
"The guys are inspiring." Demo said. "If one of us comes home from a bad day at the course, they'll give us support and let us know they expect better. There are a lot of people out there that really care about the team."
An honor graduate from Coffeville with a 3.58 grade point average, Demo is an active member in the fraternity, serving as assistant house manager and alumni relations director. All areround athlete, he has been active in the Fellowship of Christian Athletes for five years.
He professes someday to become a head golf professional, but his immediate goals include All-Big 8 honors the next two years, a trip to the NCAA championship in Chapel Hill, N.C. after this spring and a shot at All-American honors.
Wiklin's first college career goal,
earning four-time All-American
honors, ended when he missed by one
stroke his freshman year, but he feels
that three-time honors are within his
grasp.
At the present time, Wilkin and Demo are interested in seeing the KU golf team succeed.
AFTER COLLEGE, he hopes to stay in golf, either as a professional or in a job that allows him enough flexibility to compete regularly.
"We want to place very high in the next three tournaments," Wilkin said. "We're sort of let down with the third finish at Padre Island. We can make it to the NCAA's if everyone is on top of their games."
Give him Something SPECIAL this year
Whatever the future brings, however,
two things are certain: Rob Wilkin and
Brad Demo will keep on playing golf
and be on keeping good friends as well.
Jack Daniels
OLD
NO.7
WHISKEY
Large selection of Over 500 types pipes
Cigars & Imported Famous brand
Cigarettes pipe tobacco
Great selection of Jack Daniel's gift items.
CIGARS PIPES
Jose Mellei Savinelli
Colombio GBD
Vanilla Bobby
Halena Bobby
Pioneer Pioneer
Dunhill Meerschaum
Romeo y Julieta Buz-Chongu
SCHRADE pocket knives
1 yr. guarantee for loss
SAVINELLI quartz
pipe lighters
The Bookmark's
烟斗
PIPE & TOBACCO SHOP
In the Malts Shopping Center
848-7158
COMMONWEALTH THEATRES
GRANADA
ORDNYTOWN
TELEPHONE 855-792-3930
KATHARINE HEPBURN
HENRY FONDA
On Golden Pond
PG
A UNIVERSAL PICTURE
Evn 7:15 & 8:35 Mat Sat Sun 2 00
PORKY'S
You'll be glad you came!
EW 7/15A & 9/11W Wesleyon pt 2.00
RILLO
JACK LEMMON
SSIS SPACKE
missing.
702 x 30 8
1995
HILL CHESTER
RICHARD PRYOR
ON THE SUNSET STRIP
LIVE
7.30 A.M. & 10 MAT Sunday 21 S 8
R
HILLCREST 3
57TH AND DOWNEY
TELEPHONE BAR RADIO
上海交大
Entrhalling...
CHARIOTS
OF FIRE
Fri 7.15 & 8.30
Mw Sat 7.15
CINEMA 1
3357 AND 6025
TELEPHONE 811-6911
图
CINEMA 2
JAZZ AND BUBBLES
TELEPHONE 360
ALBERGE SLOUCHO IN DEPARTMENT
NICK NOLTLE
DEBRA WINGER
CANNERY ROW
EVE 7.25 & 30 Monkwalker 2.99
SHOOT MOON
Weekends at 2:00
EVENING 7:30 & 9:35
Tie InWithUs Recreation Services
Intramural Golf
Play will be April 7,14,21,& 28 at 4 p.m. at the Orchards Golf Course, 3000 W. 15th St. No entry forms to fill out—just show up & be ready to tee off at 4 p.m. Greens fees are $3.75 for 9 holes. For more information call 864-3546.
Mrs.
SPECIAL LOW PRICE $12.95
ELLENA HONDA
LAWRENCE AUTO PLAZA PROUDLY INTRODUCES GORDON WILLIAMS, OUR NEW SERVICE TECHNICIAN
COUPON *AIR CONDITION CHECK AND CHARGE*
- AIR CONDITION CHECK AND CHARGE *
INCLUDES INSPECTION OF BELTS, HOSES, LEAK TEST, COMPRESSION TEST
AND ONE CAN OF FRE-ON.
LET GORDON SERVICE YOUR CAR WITH THESE SPECIALS
GORDON BRINGS WITH HIM 15 YEARS OF IMPORT EXPERTISE SERVICING HONDA, TOYOTA AND DATSUN
INCLUDES POINTS, PLUGS, CONDenser AS REQUIRED, ADJUST TIMING,
AND CARBURERATION
- - - COUPON -
* TUNE UP *
4 CYL. $32.50 6 CYL. $41.50
CHECK ON OUR VALVE ADJUSTMENT SPECIAL
CALL BRIAN FISHER (SERVICE MANAGER) FOR AN APPOINTMENT
CHECK ON OUR VALVE ADJUSTMENT SPECIAL
ELLENA
HONDA
843-0550
Sahidun Panglima
Land Naming
OPEN SATURDAY TIL NOON LOCATED AT THE END OF THE AUTO PLAZA
2nd Anniversary
Cannot be used in conjunction with any other discount coupon or offer.
Does not apply to self service. Offer expires April 4.
20% off any photocopy with KU ID
Proud to continue serving the University of Kansas with the highest quality and best service in town.
ENCORE COPY CORPS
25th & Iowa
842-2001
Look in Kansan classified advertising
B.O.C.O.
JUNIOR/SENIOR CLASS PARTY
FRIDAY, APRIL 2ND 2-5 p.m.
BOTTOM'S UP
Class Card Holders: No Cover, 25c draws NonCard Holders: $1.50 Cover, 25c draws
---
The active woman is more than just an athlete. Today's woman is active throughout her day. She insists on comfort and freedom.
Run with the running bra, by Formfit Rogers.
UNDERCOVER
RUN WITH THE RUNNING BRA
BY DUMFIT ROPERS
RUN WITH ONE RUNNING BRA
BREAKFORM FIT RUNners
21 W. 9th 749-0004 ROGERS
FORMFIT ROGERS
University Daily Kansan, April 1, 1982
Page 11
no said.
in a bad
ius sup-
better.
re that
to stay or in a ability to
KANSAN WANT ADS
feyville,
Demo
eternity,
manager
An all-
e in the
tests for
The University Daily
Call 864-4358
CLASSIFIED RATES
goal,
erican
by one
e feels
hin his
one two three four five six seven eight nine ten eleven
15 words or fewer $2.50 $2.50 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00 $3.50 $4.50 $5.50 $6.50 $8.50
15 words or fewer $2.50 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00 $3.50 $4.50 $5.50 $6.50 $8.50
AD DEADLINES
ERRORS
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
The 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.
KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Pint Hall 864.4258
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can
Business Manager, Editor
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Paid Staff Positions
The Kansan is now accepting applications for the Summer and Fall Semester Business Manager and Editor positions. These are in a new newspaper experience. Application forms are available in the Student Senate Office, 105 B. Fitzgerald St., Room 210. Student Organization and Activities, 220 Strong Hall; and in Room 200 Flint Hall. Completed applications are due in 200 Filtil at 5:30 p.m. Monday, April 19
The University Daily Kansan is anEqual OpportunityAffirmative Action Employer. Applicable to students of all races, people regardless of race, religion, color, sex, disability, national origin, age, or ancestry.
Sophomores:
Owl Society, the junior honor
WORRIED About April 157 Call Don Bax Tax Service for fast, accurate tax return preparation. Call 841-0893, 60-day extensions of time to file are available. 4-15
ENTERTAINMENT
Deadline is April 5th
society, is now accepting applications. Pick them up in 220 Strong or at the SUA office in the Kansas Union.
ALIANCE FOR CHOICE will hold a strategy meeting Thurs., April 1, 7:00 p.m. in the C of the House to address protection rights is urged to attend. 4-1
FOR RENT
NBMEMEE THE DEBES? Drummer Poxy Sappar and her great new rocky'kidd! NBC's latest this Fri; & Sat at the Wall Hall Halle 10; EEK from b-4 & 2-4 cover TN 37 H.
Must see to believe. Furnished rooms with utilities paid near university & downtown.
No pets. Phone 841-5500. tf
HINVER PLACE. Completely furnished.
Midia, 12 by 2 berm, Located between
Berkshire and Middlesex.
KIL. DONT DELLY. Reserve your
room for dinner at the morning-mat-
thewail. 841-1212 or 842-4455.
Natasha atmospheric, international meals,
and wellness programs will be available for six collaborative group members. On the room 1069 month furnished rooms with large windows and laundry. Call 841-7629. Close contact with natasha and luncheon
PINECHEEN PLACE PATIO APPAREMENTS.
Slow, available. 2 bedroom, 2 bath, perfect for roomsite. wood burning fireplace, glass-enclosed bathroom, weather/dry hookups, fully-equipped kitchen, quiet surround. Open house. Included phone number: 847-3257 for additional information. If
For rent to mature male student. Quiet,
comfortable efficiency office. Private
kitchen. Close to the Union. Reasonable
price. 642-4185. tf
Available now. Two bedroom paesque apt.
Unoccupied, carpeted, front entrance,
wet areas,衣物 covered. Close to
campus, and on bus route $33 per month.
No pet. MADEHOURGON 10th & Cristallt.
No parking.
ON CAMPUS. New completely furnished twoboyses available immediately from the University, bath and toilet. You are Located on 3mth & 4mth Only Two boys are located from the Union, Call 82-414-3555 or 82-414-3556.
2-bdm, 1 bath in 6-pix, all appl, available now. $250. 3-bdm, 1 bath in 4-pix, all appl, available now. $250. 1 bath in 4-pix, all appl, available now. $250. car W/D books, $285, available now. 9 bdm, 1 bath in 4-pix, all appl
18 br. aft, convenient to shopping on bus
drays. Complete kitchen central air/heating,
drapes, fully carpeted. Call 841-6888. 4-5
Sublease 2 br. apt. w/gas paid. Complete kitchen, drape, fully carpeted. Central air and heating. Call 841-6868.
Spacious, new, beautiful 2-bedroom duplex
of blocks behind Naindalm dorm. $300 mo.
$available May 18 Through 1 August
or fall leave Call 641-1751. 4-5
established STUDENT COOPERATIVE close
campus and downhill. Own bedroom/
kit. Six beding meals each week. $25
night. Wine & dessert. SUNFLOWER
BASE. 843-9421.
please for summer months studio apt.
iridire. On bus route. Price negotiable.
$2396 any time.
4-5
TRY COOPERATIVE LIVING. Sunflower
Moore 847-9421 tt
Sleeping rooms 1-3 bedroom Apts. Dupuis.
and 8-bedroom house close to campus.
No pets. Call 842-8971. Leave for summer.
Full year. Call afternoons or
weekends. 4-14
Two sessions graduate upperclass students or K U employees only. Two 1 br. & 1 hr. classes. $390 block from Kansas Union, no pets. Refreshments 2 after 5 p.m. $470 + $180MB 43-42-4-2
Summer Sublease—three bedroom town-house-furnished, central a/c; 2 bath. Three blocks from campus. Female. Call Sharon 844-1401; 9:00-5:30. 4-2
TRAILRIDER. Leaving for fall-Studduson,
Saturday night at the studduson house.
All have harvest gold appliances
and new furnishings. Laundry facilities on the premises Swim-
ing pool. Laundry facility 4:30 p.m.
2500 W. 6th -847-3333. 4:30
p.m. 2500 W. 6th -847-3333.
Nice 2 bedroom apt. near hospital. Range refrigerator, draper, carpet. $270. No pets. References required. 841-8744 or 843-8814
2-bedroom duplex near Halimark. All appliances w/ dockets. CA, no picks. Referrals required. $290. 843-8143 or 841-8744. 4-5
2-bedroom duplex, range, refrigerator, w/d
hooks, carpet, drapery $275. No pets.
References required. 843-8814 or 841-8744. 4-5
$125 include ALL utilities, clean, no pets or
bathroom, all furniture, qwerty good student
bedroom, all furnishings, all appliances.
No credit required.
Summ. sublease 1 BR apt. in 4-plax, furnished, carpeted, AC. 14th & NJ, all util. free $145/mm. 749-6406. 4-6
3. BR duplex for summer. Single room or entire unit. Pursified. AC, dull waather, near campus on bus route. 841-1070. 4-5
SOUthern PARKWAY TOWNHOUSES,
26th & Kaisel. If your fired up of apartments
feature 3 br, 11's, baths, all appliances at-
tached, the answer is privacy. We have openings now, and in the summer and fall, Call Craig Laura in evening to get more information on her modern property.
Live in the CHRISTIAN CAMPUS HOUSE
growing campus ministries, Alain Ren
and Jean-François Bouchard
Summer and fall rentals, houses and apartments. New campus, no pets. Lynch Real Estate 843-1601 or 841-2322. 4+14
We have a good place to live and study in
the beautiful city of Boston. We have a
bachelor's and 12-month leases and August
admissions and we extend the courtesy of not
paying any fees for our appointment. 841-7475
PUSCOTTON TO APPPOINTMENT. 841-7475
MB CENTER ROUND? Newly refurbished
2 BR Duplexes available now. Carpet, A.C.
Appliances, parking. Call (913)-381-2678.
Nice one bedroom apartment, AC, carpeting,
close to campus, $175.00 a month, water paid.
Available now. Call 841-2763 after S. 5-40
4-14
Sublease 3 BDRM 2 bath. Full carpeted or Furnished, also central air, dwil, and disposal. Great location at 919 Indiana, Apt. 1, 749-3318 or 841-5255. 4-14
3 bedrooms 2 bath apt. Mun lubebase or
100 sqft. 840.000 $ 841-880.000 Call after
$499.000
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sah. Makes sense to use them-1). As study guide, makes sense to use them-2). As study guide,iration. "New Analysis of Western Civilization." In Sah. Bookmark, and Oread Bookmark. If
Alternator, starter and generator specialist.
Parts, service, and exchange units. BELL
AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-9660, 3900
W. 6th.
Nce 718 Plymouth Horizon 4 door automatic,
AC, Very clean, price to sell $2350, Preston
McCall Co. 314 North 3rd. 841-6067. 4-1
Beautiful bald evergreens reasonably priced.
Himmel's Rand Tree Farm—Eudora—Phone
542-3139 or 542-3349
4-20
WALK TO CLASS. Remodeled home at 1838
Illinois $40,000. Owner finance at 112%.
APR with 25% down. McKenzie Realty.
816-444-2250.
TENNIS RACKETS—Good selection new/ used. Will buy yours if in good condition. 842-6713 after 6 p.m. ff
Raleigh 10 speed, 23" frame, excellent condition Must sell. Very Reasonable. Call after 5 p.m. 843-1842. 4-2
Honda 125 XL—2400 miles, only ridden by
priest to church. $695. Peter Cappian—
841-4405; 843-8202. 4-6
Certified casting equipment, sofa, 2 ottomans, TV stands, stereo/TV monitors, Stereo-Touching Video Recorders. Name press in the K.C area Get your best price. call Total Sound Distributors 4-300 4-30
1976 Honda 400, many extras; 1981 Akii
4-alr-to-Reel 841-3577.
1975 Pontiac Ventura 3 speed. V6, 2-door,
am radio, excellent condition, priced to sell.
Call 749-3791. 4-5
975 NA04 Honda moped, excellent condition
$275.00 or best offer. Call 841-5123. 4-6
Thousands of comics books, baseball cards,
postcards, national Geographies, Playballs,
Petitcheux Books, and more.
811 N. H. Open Sat. & Sun. 10-5, 4-2
E. B. N. High School, Club Pub, Game
Ham radio Drake TR-4 transceiver with speaker and power supply, Pioneer car stereo also. 749-2374. 4-5
Raleigh Record 10 speed bike, 23" frame,
$60.84-7257 (eve.) 4-6
180 miles Evelynne i-343-9101 4-6
180 miler Pythroon Arrow, Hateback,
28.500 mile Just tuned-up, $700. Must sell
by 4/8.92 Briall Baxi 841-424-802
Buruba jersey jacket and trucks available for purchase. Ex 2024 for information on how to pay.
50W Marshall Amplifier head & cover,
beautiful card. $350. Kurt 814-6173. eyes.
4-2
BUICK—1968 2-door in good condition-
Automate with 250 Straight-6. $475.06. 841-
3215. 4-2
Cabbies in NYC eat bicycles, so I must sell my Schwinn Le Tour. Mint condition, $135.
845-5193
4-5
Everything you always wanted in a dark room! $275, call 864-6040. 4-
1978 K.E. 250 Enduro, excellent cond. must to appease. only ridden in town. Also a/e i 12.000 Btu $50. Call Randy 749-5394. 4-5
Drums seven piece CB-700 kit, also Gibson
Les Paul. B481-122 5:25 after A.5 punch. 4-2
KZ750, many extras, excellent condition,
new tires, chain, sprockets, battery, & more.
Call 864-3018. 4-7
Datsun 200 SX, 1978. 5 sp., a/c/ am/fm cassette, aluminum magazine wheels, excel cord... 900 miles. Megan 843-8703. 4-2
Sealy Springs and Mattress—6 mo. old, $25;
carry Gerry Mouter 842-3999 (842-3720, $15)
TORONADO 1871, auto. a.c. am/fm stereo,
muit sell. Fernando. 749-0745 from 3:50-4
7
Found Wesco Auditorium women's glasses
Found Wesco Aquarium's glasses
Calculated found in 2nd floor Maltah bath;
calculated found in 3rd floor Maltah bath;
FOUND
HELP WANTED
Found pair of men's prescription glasses
from front frame, new near Near
Park. 843-6038
Summer Job National Park Co. 21 Parks,
500 Openings. Complete Information $3,00.
Park Report, Mission Mn. Co., 61st 2nd Ave.
W.N. Kallpie, MT 99091. 4-19
Person interested in doing odd house jobs in exchange for rent this semester. Must be capable, studious, have own food supplies and a desire to cooperate in living. Call Darryl 841-8386.
Children's Counselors, Activity Instructors,
Cook, Kitchen Manager, Kitchen Help for
Summer Camper, Trojan Ranch,
Box 71, Boulder, Colorado, 800-245-
841, Boulder School, 800-245-
849
$75 Daily! Home. Business. Detail- $77
$300 daily! Home. Business. Detail- $37D-KW. Bonner Springs. Ks. 66012. 4-12
Lifeguards needed for County Fair Swim Club WSI. Webbed. Minimum age 19. Snd resume to Becky Popp, 2009 Maple Lane, Lawrence.
Jobs are tough to find after college. Just ask any recent graduate who went out for work, so why not get ahead of your class while you're still in school? Mutual Life, the world's largest company that offers life insurance, is one of the few internship Programs that let you sample a career in life insurance as well as provide you with experience. If you train you through our local NML agency, you'll have a chance at finding a job right now, while you're still in college. And, when you graduate think how many jobs are available and a proactive employee. Think ahead.
We are looking for 25 hardworking students for a summer work opportunity. If you are independent and want to earn $275.00 per week call 749-5227 4-13
Bartender—energetic and personable, contact Dan at the Exchange, 842-953-47
-
Student hourly position available for the remote position in the Office of Student Organizations and Activities. 220 Strong Hall. Application available in 220 Strong Hall. Available in 220 Strong HOLF 4-5-4
LOST
Lost large blue loose leaf notebook. Has all class notes. Please call 843-0673 or 843-8588 and ask for Dean. 4-11
Lost beige purse at Mad Hatter, broken
strap, 3-25, call 749-1303. 4-2
Lost: Backpack with glasses in pocket, in 4020 Wescoe Monday 3-29. Glasses needed. 843-7525 ask for Kurt. 4-7
Skillet's liquor store serving U-Daly since 1949. Come in and compare. Wilfred Stuart Edulay. 1906 Mass. 843-8186. tt
Say it on a sweatshirt with custom silk-screen printing 1 to 1000 shirt art by Swella 749-161. tf
Instant passport, visa, ID, & resume photographs. Custom made portraits b/w, color. Swells Studio. 749-1618. **1f**
שנה
Hillel
President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer
Thursday, April 1
5:30 p.m.
for 1982-83
HEADACH, BACKACH, STACHE, FIND NECK,
LEG PAIN? Find and correct the CAUSE
of HEADACH. Use a modern
modern chiropractic care. *18-30*
Accepting Blue Cross and Lone Star insurance.
(Nominations will still be accepted)
Walnut Room, Kansas Union
SKI TRIPS SKI TRIPS SKI TRIPS SKI WINTERPARK, DILLON AND OTHERS
Economical packages every weekend and school break. call Ski Etc 816-8388 today.
5:30 p.m.
The Kegger—Weekly Specials on Kegr!!
Call 841-9450–1610 W.23rd.
!f
...
For your party clothes, formal or contuse
check out the Inflation Fighter. 8 E. Tth
10-5-30 M-F 10-5-30 Sat. Open tl all
On Thurs.
Italy, key just arrived Spring shipment of Lauren Laurie Koen print knits and Oxford's 11 great colors. Lady Campbell's 841 Mass.
4.1.
COMPEREINSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES
preventive pregnancy, early and advanced
out patient abortion; gynecology; contra-
natal care; A & B. Overland, Park, PA
(912) 632-3000
www.compereinsivehealth.com
MARY KAY COSMETICS-Full-time beauty consultant. 842-6641. ff
DESIGN-A-SHIRT CONTEST
---
Entry Deadline April 23rd
Enter now at:
kansas union bookstores
Main Union Satellite
Summer school subacute Furnished 3-room
apartment, two bedrooms and amenities,
and utilities. B415-210 for a 4-p. a.
Unique clothing and accessories for men
and women. 2 Hand Second Row, Indiana
822-616.
RECORD SALE
HOT
ALBUMS
AT
HOT
PRICES
okstores
union bookstores
Exciting jobs at Lake Tabee. Send $5.00 to
Tabee Jobs, P.O. Box 7244, Kansas City, MO
60411.
4-22
Imoga inside Spring with a 'BANGO BOGG-IE²' shirt 3 color silencer MLXL-XL P.O. BOX 1447, Lawrence, KS 4-1
Attention ladies lonely man seeks life long companionship. My name is Big John and I want you to be in my life. I'll please you in every way possible. Won't you come? Don't mind me or me home. Footlights, 21th & Iowa. 4-11
You are bawed with just drinking and striping. You have a bottle of wine, drinking and stripping with an adult game cloth. You can drink and striping with an adult game cloth. You can drink and striping with an adult game cloth. The world famous Pout-Out are now on sale at Footlox. 28-41
Punk out, at Follights color your hair with Streaks'n' tins. Tips. Red, green, blue, black, purple & silver. Sprays on, shampoo out. Streaks'n' 25th & Iowa. 4-1
ORTHODOX CHRISTIANS
BIBLE STUDY
Thursday
7:30 p.m.
OREAD ROOM—
WEST COAST SAIL, Budweiser Light
Bever is here. All this week, Budweiser Light
bottles (reg. 80) only at The Coast,
2222 Iowa -M41-BREW
4-2
You You! Don't MISS CRUNZ! Wednesday,
March 31st & Thursday 4:19 at the
24-10 Club. Also Friday, April 2nd at
Clubhouse.
4-1
Silk heads, wallets, jewelry bags from Korea Barb's Second Hand Rose. 515 Indiana. 842-4746. 4-19
Spring formats—Prairie-look, 50's, beaded
Taffetas. Barb's Second Hand Rose 51S,
Indiana. 842-4746. 4-9
Community Auction 700 N.H.
Every Wed. 6:30 p.m.
Consignments Accepted
Wed 10:00 - 12:00 noon
Wed. 10 a.m. till sale
Sat. 10-5
841-2212
SPECTRUM OPTICAL. Come in and choose from over 300 frames and sunlamps in stock. One day service in most cases. Open 10-6 M-S B-1411 - 8-73 E. 4-2
**instruments for Omnicom Delta Kappa, the**
**Fiducial Delta Kappa and available in**
**all devices. Due to an earlier shortage of application form**
**entries, only 10,000 applications per**
**p.m. on 25, 30, p.m. questions can be answered**
through email or by visiting www.omnicom.com.**
ROCCO Elections The Board of Class Officers will be holding Sophomore, Junior, and Senior Elections. Petitions and filing forms may be picked up at the Office or by calling 4-555-Filing Date is Tuesday, April 6-5
GREEN'S CASE SALE PARST $7.29, BUD-
WEISER LIGHT $9.58, GREEN'S, 808 WEST
23RD.
4-2
Steven-Televisions-Video. Recorders. Names, brands only. Factory-sold cartons. Lowest prices in the K.C. area. Get your local Total Sound Encoder 912-384-6000 4-30
*eater than a trackstar more powerful than a football player Able to leap Hoech Auditorium, one hand tied behind back Ive jerked his Nope II no an Ultra 4 Pitcher Player.
PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH
RIGHT, 843-4821.
If
ACCENT SOUND & LIGHT CO. for your
home studio 841-805-9620 for booking information
4-4-6
STUDENT NURSING HOME AIDES. Share your knowledge to nursing home read-ins. Our organization is a community organization that provides the KURSING HOMES, need your input on conditions and quality of care. All materials are free to use. Write or call us: KINH, 2627; Mass. St. 21, Lawrence; KS 65043 (151) 423-3988 or www.kursinghome.org
WEAR BLUE
JEANS
IF YOURE
GAY DAY
FRIDAY APRIL 2
ALSOK
BOARDSAILING If you thought you couldn't afford your windsurfer then call about our rental-purchase program. 4-2
942-2566
**MY services. GLOSK NIGHT ON THE TOWN.** Join us for drinks and dinner in the Cocktail at 6:00. Dinner at 8:00. Entertainments at 9:00. Services for reservations. Dinners $5.00 - 4.1
Men and Women play Ultimate in short shorts. 4-7
EXCHANGE A Private Club Fire Place • Videos Great Drinks at Great
THE
Memberships Available
Have you ever fell like a Fool? Join the crowd. The Ultimate FooFest Festival Saturday and Sunday O-Zone Fields. 4-2
FriSea lams from St. Louis, Tulsa Des Moines, Oklahoma City, Springfield, Kansas City and more Saturday and Sunday O-Zone FIELD ESTIMATE FOOLS FESTIVAL 4-2
In Battlefield I weight for clue of three found on the ground. He told Oreada he will help me through this trial with aid and desig; teach the eleven rhyme words in our song. Just until our union I can never rest 4-1
Bard's Second Hand Rose
51F "Idana"
Unique clothing and accessories.
Dealing With That Urease Feeling: Learn to initiate conversations, make new friends, and get to know people on campus. 7-10 a.m., 7-9:30 p.m., Nummerizer Center, free no admission. The Student Assistant Office can be reached at (615) 248-7434.
TUTORING MATH, STATISTICS, PHYSICS,
COMPUTER SCIENCE. Call 841-1996 use
(b.S.) in physics, M.A. in mathematics)
or call 841-1475 (a.k.a. for Robert).
tr
The Horror Zonta1s and Ultra-Violets are your local Friabe team. Come yell for them this weekend. THE ULTIMATE FOOLS FESTIVAL. 4-2
Need help with organic chemistry or pharmacy Call Mike Hagemen at 841-1734 or 844-3720
4-1
SERVICES OFFERED
Schneider Wine & Keg Shop -The finest selection of wines in Lawrence-largest supplier of strong kegs. 1610 W. 23rd. 843-3212.
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LEARN TENNIS from experienced instructor in small groups with other K.U. students or private lessons 842-6715 after 6:30 p.m. if
Will tutor 1st or 2nd year French students.
Call 841-9450. 4-1
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Tutoring--Don't wait to the next exam!
Biology and Statistics 841-3246, 4-9
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1
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Professional typing. Dissertations, therea term papers, resumes, legal, etc. IBM Correcting Selectric. Deb 842-8592. 4-5
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Female roommate - 2 berm, Apt. 17h, Inc.
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74-0222
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Two Senior female business students look for roommate to share $3 bdrm. and summer and/or next year. Call #42 6611
--self time and money while still receiving the satisfaction of placing your ad in the Kansas. Just mail this form with a check or money order payable to the Kansas to University Dalkan Kountz, 180 W. Lawrence, KS 60045. Use rates below to figure costs.
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS
Take advantage of this form and save yourself time and money while still receiving the satisfaction of placing your ad in the Kansas. Just mail this form with a check or money order payable to the Kansas to University Dalkan Kountz, 180 W. Lawrence, KS 60045. Use rates below to figure costs.
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1
Page 12 University Daily Kansan, April 1, 1982
What Occurred When This Document Was Present?
Scoreboard
Basketball
BLASTINGS
Eastern Conference
Atlantic Division
Team W L Pct. GB
Cleveland 70 58 14.6 -
Philadelphia 50 22 19.3
Washington 37 37 51.4 19
New Jersey 37 31 31.3 19
New York 31 45 14.1 -
Milwaukee 49 25 681
Albuquerque 49 25 681
Atlanta 34 20 12 %
Indiana 33 40 49 %
Chicago 33 40 49 %
Chicago 15 56 18 %
Western Conference Midwest Division
San Antonio 44 28 611
Denver 42 41 362 2 ½
Cincinnati 42 31 402 3 ½
Kansas City 26 47 356 18½
Dallas 28 47 354 18½
Chicago 19 53 364 18½
Los Angeles 49 26 681
Seattle 49 26 681
Tampa Bay 40 32 7 2
Phoenix 40 32 556 9
Portland 40 32 556 10
Fortwald 16 37 219 33%
16 37 219 33%
YESTERDAYS RESULTS
VERTIGA A Y RESULTS
Boston 114 New Jersey 105 Cleveland 87
New York 96 Boston 103 Detroit 108
Kansas City 106 Seattle 109
Kansas City 110 Seattle 109
Baseball
Team W L G Pet GB
Nebraska 2 2 500
Nebraska State 2 2 500
Iowa State 2 2 500
Iowa State 2 2 500
Kansas 0 0 100
Kansas 0 0 100
Hockey
Hockey
NHL STANDINGS
Wales Conference
Pennsylvania
Campbell Conference
Minnesota 36 22 21 20 338 282 92
Winnipesaukee 32 31 14 14 338 282 90
Columbus 31 31 14 14 338 282 90
Chicago 28 38 12 12 321 364 57
Toronto 28 38 12 12 321 364 57
Detroit 28 38 12 12 321 364 57
Team W 5 L 1 T GF 74 GA 23 Pts.
NY islanders W 31 L 19 GF 67 GA 115
N.J. lakers W 31 L 19 GF 67 GA 115
Philadelphia 77 30 10 312 304 84
Pittsburgh 77 30 10 131 304 84
Pittsburgh 77 30 10 131 304 84
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Montreal 46 15 17 17 385 215 109
Boston 41 16 15 10 305 209 92
Buffalo 38 25 15 16 357 333 109
Hamilton 31 15 16 15 277 331 79
Hartford 21 10 16 17 250 368 50
Soccer MISL STANDINGS Eastern Division
NESUEL
Montreal1 Hartford1
Washington 4 Pittsburgh 1
Chicago 10 San Francisco
New York Rangers 4 Chicago 1
Edmonton 7 Los Angeles 3
Toronto 9 Detroit 2
Edinburgh 47 17 15 15 415 294 103
Calgary 48 17 13 14 322 103
Vancouver 28 33 17 17 277 282 63
Los Angeles 24 33 17 17 318 763
Chicago 24 33 17 17 318 763
Team W L Pct GB
New York 27 7 1.94 -
Hamburg 27 10 1.85 -
Baltimore 23 12 629 5½%
Buffalo 21 16 658 5⅔%
Cleveland 21 16 658 5⅔%
Nationals 13 22 371 14%
Philadelphia 13 22 371 14%
St. Louis 27 19 730 %
Chicago 21 18 580 %
Milwaukee 15 16 480 %
Denver 14 22 380 12%
Phoenix 11 25 380 12%
Cincinnati 15 25 380 12%
Track team faces field of 74
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
New York 7. Buffalo 4.
Several Jayhawks turned in fine performances, the most notable being Tudie McKnight's 21-14 mark in the season. The third best in the nation this year.
The KU women's track tam, fresh from an impressive open meeting in Alabama last weekend, will be going to Cara Giparreau, Mo., today to compete in the Southeast Missouri State Invitational outdoor meet.
By DAVE McQUEEN Sports Writer
Although the meet in Cape Girardeau will be big, with 74 students entered from all over the nation, it won't be the toughest meet this week. This Friday, the Texas Relays get underway.
KU opened their outdoor season in impressive fashion last weekend, scoring 42 points to take second place in Alabama, Louisiana and Corsica.
ACCORDING TO KU track coach Carla Coffey, she passed up the Texas Relays because she didn't think her team was ready for it.
"The times were just a little too fast for us this early in the season," Coffey said. "We like to get into the season gradually."
At the meet, KU will be competing mostly in retails. No team scores are being kept, but there are few individual events.
OF THE FIVE frelux KU will be running in, Coffey said, her two strongest teams are in the 400-meter and the 1,600-meter races. The 400-meter relay team, which ran a 48.26 to take second last weekend, consists of Dora Spearmann, Nancy McCullough, Mkorna and Lmorea Running. Trucker Brian Calough, Donna Smithherman, Calough, Donna Smithherman, McKnight and Tucker.
Other entries are Gretchen Bajema and Anne Johannessen in the invitational 1,500-meter run, Annette Craighead and Heather Houchin in the 5,000 meter road race, McKnight, McCullough and Kim Jones in the long jump and Sime Lerdahl in both the shot put and the discus.
GAMMONS
until 10:30
cover only $1
CHARIOTS OF FIRE
Fielding costs KU sweep of double-header
The Kansas baseball team continued its habit of splitting double-hHeaders yesterday against Missouri Southern, and dropped the nightcap, 3-2, and dropped the nightcap, 8-5.
BEST MOVIE
By MIKE ARDIS Sports Writer
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Kansas, 10-10, has split three of its last four double-headers. Yesterday's split came as a result of fielding lapses in the first game, where injuries in the second game. KU committed seven errors in the second game, all by the left side of the infield.
"We gave away too many runs" Coach Marty Pattin said. "We can't make these types of mistakes against Bie Eight teams, we'll be blown out."
Phillips gave up his sixth home run of the year in the fourth innings after a Dave Mascher triple, for the Lions' only runs of the game.
"I was pleased with Jim," Patt said. "He had just one mistake, he laid it down the middle for the home run. He pitched a good game though."
Sports Writer
KU RWON the first game, 2-3 on Jim Phillips four-hit performance. Phillips went the distance, striking out 10 in raising his record to 2-2.
"Only mistake I made," Phillips said. "Usually it's giving up the one pitch that hurts us. I've been working on that."
"The hitters and pitchers did well, just the left side of the infield was bad." Nuzel said. "I don't know what happened to him." We've had too many days like this."
The Jayhawks and the Lions, 18-8,
each had nine hits, but the errors were
29. The Jay
KEVIN KROEKER started the second game, but in the third after surrendering five unearned runs on five hits.
and third for its score. Mark Gile opened the first with a single and stole second. Bill Yellen brought him home and was the winner of his 14th his 14th RBI in the third when Kent
"The field is in bad condition." Pattin
could easily lose the hope, but you can't
cally blame the team.
"It's unbelievable," Pattin said.
"The ball was on and went back in."
Joe Heeney committed the other two Kansas errors in the game.
The brightest spot for the second game was Shelley's three-run, pinch-hit home. Joe and Jim Heeney were on base when Shelley hit the home run.
"It was a nightmare," Nuez said. "I forgot my glove. It was a day I’ll never forget it."
The Kansas Jayhawks men's tennis team saw their record drop below the 500 mark for the first time this season, as they lost their second match in a row, a 5-4 decision to Northeast Missouri State yesterday.
IN THE SECOND game, the Jayhawks defense came apart as they committed seven errors, five in the first defeat of Nuesi, two in the first immedate lining.
"This was a tough match to lose. It's real easy to get down on yourself when you lose 5-4 back-to-back. We've got to bounce back."
"I thought we played well," Head Coach Randy McGrath said. "It really could have gone either way. If we could have gone either way, then there, we very easily could have won.
KU tennis team loses second straight
Both SWM5 and NEMS are NCAA Division II schools, and some players thought that they took SWM5 too. But Herver, that was not the case yesterday.
The Jayhawks lost to Southwest Missouri State, 5-4, last week, too.
"I'm really glad we have these three matches this weekend," McGraath said. "I think the only way you can improve is by playing a lot of matches. By practicing against the same people, you can only go so far."
The Jayhawks have a busy weekend ahead of them. Tomorrow, they will host Drury at 2:30 p.m. Northwest Missouri State will be the opposition for the team's first game in 1 p.m. Then on Sunday, KU will play Southern Illinois in a 10 a.m. match.
"Even though we've lost two straight, they've both been tough and competitive matches and are going to help us down the road."
Shelley scored on his scarifice飞Yelton's 14 RBI is second on the team. Dick Lewallen has 15.
SANCTUARY
"We beat ourselves against SWMS, but today I just think they outplayed us," freshman Craig Tidwell said.
1401 W. 7th Lawrence, Ks 843-0540
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
RUGBY
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18
A
Exactly one and a half years ago, November 7th, 1980, two people were spotted in a remote location, far, far away from Kansas civilization. Little do they know.
RICHARD SUGG/Karasat
“It’s frustrating, the players hit the ball in the gap and the other player makes the catch. They hit some ropes today.”
A Message to G.A, D.A, S.A, JB, PB, BD, M.F, M.G, JG, DH,
B.H, MH, J.B, JK, M.K, LN, KL, M.R, M.M, GN, G.NK,
P.P, S.R, S.B, P.C, S.S, SS, B.S, JV, M.W, R.W, JW
(other known as Kaule, Davie, Sharon, Jim, Paul, Sarah, Mike, Mark, Jay,
David, Bob, Mariane, Braid, John, Marrina, Lisa, Nancy, Roger, Mark, Mollie,
Greg, Kevin, Paul, Suan, Steve, Pam, Chris, Steve, Sandy, Brandon, Janine,
Mary, Ray, & Jane);
Exactly one and one-half years ago, November 7th, 1980, these two
While the Jayhaws split again, Pattin wasn't as bothered by the loss as he was Tuesday.
KU will run conference play this weekend as Oklahoma travels to Lawrence for a four-game series this weekend. Randy McIntosh and Chris Ackley are Saturday's probable starters.
"Shelley's home run off the bench was good," Pattin said. "I'm tickled for him.
—Only bon a-fide, true to the-core LSRsans need appear. And, B.H. & B.
B., bring your Kazooz - The Piano Man
The Locus: Ye Old Smokehouse on Massachusetts Street
The Password: A private phone call will beam down the password.
LSR
The Coming: April 7th,1982
The Hour: 8:00 PM
"I felt good about the games," Patin said. "Our fielding was shoddy in the second game, but I thought we came back."
Shortstop Jeff Neill applies the tag too late on Missouri Southern's David Rampay in the first game of yesterday's double-header. The Jayhawks and Lions split the
The Hour: 6:00 P.M.
15
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Dealing With That Uneasy Feeling
Learn to:
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April 7, Wednesday
7:00-9:30 p.m.
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GO and CHESS
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Be sure to attend the simultaneous chess Exhibition
8 a.m.-5 p.m., 4th floor Kansas Union
121 Strong Hall, 864-4064
THE EAST-MEETS-WEST TOURNAMENT
SATURDAY, APRIL 3, 1982
The KU Strategy Games Club Announces:
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1
KANSAN
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
Friday, April 2, 1982 Vol. 92, No. 125 USPS 650-640
Athletic department complies with Title IX rules
By BARB EHLI Staff Reporter
The Office of Civil Rights announced Wednesday that the KU athletic department was in compliance with Tile IK. The athletic department earlier had given OCR a plan designed to reduce inequalities between men's and women's athletics.
The OCR began investigating KU in October 1980 after two complaints had been filed.
The OCR summarized its findings in a four-page cover letter dated March 31, sent with a thank you.
Vicki Thomas, University general counsel,
declined to release the report or copies of the
letter but allowed reporters to read the letter.
In 1979-80, female athletes at KU comprised
33.2 percent of all participants in the intercollegiate athletic program, but received only
13.7 percent of the financial aid," the cover letter
"WOMEN RECEIVED an average of $781 per
athlete; men received an average of $2,436 per athlete. The University acknowledges that this was a disproportionate award of aid for the women's program.
"The OCR concludes that the University plan will correct the violation within a reasonable period of time."
The length of the "reasonable period of time" was not defined in the cover letter, but the latest interpretation of Title IX states that the time period cannot exceed five years.
period Game 1A.10 The letter indicates that the University must improve the following areas of women's athletics to be in compliance with Title IX:
- Scheduling of games and practice times
- Travel and per diem allowance
- Equipment and Supplies
- Opportunity to receive coaching and tutoring
* Provision of locker room, practices rooms and
classrooms
- Provision for housing and dining facilities and services
- Publicity
- Equal and effective accommodation of the interests and abilities of students of both sexes
- Publicity
- Recruitment of student athletes
The letter came in response to two suits filed in July and August of 1978 allowing that KU discriminated on the basis of sex in its intercollegiate athletic programs.
If OCR had found that KU was not in compliance with Title IX, the University could have lost about $27 million in federal financial aid it had received.
- Promotion of support services
ANN LEVINSON, a 1900 KU graduate who
announced her desire that her intention had
not been to lose funding for her
"The intent was not to have the funding taken away. The intent was to point out the quality of our training."
eizabeth Banks, associate professor of classics and former board member of the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation, filed a lawsuit against the college out of town and could not be reached for comment.
Del Shankel, acting athletic director, said he had not looked closely at the report, but he thought that because the OCR had accepted the plan KU submitted, it probably was a fair plan.
Levinson said she wasn't completely satisfied with the decision, but she was glad OCR had responded.
responsibly, it's better than I expected because of the present administration," she said. "We know that the education department will still keep tabs on the University."
Levinson said she had filed the suit because of the inequalities she saw in available scholarship money, traveling expenses for women and "virtually every aspect of the program" while she was a member of the field hockey team and a student representative to KUAC.
"I knew what was going on at other schools" she said, and I knew what was going on in the
"It was obvious we were being treated very poorly."
assessing compliance, it measured two
factors, determined whether the
polarity and availability of the
polarity aid availbility.
THE LETTER SAID that OCR examined the availability, quality, benefits, opportunities and treatment provided for both men and women to see if they were equivalent.
athletes was proportional to their rate of participation in athletics.
Secondly, it measured whether athletic positions proportionately available to male and female athletes.
Another section reviewed all intercollegiate programs and examined the 10 factors listed in regulations, plus athletic recruiting and support programs. The programs were found lacking in each of these areas.
"On Feb. 11, 1982, the Office for Civil Rights met with you (Budig) and members of your staff to discuss informally the proposed findings of our investigation and to identify plans the University may already be implementing with respect to the inequalities that were found," the letter said.
Investigators arrived at KU in October 1980 and conducted a four-week on-site investigation, questioning athletic department officials, coaches and athletes.
3-month contraceptive stimulates controversy
KU has been waiting for a response on its status since last spring. Reshuffling OCR and budget cuts had slowed the process.
By ELIZABETH MORGAN Staff Writer
Today a woman can get a shot that prevents pregnancy for three months after it is injected.
But the drug, Depo-Provera, is not as simple as it sounds.
Because of uncertainties about the drug's safety, the Food and Drug Administration has not approved it as a contraceptive. Concerns about doctors who are willing to prescribe it for birth control.
Depro-Provera is made of the hormone progestin. Birth pains are a combination of pain and rigidity in the pelvic area.
One Lawrence physician, Dale Clinton, has chosen to go against the tie and prescribe Depoxy.
Depo-Provera has been approved as a cancer treatment since 1972. Because it is on the market for one use, physicians may use it for another, and the FDA says it is legal for them to do so.
"I'm NOT trying to promote it as a contraceptive. I don't advocate it as being an end-all contraceptive," Clinton said recently. "I do use it."
"He said something to the effect that 'There's this great new drug on the market. If it nee hassle, I'll give you a dose.'"
Sarah, a 26-year-old KU student who asked that her real name not be used, went to Clinton because she had encountered problems keeping on the schedule for taking birth control pills.
The uncertainties about the drug center on some tests that possibly link the drug to cancer, and the lack of evidence for this, are.
Sarah took the Depo-Provera shot. It was easy she simply was injected every three months. She never had to think about birth control between injections and never got pregnant. She told her friends about the "great new drug."
There is no question about its effectiveness.
According to the Upjohn Co., the manufacturer of the drug, the pregnancy rate is 0 to 1.2 per 100 women, and it is at least as effective as the pill
"It is so effective," Clinton states in a note on a bulletin board hanging in his office, "I will
perform a D & C for you without any additional
for (if you do become pregnant)."
A D & C (dilation and curettage) is a technique that removes tissue from the uterus for abortions or during laparotomy.
Although doctors are not doing anything illegal by prescribing Depo-Provera Judy Kraus, a psychiatrist at the University of Druguese with a patient might sue a doctor if there were any problems caused by the drug.
FOR THAT REASON, she said, physicians may avoid prescribing it.
"You would hold and suspect they're not going to put their reputation on the line," Kraus said.
Several Lawrence gynecologists said that they did not use Depo-Provera because they feared it would cause side effects.
"Yes, I do take risks," Clinton said when asked about possible mall practice suits.
However, a Topeka attorney, Janet Smith, said it would be difficult for a woman to win such a case.
"A woman could sue because anything that is physically different about her because of the drug," Smith said. "But the problem is linking the cause."
And, as Clinton said, "All of the complaints can't be attributed to the medications."
can't be attribuited to the medicaten
Smith said. "Without consistent evidence ...
Smith said. "Without consistent evidence ... you wouldn't have much luck in a court of law." And lack of consistent evidence could be a problem with Deo-Provera.
There is no conclusive evidence that Depo-Provera is a cause of cancer. The FDA first denied it approval as a birth control method because of studies that showed beagle dogs tended to develop mammary tumors when given Depo-Provera. It was later discovered that beagles are easily susceptible to mammary tumors.
Still, according to former FDA commissioner Donald Kennedy, "no contraceptives currently approved for marketing have shown a similar carcinogenic potential in the beagle assay."
Rhesus monkeys are were tested, but when some of the monkeys developed tumors of the uterus, critics pointed out that monkeys were given relatively high levels of the *deny*
hitively high quality
See CONTRACEPTIVE page 5
A
A four-foot square block of street collapsed from erosion at Jayhawk Blvd. and Sunnyside St. yester day morning leaving a chuckhole over a foot deep.
KU professors query Reagan's defense stance
By DEBBIE DOUGLASS
Staff Reporter
In a March 31 news conference, President Reagan ruled out the possibility of freezing the U.S. defense buildin.
"I think a freeze now would not only be disadvantageous—in fact dangerous to use with them in that position—but I believe it would also militate against any negotiations for reductions. There would be no incentive for them to meet with us and reduce arsenals."
"The truth of the matter is, on balance the Soviet Union does have a definite margin of superiority, enough so there is risk," Reagan said.
"My most serious objection, I believe, is that what he said is based on an utterly false premise—the premise that the only way to stop the army is to creep our part of the arm race," Mikkelson said.
Gerald Mikkelson, chairman of the KU Slavic department and associate professor of Slavic languages and literature, said that President Reagan's statute had been too far behind. The measure would not ahead of us militarily.
But two KU authorities in Soviet affairs say that the increased defense spending that Reagan is proposing is not the way to deal with the Soviets. Instead, there should be more emphasis on negotiating limitations of existing arms, they said.
NORMAN SAUL, KU professor of history and of Soviet and East European Studies, said, "It is very debatable whether the Soviets have superiority or not. What is superiority when
"the exact opposite is true. The only way to stop it is for us to have negotiation and agreements with the Soviets on limiting and reducing arms."
4. woud still seek all opportunities for negotiations, and I'm not sure that has been done," he said. "The more negotiations there are, the more opportunities there are for agreements."
He went there to do research on Puskink and Soviet literature and as the resident director for a semester Russian Language Program. He has also gone to the Soviet Union to negotiate for some KUI cultural and educational exchanges, but he has not Mikkelson will take two trips to the Soviet Union.
He said that Reagan's request for an increased defense budget was dangerous, and that he thought the Soviets would increase their military spending just to try to keep ahead.
dealing with nuclear powers that have the capability of mass distraction for both sides?$^2$
Mikkelson and Saul both have had personal contact with people in the Soviet Union.
Saul was in the Soviet Union in 1973 and in 1974
in search Russian-American relations in the
1980s.
both professors agreed that if the United States centered its attention on military build up and did not seriously communicate to the Soviet Union that it was interested in negotiating arms control, then the Soviets would probably respond by continuing armed race or a military confrontation.
HE HAS TALKED to many Soviet historians of American history and international relations.
Mikkelson has been to the Soviet Union eight times from 1966 to 1978.
Vladimir Mikoyan, assistant to the Soviet Embassy press secretary, Washington, D.C., said, "Any new round of arms race would increase the war effort and greatly increase the danger of another war."
Soviets think that the continuing arms race will be dangerous.
Mikoyam said that if the United States refused to negotiate, "we will not be sitting quietly doing so."
Saul said that if the Soviets thought that U.S. defense spending posed a military threat, they would react by building up their own troops and using them down or by taking some dinomatic action.
The Soviets see a large U.S. defense budget as an attempt by the United States to become the
"THE SOVIET UNION could emerge as a much more military state than it is now," he said, "but it is also possible that they won't be able to afford a military increase.
"In fact, they might not even be able to afford what they have now, and economic pressures could force them to back down from the war. But the government that they're made to military development.
He said that a U.S. military build up would not make the Soviets want to negotiate.
"We are not going to make the Soviets bow
atmositically by building up militarily
here."
Gregory Guroff, chief for Soviet and East European Research, U.S. International Communication Agency, Washington, D.C., said the US military was very serious about building new weapons.
"What makes it a very dangerous world, I think, is that the perceptions which the Soviets have of the new determination in the United States to build weapons is not counterbalanced yet by any perception that we are indeed serious about arms control negotiation." Guroff said.
He said the Soviets tended to interpret the American military buildup as more of a desire to wage economic warfare on the Soviet Union than a desire to push the button.
Mikkelson said he thought some U.S. policymakers were convinced that if the United
States forced the Soviet Union to continue in the arms race, the soviet economy would collapse, and the United States would emerge as superior.
"THEIS THEORY carries the attendant risk of a nuclear exchange at any moment," he said, "because the Soviets will not be brought to their knees."
Mikkelsen also said he thought the U.S. military buildup would convince the Soviet leaders that they were faced with an immediate, overwhelming military threat.
And, he said, "it will negate all the progress that has been made over the past 25 and 30 years of persuading, on a people-to-people level, that there is a way of getting along with each other, of having cultural and educational exchanges, of trading with each other."
Guroff said he thought Soviets perceived themselves as responding defensively to the U.S. threat.
"It you live in a society where the aggressive actions of one society, the United States in this case, are constantly portrayed to you, and the information about what your own society does is almost non-existent," Guroff said. "it is very difficult to come away with the impression that there is a kind of interactive political system in the world.
But, he said, the Soviets have moved in recent years into other areas of the world and are also moving toward the United States.
"THEY COME AWAY much more inclined to see themselves as responding defensively to their own dangers."
According to Mikkelson, the Soviets nevertheless have a tremendous sense of military and economic inferiority.
Guroff agreed.
Saiul said that throughout their history, Soviets usually had been passive, responding to the invaders. But this is not the case.
See SOVIET page 5
Staff Reporter
By ANNE CALOVICH
Prof says faculty can't lead alone
It will be impossible for the University of Kansas to ever reach its potential if the administration does not take a leadership role, Richard Cole, vice president of the Kansas branch of the AAUP, said at the annual meeting last night.
Cole, professor of philosophy, told about 25 members of the AUAP that KU would not reach its potential as long the administration in leadership must come from the faculty alone.
"If leadership doesn't come from the governance and the administration, it won't come." he
He likened departments to kingdoms and fiefdoms, where there are meetings of chairmen, and which each department guards its own interests without providing needed leadership.
Cole said that the three-year terms faculty members served on committees provided them with only enough time to familiarize themselves with the system and then they had to bow out. For example, the faculty now working on the report of the Commission on the Improvement of Undergraduate Education will all be gone in three years, he said.
"There is not a continual body with a memory capable of undertaking long-term projects because the governance destructs itself every three years," Cole said.
"In the last 15 years, there has been no speech by an administrator that spells out what needs to be done to reach excellence. The goal of the organization was to endure, but it was made without specifics."
Chancelor Gene A. Budd said laint August that he wanted to make KU one of the top 10 public universities.
He said the faculty members had been infected by the urgency the administration showed in dealing with decreasing enrollments and departments. Faculty are too concerned with their own budgeting and with recruiting students away from each other, he said.
Cole said that much of the potential to improve the University was already here, but went untapped, as departments followed the administration's example of committees galore.
The departments have become autonomous, he said, "with a responsibility each to itself without a responsibility to the interest of the University as a whole."
"The potential is not tapped, but is frittered away into useless committee meetings. AAUP meetings, departments, schools," he said. "There are literally more committeees than faculty here. A lot of it is spent in wasteful, useless committee work."
Weather
MKU
It will be cloudy today with a chance of thunderstorms and an expected high temperature around 70, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka. Tonight it will be cool with lows in the upper 38s. Tomorrow will be cloudy with highs in the low to mid-60s.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, April 2, 1982
News Briefs From United Press International
Workers clear unsafe snow after California avalanches
SQUAW VALLEY, Calif.—Rescue workers using dynamite and heavy snowplows yesterday cleared tons of unstable snow from a ski resort where the worst of a series of Sierra Nevada avalanches killed three people and left 11 others missing.
Four avalanches, triggered by nearly 13 feet of new snow dropped since Sunday by the most powerful spring blizzard in a generation, rolled Wednesday into the popular resorts of Alpine Meadows and Squaw Valley, site of the 1980 Winter Ovimics.
At Alpine Meadows, walls of snow nearly a mile-wide rolled through an area known as Beaver Bowl, uprooting an A-frame structure, pushing it into the main ski lodge and partially burying a parking lot. Three bodies were found on the ground, officials said 11 people were missing and feared trapped under the snow.
The National Weather Service said 155 inches of new snow fell on the Sierra Nevada between Sunday and Wednesday night. Both main highways from California into Nevada were closed, and hundreds of cross country roads were closed. A total of 292 warmer warnings were posted for the Lake Tahoe Basin and the surrounding area.
YAMIT. Israeli-Occupied Sinai—Israeli soldiers and squatters opposed to the Sinai National Liberation Mission in Lebanon, the Parliament of Israel, and the Islamic State for seizing territory and laying the groundwork for their reclamation.
Sinai withdrawal causes skirmish
Israel's Army Radio said two navy gunboats stopped five boats loaded with 70 members of the movement to stop the withdrawal from Sinai as they approached the border.
The final passage of the compensation bill came just four hours after the Israeli army sealed Northern Sinai in preparation for the return of the strategic region to Egypt under the 1979 peace treaty between the two nations.
The bill gives the 1,400 families who settled Yamit and its surrounding farming settlements almost a decade ago $250 million to resettle inside
Junta leader vows to keep office
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador-Junta President Jose Napoleon Duarte vowed yesterday to hold on to the presidency "if the people want me" and warned rightist foes that U.S. support could end if his reforms were dismantled.
"Do you think the U.S. Congress would approve aid for a kind of government that goes on back all the reforms made in the past two years?" Duarte
A top official of El Salvador's major right-wing party said yesterday that the ruling Christian Democrats could join a new rightist government if they were given more power.
The offer was extended by a high-ranking politician and official of the republican ballot and form the next government. That is expected to lead a Republican bid and form the next government.
Although the Christian Democrats were the biggest vote-getters in Sunday's elections for a constituent assembly, five right-wing parties announced plans to form a coalition that would give them control of the 60-seat assembly.
Bradv allowed help on medical bills
WASHINGTON—Congress passed legislation yesterday to allow White House Press Secretary James Brady to accept contributions to help defray medical expenses resulting from the wounds he suffered in the attempt on President Reagan's life last March 30.
The law forbids federal employees from accepting any remuneration from sources outside government or from organizations that provide an exemption for compensation found in an assassination attempt.
Brady, who spent eight months in the hospital recovering from a head wound and who still faces a lengthy rehabilitation process, was admitted to his home after surgery.
Officials at the hospital said that no surgery was planned for treatment of an inflamed vein in Brady's left leg, but that he was receiving medication.
Brady's ailment was listed as thrombophlebitis, an irritation of a vein caused by the formation of a blood clot, and he was being treated with blood-thinners.
Senate committee OKs defense bill
WASHINGTON - The Senate Armed Services Committee yesterday gave President Reagan most of what he wanted for his $183.4 billion weapons and military manpower bill, but cut out a new Army helicopter and stopped interim deployment of the new MX missile in vulnerable existing silos.
The committee announced approval of a $180.2 billion defense authorization bill that includes the Pentagon's weapons and the committee's
That is $3.2 billion less than Reagan had requested, but it includes nearly $4.6 billion for the production of the first seven B-1 bombers. $6.79 billion for two new Nimitz-class nuclear carriers and money for the reactivation of two battleships.
Polish newspaper criticizes regime
WARSAW, Poland - In a series of letters that took observers by surprise, a government newspaper yesterday printed the first criticism of the regime in which it was posted.
The letters, which also defended the now-banned Solidarity labor union against charges that it was responsible for Poland's economic plight, applauded a speech by Mr. Peskin, president of the
One of the letters hunchly accused the government of driving Poland to the bankruptcy.
Count the young labor movement . . . bear the responsibility for the fact that the (Communist) Party and State administration brought the country to the brink of the greatest economic and political crisis in Polish history?" asked one letter from Mieczsław Lange, Warsaw worker.
Brezhnev's health still a mystery
MOSCOW—The mystery over President Leonid Breznev's health deepened yesterday with a Communist Party spokesman refusing to confirm or deny reports from Soviet sources that the 75-year-old Kremlin leader was hospitalized.
A spokesman for the International Information Department of the Communist Party Central Committee said only, "No comment. Nothing more
Brezhev has not been seen in public since March 25, when he returned from a trip to Tashkent that left him obviously fatigued.
Soviet sources said Breznykh had been hospitalized, but they added they did not know whether he was simply resting after a recent round of apeches that began in Ukraine.
Concern about Breznev's health first increased when Soviet television failed to broadcast coverage of his return to Moscow from Tashkent last year.
Corrections
Because of a reporting error, Wednesday's Kansan incorrectly stated the method of transmission for the Telenet program. The Telenet program uses public address speakers and telephones to transmit educational courses at 33 Kansas locations. The Kansan regrets the error.
Because of incorrect information given to a reporter, yesterday's Kansan said that KU golfer Bridger Demo won the Kansas State 5-4 Championship and was named National Outdoor Athlete.
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University Daily Kansan, April 2, 1982
Page 3
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Page 4
Opinion
University Daily Kansan, April 2, 1982
A natural response
Lawrence residents may soon have a chance to join the growing national opposition to the nuclear arms build up.
This week, the Lawrence City Commission agreed to discuss the possibility of including a nuclear freeze referendum on the May 11 special election ballot.
Six state legislatures and hundreds of towns and cities across the country have already approved similar proposals, calling for a U.S.-Soviet moratorium on nuclear weapons.
One commissioner, Don Binnis, opposed the idea, calling it a waste of time. He said such action was under the jurisdiction of the federal government.
Binns is partly right. National defense is the responsibility of the federal government.
But no law requires the federal government to insulate itself from the opinion of
people in towns, cities or states. And nothing prohibits those people from relaying that opinion to federal officials.
The referendum movement has already made an impact on Washington. Congressmen are beginning to respond to the steadily increasing call for nuclear weapons control.
Earlier this week, Rep. Patricia Schroeder, D-Colo., said, "I think the remarkable thing is that the American people have taken up the debate and we have followed."
Remarkable, yes, and certainly not a waste of time.
Politicians and policymakers would not be the only ones affected by nuclear destruction. It is only natural that Americans should join together to voice their opposition to the threat posed by nuclear proliferation.
Purpose of blue jeans day to increase understanding
Students who wrapped, zipped and snapped the dem smug around their hind-ends this morning may receive a few curious glances they aren't expecting. Blue jeans are going to bring attention today, extra notice many people may not want. Today has been declared "Wear blue jeans if you're gay" by Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas.
The blue jeans theme is the fifth daily part of Gay Awareness Week, a project that may be GLSOK's most responsibly organized series of events in several years. A well-publicized jeans day hasn't been held on KU's campus since 1977.
Tonight, GLSOK will sponsor a woman's dance at the Satellite Union. Earlier in the week, GLSOK sponsored events such as a lecture on gay people and religion, a free, documentary film on prejudice against homosexuals, a panel of student speakers and an entertainment package of dinner and dancine downtown.
A picnic with free beer is scheduled for tomorrow, and on Sunday, a car pool will travel to services at the Metropolitan Community Center (MCN) in a denomination that is supportive of gray people.
GLSOK, a group that funds itself without money from student fees, can quietly offer its
JEFF THOMAS
"We're trying to promote the understanding and acceptance of gay people," with Gay Awareness Week, Joe Baldwin, a GLSOK co-director, said.
movies and speakers on campus at night and only a smattering of students will notice. Today, however, something else is happening. Tagging blue jeans with labels that say "gay" is bound to catch the attention of a great number of students—and anger many.
Yet cuffing the week with a blue jeans day might have exactly the opposite influence. Forcing students to associate the campus uniform with homosexuality might jeopardize any progress GLSOK has made this week. Many surprised students may not have discovered the new meaning of their jeans until they arrived on campus today, dressed as women they may have different tastes. Then taken on the roles they differed in both groups are probably complaining that it's wrong for gay people to force others to change how they dress.
When interviewed earlier this week, GLSOK leaders easily admitted that the blue jeans day would upset students. In any effort like Awareness Week, "There's no way we can wear blue jeans," said a member of the GLSLOK board of directors, said. "The whole point is to get a reaction."
And as far as finances would allow, GLSOK bought the promotion for the strongest possible campus reaction. Advertisements appeared daily in the University Daily Kansen this week. About 400 filers describing the week's activities were distributed on jeans day alone were distributed on campus.
The first priority for jeans day seems to be to
There is reason behind GLSOK's emotional strategy. The group has a hope for KU students, and a core working group of about 15 students helped the success of a month's preparation on it.
spark intense, personal emotions, even if those are feelings against a rude people.
The students who are irritated with jeans day are upset by more than just being uncomfortable in their usual clothes. Much of them are scared from the fear of others thinking they are day.
And that's exactly the feeling jeans day is supposed to arouse.
A first step to gaining an understanding of people who are different from ourselves is to try on their positions in life for awhile. If we could slip into the skin of another race, be the passenger in a body of the opposite sex, or try to live in an inner-city ghetto, we'd return to life more often or come up with deeper changed—and probably treat people differently in the future.
Jeans day is an effort to let us sample someone else's feelings, to make their paranoia ours. Today we're supposed to be ticked-off, in classes helplessly trusted at the chance of being fired. We feel the need of all us for something out of our control. Feel the part of the suspect and feel jilted.
Fortunately, the discomfort for straight students will end today after they leave campus. Yet other students won't be able to drop their anger in the hamster tone. As long as people are not numbered of straight people burn, gay people are going to be made to feel that they are less.
So goes a central meaning of blue jeans day. It might be a long line of thought to ask neterosexuals, some who have never yet given homosexuality deliberate thought, to go to school and may be forced to expect many students to think beyond their first "negative reactions."
Apparently, GLSOK is a group with more than usual faith in KU students as thinking creatures. As a first, GLSOK expects the gut reactions. But the group is also betting that their straight classmates will cool and think about their feelings.
"We're hoping that they might stop to think about what it must be like for others to love with us."
KU's gay leaders know their plan is hardly guaranteed to succeed with our student body. If GLSOK loses the gamble, the organization could set back the image of gay people further with a single day's activity than the other six days could have advanced student sympathy.
As University students, we're often told that we should be able to think on our own. But how often does a student organization risk its success on the assumption that students behave as intellectual beings? Examples don't flood the mind.
KANSAN
GLSOK's methods today may not be the most courteous ones. But inconvenience is too limp of an excuse to postpone working a bit on our compassion. And, in some sense, the gay organization's strategy pays us a compliment. Thanks to some KU students—who happen to have compassion—we are feeling our emotions with reason, we are being offered support for a day. And, perhaps, some people will even wear a suit of enlightened thinking for some time to come.
The University Daily
USS (8546) *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 and $1 for six months to the $27 year in Douglas County and $18 for six months to the $54 year outside the county. Student postmaster sends changes of address to the University Daily Kansas Flickr, Hint of the University of Kansas
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...AND NOW, IN THE CATEGORY OF BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR OF A MILITARY JUNTA, THE ENVELOPE, PLEASE...
THE Academy Awards
Pot Shots
Harriet Stratemeyer Adams, 89, died of a heart attack last Saturday night.
Not everyone will recognize her name, but most people have heard of her series of Nancy Drew, Hardy Boys, Bobsbey Twins and Tom Swift Jr. books.
It used to be a sign of distinction among the
Johnane Walz
girls in my neighborhood to have the most Nancy Drew books. I had 59
Even in grade-school, I knew they weren't good literature. But they were grown-up.
One of the best moments so far this spring was walking by Wescoe Hall and hearing "Let's Groove" by Earth, Wind and Fire out of a big portable radio. It was a sunny, cloudless day, and the music was a wonderful accompaniment.
"You're old enough for these, now," she said, pointing out their yellow spines in a book.
The big portabt radios—often so large they
Nancy was an exciting role-model for little girls from the 1930s to the present, a super sleuth who chased and caught crooks, and a teacher who helped for a girl to be so intelligent and adventurous.
Although there were no set rules for when you became too old for the books, one by one my friends grew up and sold or gave away collections to littler girls in the neighborhood.
I held onto mine until high school, when I boxed them up and gave them to a little girl I baby-sat for, repeating the magic words to "Here, you're old enough for these, now."
I'm having problems coping with what right now seems like a foreign concept.
That is—the fact that spring break has ended.
Sure, I've been in Lawrence for nearly two weeks now, but I'm doing little more than a few minutes.
Dan Terelia
could double as coffee tables—are very nice!
spill-resistant devices with handles,
spiral players with headphones.
Both got their start in New York, where both are appropriate. The big radios perfectly match the city's pulse. The headsets are salvation when the subway's brakes screech so intensely that you think your head is splitting.
But what is appropriate in New York can be ludicrous in Lawrence.
The headphone sets are narcissistic. Plug in and tune out. The MeGeneration extended.
The big box is OK. Although it can be the pits if a person plays something you hate, at least it doesn't hurt.
It is a shame to miss out on spring's sounds—the winds blowing, birds chirping, evangelists exherting. Besides, you just might hear a good tune as you walk to class.
Dan Bexler
last two weeks have been everything short of productive. (If you don't believe me, ask my help.)
Being unproductive is scary. At first, I feel tremendous guilt as all the responsibilities of a job are overwhelming.
But somehow, as the evenings drag on and I pass time in a local pub poised in front of a building with a sign that says
I've also become very defensive about this sudden affection. As I continue to be questioned about my recent lifestyle, I find myself snapping back in two ways; either with a resounding "I'm still on vacation," or an indignant "Go to hell world, I'm a senior."
But I think I have finally come to face reality and hereby declare that my vacation
Well, let me qualify that. It's over after this weekend!
Sun religion inspired by space study
One cannot help but feel proud and special at the sight of the shuttle and its spider arm, a floating Star Wars-like space carriage, as it tends to its tasks of experimentation. We can watch it right there on the TV, in living color, as above us man extends himself further, pushing into this huge frontier we are responsible for called space exploration.
I grew up with space. I plastered my bedroom with NASA posters and I built mod rockets.
W.J. ANDREWS
bought enough balsa wood in my five-year fad to build a raft that could float you to Guam.
I remember a summer vacation when I was the only one who didn't get sunburned because I was glued to the boob tube inside, watching the first lunar landing.
But I could glance on the screened porch door and see the ever present globe over the ocean. And Florida was the farthest I had ever been to. Florida was not a world, but a world world was, and just as suddenly it not smaller.
It was July 20, 1989, and I was watching the Vietnam war on the news, and then, right after, 21 diagonal inches of Neal Armstrong walking on the Moon.
Armstrong's comment upon his first lunar star, "... a giant leap for mankind," was not kibbits. Population experts predict drastic overpopulation as early as 1955, and unless growth reduces, it appears our destiny will have to face the solar system—barring nuclear destruction.
In fact, contemporary philosophers have recently outlined a cosmology that reinterprets the standard Copernican principle—which asserts that the earth is not the center of the universe. But as we learned from our universe is not the reason behind our existence, but that we are the reason there is a universe.
"Sav what?"
Let me put it this way; it's similar to the old one if we falling in, makes any sound if no one is there.
To understand this principle, the anthropic principle, you first must know about the cosmological and perfect cosmological principles. The former adds to the Copernican theory the stipulation that no position in the universe holds privileged status, and the perfect principle applies homogeneity to the universe-establishing uniformity in both time and space.
The anthropic principle goes even further and theorizes the universe as a labyrinth of waveforms in which the only reality is that which is subject to observation.
The philosophy suggests that whenever an event need take place, the event that will contribute most to the delivery of an observer will occur.
The first event was the evolution of an isotropic universe with small scale clustering. An isotropic universe is one in which the escape and recessional velocities are equal, the only design that would allow the small scale star clustering needed to give birth to our unique sun.
Our sun is a main sequence star, the best kind. These stars are the stable burning type, where the energy liberated by thermonuclear fission is balanced with the forces of gravitational attraction.
Within the main sequence group, our sun sits amazingly in the balance between the short-lived
and hot, blue giants, and the long-living but cool, red dwarfs. Only our rare form of sun exhibits both adequate longevity and heat to support a habitable region.
In these unique circumstances, conditions allow water to take its liquid state. And we all know that we'd be sunk without water. Another event favoring the observer.
This also says much about the evolution of life. For its possible the motivations behind the physical evolution of the universe are also behind the biological evolution of man.
The anthropic philosophers want to take the next step and suggest a close contact respon-
sibility.
The universe continually chooses in favor of an observer so that it can take on reality—reality being that which is observed—and the observer being what is not observed—i.e. hence giving it reality. A symbolism of essence.
With this in mind it is no surprise to hear that quite a few forecasters are predicting a new religion to develop around the end of the century, in which the central belief is in our unique sun.
And as the world gets bigger and bigger, and thereby smaller, maybe our necessity to branch out to space in search of habitual regions, will make us appreciate our sun more.
For many of us may find ourselves in future shuttles, rock-hopping around the solar system. We will have a new home on some remodeled asteroid, living that we dreamed of, pushing out the new frontier.
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.
cool, habitrs
iions
we all
other
life.
the
also
the
pon-
of an
anlylty
erverance
that
new
bury,
and
which
will
ure
me
ome
of.
University Daily Kansan, April 2, 1982
Page 5
Soviet
From page 1
"It is easy for those of us who have lived in the Soviet Union and talked to each other and seen them, to say that the Soviets in many ways act out of insecurity," he said.
"It is very hard for those who do not know much about the Soviets, seeing all these guns being produced, to say, 'Are they insecure?' I must understand that these factors exist side by side."
The increase in Soviet military ac-complishments, he said, had made the Soviets more able to
But at the same time it has made them equally insecure, he said, because they find they have an adversary relationship with every other major power in the world.
Mikkelsen said this was because the United States always had an aggressive stance against the Communist ideology of the Soviet Union. He said that part of the Soviet military buildup was a response to the threats that Soviets perceived coming from the United States.
Except for a brief period during World War I, the United States has generally had an adverse relationship with the Soviet Union since the Bolshevik Revolution in 1917.
BUT INSECURITY about the United States is not the only reason for Soviets increasing their
nuclear weapons.
Mikkelson said Soviet expansionism was also involved. He said the Soviet's ambition was to expand Russia's territory and control.
But, he said, "I think, that if we made a sincere initiative to negotiate arms limitation and reduction, we would get a positive response from the Soviets."
"There is no government in the world that behaves on a high moral plane all the time, and yet those governments have to continue talking to each other, trading with each other and having contact with each other, or else they'll be at each other 'a throats.'"
"But that doesn't mean they would start all the way down how we want them to behave all the way around the world."
Saul said that even if the Soviets act in a way that would violate international law, the United States should still continue to take the United States' position.
"I think that even though things happen like Afghanistan or Poland, that tend to color or make negotiations difficult," he said, "we should not close up show diplomatically.
"I think the better alternative is to negotiate,
but I think we need to be careful and careful."
talking about the situation in Poland, the other human rights violations within the Soviet Union and the Soviet presence in other parts of the world. The Soviets expect us to do that."
"I don't think that we should back out of
Mikoyam said the Soviets were willing to neotiate.
"At present, the objective of curbing the arms race has gained special significance and urgency," he said, "because rapid and profound changes in military strategy in the development of military technology.
Qualitatively, there are new types of weapons-types of weapons that may make control over them and also agreed limitation extremely difficult if not impossible to establish.
"The Soviet Union is for even, stable relations with the United States, and if certain problems still arise when it attaches itself to the conference table, without resorting to threats or attempts to
pressure politically or militarily, especially those who arise that have a direct bearing on war and peace.
Guroff said the United States and the Soviet Union are in a good position to communicate more clearly with each other.
"The critical question now is that we could with the Soviets, not our credibility for building weapons, but our credibility for negotiating limitation," he said.
Contraceptive
"We must continually, in a very complicated world, say to ourselves every time we talk about foreign policy. 'There are real people on the other side of this fence.'
"These are not robot forces acting because they are possessed by the devil. They like to think of themselves as acting for the good of their people and acting out of their own convictions, however much we may disagree and dispute with them."
From page 1
THE PACKAGE insert, a pamphlet that lists warnings and usage and is enclosed with every drug, states for Depa-Provera: "The relevance of Depa-Provera with respect to humans has not been established."
According to Jerry Levy, a Topека malpractice attorney, the package insert could be used as evidence in malpractice suits concerning the use of the drug.
After taking a Depo-Provera shot, Sarah began to gain weight and lose interest in sex. She also began to wonder why her friends did not already know about the drug.
Women often cease menstruating for several months and sometimes for more than a year
After two years on Depo-Provera, with a weight gain of 65 pounds (which she attributes to the drug) and a cessation of menstruation, she read in "MS Guide to Women's Health" about the side effects of Depo-Provera. The book said that there were studies to indicate it might be linked to cancer and that it had not been approved by the FDA.
when taking Depo-Provera. Doctors say that although this is not serious, it does often worry the patient.
Jack Scholl, a Hutchinson gynecologist, said it "might be difficult for the doctors and patient to know if there is another reason" for menstruation stopping.
Clinton has used Depo-Provera as a birth control for several years, he said.
LAST YEAR, Clinton began giving patients using Depo-Prova a letter which gives information on the drug. It includes a warning about irregular menstruation and warnings which also apply to control pills, including risks of vascular accidents and fetal deformities.
"In the very unlikely event that you do become pregnant while using Depo-Provera, the pregnancy should be terminated," one section reads.
It does not mention weight gain, depression, headaches or loss of sex drive. These also are associated with the pill, according to the package inserts for both drugs.
In the letter, Clinton states that Depo-Prova is also given an contraceptive at the University of Chicago.
Med Center, said that although "there may be extenuation circumstances" when it is used, Provera-Preva is not "a standard method of birth control," Med Center, and that no one "mottually uses it."
But Sterling Williams, a gynecologist at the
Clinton said Depo-Provera was not an experimental drug, but other doctors in Lawrence said they chose not to use it because of fear of malpractice suits, the irregular menstruation it sometimes caused and because they did believe it was experimental.
"ITS NOT REALLY a dangerous drug," stresses the nurse. "It is not an acceptable means of birth control."
R. A. Schweiger, a gynecologist at Watkins Hospital, said it was not used as a contraceptive there because the FDA has not approved it and creates a lot of menstrual prequalifications."
Clinton said it hadn't been approved because of politics. He said that birth control pill manufacturers had pressured the FDA not to approve it because the manufacturers would lose business if Depo-Provera was approved as a contraceptive.
George Kenter, FDA spokesman, said that
various organizations took opposing positions on the druid.
"Many women's groups agree with us, and many don't agree with us," he said.
ONE OF THE groups wary of the drug is the River City Women's Health Collective.
The collective, a Student Senate-funded organization that collects and distributes information on women's health issues, warned of side effects in a newsletter published last year.
Gail Boaill, a member of the collective, said that at this point the collective's position was that it "wants women to be more informed than they are" about the drug.
She said the collective was in the process of collecting information about the drug.
One Kansas City women's organization,
Women Organizing Women, is planning a demonstration May 1 in front of Ujohn's Kansas
Council. The event will be used by Depo-
Proversa in Third World countries.
More than 60 other countries have approved Depo-Provera as a contraceptive. It has been used in clinical studies in the United States since 1967.
Depo-Provera is manufactured by Upjohn's Belgian subsidiary for foreign markets, over
wich the FDA has no control. Although this concerns some consumer groups, former FDA commissioner Kennedy said that the "benefit-risk considerations may not be the same in other
According to Clinton, Depo-Provera is used in the United States than it is in for its approved use.
In a September letter to the Lawrence Journal-World, Clinton wrote, "There has never been any evidence that it is dangerous or that it is unsuitable as a contraceptive. It is, in fact, probably the best state-of-the-art contraceptive today in terms of safety and effectiveness."
Sarah still disagrees.
She said she considered taking action against Clinton, but believed it would be "too long and drawn out." She said she did not feel comfortable to bring people about the problems she exercised with.
(part 2)
"in certain ways I want to forget it," she said.
"I'll just make sure there were more wagers (taking action),"
"so I won't take action."
"I thought I was trusting somebody. I thought I was being careful. I should have asked a lot more questions."
2nd Anniversary
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Page 6 University Daily Kansan, April 2, 1982
Dancer's dream comes true; Kaw Valley group performs
By LISA GUTIERREZ
Staff Reporter
When Theresa Mertes, Prairie Village sophomore, was younger, she wanted to dance. Her parents thought she was going through a stage.
But when her in ninth birthday rolled around, she pressed the choice of playing in the school band or on a choir.
Theresa chose the dance lessons and this weekend, she will once again prove to her parents that it wasn't merely a stage she was going through—because she'll be dancing on one.
Mertes will be performing with the Kaw Valley Dance Theater when it presents its spring performance Friday, April 2 and 3 at West Juniper High auditorium, Harvard and Crestline.
"When you start in the 6th grade, you're kind of a late bloomer," Mertes said recently. "Dancers usually get started when they're three years old."
LAST BLOOMER OR NOT. Mertes has been dancing with the ballet and modern dance troupes throughout the city.
"I wanted more ballet than KU had to offer."
she said, "KU wants me more elegant and modern."
Mertes said she wasn't really nervous when she tried out for the dance troupe.
They were held just like regular ballet class. "she said
"Except we had numbers pinned to our chests." she added
One of the three newest members of the dance theater, Mertes said the first, uncomfortable feelings of being the new kid on stage have disappeared.
"It takes a little bit of biting used to, but I feel much more comfortable now," she said.
DURING THIS WEEKEND's performance, Mertes will dance in three of the theatre's six presentations: "Lebleseller ballet," a ballet by the choreographer Tina Broussard; "Juliana," a comic ballet set to rattle piano.
The other three presentations include "In-Tu",
a modern dance with a synthesizer; "Blurgess
Suite", a modern dance; and "Deflections", a
modern dance with jazz music.
The program features the works of Lawrence comosser Rarr Kurt, Kurt Sigmon and Dave
Hosek. Choreography is by Kristin Benjamin,
Elizabeth Sharon and Willie Lenoir.
Mertes said the troop began practice for the soring program right after Christmas break.
"We been practicing or twice a week," Mrs. said. "But this week it's once or two times."
ALTHOUGH THIS would not be Mertes' first performance with the Kaw Valley Dance Theatre, performing with them in their fall presentation and recent production of the show, she said she still experiences a small amount of anxiety when she performs in public.
"It's scary. With acting, you're afraid you'll forget the lines," she said.
"But in ballet, you can, number one, just as easily forget the steps or, number two, you can
“It’s fun once you get up there, though,” she said.
The Kaw Valley Theater's performances will be Friday at 8 p.m. and Saturday at 3 p.m. for senior citizens, for senior citizen students, $2.50 and for children. $1 tickets will be available at the door.
Elderly enjoy center's varied classes
By CATHERINE BEHAN
Staff Writer
The students painstakingly pushed their pants to form the intricate shapes of the pahana.
the instructor, Wayne DeQuain, was not teaching his students the rudiments of curving, but rather the serifs and parallel lines of the ancient form of printing: calligraphy. And his students were not first graders, but 16 area residents who were at least 60 years old.
The calligraphy class is just one of 12 craft classes and services offered to older residents by the Douglas County Council on Aging, 745 Vermont. The services and craft classes are available free of charge to anyone over the age of 60 and their spouses.
"I's great." Catherine Ward, Route 1, said.
"It really gets you out and out mixing with people your own age. It gives you companionship and especially when they all are grown.
"I don't know what I'd do without it."
Companionship is just one of the goals of the services the center provides. Grady Tardbutton, information and referral coordinator, said other members of the community dependence, health and mobility of county residents.
The majority of the senior citizens who frequent the center are not in nursing homes, Tarbutton said, but those who do live in a nursing home provide information on problems they might be having.
"We do casework for people who have lots of
problem," Tarbuton said. "We can help people with questions about Medicare or Medicaid or other health care options."
"They can't sue somebody for free, for instance," he said.
The center provides free legal advice about questions such as last will and testaments, Tarbutton said. The center will provide free long as the service is not fee-generating.
The center also has referral service that can send an elderly person to the right agency if he has a particular problem. Trained Internal Revenue Service volunteers answer questions about income.
If an elderly person has problems getting to the center, to a doctor or to a grocery store, the center provides a bus called "Bus 62" that runs five days a week. One of the most important trips takes the residents to places where free meals are served in the congregate meal program.
This program provides for socializing, entertainment and nutritional meals at a noon in four locations, five days a week. The food is prepared by volunteers in Kansas Union and delivered to the meal sites.
"One hundred and sixty are served each day and 17 meals are home delivered." Tarbutton
Many people depend on these meals, he said, but budget cuts proposed by the Reagan administration could somewhat cut this and other services. The center is funded primarily through a Douglas County mill levy, and partially by the federal government, donations and grants.
Although agencies funded primarily through the federal government will suffer the most from the proposed cuts, Tarbutton said the proposed 24 percent cuts could make things difficult.
"We couldn't do half the things without the volunteers, he said.
Probably, though, people like Ward will be able to continue learning calligraphy, basket weaving, sewing and enameling, as well as help with the special problems of the aging.
The 16 students paid close attention to their teacher, and explained just how easy gallantry will be.
"It will eventually flow and come automatically," DeQuoin said. "It's just so
But right now, the students are just beginning to conquer old bad habits they learned long ago, and DeQuoin, a former KU graduate student and instructor, keeps helping them along the way.
"I can't even write the first letter of my own name," student Irene Moll said. Everyone laughed as they struggled with their own letters, each one picked up the slow careful strokes very easily.
"Some of these people are really talented, I call them," Ward said. "The pick up it realizes."
Many of the students were anxious to start working with the inkwells and nibs associated with the print style, so they could make things for their grandchildren.
Irene Sanford, Lecompton, a 72-year old great-grandmother said, "Kids are my passion."
D.L.R.E.
LUCAS
Laciffic Harmon. Lawrence concentrates while working on a piece in enameling class yesterday afternoon at the Lawrence Counsellor Asisting
Weekend Arts
TODAY
THE CHAMBER OPERA "CABILDO," by
Maurice Bardot performs at 7 p.m.
in Swingtime Recital Hall.
BENJAMIN BRITTEN'S OPERA, "THE RAPE OF LUCRETA,"staged by the School of Fine Arts, will open at 8 p.m. in the University Library on Wednesday. For information call the Murphy Hall Box Office.
THE OZARK MOUNTAIN CARAVAN will perform "ECHOES OF THE OZARKS" at 8:30 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall. For ticket information call the Muphy Hall Box Office.
MICHAEL SEKELSKY will perform a MASTER'S RECIFAL on percussion at p.m. in
THE UNIVERSITY CONCERT SERIES will
close with a performance by THE ROMEROS, a classical guitar quartet from at, 3:30 p.m. in the University Theatre. For ticket information call the Murghv Hill Roy Office.
THE KU CONCERT BAND AND THE JAZZ ENSEMBLE I will perform their Spring Concert in the University Theatre. Allen Vizzuti will be the guest concert. The concert is free and open to the public.
跃
Special to the Kansas
This calligraphic detail is from a poem of the Northern Sung period (1052-1107) in China. Mi Fu was the calligrapher.
Calligraphy; simplistic beauty
By DAVID HENRY
Either definition, however, only begins to describe "Masterpieces of Sung and Yuan Dynasty Calligraphy from the John M. Crawford Jr. Collection," currently on display at the Spencer Museum of Art. The small exhibit of 13 scrolls, fans and banners reveals how the art of century reveals the simple beauty of what can be done with only a brush, ink and paper.
The Greeks used the word "kalligraphia",
meaning "beautiful writing." The Chinese called it "shu fa," "a system or method of writing."
Contributing Reviewer
Calligraphy, regarded by the Chinese as their highest artistic achievement, has only recently begun to be appreciated and collected by Westerners like Crawford. The acceptance of modern abstract art by many collectors undoubtedlybled the way for the West's "discovery" of 4,000 years of Chinese calligraphy.
Yet calligraphy is not entirely abstract art. Unlike the drip painting of the '50s American painter, Jackson Pollock, for example, each line in Chinese calligraphy has a meaning. The most striking effect is telling the reader a story or composing a poem or simply writing a note to himself.
Beautiful calligraphy is the result of complete control of both the brush and the calligrapher's hand. Thus mastery comes only after long practice, according to Stephen Addiss, associate professor of art history at KU. Additionally, Chinese calligraphy is
extremely difficult to master, Addiss says, because the artist must learn the thousands of tricks that go into making a performance.
English, by contrast, has only 26 different characters.
Despite these obstacles, calligraphy succeeds in conveying more than mere words or ideas. "The works of the Sung and Yuan periods provide an opportunity for communication with the spirit of outstanding artists, poets and statesmen of the past," writes Kwan S. Wong, in the exhibition "Song in the World." The organizer the show last year with Addis' assistance, describes these periods as an age of "new forms of personal expressiveness."
What is extraordinary about the calligraphy of these two dynasties is its amazing diversity. Some of the writing is done with sharp, angular strokes, the round fault lines of Lüssen, for example, while using Tung's script is filled with lived, almost wild lines.
Highly structured and difficult to master,
Moving along a long scroll from the Crawford Collection, while admiring the enormous variety of lines laid down with a palette of pastels and a glossy, the visual music that is Chinese calligraphy.
calligraphy, like music, has strong rhythm and movement.
Review
The enjoyment of this ancient art form is enhanced by a well-designed installation of these originals.
Authentic Ozark music performed
He was not the performer credited in 1938 with selling over a million harmonicas a year over the radio, but Bud Hunt of the "Brush Creek Follies" played his best on KC in M Kansas City, Mo.
This banjo player and singer will be one of the performers in "Echoes of the Ozarka," a program featuring banjo picking and fiddle playing, authentic cowboy and early country music. The banjo jig danced. The program will be Friday, April 2, at Sawtout Recital Hall at 8:30 p.m.
"The songs will be traditional music people have learned, not from music lessons, but from life."
"The show will have selected performers from the four Oar state, of which Kansas is one." Gloria Throne, Kansas Immigrants Program director at KANU Radio, said.
The object of the show, Throne said, was to take the surviving tradition and display it to the audience.
"Some of the performers were early-day radio
personalities," she said. "But the performances are not slick or commercialized.
"It's not like what you see when you go down to Arkansas and go to the Hill Billy Jamboree. The performers kind of make fun of or play around with the tradition.
The concert in Lawrence, the only appearance scheduled for Kansas, will end the program's tour of nine cities. The show's organizer is the National Council for the Traditional Arts with funding from the National Council for the Arts. It is being sponsored locally by the Sonneck Society, a music college organization, and financially by KANU Radio.
At each community where a performance is held, a special guest artist representing the folk traditions of that area is invited to play. For example, the Lyman Eleanor of Kansas City was selecte.
"They must characterize the music."
Tickets are available at the Murphy Hall ticket
center. The concert will be broadcast live on
KANU TV.
on campus
TODAY
THE UNDERGRADUATE BIOLOGY CLUB
will meet at 4 p.m. in the Sunflower Room of the
Biodiversity Center.
THE SIMULATIONS GAMING GROUP will meet at 10 a.m. in Cork for 10 of the Union.
SUNDAY
THE KU CIRCLE K CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in 641 Mallt Hall.
THE ALL SCHOOLSHIP HALL CHRISTIAN
SCHOOL will meet at 3:08 p.m. in
Danforth Hall
University Daily Kansan, April 2, 1982
Page 1
Carlin investigates Med Center case
KANSAS CITY, Kan.—A secretary in the affirmative action office at the University of Kansas Medical Center alleged Wednesday that she discriminated against her when it failed to promote her this month.
The secretary, Mikki Townsend,
asked Gov. John Carlin to investigate
the matter during Carlin's visit to
the Med Center Wednesday.
Carl Eberhard, personnel officer in charge of classification at the Med Center, said he was unaware of Townsend's allegations.
An aide to Carlin said yesterday that Carlin's office was investigating the allegation.
Survey asks seniors to give thoughts about KU
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By ANN WYLIE Stafi Reporter
Seniors can let University officials know what they think of their experiences at the University of Kansas and that the university last week from Institutional Research.
"I think we find that seniors especially possess very interesting and especially reliable thoughts about the educational process," Jerry Hutchison, associate vice chancellor for Academic Affairs, said yesterday.
"Some have been here for more years than they care to admit," he said.
seniors who filled out an application for
an academic position, director of
Institutional Research ,susan
than they care to admit, the sale
The survey was sent to the 2,178
The survey asks questions about four areas:
- Basic data, such as the student's major
- General experiences at KU, such as the number of courses in the student's major.
- in. Questions on the student's satisfaction with different University services, such as financial aid and student employment.
- Progress in general areas, such as the student's ability to understand
1. a survey is the best way to find out
At smaller schools, administrators interview each graduating student, Cobb said, but there are too many seniors at KU to interview them individually.
what students think of a university the size of KU, Robert Cobb, executive vice chancellor, said.
When the survey has been analyzed, Institutional Research will send the results to the vice chancellors, who will help them to improve programs in their areas.
"There is no specific use designated for that questionnaire for us," Hutchinson said.
David Ambler, vice chancellor for Student Affairs, said his office would
use the survey information to further investigate student services' needs.
"The study, unfortunately, can't go into a lot of depth" he said. "It just tells you what they didn't like."
But he said that the survey results were a good place to start to develop more in-depth surveys, such as a student opinion survey, that would measure the reasons that students did not like certain services.
"You put it all together and it helps give you a much better picture of areas where we need to improve our service," he said.
The survey is confidential, Cobb said in a cover letter that accompanies the survey.
Student L.D. numbers are requested so Institutional Research can check names off a mailing list as questionnaires are returned, he said.
The numbers are not to be used to identify the student with his responses.
It is important to the accuracy of the study that a high percentage of seniors return their surveys, Teeter said.
To get back as many surveys as possible, Institutional Research will send a second mailing in two weeks to a colleague who returned the first survey. Teeter said.
The last senior survey was done in 1977, she said, but it will be done more frequently from now on.
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AN EYE-CATCHING EXAMPLE OF JUDICIAL GERRYMANDERING
to gerrymander, the dictionary tells us, is "to divide an idea into political units in an unnatural and unfair way with the purpose of giving special advantages to one group." Although gerrymander originated in the political realm, our increasingly creative judiciary has appropriated the practical and symbolic ways that it uses its decisions when a decision is reached which assists uneasy importance to one element of a dispute "for the purpose of giving" one litigant "special advantages."
U. S. District Judge Miles Lord, a concerned Minnesota, recently engaged in some judicial gerrymandering while adjudicating a suit filed against the University of Minnesota by one Mark Hall. After having been declared academically ineligible his senior year, Mr. Hall, a three-year starter for the Minnesota basketball team, claimed that his loss of eligibility would substantially damage his chances of a professional career.
Judge Lord ordered Mr. Lord hallettened because he had been recruited "to be a basketball player, not a scholar." In his ruling Judge Lord noted that it "may well be true that a good academic program for the athlete is made virtually impossible by the demands of their sport at the college level." Judge resolved to have the university take action, but this situation is harming to the university, it because they have fostered it and the institution rather than the individual should suffer the consequences."
judge Lord accorded "undue importance" to the plaintiff's athletic pursuits "for the purpose of giving" (him), "special advantages," namely the privilege of representing a state university in intercollegiate athletics without meeting that university's minimum academic standards. By contemporary criteria this is truly judicial gerrymandering of the highest quality; however, at least some of those watching respectfully from the periphyte feel that the best is yet to come.
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University Daily Kansan, April 2, 1982
Job workshop planned to help foreign students
Foreign students will have the chance to enhance their job-hunting skills with a workshop sponsored by the Office of Foreign Student Services this weekend.
The workshop will be from 9 a.m. to noon tomorrow in 110 Strong Hall.
Diann Stewart, assistant director of Foreign Student Services, said yesterday that the purpose of the workshop was to give foreign students information on how to find a job and addresses of prospective employers.
There will be sessions on resume writing, cover letter writing and interview preparation, Stewart said. There also will be information from companies about job opportunities in the United States and abroad.
This is the first time the office has sponsored such a workshop. If it is successful, she said, Foreign Student must complete one a year, or possibly one a semester.
Superdance kicks off today
So far, 42 students have signed up for the workshop.
The KU Superdance for Muscular
Distrophy will start at 5 p.m. today
and run until 5 p.m. tomorrow at the
National Guard Armory, 200 Iowa
Notices were sent to juniors, seniors and graduate students, Stewart said, but foreign students of all levels are welcome.
Sponsored participants will wince a 24-hour marathon for prizes, including a weekend trip to Houston, for the top money collector. The money the dancers collect will go to the Muscular Dystrophy Association.
Beer, pop and special activities for the audience have been scheduled throughout the Superdance.
The Superdance is sponsored by Panhellenic, the Interfraternity Council, the Association of
University Residence Halls and the All Scholarship hall Council.
Jeannie Seitz, Superdance chairman and Topeka junior, said local businesses had been crucial to the planning of Superdance.
Many downtown stores donated gift certificates for prizes for the dancers and audience and others donated food for the dancers. All the pop and beer were donated by the Adolph Coors Co. and Seven Up.
Headmasters Inc., 1602 Massachusetts St., will be cutting hair for $1,895 to 3 to 5 pm. tomorrow for $10, and 66 of that will go to the Superdance.
On the record
A 9-year-old boy who had been left alone was rescued yesterday when Eudora Township firefighters answered a call to his burning home, Douglas County sheriff's department officials said.
The boy's home, three miles east of Lawrence on 15th Street, caught fire when the landlord was intentionally burning the yard. The landlord called the Eudora firefighters, sheriff's deputies said.
Firefighters found the boy inside the smoke-filled house when they extinguished the fire on the southeast corner of the house.
No adults were in the residence when the boy was found. Sheriff's deputies
turned the boy over to Social and Rebellantial Services, 319 Perry St. until his parents could get him, sheriff's denied said.
BURGLARS STOLE almost $800 worth of stereo equipment sometime between 5 p.m. Tuesday and 4:30 p.m. Thursday. A parked car at Lewis Hall, KU police.
Police suspect the burglar used a stuff wire to unlock the passenger side door of the car. A radar detector and an AM/FM stereo were stolen.
BURGLAR'S STOLE $300 worth of car equipment sometime between March 9 and March 13 from an apartment at 901 Avalon Road, police said.
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University Daily Kansan, April 2, 1982
Page 9
Revolts of 1960s could return soon, professor says
By DAN PARELMAN Staff Reporter
Today's conservatism is pushing the public's social consciousness to the forefront, a University of Minnesota professor said yesterday at the University of Kansas.
The professor, Clark Chambers, predicted that in the next five years people would again take part in revolutionary activities, provoked by the policies of the Reagan ad- mand and fueled by social consciousness.
Chambers spoke to about 25 faculty members and students at the Spencer Research library.
Awareness of the needs of blacks, women, workers and immigrant groups, Chambers said, was emphasized in the movement toward a new social history in the 1960s that paid attention to cultural patterns and social relationships of groups of people not previously studied in depth.
"There was in the '80s a new social history. It was a response to social needs intimately related to events of that period." Chambers said.
The social forces of the '60s and early 1970s spawned the civil rights movement, the women's movement, growing awareness of the plight of women in war and war on poverty and the counter-culture, and forced the development of a social
history of these groups by illuminating their needs according to Chambers.
"It was, as we claimed it to be,
history from the bottom up," he said.
Before the 1960s, historians were not usually concerned with the history of medicine.
"Historians were almost as genteel "1940s critics until the 1980s," Chambers said.
New Jewish, Catholic and black historians in the 40s and 1950s and women historians in the 20th century study of traditionally Protestant-dominated historicography
"They wrote a different history with a different point of view," Chambers
The new breed of historians con-
timed the social history of the '60s in the 70s, but in a more mature form. This second generation of the new social history is less dogmatic and treats historical subjects as people, not merely as members of certain groups, Chambers said. Chambers identified Regina Moranta, William Tuttle and Amanda KU, professors of history, as part of the second
Morantz, a professor of American history, has researched the family, the reform movements of 19th century America, and women's role in these movements. Chambers said Morantz "was not bogged down by feminist dogma.
Tuttle's analysis of a 1919 race riot in
Drinking Myth of the Week
MOST ALCOHOLIC PEOPLE ARE MIDDLE-AGED OR OLDER.
A University of California research team has found that the highest proportion of drinking problems is among men in their early twenties. The second-highest incidence occurs among men in their 40's and 50's.
The Student Assistance Center
121 Strong Hall, 864-4064
SANCTUARY
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
1401 W. 7th Lawrence, Ks 843-0540
THE SANCTUARY
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The Office of Foreign Student Services
For more information contact Diann Stewart, 864-3617.
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Katzman's book "Seven Days a Week," a study of domestic labor in pre-ghetto Detroit, was a humanistic historical study, according to Chambers.
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Although the new social historians have contributed to the evolution of the field, its shocking birth was in the '60s, he said.
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Chambers recalled that in the fall of 1965 he had to rewrite his history lectures because he thought that the interpretation of history had changed to reflect the histories of the overlooked groups.
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Page 10 University Daily Kansan, April 2, 1982
Gas prices pumped up by retailers
By LISA GUTTIERREZ Staff Reporter
In yet another gasoline-pricing skirmish, Lawrence gasoline retailers Wednesday raised prices at the mnm.
Prices soared as much as 11 cents a gallon in some places, from 98 cents and $1.03 for regular, to $1.09 a gallon.
Local retailers购买 the pricehiking move of two or three "lowbailers," or people who don't make the money. Some lowbailers are convenience stores.
"They use gasoline as a way to get people into their stores," Mike Royer, a spokesman for Westside 2315 W. Sixth, and Westside 2315 W. Sixth, gas stations, said yesterday.
"There are a couple of them who
always seem to be the first ones in the gas war."
Royer said gasoline prices had steadily decreased within the last six weeks because refineries were more efficient than consumers were demanding.
In addition, lowballers consistently charge lower prices than their competitors. Royer said. This pressures companies to pay even more for prices even further to retain business.
"For whatever reason they're selling gas, whether to make a living or getting people into the store, everyone's going to get more customers," Royer said.
"It's a war to get the customer and keep it from gasoline. Gasoline almost gets lost from light."
MANY LOCAL RETAILERS said they set their prices according to what
the station across the street or nearby was charging.
Wednesday was a busy day for sign changing.
"We wore out at the pumps just changing the numbers," said Jeff Underwood, an attendant at Jayhawk Oil Co. Inc., 1306 West 6th.
"It's to stay competitive with everybody else."
He said at 10 a.m. Wednesday, regular gasoline was selling for 98 cents a gallon. At 3 p.m., it had been hiked to 114 cents a gallon. Yesterday, it dropped to $1.08.
The Lawrence Battery Co. ,903 N.
2nd, was also selling regular at $1.08
a gallon yesterday.
"Two weeks ago, we were the first to guard below one door," the Zeller, manager of a company, said.
"But it was more a gas sale than a war."
Zeller, who operates seven self-service pumps, said he watched other retailers' prices and set his at competitive prices.
"Everyone did apparently go up," he
said. "I "I think it started on Ninth Street."
WHEREVER IT STARTED, Dan Brown, assistant manager of Sinclair Service Station, 845 Iowa St., said his station raised prices because the station across the street, Big V Oil Co. 846 Iowa St., had raised its prices.
"I think there's sort of a pattern," he said. "Somebody moves first, and the rest follow."
Sinclair's prices rose from 98 cents to $1.34 and $1.04 unleaded to $1.08.
Brown's competitor on the same street raised its prices after receiving a call from the station's home office in Kansas City, Kan.
Even though Lawrence consumers were paying more at the pumps, KI remained untouched by the price raise.
"Wholesale prices haven't changed and we buy our gas wholesale," said Dewey Alley, associate director of management for facilities operations.
“At the present time we're paying 96
at our regular and one dollar for unleashed.
Alirease said the University purchased gasoline for University vehicles every other day through a bidding process.
"Our tanks hold 1,000 gallons of regular and unleaded. We use about 400 gallons of gas a day," he said.
SAVE $50-100! on a Raleigh
THE MANICHIER
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UNIVERSITY FLORAL
2103 W. 28th St. Terrace
Lawrence, Ks 66044 (913) 843-6990
3rd Heart of America Collegiate Tournament
Saturday, April 3rd matches from 9:30-5:00
Championship Sunday, April 4, 1:30
Sponsored by KURFC and Coors
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
RUGBY
SOME OF THE MOST IMPORTANT WORK FOR CANCER IS BEING DONE OUTSIDE THE LAB.
AAA
AMERICAN
CENTRE
It's being done in automobiles and living rooms. Over coffee and cake. By people like Madeline Mitza and Theresa Barbieri.
They met when Madeline was in treatment for breast cancer and Theresa was the volunteer who drove her to her therapy appointments. Now, like Theresa, Madeline is bringing help and hope to other women as a Reach to Recovery volunteer.
Madeline and Theresa are living proof that it's people who give people the will to live. The work in the lab must continue. And so must the work outside. We need your help.
SHARE THE COST OF LIVING
Give to the American Cancer Society
THIS SPACE CONTRIBUTED AS A PUBLIC SERVICE
The Eldridge House
"We Serve Your Dining Pleasure"
7th & Massachusetts
749-0613
You'll enjoy your traditional Easter Sunday dinner in the elegant continental decor of the Eldridge House. Traditional fine linens, candlelight and flowers will enhance your dining pleasure. The Easter Buffet will include all the traditional Easter favorites. Each skillfully prepared by our chefs with you in mind. So this Easter do something special, celebrate in the traditional elegant Eldridge House style.
A FORMAL EASTER BUFFET
Celebrate Easter Sunday in the Traditional Elegant Eldridge House Style
The Easter Buffet is open from 11 am to 7 pm for your dining convenience.
Please pick up a nomination form from the Commission on the Status of Women, Women's Recognition Committee, 114B Kansas Union before April 5th. If you have questions, please contact the Commission on the Status of Women, 864-3954 or Kathy Greenlee, Women's Recognition Committee Chairperson, 842-1475.
OUTSTANDING NONTRADITIONAL WOMAN STUDENT—nontraditional woman student who has made a unique contribution to the University or community.
Partially funded from the Student Senate Activity Fee.
OUTSTANDING WOMEN STUDENTS IN: Athletics, Women's Rights/Women's Awareness, Student Services, Community Services, Politics.
Chef Sheldon's Easter Buffet Menu
OUTSTANDING INTERNATIONAL WOMAN STUDENT—International woman student who has demonstrated academic achievement and participation in various aspects of community or college life.
(These honors will be accompanied by monetary awards.)
Make Your Reservations Today!
Chef Sheldon's Easter Buffet Menu
Roast Baron of Beef
Baked Ham / Madera Cherry Sauce
Bread of Turkey / Apple Dressing
Garden Salad
Freshly Baked Rolls
Mashed Potatoes
Candied Sweet Potatoes
Vegetable Casserole
Succotash
Baked Apples
Carrot Cake
$8.95 per person
$4.95 children under 10
The Commission on the Status of Women is sponsoring its 12th annual WOMEN'S RECOGNITION PROGRAM
April 26,1982
8:00 p.m.
Kansas Room - Student Union
OUTSTANDING WOMAN STAFF MEMBER—non-faculty woman who has contributed in a unique way to the University, or non-teaching faculty.
OUTSTANDING WOMAN TEACHER—female instructor, student or non-student, who has performed effectively and professionally on the educator's level at KU.
"...a program designed to recognize outstanding women for their contributions to the campus, community, and/or other women."
Nominations are now being accepted for honors in the following areas:
KU WOMEN—HALL OF FAME—outstanding women graduates of the University and KU faculty or staff, not necessarily alumnae, who provide models for students as they choose careers and become effective citizens.
Sm
Smokehouse
okehouse
Come See
Bruce The
MOOSE!
CELEBRATE SPRING WITH
Enjoy Coke
No Coupons Accepted With This Offer
Any Pit BBQ LOG Sandwich (our large Sandwich)
$3.19
Reg. price $3.75
thru Sun. Apr. 4
Downtown Lawrence
719 Massachusetts St.
Lawrence, Kansas
0
University Daily Kansan, April 2, 1982
Page 11
By COLLEEN CACY Staff Reporter
Bill would let students OK building
TOPEKA-Students will be able to tell the Board of Regents whether they approve of the proposed building construction projects on campus if a bill now in a Kansas House committee is approved.
The bill would require a student vote before student fees are assessed for new building construction on Regents university campuses. The current bill is a watered-down version of legislation passed in 2014 that required student approval before the Regents could increase fee assessments to finance a new project.
The House Ways and Means Committee will hold hearings on the bill today, and its sponsor, State Rep. Mike
"The amendment takes a lot of the teeth out of it," Meacham said yesterday. "It has some weaknesses that way, but I guess the important thing is that there is some formal recognition of the students' input."
Meacham, R-Wichita, said an amendment had been added to the bill to gain acceptance from legislators.
Steve Linenberger, legislative director for the Associated Students of Kansas, drafted the amendment, which required a student referendum nonbinding.
Student governments would administer the referendums and present the results to the Regents, but the students may obligation to obey the student's wishes.
"They'd have to take it into consideration, because it's there."
SEVERAL BUILDING projects on the KU campus have been financed partly with student fees, including tuition and housing. Kansas Union and the Satellite Union.
Linenberger said. "It's more input for students."
Watkins is the most expensive of the projects, costing each student a maximum of £7. The projects will not be nailed for until the mid- or late-1900s.
of the projects that used student fees, Watkins Hospital in 1972 and the Satellite Union in 1977, were approved. Others were not and others were not to a student vote.
Lineberger said ASK did not object to using student fee money for student unions, as that is a standard policy at universities and all students make use
set foot in some of the buildings they have helped finance.
But he said some students may never
Linenberger said he thought a student referendum, although not binding, would influence the Regents' decisions.
"We feel it's the state's responsibility to provide those kind of buildings."
"THE REGENTS I've spoken to said they thought it was an excellent idea," he said. "In the past, they started putting buildings on campus and students started paying extra fee money."
But Ways and Means Committee Chairman Mike Hayden, R-Atwood, said last year he opposed the bill because the students were not the ones to use the buildings and would not be the ones to use a tax on future students.
Meacham said he did not think the committee would object to the amended bill. He said he thought that although the Regents would not have to go along with the student vote, they probably would listen to the students.
"But it's going to vary from campus to campus, from project to project," he said.
"It iten't fair to use our money without asking us," she said.
Patty Gerstenberger, a KU member of ASK, said she thought the Regents would pay attention to the vote because they could dialle against public opinion.
Linenberger said he thought the amended bill was less "threatening" to the Regents, giving it a better chance of passage this year.
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If you're a senior and have the promise of a $10,000 career-oriented job, do you know what's stopping you from getting the American Express* Card?
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A $10,000 job promise. That's it. No strings. No gimmicks. And this offer is even good for 12 months after you graduate.
Because American Express believes in yourfuture. But more than that. We believe in you now. And we're proving it.
So call for a Special Student Application or look for one at your college bookstore or on campus bulletin boards.
Of course, the Card is also good for travel, restaurants, and shopping for things like a new stereo or furniture. And because the Card is recognized and welcomed worldwide, so are you.
First of all, it's a good way to begin to establish your credit history. And you know that's important.
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but why do you need the American Express Card now?
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The KU Strategy Games Club Announces:
THE EAST-MEETS-WEST TOURNAMENT
A Simultaneous Competition in the games of
GO and CHESS
SATURDAY, APRIL 3,1982
Trailroom, 2nd floor, Kansas Union Registration: 8-9 a.m.
CHESS: 4RD SS, Rds: 9 a.m.,12,3 7 p.m. EF: $5,2 sections USCF-rated 1st: 30%, 20% 15 per section
GO: RR, upper & lower division, DF: $4 KYU-rated,
1st: 30%, 2nd: 15% per section
Fun & games, 1002 Massachusetts, will give away prizes Be sure to attend the simultaneous chess Exhibition 8 a.m.-5 p.m., 4th floor Kansas Union Sponsored by SUA Indoor Recreation, 864-3477
2
W.C. Frank
W.C Frank
1
HEARTY MEAL!
SPECIAL DEAL!
- Hiland Chips 24° Fresh, Crump and delicious. Three varieties
- Crispy Dill Slice $12^{\circ}$ A fresh keeper Paper Slice
Choice of Topping Chinese Tea Tray Child or Adult Fruit 15¢
W.C.'s
Famous Fifth™ Our Hot & Beautiful
One of the Best Drinks in America
69¢
Large Drink. 45c
All For Just $1.65
All For Just
Present this coupon with purchase of Big Meal and receive a 50's Rock & Roll Classic album, while supply lasts.
Limit one per customer
Good Sunday April 4th only
W.C. Frank
"A Frank We Can All Afford"
23rd & Iowa
842-9672
CONGRATULATIONS. IN M. A. C. A.
MARIA AND ANTHONY, WITH
HAPPY BIRDS AND ANIMALS,
THE WINNER OF THE
BEST ACT IN A MOVIE
FOR KIDS BY NICOLE
RODRIGUEZ
It's Chef Salad Season Enjoy Our Special Priced Chef Salad
CHIPS AND CREAM
Includes, Four Varieties of Special Deli Meats and Three Varieties of Natural Deli Cheeses Your Favorite Salad Dressing and Crackers
Enjoy Coke
Full Chef
2.95
Reg. Price 3.50
Half Chef 1.95
Reg. Price 2.50
OFFER GOOD Mar. 31 thru Apr. 4
No Coupons accepted with this offer
Page 12 University Daily Kansan, April 2, 1982
Cuts in aid raising cost of daycare
By JULIE HEABERLIN Staff Reporter
In the few hours she spends each evening with her children, Diana Patterson forgets the worries of an uncertain future.
Like many single parents at the University of Kansas, Patterson, a Lawrence senior, is struggling through her studies, independently support her young family.
But any further cuts in daycare funding may force her and others on federal assistance programs to abandon plans for a self-supporting career, according to Martha Langley, financial administrator at the Hilltop Daycare Center.
"The problem is that a lot of student-parents are trying to get through school with heavy loads," Langley said. "A lot of students who take classes especially if the classes have labs, find
it difficult to find time to work 30 hours a week."
Many would have to work nights and weekends if more cuts were made. This would create an additional child who could be cared for on a borne life with the child, she said.
"Some have told me they are borrowing from any source they can," she said.
CHILDCARE CUTS effective last fall have severely affected several single-parent students in federally aided programs at the center, Langley said.
Student-parents who do not work are now inible for Title XX funding. This funding was designated for service organizations that help people become independent, she said. Those that do work, she said, have paid an increased share in daycare fees since the October cut.
The other federal cut has affected those families that receive Aid to Families with Dependent Children. A
new payment method has forced parents to pay large amounts of daycare in advance before reimbursement, Langley said.
Originally, ADC's child care funding was paid directly to the center after an individual "needs assessment," based on the parent's income.
PATTERSON, WHOSE daycare is funded by ADC, pay $380 in advance for her daughter's kindergarten daycare after the initial cuts. The fee amounted to almost one-fourth of her family's income for the three-month period.
Jim Baze, section chief of the Department of Social and Rehabilitation Services in Lawrence, said that because of drastic federal cuts, the department had given prior priority to low-income employed parents.
Baze said that federal funding cuts for child care in the Lawrence-Topeka
area totaled almost $1 million last year and about $500,000 in 1982.
Because the increased share in daycare fees is only one of several federal cuts affecting single college parents, Patterson and others are about finishing school and supporting a family on poverty-ridden incomes.
"When it comes right down to black and white, we are in daycare so that we can get a degree so that we can work for the community," Society said.
KIM MARTIN, Lawrence senior, has a son in half-day daycare at the Hilltop center. She said the cuts were illogical because students needed help now for the degrees that would make them dependent of federal assistance in the future.
Patterson said that in spite of increasing hardships, she was determined to finish school and become self-supporting.
To supplement food stamps and her ADC check, she said, she works after classes as a tutor and grades papers, which leaves late evening and early mornings to study and take care of her home and family.
"I'm sure daycare providers would rather have the agency be overly conservative than unable to come up with the funds later," he said.
Baze said that SRS, like many state agencies, was cautious about spending money because they feared future cuts in social programs.
with the ramifications.
Student-parent funding would be increased if more federal money became available, Baze said.
--offices.
Attention Students;
Trailridge
Studios, Apts., Townhouses
2500 W. 6th
843-7333
The Board of Class Officers will hold Sophomore, Junior and Senior class elections April 21,22
Petitions and filing forms are available in the BOCO and Student Senate offices.
Dealing With That Uneasy Feeling
Learn to:
FILING DEADLINE—Tuesday, April 6
TURBO
CARDS &
GIFTS
... for all occasions
ABRUTHNOTS
Southwest Plaza 239 & Brew
841-270-8100
1-8am-Fri. 10-5at
initiate conversation make new friends adjust to new social situations feel comfortable around others
FREE
April 7, Wednesday
7:00-9:30 p.m.
Nunemaker Center
The Student Assistance Center
121 Strong Hall.
864-4064
OPEN HOUSE
The Yello Sub *delivers*
841-3268
IDEAL FOR STUDENT OCCUPANCY Sat. & Sun. April 3&4 1-5 p.m.
A beautiful, affordable apartment is waiting for you at Meadowbrook. Just blocks from campus, nestled among 70 acres of gently rolling hills and trees. Meadowbrook offers both seclusion and convenience. We invite you to visit us during our open house . . . we will be showing studios, one and two bedrooms, and two bedroom townhouses. It's an ideal time to select your unit for the summer or fall semester . . . and begin to enjoy the good living at Meadowbrook.
meadowbrook
APARTMENTS • TOWNHOUSES • DUPLEXES
15TH & CRESTLINE 842-4200
B. O.C.O.
JUNIOR/SENIOR CLASS PARTY
FRIDAY, APRIL 2ND 2-5 p.m.
BOTTOM'S UP
Class Card Holders: No Cover, 25c draws
NonCard Holders: $1.50 Cover, 25c draws
The University of Kansas Concert Series presents
The Romeros
'Four Guitars Sing As One...'
The New York Times
Classical Guitar Ensemble
Classical Guitar Ensemble
Featuring
Celedonio, Celin, Pepe and Angel Romero
Sunday, April 4, 1982
3:30 p.m.
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 Acts
Olympic Mount Rise.
SUA TRAVELING COMMITTEE POSITIONS
Spanning the globe, traveling to new frontiers, capturing breathtaking sunsets, as far east as Boston and far west as Odessa, Texas ... this and much more can be a part of your "worldly" college career if you join the SUA travel committee. We are looking for creative and dedicated people to help plan trips for you ... come in to the SUA office on the 4th floor lobby of the Kansas Union and sign up for an interview starting this week.
Any questions, contact Gene Wes at 864-3477 or Jeff Brown at 843-1883.
We are looking forward to hearing from you!
Mingles
Grand Re-opening April 1.1982
That's No April Fool's
New Happy Hour Prices
FREE Hor d'oeuvres
and champagne
— Thursday & Friday —
4 p.m. - 7 p.m.
Other Specials to be
announced throughout
the evening.
7 p.m. - 5 a.m.
$1.00 Drinks
50c draws
Don't Forget—Mingles is Open
Monday - Saturday 4 p.m. - 3 a.m.
Memberships available
6th & Iowa * Lawrence, Kansas
842-7030
University Daily Kansan, April 2, 1982
Page 13
The University Daily
Call 864-4358
CLASSIFIED RATES
one tie one two three four five six seven eight nine ten
five or ten degrees $2.35 $3.00 $3.60 $3.80 $3.80 $3.80 $3.80 $3.80
ten degrees $6.95 $7.40 $7.80 $8.20 $8.20 $8.20 $8.20 $8.20
ERRORS
AD DEADLINES
to run
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Friday 5 p.m.
Thursday Friday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be
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.
KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Business Manager, Editor
Paid Staff Positions
The Kansan is now accepting applications for the Summer and Fall Semester Business Manager positions, and requires paid positions and require some newspaper experience. Application forms are available in the Student Senate Office, 105 B Street, Student Organization, and Activities, 220 Strong Hall; and in Room 200 Flint Hall. Completed applications are due in 200 Filtat by 5:00 p.m. Monday, April 19
The University Daily Kansan is an Anual OpportunityAffirmation of the institutions are sought from all qualified people regardless of race, religion, color, sex, disability, national origin, age, or ancestry.
WORMED ABOUT APRIL 157 Call Don's Tax Service for fast, accurate tax return preparation. Call 841-6983. 60-day extensions of time to file are available. **4-15**
ENTERTAINMENT
FOR RENT
REMEMBER THE DEB'S? Drummer Peggy Smith and a friend will be kickin out on the jams this Fr. & S. at. & Sat. of the Wall Hall, 425 N. 10th St., BEK from 9:42 to $2.50 cost, 327 N. 1H
Must see to believe. Furnished rooms with utilities paid near university & downtown.
No pets. Phone 841-5500. **tt**
Studios atmosphere. International meals, crazy roommates with Christian perspectives. Bedroom furniture. Dwm room $140 furnished. Living room $135 furnished. Flat rooms and laundry. Call 841-7622. Close the windows.
HIANOVE PLACE Complete furnished,
studium, i 2 barm. located between
CITERANO CITY and KU. DONT DELAY. Reserve your apt.
Rentals from Rental $240 a month -wash,
dry, vacuum. Call 312-672-8911.
Naismith Hall
APARTMENT SHOPPERS
CHECK LIST
On KU Bus Route
(Utilities except phone) paid
Military Activities
Social Services with
Unlimited Seconds
to Campus
If your apartment space is on the above it's not Naismith Hall Drop by and look us over
NAISMITH HALL
100 North Hill
PRINCETON PLACE PATIO APARTMENTS.
Now available, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, pristine
interior, high ceilings, gas fireplace,
2 car garage with electric oven,
weather/dry or hookup, fully-equipped
bathroom, large en-suite, 9:30-3:30 daily at 228 Princeton Blvd., or
phone 464-275 for additional information.
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 apt.
Unfurnished, carpeted & draped. A second
room with private bath. To close,
on bus route. $35 per month.
no MEP BOOKMARK 108 & Creativel
no MEP BOOKMARK 108 & Creativel
Jayhawker Towers Apartments
Now taking applications for fall and summer leases, KU students only.
2 Bedroom apartments on campus
- on bus line
- furnished or unfurnished
1603 W. 15th
843-4993
2 bdm, 1 bath in 6-plex, all appl, available now, $250. 1 bath in 4-plex, all appl, available now, $250. 1 bath in 4-plex, all appl, available now, $250. W D, wook car, W D, wook car, $255, available now
Established STUDENT COOPERATIVE cline
to campus and downstown. Owner/bedroom/
six. Study evening meals each week. $75.
Accommodation available. QUALITY. QUINTONFLOW.
HOUSE. 82-921-921.
2 bt. avp. convenient to shopping on bus
trains, trains, or bus stops. Drapes, fringes, fully carpeted. Call 814-6818 - 684.
Sublease 2 br. apr./ w/gas paid. Complete
sublease to Linda for heating, cooling and
heating. Call 841-6868.
Spacial, new, beautiful 2-bedroom duplex,
2 blocks behind Nalshimn dorm; $300/mm.
Available May 18 through Aug. 1. Option
for fall lease. Call 841-1571. 4-5
TRY COOPERATIVE LIVING. Sunflower House, 842-9421. tf
Sleeping rooms 1-3 bedroom Apts. DupLEX,
and an 8-bedroom house close to campus.
No pets. Call 842-8971. Leave for summer.
Call sun. Call after or on Sunday.
Sum day.
Two tertiary graduates, upperclass students or two only. Two tertiary students 1 br. & bt. recently recruited by block from Kansas Union. No pets. Refs. Reg. Dg. Reg. + $100 to mb. 84-325. Fax.
Summer Sublease- three bedroom town-house-furnished, central a/c 2, bath 3 blocks from campus. Female. Call Sharron 864-1401. 9:00-5:00. 4-2
TRAILRIDE. Leaving for fall-Studios, Bali's most famous resort offers all have harvest gold appliances. All have harvest gold appliances. laundry facilities on the premises. Swimming, tennis & raceboarding. On KK 30 -23333. Reschedule to 10:45am.
Nice 2 bedroom apt. near hospital. Range, refrigerator, carpet dgrgty. $200. No pets. References required. 841-8744 or 843-8514 - 85
2-bedroom duplex near Hallmark. All appliances w/d hooks, CA, keys. Referees required. $290. 843-814 or 841-8744. 4-5
2-bedroom duplex, range, refrigerator, w/d
hooks, carpet, drapery. $275. No pets. Reference
required. 843-8814 or 841-8744 4-5
$125 includes ALL utilities, clean, no pet or暑
summer, summer, share a house, private
bedroom, all furnished, owner grad. student.
Evenings 843-842 or collect 1-812-450-1-60
Summ. sublease. 1 BR apt. in 4-plex, furnished, carpeted, AC, 14th & NJ, all util. free $145,mm. 749-606, 4-6
3 BR duplex for summer. Single room or entire unit. Furnished. AC, dishwasher, near campus on bus route. 841-1070. 4-5
28th & Kaiser. If your tired of apartments or dorms, you'll like us. Our duplexes attached to swimming pools all appliances, attached garage, swimming pool, private. We have openings now, and in the summer and fall Call Craig at 718-355-4900 for information about our modestly townhouses. If you are interested, please contact us.
Live in the CHRISTIAN CAMPSUS HOUSE
This summer & fall! Become a part of a growing campus ministry. Call Alan Nasuk, campus minister 842-692-1f
tf
Summer and fall rentals, houses and apartments. Near campus, no jets. Lynch Real Estate 843-1601 or 841-3222. 4-14
We have a good place to live and study. We offer full-time and part-time business and 12-month leaves and August holidays. We extend the courtesy of not only our adult students but also our appointment. 841-7075 HOUGHTON FOR APPOINTMENT
MED CENTER BOUND? Nowly refurbished
2 BR Duplexes available now. Carpet, A/C.
Appliances, parking. Call (913)-281-2878.
4-30
Nice one bedroom apartment. AC, carpeting,
close to campus. $175 a month, water paid.
Available now. Call 841-2763 after 5:30. 4-6
Sublease 3 DBMR 2 bath. fully carpeted and Furnished; also central air, dwim, diwasp and disposal. Great location at 919 Indiana. Apt. 1. Fax 799-3310 or 841-5255. 4-14
3 bedroom, 2 bath apt. Must sublease or
June 1, option to leave in Aug. Heatherwood
Apt.,
360.00 mo., 841-8980. Call after 5
4-6
SUBLEASE Traildrone Studio Apt. water,
On bus route $210, 842-7530. 4-8
SUBLEASE FOR SUMMER-1 br. apt. Two blocks from campus. Furnished with AC 843-727 or call collect (316) 863-3610. 4-8
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! See below.
1. Give your class a sample of what makes sense to use them-1). As study guide.
2. For class preparation of West civilization exam prepare a sample of what makes sense to use them-2). Available now in town Crest. The exam is given out on Thursday.
Sublease 3 bedroom, $2.50 bath, carpeted
townhouse. Summer only. Trailridge com-
plex. Call 841-8190. 4-7
Sublease large 2 BR, apartment near stadium, water, gas paled, central air $220
841-8235
4-15
Beautiful bald evergreen reasonably priced
Himmel's Rand Tree Farm—Eudora—Phone
542-3139 or 542-3349 4-20
TENNIS RACKETS—Good selection new/ used. Will buy yours if in good condition. 842-6713 at 6:00 p.m. tf
FOR SALE
Alternator, starter and generator specialists.
Parts, service, and exchange units. BELL
AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-906-3800
W. 60). tf
Stereo-Telescopes-Video Recorders. Name brands only. Factory sealed cartons. Lowest price in the K.C. area. Get your best price. Caterpillar Total Office 5200-7486 8-400
Raleigh 10 speed, 23" frame, excellent condition. Must sell. Very Reasonable. Call after 5 p.m. m-434-8424. Catch 4-2
WALK TO CLASS. Removed home at 1033
Illinois 40,000. Owner finance at 113%
APR with 25% down. McKenzie Realty.
4-28
444-225-220
Pollen-fresh frozen-rich in vitamins, minerals, proteins 842-5074 after six. 4-13
$975 NAAO NABO mpoel, excellent condition
8275.00 or best offer. Call 841-5323. 4-6
1975 Pontiac Ventura 3 speed, V6, 2-door,
am radio, excellent condition, priced to sell.
Call 749-7381.
Honda 125 XL—2400 miles, only ridden by
bishop to church. $695. Peter Caspian—
841-4045. 843-8202. 4-6
Raleigh Record 10 speed bike, 23" frame.
4-6
842-7207 (eve.)
1980 Blue Plymouth Arrow, Hatchback,
28.500 mile, just tuned up. $3700
buy by 4/8/82. Call Brad 841-4200. 4-6
Ham radio Drake TR-4 transceiver with speaker and power supply, Pioneer car stereo also. 749-2374. 4-5
75 Yamaha 175 Enduro, Like new condition.
1800 miles. Evenings 1-334-9101. 4-6
Drums seven piece CB-700 kite, also Gibson
Les Paul. Call 842-1252. After 5 p.m. 4-2
Thousands of comic books, baskets cards,
postcards, National Geographics, Play-
mats, board games, and other collectibles.
Erne, Erne. High School, Club Pub.
€11. NM. Open Sat. & Sun. 10-5. 4-2
50W Harman Intall cond 3410 Btu. Kurd 814-673 eyes. 4-2
Mitsubishi Fukurokke 250t. Furdure, excellent cond. must
to approve. Only ridden in town. Also
c/o 12,000 Btu. $50. Call Randy 749-3-454.
Everything you always wanted in a dark room! $275, call 864-6040. 4-2
50W Marshall Amplifier head & cover, beautiful cond. $350. Kurt 841-6173 eves. 4-2
BUICK—1968 2-door in good condition-
Automate with 250 Straight-6. $475.00. $41-
3215. 4-2
KZ750, many extran, excellent condition,
new tires, chain, sprockets, battery, & more.
Call 864-3018 4-7
Cabbies in NYC eat bicycles, so I must sell
mice. In leont. Mint condition.
84-1329 84-1320 4-5
Datsum 200 SX, 1978. 5 sp.; a/c, am/fm cassette, aluminium mag wheelets, excel cond.
79,000 miles. Megan 843-0703. 4-2
TORNOSAN 1971, auto, 3-4 ft.
TORNOSAN 1971, auto, 3-4 ft.
after 9:30, 9:47
TK-2 6-4 kg with overload. New; naut, clutch, brakes, fire-Gary-481-0991. . . . .
Calculator found in 2nd floor Malott lattoh
Room. Call Dan, 864-2643
4-5
Person interested in doing own house jobs in exchange for rent this semester. Must be capable, able to participate in own tools and equipment, to participate in cooperative **ft** Call Darryl 841-838-3586
Found pair of mens prescription glasses with Ralph Lauren frame, new, near South Park. 843-6638. 4-5
Summer Jobs National Park Co. s 21 Parks.
500 Open Information Complete Information $5.00.
Mission Min Co. s 612 2nd Ave.
W K Nallbury MT 59801. 4-19
Children's Counselors, Activity Instructors,
Cook, Kitchen Manager, Kitchen Help for
Mountain Camp Emp. Trapani Ranch,
Boulder, Colorado, 80068, (808) 424-8577.
HELP WANTED
Jobs are tough to find after college. Just ask any recent graduate who went out into the world armed only with a diploma. So why aren't these students in school? Right now, Northwestern specializing in industrial life and largest corporate specializing in industry training. Their Internship programs that lst you sample a
and a prosopective employer. Think ahead.
Call Frank Smyser at 843-153-100, 4-24
$75 Daily! Home Business Details-374-
stamps. Ween-Bek Enterprises, Inc.
@387-DWK, Bourier Springs, KS. 66012. 4-2
in school, college and work environments. You should specialize in individual life insurance, has career focus on insurance as well as provide training you through our local NML agency train you through our local NML agency money right now, while you're still in college valuable that training will be available ahead.
We are looking for 25 hardworking students
for a summer work opportunity. If you are
independent and want to earn $275.00 per
week call 749-5227.
4-13
Lifeguards needed for County Fair Swim Club. WSI Requirem. Minimum age 19. Sond resume to Becky Popp, 2009 Maple Lane, Lawrence.
Bartender—energetic and personable, contact Dan at the Exchange, 842-953-4.7
Student hourly postpartum availability:
remainder of Summer
Office of Student Organizations
and Activities. 220 Strong Hall. Application
referral to JOB HOME. Apply in
able to secure an 220 Strong Hall HOF.
4-5
Experienced Massesse need at Nautilus Fitness Center, 1601 West 23rd. Call Don at 749-190 for appointment. 4-6
Lost large blue loose leaf notebook. Has all
class notes. Please call 843-0673 or 843-8588
and ask for Dean.
The Mathematics Department is accepting applications for graduate teaching assistant positions at various colleges and students with a strong background in mathematics. Foreign applicants will be required to submit an academic transcript, proof of competency. Assistants will be responsible for leading the application process. Applicants should submit a letter indicating interest and background to the Mathematics department. 217 Strong. In addition a transmittal letter need to be submitted. Salary: Tentatively $3,800 for academic year. Additional salary may be determined on an Equal Opportunity Affirmative Action employer. Applications are sought from all qualified applicants. 4-2
The Department of Mathematics is now accepting applications for the 2019 Math 602 tutors for Fall 1982. Tutors will work approximately 10-15 hours per week and will receive a $1,000 bonus. Applicants must have successfully completed MATH 112 122, MATH 113 124, or obtained from the Department of Mathematics, Kennesaw State University. Applicants must be contacted for interviews. For further information, contact STF Sergei Perechinov at stfsergei@kysu.edu. The Mathematical Department is an Affirmative Action Equity Organization. Staff sought from all qualified persons . 4
The Mathematics Department is accepting applications for the position of an auditor. Applicants should have completed MATH 125 at Houghton Mifflin Harcourt or have completed MATH 128 at Houghton Mifflin Harcourt and be in the 113-114 suite of rooming and kitchen facilities. Applications are available in the application form on the Houghton Mifflin Harcourt website. The application must be turned in at the office, and contact professor Philip Montgomery, E.B. Strong University, Email: contactprofessor.phpmontgomery.com.Equal Opportunity Affirmative action employee Applications may not be accepted without equal opportunity.
Lost: Backpack with glasses in pocket, in
4020 Wescoe Monday 3-29. Glasses needed.
Reward: 843-7532 ask for Kurt. 4-7
Lost beige purse at Mad Hatter, broken
strap, 3-25, call 749-1303. 4-2
Missing-1 brown tri-fold wallet 1 set 10 keys, 1 set 3 keys. If found call 841-8416.
Reward 4-6
LOST
Instant passport, visa, ID, & resume photographs. Custom made portraits b/w, color Swells Studio. 749-1611. **tf**
PERSONAL
Skillet's liquor store serving U-Daly since 1949. Come in and compare. Willard Skillet 2019. 906 Mass. 843-8188. if
Say it on a sweatshirt with custom silk-screen printing I to 1000 shirt art by Swelli 749-1611. t
SKI THIRPS, SKI THIRPS, SKI THIRPS, SKI THIRPES,
WYINTERPARK, DILLON AND OTHERS
Examinal packages every weekend and school brakes. SKi Eck. Stk 841-3838. tddm
$6.95 Per Day SPECIAL
early cart(Mon, Tues,
$6.95 Per Day
$60 Per Week
$225 Per Month
Cannot be combined with any other special. All cars are mechanically sound, state inspected. Clean & ready to rent. We accept checks, checks, vmasupport.com 749-4225
LEASE-A-LEMON
HEADACH, BACKACH, STIFF NECK,
LEG PAIN? Find and correct the
problem! Call Dr. Mark Johnson for
anterior chiropractic care. 842-693-0751
For your party clothes, formal or contume,
check out the Inflation Fighter, E 8. Th E-
10.5-10.2 M-F 10.5-10.3 Sat, Open ill 8
on Thurs.
The Kegger—Weekly Specials on Keggs!
Call 841-9541-1610 W. 23rd.
MARY KAY COSMETICS-Full-time beauty consultant. 842-6641. tt
Attend an intensive one day workshop
Lawrence Arts Center 9th & Vermont
Registration: $25
COMPRESERVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES
Free pregnancy testing; early and advanced
out patient abortion; gynecology; breast
care; & Bore. Overland Park, KS
912) 643-1200
912) 643-1200
To register write: TCA, Inc.
Box 1179 Lawrence, KS 66044
Dr. Colle, 749-2080
English Graduates! Thinking ...<
School? Small is beautiful. Graduate?
Ask for a picture. The picture.
April 20, England Deparment State
University Emporia. KS. 6800. Call toll free
(314) 259-2070.
Exciting jobs at Lake Hockenbie. Send $50 to
Tahoe Jobs. P.O. Box 7244, Killam City, MN.
66142.
Hillel
presents
55n
Bagels & Lox Brunch
Arthur Kurzweil
with
noted Genealogist
"Tracing
Your
Roots"
Sunday, April 4
Sunday, April 4
12:30 p.m.
$2 Hille! members
$4 non-members
Lawrence Jewish Community Cente
nook heads, wallets, jewelry bags from
Korea. Barb's Second Hand Rose. 515
Indiana. 842-4746. 4-9
Spring formals—Prairie-look, 50's, beaded
Taffetta, Barb's Second Hand Rose, 515
Indiana, 821-4746. 4-9
TONIGHT'S THE TIGHT!
SUPERDANCE '82
Starts Today!
5 p.m. to 6 p.m.
NATL GUARD ARMORY
SPECTRUM OPTICAL. Come in and choose from over 300 trannes and sunglasses in stock. One day service in most cases. Open 10-6. M-S, 8:11, 413 E. 7-42.
BOCO Elections The Board of Class Officers will be holding Signatures, Junior, and Senior Certificates. Petitions and filing forms may be picked up in the BOCO or the Student Records Office. April 4-8
Applications for Omicron Delta Kappa, the national honor society in 290 strong Wall Dear. Due to an earlier shortage of students, Omicron Delta was scheduled to Friday, April 4, at 3 a.m. in Quincy, Mass. Applicants must submit a resume to 846-481-651.
RECORD SALE
HOT ALBUMS
AT
HOT PRICES
kansas
union bookstores
RECORD SALE
GREEN'S CASE SALE, FARST $7.29, BUD-
WEISER LIGHT $9.59, GREEN'S, 808 WEST
AIR.
GREEN'S CASE SALE. BUSCH $7.99, COORS
$8.99, BUDWESER LIGHT $8.99, GREEN'S.
868 WEST 23RD. 4-9
Starree-Teens-Videos-Tape. Recorders. Name brandly only. Factory sealed cartons. Low-cost prices in the K.C. area. Get your host call to call Tele Sound Center 913-844-2000 4-30 913-844-2000
Faster than a trackster more powerful than a football player. Able to keep Hook Auditorium with one hand behind back with Joe Jax. a hippe No. 14 in an Ultimate 4
PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH-
RIGHT, 843-4821.
tf
ACCENT SOUND & LIGHT CO. for your next party. Dates available in April & May. Call 81-0250 for booking information. 4-6
BOARDSAILING If you thought you couldn't afford your own windscreen then call our rental-purchase program. 4-232-2566
DESIGN-A-SHIRT CONTEST
$100
1st Prize
Enter now at:
kansas
union bookstores
Main Union Satellite
Men and Women play Ultimate in short shorts. 4-7
Consignments Accepted
...you ever felt like a Fool? Join the crowd. The Ultimate Fools Festival Saturday and Sunday O-Zone Fields. 4-2
FedEx teams from St. Louis, Tupper Lake, Detroit, Oklahoma City, Springfield, Kansas City and more Saturday and Sunday O-Zone FOIL VULTURE FOOSIL FESTIVAL 4-2
Every Wed. 6:30 p.m.
Community Auction 700 N.H.
Wed. 10 a.m. till sale
Sat. 10-5
841-2212
The Horror Zoontals and Ultra-Violets are your local Fridays theme. Come yell for them this weekend. THE ULTIMATE FOOLS FESTIVAL. 4-2
Dealing With That Uneasy Feeling. Learn to initiate conversations, make presentations, and teach at the Nummer Center, Wednesday, April 7, 7-9:30 p.m., NummerCenter, free no registration. The Student Assistance Program offers resources.
Born and razed in Chuckskay. Brvr Jones
Born and razed. 4-5
EXCHANGE A Private Club Fire Place Videos Great Drinks at Great Prices
Memberships Available
-Now that you're a man of 20,
I hope you won't mind dating a mere child
of 18 for a little longer! Happy Birthday!
I love you more. Lisa.
4-2
NUKE THE WALMERS!
Naismith Hall
Natalie Hall offers you the best ofadems and benefits of an apartment; good deeds and plenty of time to play. She has a wonderful website of social activities and much more. If you're looking for home in an apartment it is what we're looking for.
NAISMITHHALL
1800 Nansmith Drive
843-8559
Dearest Joe Wainshock The Seven days and nights that I've been waiting to need to see you again, see all of you. Please, Joe take me to T. J., I. L. and Ugly. Love You, Lovie, Rise and Ugly.
Dear Joe W Please love me not big, Fat,
and Ugly I Love You Kim W 4-2
Remember, O most gracious Virgin Mary that never was it known that anyone who had come to me implored the intercession was left unfaused. Inured by this confidence, I flow to these, to all of you in my presence. I stand sinful and sorrowful. O Lady of the Mistletoe, in the heart, hear and answer me, Amen.
West Coast Saloon
You get more for less,
for longer at the Coast.
25' Draws
NOON-6 p.m.
EVERY FRIDAY
2222 IOWA 841-BI
Ann: I got the best pledge daughter of them all! Love, your favorite APhi pledge mom—
Van. 4-2
Gay Services WEAR BLUE JEANS IF YOU ARE GAY
your support for our civil rights and wear your blue jeans today! WOMANS DANCE ON THE ROAD! Commission on Status of Women 4-2-4
Gay Services. FREE XEGER and "Bring Your Own Plainie" 12:00 noon Centennial Park, 91st & Iowa. Balletsch. Volleyball, bad ball. Bead. Bring a plainie and both 4-23
SERVICES OFFERED
Schneider Wine & Key Shop—The finest selection of wines in Lawrence—largest supplier of strong kegs. 1610 W. 23rd. 843-321.
Gay Services METROPOLITAN COMMUNI-
ment at 12:30 for the 1:30 service at MCC in Kansas City. Drivers and riders need sign up in the office and meet in the Univ-
WRITING A RESUME? What to say? How to say it? Stop By the House of Uber and cut up their resume on resumes by 3-4 inches, be 8-12 feet, 3-4 SAT, NOON-3 Sun.
TUTORING MATH, STATISTICS, PHYSICS
COMPUTER SCIENCE. Call 861-4099 anytime
(b.S. in physics, M.A. in mathematics)
or call 861-4176 (a.k.a. for Robert). tf
Drafting (chartts, maps, etc.) 6 years experience, competitively priced. Also script lettering for certificates. 841-7944. 4-21
Professional Stringing Tennis and Recet-
ball. Best Prices in town. Call 842-5521 or
842-6528. 4-30
LEARN TENNIS from experienced instructor in small groups with other KU students or private lessons 842-6713 after 6.00 p.m.
Responsible young couple would like to HOUSE SIT mid-May through August. Call 864-6155. 4-9
Sisterhood is fun! Come to the women' s dances on Friday April 2, 8 p.m.-p.m. midnight. Sponsor Commission on the Status of Women. Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas 4-2
Tutoring-Don't wait till the next exam!
Biology and Statistics Paul 841-254-68, 4-9
MOPED RIDERS—It's time to get your bike tuned up for the season. Experienced cycle mechanic will do tune up and recharge rate荷包. Call 841-5123. 4-2
ENLARGEMENTS
Caring Care Café
Centro de Comfort e Assistência
Another Encore exclusive:
Encore Copy Corps
25th & Iowa
842-2001
Alena Yvr/Jolba skincare. Quality product at affordable prices. Why look your skin? Call your Sake Store +1-800-745-2131 Jack. Weekdays for 4 p.m. 842-0005. 4-6
RESUMES - Professional; students' reamers a speciality. 841-2654. 4-30
TYPING
GRADUATE STUDENTS THERIS COOPERS
quality purchases based on total volume of
quality products sold in this shop that can offer variable reduction fees.
Buy One Get One. Encore Copy, B84,
84-283. Encore Copy, B84,
84-283.
ivs a Fact, Fast, Affordable, Clean, Typing
843-5820.
Put your best foot forward with a professionally printed resume from Enoce. We can write it, it and print it for you. Call Encore 842-2000, 251d & Ishwai. 4-30
Dealing With With That Uneasy Feeling: Wednes-
day 11, 7:39-9:20 pm, Nunemaker
Center. The Student Assistance Center, 121
强 Hall, 844-4064. 4-6
TYPING-EDITING-GRAPHICS. IBM Correcting,Selective, full-time tippet, spelling correction to composition assistance. Emergency service available. 841-290-47. 411
Experienced typist. Theses, term paper,
etc. IBM Correcting Selective. Call Sandy
after 5 p.m. 748-9818. tf
Experienced typist. Term papers, theses, all micaceaneous. IMB Correcting Beauty Elite or Pica, and will correct spelling Phone 453-643. Mrs. Wright. t
Experienced typist will type letters, thesis,
and dissertations. IBM correcting electric.
Call Donna at 842-2744. tf
Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms,
graphics, editing, pcl-correct. Selectric.
Call Ellen or Jean Ann 841-2172. tt
Correcting Selective II; Royal Correcting
18 500 000. B43-5675. 2F
**TYPNING PLUS:** Theses; dissertations, papers, letters, applications,复习s. Notes; composition, grammar,学术讲义. English. book; for enseigns at schools or Americans. B41-6254.
Experienced typist-thesis, dissertations term papers, misc. IBM correcting electric Barb, after 5 p.m. b42-2310
TIP-TOP TYPING—experienced typist—IBM Correcting Selective II; Royal Correcting SE 5000 CD. 843-5675. tf
IRON FENCE TYPING SERVICE Evenings
842-2507. tf
Professional typing. Dissertations, thesaurus, term papers, resumes, legal, etc. IBM Correcting Sleetric. Deb 843-9592. 4-5
MAGIC FINGERS TYPING SERVICE, 843-
6129. ___ 4.70
AFFORDABLE QUALITY for all your typing needs: themes, dissertations, resumes, charts, mailings, misc. Call Jody 842-7941 after 6:00 p.m.
Fast, accurate and experienced typist will type your papers. Reasonable. Call 842-8091. 4-30
Former medical research secretary will type books, theses, term papers. Call Nancy, 841-5802. 4-9
Quality typing and word processing available at Encore Copy Corp. 25th and Iowa.
842-2001. 4-30
Graduate students tired of typing, retyping and retyping their thesis or dissertation? Save time and money by word processing it at Excerci Call 842-2001 for more info. 415-672-3625
Would like to type dissertations, thesis, term papers, etc. Call 842-3203. 4-50
WANTED
Roommate for summer furnished 2 br. apt. close to campus, free gas & water, new carpet & paint. Call 841-0649. 4-5
Experienced female vocalist wants to join Gospel or Rock-n-Roll band. Michelle: 864-864-2219 4-5
Responsible person to share 3 bdmn. house on bus rte. from June 78 to May '83. 116 + 1/3 utilities mo. Call 842-5230. 4-76
WANTED: 1 or 2 female roommates for 3 bedroom house. Close to campus. Call 846-1365. 4-6
Male roommate. Available now! Very nice
duplex with luxurious to your own
garage space and spacious kitchen.
garbage disposal. 3 bd.
for 14/month + 1/7 unit. 841-9603.
Roommate to sublease apt on bus route.
For summer. $180 month. If interested Steve or Bobbi at 843-6849. 4-8
Wanted: Person to share 3 BR Home Avail;
immediately. On bus route, $90/mo. + 1/3
util. Don 841-5641.
4-5
Female Roommate, 2 bedroom ant., close to campus, $55 month, %₂ utilities, 941-0982 or 644-1830 for Jerril. 4-2
Roommate for May. 1. $110/mo. plus utilities.
842-0038
4-6
Pzmale, non-smoker preferably, to live with two girls in Meadowbrook - rent negotiate - call 841-8503 events. 4-21
Two Senior female business students looking for roommate to share 2 barm, and summer pad/or next year. Call 842-641-661
Female housemate for 3-bedroom house, 1 block N. of stadium. Serious student, prefer grd. 841-6454. If no answer, call 4-9 early or late.
Liberal male roommate wanted immediately or for summer call Stephanie Sliver 864-3720 or 749-2473. 4-2
Sports
Page 14 University Daily Kansan, April 2, 1982
1982 Topps, Fleer strike out Donruss reigns as card king
The King is dead.
Topps, long recognized as the best- and only-maker of baseball cards, has been supplanted as king of the collector's hill.
Last year, the Fleer and Donrusn companies won a court case which gave them the right to compete with Tops in the card market. The first series by both companies was well-made, and they were regarded as the best of the 1881 bunch.
A. M.
But the 1982 cards are out, and the verdict is in. Donruss is the superior set.
Tracee Hamilton
All three brands cost 35 cents for a package of 15, and all three brands offer "special" cards. The similarity offers "toppa." Toppas has as many of these specials as it does regular issues. Fleer's specials are, to say the least, corny. But Donruss' are definitely classy.
THE FIRST 28 cards of the Donruss set are called Diamond Kings. The company has picked one player from each team and has had the Philadelphia Phillies' artist Dick Perez draw likenesses of each of the players. Pete Rose, for example, represents the Phillies, and George Brett the Royals.
In addition, Donruss offers several special shots including, ironically, the
"Bronx Bombers," Reggie Jackson and Dave Winfield, Jackson will be "bomming" from Anaheim Stadium this spring. Another card features "Philadelphia's Finest," Rose and Mike Schmidt.
Fleer's specials are almost as silly as its football card series of last fall. The highest priced card at this moment is a special called "Pete and Re-Pete," with a picture of Rose and his famous son, little Petey.
TOPPS'S SPECIALS include a series of All-Stars "In Action," cards depicting each 1981 All-Star and "Highlights" cards.
Toppers, however, offers one thing no other company can—bubble gum. Toppers tried to put the other two companies out of competition, but won only a third. Collector collectors everywhere owe Toppers a debt of gratitude. Fleer's gum last year was so heavily powdered the chewer wore a thick white mustache after two pieces. And Donruss made bubble gum that world's first entirely tasty cheese.
To make up for the missing confection, Fleer has made a series of stickers featuring the logos of all the major league teams. On the back of the sticker cards are pictures that, when put together just right, reveal a lovely blimp shot of last year's all-Star game. Houm.
DORNUSR AGAIN comes to the forefront with its added attraction—pieces of a jigsaw puzzle, sixty-three pieces. Together to form a tribute to Baba Ruth.
Donrusx also excels at presenting the statistics nearly. All the cards present the vital statistics such as height, weight and date of birth. But Topts puts the information in tiny type, and Fleer's isn't much bigger. Donrusx gives career highlights of the players, while Topts persists year after year, in telling us droll little facts that no one really cares about.
Here's one for example: "Garry Templeton collected 100 hits from each side of the plate in 1979." That's wondersome, but it's written on damie Qurk's card.
But for those of you who collect the cards not for the gum or the statistics, but for their overall appearance, there's hardly a contest.
Fleer's photos are out of focus. Looking through several packs gives a collector a splitting headache.
TOPPS PHOTOS aren't bad, especially their vertical shot of Carlton Fisk "In Action," diving after a ball. But tops Chops to make the cards very graphic, with colored, curved lines all over the card's front side. And the colors aren't even those of the team. Fernando Valenzuela, for example, is rimmed by a line of pink and a line of purple. Ugly pink and ugly purple.
There are many fine ordinary cards in all three sets, but, as it goes with all collections, the oddity is often the most prized. In the Toops set, Yankee Dave Righett and his father Fleer's "Pete and Re-Pete" classic is going for 75 cents, as is one Donruss card that depicts—would you believe it? —the San Diego Chicken.
GEORGE BRETT
Topps
in action
20
Phillies Fineest
COURTIS
DIMOND KINGS
STOAN BADY
The Chicken
KU opens Big Eight play tomorrow
The 1982 baseball cards are the brightest ever. The cards from left to right are Topps' finest of George Brett in action, the drawing of Bret, Donnaux' special issues of Phillies Finest and Bronx Bombers, and the San Diego Chicken card.
Bronx Bombers
By MIKE ARDJ
Sports Writer
The Kansas baseball team starts conference play this weekend hoping to get solid performances out of everyone.
KU will take on Oklahoma Saturday and Sunday with both double-headers starting at 12:30 and 1:00, the previously announced time of 1 p.m.
The probable starters against Oklahoma are Randy McIntosh, 1-3 and Chris Ackley, 1-1, pitching Saturday, Jim Phillips, 2-2, and Kevin Kroeker, 1-1, will pitch Sunday.
Oklahoma finished fifth in the Big Eight last year with a 11-13 conference record. They were 40-15 and lost to Oklahoma with a 12-11 record and 32-12 overall.
One of the brightest spots for the Jayhawks is their hitting. Four of the Jayhawk starters are hitting well, as all sevenleaders the starters at 409.
ONE OF the problems for the 'Hawks this year is their inability to get pitching, hitting and fielding together in a double-header. KU has split three of their last four doubleheaders.
"We need to go out and play solid fundamental baseball," Coach Marty Pattin said. "We should have a chance. We're not as ready as we could be."
"I THOUGHT it was bad luck," he said.
Centerfielder Dick Lewallen said concentration was one of the Jawhayhs' problems.
Wallell noticed his eyes were giving him trouble last summer. Last season, though, he didn't think they were lowering his batting average.
Last fall, hitting figured to be the Jayhawks' weak spot as they returned that one pitcher from a loss led Big Eight in earned run average.
"My eyes aren't that bad," he said. "If I wasn't playing baseball, I wouldn't need them."
Lewallen hit .248 last year after hitting .316 his freshman year. Over Christmas Lewallen got contact lenses and his hitting came around.
"The defense is better than it has been," he said. "You have games like that. It happens to everyone."
Instead, it has been the hitting, with a .316 team average, that has won games for the 'Hawks. Although he has played well, ultimately, Pattin said he wasn't worried.
"You can't do that against Big Eight teams and expect to win."
SOME OFF the players have also been taking extra batting practice this spring.
"Dick has worked awfully hard," Pattin said. "He goes out and hits every day. That's good. It shows that a guy is working."
One of the keys to the Jayhawks' hitting is extra batting practice. The player's parents donated a batting kit and equipment to get extra practice in over the winter,
Pattin said the Jayhawks need to play more like a team to get better consistency.
"We've got to get more team spirit, pride," he said. "We don't have enough pride. I want these guys to have a better attitude.
"When they pull together, it rubs off on the whole team. We just can't go out there and think we're going to win. We don't have the talent. We have to have a team effort. One guy can't carry the team."
U
Randy McIntosh delivers a pitch to the plate in the *Jayhawks* game against Concordia. McIntosh will be the winning pitcher tomorrow against Oklahoma.
Tennis team attempts to break losing streak
The Kansas Jayhawks men's tennis team will try to get back on the winning track this weekend after having lost two straight matches, dropping its record below the 500 level for the first time since last season. The team's record is now 3-4
"This team never gives up. As long as we keep pushing, things are going to stale."
breaks lately," Hall said. "We've been playing real well."
The Jayhawks kick off the weekend by hosting Drury today at 2:30 p.m. Northwest Missouri State will be the opposition tomorrow in a i.p.m. match. On Sunday, they will play Southern Illinois in a i.10. m. match.
"We can't get down on ourselves for losing to Division II schools, because both of them were good teams with solid tennis programs," senior Ed Bolen said. "We've just got to make it a learning experience."
The Jayhawks are coming off two tough 54 setbacks. Both were to NCAA Division II schools, Southwest Missouri State and Northeast Missouri State.
"Our season is half over, and we need to start getting ready for Big Eight play. Thankfully, we've been having some competitive matches lately, which should really help us on down the road."
confidence," freshman Craig Tidwell said. "Hopefully, we will get a few breaks this time out."
Head Coach Randy McGrath believes his team is steadily improving.
"I'm really glad we have these matches this weekend," McGhrath said. "I think the only way you can improve is by playing a lot of matches.
Senior Tom Hall believes the Jayhawks fortunes are due for a turnaround.
Southern Illinois defeated KU 9-0 last year. The Jayshaw have not faced the Browns yet.
"We just haven't been getting any
Track team splits for weekend meets
By DAVE McQUEEN
The KU men's track team will be splitting in two this weekend, with 18 athletes traveling to Austin, Texas to compete in the Texas Relays, and 11 others going to the Southeast Missouri State annual meet in Cape Girardeau, Mo.
Last weekend, the Jayhawks were down in El Paso, Texas, where they faced Texas-Esl Paso and lost 55-69. The Jayhawks won five events at the dua.
Sports Writer
At the Texas Relays, the first stop on the Midwest relays circuit, the Jayhawks will be entered in two distance relays and several individual events. Enter at the end of therundown. The fundraiser Greg Leibert and Tim Tayms. In the distance medley relay, Rodney Bullock and Leonard Martin will run with Gundy
and Tays. Tays is also entered in the 10,000-meter run.
IN THE FIELD, KU includes role pvaulter Jeff Buckingham, Clint Johnson in the discus and Paul Titus in the high jump.
Two of the Jayhawks top athletes won't make the trip, however. Long. jumper Warren Wilhoite is out with tendonitis, and high jumper Tykie Peacock, who hasn't jumped since the 1980s. The injury, is still suffering from a knee injury.
"We'll have a larger contingent heading down this year than we've had in the past," KU track coach Bob Timmons said. "This is simply a great meet. We've been there for many years and we're looking forward to going on this year. It is clearly one of the most outstanding meets in the country."
should be tough too, with 74 teams entered from all over the country. Heading the list of Jayhawks entered in the meet is spinner Mark Rau. Rau, who is still somewhat bothered by injuries that kept him up on action last year, will be running the 400-meter intermediate hurdles.
THE MEET in Cape Girardeau
KU will have entered in the pole vault, with George Buckingham, Larry Metzger and Denis Malley competing. Other KU entries include Glen Foster, Dan Burke, Jump, Gary Lowrie in the shotput, and Eldred Williams in the high jump.
JAYHAWK NOTES: The Arkansas State Court of Appeals Wednesday upheld the conviction of former KU coach TUJUHAM on a cruelty to animals charge.
Cunningham, who competed in the 1932 and 1936 Olympics, was fined $500 for letting 12 horses on his farm starve.
Women's tennis team hosts tourney
By GARY GRIGGS
Sports Writer
The Kansas Jayhawks women's tennis team will be facing an oddity tomorrow—they will be playing a match at home. Actually, they will be playing two matches, as they host Northern Iowa and Denver in the KU In-
The Jayhawks will face Northern Iowa at 9 a.m. and will play Denver at 1 p.m.
"We've really been looking forward to this for a long time now." Head coach Johnny Manziel
Merrison said the chief reason why the women's team is only playing one home match this season is because they have a fixed scheduling teams than the men do.
kind of tough playing on the road all the time."
"The men can schedule teams like Baker or Southwest Missouri State, because these schools have established tennis programs," she said. "Most schools around here don't have decent women's tennis programs."
Men's Head Coach Randy McGrath, who coached the women's team last year, agrees with Merrion.
The women are in a bad situation
since they don't have the selection of schools to play like we do," he said.
The Jahways are now 7-6 overall, and are coming off a second place finish in the Kansas State Invitational last weekend.
"Actually, we have been somewhat lucky this season. The only reasons we are getting to play schools such as Iowa State and Texas, they called me up and asked to play us."
"We've been improving steadily all season," Merrion said. "We really played some super tennis at K-State. I just hope we can keep the momentum going into the Big Eight Championships."
Eagles linebacker retires from NFL
PHILADELPHIA—Inside linebacker Bill Bergey, who had not played a National Football League game that counted since the Philadelphia Eagles' Super Bowl appearance 15 months ago because of a knee injury, retired yesterday and embraced Coach Dick Vermell in a tearful goodbye.
By United Press International
"I gave it my best shot," Berger told news conference. "I know I can't fail."
"I know I look like I'm 28 to you people," he leaked, "but I was 37."
Bergley, a 13-year veteran who played in four Pro Bowls and was a three-time choice by his teammates as the Eagles' Most Valuable Player, said he would continue to do charity work for the Eagles.
"I don't really want to divorce myself from the game," he said. "I really don't know how I'm going to channel my interests.
"I was never asked to retire. I never
would be in retirement" out of Dick
Vernick's mouth.
Bergey, a 6-foot-3, 245-pound Arkansas State product, was a second-round draft choice of the Cincinnati Bengals in 1969. He spent five seasons with Cincinnati and was named by the Philadelphia on July 10, 1974, in exchange for two first-round draft choices in 1977 and 1978 and a second-round pick in 1978.
Vermil, unsuccessfully fighting back tears, praised Bergery as the "foundation" of the Eagles and said the veteran "has given me strength."
Basketball
NBASTANDINGS
Eastern Conference
Atlantic Division
Team W W L Pct. GB —
Boston 42 50 1.76 — —
Philadelphia 50 22 0.67 —
Washington 37 37 5.51 19
New Jersey 37 38 60.67 19
New York 32 31 41.84 24
Milwaukee...50 23 685
Atlanta...36 49 856
Baltimore...34 10 18%
Indiana...33 43 652
Chicago...15 40 177
Cleveland...15 57 908
Scoreboards
Western Conference Midwest Division
San Antonio 44 39 .603
Oklahoma City 42 38 .591 1½%
Houston 42 38 .591 1½%
Kansas City 26 47 .386 19%
Dallas 26 47 .386 19%
Yallows 19 53 .384 24%
Los Angeles 50 23 685
San Antonio 49 21 666 3/4%
Phoenix 40 26 656 3/4%
Golden State 40 33 548 10%
Chicago 40 33 548 10%
San Diego 77 38 126 34%
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
RIGHT STANDING
New York 111, Cleveland 101
Dallas 122, Detroit 120
Milwaukee 173, Atlanta 113
Los Angeles 107, San Diego 113
Baseball
Team BM HOU LSU
Oklahoua 1 0 1,000 Pct. GB
Oklahoma State 2 1 .500 %
Oklahoma State 2 2 .500 %
Iowa State 2 2 .500 %
Kansas State 0 0 .500 %
Kansas 0 0 .500 %
Missouri 0 0 .000 1
Hockev
NHL STANDINGS Wales Conference
Team W 3 L 15 T GF 77 Pts. 11
NY Islanders W 3 L 16 T GF 79 Pts. 18
Philadelphia 37 D 10 T 113 315 85
Pittsburgh 37 D 10 T 113 315 85
Baltimore 30 D 11 T 305 366 71
Montreal 46 15 17 17 355 215 109
Boston 41 15 27 31 311 109 27
Buffalo 38 25 15 298 289 82 91
Quebec 32 18 15 16 385 81 80
Québec 28 14 15 17 360 81 80
Campbell Conference
Campus Conference
Nerrix Dukeson
Minnesota 36 22 10 33 282 92
Winnings 33 22 10 34 338 822
Wilmington 31 13 14 318 389 90
Chicago 38 38 12 12 321 368 64
Chicago 38 38 12 12 321 368 64
Toronto 21 16 14 16 389 584
New York 38 16 12 12 368 368
Edmonton 47 17 15 15 415 294 105
Calgary 47 17 33 143 334 105
Vancouver 28 33 17 17 277 282 63
Los Angeles 28 33 17 15 310 76 53
YESTERDAY S RESULTS
Quebec 8, Boston 10
Philadelphia 3, New York Islander 3
Calgary 11, Colorado 0
Soccer
MISL STANDINGS
Western Discus
Team W L T Pct. GB
New York 27 7 1.74 -
Texas 27 14 1.58
Baltimore 23 13 659 %
Buffalo 21 18 628 %
New Jersey 14 12 389 14
California 14 12 389 14
Philadelphia 10 28 363 12
St. Louis . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27 . 10 . 730 -- %
Wichita . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23 . 15 . 534 -- %
Wilmington . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 . 18 . 468 -- %
Denver . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 . 22 . 388 -- 12%*
Denver . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 . 22 . 388 -- 12%*
Kansas City . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 . 18 . 468 -- %
Kansas City . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
New Jersey 4. Philadelphia 2
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The University Daily
KANSAN
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
Monday, April 5, 1982 Vol. 92, No.126 USPS 650-640
A
(?)
20
JOHN EISELE/Kansan Staff
Martha Parrish, Wilmette, Ill., freshman, dances during the final hours of the 24-hour Superdance for Muscular Dystrophy last weekend. The dance, sponsored by Panhellenic and the Association of University Residence Halls, raised an estimated $2,200.
By SUSAN AHERN MARUSCO Staff Reporter
Western civ cuts protested
James Seaver, chairman of the western civilization department, Friday threatened to resign as chairman and accused the dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences of acting as a tyrant by slashing western civilization's budget by 50 percent.
Seaver said at a University Senate Executive committee meeting that he was not only outraged that no one told him about the cuts, but that he was also angry that the other half of his budget was being turned over to the history and philosophy departments.
He said he was opposed to those departments taking control of 10 teaching-assistant appointments in the western civilization program.
"I am indignant because I don't think I've been given due process," Seaver said, "my lawyer is being sued."
three pages of objections to the dean, but he didn't seem interested. I'm doing everything in my power to reverse this situation, but I don't think I'll be able to. Ultimately, I'll probably resign the chairmanship and go back to teaching history.
"But I'm going to fight first."
SEAVER SAID that giving the philosophy and history departments control of western civilization teaching assistants could do more than just teach the western civilization's teaching assistant staff.
"We're going to get the dregs from both departments," Seaver said. "This will also eventually decrease the quality of unrestricted education in western civilization.
"They (history and philosophy departments) will appoint the best applicants to their own programs first and give us what's left. They say, 'No. No. This isn't going to happen.' But it is. What if they only have five unsuitable applicants left to offer us?"
Robert Lineberry, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, said he viewed the western civilization budget cuts as a "minor, almost housekeeping matter."
He said that he didn't want to use the term budget cuts, because "reconfiguration" was a more useful word when talking about budgets.
Lanebey preffered that word because he said he was "too good" and budge was not have cut but re-channeled.
Last year western civilization's base budget was $100,995. Under the proposed 1983 budget plan, western civilization will receive $53,000.
Reallocation of funds divides faculty
SENEX PLANNED to draw up a resolution that affirmed the historical "openness" of history.
By DOUG CUNNINGHAM Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
The KU western civilization program was started in 1945, and since then, thousands of students have been exposed to the ideas of figures ranging from Plato to Adam Smith to
And James Seaver, director of the program for 25 years, has had direct control of the budget and instructors hired in a program he calls "interdisciplinary" in nature.
The 50 percent budget cut threatens the very existence of the program, he said.
But that changed on March 25 when Seaver received his budget for the next year and discovered that it had been cut by 50 percent, from $106,995 to $83,500.
Seaver said Friday that he had no prior knowledge that such a budget cut was going to be made.
ALMOST ALL KU students are required to take two semesters of western civilization, or pass a comprehensive examination covering the course material.
Jane Morse, senior instructor in the program, said that one of the main advantages the program had was its interdisciplinary approach.
Western civilization teachers are chosen for the depth of background and their commitment.
Teaching western civilization requires an understanding of the interconnections among the various disciplines, she said. People who have learned these skills are among the best instructors available.
"We traditionally get the cream of the crop of graduate students" she said.
THE BUDGET cut will not actually reduce
the amount of money spent, but will reallocate one-half of the money from western civilization to the philosophy department and each such of those departments will then appoint five instructors to the western civilization program.
The western civilization program currently has 26 assistant instructor positions, Morse
Seven of those assistant instructors are graduate students in the philosophy department, and another seven are graduate students in the history department.
Weather
seaver said that the budget cut was based on the concept that in many ways the graduate programs at KU, such as the history and philosophy graduate programs, are more important than the undergraduate programs, such as the western civilization program.
See WESTERN page 7
CHILLY
Conferees to decide fate
It will be cold and windy today with temperatures reaching a high near 40 degrees, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka.
Enrichment fund's life is on the line
Staff Reporter
By COLLEEN CACY
Winds will be from the northwest, gusting from 20 to 30 mph. There is a 20 percent chance of precipitation today and high temperatures in the teens to low 20s.
Tomorrow will also be cold, with temperatures in the high 40s.
TOPEKA—The Board of Regents 1983 budget has passed the Kansas House and Senate, leaving the fate of a $1.5 million faculty salary budget to the governor. The board made up of three members from each chamber.
The committee is scheduled to iron out the differences between budget recommendations made by the House and the Senate in a meeting tonight. The enrichment fund is the largest difference between the two budgets, because the Senate approved it, but the house killed it Friday.
Four votes are needed to approve the fund, and its success appears doubtful. Three members of the committee have already stated their opposition to any more money for faculty salaries.
Committee members will be State Rep. Mike Hayden, R-Atwood, chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee; State Rep. Bunten, R-Topeka; State Rep. Loren Hohman, D-Topeka; Senate President Ross Doyen, R-Cordonia; State Sen. Paul Hess, R-Wichita, Senate Ways and Means Committee chairman, and probably State Sen. Frank Gaines, D-Rockville.
Hayden, Bunten and Hess have opposed the fund in previous debate, but Doven supports it.
THE ENRICHMENT fund was one of seven amendments made Friday in the House that would have increased the Regents budget, but not enough to most all the Senate's recommendations intact.
The 1983 budget includes a 7.5 percent faculty salary increase, an 8.75 percent student salary increase and a 6 percent increase in operating expenses.
It adds $245,444 to the University of Kansas' position positions and $180,000 more for operating expenses.
Of the seven amendments made on the House floor, only one succeeded, a poison control hotline at the University of Kansas Medical Center that was introduced by State Rep. Jess Branson, D-Lawrence. The amendment calls for an effort to establish the hotline and hire one nurse
nurse.
State Rep. Joe Knopp, R-Manhattan, tried to amend the faculty salary increase up to 8.5 percent, but was voted down, 51-62.
"This body needs to make a decision—what level of education do we want to have in our state universities?" he asked the House members. "Do we want to mass exodus of faculty from our universities."
BUT WAYS and Means Committee Chairman
Haven opposed all the amendments to increase
the Regents budget, saying the state could not afford to give faculty more money.
"It would be nice and they deserve it. Everybody knows that," Hayden said. "But we have a fiscal responsibility here. We're not being too aware of these people with the House recommendations."
Later, in a comment made to House members seated near him, Hayden said "we've been waiting for that mass exodus for decades. We need it, with an exit sign and show them the way out."
Calling it a "half a load," Hayden also opposed an attempt by State Rep. Mike Mecham, R-Wichita, to increase faculty salaries by an extra 5 percent, to 8 percent.
Later amendments would have increased operating expenses by 7 percent and 6.5 percent.
See BUDGETpage 5
Senate committee reduces budget, still exceeds limit
By ANN LOWRY Staff Reporter
After more than 24 hours of deliberation beginning Friday, the Student Senate budget subcommittee this morning pared the fiscal 1983 budget requests from $121,000 to about $78,000-$20,000 now that it has to allocate.
The committee faced the decision to either take the $78,000 figure before the entire Student Senate and let it make further cuts or to review every request from the 60 student groups for the
only six groups' requests—the Men's Coalition for $85, the Students Concerned with Disabilities for $405, KU Volleyball for $1,117, KU Crew F for $2,360, Hilltop Child Development Center's for $2,814 and KJJK Radio's for $3,650—survived without cuts.
Two decisions the committee finalized were to cut the Black Student Union's $10,450 request and the Student Council for Recruiting, Motivating and Educating Minority Engineer's requests. The request was audited and auditing committee investigates them and the groups re-submit properly written budgets.
As of 2 a.m., Tom Berger, finance and auditing co-chairman, said he did not know which option the ground would choose.
Groups tentatively allocated more than $1,000 were:
- The KU International Club was cut from *s* 39% to 29 144
- *Tau Sigma Dance Ensemble was cut from $2,644 to $1,474.*
- Latin American Solidarity was cut from $198 to $1,344.
- Kansas Defender Project was cut from $3,903 to $3,891.
See ALLOCATE page 7
Biker pursues lifelong love
By KAREN MUELLER Staff Reporter
Dave Conrad, Lawrence graduate student, was like many other grade school boys who dreamed of being sports stars.
But 14 years, seven Kansas state championships titles, and an international race later, Conrad said he felt like "kind of an old man" when he saw the new, young riders.
"I think I've always wanted to be a racer," he said. "I can remember once in the fifth grade, I was racing to school because I was late, and I was pretending I was in a race, when interviewed by a reporter on how it is so fast."
But his dream always included his bicycle.
"I feel comfortable enough now with what I've accomplished that I could retire without regret from this job."
Although he considers himself too old, at 24, to try out for the national team, he speaks enthusiastically about using his experience and knowledge to help younger riders make it to the top.
BUT IF CONRAD appears to be losing interest in
ecling, appearances are deceiving.
"The kids in this area have the best opportunity of anyone in the country," he said. "They've got the best coaching, except for those few juniors who get to go to the Olmantic Center in Colorado Springs."
Through the Mt. Oread Bicycle Club, Conrad said, he has met younger riders who ask him and other ex-riders to ride with him.
"I wish I'd had that kind of advice," he said. "I feel more than happy to give it to them."
Besides offering advice from his racing experience, Conrad said he hoped he would aid racers with the results of scientific research he is conducting at bicyclists.
Conrad is completing his thesis for a master's degree in exercise physiology. The thesis research, he said, concerns how a biker's oxygen consumption varies when the bicycle's crank arm length changes.
"I think it's unique," he said. "Eventually, it'll be published."
Although he won't be able to test enough riders to form exact applications properly, said his research team, he will be looking at the data.
HOWEVER, HE SAID, his demanding racing schedule often cuts into his study time. During the racing season, which lasts from the end of February until October, a race he never tried to race every weekend, a total of 60 to 70 races.
"The racing's fun. By the end of the season, you get tired of it, but it gives you something to look forward to."
Although biking can be a costly sport, he said he was sponsored by bike distributors who helped pay his expenses and provided a bike for his use each year. Conrad often traveled as far as 1,000 miles in one
Conrad often traveled as far as 1,000 miles in one
Monday Morning
weekend to race. This regional competition was "basicly, almost precisely my level."
mistfully, hastily proceed. But
However, last summer Conrad traveled considerably
further than that for one race. He was invited to compete in the Tour of Ireland.
"I got to go to Ireland purely by luck," he said. "I had been training for the National Championships, and was packed to leave the next day, when a friend called from Ireland, who had asked if I could be ready to go to Ireland in a few days."
HE DECIDED on the spot to trade his bid at the Nationals for a trip to Ireland. Within a week, he had obtained a passport, raceed in Massachusetts, and flown to Ireland with his three American teammates.
The Tour of Ireland is a stage race, which is a series of races held each day, usually racing from one place to another. The racer having the lowest cumulative time wins the race and are also awarded to the winners of each day's stage.
The racers in Ireland covered 740 miles in eight days and 11 separate races, he said. The course took them from southern Ireland up the west coast almost into Northern Ireland, then to Dublin.
"I was just glad to finish," Conrad said. Of the 100
copies he had ordered.
NIKE
David Conrad
JOHN EISLE/Rangan Star
C.
Page 2 University Daily Kansan, April 5, 1982
News Briefs From United Press International
British kill 3 Argentinians, send war fleet to Falklands
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina - Argentina said yesterday more of its soldiers were killed in British marines defending a scientific facility on the Falkland Islands near Tortoise.
It warned Britain that any attempt to reclaim the Falklands by force would mean a full-scale war.
In Britain, the largest British war fleet assembled since the 1962 Suez crisis completed preparation to set sail today for Falklands, 450 miles off the South Pacific.
An Argentine military communique said a contingent of 22 British marines ambushed an Argentine force landing on the island of south Georgia Saturday, killing three Argentines and destroying a helicopter in a two-hour battle near the scientific outpost of Gurkien.
It said the marines, on south Georgia to protect a team of British scientists, surrendered and that the Argentine force was in full control of the area.
The fighting brought Argentine casualties to four dead and two wounded since Friday, when 4,000 troops invaded the Falklands' main cluster of islands, capturing the capital of Port Stanley after a three-hour battle with 78 Royal marines.
Both Argentine and Britain officials hope for a diplomatic solution to the property battle, but Argentine Pens. Gen. Leopoldo Gattieri said he was ready to take action. "We are ready," he said.
The Falklands have been a British colony since 1833 and their residents are of British stock. Argentine maintains it inherited a Spanish claim to the islands.
Leaders remember death of King
ATLANTA—Curtessa Scott King, the widow of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., was named a special guest on the 51st anniversary of the Nobel Peace prize winner's assassination.
King was joined at the grave site by King's father and other family members, Atlanta Mayor Andrew Young and the Rev. Joseph Lowery, president of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, which King founded after the 1966 Montgomery bus boycott.
King was gunned down April 4, 1968 in Memphis, Tenn., while standing on a balcony at the Lorenstein Hotel during his campaign for better treatment of blunt wounds.
A group of about 500 blacks embarked on a march through Henning, Tenn. to commemorate the anniversary of King's assassination.
Brezhney to resign, magazine says
NEW YORK—Soviet President Leonid Breznev suffered a “very
serious” injury two weeks ago and will resign in May. Newsweek magazine
started writing about him.
Newsweek quoted what it said was a 10-page U.S. "intelligence document" which concluded that even if Brenzhener survived, he would be replaced. Communist party leaders have scheduled a central committee assembly in May, ostensibly to decide on a successor to theAILer leader.
Other sources have said Breznev's condition is not that serious. They indicated that doctors were still not sure whether Breznev had suffered a mild stroke or a transient pre-stroke condition. Meanwhile, the official Soviet newspaper Prava published yesterday a terse, two-paragraph announcement in Breznev's name, apparently to silence speculation on his condition.
Reagan's defense remarks blasted
WASHINGTON—Two influential Democratic senators and a former U.S. agent when he said the Soviets had a margin of superiority in nuclear force.
The comments, made on two television broadcast interviews yesterday, referred to Reagan's remark during a news conference last Wednesday that the Soviet Union has a "definite margin of superiority" in nuclear weapons would launch a nuclear attack, "absorb our retaliatory blow and hit us again."
Sen. Daniel Moyhann, D-N.Y., vice chairman of the select committee on intelligence, called Reagan's remark a "leakage of reality" and said it was
Sen. Henry Jackson, D-Wash., said that imbalances existed between the Soviet and nuclear forces, the United States still had the largest of them.
Paul Wainne, President Jimmy Carter's arms control negotiator, said the United States had "got to regard to the state of nuclear balance and his statement was flat wrong."
Reagan was defended by a state department official, who said, "Of course the President was right."
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador-Gunman assassinated a right-wing politician and wounded a second man in the first post-election violence directed against members of El Salvador's new constituent assembly, authorities said yesterday.
Gunmen kill Salvadoran rightist
Assemblyman David Joaquin Quinteros of the extreme right-wing Nationalist Republican Alliance and his cousin were shot by gunmen late Saturday and left to die in a trash dump used as a burial ground by death squads, a party spokesman said.
The assassination came amid a fierce power struggle between a coalition of five extreme rightist parties and the U.S.-backed Christian Democrats for control of the 60 seat assembly, which will appoint a new provisional government.
The rightist parties won 36 seats in the election, but no single party won a majority. The rightists are attempting to form a coalition that would leave the moderate Christian Democrats powerless and replace their ruling military junta.
PARIS—French President Francois Mitterrand personally ordered a nationwide wanwhamh yesterday for a female terrorist who shot and killed a Frenchman in Paris.
Murder stirs French manhunt
The 17-year-old son of saint diplomat, Yacov Barsimanton, provided police assistance in the description of the assassin after chasing the woman through the streets of St.Paul.
Barsimantov, 42, was shot several times at close range in the ground floor hallway of his Paris apartment building.
Israel has accused the Palestine Liberation Organization of responsibility for the assassination, but the PLO's representative in Paris said his
Chicago subway trains crash again
CHICAGO—Two Chicago Transit Authority rapid transit trains crashed yesterday, injuring six people, authorities said. It was the second accident in
In yesterday's incident, an Evanston line train hit the back of a north-south line train that had stopped on the tracks, officials said.
A two-train accident Saturday sent at least 60 people to area hospitals with minor injuries.
A CTA conductor, a junior and four passengers were taken to an Evanston hospital for treatment, a CTA spokesman said.
In Saturday's accident, a train's motorman stopped his train in a subway after some tar naron on the tracks caused the train to alin.
Another train came moments later and struck the lead train, a spokesman said. It was not known how fast the second train was going.
Real-life emergency crew waits for action
By TOMHUTTON Staff Reporter
KANSAS CITY, Kan.—The crew of KARE 24 sat in Fire Department Headquarters at Sixth and Armstrong streets with a glazed look that only a day filled with inactivity could bring to a team trained to thrive on movement
The jobs of the crew of KARE, which stands for Kansas Aid and Resuce Emergency unit, are not the glamorous duties as portrayed by their Hollywood counterparts. There is no weekly episode with a car on the edge of a cliff and often there is no hardening end.
KARE units are stage one ambulances, which carry sophisticated medical equipment and highly trained personnel. They are located in Johnson County and the Douglas County ambulance service are all examples of this new type of ambulance that carries personnel with the intensive Care Technicians certificate.
THE KARE emergency unit, which is part of the city fire department, sat in limbo much of Saturday night. The crew waited for the shrill modulation of a gun from the relaxed, shoe-off state and into a precision team. They knew that
This certificate allows technicians to administer drugs, start intravenous fluids and make heart tests before the patient reaches the hospital.
When a call did come, late in Saturday's 24-hour shift, there was no time for unit leader, Mick Mitchell, to tell his co-workers Tommy Dudley and Chelsea to bring the equipment to be ready and Dudley and Cleveland did not let him down.
the relaxed state could change without a moment's notice.
Possible heart problems characterized by shortness of breath and chest pains and severe trauma cases, such as those in children, the only calls to which KARE responds.
The modulating horn blew and was followed by the nasal tones of a dispatcher who had sent the call.
"KARE 24, KARE 12" the dispatcher's voice barked over the speaker in the 50-year-old station house "7-11 store" where officers and their chest pains. Police will accompany.
Mitchell and Dudley hoisted themselves from the chairs in the middle of the squaud room and started across the garage lined with bright red pumpers. They were met halfway across by a woman who had left the room for a upstairs.
Police said herbert Sneddy was arrested at 3:40 a.m. after he allegedly entered a student's room at Winona Hall and attacked the occupant.
MITCHELL GUNNED the one-and-a-half ton dual-wheeled Chevrolet truck out of the garage with the speed and experience 11 years of experience could bring.
"I told you Barb," Dudley said as the tri moved to the far side of the garage. "As soon as you went upstairs we'd get a call."
Winds Friday damaged about 10 cars parked on campus parking lots, KU police said. Police reported that eight windows were shattered because of the windows were shattered because of the wind or wind-blown objects.
LAWRENCE POLICE arrested a 27-year-old Haskell Indian Junior College student for attempted rape yesterday.
Nine of the cars were parked in the Tempiin Hall parking lot and one was parked at the computer center. Police said that nothing was missing from the cars.
The suspect allegedly entered the room through a partially opened door, lifted the covers and attacked the victim. The suspect did not say anything to the victim.
With the sirens wailing their pitiful
On the record
Police said the victim pushed the attacker away and ran to the dormitory office to call police. A security guard came and tried to grab him outside the dormitory, police say.
Sneddy is being held on $10,000 bond in the Douglas County jail pending formal charges.
LAWRENCE POLICE also arrested a 16-year-old juvenile for indecent exposure Saturday night.
The suspect stood at the office window of the Hallmark Inn Motel, 730 Iowa St., knocked on the window to get the clerk's attention, pulled down his pants, lifted his shirt and exposed himself, police said.
The victim told her husband who then chased the suspect. Police officers continued the chase and found the suspect in a wooded area, police said.
Doors flew open, Mitchell and Cleverdon bolted from the cab, leaving the rookie Dudley a few steps behind carrying the heart monitoring equipment. Lugging a heart defibrillator and an oxygen tank, Dudley arrived just in time to meet Cleverdon and Mitchell on their way out of the store.
song, the truck arrived in front of the store in a little more than one minute.
"False alarm," Mitchell said.
Apparently, he said later, a friend of the middle-aged man in the store heard him complaining of an arm injury and called the fire department. The KARE unit was dispatched, he said, because the called probably had said the man was suffering from chest pains. An immediate call went out for KARE.
"A lot of people think they can save themselves the cost of a private ambulance service by calling us and lying about the symptoms." Mitchell said.
"If we don't feel it's a legitimate call, we'll either call a stage two ambulance or tell them to ask a friend to take them to a hospital."
WITH THE SIRENS off and its foot lightly on the accelerator, Mitchell headed toward the station. The modulating tone blurted over the radio in the truck—this time the call would be for real.
The ambulance arrived at the address, nearly 30 blocks away, in less than 10 minutes. However, the pumper and the nurse had already arrived at the scene.
"KARE 42, KARE 42," barked the dispatcher. "Woman companding of chest pains, 1911 N. 41st Street, 11 pump accompanery."
Released from the hospital only a week earlier, Aldrich did not complain, but quietly answered the questions at her by all three KARE members.
Mitchell whipped the ambulance into a U-turn in the middle of an empty intersection and the sirens once again began their song.
On the kitchen floor of a modest home decorated with pictures of sons and sisters.
A HISTORY of emphysema, bronchitis and the possibility of a small amount of fluid in her lungs, caused KARE to recommend hospitalization.
"The choice of whether they want to go to the hospital or not to up to them," he said. "And as long as a patient is ill, they have their choice of hospitals."
Dudley began intravenous fluid lines and supplied oxygen and Mitchell attached the electrocardiogram while she was discharged in contact with the hospital's emergency room.
The woman had chosen a hospital in
Western Wyandotte County, and the somewhat jerky ride began.
The total time at the scene had been 16 minutes.
As the ambulance moved forward, the electrocardiograph beeped steadily and scrawled a heart-beat pattern that was intently watched throughout the ride by Cleverdon and Dudley. It was a possible congestive heart failure, Dudley said. The woman could have died on her kitchen floor.
AS RECENTLY as seven years ago when ambulances were often called "meat wagons", most patients did not have a good chance for survival. Ambulances used to be staffed by technicians who work with chauffeur's license and a first-aid certificate from the American Red Cross.
The qualifications for ambulances have changed considerably, and the University of Kansas Medical Center has its own EMCICT program and directs all other programs in the state. Cleverdon, Mitchell and Dudley all graduated from the Med Center's EMCICT program.
Becoming an EMCI1 through the Med Center requires a student to complete three parts of an intense one-year course. These divisions—classroom, clinical and actual experience on a stage one ambulance—prepare the student for the required yearly state certification test.
"This is not an easy course by any measure," Mike Szczygiel, associate director for the emergency medical training program, said recently. "It takes an enormous amount of dedication and strength to stick with the course—it's just not for everybody."
State two ambulances, which often are privately owned, are usually staffed by personnel with emergency medical technician certificates. Szczegyl compared this training to an advanced first aid course Emergency Medical Technician training teaches CPR and basic medical first aid training that the nurses of KARE, 42 thought everyone should have and training that new Kansas City, Kan. firemen are required to complete.
The last call was completed around 2 a.m. yesterday, and some of the firemen and KARE crew re-hashed the evening's events and discussed their plans for the two days off following their 24-hour shift.
But they awaited, even if asleep on one of the cots upstairs, for the modulating tone that they knew could have been a signal shift change at 7:45 Sunday morning.
Now that's something to call home about.
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.
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University Dallv Kansan, April 5, 1982
Page 3
McCollum leader wants change
Bv JIM LEHNER
Staff Reporter
The outspoken, newly elected president of McColum hall wants to make his resident hall the best on campus.
The president, Nick Oropeza, Chicago junior, already has made elections at the hall a little more interesting. Known around McColm for his outspokenness, Oropeza used his notoriety and a hard-campaigning style to win the hall's presidency by a margin of almost 2 to 1.
McColum was one of three residence halls to elect presidents last week. Ellsworth and Hashingher halls elected Milton Scott, East St. Louis, Ill., sophomore, and Rosemary Mission fellow, Shawne Mission junior, responder.
"People saw Nick as the controversial rebel who was willing to challenge the present system and make it better," Randal Messner, Shawnee law student and McColum resident, said yesterday.
"Usually the people running for dorm positions are bland and non-controversial. The election of Nick was not a fight about whether Mr. Kushner's frustration with the present system
"Whether it's going to change things is questionable."
Messner said this year's election was for the most interesting since he had been.
"I've been here for three years, and there were never so many people who voted," he said.
More than 6,60 people, more than two-thirds of the hall's population, voted for one of the six candidates, he said.
"Even though he's been the hell-raiser in the past and probably will be in the future, he's done a lot to improve the dorm," he said.
Messner said Oropeza won the election because he came across as a common guy.
"He's definitely not the preppie type that gets into an office and seems to forget the student he represents," Messner said.
OROPEZA SAID he thought that his
term in office would bring a definite change to the residence hall.
"During the course of the past school year, I've talked to many dorm residents," Oropeza said, "and they've told me that they all government had been non-existent.
"They need strong leadership, and that's what my cabinet and I will give them."
He also said his cabinet would be noticed.
not have five committees that will report to me on a weekly basis on dorm proceedings, "Oropea said.
The committees are the Hall Improvement Committee, Athletic Committee, Cultural and Social Committee, Hall Committee and Administrative Committee.
He said the goals of the committees would be to improve the existing facilities of Colium and eventually to the most respectful residence hall on campus.
OROPEZA, WHO will officially take on Thursday, said he was busy
"I want to work at my job, not just hold the position because it looks good on my resume," he said. "Me.Mollcum has the reputation as the worst dorm on campus. Many people classify it as the worst dorm in the country and infur of foreign students. My job is to make this place be known as a great place to live for everybody."
setting up his committees as soon as he was declared the winner last week.
"This dorm has the most outdated material and worst facilities anywhere on campus. The computers in the computer room are so outdated that getting new parts for them may be an impossibility."
He said that many people who came to McColm became upset with it quickly and decided to transfer to another half a just a few weeks after they left.
"I want to make McCollum a happy place to live by setting up various educational and social events that will attract all students and that will create the positive image that this big building rightfully deserves," Oropeza said.
What if the Bomb hits Strong Hall? Activities planned to stimulate awareness
Signs doting the KU campus and the neighbors of Lawrence were set up yesterday by the Lawrence Coalition for Peace and Justice to remind people of how horrible nuclear war could be. A member of the Coalition, said yesterday.
Yesterday marked the beginning of Ground Zero Week, a week of increasing awareness about nuclear war. Students at various university departments and various university departments
The signs designate the "zones of destruction" which would result if a one-megaton bomb was dropped on Lawrence.
The Coalition spent yesterday afternoon placing signs on campus that say, "If an A-bomb would hit Strong, this would be the edge of the crater."
Strong Hall is the geographic center of Lawrence.
Other signs around town designate the edge of the fireball created by the blast and the edge of total and partial destruction.
THE CRATER area would encompass the central part of campus, Moore said. It would reach from the Campanile to the intersection of Jayhawk Boulevard and Sunflower Road to Malott Hall to Marvin Hall.
The firebail area would take in most
of the campus and surrounding area this area would be totally destroyed.
The third area, a 1.7-mile radius from Strong Hall, would suffer almost total destruction, Moore said. All of the buildings in this area would be destroyed or on fire with the exception of some concrete-reinforced buildings.
Ninety-eight percent of the people in this area would have died instantly from the concussion of the blast, the collapse of buildings fallen on them, Moore said.
Within the next area of destruction, he said, 50 percent of the people would be killed instantly and the survivors probably suffer three degree burns.
MOORE SAID their statistics come from the Defense Preparedness Agency
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He said if a person in Baldwin were facing the blast area at the time of the blast, he would be blinded. Baldin was about 13 miles southeast of Lawrence.
The placing of the signs, Moore said, is to make people aware of the kind of destruction that could happen if a bomb were dropped on Lawrence. He said it would affect most of the county and even parts of Leavenworth County.
which supplies literature to Civil Defense units.
The teach-in this week, Moore said, is to inform people on the issue of nuclear war. He said that "the world needs a
Moore said they hoped that this week's activities would stimulate students to set up similar activities in the communities when they return home in May.
A meeting, "Organizing for Action on Disarmament—What You Can Do," is scheduled for 7:30 p.m., Tuesday, April 15 in the Forum Room of the Kansas State University was to help people who wanted to form similar Ground Zero activities.
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Demo leader predicts severance tax approval
By KEVIN HELLIKER
Staff Reporter
After struggling all weekend to stem a Senate tide, Minority Leader Jack Osborne late yesterday that the Kansas Senate approve a severance tax this morning.
"Votes are now shifting in favor of a severance tax," Steinerger, D-Kansas City, said yesterday. "Inkwe we've been working on the severance tax over favorably Monday."
Although polls taken Friday by the Associated Press and by the Kansas City Times showed the severance law would fail on at least a 20-20 vote, Steineger maintained several senators had changed their minds over the weekend. However, he declined to name them.
"Once the bill passes, I fully expect another four or five senators to enlist on the winning side."
Gov. John Carlin has tried unsuccessfully to push a sovereign tax through the last two sessions. His proposal would tax oil and natural gas percent and natural gas liquids at 2 percentage to raise about $303 million a year.
Attributing this change to recognition of the state's need for additional funding, Steinger said, "The Senate knows a severance tax is the only choice, and I'm confident at least 21 senators now have the勇气 to stand up to the gas and oil lobby."
Steinerange shifted into high political gear last Friday after Senate President Roy Doyen, R-Concordia, agreed to allow the first Senate. On July 14, he was joined by a staunch opponent of the tax, had previously sent severance tax
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proposals to two Senate committees from which they never surfaced.
But Friday Doyen called the Senate's top brass into his office and said to Steinerge, "I'm tired of playing these games on the severance tax. Let's have a vote on it Monday. It's a chance for a clear up and down vote."
Despite indications Friday that the vote would be down, senators on both sides of the issue said a lot could have happened over the weekend.
"Friday's Friday and Monday's Monday," he said.
State Sen. Norman Gaar, R-Westwood, a prominent foe of the severance tax, said the Senate's action issue depended on when it was rolled.
And State Sen. Jane Eldredge, R-Lawrence, an advocate of the tax, said yesterday she didn't doubt that Steinecker had swayed some votes.
"I may decide in the shower," Reilly said.
"I think there certainly a chance that he worked up those votes over the weekend," Eldredge said. "I have no reason to disbelieve him."
When the Senate adjourned Friday, at least three senators had not committed themselves on the issue, including Edward Reilly Jr., R-Leavenworth. Reilly said yesterday he had received between 70 and 100 phone calls during the weekend from people trying to sway his vote. But he would not say which way he intended to cast it
State Sen. August Bogina, R-Lenexa, and Richard Gannon, D-Goodland, also are pegged as swingers who could get a majority for the tax.
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan, April 5, 1982
Opinion
=
1
the
Title IX compliance?
It looks as if the wheels of justice are finally turning at the KU athletic department. s-1-o-w-l-y.
Of course, the University of Kansas was only one of about 80 universities that the federal government planned to investigate. And plenty of other athletic programs probably deserved a closer look as well.
Over the years, Female athletes have practiced and sweated and suffered as much as male athletes have, but that did not seem to matter when the scholarship checks were signed.
For example, in 1978 at KU, 33.2 percent of all KU students were female, but they received only 13.7 percent of the financial aid. The average male athlete received $2,436 a year and the average female athlete received $781.
Two years passed.
In that year, Ann Levinson, a student, and Elizabeth Banks, a KU associate professor of classics, tried to do something about the problem by filing suit against the University.
Then, in 1800 investigators from the Office of Civil Rights came to KU to conduct a four-week investigation, questioning coaches, athletes and athletic department officials about the KU program.
Two more years passed.
Finally, last week, the office sent KU a letter that outlined its findings. But the letter leaves some unanswered questions.
Taken at face value, the letter says that the KU athletic department complies with Title IX standards of equality—but then it says KU doesn't.
If the office's investigators had found that KU did not comply with Title IX, the University could have lost $27 million in federal financial aid. And apparently, the office decided to go easy on KU because it planned to correct the violations within a "reasonable period of time."
But it is still unnerving that the Office of Civil Rights has ruled that the University complies with Title IX simply because KU is close to complying.
The letter, which is dated March 31, said KU still treated female athletes unequally in a long list of areas including equipment and supplies, game and practice scheduling, travel, opportunity to receive coaching and tutoring, provision of locker rooms, practice rooms, housing and dining facilities, recruitment of student athletes, and publicity.
It seems as if the only items to which female athletes have equal access are water fountains and uniforms.
It seems that "close" now counts in horse shoes, hand grenades—and federal investigations.
U.S. must look beyond history books
Remember those junior high history books that always painted an image of Uncle Sam wearing a crispy-pressed red, white and blue suit?
You know, the ones telling us how the 20th century version of the United States was always ready to jump to the aid of those less fortunate to learn the name of World Peace and Human Dignity.
All the white, foreign countries welcomed
their embassy, being towered over Uncle
Sam with a appreciative and admiring
smile.
As naive preteens. we were conditioned to see
our country as one that stood for everything that was Right and Good.
Even during Vietnam, the world's view of the U.S. was somewhat cloudy to grade schools who still believed that George Washington never told a lie.
DAN BOWERS
We knew there was something wrong with being in a war that we had no practical interest in, but, somehow, just the fact that the U.S. was coming, we had records of another feather in Xanbee Dodin's car.
But in 1892, as the world's political intricacies become increasingly blurred, it is becoming more clear that not every country accepts the approach to world problems as the "right way."
As the number of world-wide anti-U.S. demonstrations increases, it's time to pull our
heads out of old history books and takes a look at how other nations feel about us. We may just find that not everyone looks to the U.S. as his guardian. He doesn't stand for all that is well and good in the world.
Take a look at El Salvador, and then think back a few years. Remember the 1980 Olympics? Probably not, since the United States didn't compete.
Take a look at El Salvador, and then think back a few years. Remember the 1980 Olympics?
Instead, we sat out that year in protest of the Soviet Union's support of the Afghan government in suppressing guerrilla uprisings. Now, pick up any newspaper and read the reason why we're involved in the sticky El Salvador situation.
Sure, the degrees of involvement are different, but fundamentally, there is little difference in the reasons for the two powers' presence in the country and in protecting the political stability of their neighbors.
Of course, we take the side that we're trying to protect the people's rights in that country, while supporting a pre-election government that suppressed those rights.
Can we afford to be blind to what the rest of the world thinks of our entanglement there? Why should they look at El Salvador any differently than we looked at Afghanistan two years ago?
The Dutch buried four of their journalists a month ago who were victims of El Salvador's government troops. You can bet that country is sympathetic to the U.S. stance in El Salvador.
When 300,000 protesters stage an anti-America rally in Bonn, Germany (a city of about 300,000), one gets the feeling that their attitudes toward the U.S. are less than cordial.
A glance across the Atlantic brings up another case in point.
The purpose of the rally was to protest the continual buildup of nuclear armaments in
western Europe by NATO. The European
greedy forces in the defense relics
greatly on the United States.
As a consequence, NATO's policy is essentially what the U.S. dictates, and as NATO continues to stockpile nuclear arms in Europe, the accuracy European points across the Atlantic to the U.S.
To make matters worse, the Soviets defy proposed a freeze on further nuclear buildups in
With little more than casual consideration,
Reagan turned his nose up at the proposal,
labeling it as a propaganda play. Meanwhile,
the Europeans start raiding their fingers again.
A propaganda trick, true, but it seems to have worked. Reagan has presented an image to the Europeans as a missile-happy war monger who is unsympathetic to their concerns.
Add America's backing out of the Soviet-European oil pipeline, and backing into Central America and Uncle Sam's shiny star-spangled armour becomes more and more tarnished.
It is becoming more evident that the United States does not have the catch-all solution all of the time.
And as our economic picture weakens, the U.S. status in the world political sphere is beginning to weaken, turning more attention to the military aspects of American foreign policy.
In this position, Washington justifies its every action with the same arguments we read in our book.
As the rest of the world becomes more sophisticated, many countries are simply refusing to swallow the entire package of America's foreign policy.
The serfs wailed. for then feared 'New Feudalism'
What we see might not be pleasant, but then,
the truth seldom is.
Maybe it's time we closed our old history books and tried to see ourselves as others uss.
HOW KING RONWALD AND DUKEHAIGWULF CHASED A THREAT IN THEWOOD, WHICH LED THEM TO A SPAWLINGLAKE, AND OF WHEN THE WRENGALD GATHS WISDOM HICAILCRE, AND HOW THEHOLY GRAIL APPEARED AS THE CONSERVATIVES SAT AT SUPPER, AND HOWTHEY ALL TOOK UP ON THEM THE QUESTOF FEDERALISM, AND OF THE SORROW OFCONSERVATIVES. AND OF THE SORROWING, WHICH LED TO THE DISBANDING OFTHE RUN-AROUND TABLE. Being the secondpart of a Triology of Tales adapted fromaccountsof ages long ago, including those of Sir ThomasMalory, and others.
One day, as Ronwald and his retainers were chasing a threat, they came to a pentagonal lake, wondrously huge, and his counsellors said. Lo! yonder is that sword that we spake of. Then was
RADI LINC 2
SIR CLAY
Horton-upon-Otter
Ronwald wade of an arm cloaked in khaki samir, that held a fair sword in the shape of an interlacement.
Said his counsellors, a damosel with the gold eagle on her brow will come to you anon, and then speak ye fair to her that she will give you money for it. But he would be sent into Bonwale, and saluted birn, and he her again.
Rir Ronwald, king, said the damosel, if ye will give me a gift of billions when I ask it you, ye shall have this sword, which is Hichelare. By my gift you Rir Ronald, I will give you what gift you will ask
When they came to the sword that the hand held, Sir Rowlard took it up by the handles, and the arm and the hand went under the water; vea, verily like a Trident submarine.
Then Sir Ronwald looked on the sword, and liked it passible well. Whether liketh you better, said the wizard Kissingerberht, the sword or the sword of the knight, the sword of Ronald. Ye are more unwise, said Kissingerberht, for the scabbard is worth ten of the swords, for whiles ye have the scabbard upon you, ye shall never lose so blood, be ye never soaked, therefore we keep well the scabbard always with you.
For this counsel was Ronwald much wroth
Now after the jousting in November, the king and all estates went home unto what once, in golden days of yore that is, before the loud and angry crowd of the people. Camelot. And there so went they to supper, and
Soon thereafter Ronwald forgot a vow he had taken before Hibcalbine was granted him, and began pressing all the young vassais of the land to sweep fealty in knightly service.
with Kissingerberht, and banished him from the court. But as Kissingerberht departed from Ronwald, he warned him that the king should not allow his friends to all than all your AWSOs to have me back again.
been borne through the hall, supported on thin air by the Bill of Writes, to which nondurst lay hands, it departed suddenly, and the knights wist not where it became.
Then rose King Ronwald at the head of the banquet and interpreted the vision as meaning the reappearance of New Fewdalism in this world. Now feudalism had disappeared when Roosevelthred had unsurpelled the governments' hand and transferred their gold to the royal treasury.
Then anon they heard clacking and crying of thunderous IBM copiers, that them thought the place would all be borne away with inefficiency. In the midst of this tangle entered a shining red tape, verily a supple ribbon snipped and tattered, and more shorter by seven times than ever they took toorehand. And all they were alighted of the grace of the Jeffersonian Spirit.
But that bode well for the peasantry, as the barons and sheffalls of the time were very cruel, and were often to be used in war.
But the Holy Grail was that night covered with a veil of statistics, so there was no muller见鬼. There was only one
feasted for two months or more on lune duck, mallard or turkey, and every knight sat in the place of him beheld.
foresworn and under oath to disperse it well amongst their shires.
But when the Grail had appeared in its marvellous light, then began Romanal to behold the barons present, and saw them, by their seeming, farther than ever after. And so he placed full faith that they might be to work in the hearts of the barons, that they might be trusted to disperse the royal lively justly.
Then said Ronwald, I will make here avow,
that I shall labour in the quest of the Grail,
and never shall I return again unto the federal
funding till I have seen Prosperity more openly
than I have seen it here. I shall hold me out a
twelfemonth and a day, or more if need be,
because Prosperity, it be said, is just around the
corner.
When the bureaucrats heard King Ronald's avow, they were greatly displeased, for they wist well he might not again-say his avows. Alas, said they to Ronald, we have nigh slain us with the avow and promise ye have made; for through you ye have bereft us the fairest of perks and the corruptest of officehead that ever were seen in any realm of the world.
And therewhe the tears fell in their eyes. They cleaned out their castle office drawers and threw out the fat stuff they had so long leapped upon, the mousselos who knew not short hand were in distress.
But the barons and governeurs were displeased, because some of their estates were scant. For the land was being ravaged yearly by great hordes of marauding currencies, and the money they brought under the New Feudalism they might not have fiefs enough to grant to the many motley serfs.
So thereupon right smartly did they gather at a meadow called Plentyndy, and forced Ronwald to sign the Medi Caida over to the national ad-hoc, and to accude to a list of assurances.
Yet even so, great qualms ran among the governeers, for it was the custom, back to a time to which, as it is said, memory does not extend, for kings to act as they pleased. Charters were greatly disregarded, and estimates of sums heavily relied on the air, and tax bargained down.
But Rowald and all his knights continued in the quest of the vision he had seen. The knights saddled their programs on the backs of the horse, which was one of the economic wilderness, in search of adventure.
Letters to the Editor
THUS ENDS THE SECOND BOOK OF THE DOMESDAYTRILLOGY.
Right to privacy no defense for abortion
Thomas Long recently wrote a letter to justify his pro-abortion stance. As do most pro-abortists. Long dealt ineffectively with the false issues of abortion—that is, the convenience of the woman involved versus the termination of a human life.
To the Editor:
Long also stated that the passage of the Human Life Amendment would result in "countless deaths." On the contrary, 1.5 million people would be saved each year. Maybe once this deadline of contraception isn't available, people will begin to take responsibility for their own actions.
He claimed that every woman should be able to do what she wants to her body as her "constitutional right to privacy." This process of empowerment has led the legalization of LBD, not to mention murder.
I fail to see where the controversy about abortion lies. Simple logic tells us that the fetus is a human being. Killing human beings is wrong; therefore, killing fetuses must be wrong
And of course, pre- abortionists love to argue that a woman has the right to decide whether or not to bear a child. Once she has conceived, she has already exercised that right.
Leslie Spaulding,
Derby freshman
also. Most importantly, a fetus does t'-ZAP-
become a human at Day 127, but at Day One.
Unbalanced budgeting
"The Tale of the Balanced Budget" or "Trust Your President.
To the Editor
"We must balance the budget . . . I know we can do it and I know we will."—candidate Ronald Reagan
"I believe the budget can be balanced by 1882 or 1983."—candidate Regent, Sept. 21, 1980.
"I have submitted an economic plan . . . and believe . . . that it can provide for a balanced budget by 1983, if not earlier"—candidate Reagan, Oct. 28, 1980.
"One of the things I have not retreated from is the 1983 target (of a balanced budget).—President Reagan, Feb. 3, 1981.
HUAGE, J. M. 1982; HUAGE, J. M. 1983."
PHASE II: Who said 1982 or 1983? We meant 1984.
"This administration is committed to a
balanced budget, and we will fight to the last blow to achieve it by 1844." - President Reagan,
PHASE III: We are not Jimmy Carter, and Don't You Forget It.
"Maybe you'll remember that we were told in the spring of 1980 (by President Carter) that the 1981 budget, the one we have now, would be balanced; Well, that budget, like so many in the past, hemorrhaged badly and wound up in a sea of red ink. I have pledged that we will not stand idly by and see the same thing happen again."—President Reagan, Sept. 24, 1981.
PHASE IV: You Misunderstood from the Start.
"I've never said anything but that it (the balanced budget) was a goal." -President Reagan, Nov. 6, 1981.
PHASE V: Maybe some other Time.
"I did not say come here to balance the budget—not at the expense of my tax-cutting program and my defense program. If we can't do it, we'll do it later." —President Reagan, Nov. 16, 1981.
Harry G. Shaffer,
Professor of Economics and
Soviet and East European Studies
The University Daily
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University Daily Kansan, April 5, 1982
Page 5
SenEx
From page 1
among KU administrators and that expressed concern about western civilization's budget cuts. SenEx members will vote on that resolution next Friday.
Loren Burby, vice chairman of SenEx, said he couldn't doubt anything but offer Sensor套餐.
seaver also said that he was taking his case to the College Assembly next Tuesday. The assembly created the western civilization department.
"But maybe Chancellor Bickle will take the see SenEx getting involved," Bulley said.
Laurence Rose, SenEx secretary and KU teacher, said he was distressed to see Seaver upset.
"I'm also concerned about the proceedings in which department funds were allocated without notice," Rose said. "I'm concerned that the matter was never openly discussed.
"This is not the way things have been run at KU, and it's not the way things should be."
BUT LINEBERRY said that he couldn't answer the question of communication in the workplace, despite departmental ties.
"If Seaver felt that he was not properly warned, he would be then probable to warrant the arrest."
Seaver also told SenEx members that he was concerned about the morale in charge of the project if the cull took effect.
He said that since 1956, western civilization chose its own 22 teaching assistants from all
disciplines, including history, philosophy, music and the sciences.
Square and square that this has made the standard
mathbf and that this has made the program
Square and square that this has made the standard
"But it's also kept morale high, because those who have got western civilization assistants in the past knew they competed with students from all departments instead of being appointed by the history or philosophy departments.
BUT ANTHONY GENOVA, chairman of the philosophy department, said his department needed the additional assistantships to lure qualified graduate students to KU.
Genova said that while philosophy students had done well in the competition for western civilization assistantships in the past, there was no guarantee. He said that under their current budget, the philosophy department carried out only about two TAs and about two TAs would be admitted each year because many former teaching assistants were rehired.
"Nine graduate teaching assistants is grossly inadequate if you compare this with philosophy programs of comparable size at universities around the country," Genova said.
"This reason our budget has historically been so small is because it was so easy to tell us. You don't need more assistantship money because philosophy students always get seven or eight teaching jobs in western civilization. You don't want to be zero. We want a guaranteed number of
But Norman Saul, chairman of the history department, said his department discussed the matter and agreed that if they got western expansion they would ask that it be transferred back.
appointments so we can beef up our graduate program."
SAUL SAID that his department didn't need the money because it already interviewed teaching assistants and had committed history budget resources for the next year. Saul said that it didn't matter to his department whether history graduate students got teaching assistantships from the western civilization or the history department.
soever said he realized there were some problems with the way the western civilization program was administered and he told SenEx that he had submitted a proposal to change all interested parties be included in discussions and criticisms of the program.
"If Dean Lineberry can do this to me without prior consultation, he can do it to anyone else," Seaver said. "Who's next? This is a difficult situation, and it must be停顿 now."
Seaver also said that he planned to bring his motorbike registration before every body of governance.
In other business SenEx passed a more generalized version of a sexual harassment policy that was endorsed by the University Council on January 21. This policy is on its way again to University Council for reapproval.
STATE REP. Jessie Branson carried the first of these, which would have increased operating expenses by $500,000. These expenses include supplies, equipment and library acquisitions—everything in the universities' budgets except salaries and capital improvements.
Budget
From page 1
"Out of all the items in the Regents budget, I really believe OOE is hurting the most," Branson said. "There are no funds available to replace it." He added. "Let's put this money where we really need it."
State Rep. Betty Jo Chariton, D-Lawrence,
made an amendment to increase the fee waiver
for graduate teachers assistants from 60 percent
to 100 percent, but it also was killed.
The enrichment fund amendment, proposed by
the Board of Directors, R-I-Employment, was
downed down 43-24.
"We've already had two amendments to increase faculty salaries," Hayden said in arguing against the fund. "A catfish is still a catfish even though the department is taking a side door approach to the question."
THE FUND would probably be used for faculty in high-demand areas such as engineering and computer science, although each university has free to distribute the money however it wished.
State Rep. John Solchb, D-Lawrence, said he thought it would depend on whether or not the governor had a vote.
The controversial tax, which would raise $10.1 million, would be the second vote to vote this morning in the Senate.
"If the severance tax passes, the enrichment
fund probably will," Solbach said Saturday. "If not, there won't be enough money."
But State Sen. Jane Eldridge, R-Lawrence, said the fund should not be linked to the fate of Mr. Obama.
"It's important not to tie it to that," she said. "it don't think it'll help it all, if it's viewed as, We'll take oil and gas money and give it to faculty."
SHE SAID this was especially true because Senate President Doyen had proposed the enrichment fund earlier, and he is an influential component of the severance tax.
The only other change the House made in the Senate budget was the addition of the poison
Branson's attempt earlier in the session to establish the hotline failed, but Solbach predicted it would stay in this time, because it was supported of the House Ways and Means Committee.
Hobman, who is a member of Ways and Means, spoke in favor of the hotline.
"We already have some of the top people on board at the Med Center in the area of toxicology," he said. "This would make the center available to everyone in the state of Kansas. I don't think it is too much to ask that we provide this service for the people of Kansas."
The House approved KU's other requests, for $119,580 for the Bureau of Child Research and $20,000 for the Kansas Applied Remote Sensing Center to lose a federal grant money next year.
The House will consider Regents capital improvements requests, numbering 131 million in total. Hall, today.
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Page 6 University Daily Kansan, April 5, 1982
Pole filmmaker to show movie on homeland
Marian Marznyk returned to his native Poland last May, and an 12-year absence, to make a film about his life and assess the present state of his homeland.
"The point of the film was to return to his roots to try to recover his early childhood during the war as a metaphoric excuse as to what's happened in Poland." Richard Colyer, professor of English, said Friday.
Today, Marzynski brings that film,
"Return to Poland," a Public Broadcasting Service World special, to the University of Kansas. The film will be presented at 9 p.m. in 300 Strong. A session with Marzynski will follow.
Marzynki, a Jew, was born in Poland in 1837, two years before the German invasion. He spent his early years in the Warsaw ghetto until his mother saved him from probable death by being buried with him in the care of a nun.
"He was smuggled out of the Warsaw ghetto, hidden and protected by a Catholic nun and given a new personality." Calyfer, a friend of Mar
AFTER THE WAR, Marzynski was educated as a journalist and filmmaker. "Return to Poland" is a chronicle of his life in Poland until he emigrated to Denmark in 1969, and eventually to the United States in 1972.
Polish officials considered Martzynk's return a serious threat to security, so he had some difficulty returning to Poland, according to Colyer.
on campus
TODAY
THE STUDENTS CONCERNED WITH DISABILITYS will sponsor a discussion group at 4 p.m. in 7-D, Linguinec Hall.
THE INTRARAVISITY CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP will sponsor a lecture, "Gifts and Vocation," at 7:30 p.m. in Parlor Cof the Kansas Union
TOMORROW
THE NON-TRADITIONAL STUDENTS will sponsor a dutch lunch for members at 11 a.m. in Cork II of the Union.
THE CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR CHRIST will meet at 7 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room of the Union.
Conrad
From page 1
starters, he said, about 75 finished the course, and he placed 80th.
Although the weather in Ireland was pleasantly cool, he said the racers had many hard days.
"One day we rode 120 miles in the rain, the wind was blowing off the ocean as we rode up the coast. It was cold and wet and long. All I wanted to do was finish. Then then," he said, "There even hot water to get us all clean."
AN ADDITIONAL problem for the Americans, he said, was getting used to riding on the left side of the road.
Conrad said that injuries such as strained muscles and tendons are a problem, especially during such a grueling race as in Ireland. He is still nursing a knee that he injured during the tour.
This injury is another factor Conard considers when contemplating his retirement from racing. However, he said he hoped to overcome the injury and make a comeback this fall in the KU Criterium race.
"I'm fat and out of shape and will be
But Conrad is still lured to the Criterium, a race he has never won but thrice taken second place.
behind in training for awhile," he said. He also doesn't know where he'll work after graduating this May.
WIN OR LOSE, he said, he is satisfied with his accomplishments, and looks forward to charting the progress of the future champions he coached.
"It's fun to watch kids like that, who are willing to work hard," he said. "Anything like this takes a lot of dedication, of both mind and body. The kid has to want to do it, though. The parents shouldn't push."
Conrad said that his own parents had supported his racing career, although "it was kind of rough at first." His father, Don Conrad, is a minister at the University of W. St. 18th st., and didn't like Dave to be away at races every Sunday.
"But they got used to that," he said,
"and I'm always around after the end of
the season.
"They show me they appreciate it, when they come to my races and brag to the relatives."
The water at Clinton Lake is a frigid 50 degrees.
By DON KNOX Staff Reporter
Twisted and rotted branches have washed ashore since last summer. Native limestone dots Clinton beach's 500 feet of sand. And the gold and maroon brick bathhouse needs a thorough cleaning.
But Park Manager Bob Wallace knows that soon hot, lazy afternoons will beckon hords of college students anyway.
Clinton awaits warmer times
"The kids really seem to like it here," said Wallace, now in his fourth year as manager at Clinton State Park. The park, which includes more than 10 miles of shoreline, is six miles west of Lawrence.
"April is more or less for fishermen," Wallace said. "But the students are always out in the spring."
THE PARK OPENED for overnight camping last Friday afternoon. Park officials are preparing for the numerous campers, boaters and swimmers who will descend upon the six-year-old lake.
"Sometimes it's just like a city here," said Ranger Jim Adkins, father of David Adkins, student body president at the University of Kansas.
But to Jim Adkins, clad entirely in denim to fight off a gusty spring wind, the students are "a very congenial crowd."
"They're really a neat group of kids," Adams said, but they lack information
Beach and park rules are strict, he said.
"We don't allow kegs in the park," Adkins said. "Nude swimming and disrobing is prohibited on the beach, and boating and bottles, pets and open fires."
ALL BOATERS must wear life preservers, launch from certified boat ramps and be swimmers of swimers.
Wallace said, "It's swim-at-yourn-isk here." No lifeguards patrol the lake's beach.
"And permits are required for
e everyone," he added. Passes cost $150.
But student-related problems rarely occur at the school level, however involved
ANOTHER NEAR tragedy last week also sent the worker's rage into action.
"He wasn't hurt too bad," Wallace recalled, "but he left quite a bit of blood."
KU's chapter of Delta Tau Delta fraternity.
"The fraternity had an initial," Wallace said, "and the students had to sleep on top of one of our latrines." One he dean said, "I fell from the roof in his ceasen he said.
also sent the planets and their moons to the lake after their sailboat capized Tuesday. Although both were lifjacketes, one student spent 15 minutes in the lake's cool waters. His body temperature dropped to 84
Adkins said, "Those things don't happen very often, maybe once or twice a year." No one has ever drowned at Clinton State Park, he said.
"The water temperature is still too cold," Wallace said. "There were fourteen inches of ice on this lake during the winter."
wauce said he did not expect much active activity at the lake immediately.
Outstanding sophomores to receive $500 stipend
By ANNE CALOVICH Staff Renorter
There is now an extra bonus for students who are selected to be University Scholars $500.
Al Johnson, assistant to the vice chancellor for academic affairs, said Friday the Kansas University Endowment Association, which already sponsored the program, would give $20,000 a year to the University Scholars program.
Johnson said the money was a sign of the University's commitment to the honors program.
"It's kind of a nice gesture," he said.
"It's fitting that they should have something."
Twenty outstanding sophomores are chosen each semester to be scholars, and will receive the money in the amount of $250 a semester, Johnson received $1400 during spring 72 class, will also receive the $600 starting next semester, he said.
the stipend was to allow the scholars to buy books and expand their libraries, but that no stipulation would be put on the money. He said the students would be given an additional addition to any other financial aid and scholarship money they receive.
They also must maintain a 3.5 grade point average to get the money.
JOHNSON SAID that the purpose of
The University Scholars program is new this semester, implemented as part of the Report of the Commission on Education, which was released last fall.
Applications for next semester's class are being taken now. They are open to students who will be first or second year in college and who have a 3.5 or better GPA.
The program is meant to encourage outstanding students at an early level so they will remain competitive about their undergraduate careers.
Students must send a letter of application, two letters of recommendation and a current transcript to the office of academic affairs by April 9.
Microbiology prof wins grant
By VINCE HESS Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
An assistant professor of microbiology credits the faculty and students around him for helping him a national grant that will pay his
John C. Brown, an assistant professor of microbiology who specializes in immunology, recently received the "Research and Career Development" award from the National Institutes of Health. The award will pay his salary for a five-year period ending in September 1986.
"Everyone has limits on his abilities," Brown said, "but I know I can do about as well as I can because of the people around me.
"No matter what ideas you have,
having other people provide ideas,
question your own and do some of the
work makes you very fortunate."
BROWN SAID he was using funds from the award and from a three-year individual research grant from NIH to study "auto immune phenomena." The research grants run out in September, but Brown is seeking an extension.
immune responses of the body, he said.
Usually antibodies react against foreign bodies, such as infections, but in some cases, these immune cells react against themselves.
The phononmena are abnormal
A common result of the phenomena is rheumatoid arthritis. Brown is trying to find out what causes the phenomena and what can prevent them by studying rabbits, whose arthritic symptoms resemble those of humans.
Students benefit from the award by having an opportunity to do more learnings.
teaching and administrative duties and increase the time he spends in the laboratory and in traveling and consulting with other researchers.
BROWN SAID other professors in the department encouraged him to apply for the award, and he did in spring 1980. Federal budget uncertainties delayed until last fall the decision. The process usually takes nine months.
As part of the requirements for receiving the award, Brown must reduce the time he once spent on
Brown said the "Research and Career Development" award was one of two NIH programs designed to promote scientific research.
One is grants for individual research projects by scientists, he said. Other scientists in a field of study review materials them for funding to NIH officials.
The other program is the award. The number given out each year is confidential, Brown said, because the awards are not a scientist's salary at his institution.
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Lawrence, Kansas 60045
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Completed applications, which must include a resume, are due: Thursday, April 15 at 5:00 p.m. in the Student Senate office. Interviews will be held on Monday through Friday.
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University Daily Kansan, April 5, 1982
Page 7
Western
From page 1
Seaver said that the philosophy department, in its own study of itsograms, presented to Robert Nembery, dean of the college of liberal arts and sciences, had a "blueprint" outlined of how money could be transferred from the western civilization program to the philosophy department.
ON PAGE 12 of that study, the department outlines its current direct graduate student support, and says that philosophy students "typically manage to acquire between 8-12 appointments in western civilization each year."
Anthony Genova, chairman of the philosophy department, said that the study merely pointed out that the philosophy department did not have direct control over those appointments in the western civilization program and therefore could not guarantee incoming graduate students a teaching position.
Lineberry, in deciding to cut the western civilization budget and reallocate that money to the history and philosophy departments, made a "very straight-forward and honest academic decision." Genova said.
The philosophy department is always trying to justify its case for increased unding, but at no time did the department want to use a western utilization program, he said.
The study used the western civilization appointments as an example of money the philosophy department did not have control of, as well.
"The point wasn' directed at western civilization. It was simply identifying the problem," he said.
TAKING RESPONSIBILITY for hiring instructors out of the western civilization program and giving that responsibility to the philosophy and history departments will weaken the nature of the program, Seaver said.
Genova said that his department would appeal to best people to teach civilization.
"It would be stupid to appoint weak people," he said.
The only change at all is who has control of the money, Genova said. The quality of people, the curriculum taught and the supervision will not change at all, he said.
The philosophy department has been historically underfunded in its graduate
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programs, Genova said. Whenever the department brings this underfunding to the attention of the administration, he said, the typical response is that the philosophy department really does have more money, because seven to 10 people typically get assistant instructor training in the western civilization department.
The philosophy department will be able to attract more and better graduate students, Genova said, guarantee more teaching positions.
HE SAID his department would not appoint anyone to teach western civilization that the western civilization director did not approve.
The western civilization program will still have the same number of instructors, and Seaver will supervise them. Genova said.
Seaver said that the standard interview process for assistant instructors in the western civilization program would be undercut by such an arrangement. If he did not approve of whoever the philosophy or history departments assigned to teach western civilization, it was possible the instruction could be worse than the instructor he originally objected to, he said.
Joseph VanZandt, a graduate student studying for his doctorate in philosophy and assistant director of the western civilization program for three years, said that both the western civilization and philosophy programs would lose out in the end if the budget cut goes through.
If the philosophy department appoints people to teach in the western civilization program, he said, that would mean that one academic unit is making appointments into another department, anything he said is not a good principle.
"I don't believe there is any clear evidence that this will benefit the philosophy program in the long run," he said.
Seaver said that if this money can be taken away from his department, it could be taken away from any department. He intends to use every forum required to seek to have the money restored, he said.
"If by debate of this issue, I could prevent other people from being destroyed in this fashion, then I might have done some good," he said.
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Ukrainian Easter eggs show displays ancient sign of spring
So are Ukrainian Easter eggs.
"They speak about the rebirth, about the spring," Michael Palij, a bibliographer in the cataloging department at Watson Library, said.
Pali) has put together an exhibition of the ages in the library lobby.
The hand-painted eggs can be either real or wooden, he said. If the eggs are real, they are not blown out. The yolk and white are left in, and eventually dry up and turn to dust. The shell remains intact.
THE EGGS are now used routinely in Ukrainian church services, he said. The intricate designs of the eggs are also found on churches and other objects attached with church services.
The Ukrainian eggs predate Christianity, Palij said. As Christianity was accepted, the eggs became associated with Easter.
"The young boys always have nice embroidered shirts for Sunday," Palji said. "The embroidery and the Easter eggs are a speciality of the Ukrainians!"
Eye-catching colors, such as green, red and yellow, are used to decorate the
eggs, Palij said. Besides real eggs, wood is the proper material for a Ukrainian Easter egg.
"Plastic wouldn't work," Palij said.
"You have to have something that takes the paint."
Making a Ukrainian Easter egg can take from 15 minutes to several hours, depending on the complexity of the design.
"The families try to have some not only for the occasion of Easter, but after that," he said.
DIFFERENT REGIONS of the Ukraine, particularly in the mountains, have their own distinctive designs for the eggs, Palij said. The eggs are important traditions for Ukrainian families, he said.
Palij, a native Ukrainian, has his own collection of the eggs at home. Some were bought while on book-buying trips for the library, he said.
In this country, Minneapolis and New York City are probably the best places to find decorated eggs, he said.
The Easter egg display restores the
display in Watson Library, Paladin.
Allocate
From page 1
- University Dance Company was cut from $3.625 to $2.597.
- Engineering Student Council was cut from $2.552 to $2,194.
- current $2,600 to $10,400
• University Film Society was cut
from $4,050 to $2,490
- KU Men's Soccer was cut from $1,903 to $1,614.
- from $1,000 to $2,400.
• Blacks in Communications was cut from $3,902 to $3,226.
- Women's Transitional Care Services was cut from $4,820 to $3,840.
- MECHA was cut from $1,451 to
$1,167.
- River City Women's Health Collective was cut from $1,792 to $2,263.
TRAINS & MODELS
230 LOCUST
Join Jayhawk West
Tues.-Sat. 10-5
Sunday 1-5
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- Commission on the Status of Women was cut from $2,140 to $1,668.
Re part of the
- KU-1 was cut from $2,950 to $1,860.
* KU Water Ski Club was cut from $1,656 to $1,026.
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Tuesday, April 6, 1982 1-8 p.m.
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A. W. H. M.
Su Ji Chan, Taiwan graduate student, examines the Ukrainian Easter egg exhibit in the lobby of Watson Library.
DOUG CUNNINGHAM Kansan Staff
THE SANCTUARY Home of Great Specials
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Sign up for an interview time in the SUR Office.
Deadline is Friday, April 16, 5 p.m.
SYMPHONIC BAND SPRING CONCERT
LUNAR STUDIO
what is Robert E. Foster inspired by the University of Kansas School of Fine Arts training in the profession of Poxy Granginger Lincolnshire Poxy
8:00 p.m.
Tuesday, April 6, 1982
University Theatre
Murphy Hall
tree admission
M
Page 8
University Daily Kansan, April 5, 1982
Javhawk tennis team splits two matches
By GARY GRIGGS Sports Writer
The Kansas Jayhawks men's team was hoping to gain momentum for the Big Eight conference season which ended split two matches last weekend.
On Friday, KU defeated Dratch. 6-4 in a controversial match. On Saturday, however, the Division II hex still hovered over the Jayhawks. This time the culprit was Northwest Missouri State. 5-4.
The Jayhawks were scheduled to play another match yesterday, but the Southern Illinois team did not appear.
AGAINST DRURY, freshman, Scott Alexander, defeated Seve Chamley, 7-6, in the No. one singles match. This was the match that stirred up con
With Chamley leading the first 5-set and serving for set point, Chamley hit a deep shot to Alexander's baseline. When she was rulled "in" by one of the line judges.
Alexander thought the shot was out but returned it anyway. However, Chamley did not attempt to return Alexander's shot.
Chamley claimed the call should have been overruled and he should be credited with winning the first set. Alexander claimed he should be awarded the point since he made a good return shot.
Both coaches discussed the call, and after about a 30 minute delay, it was decided that the point should be relavel.
Alexander won the replay point and then went on to capture the set. But after he won the first game of the
second set, the Drury coach pulled his player off the court, thus forfeiting
AS SOON as all the singles matches had been completed, the Drury coach refused to play the doubles matches.
"There were a lot of questionable calls." KU Head Coach Randy McGratain said. "I guess their coach was really nervous about it, and going so they just packed up and left."
In other singles matches, freshman Rick Aukin defeated Bruce Patton, 75-76, in the No. two match. Senior Ed Williams, in the No. three match, 74-3, 74-6.
Freshman Craig Tidwell defeated Norm Vialle in the four. match, 2-6, 7-6, 6-3. In the five match, junior Jim Syrett defeated Rieger Niemeyer 3-6, 3-6, and senior Tom Hall defeated Dunaway 6-1, 6-3, in the six match.
THE LOSS TO NWMS marked the third time in the past week that the Jayhawks had fallen 5-4 to a Division II school.
With the match tied 4-4, the outcome came down to the No. one doubles match. In this match, the KU tandem of Aubin and Tidwell had two match point opportunities, but wound up losing to Jim Eaton and Jim Gersner, 8-6, 7-7.
In the other doubles matches, Hall and Syrett defeated Dave Deloach and Ron Von Dielingen, 6-2, 6-4, in the three match. Meanwhile, Bolen and Alexander were defeated by Godwin and Adeyemi, 6-4, 6-3, in the two match.
Winners for the Jayhawks in singles play were Aubin in the No. two match, who defeated Johnson, 6-1, 6-4. Syrett defeated Dielingen, 6-3, 6-1 in the No.
five position, and Hall defeated Deloach in the No. six match 2-6, 6-4, 6-4.
IN OTHER singles action, Alexander was defeated by Adeyemi, 6-3, 4-6, in the No. one match. Bolen was defeated by Eaton in the No. three match. Gervain was defeated by Kidwell in the No. four match.
In summing up the weekend's play, McGrath said, "This sure wasn't one of the best times in my career."
"The loss to NWMS was about as tough a defeat as we've had all year," McGrath said. "We were close with two match points and all. I was up so upset felt like going out onto the football training my head into the blocked sling.
"I was really disappointed that Drury didn't play doubles. Then to make matters worse, Southern Illinois doesn't even show up to play us. They would have been good for us to play then before we start Big Eight play them.
THE PLAYERS were equally upset and frustrated.
"I don't see why we can't bounce back. We'll all be over this tomorrow."
"What makes it so tough is that we didn't play that bad." Bolen said. "It seemed like everything they did went wrong, but we tried to some hot teams at the wrong times."
"It really hurt losing these 5-4 matches," Syrtet said. "We thought we had it won. We just can't get to any breaks."
The Jayhawks, who are now 4-5, begin conference play this weekend in a series of games. The task for them as they play three of the toughest teams in the conference.
On Friday, KU plays defending Big
Eight champion Oklahoma State. The Cowboys have won four consecutive Big eight titles. Last year, the Cowboys defeated the Jayhawks twice, 9-0, 9-0.
Oklahoma State is led by All-American Mark Johnson. However, the Cowboys will be without the services of another All-American, Kirk Loomis, who is out for the year with an arm injury.
"It's going to be tough," McGarth said. "Oklahoma State has a great team. Missouri probably has its best team, but it still is a bit better than they have been."
THE JAYHAWKS will play Colorado on Saturday and will wind up the trip by playing Missouri on Sunday. KU lost to Utah last year, and fell to Missouri, 8-1.
"We will have to be at the top of our game if we're going to do well."
Syrett feels the Jayhawks' recent 5-4 setbacks will benefit them in Big Eight play.
"They really have improved our mental toughness and competitiveness," he said.
Bolen said that if the Jayhawks are to turn things around, the first step is to cut the losses aside.
McGrath said he wished his team would be more consistent.
"One day it seems like a couple of guys will play good and a couple of guys will play bad," he said. "Aubin probably played the best tennis he's played all year this weekend, but we knew the players that didn't play all that well."
"It sure would be nice if we could all play well on the same day."
Two members of the KU men's track team, discus throw Matt Friedman and decathlete Owen Buckley, set national qualifying marks at the Texas Relays, held last weekend in Austin, Texas.
Friedman, a senior from Great Bend, threw the discus 18-4 to place fourth at the meet, which was the first stop on the prestigious Midwest relays circuit. In the decathlon, Buckley, a Slovak City, Iowa, junior, received three points. Their performances were good enough to qualify them for the NCAA national outdoor championships in Provo, Utah, next June.
that hurt our performance."
Also, the four-mile relay team of Tim Gundy, Bob Luder, Tim Tays and Greg Lebert took second place in the 2014. Arkansas won the race in 16:41:7.
Two qualify for NCAA meet
"Things went pretty well," Roger Bowen, KU assistant track coach, said. "We were short on people, and
Bowen said that injuries to Warren Wilhoite, who has tendinitis, and Anthony Polk weakened KU's chances in the sprint relays.
Bowen said that several Jayhawks achieved or came close to achieving their personal best records. Clint Johnson's 184-foot throw was a personal best in the discus. Valentino Robinson also had his best time in the 110-meter high hurdles with a time of 14.20.
Besides Buckley and Friedman, several other Jayhawks qualified for the finals at the meet, but did not place.
KU also sent 11 athletes to the Southeast Missouri State Invitational outdoor meet in Cape Girardeau, Mo., last Saturday. At that meet, Larry Metzger took third place in the pole vault, tying his personal best of 16-6, and Gary Lowrie took second in the shot put.
Track team wins three events
The KU women's track team won three events and placed several other athletes Saturday at the first annual NCAA Division III Golf Championship in Missouri State in Cape Girardeau, Mo.
In the discus, Becky McGranahan, who set a KU record and qualified for nationalists in the event last weekend, had a throw of 15-47 for another first-place finish. Also placing first were shot putter Stine Lerdahl, whose 48-43 win over last year tested the 3,200-meter relay team of Kelly Wood, Bever Mortimer, Anne Johannessen, and Gretchen Bajema won the race in 9:27.
KU track coach Carla Coffey said that while her team did place high in the relays, they still had room to improve.
in the relays, the 800-meter team, consisting of Dora Spearman, Nancy McCullough, Tucker, Smitherman and Lorna Tucker, finished with a time of 2:59. The second-middle team meter of McCullough, Smitherman, Tudie McKnight and Tucker also
today in cooperation with
Kansas Theatre present
Estelle Parsons on
"Miss Murgarida's Way"
Written & Directed by
Robert Attridge
8:00 pm, Friday April 16, 1982
University Theatre, Murphy Hall, University of Kansas
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office.
All seats reserved. Public $9, $8 $7. Student
and senior citizen discounts available.
For reservations, call 913 864-3982
This program is partially funded by
the Kansas Arts Commission.
For mature audiences
Some material may not be suitable for children.
Criswell faces drug charges
By United Press International
ST. LOUIS-Kirby Criswell, a second-year reserve defensive end with the Cardinals and a former Al- America honorable mention at the University of Kansas, faces federal drug charges.
college draft, but cut him on the last roster reduction before the season began. The Green Bay Packers won the title and released him later in the season.
the Cardinals signed Criswell as a free agent in November 1980 and assigned him to special teams that played against the Cardinals played in four games.
monday madness
Criswell, 24, was charged in a federal complaint late Saturday with conspiracy to manufacture and distribute麻醉药品, a nonnarcotic stimulant.
Before the 1981 season began, Criswell broke his hand when a tree he was cutting fell on it.
IRELAND
Kirbv Criswell
Criswell, whose hometown is Grinnell, Iowa, spent three years playing tight end for Kansas and played stand-up defensive end his senior year, when he led the team in tackles.
Criswell and Groff were arrested Friday by St. Louis County police and taken to the county jail, where he was found by authorities and enforcement administration agency.
Fast...Free Delivery
U. Magistrate David Nosee to Criswell's bond at $25,000. Nosee also set bond at $25,000 for Dorian Groff, and Criswell's face who faces the same charges.
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Other Jayhawks placing at the meet were McKnight, who took second in the long jump, Kari Haggy, who was third in the shot put, and Heather Houchin, who was third in the 5,000-meter race.
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Thursday, April 15
7:30-11:00 p.m.
403 Kansas Union
- Free Beer
* Free Soft Drinks
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Come by the Kansas Alumni Association Office, 403 Kansas Union and register for these great prizes and more, April 12-15 from 8:00-12:00 and 1:00-5:00 daily.
And don't forget to purchase your discount Senior alumni membership!
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Gifts and prizes contributed by KU Endowment Association,
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VIEW 2, 74th Street, Wed. Mar. 30
University Daily Kansan, April 5, 1982
Page 9
Women's golf team finishes third
By BILL HORNER
Sports Writer
The high winds made it tough for everybody who participated in the Southwest Missouri State Invitational golf tournament in Springfield, Mo., this weekend, but the Kansas women's golf team was enough to finish third, enough to finish first the 1981-82 season.
"The weather was awful," said Head Coach Ross Randall. "It was hard for anyone to play well."
The women did play well enough, though, to earn Randall's praise.
"Some of the girls had pretty decent individual scores," he said. "It was hard to concentrate in the bad weather. No one gave up."
The Jayhawks finished the 54-hole event with a 1,036 stroke total, which placed them ahead of Northern Iowa and host Southwest Missouri State. Missouri, one of the top women's teams in the nation, had with a 974 total, while Stephens College took second with a 1,099 total.
"We're making good progress," said Randall. "We didn't make as many mental mistakes this tournment."
Randall commended the play of freshman Karen Gustafson, who in her first college tournament fired rounds of 91-92-98 for a 281 total.
"She played really well her first two rounds. I think she'll be a help to us in years to come." Randall said.
Randall also complimented the play of Dee Williams, who bettered
her scores each day for the second straight tournament, and Bev Boozer, who after shooting a 100 in one round of the women's last event, opened the tournament with a 79, the team's low individual score.
Boozer added rounds of 88-87 to finish at 254, two strokes in back of Lisa Howard.
The women's next competition will be the Big Eight Championships.
ream scoring. Missouri 974,
Stephens 1,099, Kansas 1,096,
Northern Iowa 1,062, Southwest
Missouri State 1,122.
SOUTHWEST MISSOURI STATE INSTITUTIONAL
Kansas scoring: Lisa Howard 252,
Bev Boozer 254, Dee Williams 262,
Patty Coe 258, Karen Gustafson 251.
PHOENIX-Walter Davis came off the bench to score a team-high 22 points last night to lead the Phoenix Suns to a victory over the hapless Kansas KC.
Mike Woodson scored a game-high 28 points to lead the Kings, who now stand 26-49 on the season. They trail the division-leading San Antonio Spurs by 15.
Ernie Grunfeld and rookie Steve Johnson added 18 points each. Reggie King, who has been fighting a year-long slum, had 11.
The Suns had four other players in double figures. Alvan Adams and Dennis Johnson each had 17 for the Suns. Rich Kelley added 14 and Kyle
Suns top Kansas City, 104-95
The score was tied nine times before Phoenix took the lead for good at 27-26
with 44 seconds left in the first quarter. The Suns scored the first 10 points of the second quarter to pull away from the Kins.
Phoenix led 58-47 at halftime, but Kansas City closed the gap to 66-62 midway through the third quarter. A three-pointer by Macy started a string of 11 straight Suns' points to thwart the Kings' comeback.
By United Press International
RANS
F 4,101 1. Woodson J 40-28, B. Johnson J 20-44,
F 4,101 2. Woodson J 40-28, E. Johnson J 20-44,
Drew 3, O. Johnson J 8-24, H. Johnson J 8-24,
Drew 3, S. Johnson J 8-24, Denmand 2, O. Loder J 0-40, Dower J 3-19, 5-19
The Suns, who are 42-32 on the season,
stand one game in front of the Golden State Warriors.
Kansas City 26 21 21 27 -96
Phoenix 27 31 21 23-104
Adams 12, 47 15, Ribonstein 4, 12 9, Kleiber 9, 24 14,
Johnson 7, 54 17, Mac 9, 10 16, Scott 3, 14 5, Duvett 10, 22 19, Kramer 30, 6, Nance 16, 2 5, Cook 0, 1 21.
*Table 10.192 104*
Khanshat
city
present
71 23 11 23-13-14
two postals flea - Macy Flea out - none
total fouls - Kauai City 24, Phoenix 13, Technical fouls - Macy Attendance - 10,916
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Available now. Two bedroom spacious apts
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campus, and on bus route. $34 per month.
**MADBOK WEEK 10** & **CREATIVITY**
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FORIRED ABOUT April 157 Call Don's Tax Service for fast, accurate tax return preparation. Call 641-8833, 60-day extensions of time to file are available. 4-15
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phone 842-278-1465. For rent to mature male student. Quick,
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carriage.
The University Daily Kansan is an Equal OpportunityAffirmative Action institution are sought from all qualified people regardless of race, religion, color, sex, disability, national origin, age, or ancestry.
, The Kansan is now accepting applications for the Summer and Fall Semester Business Manager positions. Students must pay paid positions and require some newspaper experience. Application forms are available in the Student Senate Office, 105 B. Fitzgerald Drive, Room A, Student Organization and Activities, 220 Strong Hall; and in Room 200 Flint Hall. Completed applications are due in 200 Flint at 5:00 p.m. Monday, April 19.
FOR RENT
Must see to believe. Furnished rooms with utilities paid near university & downtown.
No pets. Phone 841-5500. tf
ATTENTION: BLUE JEAN OWNERS. If you can help us get our stock so we can find it for you, then the thieves to sell to us in store and jets & team will be on call phone: 841-1032 or iakes takes a phone call: 841-1032.
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Jayhawker Towers Apartments
Now taking applications for fall and summer leases. KU students only.
Bedroom apartments on campus
- **utilities** - swimming pool
- **entertainment** - on bus line
- **facilities** - laundry facilities
- **facilities** - bedrooms or furnished
Sublease 2 br. apr. w/ gas paid. Complete kitchen, drapes, fully carpeted. Central air and heating. Call 841-6868. 4-5
Established STUDENT COOPERATIVE close to campus and downtown. Own bedrooms/study; enrollments mite each week $72-$84. Inquire for additional sunflower HOUSE. 925-8421.
2 br. apt. convenient to shopping on bus route. Complete kitchen central air/heating, drapes fully carpeted. Call 841-6888. 4-5
Spacen, new, beautiful 2-bedroom duplex
2 blocks behind Nalshim dorm. $300/mo.
Available May 18 through Aug. 1. Option
for fall lease. Call 641-1571. 4-5
Sublease for summer months studio apt.
Trallridge. On bus route. Price negotiable.
841-2396 any time. 4-5
TRY COOPERATIVE LIVING. Sunflower
House, 842-9421. tf
Sleeping rooms 1-3 bedroom Apts. Duplexes and an 8-bedroom house close to campus. No pets. Call 642-8971. Lease for full year. Call afternoons or Sat, or 4-14
TRAILRIDE. Leasing for full-Stuhl-
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houses. All have harvest gold appliances
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Vice 2 bedroom apn. near hospital. Range,
refrigerator, carpet, drappy. $270. No pets.
references required. 841-8744 or 843-8814.
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2-bedroom duplex near Hallmark. All appliances w/d hooks, CA, no pears. Referees required $200. 843-8814 or 841-8744. 4-5
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requirements required. 843-8814 or 841-8744. 4-5
$125 includes ALL utilities, clean, no pet or smokers, summer, share a house, private bedroom, all furnished, gift grad. student.
Evenings 843-482 or collect 1-482-2150. 6-9pm
Summ. sublease. 1 BR apt. in 4-plex. furnished. carpeted, AC, 14H & NJ, all util. free $145,carpet. 749-4606. 4-6
3. BK duplex for summer. Single room or entire unit. Furnished. AC, dilwashower, negr campus on bus route. 841-1070. 4-5
our campus for fun. Small town to entire campus, fortress-like near campus on bus route 8140-1-67.
SOUTHERN PARKWAY TOWNHOUSES, 6th & Kearnsa If your tired of apartments in downtown, you may feature 3 br., 1½ baths, all appliances, alarms, lockers and more. We have openings now, and in the summer and fall Call Craig Leva in 149-157 or about our modestly priced townhouses.
Live in the CHRISTIAN CAMPUS HOUSE
This summer & fall. Become a part of a growing campus ministry. Call Alan Rose, campus minister 842-692. tf
We have a good place to live and study. We offer six-room apartments and 12-month leases and August sub-lease and 12-month leases. We allow students to own the courtyard or not allow them to own the courtyard. We have HOUGHTON PLACE, 8400 Alabama St.
HOUGHTON PLACE, 8400 Alabama St.
Summer and fall rentals, houses and apartments. Near campus, no pets. Lynch Real Estate 843-1601 or 841-3222. 4-14
MED CENTER BOUND? Newly rebuilt
center for specialized patient care.
Appliances. parking. (913)-381-2976.
Sublease furnished studio apartment with pool, tennis courts for summer $230 + electricity $300 deposit 749-4526 4-16
Nice one bedroom apartment. AC, carpeting,
close to campus. $175 a month, water paid.
Available now. Call 841-2763 after 5:30. 4-6
Sublease large 2 BR, apartment near stadium, water, gas paid, central air $320
841-8235 4-15
Sublease 3 BUMM 2 bath. fully carpeted & furnished, also central air, dwil, and disposal. Great location at 919 Indiana, Apt. 1. Fax 749-3310 or 841-5253. 4-14
Summer school sublease. Furnished 3+
bedroom home. 350 per month + deposit
and utilities. 94-515-24 after 4 p.m. 4-2
Sublease—a nice furnished 2 bedroom apt,
with water paid. Central air, cable T.V.
On bus route, 845-7104. 4-9
Two bedroom, apartment, one year old Energy efficient, on bus route, dudwasher, water paid. Available after finals. 841-563-94
3 bedroom, 2 bath ant. Must sublease or June 1, option to leave in Aug, Heatherwood Apt., 340.60 mo., 841-8980. Call after 5 p.m.
4-6
Sublease 3 bedroom, $2\frac{1}{2}$ bath, carpeted townhouse. Summer only. Trailridge complex. Call 841-8190. 4-7
SUBLAELE Traillard Studio Apt. water.
On bus line 821. 810-753-800
4-8
SUBLAELE FOR SUMMER! -br. apt 2
blocks from campus. Furnished with AC
and water.
Summer Sublime: very large, 3 bd, 2 duplex, semi furnished w. living, dining, din. porch, 18; kitchen. Ideal for family Call Dave or Briat at B11-8000 for 400
MINI-MOOG Synthesizer & HAMMON B-3
Organ. Pried to 841. 485-4
4-7
FOR SALE
Alternator, starter and generator specialists.
Parts, service, and exchange units. BELL
AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, 842-9068, 3900
W. 6th.
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale!
Begins January 16th. Makes sense to use them-1). As study guide,
assist with understanding of Western Civilization.
"New Analysis of Western Civilization-
availability notes." Criteria.
Orders. Free Booklet.
TENNIS RACKETS--Good selection new/ used. Will buy yours if in good condition. 842-6713 at 6:00 p.m. tf
Beautiful bold evergreen reasonably priced.
Himmel's Rand Tree Farm—Eudora—Phone
542-3139 or 542-3349. 4-20
1979 NA50 Honda moped, excellent condition
$275.00 or best offer. Call 841-5123. 4-6
1975 Pontiac Ventura 3 speed, V6, 2-door,
am radio, excellent condition, prefit to sell.
Call 789-3793.
Televisions-Video.Recorders. Name brands only. Factory-sales cartons. Lowest prices in the K.C area. Get your set of recall Total Sound Distributors 384-504
Pollen-fresh proteins, 942-5074 after six. 4-13
proteins, 942-5074 after six. 4-13
Kaleigh Record 10 speed bike, 23" frame.
680, 842-7507 (eve.) 4-6
Honda 125 Xlr-2400 miles, only ridden by
priest to church. $695. Peter Casparian-
841-4405, 841-8202. 4-6
75 Yamaha 175 Enduro, Like new condition
1800 miles. Evenings 1-334-911-4.
4-6
1980 Blue Plymouth Arrow Hatchback,
25.500 mL, just tuned up to $730. Must
buy 4/8/82. Call Brad 841-4200. 4-6
1978 K E 250 Ehdur. Enclosure, must drain. KE 250 Ehdur. Call Randy G749-354-384. Cabbies in NYC cat bicycles, so I must lift my Lt-Tour. Mind caution.
Ham radio Drake TR-4 transceiver with speaker and power supply, Pioneer car stereo also. 749-2374. 4-5
KZ750, many extras, excellent condition,
new tires, chain, sprockets, battery, & more.
Call 864-3018 4-7
TORONADO 1971, auto, a.c. am/fm stereo,
must sell. Fernando, 749-6745 after 5:30 4-7
HELP WANTED
cruel brace, Arfa. $165. 842-7530. 4-8
Elec. Guitar, copy, Arfa. $165. 842-7530. 4-8
FOUND
Dark blue knit shirt in UDK box south of Murphy Hall. Mitch-749-0596. 4-7
with Ralph Lauren frame, new near South Park 843-6656 4-5
Calculator found in 2nd floor Makiti kitchen. Call Dan. 864-254-4-5
Found pair of mens prescription glasses with Ralph Lauren frame, near, new south carolina
We are looking for 25 hardworking students for a summer work opportunity. If you are independent and want to earn $275.00 per week call 795-3227.
4-13
Person interested in doing odd house jobs in exchange for rent this semester. Must be capable, studious have own tools and equipment. Available to coeffort. Call Darryl 841-8388.
**Delightful Counselors, Activity Instructors,**
Cook, Kitchen Manager, Kitchen Help for
Mountain Sunrise Camp. Trianah Ranch.
Box 711, Boulder, Colorado 80365 (808) 259-8640.
Summer Job National Park Co. s-2. 19Ks.
500 Openings. Complete Information $5.00.
Park Report Mission Mt. Co., 612 2nd Ave.
W.N. Kallspell, MT 39901. 4-15
Missing—1 brown tri-fold wallet, 1 set 10
keys, 1 set 3 keys. If found card #641-8418.
Reward. 4-6
First Christian Church (Disciples of Christ of Lawrence, Kansas is seeking applicants for an office-ordinator. The position would be apportioned among 30 students $2,500-$3,000 per year salary beginning in the summer of Christian college, including a term of recommendation, should be mailed to First Christian Church (Disciples of Christ of Lawrence, Kansas) 606444 100 Kentucky, Lawrence, KS 606444 April 23, 1982 Inquiries please visit www.firstchristianchurch.com 4-16
Lost: Barkace with glasses in pocket, in 2020 Weston Weekend - 3-10, glues needed. Reward: 843-7552 ask for Kurt. 4-7
Bartendir—energetic and personable, contact Dan at the Exchange, 842-953-9. 4-7
NATIONAL PARKS hiring now. Work and play for pay. More than 300 parks need thousand dollars to hire managers, clerks, attorneys, waiters/waitresses, chefs, cooks, cafes, tour guides, bus drivers, laundry, clerks, tour guides, bus drivers, laundry, postal clerks, etc. Spend numbers in Adams, Yellowstone, Wineries. Make new friends supplement income, equity National Parks fund $1,000. Send $5.00 Employment Guide Parks Nashville, P.O. Box 2679;JAACA 4-83 92704
Student hourly position available for the remainder of Spring semester and Summer activities. 220 Strong Hall. Application in 220 Strong Hall or 4-5 in 220 Strong Hall EQ.
LOST
Experienced Massage needed at Nautilus Fitness Center, 1001 West 23rd. Call Don at 749-1509 for appointment. 4-6
Lost large blue loose lead notebook. Has all class notes. Please call 843-0673 or 843-8588 and ask for Dean. 4-11
Bassett hat, yellow. Indianapolis 508 patch,
left by tennis courts Sunday. March 28
evening please phone 841-2561. 4-9
PERSONAL
Instant passport, visa, ID, & remine photographs.
Custom made portraits b/w, color.
Swells Studio. 740-1611. tf
Skillet's liquor store serving U-Daly since 1949. Come in and compare. Willfried Skillet Rudaly. 1906 Mass. 843-8186. tf
SKI TRIPS SKI TRIPS SKI TRIPS SKI TRIPS WINTERPARK, DILLON AND OTHERS Economical packages every week and school break. Call Ski Ele. Bc1-8336. eightday
LEASE-A-LEMON
$6.95 Per Day SPECIAL
Rent any car (Mon, Tues, Wed.
$8.95 Per Day.
$60 Per Week
$225 Per Month
Cannot be combined with any other special oils are mechanically sound, state inspected clean & ready to rent. We accept cash, check, visas or credit cards 492-4255
Say it on a sweatshirt with custom silk-screen printing 1 to 1000 shirt art by Swella 749-1611. tf
HEADACH, BACKACHE, STIPK NECK,
LEG PAIN? Find and correct the
problem. Call Dr. M. Jacobi Johnson for
his advice. Mail 84-9350.
Accepting Blue Cone and Lone Star insurance
For your party clothes, formal or costume,
check out the Inflation Fighter. E 8: Thr:
10-5-30 M-F 10-5-30 Sat. Open till 8
on Thurs.
Community Auction 700 N.H.
Every Wed. 6:30 p.m.
Consignments Accepted
Wed. 10 a.m. till sale
Sat. 10-5
841-2212
The Keeper-Wekweek Specials on Kegs!
Call 841-9509-1610 W. 23rd.
t
MARY KAY COSMETICS—Full-time beauty consultant. 842-6641. tt
COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES
Free pregnancy testing; early and advanced out patient abortion; gynecology; KSU research; and Boc. Overland Park, KS (912) 643-3200
Hillel Lunch
'Jewish Medical Ethics'
Tuesday. April 6, 12:15 to 1:00
Tuesday, April 6, 12:00 to 1:00
Cors 1, Kansas Union Cafeteria
Martin Wollmann, director of Health Services, Watkins Hospital
Exciting jobs at Lake Taboos. Send $3.00 to
Taboos Jobs, P.O. Box 7244, Kansas City, MO
64112.
4-22
Silk heads, wallets, jewelry bags from Korea.
Barb's Second Hand Rose. 515
Indiana. 842-4746. 4-9
All-University Seder
Spring formals -Pratline look. 50% bead
and finish. Second Hand Water
Indiana 433-8766 49-49
Miami 433-8766 49-49
GREEN'S CASE SALE, BUSCH $7.99, COORS
$8.99, BUDWESER LIGHT $9.59, GREEN'S,
4-9
BURST 23RD.
Wednesday April 14 7-9 p.m.
Residence
Residents: FREE
Others: $2
Templin Hall. University
Stereo-Televisions-Video. Recorders. Name brands-Factory sealed cartons. Lowest prices in the K.C.A. Need your host to call Toni Sound Audience 313-840-3600 4-30
Tickets available from March
29-April 9 at main deks in
Residence Halls, Hilton office,
B-117 Kansas Union,
Canterbury House,
114 Louisiana.
BOCD Election The Board of Class Officers will be holding Sophomore, Junior, and Senior Elections in Petitions and filing form may be picked up in the BOCC or the Student Senate Office. Filing Deadline is Tuesday, April 26. GREEN'S CASE SALE, BUSCH COORS 100 WEST 3RD STREET 2ND FLOOR 200 GREEN'S.
PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH-
tf
843-4821.
Men and Women play Ultimate in short
shorts. 4-7
ACCOUNT SOND & LIGHT CO. for your next surgery. Dates available in Anil & May.
Call 811-0295 for booking information. 4-6
Dealing With That Unseasonal Feeling Learn to initiate conversations, make new friends. April 7 - 9: 30 p.m., Numerator Center, 844-761-1228; March 26 - 4: 44 p.m., Bordner Center, 844-761-121, Strong Hall 4-6
Born and razed in Cheekago, Breer Jones.
Born and razed. 4-5
Remember, O most gracious Virgin Mary, that never was it known that anyone who to the body, sought thy protection. Insisted that by this confidence, I flow to these. Imprinted by this confidence, I flow to these. I stand dutiful and porrowful. O Lady of the Word incline and answer me, and answer me. Amen.
Miss Bacchus ever since our fling started, we've fought tough enough we've loved, we've even banched our dreams. But now, in our dream we'll come true and we'll own our life. Thanks for sticking with me I am grateful
Give your favorite kid (young or old) an Easter casserole-A special edition Easter casserole with chocolate eggs and jelly beans, with pastel balloons and a festive balloon-Balloon-A-Gram-8458-4-9
Last fall Templin was a flake. We are laughing at Templin on 'cause there's no way they can even make a decent show in The Blood Drive. The Greeks. 4-9
Templein Hall does not have blood in its vein! It has some mixture of beer & other substances. You'll be buried in the Blood Drive. 4-8
WELCOME GARFIELD! 4-5
Rhythm Guitarist/Vocabulary—looking for Loud, Bain, and Drums—For No frills Rock & Roll. Call Chris after 3:30 p.m. (864-4295) 8625;
To the Invaders, so very dear You just may have something to fear Walt will May and then you will see What I have in store for The. Invasd. 4-5
CHICAGO MATERNITY CENTER STORY.
a film about an alternative to high cost
broadcasting. 2013, Galley Room, Lawrence Public Library,
Galley Room, LA. CITY CITY WOMEN'S
HOLISTIC COLLECTION
Established hard look for male/female
Drums, Drumsticks and Keyboards.
Immediate Contact. Caregay at 842-8030.
If not there, leave name & phone:
4-16
Looking for a person interested in going on a coast to coast by C bicycle Trip this summer.
Phone 841-6668 4-8
MONTESSORI PLUS TEACHER PREPARA-
TION is now enrolling for the summer
training program to become a Montessori
principal teacher. Call 232-8531 for infor-
mation.
GREEN'S CASE SALE. BUSCH $7.99.
COOBS $8.99. BUDWEISER LIGHT $9.99.
GREEN'S WEST WIRD 23RD. $4.99.
ARTISTS THE WOMEN STUDENTS ORGANIZATION needs a logo. Submit entries for the art competition. Winning artist will receive a $10 gift card to Sprintner's Bookcast. Call 964-358-7432.
WOMEN STUDENTS Help build an organization to work for your needs. We are a community of women in nursing. If you would like to be President, Vice president, Treasurer, Publicity Chair, interest group, Call WOMEN STUDENTS on (312) 654-8900 or the Status of Women. at 4-3084, B14 Union.
**STUDENT NURSING HOME AIDES:** Share your experiences with us, as a public service organization. KANSAN'S FOR IMPROVE-ON-HEALTH on conditions and quality of care. All correspondent on conditions and quality of care. Mail to: RS 604013 (KINH. 8279); MASS. ST. JEWELLE; RS 604013 (MKH. 8342) or 8038 (JUNI).
SERVICES OFFERED
TUTORING MATH, STATISTICS, PHYSICS,
COMPUTER SCIENCE. Call 814-499-0968
for help on computer science.
call 814-475-176 (ask for Robert). tf
Schneider Wine & Keg Shop—The finest selection of wines in Lawrence—largest supplier of强肾. kgs 1.93 Wd. 22rd. tf
WRITING A RESUME? What to say? How to say! HI! Stop by The House of Uhde and pack up our FREE Resume on resumes at us.com/FreeResume. 8-31 Mon.-Sat. NOM-Sun. 3-11
31/2¢ self service copies now at ENCORE COPY CORPS 25th and iowa 842-2001
25th and Iowa 842-2001
Responsible young couple would like to HOUSE SIT mid-May through August. Call 804-615S 4-9
LEARN TENNIS from experienced instructor in small groups with other K.U. students or private lessons 842-6713 after 8:00 p.m.
Drafting (charis maxts, etc.) 6 years expert
Supporting writing for certificates 841-7944, 741-
421 Professional Stripping Tennants and Rackout
Appraisals Prices in Town. Call 842-5231 or
842-6563
Tutoring--Don't wait till the next exam! Biology and Statistics Paul 841-2546. 4-9
RESUMES - Professional; students' remanes
a specialty. 841-2654 4-30
Alber Vera/Johanna care. Quality products at affordable prices. Why not look our店吧. Call your business line—look Weekdays for 4 p.m. 840-0005. 4-6
Draining With That Awake Feeling: Wednesday,
April 7, 7:00-9:30, Numeraker
Center. The Student Assistance Center, 121
Strong Hall, 864-4064.
4-6
Put your best foot forward with a pro-
fessionally printed resume from Encore. We can write it, type it, and print it for you. Call Encore 842-3001, 82th & Itha. 4-30
GRADUATE STUDENTS THEISI COPHERS
QUALITY discounts based on total volume of
quality discounts based on total volume of
shop that can offer variable reduction in
shop that can offer variable reduction in
Emerge Copy Corner, 28th & 30th
floor. Emerge Copy Corner, 28th & 30th
WOMEN'S GROUPS STARTING THE WEEK OF
April 9. 30th. Women's Support
Group 1; University of Pennsylvania;
'Training Group 3'; Wellness Workshops.
Call 4-616-7257; Judy Woods, 'Judy
Zhif' for information.
TYPING
Experienced typist. These, term papers,
etc. IBM. Correcting Selectric. Call Sandy.
after 5 p.m. 748-9818. tt
it's a Fact, Fast, Affordable, Clean, Typing 843-5820
TVFING-EDITING-GRAPHICS. IBM `Corrective`, Selective, full-time ttypel spelling correction to composition assistance, Emergency service service. 841-296-4, 412-7
Experienced typist. Term papers, thesis, albus micraneseal. IB Correcting EMC or Pica, and will correct spelling. Phone 843-6545 Mrs. Wright. t
Experienced typist will type letters, thesis and dissertations. IBM correcting electric Call Duna 842-2744. *tr*
Reports, dissertations, resume. legal forms
graphics, editing. m-correct. Selective
Call Ellen or Jean Ann 841-2172. tl
Experienced typet -thesis, dissertation
term papers, misc. JBM correcting selective
Barb, after 5 p.m. 842-2310.
t
**TYING PLUS**. Thesis, dissertations, papers, letter, applications, renumer, memoranda, with composition, grammar, research, oral presentations, foreign students, or Americans. 814-6254.
For PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myrn 841-4980. U
TIP-TOP TYPING—experienced typifier—IBM
Correcting Selective II; Royal Correcting
S 5000 CD. 843-5675.
IRON FENCE TYPING SERVICE. Evening:
843-2507. U
Professional typing. Dissertations, these term papers, resumes, legal, etc. IBM Correting Selective. Bd 843-9529. 4-10
Experienced typist will type term papers, thesis, dreadsations, books, etc. Have IBM mini-correcting Seectric II. Call Terry 842-7454 anytime.
MAGIC FINGERS TYPING SERVICE. 843
6129. 4-30
AFPENDABLE QUALITY for all your typing needs: themes, dissertations, resumes, cards, mailing, misc. Call Judy 842-7943 after 6:00 p.m.
Fast, accurate and experienced typist will type your papers Reasonable. Call 842-8091. 4-30
Farmer medical research secretary will type books, theses, term papers. Call Nancy, 841-5802. 4-9
Quality typing and word processing available at Encore Copy Corps. 25th and Iowa.
842-2001. 4-20
Graduate students trained in typing, retyping and rewriting your thesis or dissertation?
Save time and money by bookmarking at Enerex (Call 642-7900 for more information)
Would like to type dissertations, thesis, term
nomenets, etc. Call 842-3203. 4-35
Shakespeare could write. Elvis could wiggle my talent, typing. Call 842-0043 after 5:00 and weekends. 4-18
Professional typing. Dissertations, these
term papers, resumes, legal etc. IBM Corp-
recting Selecific. Deb 843-8592. 4-20
WANTED
Roommate for summer furnished 2 br. apt,
close to campus, free gas & water, new
carpet & paint. Call 841-0649. 4-5
Experienced female vocalist wants to join Gospel or Rock-n-Roll band. Michelle: 864-864-2219 4-5
Responsible person to share 3 bdmn. house on bus rite from June 82 to May '83. 15 + 1/3 utilities mow. Call 942-3230. 4-7
WANTED: 1 or 2 female roommates for 3 bedroom house. Close to campus. Call 864-1365.
Male roommate. Available now! Very nice duplex with luxuries such as your own garage, speculum study room, diploma room, 3 bd. for 14/month + 1/3/ul. 841-9632
Roommate to sublease apt. on bus route.
For summer. $180/month. If interested Call
Steve or Bobbi at 843-6849. 4-8
Wanted: Person to share 3 BR Home Avail.
immediately. On bus route: $90/mo + 1/4
uill. Don 841-5461. 1-45
Fernale roommate - 2 bdrm. Apt. 17th,
Ohio $0, no $8.75, dm + 1s use. Non-amoker.
prefer English or fine art interest.
749-0222
842-0038 4-4
Female, non-smoker preferably, to live with
in a Madison neighborhood, not pregnant
Two Senior female business students look for rooms to share to 3 bdrm, and over summer and/or next year. Call $42-6
Sports
Page 10 University Daily Kansan, April 5, 1982
KU softball team wins six falls in championship game
By TOMCOOK
Sports Writer
After winning their first six games in the tournament, the KU women's softball team looked in good shape to claim the championship in the Southwest Missouri State Invitational at
"It was an emotional win for Oklahoma State, and a tough loss for us," said KU Head Coach
However, Oklahoma State stymied the Jayhawks on three hits as the Cowboys defeated KU, 1-0, yesterday in the final. It was the second time the Jayhawks took the runner-up in the tournament.
"Any time we play Oklahoma State, the games are very important to us. They've beaten us the last three years in the Big Eight, so we wanted to do well against them," he said.
The Cowboys picked up the only run they needed when Pam Harper scored in the third on an RBI single by Shelly Hullack. Harper was hit by a pitch and advanced to second when Kansas' Liz Commino carried the ball into the dugout after making a running catch.
Rhonda Clarke took the loss for the Jaywhays, suffering only her sixth defeat of the season against 18 victories. Clarke scattered six hits, while striking out six and walking four.
The Jayhawks had two opportunities to score, leaving the bases loaded in both the first and third quarter.
"It was a good game, and we had chances to
become it, but we just couldn't get the runs across
the plate."
Kansas, 29-8, advanced to the finals with a 1-0 victory over Oklahoma yesterday. Clarke pitched the shutout, her 13th of the season. She gave up just three hits and fanned five batters.
The Jayhawks scored in the third on a freak play. Candi Boyer led off the inning with a single. Parm Cox laid down a bunt and collided with the first baseman on the play.
As both players lay on the ground, with the ball out of reach, "Oklahoma kept calling for a time out," said Stancilf. "But we kept yelling for us to keep going because the ball was still alive."
The Sooners had a chance to tie the game in the top of the seventh. Oklahoma's leadoff batter singled and moved to second on a sacrifice. On the next play, the ball got away from KU first baseman Tammy Hoffman, but Hoffman threw the runner out at home as she tried to score.
The tournament began on Friday and was scheduled to conclude Saturday. But rains postponed play, so the Jayhawks played just two games on the first day and three games on the
In the tournament a player for Kansas, the Jayhawks cruised to a 9-1 victory over Northeast Missouri State. Clarke nearly threw her third no-hitter of the season, but the bid was spelled in the sixth inning when Denise Waddill rapped a two-out home run.
The Jayhawks tallied 11 hits, led by a 3-for-3 performance from Commino, which included two RBI. Clarke and Sue Sherman each had two hits.
Clarke struck out 15 of the 18 batters she faced and came back to fan nine batters in the next game.
KU won the rain-shortened game, 8-2. The contest was called after six and two-thirds innings. The Hawkeys conceded the game to the Jayhawks after officials planned to make the two teams resume play Saturday morning, all for just one out.
Clarke went five innings to pick up the victory.
Simmons went four innings to pick up the sixth. Hoffman allowed just one run on one hit.
Kansas won all three of its games on Saturday. the first win gave the Jayhawks the 10th inning, gave the Hawks the 12th inning, gave the Hawks the 14th inning.
The second win, over Oklahoma State, put the Jayhawks in the single elimination tournament of the top eight teams. Oklahoma State's record was also good enough to make it to final eight.
Hoffman won the first game Saturday at Kansas posted a 9-1 victory over Mississippi State in a game that was called because of the eight-run rule.
Hoffman, 2-2 for the season, allowed just three hits, walked two and struck out seven while KEON scored eight.
KU then faced the Cowboys for the pool championship, and Clarke pitched a shutout to give the Jayhawks a 14 decision. She gave up two shots, and struck out five on her way to the shutout.
The Jayhawks then moved to the first-round game of the final eight against host Southwest Missouri State. Clarke picked up the decision again, winning 2-1.
Kansas faces a busy week now as they travel to Columbia tomorrow for a double-header with the Missouri Tigers. The Jayhawks hit the road in brilliant bolt with Creighton at Omaha, Neb., on Thursday.
Their next home appearance will be Friday against Kansas State in a double-header at the FedEx Field.
They wrap up pre-Easter action on Saturday with a pair of games against Oklahoma City at
"We have one of the toughest weeks of the whole season coming up," Stanniff said. "I hope everyone can be there."
BOB GREENSPAN/Kansan Staff
10
Jeff Long dives back into first base in the first game of Saturday's double-header against the Oklahoma Sooners. The Jayhawks lost both games on Saturday but bounced back to win yesterday's doubleheader.
'Hawks split opening Big Eight series
Bv MIKE ARDIS
Sports Writer
Facing the possibility of losing three of four garnes to Oklahoma, the Kansas baseball team had to go to extra innings to split the weekend series.
"Wow, that's all I can say," Coach Marty Pattin said in kuep sweeter's games withOU. "I'm very happy with the split. The game really looks big, but you can't call it back."
After dropping two games to the Sooners Saturday, the Jayhawks, now 12-12, appeared to be in trouble. They had taken a 10-5 lead going into the ninth inning of Saturday's first game, only to lose on eight Oklahoma runs in the ninth. KU also dropped the nightcap 5-3.
On the strength of Jim Phillip's complete game victory, KU took the opener yesterday, 6-2. Phillips, 3-2, allowed eight hits while striking out seven in getting KU's first conference victory of
KU WON yesterday's second game in dramatic fashion on Jim Heeney's extra-inning single, scoring Mike Bohn from third. KU won, 9-8.
After blowing a 6-lead, KU had to come from behind to take an 8-7 lead in the sixth, only to have OU tie it up in the seventh. Heeney's run three-times in eighth made up for his earlier three-run error.
OU had the bases loaded in the fourth with two outs when Richard Curtjou hit a fly to Heeney.
"There was no way I was going to make the second out," Heeyen said. "I was just looking at it and then I said, 'Let's go.'"
Heney said he thought about his chance to make up for his error when he was at bat in the game.
Heeeney almost did not have a chance to get the game-winning hit. OU scored one run in the top of the seventh to the game and would have had to out Bill Yellow threw out Cudjo as he tried to score.
DUKE LOHR had to shut off an OU rally in the eighth to college his second win of the season. OU won all but one game.
"Bill's throw was the play of the game," Pattin said.
Saturday, the Jayhawks also took a lead into the final inning of a game only to have the Sooners rally. Gary Springer opened the inning with a single and Ty Powell hit a ball to Jeff
Neuzil. He could not handle it, eliminating the possible double play. Then the flood gates opened as OU won the game with eight runs on three home runs.
The Jayhawks had their own rally in the game, scoring seven runs in the seventh to take a 10-5 lead. Heeney and Phil Doherty had home runs in the inning.
Saturday, with the wind blowing out, the teams combined for eight home runs in the doubleheader. Yesterday, with the wind blowing up the day, OU players hit the only two home runs.
"HE TREW the ball well," Pattin said. "I may give him a shot at a startling role."
OU led the entire second game Saturday, scoring four runs off starter Chris Ackley. KU was trailing, 4-6 when Patton put Mike Watt in. He then scored on two free throws, the most he has allowed in his last three outings.
KU, behind I in the sevent, put together a
Jawahara only two short when the Jayhawaks
could manage only two.
The Jayhawks, 2-2 in the conference, will face Iowa State next weekend at Iowa State.
"It would have put us in a bad position," Pattin of the possibility of losing yesterday's secret.
Jayhawks win first golf title in two years
Creatve Waltor
By BILL HORNEP
Kansas volfer Rob Wilkin said it all.
"We went out and did what we were supposed to do, and I think we can go to WSU and do it again."
Wulin finished second place individually to lead the men's golf team to their first team title in two years inst weekend, as the Jahywens secured the Park College Invitational in Kansas CAA.
The win set the stage for the upcoming shocker Classic, to be held at the Wichita State Golf Course April 15-16, where the men will face their toughest competition of the season. The field includes Oklahoma State, who, in the opinion of the best college golf team in the country.
Wilkin, who won the medalist title at the Gulf Coast Invitational Tournament earlier last month, finished one stroke out of medalist position, and one stroke ahead of teammate Brad Demo. Wilkin's 76-73-149 total placed him one stroke behind Baker's Bok Bezek. Demo's 76-74-150 total placed him in a tie for three with other golfers.
AS A TEAM, the Jayhawks' 692 total heat
bears their D15 score, while Big Eight eig
Missouri's 714 score.
"This isn't the high point in the season," said assistant coach Ken Weisner, who accompanied team to the event. "It's something you take pride in. But our test will be at Wichita State."
Of the 19 teams finishing the Park College tournament, four were Big Eight schools, and three were West Coast.
"In the past two tournaments, (Park College, Gulf Coast) we've had good competition, but not the best. At WSU, we'll be facing the best," Weiser said.
AS FOR THE PARK College event, Weir said that the victory felt good for the team that buttressed their season.
"If there's a trademark to this team, it's coming out of the blocks slow. It was a little disappointing that we didn't come out and shoot first day (2nd place, six strokes behind Baker)."
Wilkin and Demo, deadlocked in third place individually after the first round, came back strong, in the second round as did Dean Cunningham. In the third-round antithetical '76's to erase Baker's lead and take the win.
Weiser said that if the tournament could have continued for one more round, Demo and Wilkin would win.
Wilkin, playing in the same group as medalist Bezek the final round, sank a pressure-packed ten-foot putt on the last hole to finish at 149. Bezek had a similar ten-footer, and with a crowd surrounding the 18th green, sank it for a 148 total and the medalist title.
to get pumped up at the end of the tournament.
They didn't give anything away, though."
Demo, on the other hand, took an agonizing bogey on the next-to-last hole, which cost him a tie with Wilkin for second, and threw him into a deadlock at 150 with three others.
"BRAD AND Rob were great." he said. "They had a lot of tough luck, though, with bad lies, and I felt like I was being told the truth."
He bogeyed the first hole in the playoff, and was eliminated.
"When Brad and I were walking back to the clubhouse after that beogey," Weisler said, "the looked at me and said, 'The team won; that's the important thing.' That shows a lot of class."
ALSO SHOWING class in the final round was Fugate. After shooting an 83 in the first round, and a 41 on the front nine of the final round, Fugate came in with a terrific 35.
"Fugate really helped us a lot," said Wilkin. He played very well. We really came together to play.
Head Coach Ross Randall, who was with the women's team at the Southwest Missouri State Invitational tournament, was also happy with the results.
"I'm glad to see we beat the Big Eight teams (MU, ISU, KSU)."
KU defeats Northern Iowa, loses to Denver
RvGARV GRIGGS
Although conditions were not perfect, the first annual KU women's tennis invitational was held this past weekend. The Jayhawks split in their two matches.
Sports Writer
KU, which is now 8-7, defeated Northern Iowa, 7-2, and lost to Denver, 5-4.
Some people might not have thought the invitational was played, because the KU men's team had a match on Saturday afternoon that took place on the KU varsity courts.
The KU women's team played Northern Iowa at 9 a.m. Saturday on the varsity courts behind Allen Field House. However, because of a scheduling conflict with the men, they were forced to play Denver at the Lawrence High School courts.
DENVER AND NORTHERN Iowa also had to play at Lawrence High School on Friday afternoon, because of another scheduling conflict with the men. Denver w-81.
Saturday's gusty winds didn't help matters any.
"The scheduling conflict was no big deal," KU Head Coach Kathryn Mattery said. "The wind was strong."
There was supposed to be a four team in the invitational, but St. Louis cancelled.
they had to adjust and play the wind. But it's all part of the game, and everybody has to play it as a team.
The Jayhawks were paced by the singles play of junior Maureen Gulliford and free-lance Liz Fraser.
"The girls really couldn't play their games,
THE DOUBLES team of Guilfoll and sophomore Marn Jensen also was undefeated.
Senior Shawn Wilson was defeated by Nina Nelson, 7-5, 7-5 in the No. four match. Senior Corey Nason defeated Chris Corsalso in the No. five position, by way of default, and Jones defeated Tanna Kiehl, 6-1, 6-2, in the No. six match.
In singles play against Northern Iowa, freshman Laura Runnels defeated Vicki Reinke, 6-3, 6-4, in the No. one match. Guilfoil defeated Nancy Land in the No. two match, 6-4, 1-0. In the No. three position, freshman Steffanie Dicke defeated Cathrine Crowl, 6-3 7-5
"Maurine jint had a super day," Merrion said. "Marrn and she played a great match and was so good."
GUILFOUL AND Jensen defeated Land and Crowl in the No. one doubles match, 6-3, 6-2. Rumelm and Nason won by way of default in the No. two doubles position, and the No. three team of Dicke and Wilson defeated Nelson and Reimcke, 7-5, 4-7, 7-5.
In other singles play, Runnels was defeated by Kim Gosche, 6-1, 6-3 in the No. one match. Dicke was defeated by Jackie Richards in the No. three match, 7-8, 6-2. Wilson was defeated by Karen Wynn in No. four position, 6-5, 7-4, and Nunnon was defeated by Mary Mongols, 6-1, 9-1 in the No. five match.
Winners for KU in singles action against Denver were Guitail, who defeated Kim Daus in five sets. The U.S. men's champion was
defeated Barbara Mangan, 6-1, 6-3, in the No. six position.
In doubles play, Guilfoll and Jensen defeated Gosche and Daus, 7-5, 6-4, in the one match. Rumels and Nason were defeated by Richards and Hodges in the No. two position, 7-6, 6-4, and Dicke and Wilson defeated Hughes and Mangan, 6-1, 7-5, in the No three position.
"NORTHERN NOWA didn't give us too much trouble, but Denver was a real tough team." Nason said. "The Denver match will be good for us as we head into Bieg Eight play."
The Jayhawks begin Big Eight play this weekend when they travel to Columbia, Mo., to
KU lost to Missouri, 7-2, and Nebraska, 5-4, in the fall. However, the Jayhawks were 5-1 against Missouri in the Kansas State invitational held in Oklahoma, where they were 0-1 in their only match against Nebraska.
"Playing as well as we did against Missouri at K-State was real encouragement." Merrion said. We are pretty even with Nebraska, but I would be more confident that we have been playing outside longer than they have."
NBA STANDINGS Eastern Conference Atlantic Dialysis
Team W W L Pct. GB —
Detroit 8 10 7.34
Philadelphia 52 22 16.33 6
New Jersey 39 36 5.50 18½
Washington 36 37 5.50
New York 61 67 4.32 432
Scoreboard
Milwaukee 52 23 693 - -
Atlanta 37 37 40 14 %
Dallas 37 30 48 - -
Indiana 33 42 440 19
Chicago 31 42 460 19
Cleveland 18 18 60 - .
Western Conference Midwest Division
San Antonio 44 41 31 .587 - %
Dover 44 31 29 .587 - %
Houston 43 32 572 1
Kansas City 26 49 347 18
Dallas 26 49 343 18
Utah 26 49 324 18
Los Angeles
Seattle
Florida
Golden State
Portland
Ohio
16 50 24 676
50 48 3676
49 42 3584
41 33 3544
41 37 3513
16 50 26 344
Houston 95, San Antonio 63
Boston 74, Seattle 62, Philadelphia 127, New York 106
New Jersey 89, Cleveland 109
New York 81, Cleveland 109
Phoenix 104, Kansas City 74
Phoenix 104, Kansas City 74
Rasehall
IG EIGHT STANDING
Team W W L Pct GB
Okahanna State 5 3 2 .625 1%
Okahanna 2 2 2 .500 1%
Kansas State 2 2 2 .500 1%
Nebraska 2 2 2 .400 1%
Missouri 4 3 2 .375 1%
Iowa State 3 3 2 .375 1%
VISTA DEL MAR Y DENOMINACIÓN
Kauai 6-84, Hawaii 10-92, Alaska State 40-94, Iowa State 2-13
**
Hockey
NHL STANDINGS
Wales Conference
Retief Dijkshoff
Team W L W T GF GA Pts.
Nationals 50 18 37 69 104 612
NY Rangers 39 27 14 17 113 65
Philadelphia 38 31 11 132 313 87
Pittsburgh 38 31 11 132 313 87
Michigan 36 11 13
Campbell Conference Norris Division
Montreal 46 17 17 17 300 223 109
Boston 46 17 17 17 300 223 109
Buffalo 38 36 15 15 307 273 87 90
Cleveland 38 36 15 15 307 273 87 90
Hartford 23 11 48 244 251 341 60
Minnesota 37 23 20 14 346 284 94
Winstepg 37 23 23 14 315 284 90
Minnesota 32 42 40 17 313 321 80
Chicago 30 38 12 12 332 363 72
Toronto 30 38 14 12 371 362 54
Edmonton 21 47 12 12 271 354 40
Montreal 48 17 15 17 417 296 111
Vancouver 30 17 13 17 417 296 117
Calgary 29 34 17 13 334 345 75
Montreal 29 34 17 13 334 345 75
Colorado 18 49 17 241 343 89
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Pittsburgh 7 New York 9
St. Louis 10 Detroit 8
Boston 7 Hartford 10
Quarter 7 Buffalo 8
Quarter 6 Greenville 10
Philadelphia 7 Toronto 1
Philadelphia 7 Toronto 1
Edmonton 2 Wunipug 3
Vancouver 7 Los Angeles 4
Sydney 5 Boca Raton 5
Soccer
Soccer MISL STANDINGS Eastern Division
Team W L Pct. GB
New York 29 7 1.04 ---
Pittsburgh 18 6 1.35 ---
Baltimore 23 14 6.52 6½
Buffalo 21 17 523 9
New Jersey 14 22 389 15
Cleveland 14 22 389 15
Philadelphia 14 22 356 15
St. Louis 27 12 692 —
Wichita 22 15 605 3%
Milwaukee 18 19 594 1%
Denver 14 24 368 12%
Phoenix 14 24 368 13%
Kansas City 12 25 344 1
A.
Edwards captures Greensboro Open
By United Press International
GREENSBORO, N.C.-Danny Edwards two-putted from 30 feet to stop a strong challenge from Bobby Clemente yesterday to win the wind-swept Greater Greensboro Open for the second time in seven years on the Professional Golfers' Association tour.
Edwards, who won here in 1977, finished the
Edwards, who claimed the Open as only his third tour championship, struggled against 40 mph winds and subdued Clampey on the final hole with a three-foot putt for a bowie. He played with a 6-over-par 75 and a 12-margin over Clampey, which was close to Edwards all day long.
The two leaders, playing in the same group, fought a duet that went down to the final hole where Edwards had trouble with a fairway bunker. He had to make the shot in two attempts from 30 feet for a bogey. Clampett's shot flew over the green, and he had to settle for a par.
tournament at 3-under 285 to collect $54,000. He had won only $4,544 so far this season.
The victory sends Edwards into the Masters Tournament for the third time in his career, while Campey, who has now finished second five times during his two-and-one-half year career, will miss the Masters as well as the Tournament of Champions the following week.
Jack Renner shot a 70 yesterday for one of only two sub-pounds rounds of the day to finish in sole position.
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
KANSAN
Tuesday, April 6, 1982 Vol. 92, No. 127 USPS 650-640
Boost for women's athletics Plan complies with Title IX
By BARB EHLI Staff Reporter
The University of Kansas is committed to a 13-point plan to eliminate inequities that the Office of Civil Rights found in KU's intercollegiate athletic program, according to a copy of the report.
Del Shankel, acting athletic director,
yesterday explained the specifics of the plan KU
submitted to OCR regarding its compliance with
Title IX.
"We're committed to doing some specific things to aid the women's athletic program without diminishing support for men's athletics." Shankel said.
TITLE IX, WHICH WAS passed in 1972 under the Education Amendments, calls for equal opportunity and is equal per capita spending on involved in men's and women's athletic programs.
KU became one of the 80 schools under investigation after two separate complaints were filed by the district.
Anne Levinson, a 1980 graduate who was a member of the field hockey team and the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation board, filed the first complaint in July. Elizabeth Banks, department of classics professor and former KUAC board member, filed a second complaint in August. Both cited inequalities in KUAs women's athletic program.
In a letter of findings released last Thursday, OCR found KU in compliance with Title IX if
their access rights violated.
KU3's 13-point plan, submitted to bring the University in compliance with Tile IX, covered athletic financial assistance; provision of equipment and supplies; scheduling of game and practice times; travel and per diem allowance; opportunity to receive coaching; opportunity to receive tutoring; provision of locker rooms, practice facilities, training facilities and training facilities and service; provision of housing and dining facilities and services; publicity; provision of support service; recruitment of athletes; effective accommodation of student interests and abilities
INEQUITIES EXISTED in almost every area the time the suits were filed, according to the OCR.
A few of the changes accepted by OCR already have been made. Others must begin in the fall of 1982. The University has agreed to make all necessary changes within the next three years.
The following are the main areas the plan considers.
Athletic facilities
By the 1984-85 school year, the women's softball team can expect a new softball diamond to be completed just south of Allen Field House.
The softball team can also expect additional lighting in the area of Allen Field House, where it is located.
Shankel said the additional lighting for the men's baseball team had been provided for by the athlete's parents, but the University had not found a substitute. Additional lighting in the women's softball team area.
The locker room for the women's basketball team had been delayed because the facilities operations had not been able to get all of the materials it needed to finish the project.
Game scheduling
The plan effective next year will move men's Saturday basketball games from the evening to 2 schedule which will allow women's teams to schedule later and ultimately after men's 3 games or in the late evening.
Travel allowance
The length of stay and room arrangements will depend on budget constraints, but KU will
For teams that travel within a 300-mile radius of Lawrence, the athletic department will provide van transportation. Outside of that radius, the teams will travel by bus or plane.
"Insequence implementation of this policy will not enable suitable treatment for male and female athletes."
OCR found dining arrangements during travel to be equitable.
Training facilities
KU now pays the deductible amount of medical costs on the health, accident and injury insurance for both male and female athletes. This was found to be equitable.
The athletic department will also continue to provide a certified trainer for both programs, and the weight and strength coach will be available to all athletes.
Over the course of the next three years, KU will either increase the number of women's coaches or decrease the number of men's coaches to make the programs equitable.
The housing and dining facilities will become equitable over the next three years, KU has promised, with a specific plan to be developed in the fall. The university is officially becomes KU's athletic director May 1.
This particular point dealt with both housing and training table facilities.
Shankel said that in the category of tutoring, the athletic department would make tutoring available to any student-athlete who thought he or she needed it.
Financial aid
In swimming, tennis, track and golf the
bowler is awarded will be identical as
of fall 1982, Shanker kissed.
"It is our commitment and our firm expectation that within three years the financial aid for female athletes will be substantially doubled and that other benefits in intercollegiate athletics," the report stated.
in college financial in order to fulfill its commitment, KU will either fund the programs to the maximum levels set by the national organizations to which they
See PLAN page 5
Severance tax bill crushed; Carlin vows to continue fight
Staff Reporter
ByKEVINHELLIKER
TOPEKA-A A slim majority of senators yesterday crushed the only severance tax bill to reach the upper chamber this session, but supporters refused to acknowledge defeat.
On a 21-9 roll call vote, the Senate killed the first severance tax bill to reach its floor since 1957. But Gov. John Carlin, in a news conference called immediately after the vote, vowed to persist in his severance tax campaign and criticized those who opposed him.
"I can assure you the severance tax will be a part of a package before this legislative session."
Wait, let me look at the first word. It's "can assure you". The second word is "the severance tax will be a part of a package before this legislative session."
BUT DURING two-and-a-half hours of emotional debate on the tax, which would have
"The problems are still here today."
"If you think all I wanted a vote on the floor, you have not heard what I've been saying. I have not fought for two years for a severance tax just to have it voted on."
raised more than $100 million for the state general revenue fund, Senate opponents said Kansas did not have serious enough financial problems to justify a severance tax.
they argued that the tax would cause the oil industry—the second largest industry in the state next to agriculture—to move out of Kansas, taking jobs with it.
One opponent, State Sen. Frank Gaines, D-PA, would receive all of Kansas' finan-
cial would resolve all of Kansas' finan
Although the bill did not specify which state agencies would receive severance tax money, supporters said it would be aimed at social education and maintaining quality education in the state.
"At no place in state government, other than in state roads and highways, do we show a need for a new highway system."
BUT MINORITY Leader Jack Steineger, D-Kansas City, responded, "Those of you who believe that can take the fishes and the loaves and feed the multitude."
See SEVERANCE page 5
Weather
CHILLY
Spring will take a step backward to more winter-like temperatures today as highs will reach in the 40s, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka. Winds will be from the south-southeast at 5 to 10 mph. It will be warmest on Sunday, with lows tonight in the 28s and 39s. Fair skies will prevail tonight.
Tomorrow will be partly cloudy and warmer with temperatures in the low to mid-60s.
1970
Winter weather blew back into Lawrence yesterday after spring made a brief appearance last week. The Frigid temperatures forced students inside Bailey Hall to escape the elements.
Area weather not that bad
From Staff and Wire Reports
Even though there were snow flurries yesterday and KU students had to face a chilling wind and 30-degree temperatures, Lawrence fared much better than the northern half of the
According to the KU Weather Service, yesterday's weather did set the record for the coldest high since
but in Chicago, nearly a foot of snow fell and 40 mph winds caused blizzard conditions.
An intense snowstorm also dumped more than six inches of snow in six hours on Des Moines.
was issued for much of the mid-Atlantic coast and central Appalachians for today.
Up to four inches of snow was expected in some of those areas.
A winter storm warning was posted for north-central Illinois, northern Indiana and west-
central Wisconsin.
New York state was caught in winter-like vice with up to six inches of snow and winds up to 55 mph, causing a wind chill index of 13 degrees below zero.
Mike Akulew, of the National Weather Service
topics "yesterday and today" to temperatures
in Kansas.
He said an arctic high pressure area from Canada was causing the lower temperatures in
The normal temperatures for this time of the year, Akulow said, were highs in the lower 80s.
THE MONK OF THE FIELD
Warren Farrell, author of "The Liberated Man," leads a group in a stand-up, sit-down dancing experience as part of his workshop to emphasize understanding from the other gender's viewpoint. Monday's workshop was part of Men's Awareness Series 1982, sponsored by the Men's Coalition.
BON GREENSPANIKansan Staff
Lecturer advocates sexual awareness
By JIM LEHNER Staff Reporter
Society teaches men and women to look upon each other only as success and sex objects, which contributes to problems concerning male and female awareness, author Warren Farrell told about 300 people last night in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
Farrell's lecture was part of the Men's Awareness Series sponsored by the Men's Coalition in cooperation with Student Union and University Residence Halls and Husband and Husband.
Farrell said that women were taught to enjoy their bodies only if they were overpowered by men and men were taught to power women.
"I think we train men to have the psychological components to be mini- tured."
'And we train women to have the psychological components to be mini-
sized.'
FARRELL, a former board member of the National Organization of Women and the only male to be voted to the board three times, said when he became involved with NOW in 1970, "a lot of people saw the women's movement as a threat to masculinity."
Farrell took the early part of his lecture in a narrative about his experiences with men's health.
"We're prisoners of our specialities."
"We're prisoners of our specialties." She said women held back their feelings
"We see ourselves as the Mariborino Man," he said. "but after five or 10 years, we're involved with an institution, answering to a boss to pay the mortgage.
about sexual relations, while men tended to overstate theirs.
MEN ARE PRESSURED, he said to tell little stories about how successful their sex
"We know we're lying but we don't know how much the others are lying," he said.
This, he said, made males extremely insecure.
One device Farrell used to demonstrate to men how women tested when men judged them.
"The beauty contest." Farrell said, "tends to attract a carnival crowd."
The purpose of the contest, he said, was to get the "carnival crowd" to attend and then "move them through a process they weren't expecting."
Farrell said that another purpose of the contest was to show men how it felt to be viewed as a sex object and to show women how it feels. Men pressures into treating women as sex objects.
"Women are part of a beauty contest everyday," he said. "They have no choice but to be judged, and men refuse to comment on a woman's body, they are called fags."
FARRELL SAID he did not enjoy the beauty contest, but it was the strongest method of showing people the roles they fall into.
For men, the accustomed role is that of a success object, Farrell said, and for women it is that of an avid reader.
Men are trained to think their only worth lies in their success in the business world and women are taught their only worth comes from their attractiveness. Farrell said.
See FARRELL page 5
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, April 6, 1982
News Briefs From United Press International
British secretary resigns;
Argentina suffers casualties
LONDON-British Foreign Secretary Lord Carrington restarted yesterday because of the "humiliating affront" of Argentina's seizure of the Falkland Islands. A British armada is en route to the distant South Atlantic in a bid to recapture the crown colony.
Within hours, Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher appointed Fran Cyphis, the leader of the House of Commons and a former defense minister, to
Hunt, who gave the first full account of Friday's battle for the British Crown Colony in the South Atlantic, said the Argentines suffered higher casualties than they had admitted—five killed, 17 wounded and as many as 10 others believed killed when an armored personnel carrier was blown up.
Argentina said it last only one man in the battle Friday, and three more Saturday in a battle for South Georgia Island, a dependency of the Falkenstein Islands.
Argentina's foreign minister said his country might ask members of the Organization of American States, including the United States, to help defend the country.
Beagan ignores AFL-CIO boos
WASHINGTON—President Reagan got a cold yesterday from recession-weary construction work that he ignored their boos and sought help to repair the problem.
Shortly before Reagan addressed 5,000 delegates to a legislative conference of the AFL-CIO building and construction trades department, union officials decried administration economic policies they blamed for the recession.
Heagan urged the audience to stay with his economic program. To abandon it now, he said, would only compound the problems.
At a news conference earlier in the day, Reagan had said that the unemployment rate—already matching a post-World War II high of a percent—was 46.9%.
"We're in the trough, the bottoming out of a recession," he said. "And one of the characteristics . . . is that employment lags behind and very often in the recovery."
"There may even be more unemployment because, I guess that's why they call it a trough."
Mount St. Helens emits gas, ash
VANCOUVER, Wash. — Mount St. Helens shot out a gaseous eruption for three time in about 49 hours that signals that lava and gas were blasting up the ground, triggering signs that volcanic activity was on the rise.
The latest eruption, at 4:20 p.m. CST, was described as a "small smal
let that sent snow and ash around an amount of ash about
13,000 feet" earlier, a crater—an elevation of about 2,200 feet.
Earlier, the volcano shot two towering plumes of steam and ash four and five meters into a pattern indicating the movement of lava or gas, or both. deep inside
"It means an eruption is quite likely at any point," said a spokesman, A.B. Armis, of the University of Washington geophysics department, referring to the eruption.
Reagan will address U.N. meeting
WASHINGTON—President Reagan said yesterday he would address a U.N. nuclear disarmament conference in June, and he raised the possibility of meeting in New York with Soviet President Leonid Brezhnev.
Reagan said at an impromptu conference he would make a U.N. speech on "the very big subject of nuclear weapons" after the economic and security crisis.
"And I hope very much that President Breznev will be on hand to do the same thing and address the same group," Reagan said.
The Kremlin issued a statement yesterday denying a published report that Brezhnev had suffered a stroke and planned to resign within a month. The statement said Brezhnev would be out of the public eye for a month, however, because he "is currently taking his routine winter vacation."
Landon undergoes tests in hospital
TOPEKA-Af AJLandon, 94-year-old elder statesman of the Republican party and 90% GOP president nominee, was admitted to a hospital after an accident.
Kathy Olson, a spokesman for Stormtown-Vail Regional Medical Center in Topeka, said Landon, a two-term Kansas governor, was at the hospital for
A spokesman for Sen. Nancy Kassebaum, Landon's daughter, said the senator had been planning to visit her father Thursday in Topeka and then move on.
Woman rescued from avalanche
SQUAW VALLEY, Calif. — A woman buried under tons of snow for five days in a massive avalanche at a ski resort was miraculously found alive yesterday.
Annie Conrad, an employee of the Alpine Meadowsski Resort, was found in an A-frame building devastated by the snow slide that plowed into the resort on Wednesday and killed six people. Another person was still missing. Conrad was flown by helicopter to a hospital about 10 miles away.
"The only thing we know is that she's alive," a spokeswoman for the Placer County Sheriff's Department said. "We did hear report that her vital signs are normal."
Six bodies were recovered last week. The search was called off Friday because of avalanche danger. It resumed shortly after noon yesterday.
Gunman kills instructor, classmate
HOT SPRINGS, Ark. — a student at Garland County Community College apparently went beekest yesterday and shot to death one of his instructors
He was caught more than 100 miles away after a chase in which shots were exchanged. Loy was freed unharmed.
Authorities said the student, Kelvin Love, 26, of Little Rock, then fled the school with Carrie Lov. 18. as a hostage.
A sheriff's spokesman said Love was waiting in line to work on a computer terminal when William Putnam, Love's teacher, said he wanted to talk to Love about his grades. When Putnam started to walk into his office to get a computer sheet, a shot was fired. Several shots followed, the spokesman said.
Killed were Putman, head of data processing at the two-year college, and Donald Schamp, a student.
Corrections
Yesterday's Kansas incorrectly reported that a Delta Tau Delta fraternity pledge class camp trip to Clinton Lake was an initiation. Lee Wandling, Delta Tau Delta president, said pledges were not required to participate, and the trip was not an initiation. The Kansas grenaded the error.
Because of an editing error, yesterday's Kansaan reversed the figures in one Student Senate budget allocation. It should have stated that the River had increased by $20,000.
KU gridders receive probation for thefts
By BECKY ROBERTS Staff Reporter
Three University of Kansas football players received probation yesterday in Douglas County District Court.
Staff Reporter
District Judge James Paddock sentenced Cedric Alexander, Chicago freshman, and Renwick Atkins, Chicago sophomore, to five years in prison. Brodrick Thompson, Cerritos, Calif., junior, to three years probation.
The players pleaded no contest to charges of burglary and felony theft on March 10.
ALEXANDER AND ATKINS must pay court costs and restitution to their victims. They were found guilty of burglary and felony theft.
Thompson was found guilty of felony theft and also must pay court costs and restitution to his victims.
Head football coach Don Fambrough said in a prepared statement that the players would be able to play against the team during spring practices.
Alexander, Atkins and Thompson spent 10 days in the Douglas County jail during spring break after they were convicted of the felony charges. The state requires that anyone found guilty of a felony must spend 10 days in jail before sentencing.
Before Paddock read the sentences, he asked the players for any remarks they might want to make.
"I think I've seen both sides of the coin and I want to stay on the right side." Thompson said.
Atkins said, "I recognize the fact that what I've done is wrong. I don't feel I'll be involved in anything like this again."
Alexander said, "The crime that I
Alexander was found guilty of a Feb. 9 burglary at a residence in the 700 block of Ohio Street. Four speakers, a stereo amplifier, a stereo tuner, a cassette deck and a turntable were stolen.
THE DISTRICT attorney's office originally charged the men Feb. 17 after KU police recovered more than $6,000 worth of stolen property from a Jayhawk Tower apartments on Feb. 12.
In one burglary, a turntable, a stereo receiver, a cassette deck and two speakers were stolen. In the second, a portable television, a component stereo and speakers were stolen.
In his statement, Fambrough said, "I have given much thought to this matter. I believe these three young men deserve a second chance to complete their education at the University of Kansas.
"They will be placed on a rigid probation concerning their participation and future in our football program."
Alkins and Thompson were found guilty of two separate Dec. 25 burglaries at the Towers.
DURING THE 1981 football season, Atkins, a 6-foot-5, 265-pound offensive tackle, and Thompson, a 6-foot-6, 265-pound defensive tackle, started on the Jayshawts. Atkins started his starting halfway through the season.
Med Center official disputes worker's discrimination charge
committed was foolish. If probation is granted, I'd be a low risk. I'd try to better myself and set a good example."
KANSAS CITY, Kan.—A discrimination complaint leveled against the University of Kansas Medical Center last week has little basis because of a case involving classifications, the director of personnel at the Med Center said yesterday.
The 6-foot-9, 295-pound Alexander trained with the football team last season. He was academically ineligible to play.
The three players have not practiced with the team since it began spring practice a week ago.
Last Wednesday during Gov. John Carlin's speech at the Med Center, a secretary from the affirmative action committee for the University promotion practices at the Med Center.
BILL TUSTEN, the director of personnel, said he believed no discrimination occurred because of the difference in positions.
The secretry, Mikki Townsend, alleged funds were used to promote a white woman in another department when she was passed over. Townsend is black.
A classified employee must be reviewed more thoroughly by the personnel department and carries a record of his employment, he said. The promotion of an
Townsend is a classified employee, Tusten said, and the other woman is unclassified.
unclassified worker usually includes only a salary and not a title change.
"The circumstances were a bit different," Tusten said. "The cases didn't involve jobs that had the same classification."
Townsend is currently a second-level secretary and makes about $960 monthly. The position that she wanted pays about $1,350 monthly.
Unfortunately, Tusten said, the Med Center's recent budget problems had stopped promotions of classified employees throughout the hospital.
"There are many people under review and many of them probably deserve a promotion—the just aren't enough funds," Tusten said.
THE LEGISLATURE recently rejected a request from the Med Center for increased funds. Sagaing occupancy rates at the hospital were blamed for the Med Center's more than $6 million deficit.
Pam Horton, an aide for Carlin, said the governor's office was investigating the discrimination complaint but would wait until the investigation was completed.
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JOB OPPORTUNITY 1982-83 ACADEMIC YEAR
By ANN LOWRY
Staff Reporter
Naismith Hall announces that applications for R.A. positions are now available at the Naismith desk between 8:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. Monday through Friday.
The applications are for R.A. positions commencing next Fall.
Group juggles requests to allocate Senate funds
The fledgling Student Senate budget subcommittee and some tough decisions to make on the pecking order of student groups when it finalized its allocations for fiscal year 1983 early yesterday morning.
And considering the amount of money requested by student groups against the amount available, the subcommittee did an admirable job of attempting to allow funds according to Senate rules and its own set of criteria.
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After six nights of listening to groups' requests and then 26 hours of deliberations this weekend, the subcommittee trimmed requests from $121,000 to a little less than $78,000 and passed the budget unanimously.
E. O.E.M/W
ALTHOUGH its final total amounted to about $20,000 more than the Senate's original sum, it is less than
made just about as many cuts as it could, going line by line through every budget from 60 student groups.
The amount of time spent by the committee seemed inordinate. But the time taken resulted in justifiable action on the individual budgets.
"Ninety-five percent of the cuts were rational, Joe Robb, the Senate's assistant attorney general."
He said in the past, during deliberations, the committees considering budgets got to a certain point and just started cutting.
But because of legislation passed last year, the budget recommendations from this subcommittee will go directly to the Senate. In past years, it went through specialized committees such as sports, then through the finance and auditing committee, and finally to the entire Senate.
MEMBERSHIP ON the committee was open to all interested students. Of the 60 who originally signed up for the committee, about 15 to 20 members of a representing diverse backgrounds and interests stuck with it the entire time.
But Tom Berger, finance and auditing committee co-chairman, said he was disappointed because he did not think enough minority and women students showed an interest in the committee.
"It itles with the students. If they don't want to exercise their responsibility, it will continue to be a group of people who are not is not represented," Berger said.
THOSE WHO DID participate in the budget process cut carefully.
whether they were considering cutting allocations for a $12 stapler to $10 for a cheaper model, or thousands of dollars for rent and utilities.
"I really gotta say this group did an outstanding job," Berger said. "There was a real serious attempt to come up with criteria."
Berger said although he didn't mean that previous finance and auditing groups hadn't attempted to be fair. Mr. Gough said the committee actually wrote guidelines.
But that was the committee's job to ask the groups to explain their requests.
During hearings when the subcommittee listened to the groups and questioned them about their budgets, some of the groups' representatives felt they were being hashed by the subcommittee and its direct questions.
Representatives for groups that were well-organized and had prepared budgets according to specifications, and then thought the questions justified.
During deliberations, the subcommittee applied strict guidelines to its discussions and cuts to maintain security and avoid emotional outbursts.
THE FACT THAT all groups applied to the single subcommittee rather than several specified committees assured consistency, because the subcommittee demanded the same information from all groups.
The committee also seemed just in its decision to give priority to groups that made some effort to support themselfs.
During deliberations early Monday morning, the committee decided to fund the two groups with the largest requests. Friends of Headquarters and the other committee accounted for a percent of their requests, based upon the amount actually allocated last year.
Their budgets were set at $9,919 and $10,435 respectively. They should be able to get the remainder of their budgets from the Senate during next fall's supplementary budget hearings as they have in past years.
And considering the care it took with each request, the subcommittee should be able to defend its cuts before the entire Senate this week.
Along with Berger, Robb and finance and auditing co-chairman, David Zimmerman, the committee members work on behalf of their fellow students.
The Senate must determine whether it will make further cuts in the budgets to get down to $33,000 or take the tax plan to $45,000, a savings account of about $7,400.
The responsibility now lies with the Senate.
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University Daily Kansan, April 6, 1982
Page 2
Officials set guidelines for pavrolls
Guidelines for determining on which payroll to place students who are also KU employees were recently developed by University officials.
The guidelines state that a person who is a student first and incidentally an employee should be put on a student payroll, Martin Jones, associate director of business affairs, said yesterday.
THE POLICY WAS developed after a department put an employee who should have been on a student payroll on a non-student payroll, Sherry Kopf, an administrator in the comptroller's office. said.
But, he said, a person employed by the University full time or 80 percent of the time on who takes a few classes on the on a classified or unclassified payroll.
The student had been a full-time employee, but decided to work fewer hours and concentrate on working toward a degree, she said. The department failed to shift the employee to a student payroll.
The payroll office caught the mistake and shifted the employee to the student payroll.
Placing a student on a non-student payroll could cost a department more money. Kopf said, because social charges are not on student navrills.
For this reason, departments that intended to abuse the payroll system usually put a non-student on a student payroll.
"We rarely have a student put on a non-student payroll." she said.
A DEPARTMENT MIGHT knowingly leave an employee on a non-student payroll as a favor to the employee, Kopf said. The student would then continue to receive benefits such as paycheck payments on employees on a student payroll do not get.
student plays the game Kopf said she did not know if this was the case in the recent incident.
Cable causes KU Campanile to miss beat
The Campanile missed a beat every time it rang yesterday, but it should be back to normal again today, according Anderson, director of facilities.
A steel cable that is connected to an arm that moves a bell clapper brook Saturday or Sunday, causing one note to not be played when required. An arm that moves a bell clapper only one of several, so the other notes played normally.
Anderson said that the cable should be replaced today.
The cable simply wore out, Anderson said. He said that the operations crew tried to replace cables before they wore them. But the engineers who broke before being replaced.
On the record
A 40-year-old Lawrence man accidentally shot his son in the head about 11 p.m. Sunday, Lawrence police said.
rounce said Bryan Kent McCullough, 1033 Sunset Drive, accidentally shot Lee McCullough, 23, above the left eye when the men were taking inventory of their gun collection.
The men were sitting at the kitchen table and Bryan Ken McCullough was examining a .22-caliber revolver. Police said the man was attempting to get a catch out of the gun's firing mechanism and accidentally fired it. The man did not know the revolver was loaded with a .22-caliber long rifle bullet, police said.
Lee McCullough was rushed immediately to Stormont-Vail Regional Medical Center in Toppea who is a trauma center, police said.
The nursing supervisor at Stormont-Vall yesterday said Lee McCullough, who is in intensive care, was ingritical condition.
Mike Malone, Douglas County district attorney, said the shooting was accidental and police would not investigate the case.
DOUGLAS COUNTY SHERRIF'S Department officers recovered the body of a 49-year-old Overland Park man about 8:30 a.m. yesterday just north of Clinton Lake, Douglas Robert Cassidy. Robert Cassidy said yesterday.
Sheriff's officers discovered the body of the man, James R. Hensley, in the Rock Creek arm of Clinton Lake. They listed the cause of death as drowning and over exposure, officials said.
Sheriff's officers began the search for the two men Sunday afternoon after their wives called and reported the men missing.
was with Hensley. Officials would not release his name.
The men had gone to Clinton Lake to fish Friday afternoon and were expected to return about noon Saturday, Cassity said.
Sheriff's officers recovered some equipment the men had been using and a van at about 11:20 Sunday, Cassity said. No one was found in the area and officers continued searching.
LAWRENCE POLICE reported a kidnapping and armed robbery about 7:30 p.m. Monday at the building on the campus of Machine, 15th and Kaskid Drive.
Officials said the search would continue, and the Kansas Fish and Game Commission began dragging the lake yesterday.
The victim acted as if she had fainted and waited for the man to leave, police said. The suspect stole the victim's purse and her Doug card and went to get in his car, police said.
When the victim left the machine for her car, the suspect jumped out of his car and grabbed her, police said. He then drove around the area and entered the home on her stomach in a field until he drove away, police said.
The victim was at the machine withdrawing money when a suspect entered the room with a blue steel revolver and held a handkerchief over the victim's mouth, making her feel dizzy, police said.
Police did not know the value of the purse. There have been no arrests, police said.
By GINA O'NEAL Staff Reporter
Better Business Bureau to investigate Students doubt job
Student inquiries to the American Student Foundation's foreign summer job program prompted the Colorado Springs, Colo. Better Business Bureau last Tuesday to send a letter requesting information about the foundation. Inquiries Officer Lois Rauh said recently.
one foundation, based in Colorado Springs, sent students a letter last week offering a summer work program in Europe and cheap air fare there.
"We've received about 20 calls from students as far away as New York and close as Wyoming," Rahu said.
THE FOUNDATION'S LETTER offers a full and partial payment plan and guarantees students a salary at or less $150 for 40 hours of work a week. It also provides a work program and take advantage of the low air fare only, the letter said.
The students made no allegations against the foundation, but requested reliability reports about it, she said. She and the staff have contacted the bureau, she said.
The foundation is not listed in the 1981 edition of the Encyclopedia of Associations, a reference book containing names of national organizations. David Woodworth Summer Jobs April 1982, 1982; organization offering foreign summer students does not include the foundation in its list.
The foundation has a post office box number address and no listed telephone number, Rauh said.
Three or four KU students contacted the KU office of study abroad late last week to ask if the office had heard of the foundation, Mary Ryan, assistant
THE STUDENTS, whose names she did not know, made no allegations against the foundation, she said.
director of the office of study abroad, said Friday.
Ryan said that she had never heard of the foundation, which she said should not be confused with the American Field Service, one of the oldest international foreign exchange programs for high school students.
According to the letter, sent in a white envelope with a bulk rate postage stamp and no return address, the foundation will arrange summer work for students in Great Britain, Germany, France or Spain. Students may choose to work they prefer, including agriculture, sales, restaurant or manufacturing.
The foundation has obtained charter rates to fly students to those countries, the letter says. According to the foundation's price list for one-way fares, a student can fly from New York to Frankfurt, Germany, for $215.
The same flight on Trans World Airlines for the third week of May would cost $749, a TWA reservation clerk said.
"I if could afford it, it might be fun." Laurie Forck, Kansas City, Kan. junior, and a recipient of the letter, said.
JIMM McCROSSEN, Ottawa sophomore, who also照顾 the foundation's letter, said, "I thought it sounded like a good deal, but I did wonder why you could have the low air pressure taking part in the job program."
Students may pay the full amount for their air fare now and receive a 10 percent discount off the total fare, the letter said, or they can pay half their
program
mgm cost now and pay the other half when they receive their flight confirmation.
An additional $25 is added for those interested in the work program to cover work permit fees and administrative costs, the letter states.
The letter urges applicants to reply as soon as possible to receive the best flight and job preference. The deadline for applications is April 20, 1982.
IN THE LETTER, students are encouraged to tell others about the
"We have enclosed application forms which can be Xeroxed for additional comics," the letter reads.
Ryan said that the American Student Foundation's letter, which contains many spelling errors, is missing some important information.
"There is no person to contact, no logo, no address and no telephone number," she said.
number,
"The guaranteed salary of at least $150 per week is higher than any foreign work program I am aware of."
Often, she said, payment for work is in the form of room and board.
Rauh said the form letter sent to the foundation requested the foundation's name, telephone number, address and number of years in business. The foundation then has 14 days to respond to the bureau send another letter, she said.
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Opinion
Page 4 University Daily Kansan, April 6, 1982
Careless housekeeping
The handling of what the dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences considers a "minor, almost housekeeping matter," has caused dissension within his academic house.
The controversy centers on the shifting of $53,500, money used to hire 10 assistant instructors, from the Western Civilization program's budget to the budgets of the history and philosophy departments.
Last week, James Seaver, chairman of the Western Civilization Program, went before the University Senate executive committee to complain about the reallocation of half of his department's budget.
The money will still be used to hire assistant instructors for Western Civilization, but the history and philosophy departments will be the ones doing the hiring.
It appears that the Western Civilization Program was treated in an uncivilized way.
Robert Lineberry, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, made the decision to shift the money without consulting, or even notifying, Seaver.
Seaver has grounds to complain. While no rule requires that Lineberry consult with department chairmen before making budget changes, it's hard to imagine him making a change of this magnitude without asking Seaver for his opinion.
The rationale behind the change, strengthening the graduate programs in the other two departments, may be valid. But the procedure followed to make the change was hardly admirable.
At Seaver's request, the history department has already agreed to return its money to the Western Civilization Program. But the philosophy department is hanging on to its share of the loot.
Seaver has drawn up a compromise to remedy the situation. He is asking Lineberry to allow the program to keep its full $106,995 budget for next year. The dean and the departments involved could then hold discussions about ways to reorganize the program.
It is not too much for Seaver to expect to be included in decisions that affect the program he has directed for 25 years.
Maybe Lineberry will see the uproar created by this decision as a helpful hint for improving his housekeeping.
Private sector given chance to support space exploration
I didn't watch the space shuttle land last week. It's not that I wasn't interested, because I paid close attention to the news to find out how well Nike was doing and to perform and to make sure it's crew was safe.
Space exploration is still dangerous and exciting, but it's not the stuff of dreams it was ten or fifteen years ago. Now I find it hard to think of the shuttle Columbia as much more than a glorified airplane, although the early rockets are more serious as any contraction H.G. Wells dreamed of.
Back when Neil Armstrong rode one of those rockets to make that "one small step for man, one giant leap for Mankind," everything on Earth fell during each crucial step of the Moon mission.
JOLYNNE WALZ
People brought television sets to work or stayed home to see the first fuzzy video images of the moon's surface. At my grade-school, everybody assembled in the caterina to watch history being made on television, instead of reading about history in their textbooks.
That moment when the first footprint of man impressed the moon's surface has long since passed, though, and those of us who witnessed it became the only people ever to live during a time in which we were alone. As a result, to suddenly find themselves living during a time when space travel was almost ordinary.
Almost, but not perfectly ordinary, though.
Despite our familiar acceptance of it, space travel is man's great quest during this century. The challenge for us is to conquer the universe.
Others say we are questing for a new home for people to colonize as they overload the Earth.
There are those who say we are questing for technological knowledge, so that one day industry may be established in space to make way for ever increasing numbers of people on Earth.
Some people, especially the astronauts, are questing purely for the adventure of it, the thrill
And others are questing to find other intelligent beings, because we on Earth are beginning to feel a bit lonely, whirling around in snace all by ourselves.
Lonely all by ourselves, lonely among billions of people.
Critics say that money the United States government spends on the space program is being spent on a quixotic quest and that the money could be better spent on Earth, to feed.
clothe, house and provide medical care for millions of people who need it.
These concerns are admirable, but the United States funding for space exploration is less than one-tenth of one percent of the federal budget, and its budget cuts during the Reagan administration.
There are other areas of the budget that might be cut to provide money to care for the poor—Notably defense —but even if the entire space exploration budget was scraped and the money handed over to the poor, their problems would not end.
People would still go hungry. People would still receive inadequate medical care. People would still live in rattlesnake shelters or no place to sleep. People would still be lonely and people would still die.
But some money can buy a dream—the dream of traveling through space and exploring the unknown. Some money can fulfill a spiritual need, even if it cannot end their physical needs.
No amount of money can stop that.
And all of that money doesn't have to come from the government, which was once thought to be the only agency large and affluent enough to underwrite space exploration. Now that space trajectories are almost ordinary, private industries have shown interest in sending up spaces vehicles of their own.
An organization has even been formed to encourage private investment in space exploration.
Co-founded by Carl Sagan, director of the Laboratory for Planetary Studies at Cornell University, and Bruce Murray, director of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory at the California Institute of Technology, the Society is a nonprofit organization devoted to encouraging and promoting research on planetary systems. The search for planets in other solar systems and the quest for extraterrestrial life and intelligence.
Projects the society encourages include obtaining soil samples from other planets, sending a probe in to the Sun, sending robot rovers to other planets and moons in this solar system, mapping Venus with radar, obtaining samples of passter aerosols and sending out radio signals into space in the hopes that other intelligent beings will hear and respond.
Funding for these projects sponsored by the society will come from annual dues paid by its members.
Instead of vicariously participating in space exploration only by fuzzy video images of the television, members can have a more personal stake in space exploration.
Now, everybody can have a piece of the rock, but the new rocks they bring back will probably be of a different chemical composition than any ever found on Earth.
KANSAN
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'Pac-Man fever' a national epidemic
The world is about to be taken over by a little yellow ball that eats dots and monsters.
Atari, the company that manufactures the home video version, recently launched a publicity barrage equaled only by the Reagan administration's campaign to look credible in
Companies are manufacturing all sorts of Pac-Man paraphernalia, just in case we don't get enough of the critter at the arcade or in front of our television screens.
All this activity adds to the growing debate on video games. Are they merely sophisticated updates of traditional toys or the mind-numbing products of a brave technology? The Pac-Man craze reinforces the need to answer the question.
A year ago, Pac-Man was just the latest in the succession of video games. It stood out from others. You didn't have to fire at any ships or master any complicated controls.
A single lever is the only control. With it you guide the Pac-man around the maze, as it eats dots and monsters when it is energized. It was especially popular with women, since it wasn't a fighting game. Experts said women tended to leave from games that involved guns or battles.
Sometimes in the fall, its popularity took off. Pac-Mach machines appeared everywhere, in arcades, department stores and even in restaurants that didn't serve pizza.
Atari, which controls most of the video market, is betting that Pace-Man cartridges will account for 25 percent of everything sold by the home game industry.
Big business, never shy about running a craze into the ground, is acting accordingly.
They probably could do that without any public notice in case they went ahead and carried a criminal charge.
April 1, coincidentally or not, April Fools' Day, was declared National Pac-Man Day. In 25 cities, Pac-Vans, customized Volkswagons, patrolled the streets blasting out the Pac-Man
PARKER
DAN TORCHIA
Other companies are getting into the act. About 30 companies are flooding the market with Pac-Man pajamas, greeting cards, wrapping papers, clocks, mugs and lunch
"Pac-Man Fever," a novelty song, has hit the Top 15 on the Billboard charts, and an album of songs about video games has just been released.
And what about the game itself? It has spun off two more games, Ms. Pac-Man and Pac-Man II. The original game has grossed about $1 billion in its first year.
Atari executives estimate people have bought a million cartridges in the first month it has been available. By the end of the year, it will be in nearly one out of every 10 homes.
Isn't all this a little much?
Bear in mind that I have nothing against the game, although I am a little envious of those who master it. I could never play a pinball machine, much less a video game.
The popularity of video games is exploding, and no one is taking time to question their nature. Companies are supplying the goods and people are blithely buying them.
Our concepts of free time and constructive play are changing and it may not be for the best.
Play is usually thought of as curious and spontaneous. There usually is some part of positive result from it.
Video games are different. You can play for an hour and the result will be sore eyes and a
the problem with video games is that they are so easily addictive. The appeal is obvious—the bright lights, sophisticated controls, fantasy situations. But as players become proficient, they move on to more sophisticated games. This is where the Pac-Man barrage is flawed.
The people I know who are video experts played Pac-Man in the fall. They have long since gone on to other games. It doesn't make sense to watch a product that will be forgotten in a few months.
It is very likely that Pac-Man will go the way of the hoala-hoop the mood ring, pet rocks and the happy face. Even if you hate the creature that gobbles monsters and dots, you might want to pick up a couple of Pac-Man mugs, or perhaps a T-shirt.
You can show them to your kids as an example of silly crazes in the '80s.
Letters to the Editor
To the Editor:
Inviting Schlafly a 'disservice' to University
I can think of no greater disservite to the faculty, staff and students of this campus or to the community at large than to provide this woman with a forum from which to parapolize and willfully misrepresent. And to then give her several thousand dollars of student money for doing so is incredibly stupid. Tentative her talk: "Do we want a gender-free society?"
I would call on all people committed to the concepts of equal opportunity and progressive social change to use the time and place of Schlafay's appearance to demonstrate against the abversion of the ERA and the women's involvement in the society she has so joyfully and effectively smeared back.
SUA has erred severely by inviting Phyllis Schiaffy here to speak.
Let Phyllis take her money and leave Lawrence with a bitter taste in her mouth.
Peter Gray,
Wichita Graduate student
Clarifying remarks
To the Editor:
I employed reading Ame Calovich's story covering my remarks to the American Association of University Professor's chapter meeting last Thursday. I would appreciate the opportunity to add some details that may clarify my thinking for your readers.
I quoted Deanell Tacha, vice chancellor for academic affairs, about the principle that reforms of KU's academic programs should be initiated by faculty. Iutee agrees with this.
The obvious vehicles for faculty academic leadership are the governance bodies of the University. But, as presently constituted, they cannot function well for this purpose, because of their complexity and frequent turnover of members and leaders. Therefore, I proposed
that the University Council review the Senate Code with a view toward reconstitution itself in a form more suitable to academic leadership responsibility.
On the matter of departmental autonomy, as it exists at the University of Kansas, my view is that our form of it has generated inward-looking departments mostly preoccupied with departmental interests at the expense of academic authority which spans departments and schools.
This is the model of University organization sometimes called a "faired" system. I believe that it is possible to preserve appropriate autonomy without the penalties of parochialism; hence, I deplore this and hope we can change it.
An example of an undesirable consequence is the effect of complete delegation of salary budgets to departments. The method makes it difficult to equally reward equally meritorious faculty who are in different departments.
professor of philosophy and vice president of KU's AAPU chapter
To the Editor:
Punk misunderstood
To the Editor
We have been amused by the questionably competent opinions expressed on the subject of punk and "gnu wave" music following the University Daily Kansas' publication recently published by The Huffington Post on the music scene in Lawrence. A few points have been overlooked in the dash into print:
1. There is more to punk than slam dancing and purple hair (there are also funny shoes and shirts). Far beyond the creatinous conceptualization of rebellion attached to punk by outsiders, the subversion of symbols and refutation of the apparent values of mainstream society are the primary instigators of the expression of punk.
2. True punk is no more dead than Mozart or
yo-ys. What is dead (or should be killed) is the sexistdrive emanating from the LA music industry and squashed across the radio spectrum Just because you don't hear it on the commercial FM or read it in the National Enquirer, youthful doesn't mean it could be cried into a hole and died.
3. To many, dancing is simply the Duquesne hurling of a body through space. The abrupt connection of one body with another (the so-called "slam") is a secondary phenomenon much like the apple sucked by gravity eventually hitting the ground.
5. By turning the values of society upon itself (for instance, you cannot print the word "fuck" in your paper, yet no doubt most of you on the staff use it and certainly all of your readers are familiar with it), the failures of the system are evidenced, which is why society feels alienated from the punks and hates them so (as contrasted with the onosite, which is also true.)
4. You are too stupid to understand points 1
through 3.
Jocelyn Kitchen,
Manhattan freshman
John Simmons,
President,
21 Kusol
Letters Policy
The University Daily Kansan welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten, double-bleed and not exceed 500 words. They should be 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 Kanasan reserve the right to edit or reject letters.
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gir
egir
end
ave
the
and
me
for
d a
rey
an-
me
dan
arts
ike
be
ay
and
right
or
an
University Daily Kansan, April 6, 1982
Page 5
House OKs spending bill for Haworth improvements
TOPEKA-A bill providing money for the long-awaited $13.8 million addition to Haworth Hall is on its way to Gov. John Carlin. The easy亲近 passing the Kansas winter day.
The addition, which is the University of Kansas' highest priority building project, would be funded over a period from $1.2 million for 1984 to $5 million for 1985 and $1.5 million for 1986.
The Legislature appropriated $18,000 for planning of the project. in 1980. The University requested funding to the addition午夜灯 the budget was light and the Legislature denied the money.
"Now we can get the project on the line." State Rep. Dave Heinemann, *R* Garden City.
a member of the House Ways and Means Committee, told the House yesterday.
The House unanimously approved the project, which was included in a multi-year funding bill with three other projects, without debate. The other projects involved Pittsburg State University and the Kansas State School for the Deaf.
Also approved in the bill was $2.6 million to complete a renovation of E.B. Allen Hospital at the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan.
The House approved a related bill yesterday that would return a million that was not needed in school and schools last year for capital improvements and was not needed to complete the projects.
Med Center poison hotline is supported by Legislature
TOPEKA—The conference committee of the Kansas House and Senate Ways and Means committees yesterday approved $300,000 for a memorial park in Kansas Medical Center, Kansas City, Kan.
The committee met to iron out differences in the budget bills passed earlier by the House and
proposed the amendment last week during debate in the House. The amendment grants $30,000 to hire one nurse and to establish a 24-hour holine for providing information about
During the bargaining session, the Senate conceded without debate a House-approved amendment to the budget bill that would establish a poison control hotline.
State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence,
Later in the session, committee members delayed discussion of a Regents faculty enrichment fund that was approved by the Senate but killed by the House last week.
The committee postponed any decision because Speaker of the House Wendell Lady, R-Overland Park, who had appointed himself to the committee, was not present at the meeting.
belong, or cut programs to live within the budget they have.
Plan
Shankel said the athletic department had not determined how this area would be handled.
From page 1
Shankel acknowledged that the aid given to men and women was not in equivalent proportions, but also pointed out that changes effective next year would help the move towards equity.
"We are making a significant increase from $42,000 to $73,000 in the women's basketball programs." Shankel said, referring to scholarships.
The men's basketball scholarships will be reduced from $32,000 to $90,000.
33. 2 percent of all participants in the intercollegiate athletic program, but received only 13.7 percent of the financial aid. Women received more than men for these awards at $2.48 per athlete," the letter stated.
In 1979-80, female athletes at KU comprised
Tennis and track are now operating on an equitable basis in terms of equipment, uniforms and gear. OCRN teams play at the same level.
Equipment supplies
Now money from the student activity fee, not the University, allows women's athletics to purchase equipment in the same time span as the men's athletics department.
At the time of the complaints filed against the athletic department, the women's programs had a 42-day delay in processing equipment vouchers, because their funding came from state
funds. Men had four-day delays because their
home come directly from the athletic
department.
in the area of publicity, sports information now includes women's sports in its weekly media release. In the future, media guides also will be provided on a comparable basis to men's media guides, and one will be prepared specifically for volleyball.
"Whether the newspapers choose to provide that in their sports pages, we can't control."
Severance
From page 1
Steinauer said state budget officials predicted that $300 million dollars in additional revenue would be needed by 1991. Yet, the state this year would have $30 million less than planned for, he
STEINEGER, HIS voice often rising to a shout, predicted that children and college students would suffer if the severance tax were not passed.
Senate President Ross Doyen intervened to reprimand Steineger twice, especially after Steineger shouted at State Sen. Ron Hein, R-Tonkka, an opponent of the tax.
Later Monday, the Legislative Research Department confirmed Steiner's statements and released a report saying estimated receipts for the state treasury in fiscal year 1982 and 1983 would be about $49.5 million less than originally anticipated.
A severance tax opponent himself, Doyen, R-
Concordia, asked Steiniger to conduct himself in a manner 'the people of Kansas would be proud'
But he said the women's liberation movement was helping women break out of that role. However, he said, his work with men's consciousness-raising groups during the past several years showed him that men did not know how to deal with liberated women or how to liberate themselves from their role as success objects.
"We've recognized that we've not been able to meet those needs of the State Board of Regents."
Although State Sen. Jane Eldredge, R-Lawrence, praised Doyen for his own senatorial conduct, she supported Steinenger's argument against education in the state hinged on the severance tax.
"When women share the responsibility of earning income, men are free to take risks in their jobs, instead of restricting their creativity in the name of security," he said.
We began to see very early in this session that
how the women's liberation movement would be beneficial to them.
EARLAGE SAYED.
Because of this, she said, "we've slipped drastically in the last three years in the area of higher education."
Part of this freedom from restriction, he said, would bring many improvements for
"There could be fewer rapes, homicides,
ulcers and heart attacks and men could live
Farrell
From page 1
"The oilmen are Republican. If you vote against them, where else are they going to go in the next election?"
STATE SEN, Norman Gaar, R-Westwood, agreed.
THIS PROBLEM prompted him to write "The Liberated Man" in 1974 to show men
"They're great guys. Most of them are millionaires. They're going to stay millionaires with or without this tax."
seven years longer because of the women's movement," he said.
—Sen. Norman Gaar, B. Westwood
Farrell also conducted a role-reversal experiment on dating. He said that many times men were afraid of asking the women they were more attracted to for a date because of their appearance.
R-Westwood
During the experiment, both sexes changed their roles for 15 minutes. The women looked at the men as sex objects and the men viewed the women as success objects.
the problems of this state focused on our schools." Gaar said.
Noting that the session was nearly over, Gaar asked, "Where are we? We nowhere. What have we done? Not a single thing to address this issue.
"Are we going to pay the adequate funds to keen teachers in our schools?"
Echoing Steinerge's accusations, Gaar said that opponents of the tax feared wealthy olmine in the state. But these men's bark is worse than their bite, he said.
"The oilmen are Republican," Gaar told fellow Republicans. "If you vote against them, where else are they going to go in the next election?
"They're great guys. Most of them are millionaires. They're going to stay millionaires with or without this tax."
STEINEGER SAID deregulation of oil prices had resulted in an extra $250 million a year for the oil and gas industry in Kansas.
Less than half that amount would have been drawn into the state coffer from the proposed severance tax, which would haveTax at 3.5 percent oil severed from the ground and at 2.5 percent natural gas liquids, according to estimates.
It is strange, Steineger said, that the oil industry spent about $150,000 on lobbying efforts this session, yet was said to be unable to afford the severance tax.
However, after both sides had argued their points, a quiet fell upon the crowded chamber, and the Senate recorded two more nays than veas on the severance tax.
The oil and gas lobbyists in the galley responded to the vote with a smattering of applause. Supporters of the bill remained silent. And Doyen, who previously vowed to kill all severance tax bills in Senate committees, showed little reaction to the vote.
towered real reaction. "Some go up, some go down," he said.
Attention Students:
Petitions and filing forms are due TODAY at 5:00 p.m. in the BOCO and Student Senate offices.
The Board of Class Officers will hold Sophomore, Junior and Senior class elections April 21,22
FILING DEADLINE—Tuesday, April 6
Intramural Golf
Tie InWith Us Recreation Services
Play will be April 7, 14, 21, & 28 at 4 p.m. at the Orchards Golf Course, 3000 W. 15th St. No entry forms to fill out—just show up & be ready to tee off at 4 p.m. Greens fees are $3.75 for 9 holes. For more information call 864-3546.
Learn to:
Dealing With That Uneasy Feeling
initiate conversation make new friends
adjust to new social situations feel comfortable around others
FREE
7. 00-9:30 p.m.
April 7. Wednesday
7:00-9:30 p.m.
Nunemaker Center
The Student Assistance Center
121 Strong Hall,
864-4064
Men's Coalition Awareness Series 1982
"The New Masculinity: Living Together in Self-Respect"
All workshops are FREE and will be held in the KANSAS UNION from April 5th to April 15th.
Men and women encouraged to attend.
r or further information please contact John Macchietto at 843-8267 or Dougherty at 843-3224.
TUESDAY APRIL 6th
7:00 a.m.
7:50 p.m.
A Follow-up to the Beauty Pageant
led by John Mattochia and Tom Dougherty, Men's Coalition members, John and Tom will provide a forum for people who wish to further discuss their relationships to Warren Farrell's beauty pageant.
THURSDAY APRIL 15th Guild! It isn't Fun Anymore.
Date: 2:30 p.m.
Led by Tom Duggeroy and John Machiaev, Men's Collection members. Tom and John will conclude with a discussion of how guilt can alter communication in male/female relation-
with the same relationship, which was learned through case studies.
TUESDAY APRIL 13th Intimacy and Trust in Relationships
International Room
7:30 pm.
Led by Scott Coffey and Phil Mantelland, Mae's coalition members,
and Ana Oroak. University Counseling Center. Apn. and Scott
will address, in a discussion format, basic issues in intimate relationship
THURSDAY APRIL 8th
Mothering/Fathering Roles: Are they Different?
Special Thanks to the Student Senate which funds the Men's Coalition
WEDNESDAY APRIL 14th Sexrole Changes: What's in it for Men and Women?
STAGED BY ANDREW TSUBAKI AND A COMPANY OF SEVEN DANCERS
Walnut Room
7:30 p.m.
Led by Tom Daugherty, Men's Condition member, Pam members.
Jon O'Neal, Associate Professor, Counseling Center, Lake Zion College, Lake Zion College, Green Bay Park Academy, Occupational Therapy, Barbara Ballard, Coordinator,
Women's Health Center, Lake Zion College.
This is a wonderful conversation to present different perspectives of sex.
Led by John Van DeBerg, M.D., Certified from the department of Human Development and Family Life. John will lead a disaster response training program.
PERFORMANCE WILL
INCLUDE MASKS, HEADS
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TUSABIKI STUDIO
CHIAH DANCING
IN INDIA.
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS THEATRE PRESENTS
THE FIRST UNITED STATES PERFORMANCE OF
CHHAU INDIAN FOLK DANCE THEATRE
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APRIL 7, 1882
MUSIC 17,4-00
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Page 6 University Daily Kansan, April 6, 1982
Spare time
'Rape' best of non-traditional operas
By ERLEEN J. CHRISTENSEN CONTRIBUTING Reviewer
Benjamin Britten's "The Rape of Lucretia"
An Opera in Two Acts
7 p.m. Friday and Saturday
University Theatre: 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday
people who think of operas as huge mobs of performers singing in languages the audience doesn't understand might do well to broaden their definition of opera by attending the University Theatre's production of Benjamin Britten's "The Rape of Lacraetia."
The Opera is short, less than two hours, has a cast of eight and is sung in English, the language of England.
The story is one that has often been treated in literature, the tale of the chaste wife who commits suicide after being raped. Because Lucretia is the wife of a Roman general and the man who raped her is a member of the Estruscan family then ruling Rome, Lucretia's rape also becomes a metaphor for the Etruscan domination of Rome.
The opening scene of the second act heavily underscores this. A group of masked, black-shrouded figures sings, "Down with the Etruscans" and makes a pact in the darkness. The first act closes with Prince Tarquinius arriving at Lucretia's home late at night.
TO THE AUDIENCE, Tarquinius is obviously intenate on rape; to Lucetrina and her two female servants the arrival is an ominous reminder of the absence of the absence of Colatinus, Lucetrina's husband.
We expect the second act to open with the rape; when it opens with the spectral reminder of the political situation, we are acutely aware of the union as raper of Rome, as well as of Lucretia.
Layers upon layers of cultural interpretations have been placed upon the story of Lucetia's rape, and Britten seems almost more interested in the richness of their styles than in retelling the tale.
THE STYLIZED ACTIONS of opera, the "speeches" in song, the recurring refrains and modifs, the juxtaposition of radically different musical forms, the variationally varying instrumental solos all serve to
Review
emphasize that the actual rape is the stuff of which a work of art has been woven. The rape is not an incident which the illusion of drama tricks us into thinking we are actually observing.
Britten uses two courses to frame the action, to comment on the rape. The choruses, actually one man and one woman, are Christian in viewpoint. The rape becomes, for them, illustrative matter, a tale that proves a point about what life was like before Christ. The choruses, too, are styled and removed from the audience, performing a ritual done many times before.
GREGORY'S HILL'S SETS visually reinforce our cultural distance from that which goes on on
the stage. The stage is framed by huge columns, ruins of ancient Rome—at their bases sit the two singers who are the choruses, like statues in a sculpture gallery on which a stylized swan and serpent entwine.
The curtain rises on an Etruscan Rome which is not merely a ruin—it is a ruined reconstruction. The arch that serves as doorway and the chipped bask-ress that hangs to its left, the bit of fresco that hangs to its right, are roped together on metal frames.
The set reminds us that what we know of this incident is fragmented and liable to distortion. We are building our perception of the rape of Lucretia like archaeologists trying to reconstruct a civilization with a few shards of pottery, a decaying bit of timber.
THE ORCHESTRA, like the cast, is small. Britten takes advantage of the distinctive sounds and capabilities of each instrument in a score that also work and sharply contrasting musical moods.
The same kind of contrast takes place visually. The rape scene is followed by a scene in which Lucetia's two servants, ignorant of what has happened to their mistress, delight in a spring morning as they arrange flowers in anticipation of their master's arrival.
THERE ARE TWO SUPPORTING CASTS—one group of singers for the Friday performance and another for Saturday. In all the performances, however, guest artist Brian Steele of the Kansas City Lyric Opera plays the part of Prince Taquinius, Jayne Casselman sings the part of Lucretia and Wayne Kemppeil sings the part of Collatinus.
Chhau dances include exercise, creativity
By LISA GUTIERREZ Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
Andrew T. Tsubai, professor of theater,
has brought a little bit of India to Lawrence.
The fully staged production of this little-known and unusual dance form will be performed tonight and tomorrow night at 8 p.m.
Taubiki knows the dance well.
Tonight, for the first time in the United States, Tsubaki will share the gracefulness of Sesame Groove folk dance by directing a presentation of it in Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall.
He spent three months studying Chau dance at the Government Chau Dance Center in Seraikella, Bibar, in 1981. While in India, Tsubai baked the authentic costumes, headgear and original Chau music used in the dance presentation.
THE GRACEFUL MOVES of the Chauna dance form are grounded in the vigorous exercise of the body.
“There are three forms of Chauh practiced in India,” Tsubaki said, “and all are based on the martial exercise developed by warriors who kept themselves fit through this art.”
TOMORROW
Tsaubaki said that each form of China has its own culture, and that identify the region in which it is practiced.
"Chhau originated in the area of India where three states meet, and each of the regions has developed its own form of Chhau," he said.
The Serakella style of Chauu is known for its graceful movements. Tsaukii said,
*Seraikella has developed a hauntingly refined style of its own, reflecting the devoted
coaching given by generations of maharajas there." he said.
Elaborate masks are also a distinctive characteristic of the Sarakiae Chau dance.
But because of the restrictions on breathing caused by the tightly fitting masks, Tsubaki said, each Chhau dance lasts only seven minutes.
THE DANCES ARE DEMANDING and
from lack of oxygen
and exhaustion, headache.
on campus
The KU production of the Chaua dance will open with an introduction and slides Tusaki shod in India. After devotional music, the entire company of seven dancers will participate in Parkikhanda, a series of basic exercises.
Each of the Prakhanda moves is based on a household chore performed by Indian women. The performance also will include five other dances.
Sandha is a solo female dance; a light offering, Tsubaki said. Radha is a female dance with an accompanying song, based on local folk dance tradition and not requiring masks. Ekhanya is a male solo dance about a tribal dance, is determined to be the best archer.
Barski and Garuda is a duet telling the story of a fight between a serpent and the monster Garuda. Hara Paravati is a male-female between the god, Siva, and his consort, Paravati.
TODAY
There is a 5 P.M. ENTRY DEADLINE for the Recreation Services TENNIS DOUBLES TOURNAMENT. Sign up in 208 Robinson.
"Images of Woman as Misreader."
THE WOMEN'S STUDIES DEPARTMENT
will sponsor a Sandwich Seminar at 11:45 a.m. in
the Women's Study Center.
AFTER THE KU PRODUCTION, Tsubaki and his company of seven KU students will present the program for the Association of Kansas Theater conference in Kansas City, at South Junior High School in Lawrence and a Babcock学院 in Lindsborough.
THE KU SYMPHONIC BAND will perform its Spring Concert at 8 p.m. in the University Theatre.
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Meeting!
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Union—Cork 1 Room Level 3
1. Current Business (Criterion)
2. Goals for FY 1982/83
Paid for by the Student Senate Activity Fee.
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Summer Jobs
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and up for the summer!
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Also openings available in surrounding states.
FOR MORE INFORMATION COME TO KANSAS UNION
REGIONALIST ROOM MONDAY AND TUESDAY MARCH 29TH AND
30TH AT 11:00, 1:00, 3:00 OR 5:00.
A TWENTY MINUTE EXPLANATION OF THE JOBS WILL BE GIVEN AT THIS TIME.
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University Daily Kansan, April 6, 1982
Page 7
Commission to pick next year's mayor tonight
By STEPHEN BLAIR Staff Reporter
Lawrence City Commissioners plan to choose next year's mayor at tonight's regular commission meeting.
The commission selects one of the commissioners to serve as mayor.
"It's more a prestige kind of thing than power," Lawrence City Commissioner Don Binsn said yesterday. "They cut all the ribbons. Three commissioners can override the mayor on anything."
The commission meeting begins at 7 tonight in city hall.
Because Lawrence has a city manager-commission form of government, the city manager carries out the policies at the commission's will, and the mayor merely presides at meetings and is a ceremonial head, Binsn said.
Mayor Marci Francisco added, "She gets asked a lot of questions by the police."
IN ANOTHER MATTER, tonight is the last chance the commission has to place a resolution about nuclear arms on the May 11 ballot, Francois said.
Because of legal problems, it may not be possible to place a non-binding resolution on the ballot that urgues a halt
"We have an opinion from our attorney that the rest of the election—the water fee and the recall—could be invalidated." he said.
Unlike those two issues, the nuclear weapons resolution would not be binned.
Francisco said, "One question was to combine advice votes with blinding votes.
There has been some discussion of changing the resolution so that if it passed, the mayor would be required to write a letter to congressional representatives urging a nuclear weapons freeze, Francisco said.
in the nuclear arms race with the Soviet Union, Binns said.
THERE ARE already two binding issues on the May ballot. Voters will be allowed to vote on Thursday, Tom Gleason and whether to have a 60-month salary collected on the water
bill that would finance a storm-water study.
Binns said he would ask the commission to delay the resolution until it could get an opinion from the Kansas attorney general's office.
"It might be a way of making it a binding vote," she said.
The commission will also consider two problems related to the proposed construction of 102 apartments southwest of 10th and Arkansas streets in the wooded area known as the Tanglewood Addition.
BEFORE CONSIDERING a real estate development map, known as a site plan, commissioners will discuss issues that are outside the control of developers, said Linda Finger, a member of the planning staff.
Although improving drainage and streets are the main concerns, the city staff is also interested in preventing soil erosion and in channeling bicycle and pedestrian traffic to adjoining properties, she said.
Binns said he would ask the commission to delay the resolution until it
If the commission does not approve the arms resolution for the May ballot, it might go on a November ballot, she said.
During a storm, the water running north off the Tanglewood lots would reach a storm sewer that is 24 inches in diameter. The preferred size of pipe to handle that much drainage is 48 inches, Finger said.
"Undoubtedly you're going to be putting a lot of stress on a system that is grossly undersized," she said.
The University Daily
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WORRIED about April 157 Call Dot's Tax Source for fast, accurate tax return preparation. Call 641-8933. 60-day extensions of file to are available. 4-15
The Kansas is now accepting applications for the Summer and Fall Semester Business Manager positions. Students pay positions and require some newspaper experience. Application forms are available in the Student Senate Office, B, Room 120; in the Student Organization and Activities, 220 Strong Hall, and in Room 200 Flint Hall. Completed applications are due in 200 Flint by 5:00 p.m., Monday, April 19.
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.
The University Daily Kansei is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Act institution are sought from all qualified people regardless of race, religion, color, sex, disability, national origin, age, or ancestry.
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today. Runnel from $12 per month-worth-
$41-121 or $43-145.
Stadium atmosphere, International meals,
coach and cabins for backpacking for six cooperative group meetings. Included are TILFTILTS INCLUDED. Large house appliances and laundry. Call 814-7692. Clemson.
Thinking of Next Year?
Naismith Hall is the Place to Live
*Private Sleeping Study Area*
*Carpeting*
*Create Baths & Showers*
*Choice of Meal Plans*
*Parties*
*Meal Service*
*Great Location*
available now. Two bedroom spacious apts.
available, carpeted, and drape! all electric,
furnished with stainless appliances, campus,
and on bus route. $35 per month.
BOOKMARK 10TH EDITION M-420 - 10th Edition M-420
applications are not
Call 843-8559 or Stop By
1800 Naismith Drive
For text to mature male student. Quiet, comfortable efficiency apartment. Private kitchen. Close to the Union. Reasonable price. 842-4185. **if**
We Think You Will Like Us
We are now available
Check Us Out This Spring or Summer
Instituted STUDENT COOPERATIVE close
6 campus and downtown. Own bedroom/
kitchen. Six dining meals each week. WB-
room. Five study spaces. WUNFILS
HUSE. 842-941.
TWY COOPERATIVE LIVING. Sunflower
house. 842-2421. tf
PENTECON PLACE PATIO APARTMENTS.
For rentals, roommates, and building fire blighters/builder/diverter. hookups. fully-suplicated hookups
TRAINEDGE. Lease for harvest (full-studi-
trained). All have learning facility.
All have harvest gold appliance
savings. All have laundry facilities on the premises. Swimming, tennis or racecourses. On K.K. 108-3233-3233.
Summ. subleave. 1 BR apt. in 4-plex, furnished, carpeted, AC. 140 & NJ, all until free, $145/mo., 749-4606. 4-6
SOUTHEEN PARKWAY TOWNHOUSES,
26th & Kasaid. If your tired and unacquainted
you are welcome. Our duplexes
feature 3 br., 1½ baths, all appliances at-
tained. We have full privacy. We have窒montions and in the
summer and all call CRAIG Levin in
the numbers 149-4580 or on our modestly priced townhouses.
Jayhawker Towers Apartments
Live in the CHRISTIAN CAMPUS HOUSE
growing campus museums; call Alain Foxen,
chief executive of the campus museum.
MID CENTER BOUND? Newly refurbished
Appliances, parking. (123) 381-3976.
Appliances, parking. (123) 381-3976.
Alternator, starter and engine specialist.
Parts, service, and exchange units. BELL
AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-9069, 3900
W. 6th. tf
Summer Sublake: very large, 3 bd. 2 level,
duplex, semi furnished w. living, dining,
den, sun porch, 15 bath. ideal for family.
Call Dave or Dale at 841-806-8499.
4-9
We have a good place to live and study. We are located in Westchester County, sub-lease and 12-month leases and August lease of our property. We are adults and we extend the courtesy of our students by offering an appointment at 841-3757 HIGHTON PLAZA.
Nice one bedroom apartment. AC, carpeting,
furniture, dishwasher, toilet, laundry available.
Now call 841-2763 for 5:30, 4:30-
5:30 Sublease $ BORM $ malth $ vallied carpeted &
staircase $ barm $ malth $ i91 Indiana. Apt.
749 - 749 321 5600
Sublease—a nice furnished 2 bedroom apt,
with water paid. Central air, cable T.V.
On bus route. 843-7104. 4-9
FOR SALE
Sublease furnished studio apartment with pool, tennis courts for summer. 743 + electricity. $300 deposit. 749 - 4236. 4-16
Summer and fall rentals, houses and apartments. New campus, no pets. Lynch Real Estate 843-1601 or 841-3222 4-14
Now taking applications for fall and summer leases. KU students only.
Two bedroom apartment, one year old.
Energy efficient, on bus route, dishwasher,
water paid. Available after finals. 841-5634.
4.6
Sublime large 2 BR, apartment near stadium,
water, gas paid, central air $320.
841-8233. 4-15
SUBLEASE Trailroad Apt. water.
Paid on Bus route $210. 842-753-39
4-8
SUBLEASE FOR SUMMER! - br. apt. 2
blocks from campus. Furnished with AC
units.
MINI-MOGO synthesizer & HAMMON B-3
Origan. Priced to sell 841-181.4-7
4-7
Sublease 3 bedroom, 2½ bath, carpeted townhouse. Summer only. Trailridge complex. Call 841-8190. 4-7
For Rent 2 br. apt. convenient to shopping center, located near Walmart & CVS available.
Call 841-6848 for an app.
Western Civilization Notes. New on Sale!
Makes sense to use them-11. As study guide.
Makes sense to use them-12. As study guide.
*New Analysis of Western Civilization*
*available in Town Crest*. The
*New Analysis of Western Civilization*
3 bedroom, 2 bath apt. Must sublease or lease.
Furnished. $490-$500, 844-9800. Call after.
Residential. $490-$500, 844-9800. Call after.
Summer sublease. Nice 3 bedroom town-house.
On KU bus route. A.C. dishwashers.
275 per month + utilities. Call 864-1310 or
864-162-162
4-14
3 bdm. 2 bath, furnished apt. at Malls Olde
English. Gas & water paid. On bus route.
501 per month. Available from June. 4-12
2 bedroom apartment
- utility room
- swimming pool
- laundry room
- bus line
- nursery
- unkind 1800 sf
- laundry room
- unkind 1800 sf
TENNIS RACKETS—Good selection new/
used. Will buy yours if in good condition.
842-5731 after 6:00 p.m. **tf**
1603 W.15th 843-4993
Beautiful bold overgreens required nicely priced.
Farm-Rod-2000 - Farm-Rod-3439 or 5439-3439
5439-3439 or 5439-3439
4-20
Honda 125 XL-2400 miles, only ridden by
Jimmy Perry 909. $99. Peter Jenkins
841-340-6855 4-6
841-340-6855 4-6
Subiaco at last years prices 2 br. apt. complete kitchen c/w a carpet. Carpet and drape. Call for an appointment today 841-6888 4-19
blocks from campus. Furnished with AC.
843-7237 or call (316) 683-3018
4-8
1997 NASO Hands teamed with contour
1998 NASO Hands teamed with contour
Pollest fresh-fruit rich in vitamin m
Pollest fresh-fruit rich in vitamin m
Cali Call 811-3535
Cali Call 811-3535
75 Yamaha 175 Enduro. Like new condition.
1800 miles. Evenings 1-331-9011. 4-6
Baleigh Race 10 speed bike, 23" frame.
$60. 842-7507 (eve.) 4-6
Stereos-Televisionals-Video Recorders. Brackets only. Factory sealed cartons. Lowest prices in the KC area. Area codes call Total Sound Distributors 315-834-2000. 4-30
1980 Blue Plymouth Arrow, Hatchback,
28,500 ml, Just tuned-up. $3700. Must sell
4/8/82. Call Brad 841-4200. 4-6
Consignments accepted Wednesdays 10 am 'til sale time and Thursdays 10 am 'til 4.
700 New Hampshire.
Community Auction
East Wednesday / 70p.m.
This week kitchen table kitchen and 4 chair dining tables, a double box springs and 2 single matresses and spades, speed boat with 6500 pound trailer, 3 pop machines, other used furniture
KZT50, many extras, excellent coudition, fine snubstrel, pincers, battery, & more
durable shells.
TORNADO 197, auto, a.i. mph /fmister, must sell. MFRONDO 789-745-6745 for 5.30-4.7 4T TR 6-4 gnd with overdrive; new paint; bldg trees tr= 841-6991-8 8-8
Formula Ski Speakers $500.00 value, sell
490.00 best offer. Pinner certificate deck
$550.00 value $300.00 or best offer, Call
842-9962 4-13
Elec. Guttar, copy, Aria, $165, 842-7530, 4-8
For Sale 1975 Yamaha XS 650 SPECIAL
842-5279 4-9
BUY MY CAR: Must sell by 4-15 & 7 Chevy Monza. 60,000. A/C, beautiful condition. VERY reasonable. Call 843-5134, keep trying. 4-9
B.W. T12" , 6 months old, very good condition
841-9683
4-9
78 Suzuki GS550E. Looks and runs great.
Good gas mileage. 10,900 miles. $1295. 749-
1705. 4-9
Double Bed mattress box springs and frame,
with headboard. $25.00. Call 749-4543 after
examining your order.
FOUND
Person interested in doing house jobs in exchange for rent this semester. Must be capable, studies have own tools and experience in cooperative work. Call Daryll 843-8386.
Dark blue knitter muffier in UDK box south of Murphy Hall. Mitch-749-0596. 4-7
Keys, Textbooks, Notebooks, jackets, gloves,
etc. Please come to Spanish and Portuguese
Department, 3062 Wocoe, to identify and
claim.
HELP WANTED
Summer Job National Park Co.'s 21 Parks.
500 Openings. Complete Information $5.00.
Park Report Mission Mn. Co., 615 2nd Ave.
W.N. Kallippe, MT 90910. 4-19
Children's Counselors, Manager, Instructors,
Cook, Kitchen Manager, Kitchen Help for
Mountain Summer Camp. Tropical Rain,
Boulder, Colorado, 80386 (508) 494-7211
First Christian Church (Diplagos of Christ) of Lawrence, Kansas is seeking applicants for the position of co-ordinator. The position would be approximately 10-15 hours per week with a total of six weeks in the summer 1982. Resumes including a letter of recommendation should be mailed to KC4604 at 100 Kentucky Avenue, KS 66044 by April 23, 1982. Inquiries will be made to KC4604.
We are looking for 25 hardworking students for a summer work opportunity. If you are independent and want to earn $275.00 per week call 798-5227
4-13
Bartender - energetic and permanent, contact
Dant at the Exchange, 842-959-473
Apprentice Massage needed at Nautilus Fitness Center, 1001 West 23rd. Call Don at 749-1065 for appointment. 4-6
Secretary. National Association seeks energi-
ful and efficient secretary with outstanding
knowledge and exp in national office. Must be highly
knowledgable, adaptable to fast-paced
environment. Experience in word process-
ing, benefits. Salary open. Send resume and
resume cover letter to National Association,
Lawrence, KS 60044. 4-9
Part-time help wanted, grill and fountain,
noiset and night. Apply at Vista Restaurant.
1257 W. 6th. 4-13
Missing=1 brown tri-fold wallet 1 set 10 keys, 1 set 3 keys. If found call 841-8416.
Reward. 4-6
Lost large blue loose leaf notebook. Has all class notes. Please call 843-0673 or 843-8588 and ask for Dean. 4-11
Lott: Backnack with glasses in pocket. in 4020 Weco week 3-29. Glasses needed. Reward: 843-7552 ask for Kurt. 4-7
Baseball hat, yellow, Indianapolis 509 patch
by tennis courts Sunday, March 28
evening please phone 812-2561. 4-9
PERSONAL
LOST
Instant passport, visa, ID, & resume photographs. Custom made portraits b/w; color. Swells Studio. 749-1611. **tf**
Skilker's liquor store serving U-Daily since 1924. Come in and compare. Willried Skilpet Ealday. 803 Mass. 843-8186. If
SKI TRIPS, SKI TRIPS, SKI TRIPS, SKI TRIPS,
WINTERPARK, DILLON AND OTHERIS
Economic packages every weekend and
school break Call Ski Call 811-8368 today.
Say it on a sweatshirt with custom silk-screen printing 1 to 1000 shirt art by Swella 749-1611. tf
HEADACH, BACKACHE, STIFF NEK,
LEG PAIN)? Find and correct the CAUSE
of the problem. Call Dr Mark Johnson for
advice on what to do. (Repeat
ceiling Blood Cross and Lone Star insurance.)
Community Auction 700 N.H.
Every Wed. 6:30 p.m.
Consignments Accepted
Wed. 10 a.m. till sale
Sat. 10-5
841-2212
For your party clothes, formal or costume,
check out the Inflation Fighter, E 8. Thr.
10-5-30 M-F 10-5-30 Sat. Open til
8 on Thursday
on Thurs. **if**
the Keeper—Weekly Specials on Kegha!
The Kegger—Weekly Specials on Kegga! tf
1610 W. 23rd.
Toll KAggr. - W604, 5 Spears on KAggr.
Call 814-950-100 W. 23rd. tt
MARY KAY COSMETICS-Full-time beauty
897-6644.
COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES
Free pregnancy testing; early and advanced
out patient screening; gynecology care
and Roe, Overland Park MS
(913) 621-300.
Exciting jobs at Lake Tahoe. Send $5.00 to Tahoe Jobs, P.O. Box 7244, Kansas City, MO 64113.
4-22
Silk heads, wallets, jewelry bags from Korea Barb's Second Hand Rose: 515 Indiana. 842-4736. 4-9
Spring formalis-Prairie-look, 50' s, beaded
Taffetas. Barb's Second Hand Rose. 315
Indiana. 842-4746. 4-9
GREEN'S CASE SALE, BUSCH $7.99, COORS
$8.99, BUDWISER LIGHT $9.59, GREEN'S,
BOWNT WEST 23RD. 4-9
Grant Proposal Writing Workshop Learn a marketable skill— in demand.
April 10
April 10
Lawrence
Public Library
9:30 a.m - 4:30 p.m
Arts Center
9:30 a.m - 4:30 p.m
Vern & Vermont
Registration: $15
To register write, TCA, Inc.
Box 1179 Lawrence, KS 66044
Or Call: 749-3080
Stories-Television-Videos Recorders. Name brands only. Factory sealed cartons. Lowest prices in the K.C.A. area. Get your phone call to call Total Sound Diatoms 913-840-3600 913-840-3600
PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH-
RIGHT 843-4821.
Dealing With That Unison Feeling: Learn to initiate conversations; make new friends; participate in meetings; April 7, 9-30 p.m. Nummerizer Center, free registration. The Student Assistance Center is located at 126 West 46th Street.
ACCENT SOUND & LIGHT CO. for your next party. Dates available in April & May. Call 841-2653 for booking information. 4-6
Men and Women play Ultimate in short shorts 4-7
Remember, O most gracious Mary, that never was it known that anyone who had the kind of interest implied the interaction was left unadvised. Inspired by this condemnation, I before three I stand silent and sorrowful. O Lady of the Reverence in the heart and love and answer me. Amen.
REVIVAL! 4-7
Give your favorite kidte yoying or old! an Easter surprise - A special edition Easter Basket Balloon and jelly beans, chuckle balls and jelly beans, with pastel balloons and your Easter messenger. 4-8-9 10-23
Tempiin Hall does not have blood in its veins. It has some mixture of beer & other substances. You'll be burried in The Blood Drive. 4-9
CHICAGO MATERNITY CENTER STORY.
A film about an alternative wedding,
April 10th, Gallery Rison, Lawrence Public
Library, Chicago, City OF. HEALTH COLLECTIVE
Brianhythm Guitarist/Vocals-loving for Land, Bass, and Drums—For no Frill Rock & Roll. Call Chris after 3:30 p.m. (8:44-10:05)
Looking for a person interested in going on a coast to coast Bicycle Trip this summer.
Phone 841-6668
4-8
Established band look for male/female
leads, Drums, guitar and keyboards.
Immediate Need. Contact Gary at 842-6000.
If not there, leave name & phone:
4-148
Bernardette, mother loves you, allow her to play with her little ones. Studio for fine art portrait of quality, special needs child. 90% cotton, 10% polyester.
MONTESSORI PLUS TEACHER PREPARATION is now enrolling for the summer training program to become a Montessori teacher. Call 232-838-1904 or information.
ARTISTS. THE WOMEN STUDENTS ORGANIZED a logo. Submit entries to B114 Kansas City, B114 Kansas City, or B25 Winning artist will receive a $10 gift certificate to Bookcast. Bookcast for more info. 4-93
WOMEN STUDENTS! Help build an organization to work for your needs. We are a national nonprofit organization. If you would like to be President, Vice president, Treasurer, Publicity Chair, and/or member of the interest groups. Call WOMEN STUDENTS ORGANIZATION, formerly Commission on Women in Business.
The treasure has been found by KU seniors Tom Hawkins, Torey Lacy, and John Malbry. Another $100 has been hidden somewhere in the Lawrence area. Listen for new chickens on the lawn.
GREEN'S CASE SALE, BUSCH $7.29,
COORS $8.99, BUDWEISER LIGHT $9.39,
GREEN'S, 808 WEST 23RD. 4-9
Envy Pair Island during Spring Break?
Want to go back this summer for $238 (includes round trip bus fare) from June 16th to April 19th, Call 817-1230 (evens) or April 10th, Call 817-1230 (evens)
DID YOU KNOW The Community Mercantile 70 Maine has fresh baked whole grain bread, buns, sandwiches, rolls, cookies and cakes. One item baked on each thur. April 14th.
T. Parker Thank you all c: ZCY & H 4-6
FINANCIAL AID! We guarantee to find scholarships. Send a brief graduate which you own, and we will provide the AD FINDER, Box 1034, PA 12526, IA 92266.
SPECTRUM OPTICAL—Do you have a screw loose? Broken lens? Broken frame? One day service in most cases Open 10-6. M- S41-1013. I 4. E 7-8. 4-9
TUTORING MATH, STATISTICS, PHYSICS,
COMPUTER SCIENCE Call 841-1096-0088 or
email us at tutoring@wisc.edu or call 841-6476 (ask for Robert).
Science Wine and Kg Shop—The finest selection of wines in Lawrence—largest supplier more kgs. 1651, W. 23d, $28.
*
SERVICES OFFERED
WRITING A RESUME? What to say? How to say it? 147 Stop by The House of Uber and up in our office on resumecare.com on resume or 3-9 Sat, NOON-3 Sun.
.
ENCORE COPY
3 1/2¢ self service copies
H
CORPS
25th and Iowa 842-2001
Drafting (charts, maps, etc.) 6 years experience,
competitive skills and can script
programming skills 841-7944.
Entering for verification 841-597-6138
The Price of the Registration is $299.00 at Registrar's Price in town. Call 841-597-6138
LEARN TENNIS from experienced instructor in small groups with other KU. students or private lessons 842-6713 after 6.90 p.m.
Parenting young couple would like to
support SST mid-May through August.
846-1523
Tutoring--Don't wait till the next exam!
Biology and Statistics Paul M. 814-2546. 4-9
Dealing With That Unclea Feeling: Wednesday, April 17. 7-9:00-3:00. p.nunemaker Center. The Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall. 864-4044. 4-6
Alice Vera Joloba skin care. Quality products at affordable prices. Why not look your own call Your Saco distributor for a business call. Weekdays: Jack-Wednesday 4 p.m. #824-0005.
EDITING, proofreading. Professional copy editor. Prompt service. Pick up delivery available. 223-890 (Topeka) daytime 4-14
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 842-2601, 525th & Iowa. 4-30
GRADUATE STUDENTS TRIES COPERS.
QUALITY discount based on total volume of
quality discourses presented to can offer variable education equation in this world. Encore Copy Corp., 22nd & 4th
WOMEN'S GROUPS STARTING THE WEEK OF April 19th: 1. Women's Group 3. Women's Group 4. Facilitator's Training Group 3. Wellness Workshops. Training Group 3. Jordy Workshops. 237 information for.
TYPING
It's a Fact, Fast, Affordable, Clean, Typing.
643, 5820
If
TYPFING-EDITING-GRAPHICS. IBM Correcting Spectacle, Inc. (800) 247-9160 Emergency service available. 812-290-7757
Experienced typist. Term papers, these, all michelanese. IMC Correcting. Ensure Elr or Pica, and will correct spelling. Phone 843-9544 Mrs. Wright. *if*
TIP-TOP TYPING - experienced typemaster - IBM
SEE KNOW - Royal Coral
SERIAL CODE 834 - 648-7675.
TYPING PLUS: Theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications, renames. Assistance with composition, grammar, spelling, punctuation. Foreign students or Americans: 814-6544.
Reports, dissertation, remines, legal forms,
graphs, texts, and the works of Select
teachers to J. Ann 841-2726
Experienced typet-thesis, dissertations
term papers, mite. IBM correcting selectic.
Barb. after a 5 p.m. mike. 824-2310.
tr
Experienced typist will type letters, thesls,
and dissertations. IBM correcting selette.
Call Donna at 842-2744. **¶**
FOR PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myra.
841-4980. If
IRON FRENCE TYPING SERVICE. Evenings
842-2507. tf
experienced typist will type term papers,
thesis, dissertations, books, etc. Have IBM
mimic-correcting Selective II. Call Terry 842-
4754 anytime.
Fast, accurate and experienced typist will type your papers. Reasonable. Call 842-8091. 4-30
MAGIC FINGERS TYPING SERVICE. 843-
5129. 4-20
Former medical research secretary will type books, theses, term papers. Call Nancy, 841-5802. 4-9
Quality typing and word processing available at Encore Copy Corps. 25th and Iowa.
842-2001. 4-30
Would like to type dissertations, thesis, term papers, etc. Call 842-3203 4-30
AFFORDABLE QUALITY for all your needings: theresa, disartements, resumes, cards, mailings, misc. Call Judy 842-7945 after 6:00 pm.
Graduate students tired of typing, retyping and retyping their thesis or dissertation?
Save time and money by word processing it at Encore! Call 492-8001 for more info. 456
Shakespeare could write. Elvis could wiggle,
my talent, typing. Call 842-0043 after 5:00
and weekends. 4-19
Professional typing. Dissertations, theses.
term papers, resume, legal, etc. IBM Cor-
tering Selectic. Deb 843-8592. 4-26
WANTED
Male roommate. Available now! Very nice
duplex with luxuries such as your own
guestroom, aquarium room, dormitory, fire-
place, and kitchen. Room size is 28'x16'
for 140 month+ + 1.7 util. B4-943-6
844-943-6
Roommate to sublease apt. on bus route.
For summer in 12/month. If interested Call
Bobbi Bobby.
Roommate for May 1. $110/mo. plus utilities
842.0038
4-1
Female, non-anoker preferably, to live with two girls in Meadowbrook - rent negotiable
call 841-5630 evenings
4-21
Two Senior female business students looking for commute to share 2 bdmr. apt over manner and or next year. Call 842-6531.
Female housemate for 3-bedroom house 1
Fermail N. of stadium. Serious student, prefer
grad. 641-6545. If no answer, call very
early or late.
2 rooms for apartment 2 blocks from
KU Med. Center, summer and/or next year.
Call Jan 841-8913
4-12
Female Roommate wanted for summer (at least). Nice 2 bedroom duplex $100 mo. +4-19 utilities-Call 843-6436
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS
Don't want to drive across town to send in your classified ad? Take advantage of this form and save your time and money while still receiving the satisfaction of placing your ad in the Kansan. Just mail this form with a check or money order payable to the Kansan to: University Daily Kansan, 111 Flint Hall, Lawrence, Ks 66045. Use rates below to figure costs.
Classified Heading:
Write Ad Here: ___
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, April 6, 1982
Scoreboard
Basketball
NBA STANDINGS
Eastern Conference
Team W W L Pct. GTG —
Philadelphia 58 22 17.64 — 6
Pittsburgh 52 22 17.64 — 6
New Jersey 39 36 5.30 19½
Washington 39 36 5.30 19½
Colorado 37 34 5.20 18½
Western Conference
Milwaukee 52 23 693
Atlanta 57 28 693
Dallas 40 35 17
Indiana 33 42 440
Chicago 29 42 392
Houston 15 50 128
Los Angeles 50 24 676
Seattle 58 24 676
Washington 48 32 68
Golden State 41 33 554
Portland 41 33 554
Oklahoma 16 50 92
Texas 16 50 92
San Antonio 44 41 .587 ___
Denver 43 42 .574 ___
Dallas 51 32 .573 1 ___
Kansas City 26 40 .347 18 ___
Dallas 26 40 .347 18 ___
Dallas 26 40 .347 18 ___
Hockey
TOMORROW'S GAMES
Divisional Semifinals
Best of Five
Patrick Division Pittsburgh at New York Islanders Philadelphia at New York Rangers
Buffalo at Boston Norris Division
St. Louis at Wainwright
Smythe Division
Los Angeles at Edmonton
Vancouver at Calgary
Soccer
MISL STANDINGS
Eastern Dhylok.
Team W 1 W 7 Pct. GB
New York 29 19 7 .606 -
Baltimore 28 18 606 -
Ethbridge 23 14 17 .822 6%
Buffalo 23 17 15 .823 6%
Newjersey 13 14 396 15%
Philadelphia 13 22 29 .386 15%
Philadelphia 10 22 29 .386 15%
AMERICAN LEAGUE Eastern Division
Baseball
St. Louis 27 12 692
Wichita 23 12 692
Birmingham 18 10 84%
Denver 14 24 368
Minneapolis 13 24 384
Kansas City 12 25 324
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Team W L Pct. GB
Balmoral 1 0 .000
Boston 0 0 .000
Charleston 0 0 .000
Detroit 0 0 .000
Minneapolis 0 0 .000
New York 0 0 .000
Toronto 0 0 .000
NATIONAL LEAGUE Eastern Division
Stewart, who three two-hit ball at the Royals, worked the five inning of relief
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Baltimore 13, Kansas City 5
Team W 1 0 Pct. GB
Miami 0 0 2,000
Minnesota 0 0 0,000
New York 0 0 0,000
Vancouver 0 0 0,000
Pittsburgh 0 0 0,000
Baltimore 0 0 0,000
BALTIMORE—The Baltimore Orioles used home runs by Eddie Murray, Gary Reinicke, Dan Ford and Cal Ricken Jr. to riot in Kansas City on June 14, 2013, opening day crowd of 83,943, the largest regular season crowd in club history.
Atlanta 0 0 .000
Houston 0 0 .000
Los Angeles 0 0 .000
San Diego 0 0 .000
San Francisco 0 0 .000
Carsonville 0 0 .125
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Chicago 3, Cincinnati 2, called after 8 innings,
rain
By United Press International
Rovals beat in opener
Dennis Martinez scattered six hits but needed relief help from Sammy Stewart in the fifth inning. The long-relief ace limited the Royals to two hits the rest of the way and picked up the victory.
California 0 0 0 .000 —
Chicago 0 0 0 .000 —
Miami 0 0 0 .000 —
Oakland 0 0 0 .000 —
San Francisco 0 0 0 .000 —
Texas 0 0 0 .000 —
Tampa 0 0 0 .000 —
14%
City 0 0 0 .000 —
BIG EIGHT STANDINGS
Ford smacked a three-rank homer in the seventh innings off Grant Jackson, who had come on in relief of Paul Splitterff. Rich Dauer's bases-loaded double preceded Ford's first homer as an Oriole.
Team W M L Pct. GB
Oklaabama State 5 3 625
Oklaahoma 3 2 600 ½
Kansas State 2 2 500 1
Kansas State 2 2 500 1
Nebraska 4 4 300 1
Missouri 4 4 300 1½
Oklahoma 4 3 375 ½
The Orioles built a 7-1 lead on a two-run hit by Ripken in the second inning following a walk to Ken Singleton. A grand slam by Murray in the fifth inning, and then an emphatic four hits, a home run to left field that chased losing pitcher Dennis Leonard.
CARDS &
GIFTS
Russell Stover
CANDIES
for all occasions
ARBUTHNOTS
Sacramento Plaza 2% Rent
Sat 21-9 Mon - Fri 10-8, Mon - 10-3, Sat 1
Brett's homer opened up the seventh inning. Wing singled across a second-inning run, and after Amos Otsi doubled and Hal Mec Rae singled in the fourth, White's home run to left field narrowed the margin to 7-4.
Ripken, who also had a single and
doubled, erased a 1-0 Royal lead with
his first major league home run in
the second inning.
Frank White drove in four runs for the Royals with a three-run homer and a single, and George Brett added a solo hit. The Royals won Kansas City pitchers for 18 hits.
Singles by Rick Dempsey and Ford, coupled with Leonard's error on a Singleton chopper in front of the plate, set the stage for Murray's fifth career grand slam, a shot over the left-center field fence.
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"Softball, as a sport, is dictated by the quality of a team's pitcher," KU Head Coach Bob Stancill said recently. "Because of our success is due to Rhonda."
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Clarke hits, pitches 'Hawks to 20-8 record
Rhonda Clarke is the best trouble Kansas has seen in quite some time, causing fits for opponents while leading the team to a baseball team to an impressive 28-4 record.
By TOM COOK Sports Writer
Ya got trouble, my friends. Right here I say. Trouble right here in Lawrence, Kan. Trouble with a capital T and that matches with C and that matches with D.
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With respect to Meredith (The Music Man) Willson:
In 182.2 innings, Clarke has given up just 75 hits, surrendered 33 walks and struck out 220 batters. She has allowed only 15 earned runs for an ERA of 0.57, but her most amazing statistic is her shutout total.
The 20-year-old sophomore pitcher from Fairfield, Calif., has emerged as the inspirational leader of the Joules, both on the mound and at the plate.
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CLARKE, a transfer from Oklahoma State, has become a dominating force for the Jayhawks. She has compiled an 18-6 pitching record and racked up a batting average of .325, both tops for the team.
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"I played six games at Oklahoma State in the fall (of 1979), but I didn't like their program. They didn't have what I was looking for."
Four of her six losses have been one-run decisions and three of those four have been 1-0. Her most disappointing loss was a 1-0 setback to the University of Florida in an NCAA college contest. In that game, she fanned 28 batters and did not give up a walk.
sone has held opponents scoreless 13 times and tossed two no-hitters.
"WE CONSIDER her to be one of the very best pitchers around," said Stantlift.
So Clarke went home, back to the sunshine of California, a player without a team. She joined the Southern California Renegades, and they finished second in the national tournament during the summer of 1980.
"I always go for the shutout," Clarke said. "The no-hitters aren't my first priority. I just want to keep them from scoring runs."
But KU might not have known how good she really was if she had not left Oklahoma State. Clarke said she went out accompanied with the Cowboys' program.
"My arm might get stiff, but it doesn't get sore. the rest of my body gets tired first," she said. "My legs are usually the first to go."
THE INCONSISTENCE of the Kansas weather does not appear to bother奶奶, but she said that she would rather pitch in the heat of the
Then how does she continue to throw, day after day, week after week?
"Rhonda has a strong arm and her velocity is good, but that isn't her greatest asset," Stancill said. "Her movement on the mound is exceptional and she has good control of five different pitches."
"It's a natural motion," Clarke said. "It's just like walking. Your arm just swinks back and forth."
But Clark insists she does not tire easily, especially her arm.
She then played for the Southern California Raiders, a team which also
"I like to pitch when it's hotter," she
would work up a sweat, it's a big case
to get it done.
"Before, I used to throw my game," she said. "Now, I follow the catcher and work on strategy. When there's a batter hit, we concentrate on the catcher and her mitt."
She also said she had modified her pitching style to fit college softball.
During the season, she never throws on Saturday or Sunday.
She hopes to take her simplistic methods into practice and she college with them, but the problem was the program.
STANCLIFT WAS recruiting Sherman at the time, and she told him about Clarke. Stancliff convinced Clarke that Lawrence might not be a bad place to spend a few years, so she joined the Javahaws.
featured current KU players Sue Sherman and Becky Ascencio.
one crusist Posey did. (Posey is first-year assistant who played for the Jahynks last year.) That's a good deal, especial under Bob, because he
Clarke was declared ineligible at KU last year because of her brief stint in Stillwater. But she continued to work on her game, waiting for this season.
"I'd also like to coach; do something
Whatever her plans may be, she said she wanted to help the Jaylahwakes have a successful season, which included a trip to Orlando. Softball World Series at Omaha, Neb.
"It's too easy to burn your arm out," Clarke said. "For as much as I throw in
Her pitches have been clocked at 62 mph. However, the pitcher's mound is only 40 feet from the batter's box, so her pitching speed is 98-90 mph in baseball, Stanford said.
"Bob was a good salesman, too," Bob recalled. "He was a really good teammate."
KU's leading hitter, Clarke has pounded out 27 hits with 14 RBI. She also leads the squad with three home runs and a slugging percentage of .506.
CLARKE IS Kansas' main pitcher, but he played in 22 contests. She has started 24 contests. She games.
"So long as her arm is still connected to her shoulder, she is going to have a successful season for us," Stanclift said.
games and practice, I think I can take the weekends off."
Maria
Jayhawk pitching sensation Rhonda Clarke prepares to deliver another pitch. Clementi 18-6 this season with a 0.57 ERA. He has also struck out 230 batter in 182 CLEF 18 innings.
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KANSAN
The University Daily
Wednesday, April 7, 1982 Vol.92, No.128 USPS 650-640
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
MARCI FRANCISCO
Marcel Francisco enjoys Commissioner Barkley Clark's presentation of flowers after she was re-elected mayor of Lawrence last night.
Apartment plan OK'd Francisco re-elected Lawrence mayor
By STEPHEN BLAIR Staff Reporter
"I'm pleased," Francisco said.
Lawrence Mayor Marci Francisco was elected to a second year as mayor by other commissioners last night.
I'm pleased, Francisco said,
Commissioner Barkley Clark nominated
Francisco and Commissioner Nancy Shontz
nominated Commissioner Don Binnis for the post.
Shontz advocated returning to a system in which the two commissioners to receive the most votes in an election became mayor on a rotating basis.
The commission abandoned that system two years ago and adopted a system in which the mayor is elected by the commission.
"The new election method is a political one." Shontz said. "Now mayors are elected on a different basis. I've noticed that commissioners are beginning to care who becomes mayor."
However, Binns abstained from voting, and Shontz was the only one to vote for him.
Francisco voted for herself, as did Gleason and Clark.
Clark said his two reasons for nominating Francisco were that she was in tune with the present political line-up of the commission and she works well with City Manager Buford Watts.
"We don't want someone as mayor who's out for the city manager's blood." Clark said.
Although Binns works well with Watson, Clark said, he is not in the mainstream of Lawrence's current political situation.
The present system of election by other commissioners strengthens the office of mayor, Clark said.
"It's still the same system, but we just put a little more emphasis on the mayor, which is important in the city manager system to balance the power the city manager has," he said.
the power the mayor was elected as vice-mayor. She will appear on behalf of the commission at functions when the mayor is absent.
In other business, the commission unanimously approved a site plan for the construction of 102 apartment units southwest of the campus, with walking distance of the KU Campus.
A site plan is a real estate development map of proposed construction.
See COMMISSION page 5
Committee to study abolition of B.G.S.
By ANN WYLIE Staff Reporter
A KU committee will soon begin studying the possibility of abolishing the Bachelor of General Studies degree.
The College Assembly voted 85 to 74 yesterday to have Robert Lineberry, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, assign the committee.
The decision was a reaction to a motion to abolish the degree for all students who enter the college.
In other business, Lineberry announced yesterday that James Seaver, director of western civilization, would not discuss his department's 1983 budget at the assembly.
But for yesterday's assembly, the B.G.S. degree is the issue of the day, and committee members will continue to work.
soever, who had planned yesterday to speak at the assembly, said that he, Lineberry and other members of the western civilization attended the meeting and bring it up at the next assembly, April 27.
The B.G.S. degree requirements are too similar to the Bachelor of Arts requirements to require two separate degrees, Andrew Delcki, professor of Spanish and Portuguese, said.
The main difference between the B.G.S. degree and the B.A. degree is that the B.G.S. is
more flexible, according to the KU undergraduate catalog.
Also, the B.A. degree requires western science and the B.G.S. degree requires laboratory science and the B.G.S. degree.
science and the B.A. degree.
The B.G.S. requires a world civilization and culture sequence, not required by the B.A.
degree.
But several people defended the B.G.S. degree.
John Miller, Topeka junior, said that the language requirement was a big enough difference to warrant keeping the B.G.S. degree.
"We can't appreciate the value of taking a foreign language course when we plan on staying there."
Debicki said, however, that advising B.G.S. degree candidates was a problem because it was confusing. The program's flexibility allows a wide variety of degree emphases, he said.
But Mark Giltill, Leavenworth junior, said he thought that advisers should take the responsibility to advise B.G.S. candidates well, even though advising was complicated.
"What is essential to the B.G.S. program is that what's important that's what will make this program work," he said.
Proposed bill to allow increased police patrol
programmer.
John Wright, professor of human development,
said that the B.G.S. degree offered
students options that no other degree did.
He said, "The point of the program was not to
see ASSEMBLY page 5
BvCOLLEEN CACY
Staff Reporter
TOPEKA-A -A bill that would expand the jurisdiction of campus police at Board of Regents schools was approved yesterday by a Kagasa House committee.
The bill would allow university police at a city hall to enforce the law, or all property associated with it.
At the University of Kansas, the bill would give police jurisdiction at fraternity and sorority houses, property owned by the Kansas University Endowment or of Kansas Athletic Corporation, and streets, highway and property surrounding the campus.
"we have a good working cooperation in on-the-scene events," he said.
Ron Olin, Lawrence assistant chief of police, told the House Federal and State Affairs Committee that KU police needed the legislation to keep them safe. Now they now had with the Lawrence Police Department.
And he said a city ordinance, established last fall by the city manager to give KU police the
autonomy to enforce laws off campus, had problems.
City Manager Buford Watson used the ordinance to create a special police commission that allows KU police to enforce traffic ordinances, investigate crimes, make arrests and conduct searches in connection with crimes that originate on campus.
but Kansas Attorney General Robert Stephen has questioned the legality of commissions created by city governments, and officials feared that the KU Police Department's off-campaign authority would be removed if it was not guaranteed by a state law.
gun aliberty of a sake. The bill would not change the extent of the KU Police Department's authority, just allow it legally to continue.
"This solidifies KU's ability to be a law enforcement agency." Ollin said. "Routine investigations require cooperation between the University and the city.
"It takes all the KU Police Department and the vast majority of the Lawrence Police Department just to handle the football crowd. If we had a winning ticket, I don't know what we'd do."
See LAW page 5
Haig holds peace talks to end Falkland dispute
By United Press International
WASHINGTON - Argentina's foreign minister emerged from a meeting with Secretary of State Alexander Haig yesterday and expressed confidence that the country's downslope with would be settled peacefully.
"As a diplomat, I am confident we will reach through negotiations—even if they are long—an honorable and just peace," said foreign Minister Nicandor Costa Mendez.
"I am confident we can solve our problem with Britain."
Haig emerged during the day as the point man in U.S. efforts to head off a military clash between Argentina and Britain over the Falkland Islands. Argentina seized the islands from Britain over the weekend and on Sunday, a British naval armada was dispatched to recapture the crown colony, which is located about 450 miles off the coast of Argentina.
Haig's meeting with Costa Mendez was preceded by separate talks with the British ambassador to Washington, Sir Nicholas Henderson, and Argentine ambassador Esteban Takacs. All the diplomats are attempting to reach some sort of nepal peace in Washington, before the British war fleet reaches the deterned islands. The trip will take about two weeks.
weeks
Meanwhile yesterday in London, Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher was asked by party legislator Robert Cryer whether
she was planning to resign as a result of the crisis.
Thatcher staunchly held her ground and responded to the situation by imposing a trade embargo on Argentine imports that went into effect at midnight last night.
European support for Britain was evident, as West Germany, Austria and the Netherlands took steps to cut off arms sales to the South American nation.
Earlier in the day at the White House, Deputy Press Secretary Larry Speaks turned aside a question as to whether the administration is favoring one side over the other in the snubble.
Following up the President's offer Monday to act as "honest broker" in the territorial dispute, Speakes told reporters the United States "stands by its position," and warned that it be beguilting in promoting a peaceful solution.
Catto did say, however, that the United States had an obligation under a 1962 agreement to let the British military use the American-built, 10,000-foot runway on Ascension Island, a speck of British land in the Atlantic off the west coast of Africa and about midway along the 8,000 mile stretch of ocean between Britain and the Falklands.
Love is in the air!
The U.S. military "hands off" position also was emphasized yesterday by Herry Catto, assistant defense secretary for public affairs, who said the department should not going to give anybody any help, either way.
Speaks assured reporters that there was no plan to involve U.S. armed forces in the dispute.
Weather
The high today will be an unreasonably cool 50, with winds from the south at 10-15 mph, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka.
The temperature should dip to 30
tought and is expected to reach only 45
degrees.
Skies will be partly cloudy to cloudy today, tonight and Thursday.
OB GREENSPAN/Kansan Staff
Fencing requires strategies, fancy footwork
Karl Jole, St. Joseph, Mo., senior, practices fencing by hitting a golf ball suspended from the celling of Robinson Center. Jole is in his second year as a member of the KU fencing club.
By BARB EHLI Staff Reporter
The two masked figures glide gracefully up and down the black rubber mat. Dressed in white and protected by canvas, they resemble mobile mummies, silent except for the steel
With a flick of the wrist, the larger figure sends the opponent's foil crashing to the floor.
FOR GREENSPANKwanan Stai
"It's physical chess," said Steel Smeller, member of the KU fencing club and Topeka
"Everyone knows which way you can move, but it's how you put the moves together."
junior emuot, Lawrence graduate student and fencing club coach, said fencing was truly a lifetime sport, and could be played by anyone at any age.
"In fencing, because it's very much a head game, age doesn't make a difference," she said. "You learn strategies in games that are more important."
She said the youngest person she had ever fenced against in competition was 12 years old, and the oldest was a woman in her mid-50s.
Her fencing instructor was in his 60s. Elliot had seen a 70-year-old man in competition before.
"He used his head a lot and his feet just a little," she said.
Stamina is the most important trait a fencer has, and is more im-
brute strength.
Before a fencer begins a "bout" or game, he does a series of limbering stretches to warm up. The standard bouts last six minutes and the scores five "hits," whichever comes first.
A hit is a point in the player's favor that is scored when the tip hits the opponent and causes a light to flash at the "director's" or judge's desk.
Elliott said she was once in a bout that lasted 30 seconds.
Fencing is not a native American sport, but has been popular for centuries. It started in Europe, and was imported to America with the concuisitors and Columbus.
Since that time, New York has become the
undisputed fencing center of the United States, Elliott said...
"You can find anything in New York," she said. "They have a much larger population to
AN EVOLUTION in fencing introduced electricity to the sport.
The mat used in competition is different from the one used in practice. It measures about two meters wide by 14 meters long,
Also, she said, the fact that the Eastern seaboard settled more quickly helped fencing to become established in the Ivy League. The formation of fencing is firmly established there.
Most of the other equipment hasn't changed a lot over the years.
In competition, the hits are scored when one player hits the tip of his foul against the canvas protruding from it. The ball causes a light to flash at the table where the director sits.
smaller feet.
This metal mat provides grounding that prevents a player from scoring by merely touching the floor with the foil.
made of finely woven copper or brass. Elliott said it resembled a window screen but was a smaller mesh.
When using the epee, which has no edge and tapers to a blunt point, the player's target is the whole body. With the saber, which is a hook, the player uses the hip bones to the head, are the target.
The weight of the canvas, and the reinforced breast-plate for women, provide adequate protection, Elliott said. Fencers wear a heavy glove over their hands and a screened mask. A concave guard through a blade gives more protection to the hand.
The only area that really has no protection is the back of the neck, Elliott said, so if a person's opponent has a deadly aim, the person should not try to run away.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, April 7, 1982
News Briefs From United Press International Columbia piggybacks home one day ahead of schedule
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.—The space shuttle Columbia, riding atop a gleaning Boeing 747, returned to its home near the Atlantic Ocean beaches after a mission in October.
The awkward-looking jet transport left White Sands Missile Range in New Mexico at 8 a.m. and completed the, 1,453 mile piggyback trip about seven miles south of New York City.
About 2,000 space center officials and their families cheered as the Columbia-747 descended before 3 p.m. on the 3-mile-long concrete runway at the Space Center.
Some 6,000 spectators, many sunburst vacationers, also lined beaches to get a glimpse of the historic spacecraft. Joe Algrand, pilot of the jumbo jet, was on board.
Earlier yesterday, about 65,000 space buffers turned out at a refueling stop at Barksdale Air Force Base near Shreveport, La.
Officials opened the strategic air command base to civilians, who braved strong winds and mid-40 degree temperatures to see the shuttle.
Ground crews began removing the shuttle from the 747 last night and were expected to take it to the vehicle assembly building today. Technicians will then prepare the shuttle for its fourth and final test flight scheduled for June 27.
The preparations will include the strengthening of about 1,200 heat resistant tiles damaged during liftoff March 22.
Builder pleads guilty to bid rigging
KANSAS CITY, Kan.-A Marysville road builder and his company, in an agreement with the federal government, yesterday pleaded guilty to rigging
The plea came only minutes after a special grand jury investigating antitrust violations in the state indicted Albert G. Kistner and his company, Hall Brothers Construction Co., for prearranging bids on highway projects in Washington county.
In that agreement with the government, Kistner pleaded guilty to bibig rigging and mail fraud, and also pleaded guilty on behalf of his company to a
Klstner and his company brought to 25 the total number of construction companies and executives indicted on similar charges in Kansas since a federal investigation began last year. Including yesterday's pleas, 12 contractors and 10 firms have been convicted or have被 guilty.
Plan calls for looser handicap law
WASHINGTON-Reagan administration officials are moving to narrow the scope of the law that protects the civil rights of 35 million handicapped people and to rewrite enforcement provisions, a proposed draft obtained from the Office of Management and Budget revealed yesterday.
Changes in the law would include allowing recipients of federal funds to judge a handicapped person's "potential contributions to society" in court.
Groups representing the handcapped said the suggested changes would gut the intent of civil rights protections found in the 1973 Rehabilitation Act.
The 1973 statute's most visible results included implementing access ramps at buildings around the country and providing special buses to serve
Survivor faces possible amputation
SQUAW VALLEY, Calif—Anna Conrad, who miraculously survived being buried five days in an avalanche at a Sierra Nevada ski resort, might be forced to have her feet amputated to prevent blood poisoning induced by frostbite. her doctor said yesterday.
Dr. Roger Mason made the announcement as searchers hoping to find only empty cars and debris prepared to clear the last snow from the parking lot at Alpine Meadows ski resort. An avalanche killed seven people there last Wednesday.
Conrad was found Monday under a row of lockers that had fallen across a wall at the building at the bottom of the ski mountain. She had been missing for 14 hours.
Mason told a news conference at Taheo Forest Hospital that surgery performed Monday night to clear blood clots may not have solved the cirrhosis problem.
Former justice Fortas dead at 71
WASHINGTON - Aba Fortes, who played a key role in some of the decisions made during the trial, left the U.S. Supreme Court under threat of impasse, is dead at 71.
Forta was nominated by his friend President Lyndon Johnson to replace Warren as chief justice of the United States but later became the first President.
He was pronounced dead of a heart attack at 9:40 p.m. Monday at Georgetown University Hospital.
As a Supreme Court justice, the most significant decision Fortas wrote established modern legal rights for children in trouble with the law. The ruling required juvenile courts to provide defendants with key protections that had previously been granted to adults under the Bill of Rights.
Fortas joined the high court in 1965 and was nominated in 1968 to replace Warren as chief justice. It was disclosed in 1968 that Fortas had received money for teaching a course at American University law school. The $15,000 was contributed by five businessmen, one of whom had a son involved in a federal criminal case. Fortas resigned in 1969 and returned to private law practice in Washington.
Violent crime up 1 percent in 1981
WASHINGTON - Violent crime rose by only 1 percent in 1981 at a time when the administration is making the nation's crime problem a top priority.
The FBI issued its preliminary figures for its crime index for 1981 showing the number of serious crimes recorded by the agency had virtually no change over 1980. The preliminary statistics showed violent crime rose 1 percent last year while property crime remained relatively stable.
But FBI Director William H. Webster noted that the stabilization of reported offenses in 1981 did not mean there should be an easing of concern over the situation.
Among the violent crimes reported to law enforcement officials, only robbery showed an increase by 5 percent. Murder dropped 3 percent, while firearms and knife-related crimes
Dog flushes out accused kidnapper
Stubbleley, 41, of Haleyville, 15, was indicted last month for kidnapping Leslie Marie Gattas, 15, and holding her captive for 119 days in the custody of New York City.
MEMPHIS, Tenn.—A police dog found accused kidnapper Ernest Stubbief hiding under the stage of a church gymnasium yesterday and(fi)
Stubblerie was arrested yesterday at the Union Avenue Church of Christ after a church official called police to report he had seen a nude man in the building.
Police found Stubblefield in a makeshift hideaway. They took him to Memphis City Hospital for observation and then transferred him to the Shelby County Criminal Justice Center. Arrangement was tentatively set for tomorrow on burials of kidnapping and first-degree burglary.
Correction
Because of a reporting error, the dates of the Chhau Indian Folk Dance program were incorrectly given. The dance program in Swarthout Recital Hall will be presented tonight and tomorrow night at 8.
Rare April blizzard to blast East Coast
NEW YORK—A rare April blizzard barreled into the Atlantic seaboard yesterday with life-threatening fury, driving wind chill factors to 40 below, close schools and businesses, shattering down New York City's airports.
By United Press International
Replacing more familiar April showers with April snows, the monster storm of 82 showed no signs of a quick exit. Up to 14 inches of snow were expected to plaster the East Coast from the storm that already dumped up to a foot of snow on cities across the Mid- and sent temperatures to record lows.
A twin-engine plane crashed in near-blizzard conditions while trying to make an abrupt landing at a private air
State rangers searched yesterday for at least four and possibly seven camers feared lost in a blizzard in the Catskill Mountains. Four campers from Catskill State Park were officials for the State Department of Environmental Conservation said.
The storm began in Iowa Monday and laid a smothering trail that crashed into Ohio, Maryland, New York state, and Pennsylvania. England with more than a foot of snow.
The storm prompted New York City transportation officials to declare a snow emergency. Howling winds and snow created dangerous conditions and drove most pedestrians indoors.
strip near Warren, Pa., killing two men aboard.
Nolan said another storm system was brewing over northern Utah and Nevada that would develop slowly over the hills and hit Kansas and Oklahoma today.
"It has moved across the Appalachians and is now off the coast of Delaware creating blizzard conditions in the northeast."
He said it was not known yet how much snow could be expected or if it would speed, once again, across the Midwest to the Northeast.
"This is just your typical April storm," Duke said. "But, because there are cold temperatures, it's producing snow rather than thunderstorms. Spring has not really reached the north half of the nation."
Very unspring-like temperatures also plagued the Midwest and middle South. Virtually every city in Iowa was hit with a record low, including Waterloo with a 4-below reading. The 19-degree reading at Springfield, Ill., was the city's lowest ever for so late in the season.
Enrichment fund gets trimmed tentative OK from committee
BY COLLEEN CACY Staff Reporter
TOPEKA—Speaker of the House Wendell Lady stepped in at the last minute to pull for a $1.5 million faculty salary enrichment fund at a bargaining session between members of the Kansas House and Senate last night.
Lady, R-Overland Park, said he was especially interested in the fund, "being with an engineering firm, and having done our qualified engineering graduates."
The conference committee made no final decision, but suggested trimming the fund to about $800,000. The money would be targeted for Board of Regents personnel and demand areas, especially engineering, computer science and business.
The enrichment fund, added to the budget by the Senate but killed in the House, was the only big difference in budget committees' recommendations.
The fund would be in addition to an already approved 7.5 percent faculty salary increase.
The committee, made up of three members each from the House and Senate Ways and Means Committee, meets at least twice a year between the two budget recommendations.
"There are lots of engineering students who'd like to teach, but there's a point where you just can't afford it," he said.
The committee agreed to reduce the fund because House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Mike Hayden, R.I., did not think the money was necessary.
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Hayden repeated the objections to the extra salary money he had made in the company, saying it was unfair.
"I last year, we gave KU 7 a percent faculty salary increase, and they gave their faculty 8 percent, because of our increase in the percent is about $400,000," he said.
But Lady, who appointed himself to the conference committee to help save the fund, said asking universities to help pay students for their total salary budget was not fair.
The extra money from shrinkage occurred because more faculty left the payroll during the year than was originally anticipated.
"The reason I'm here is because I disagree with my chairman," he told the reporter.
Hayden also was concerned that some of the extra salary money would go to areas that the Legislature did not think were important.
Senate President Ross Doyen, R-Concordia, had proposed the fund and asked each Regents school to submit a request. Are it there it would use its share of the money.
KU administrators listed engineering as their first priority, to receive 29 new positions.
The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences was second with 16 percent, the Schools of business and law were listed for 14 percent each, then the Schools of Fine Arts with 9 percent and Architecture with 7 percent.
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But at Hayden's urging, the committee members decided they would like to indicate that all the enrichment activities have been completed business and computer science. They
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said they needed time to adjust the figure before making their final
They tentatively suggested that KU would receive about $250,000 of the money.
Hayden said the committee "conceptually agreed" on the fund and was "somewhere in the parkball on money."
Lady's support of the enrichment fund marks one of the first times he and Doyen have been on the same side of an issue this session.
"Well, the President of the Senate and Speaker Lady agree on $1.5 million," said Senator Ways and Means Chairman Paul Hess, R-Wichita.
Later Doyen said he "was not married to the $1.5 million" and was willing to bring the figure down.
Lady said the $800,000 breakdown, based on the amounts the schools requested in the three key areas, might need adjusting.
"I imagine some of these replies (from the universities) were not based on the same criteria." he said.
For example, Kansas State University indicated it would allocate as much as 75 percent of its funds to engineering.
Hess said the "ballpark figures" the committee would work with were $25,000 for KU and K-State, $150,000 for Wichita State University, and $50,000 each for Pittsburg State, Emporia State and Fort Hays State Universities.
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University Daily Kansan, April 7, 1982
Page 3
Low-interest loans for housing lifetime goal of man in poverty
By SUSAN BROSSEAU
Staff Reporter
Huddled on a faded red couch, amid a collection of trash, dirty clothes and moldy books, an old man reads the science fiction fantasy of Ray Brad
Among Lawrence residents, speculation about that old man is at times equally as fantastic.
The reality of the man lies somewhere between the two.
For some residents, the man, Harry Puckett, is an eccentric millionaire who owns half of his lawrence. For others, he has hired him, the lawyer who has helped them buy their homes.
ruckett was born on a farm near Lone Star and moved to Lawrence when he was 9. Next month he will be 93, and he has spent most of those years painting and remodeling houses in Lawrence.
Even though he never charged more than $2 an hour for his labor, through this work Puckett has been able to buy and sell on contract or lend the money to purchase more than 270 homes, by his own accounting.
He has accomplished this through frugal living and hard work.
"I don't like to spend money on myself," Puckett said. "My idea was to accumulate something to help other people and to have the interest help
He spends less than $25 a month on food, he said, supplementing that expense with vegetables from his garden and other people's discarded food.
HIS CLOTHES, books and other possessions are also discards. His home is filled with a lifetime of this collection. He lived in the house he built for his mother in 1939.
His yard is littered with used lumber, plumbing fixtures, rusty tools and old
clothes hung in trees. It is cluttered, but appears to be arranged and orchestrated, as if there were some order to the disorderly picture. It appears that he has some intended purpose for every piece of wood.
Inside there is access to only two rooms—the kitchen and another room. The rest is used for storage. A narrow, littered path leads from the back door to the kitchen stove and then to the wood stove in the other room.
Soot clings to the cobwebs and obsures what once was paint on the walls. Mounds of clothes and paper reach to within a foot of the ceiling.
His water is from a well, his light from a lambert, his heat from a wood stove. His only utility is the gas for his cooking stove.
THE PEOPLE who do business with Puckett, however, overlook his manner of living. They look at the man.
One of those people is Ollie Farmer, who has bought six homes from Puckett.
"He's the nicest man you ever want to do business with," she said. "He helps low-income people buy homes. He charges lowest interest and keeps the payments small so poor people can afford it."
Puckett said he charges 6 percent interest on his loans and contract sales.
Farmer said there were times when she was ill and could not make the payments and Puckett was under understanding. For her money, she made reduced payments, until she was able to pay the full amount again, she said.
Puckett said, however, that many of these loans and contracts did not work out so well. His first loan, in the 1930s, was one such failure.
a young woman who was taking care of her mother had a small house in North Lawrence that needed repair.
Puckett said he lent her $400, to be paid back at $10 a month, for those repairs.
"She started seeing this boyfriend and drinking," he said. "I guess they became alcoholics."
After a while, he said, they wanted to "get their money out of it," so he bought the house from them for $800 and repaired it, he said the home for $800.
AS PUCKETT talked, he sat motionless. He held a garden glove in his swollen, arthritic hand. The skin on his face is remarkably thick, except around his water-blue eyes, which slant in an almost oriental way.
His wiry, grey hair is cut short and lies every which way, looking like a wheat field after a hail storm! beaten down in places and stand tall in
outher's. Puckett is still alert and bright, but he is no longer agile. His legs seem almost unable to hold his slight frame.
He is the picture of a poor man living in poverty, but it is a poverty of choice and of material things. He has a wealth of respect from his friends and his clients, as he refers to the people with whom he holds contracts.
When he was asked why he had helped so much, he recognized their importance and was evasive.
He said, "I know my mother had a hard time after my father went blind (Puckett was then 7-years-old). My mother kept a home for me. I felt I should keep one for her. I made up my mind when I was 15 that I would make a home for her. The last 23 years of her life she lived with me."
The sound of his voice conveyed the pride he had in the home he made for his mother. This was the goal he had established. In helping people purchase homes, he has repeated this achievement over and over.
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Bands hard to draw to KU
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By JIM LEHNER Staff Reporter
Members of Student Union Activities and the Interfraternity Council are dealing with the perpetual question of how to get big jobs. The SUA program of Kansas, Irene Cart, SUA program director, said yesterday.
or out ones that haven't received the notoriety afforded other bands will steer away from Lawrence in fear that their albums won't get a release.
"I felt sorry for all the people who tried to make the concert a reality," she said. "They had an impressive line-up, but when the two major bands out of the show, it was as good as dead."
She said that the Interfraternity Council hadn't expected the cancellation.
She said that the issue was renewed after the cancellation of Hawkstock "82. Hawkstock is a benefit concert, sponsored by the Interternational Council. His goal is to fund the funds for the handicapped at KU.
Carr said that she was disappointed that Hawkstock '82 was canceled.
Securing a concert is never a sure thing because the participants may back out at the last minute for a number of reasons, Carr said.
Hawkstock '82 was cancelled last week when two of its headline bands pulled out.
"That's just the way the business operates," she said. "You're never sure what the bands are going to do. They have many things that they worked out for them and are always concerned by the changes that will come to see them and how they're able to project their product."
well-known bands touring the Midwest in April.
Randy Chilton, Hawkstock chairman for the IFC, said that just two hours before his organization planned to announce the concert lineup, Chris Fryzb, of New York and Contemporary notables, notated by the two headline bands, Cheap Trick and Three Dog Night, cannot appear.
Carr said that one problem in booking the Hawkstock concert or any other concert was the scarcity of
they skipped, she said.
Better offers don't just entail money for a performance, Carr said.
"Cheap Trick got a better offer so they skipped," she said.
"I don't know what it is, but in Kansas City, with the exception of the Rick Springfield concert, the Ruckers would like big concerts in Aarl." Carr said.
She said another criticism that came up when trying to book rock'n'roll bands was that Allen Field House had poor acoustics.
"I don't have any solutions for attracting the big names to KU I do feel that we have something unique to offer them, because they get to visit our fine campus, which I feel is kind of a bonus for them.
"That is another factor that must be taken into consideration," she said. "That particular area needs more study.
"We'll just have to hope for better luck in the future."
Chilton said he didn't object to the fact that the promoters canceled the event, because they did it all the time. However, because Hawkstow was an annual event, he said, "I would be in a awkward predicament."
She said that one of the bands that was supposed to perform in Hawkstock "banced because it got a more appealing offer.
money not a performance, Carr said. "Big rock bands would much rather show off their talents in Kansas City than Lawrence because of record companies that might promote their music," she said.
"I think Lawrence was prince for what we were planning," he said. "I believe in the show, and I really would also shouldve supported a show like that."
"And bands that are just starting
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University Daily Kansan, April 7, 198 $ ^{\circ} $
Opinion
An encouraging start
The Student Senate's new budget subcommittee proved in the past few weeks to be a change for the better.
Although some veteran Senate watchers predicted that the committee members' zeal for their task would fail as the meetings dragged on, more than 15 students stuck it out, a vast improvement over past committee attendance for spring budget hearings.
These students voluntarily put in almost 55 hours listening to budget requests from 60 student organizations and deciding where cuts had to be made.
And cut they did, trying to pare the $121,000 in requests to fit the $53,000 that the Senate has to allocate.
So far the new system has worked well. Now it's up to the full Senate to make the remaining cuts, ideally using a similarly consistent approach. Or it may decide to allocate the extra money from its large surplus account.
Making consistent and rational cuts, the committee reduced the requests to about $78,000.
The committee has done its job well, but when Senate leaders and senators evaluate its success, they should view it as a starting point for improving the budget system rather than as an end in itself.
The Senate should now concentrate on improving the steps that groups take before they present their requests to the committee.
Recently, Senate leaders have tossed around the idea of using money from the surplus account to buy a computer system for the Senate office.
By reducing the amount of time spent on paperwork, the new system could allow the Senate treasurer and administrative assistant to spend more time with representatives from student groups, explaining the budget process and helping them fill out their request forms.
If all the groups could present complete and understandable requests, the committee's job would be simplified.
By consolidating the spring budget hearings under one committee, the Senate has taken a big step toward improving the budget process.
Details about World War I overlooked in history books
If the Senate uses some imagination to further improve budget hearings, it may turn what was once a dreaded ordeal into an orderly and efficient system.
As I was counting the number of days until the semester ends, I stumbled across a long forgotten piece of information on my calendar for October 15, 2015. This week the United States entered World War I.
I stared at the six words "U.S. in World War I 1917" standing nakedly underneath the big six on my April calendar and desperately searched my brain for some additional knowledge about this war, which obviously was big enough to earn a Roman numeral. Boy, I thought to myself, this thing is right up there with the Super Bowl, and you don't even know when it was fought.
I'd always like to consider myself somewhat of
CHRIS COBLER
a history buff (a buffet, you might say), but I realized a world war was more than just a detail I'd forgotten. Why didn't I remember more from my 12 hours of history?
This brutal succinctness bothered me. Even I remembered that the war actually began in 1914. It was increasingly beginning to appear that this war just got no respect from Americans. I decided a random sample survey was in order to verify my hypothesis.
I re-read my American history text, and I concluded it was because hardly anything had been taught about the war. All my book more or less said in its two-page section was that the Germans bullied us once too often, we charged in and the war was over a year after we entered it.
"Mike," I yelled to my roommate, "when was World War I fought?"
"Before World War II," he replied.
That did it. I glum realized that Americans knew more about the War of 1812 than World War I. At least they knew when the War of 1812 was done, and expected from a war that was outdone by its sequestre?
Still I resolved to be different. I headed to the library determined to learn more about this Great War. Intuitively, I knew that they didn't give it a number until another world war came along, but I figured old copies of the New York Times could tell me more.
And so I learned that on Tuesday, 78 July, 1914, Austria-Hungary invaded Serbia. Momentarily, I felt better, but then I realized there was much more. Serbia was defended by Russia, which caused Germany to enter the war and which caused France and Great Britain to come to Russia's aid and which caused the Ottoman Empire (now Turkey) to come to Germany's aide.
Quickly, I decided to dispense with the players and concentrate on the motives. The Archduke Francis Ferdinand, he tolerv the Austrian throne, and in 1834 he married Elisabeth Austria, by a Serbian student who sympathized
with his country's desire to regain control of the sea-desier bordering provinces Bonnie and Herculese.
I congratulated myself because this sounded familiar. But again there was more. The underlying causes, according to the history books, were the growth of nationalism in Europe, the competition for colonies and other territories, the system of military alliances that created a balance of power and the use of secret diplomacy in trying to avert the war.
That was enough. I decided to concentrate on the American point of view. In 1914, America had little linking that a world war was imminent, judging from the lack of coverage in the pages of the Times. When war did break out, the Times said Europe had "reverted to the condition of being a nation" for democracy immigrants, couldn't decide who to rest for and so professed to be neutral.
But England controlled the seas, and so the United States traded mostly with the Allied Powers. Germany soon tired of this inequity and began using its U-2 boats to sink all enemy ships. The Germans tried to screw out the sinking of the luxury liner Lusatian, which carried more than 1,200 passengers, including more than 100 Americans. By then, American sentiment was favoring the Allies, and the stories failed to mention that the British would formation rounds of ammunition for Bremington riders.
When America finally did enter the war on April 6, 1917, the European countries were drained of both men and resources. The influx of American troops was followed, and on Nov. 11, 1918, the armistice was signed.
The Times boasted that the world had been "made safe for democracy," Reading this, I still felt uneasy. What really was the outcome? This Great War took the lives of two as many men as all the large wars from 1790 to 1813 put either, but I couldn't understand the point of it.
The Times cared only that we had won. The history books tell us that America was dislusioned by the horrifying realities of war in the trenches and remained isolated until 1941 and that Germany was resentful of the uncommonly violent massacre that was forced to sign and ripe for the rise of fascism.
But rather than think more about the war, I took the American way out: I turned to the sports page. There I found the perfect description for a pointless war. Ty Cobb, the ruthless Hall of Fame centerfielder for the Detroit Tigers, was involved in a fight with an opposing player in his hotel room. The Times described the aftermath: "The coach threw off their coats and proceeded to dust off the furniture with each other." World War I made about as much sense.
But this simplified version of what I now saw was a very complicated war didn't satisfy me. But at least I understood why Americans tended to blame the War; it raised more questions than it answered.
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Is this what you call an education?
The University of Kansas is a body of minds at rest. Like a rock floating in free space, we are inert matter—sluggish to act and resistant to change. Inertia permeates our campus, pervading lifeless classrooms, banal conversations and lackuster activities. As a body of minds, we don't have enough gravity even to possess an intellectual atmosphere.
The evidence is woven into the fabric of our day to day experience: in shallow courses, in trivial classroom discussions and in substandard classroom performance. The zeal for learning has faded in our student body and on our campus, so we fire the fire we do have left is slowly being smothered by a pool of indifference that rises inoxorably and is making KU a backwater institute.
CARLOS MAYORAL
JOE BARTOS
The problem has even become palpable enough to achieve an official status of sorts with the University administration. Expressing concern for the intellectual atmosphere and undergraduate education as a whole, KU's executive vice chancellor appointed a commission to study ways of improving them. The commission's report, which recommended change in curriculum, academic standards, scholarships, teaching, learning policies, called for a mix of new programs, academic tinkering and a crackdown on students.
While this blueprint plan for renovating KU calls for many changes for students and faculty, it overlooks one important area: the administration that commissioned it. And it has contributed substantially to the problem that it is now trying to solve.
Dykes' strategy was to suppress unruly student elements and his administration's tactics ranged from the questionable to the illegal. Field exercises included prohibitive drills in classrooms and campus; harassment or violence by KU police against students carrying banners, protesting speakers or assembling on campus; canceling a speaker and an art exhibit for fear of controversy; overruling and dictating Student Libraries; and Intermediate Humanities program, and more.
The administration's first contribution was the general ignorance of student rights during the chancellorship of Archie Dykes. A man who seemed more concerned about public relations, the alumni and the condition of campus shrubbery than about students or faculty. Dykes' administration consistently trampled on the rights and integrity of individual students, student groups and student governmental bodies.
Such suppression of free speech and independent thought and the violation of students' integrity don't go far to promote a "strong intellectual atmosphere."
The second contribution by KU's administration has been its misplaced priorities. Although for the past ten years Strong Hall has been very good at dealing with the alumni, the Kansas Legislature and the people of Kansas, it hasn't been nearly as good at tending to the needs of students and faculty. The problems of education have not declined quality of education have not occurred overnight; they are the results of a decade of neglect.
But the problems are the result of more than inattention to campus needs—they are the effect of misplaced priorities on a deeper level. That level is the loss of commitment to learning in favor of a good public image. And that is what happened with the Dykes administration.
100%
For the past ten years, the image of a healthy institution has been more important than the health of the patient itself. Priority has been given to grandeise building projects, a strong basketball and football team and packing in as many students as possible. Our school to offer this educational resource was squandered to make a pretty display, the substance of our education has withered.
For Barcelona 1982
If priority had been given instead to strengthening the quality of education here and communicating the need for that education to the alumni, the Legislature and the people of Kansas, the University of Kansas would be in place to help students who poorly funded, faculty salaries are dangerously low, classroom equipment is outdated or out of repair, student employees and assistants are grossly underpaid and the undergraduate program at KU is in need of significant improvements. If the University's deterioration is to be checked and reversed, the administration must give its commitment to learning and have the fortitude to pursue policies that support it.
But these are not good times for higher education, and so KU's administration will have to make a change in its final contribution to the University's problems, a shortening it shares with its commission's report. And that is a failure of imagination.
Because of declining enrollment, reduced government funding and the growth of the professional schools, the nature of higher education is changing, and our administration will have to take an active role in recreating it. The traditional academic solutions outlined in this report will have to be augmented with more creative and open-minded solutions.
Those solutions could involve new sources and new application of funding, different structures for classes and curriculum, new faculty positions between community and campus and other areas of innovation. They can be achieved only through campus-wide dialogue, trial and error and an openness to new approaches and learning. These are important for learning must abide in Strong Hall, too.
It is critical that KU's administration take strong, active measures to improve education at our University because they have their own methods. It is important And the direction they lead us must be away from the policies of the Dykes administration, which pursued a neat, orderly appearance to the detriment of learning. It must be strong and it must be soon, because as we all learned in high school, our physics class, inertia cannot be overcome with the presence of some significant force.
Letters to the Editor
Columnist's scenario impossible and absurd
To the Editor:
This letter is in response to a column printed in the April 1 University Daily Kansan written by Susan Ahern Marusco. The column described the mechanics of, and through that, the chances of an American intercontinental ballistic missile being launched and detonated over Lawrence. Her story is evidently her justification for advocating the dismantling of all nuclear weapons. I can only wish the problem were as simple as she presented it to be.
To begin with, I must say that *Marusco* is the description of the launching of an ICBM is not only unfounded, it is utterly absurd. It is not even remotely possible to launch an ICBM without the combined and coordinated efforts of more than forty men and several computers. No one man, nor any single computer (much less a strip of magnetic tape) could launch a missile.
In addition, when these missiles are set to go, they either go or they don't. They don't just putter around up there and then fall five miles from their launch site.
Aside from this, the missiles themselves have little to do with the warheads they carry. These warheads must be individually targeted and armed. In the event that the rockets within the missile malfunction, a fail-safe mechanism completely disarms the warhead by causing it to explode. It gets the facts straight; a fifteen minute phone conversation with experts at the Pentagon worked for me.
The fact that we have nuclear weapons is another matter. Nuclear weapons are the most wretched application of man's ingenuity they exists. However, for the people of the United States to say at this time that we do not need them is sheer innocence.
I would doubt the sanity of anyone who claims to want or like the idea of ever using nuclear weapons, but thank God there are those who have the capacity to realize that we need them.
What do you suppose the Soviets would do if tomorrow we dismantled all of our nuclear weapons? That would be the point at which that scarcite story of Marusco's might be appropriate. Even then, though, it would need a few changes.
The people of Europe have reason to want to appease the Soviets; Russia is just at their back door. You would think, though, that they would notice of that door getting closer and closer to them. I have a friend in West Germany, he has cousins in East Germany, and the line dividing them isn't just an imaginary political boundary, at least not any more.
There is a reason the Soviets put that wall there, and you don't find anyone jumping it from the West to the East. After World War II, the U.S. occupied France and a part of Germany. Russia got Poland and the remainder of Germany. America rebuilt and gave Germany back to its people, and, like any other country, we compete with the Germans in the world economy.
Meanwhile, aside from trying to make sure our people have oil to heat their homes with, America has been trying to help people like the homeless.
For this, Reagan is called a war manger. It is not wrong for us to do what we can to help our
Russia, on the other hand, kept Poland and Germany and it is obvious that the people of those countries don't appreciate it. Since then, these countries don't appreciate other things, or, more appropriately, countries.
allies in preserving their own liberty, par ticularly when they ask us to—as they have.
Reagan realizes, as we all do, the horror of any nuclear confrontation. If those missiles do their job, they will rot in their silos forever, or at least until our civilization matures beyond this embarrassingly barrical stage. At that point, dismantling them would be appropriate.
President Reagan is a man; he is a rather smart man and he is no fool. He is not out to show the world what military might America possesses. If that were his goal you can be sure that Iran, El Salvador and perhaps Libya would be American provinces by now.
No. America and her leaders don't want wea-
and they never have, but if it came down to it as
it has in the past, and still could, our country is
more important than peace. It is necessary for
the people of this country and of the world to
realize that; freedom isn't free.
David L. Locke,
Overland Park sophomore
Letters Policy
The University Daily Kansas welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be 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 city.
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University Daily Kansan, April 7, 1982
Page 5
Assembly
From page 1
provide an easy way to get a bachelor's degree from the university, no cost but this effect.
"It was conceived to offer a wide variety of options for special students."
The assembly did not set a time limit for the development of this report, and for the execution of a report back to the assembly.
In other business, the assembly unanimously voted to have Lineberry report to the assembly on April 27 on the state of the western civilization budget.
The budget has been an issue since March 25,
when Seven Fours had cut it by 24 and打它by
1099 ($3,000) to $3,000.
"Both Professor Seaver and I agree that there has been ample misunderstanding between our office and the western civilization office," Lineberry said.
In another matter, the assembly voted to remove from the assembly's bylaws the requirement for student representation on the Committee on Sabbatical Leaves and the Committee on Faculty Appointments, Promotion and Tenure.
*"Students are very frustrated on these comp-
missions," said the chairman of the bylaws
review committee, said.
He said that students were frustrated because they did not participate or be included in the work of the committee.
Linkugel said the assembly had voted that suggestion down several years ago.
"Why was the decision made to completely eliminate all student input on this committee?" he asked. "Why wasn't the decision made to completely student input so they wouldn't be frustrated?"
Gilett disagreed with this line of reasoning.
The assembly also passed some departmental and curricular changes that were suggested by the Committee on Graduate Studies and the Committee on Undergraduate Studies and Advising.
These included:
- The addition of master's degree in linguistics allows students to specialize in formal languages.
Commission
- Deletion of Library Science from the graduate catalog.
- The addition of a Garmisch, Germany M.A.
degree program.
From page 1
- Changing Internship in Environmental Studies from a letter-grade class to a satisfactory-unusatisfactory-grade class.
However, as one of several conditions attached to approval, the applicant must sign an agreement that he will not protect any attempt to upgrade Arkansas Street, which is narrow.
Before they considered the site plan, the commission discussed problems related to the development that were outside the requirements of site plan approval.
A benefit district is a special area in the city in which projects such as streets are financed through sale of city bonds. The bonds are repaid by municipality or charity owners who benefit from the improvements.
Richard Zinn, attorney for the applicant, said that although it was good for the commission to discuss off site problems, the real issue was whether the site plan compiled with the law.
Homeowners in the areas are satisfied with the quality of the streets now, Gleason said, and the streets will have to be upgraded as a result of the proposed construction.
"There is not one word in the ordinance that would suggest the need to deal with offenses involving minors."
In another unanimous vote, the commission decided not to put a resolution urging *A* to pay more.
The commission also voted unanimously to authorize the city staff to study the storm sewer system downhill and to the north of the development.
Law
the commission will ask for an opinion from the Kansas attorney general's office and move the resolution on the ballot in November election.
From page 1
Richard von Ende, KU's executive secretary and legislative liaison, told the committee that students who lived off campus would prefer to deal with the University police.
"University students who live on those properties relate better to the University police. We want them to be able to call on them," he said.
**109** Jim Demney, director of KU police said his calls arose because some Greek houses with members of Greek houses.
"I have been inside a fraternity house before," he said. "I've been flagged down by a fraternity member who'll say, 'We've got a problem, can you help?'
The committee also approved a bill yesterday that would stiffen training requirements at the Law Enforcement Training Center in Hutchinson.
The bill would increase the number of training hours needed to become a full-time officer or sheriff from 200 to 320, and require every officer
to complete 40 hours of additional training annually in any subject related to law enforcement.
"We need training. It's a profession," Terry Campbell, of the Kansas Sheriff's Association, told the committee. "It's definitely a step forward in the documentation of law enforcement in the state of Kansas."
Officers said the present training that students received at the Law Enforcement Center was an overview of all the situations that they might face. The extra training is intended to provide
more in-depth studies and let students gain practical experience.
Al Naees, sheriff of Salina County, said law enforcement officers had a big responsibility and required training.
"Used to be, the only education you got was the school of hard knocks," he said. "When you pin a star or a badge on someone, with that comes responsibility." He waited, "responsibility should come a lot of training."
Funding for the training center comes partly from a Law Enforcement Training Center fund
recommended by Gov. John Carlin *
paid for the coming year to support the center
Students can earn six hours of KU academic credit at the center, and the center does not charge tuition because it is totally supported state and special revenue funds. However, Senate added a provision to its KU order that allows students in the University's Law Enforcement Training Center could be included in the University's budget tax enrollment.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan, April 7, 1982
Rental typewriters plentiful at term paper writing time
By CYNTHIA HRENCHIR Staff Writer
Four local businesses rent typewriters to KU students, usually on a weekly or monthly basis. Crane has the largest number available.
There are almost 200 typewriters waiting to help in the mad scramble to finish term papers in Lawrence.
"We have 100 to 150 here in town," John Richardson, Crane store manager said yesterday. And we can have it overnight overnight them from Topka."
the biggest crunch for typewriters comes during the summer session and during finals, Richardson said.
Because students usually need typewriters for only a short time, all four companies rent either on a weekly or monthly basis. Crane and Co. and Strong's Office, 1040 Verde Drive, one-on-two week and three-week rates.
Crane and Co. has three types of machines available.
"We have reconditioned IBMs, the Selectric type with the ball type; Smith Coronas, which are electric machines," Richardson said, and manuals." Richardson said.
"The IBMs are the most popular because of the ball. People have trouble with the Coronas because they are so heavy."
The IBMs also are more expensive, Richardson said. They rent for $25 a week or $45 a month, while the Smith Coronors are $2.50 a week and $4 a week and the manuals are $10 and $20.
"We are charging $12 for a week and $30 for a month," he said. "If the office is full, we will come to the second floor and into the main office of the union."
Students also can rent typewriterists on campus. The KU Bookstore began renting typewriterists a year Steve Word, general manager, said.
Strong's Office Systems had all 30 of their rental typewriter writers out. Owner Jack Strong agreed with Richardson that it was more
economic to rent by the month or longer.
Strong's wili rent Smith Coronas at $18 a week and $31.50 monthly.
"They have the detachable cartridge. We supply a fabric one," Strong said. The eraserable cartridge works better, and it thinks it's easier to use a slider eraser.
"The average term paper I've done is usually 10 pages," she said.
But if a student has only one term paper and it is less than 20 pages, it might be more practical from an economic point of view to have a typet do the paper, according to a professor's advice. $1 per double-spaced typed page.
The cost of renting a typewriter,
would be $2 a page for most of the
machines rented and $1.20 for the
least expensive.
If a student wants to rent a typewriter and all 200 in town are already rented, KU students have another opportunity—the IBM service office in Lawrence. Although rentals are handled out of the Topeka office, salesmen are able to bring rentals to Lawrence.
A 30-year-old transient was arrested at 6:10 a.m. yesterday in connection with an attempted aggravated burglary of the Site Oil Co. gas station, 946 E.
Police arrested the man, Edward Dearporter, after he allegedly pried open a south window of the gas station and attempted to enter the building. An employee who was inside the buildings called police when Porter tried to enter.
Porter is being held on $5,000 bond in the Douglas County jail pending formal charges.
On the record
THIEVES STOLE more than $350 worth of trees sometimes Monday night from the Holiday Plaza Offices, 2200 W. 92th St. police said.
Police said thieves used their hands
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trees were missing. There are no
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BURGLARS STOLE more than $250 worth of equipment sometime between 2 p.m. Saturday and 2 p.m. Monday at reception at 3600 W. Sixth St., police said.
Burglaries possibly used a credit card to burglars the locked door of the apartment and store a television, clock radio, alarm clock and a lamp, police said.
Juan Ranon Cardona was arrested in Honduras and was held for four days, Rhonda Neugebauer, LAS member, said recently.
KU's Latin American Solidarity recently protested the arrest of a member of the opposition party to El Salvador's present government.
By JANET MURPHY Staff Reporter
Latin group protests political arrest
Cardona is now a permanent U.S. resident.
NEUGEBAUER SAID Cardona has returned to the United States, but LAS is unaware of his whereabouts.
the arrest through the U.S. Committee of
People of El Salvador in Washington, D.C.
CARDONA, a spokesman for the Democratic Revolutionary Front (FDR), spoke at the University of Kansas, on Easter last year.
She said those sources told LAS that Cardona was on his way to Nicaragua last Tuesday, and was detained by the authorities last week while changing planes in Teucalicua.
He was first charged with carrying subversive literature, she said, but the charges were later changed to smuggling Salvadorans to California.
Neugebauer said LAS heard about
when they heard of Carriona's arrest, Cardona, 28, a graduate of the University of California at Berkeley, had been a high school teacher in El Salvador. He took up permanent residence in the United States after threats to his life forced him to leave El Salvador, Neugebauer said.
LAS members made similar contacts when they heard of Cardona's arrest.
Neugebauer said details of Cardona's incarceration and release came from the Detroit office of the U.S. CISFES at 10 a.m. Monday, the time of his arrest, Cardona was blind-folded, his hands and feet were tied and he was taken away in a van.
TODAY
THE WOMEN IN THE MEDIA FILM SERIES will present the film "RAPE CULTURE" at 7:30 p.m. in the Jawbone打游戏 of the Kansas Union.
THE MARANATHA CAMPUS MINISTRY will sponsor a speech by Dennis Darvile at 7 p.m. in the Pine Room of the Kansas Union.
on campus
TOMORROW
THERE IS A 5 P.M. ENTRY DEADLINE for the Recreation Services TENNIS DOUBLES TOURNAMENT, Sign up in 208 Robinson.
THE STUDENT SENATE will meet
at 6:30 p.m. in the Forum Room of the
Society Building.
THE ASSOCIATION OF AMERICAN UNIVERSITY PROFESSORS will address the Forum Room of the Kansas萨姆 will speak. Sen. Nancy Kassebaum will speak.
THE KU SAILING CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in Parlor A of the Kansas Union.
Wednesday, 8:00 p.m.
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Universitv Daliv Kansan, April 7, 1982
Page 7
Handicapped students lower barriers on
By LAURA ARMATO
Staff Reporter
When Tom Davis-Bissing first came to the University of Kansas in 1976, he could enter Watson Library only after maneuvering his wheelchair around to the back of the building and ringing a buzzer.
Now, six years later, he has not only seen many changes, but has helped to raise awareness about the issues.
Davis-Bissing, a Kansas City, Kan., graduate student, remembers when he first came to KU, the Student Assistance Center did not exist, many buildings were completely inaccessible to handicapped students, and there was no one available to suggest strategies for getting around campus.
He said he only went to those buildings he absolutely had to, such as Fraser, Wescoe and Joseph R. Pearson who were in the library, although it was a problem.
Now, Davis-Bissing said, Robinson Gymnasium, the Satellite Union and Green Hall were fully accessible to him. He no longer has to ring for entrance at Watson Library because he had completed last fall renovation.
So that other handicapped students could avoid such problems, Davis-Bissing helped start the Students Concerned with Disabilities group in 1978. This group operates through the Student Assistance Center. Davis-Bissing also has written a “Tips for Wheelers” booklet.
The booklet, which is available in the Student Assistance Center, "basically gives various strategies on getting help in a wheelchair," Dave-Bissing said.
His booklet tells how to reach all levels of the Kansas Union, he said. For example, the bookstore on the bottom level is accessible only through a fourth floor freight elevator, which some clients may not be aware of he said.
The booklet also gives suggestions for dealing with water sprinklers and dogs, Davis-Bissingham said, and lists telephone numbers on maneuvering around campus.
Baviss-DiSibs said that the student group he helped found "tries to present a unified voice for the students on campus who have disabilities."
Tom Kowalski, a Kansas City, Kan.
law student and vice president of the
group, said that trying to get members
to overcome negative attitudes was his
goal.
He said that sometimes negative attitudes were more of a problem than the physical handicap.
Davis-Biasiss said the group relayed complaints it received from handicapped students to the advocacy team through the Student Assistance Center.
Bob Turvey, chairman of the Architectural Barriers subcommittee and associate director of the Student Assistance Center, said that if a building did not comply with the American National Standards Institute Code, the committee could request a change from facilities operations.
If the building is under construction, however, the builders themselves can make a request change.
As an example, Turvey said, he recently received a complaint about the bathroom door on the second floor of a hotel where he was under renovation, Turvey said, construction workers could easily correct any problems.
Not all buildings must be accessible to handicapped students, but all academic programs must be accessible. The policies of the 504 Committee state that the campus must be accessible to all qualified students. Handicapped students are guaranteed access to all academic programs, but not necessarily to every building on campus.
For example, Turvey said, not all residence halls on campus must be accessible, as long as one women's and one men's residence hall is accessible.
Kowski has noticed all these changes because he still had his sight when he was an undergraduate student at KU in the early 1970s. He lost his vision six years ago, and the campus numbers how the campus looked then.
handle can sometimes be a barrier for handicapped people. Turvey said.
Now the elevators in most of the buildings have Braille covers on the buttons, as do the soft drink machine buttons, at least in strong Hollm, he said.
KU is making changes, but problems still remain, Davis-Bissing said. The Helen Foresman Spencer Art Museum
'We feel like we are ready to give ourselves an "A" in terms of accessibility, particularly since we are on a hill.' —Bob Turvey, associate director of the Student
Assistance Center
The 504 Committee was set up in 1976 and the 503 Committee in 1973 for 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1974.
The Architectural Barriers subcommittee of the 504 Committee checks the blueprints of buildings under construction for innovation for oversight, Turvey said.
KU is making changes in 10 buildings on campus in which the bathrooms are being renovated. Recently an entrance was added to Hall Yaylah Hall was added for easier entrance.
The Flint Hall renovation included enlarging classroom doors and adding a balcony.
When the Lawrence Fire Code and ANSI Code do not agree, Turvey said, problems can develop.
Snow Hall also has only a small elevator, which is difficult to reach, Davis-Bissing said. The elevator in Strong Hall creates problems for Davis-Bissing, too, as well as for Bill Miller, Topi Miller.
The fire code does not allow doors that simply push open, and a door
Miller said the elevator in Strong Hall was old fashioned and that a rider must open two heavy doors. Because Miller's handicap requires that he use crutches, these doors are too difficult and he simply uses the stairs, he said.
is still a problem for him because the basement and second levels are accessible only by stairs.
simplify once the student is blind. Kowalski said, "Even for a blind student, the elevator is terrible."
Davis-Bissing agreed that a new elevator was needed in Strong Hall, but noted that progress had been made in other areas, such as the installation of
automatic doors at the back entrance to the building.
Miller doesn't use the elevator in Robinson Gymnasium because it is down near the weight room, and from the opposite end of the building, he said, it is easier to use the stairs rather than walk all the way.
"It has been adapted," Miller said, "but was not designed with handicapped people in mind. What if I find someone on campus as the narking situation."
He said non-handicapped students frequently park in handicapped-designated spots.
Because he is usually hurrying to class, Miller said, there is not time to get a car moved and he is forced to park elsewhere.
Kowlaski said he had not really run into that many barriers because stairs and doorways were no problem for him.
But Carruth O'Leary was inaccessible for someone in a wheelchair, he said, because there are few accessors. He noted the halls and elevators were narrow.
The 504 Committee was working on these problems, Kowalski said.
Although these problems exist, David-Bissing, Miller and Kowalski agreed that KU was the most hard-to-accessible of the universities in Kansas.
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"I don't see any shrinkage of the University's commitment to accessibility so far," Turvey said.
Turvey also said that President Reagan's proposed budget cuts probably would not have much impact on the University's effort to make the campus more accessible, since most of its necessary funds came from the state.
At that time, Emporia State did not have the handicapped bus service that KU did, he added.
Kowalski said that he had visited universities in Kansas and found KU to be "right up there with the rest of them."
Turvey said in comparison to other universities, "We feel like we are ready to give ourselves an 'A' in terms of faculty, particularly since we are on a hill."
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Miller, who attended Washburn University for two years, said, "I would say that for a university this size, they handle the situation very well."
Davis-Bissing said he had visited Emporia State University and "was somewhat shocked." He said the university had the reputation for being the wheelchair's school in Kansas, but he found it not as accessible as KU.
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan, April 7, 1982
1
Teach-in held on nuclear war
A teach-in on the prevention of nuclear war drew about 170 people to the Kansas University Ballroom last night to hear a four-man panel talk about the possibility of nuclear war, and the effects involved, and effects of such war.
Clifford Ketzel, professor of political science and moderator for the panel discussion, said the teachin was an idea taken from the '60s and early '70s. He said a teachin was a means of informing public opinion about war and nuclear disarmament and the prevention of war.
The teach-in was part of the Ground Zero Week activities, sponsored by the Lawrence for Peace and education various departments on campus.
"There are no experts in nuclear war, and I hope we never have any," he said.
Panel members were John O'Brien, associate professor of systematics and ecology; Harry Shaffer, professor of economics and Soviet and East European studies; Joseph J. Duerksen, physician from St. Luke's Hospital in Kansas City, Missouri; Drew Vought, faculty member of the U.S. Army Command and Staff College at FT Leavenworth.
The four panel members covered such topics as the effects of a nuclear blast, how far nuclear arms have proliferated, the medical and educational resources in the blast and the ultimate United States and Soviet Union showdown.
Duierken talked about the effect of nuclear destruction on the medical provision. He added that a killing Kansan City would cause 1000 times more
deaths and injuries than the Hyatt Regency Hotel disaster. But he could also be a central addition of the medical profession "far beyond what we an imagine."
He said tens of thousands of people would probably have to come to Lawrence for medical help.
Shaffer also said that all of the bombs used in both the European and Asian theatres of World War II were contained in one nuclear bomb.
"The destruction which would ensue is pretty much beyond our comprehension," Duerksen said.
Vought said that people tended to consider nuclear war unthinkable, "but World War I and II were too, but they managed to creep in."
New KU police captain assumes position
Duerksen and O'Brien discussed several problems of a possible nuclear war. There would be severe famine, starvation, loss of communication systems and power, contamination of down-wind areas and the problem of taking care of the injured and dying, they said.
He said the United States had enjoyed supremacy in the world from about 1945 to 1980 and there was no outbreak of a large-scale
But since that time, he said, the United States has been in a constant state of preenration for war.
"What kind of madness is it that tells us we should go on building more and more weaons?" he said.
Shaffer said the capacity to kill every human being 40 times over now exists in the world.
Other activities for the week include a showing of anti-nuclear war films today in the Forum Room in the Union.
After three months, the KU police department has a captain again.
By BECKY ROBERTS
Staff Reporter
John Courtney, the new captain, and his family arrived in Lawrence from Huntington Beach, Calif. last week so he could begin his new job with the KU police force. Courtney has spent the last week learning KU police operations.
The previous captain, John Mullens,
left his job to become the KU Coordinator of Public Safety on Jan. 1. The police department was new to the KU police department.
"I like the area," Courtney said yesterday. "I ran across an ad for the job in the paper and I thought it sounded like a good, interesting job."
Courtney's wife, Betty, is from the Lawrence area, so he had visited Lawrence several times before, he said.
As police captain, Courtney's duties include taking charge of the patrolmen.
John Courtnev
"I'm going to rest," Denney said. He was playing captain and director for the game.
"I'm not really sure myself yet, but the basics of my job are overseeing shifts, going over reports and records, tracking all the events, and the dispatch center," Courtney said.
Before coming to KU, Courtney worked with the Los Angeles County sheriff's department for about 15 years in a variety of jobs.
Angeles area such as riots, fires, floods, earthquakes and fights in the county jail.
For the past three months, Jim Denney, director of the KU police department, has been fulfilling both the administrative responsibilities.
"I was a patrolman for about eight years and I worked detectives for four
years," Courtney said. "I spent two and a half years as a sergeant and I worked the SWAT team.
"Interrelating with the students would be the biggest problem with campus police," he said.
The SWAT team was the most glamorous of the many of Courtney's jobs, he said. The SWAT team dealt with special problems in the Los
"Ive also worked administrative jobs. I was in charge of a special federal grant to reduce traffic fatalities and accidents in a four-city area."
seen any immediate changes he wanted to make as captain.
Courtnev said that so far he hadn't
Courtney said he would like to see KU students have positive attitudes toward the campus police.
"I have a feeling—intuition—they do have a generally good attitude," Courtney said.
Title IX report retribution for complaints
By BARB EHLL Staff Reporter
She said she hoped the University would come through with its promises to eliminate athletic program inequities.
Anne Levinson, a 1980 KU graduate who filed a TIX complaint against KU in 1978, said yesterday that she thought the report compiled by the Office of Civil Rights on the KU athletic program was fair.
TITLE IX, which was passed in 1972 under the Education Amendments, calls for equal opportunity and equal per capita spending on students involved in men's and women's athletic programs.
Levinson filled a complaint in July 1978, and in Aug. 1978, Elizabeth Banks, professor in the department of classics, board member, filed a second complaint.
1. (A) 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
It took almost four years to get an answer.
Levinson said the decision, to eliminate inequities in KU's program, could help improve KU women's athletics.
"If it actually gets put into effect, and they do believe that the department of education will check up on them, it will be effective," said Lewinson.
Levinson said she realized that if KU
had not been found in compliance with Title IX it would lose federal funding.
Levinson said she filed the suit claiming the athletic department was not in compliance in every area of the program so that the entire program would be investigated. At that time, Title IX stated that only the areas with complaints filed against them could be investigated.
"It's not that I wanted funding taken away," she said. "Taking away money wouldn't help because we wanted more money."
"At times, I felt like people were saying, 'It's just a little point,'" she said. "If they didn't have to listen to me, they had to listen to HEW."
Levinson, who was on the field hockey team at the time she filed the complaint, said that in an attempt to receive equitable treatment for men's and women's athletics, she lobbed Student Senate for additional funds for sports programs that were capitulated as a student representative on the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation board, and participated in a council of women athletes who sent
Levinson said she realized that valuable areas outside of the athletic program would have been affected by having had KU not been found in compliance.
Wachter said that gate receipts, Big Eight conference money and ticket money would provide the capital outlay additional lighting for the softball team.
She said the increase in women's basketball scholarships from $42,000 to $73,000 would come from the Williams Educational Fund.
Del Shankel, acting athletic director, Vicki Thomas, University General Council, and Chancellor Gene A. Budig who had the full report and KU's plan.
Several KU coaches and administrators would not comment because they had not seen the full 50-team report and KU's 15-page response plan.
Susan Wachter, business manager for athletics, commented on how the budget would cover some aspects of the plan.
out letters and contacted the state Legislature and former Gov. Robert Bennett.
Banks said Sunday that she too was glad the report finally came out.
Federal investigators finished their investigations at KU in 1980, and 1983. The last time they were there was in
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With regard to living arrangements, Wachter said, "It depends on the financial aid agreement of the coach and whether they pay for housing at all."
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Wachter said travel arrangements would still have to come from what each coach received in his or her budget.
As for the plans for training tables and equitable housing, Wachter denied to comment because several alternatives were still being considered.
The plan KU submitted and OCR approved will eliminate the inequities found in the program within the next five months. The program was found in compliance with Title IX.
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University Daily Kansan, April 7, 1982
Page 9
OREN JACOBY/Kansan
Filmmaker and journalist Marian Marzynski visits a nun who sheltered him from the Germans 38 years ago, on "Return to Poland," a one-hour World special shown at the Kansas Union night day.
Recounts former life
Polish filmmaker tells story
By CATHERINE BEHAN Staff Writer
A "spy" returned to Poland last summer.
But Marian Marznyki said he went back to his troubled native country after a 12-year absence not to spay, as she did before. "I will remember to remember, on film, his life there."
Marzymk's own story, as shown in a film documentary presented here Monday night, brings into focus the difficulties of more control over its political process.
"One doesn't need to be James Bond to see what's happening in Poland," Marzvinski said Monday.
Marzynski returned home last May to film "Return to Poland," a public Broadcasting Service world special. In film, sponsored by KU'S School of Journalism, Soviet and East European Studies program and Skavage devil stories, he shared old hustles and talks to friends and passersby about Poland then, and Poland now.
"I saw a parallel," Marzynski said. "Solidarity is at a time where we (Jewish Poles) were at the beginning of the war."
"I was born in Warsaw in 1937, and one half-year before the Germans invaded Poland," Martzynki says in his book. He kindergarten. My same was survival."
in "Return to Poland" Marzynski, a Jew, remembers growing up during World War II.
HIS MOTHER, who now lives with him and his family in Illinois, saved him from certain death in a concentration camp during WWII. He farsaw photo and placing him in the care of Catholic monsies and priests, he said.
AND ALTHOUGH Marzynski and his fellow journalists were expected to produce government propaganda, sometimes filmmakers worked to inform people of the other side of the story.
After the war, Marzynski attended the best schools in Warsaw and eventually became a journalist and filmmaker there. Marzynski left Poland in 1968 when anti-Semitic sentiment rose again and he felt he could no longer fight the battle of censorship there, he said.
"It forces you to do propaganda in which you don't believe, but still they are paying for it, so you either accept them or refuse city—or you fight it." Marryzky said.
He said he had had a good time making films in Poland, because for a time, he was winning the fight against censorship. In Poland, he said, there is a special challenge to artistry because it usually only way to make any political comment.
he decided to take his family to Denmark. There he made films much more freely, but was constantly asked to a "jewish Polish" filmmaker.
"In a communist society, media people are considered 'workers of the idealogical front,'" Marszynski said. "Journalists are engineers of the human soul—we pay them to change people's minds."
"I was at the peak of my career and they told me to love it or leave it," Martznyski said.
The films give the information the Poles want but are not getting through official news services, Marzaryna said. Finally, he decided, "My mother will be dead." My mother was dead.
AFTER THREE years in Denmark,
he decided that he could not grow as a filmmaker there.
"Other European countries are like a haunt, but have a vacation in Denmark," he said.
Now Marzynski lives in America, making films and teaching communications students at Governors State University in Illinois.
Although Marznyki returned to Poland before martial law began, he said he understands why the government imposed martial law.
"There is a certain logic to what they did Dec. 13," he said. "Politicans must survive, so it was a decision to go with or against Russia."
"As long as people aren't dying, we (the United States) can't do anything," he said. "Without blood, there is the status quo.
"It was, I believe, a close decision." For Solidarity to take over the government, Poland must get worse, he said.
Sures que. "Unfortunately, I see blood in Poland."
One of the reasons given for martial law is that as long as the people rebel against it, they must resist it, so we tell it, the judge said. As soon as the cease is accepted martial law, it will cease.
But, he added that Solidarity was not ready to take over the government yet. The group should be strong enough to resist the battle against the Soviet Union he said.
Information is not so desperately needed as the spark, because the Polish people are extremely aware of what's going on in and around their country, he
"I'm very optimistic, though. It's just a matter of time," Marzynski said. "There's no way that this movement can't win. Only the spark is needed."
Alumni fund raiser brings KU $42.538
By DEBBIE DOUGLASS
Staff Reporte
Staff Reporter
KU alumni pledged $24,338 to the Greater University Fund during a two-week telephone campaign against Alabama University Fondation Association.
In the past, unrestricted funds have been used for student financial aid, library books, scientific equipment, technology effects and museum acquisitions, she said.
Money raised during the campaign, which ended Monday night, will go primarily into unrestricted Endowment Association funds, Laurie Mackey, director of the Greater University Fund, said yesterday.
The Endowment Association passed
magal of $29,000 last Thursday night.
Magal
"It turned out to be a very rude, goal," she said. "We were astounded." Mackey said the amount of money they raped of what had been thought were realistic predictions, but the Endowment Association was happy to be incorrect.
"I think it's a tradition that's here to stay," Mackey said.
This was the third year for a national telephone campaign from Lawrence, she said. For the last two years the goal was $25,000. In 1980 she said, the Endowment Association raised $25,000 and last year it received $34,000.
She said 116 students from 20 Greek houses volunteered to call KU alumni and ask for donations to the University.
"I'm so impressed with the students who cane and called," Mackey said. "And, of course, I am very happy with the students we were made available to the University."
She said students spent three hours each night of the campaign calling out-of-state alumni, without taking any breaks.
"This is the first time we didn't call alumni in Kansas."she said.
And, Mackey said, many of the alumni expressed a real affection for Lawrence and the University. A large number of alumni who had never responded to any mail requests gave donations, she said.
Mackey said Jill Remsberg, Wichita senior, and Jay Simpson, Lawrence junior, were responsible for recruiting Greek houses to telephone alumni.
"We have extremely loyal alumni at KU." she said.
Remsberg and Simpson, she said, recruited 10 team captains, who organized teams.
Mackey said Phil Delta Theta fraternity was the top money-raising team, raising $4,450 in pledges. Gamma Phi Beta sorority and Phil Delta Theta
fraternity combined to produce the top nightly total of $7,660 in pledges.
Suzy Stevenson, Gardner freshman, got the top number of pledges in one night, Mackey said. Stevenson obtained 32 pledges.
Nancy Ice. Newton junior, had the top amount of money raised personally with $2380 in pledges. Mackey said.
She said the students probably called 106 people each evening and averaged about 12 pledges.
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University Daily Kansan, April 7, 1982
Profs condemn arms freeze
By DEBBIE DOUGLASS Staff Reporter
KU professors who are specialists in Soviet and East European affairs said at a press conference yesterday that a U.S. freeze on the development of nuclear weapons and an unilateral reduction of arms would put the United States in a dangerous position.
Bill Fletcher, director and professor of Soviet and East European studies, said the balance of nuclear weapons between the United States and the Soviet Union was a deterrent to nuclear war.
And, he said, an emotional peace movement that operated from a state of fear and panic was not the way to gain armies reductions.
"I applaud the concern of these peace movements, but I'd like to see all the options discussed seriously," he said.
The professors called the press conference to present their views on nuclear weapons, which they said differed from those expressed by other advocates and the ground zero anti-nuclear war supporters.
Jarosław Piekiewicz, professor of political science and Soviet and East European studies, said unilateral disarmament was impossible because he thought the United Union would take advantage of it.
"It would mean the demise of western civilization," he said.
The professors agreed that the anti-nuclear and peace movements had already exerted a tremendous political force.
Roy Laird, professor of political science and Soviet and East European studies, said the logic of his report was that he'd rather be Red than dead."
"I'd rather be neither," he said.
Fletcher said a foreign policy based on public opinion was dangerous. He said representative opinions by specialists, even though they held opposing sides, were better because the principles were more likely to ultimately assess the nuclear weapon situation and make decisions.
Leslie Dienes, professor of geology and Soviet and East European studies, said Americans have lived with the paranoia of a nuclear age.
Western Europe, because of the imbalance of power resulting from a U. freeze, would feel less secure in the West than Soviet political pressures, he said.
Fletcher said the public needed to be educated on the issues involved in the disarmament question.
Dienes said, "If we totally disarmed, the Russians would still think we had something up our sleeve."
Ron Francisco, professor of political science and Soviet and East European Studies, said a U.S. freeze on Russian unions would cause world instability.
Their ideology, Dienes said, conditions them to be suspicious of any capitalist, because capitalism is the world socialist's goal to make the world socialist.
"I think we would see a decrease in West European sovereignty," he said.
Laird said the reduction of nuclear weapons could only be done on a diplomatic level.
Salina Piece to get safety inspection
KU administrators are hoping that a local engineering firm's study of the controversial Salina Piece will begin within the next week.
"I understand the firm's going to be on campus soon to look at the piece itself." Aaron Wiechert, University office of facilities planning, said yesterday.
whechert said the firm would be looking for ways to improve the structural soundness of the sculpture, a work addressed by the Kansas City Art Institute.
"I would hope to have something in written soon," said Robert Cobb, executive vice president in reentry he was steering firm's in-market commitment to a completion date for the study.
Cobb would not divulge the name of the firm.
"It's just in the preliminary stages right now," Wiechcair said.
The firm was retained for the study two or three months ago, after the University accepted the recom-
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position for five years, said the new directorship would offer him similar responsibilities for forging fiscal and academic policy.
"As I learn more about the position, I think they'll allow me to utilize my talents with regard to what higher education should and could do," he
The recommendation was made after the Salina Piece fell to the ground last semester during unsuccessful attempts to install it on campus.
Before 1971, Koplick did graduate work at New York University, John Hopkins University, Harvard and in Bologna, Italy. He also taught school courses to Americans and others from the Armenian School in Pakistan.
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THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Office of the Student Senate
B105 Kansas Union
Lawrence 60045
www.ku.edu
The Student Body President is now taking applications for the positions of Administrative Assistant and Treasurer. Job descriptions and applications are currently available in the Student Senate office, B-105 Kansas Union (Third Level). Both positions require backgrounds in accounting and business procedures. Applications must be academic standing and a working experience of university experience is useful. Each position pays $230.00 monthly. The appointments are effective May 15.
Sandra McMullen, Regents chairman, said, "We thought his excellent educational background and experience would be valuable."
mendation of three KU engineering professors to engage an outside firm to inspect the safety of the sculpture.
Kopick said he would retain his present position in Jefferson City, Mo., until he begins the new directorship. He will family will then move to Topeka.
McMullen said Koplik's main responsibility as analyst budget was the public institutions of higher education under the Regents.
Koplick, who has been in his present
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"I got to know a number of people," he said. "I was impressed with the overall commitment to higher education in Kansas."
Completed applications, which must include a resume, are due Thursday, April 15 at 5:00 p.m. in the Student Senate office. Interviews will be held on Tuesday, May 4.
The Gidley-Grant team compiled a record of 82 wins and 17 losses in 1981-82, and the Leader-Payne team record was 69-32.
"I feel that the Board as a governing board is the most effective way to run institutions of higher education," he said.
Sixty teams competed at the tournament, Donn Parson, KU director of forensics, said yesterday.
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Do you own a Barry
Gidley placed 10th in individual speaking based on points awarded by judges, Parson said.
16 teams, including the KU teams, automatic bids. District tournaments determined 36 other teams, and the committee picked eight more teams.
Koplik said working for the state had acquainted him with Kansas.
The KU teams of Mark Gidley, Houston junior, and Zac Grant, Manhattan senior; Paul leader, Derby junior, and Rodger Payne, Sand Springs, Okla., junior, tied for fifth at the tournament.
relationship among the Board of Regents Schools.
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The National Debate Tournament,
the last competition of the year for the
debaters, was April 1-4 at Florida State
University in Tallahassee.
In the previous 12 years at the National Debate Tournament, KU teams placed first in 1970 and 1976; third in 1970, 1971, 1973, 1977 and 1979; and fifth in 1972, 1974, 1978 and 1981, Parson said.
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The full nine-member board unanimously selected Koplick to replace Conard, who has been Regents director since 1978.
KU ties for fifth at debate tournev
Two KU debate teams tied for fifth place at the National Debate Tournament last weekend, and a KU placed 10th in individual speaking.
Koplick said yesterday that as a fiscal analyst, he learned the structure of the Regents and enjoyed the
If you answered all these questions correctly, then SUR Special Events could be looking for YOU. We will be interviewing for the following positions on
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Koplick was one of four finalists chosen by a Regent member search committee from 120 candidates.
Security Director
Boca Regina.
Koplik will replace John Conard, who announced last December that he would resign.
Stanley Kopick, a former Kansas fiscal analyst and current chief executive officer for the higher education in Missouri, has been named the new executive officer of the Kansas Board of Regents.
Koplick, 38, will take over the position Julv1.
Publicitu Director
Lighting Director
Stage Manager
Photographer
Sign up for an interview time in the SUA Office.
Communications Director
Deadline is Friday, April 16, 5 p.m.
Only two teams from a university could compete at the tournament. The 13-member selection committee gave
THE MAIN STUDENT UNION
The Gidley-Grant team was the top-ranked debate team in the country, according to rankings by the tournament selection committee. The team won 32 out of 40 pop-up semifinals and released after the tournament and were based on the teams' records.
GIVE BLOOD APRIL 7, 8, 9 AT
MEN OF TEMPLIN RALLY FOR HONOR AND PEOPLE'S LIVES
"The tournament didn't go quite as well as we wanted, but when you get to that high a level, that's pretty good," he said.
1982
TONIGHT IS PITCHER NIGHT
at
THE HAWK
THE HAWK
NEW PRICES
First Pitcher—Regular Price
Refills
6 00-7 00 $0.50
7 00-8 00 $0.75
8 00-9 00 $1.00
9 00-10 00 $1.25
10 00-11 45 $1.50
For the New Spring Look Come to
MERLE NORMAN
The Play for the Custom Flee
Thursday .. .
Jayhawk Room
It Could Only Happen at ...
THE HAWK • 1340 OHIO
Friday . . .
Forum Room
Wednesday. . .
Pine Room
7 p.m. nightly
Maranatha Ministries
Dennis Darville
701 Mass 841-5324
DANIEL L. BECKHAM
- Spring Dresses
REDUCED 40%
One Smaller Group Fall and Holiday Sportswear and Dresses
- Spring Suits
35 MASS. * 843-4833 • LAWRENCE, KANS. 60444 PRC
NOW 75%
REDUCED
Jay1 SHOPPE DOWNTOWN
PRE-EASTER SALE!
Thursday-Friday-Saturday
- Spring Co-ordinates
IF THE HIGH COST OF GOING OUT IS GETTING YOU DOWN . . .
TAKE A LOOK AT TIME OUT
- 75' LONG NECK BOTTLES OF BUDWEISER, BUD LIGHT,
COORS, COORS LIGHT, BAPST. AUMER, AND LIFE.
- FROSTY BUDWEISER, COORS AND COORS LIGHT ON TAP
- HOME OF THE DOLLAR SCHOONER (28 oz.)
- WEEKNIGHT BEER SPECIALS
- MONDAY NIGHT POOL TOURNAMENT ($30.00 FIRST PRIZE)
- GREAT FOOD INCLUDING THE INTERNATIONALLY
PRESENTED DESSERTS
- RENOWNED T.O. CHEESEBURGER
*VIDEO GAMES AND PINBALL*
- VIDEO GAMES AND PINBALL
* CLEAN BEST BOOBS
- CLEAN REST ROOMS
Take
A GOOD TIME AT AN
AFFORDABLE PRICE
TIME OUT (CONVENIENTLY LOCATED ACROSS FROM KIEF'S
$15/$30 REBATE On your College Ring
B
EUF
See your Jostens' Representative. DATE: April 13 & 14 TIME: 10-4 PLACE: Kansas Union Bookstores
Main Union Satellite Union
Jostens
V240
MasterCard
University Daily Kansan, April 7, 1982
page 11
The University Daily
Call 864-4358
KANSAN WANT ADS
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five six seven eight nine ten one
$2.50 $3.00 $3.50 $4.00 $4.50 $5.00 $5.50 $6.00 $6.50 $7.00
$7.50 $8.00 $8.50 $9.00 $9.50 $10.00 $10.50 $11.00 $11.50 $12.00
15 words or fewer... Each additional word.
AD DEADLINES
to run
Monday Friday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Thursday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
ERRORS
RANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
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.
WORRIED ABOUT APF 158? Call Don't Ask
the Doctors. Call '643-827-5000' for days of extensions
from the hospital.
ATTENTION: BLUE JEAN OWNERS. If you can help us get our stock so we can provide a wide variety of clothing, jeans & western shirts to our in-store, sales & online stores is a phone call too. 841-6329 - 844-8339 - 844-8348
Paid Staff Positions
Business Manager, Editor
The Kansai is now accepting applications for the Summer and Fall Semester Business Manager and Associate positions and require some newspaper experience. Application forms are available in the Student Senate Office, 105 B. Street, Room 209. Students Organization and Activities, 220 Strong Hall; and in Room 200 Flint Hall. Complete applications are due in 200 Flint by 5:00 p.m., Monday, April 19.
The University Daily Kansei is an Equal Opportunity Affirmative Action Employer. Application is required for people regardless of race, retigen, color, sex, disability, veteran status, national origin.
Gem and Mineral Show, April 17, 10:30 noon
Gem and Mineral Show, April 17, 10:30 noon
4-H Fairground, Building 21 Demonstration
Room, Garden, Building 21 Demonstration
Room, Garden, Building 21 Demonstration
Shrimkinshow, Squalting, Stained Glass
Bright-A-Free Admission - Dose-Number
5-4-9 B-Gree-Free Admission
FOR RENT
Must see to believe. Furnished rooms with
utilities paid near university & downlo-
n. No pets. Phone 841-5500. tf
HANOVER PLACE. Completely furnished,
huge room with 2 bedrooms on
mass on Mass. Only 3 blocks from
KUJ. DONT DELAY. Reserve your
space in the month-wrapped
month. Mail us @ 842-8455 or
842-8455.
For rent to mature male student. Quiet,
comfortable efficiency apartment. Private
kitchen. Close to the Union. Reasonable
price. 842-4185. t
PRINCETON PLACE PATIO APARTMENTS.
Now available, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, perfect for family use. Refrigerator, dishwasher, car garage, with electric oven,洗衣/ dryer hookups, fully equipped kitchen and dining room, up to 30 days at 1208 Princeton Blvd., or phone 842-2575 for additional information.
Sidhams atmosphere International weals,
adventure park, offering looking for sixth cooperative group num-
bers. Call 814-762-2590 UTILITIES INCLUDED. Large house in op-
erty building. Lawn: 814-762-6961 campus
TRY COOPERATIVE LIVING. Sunflower House, 842-9421. tf
Established STUDENT COOPERATIVE close to campus and downtown. Obedient home study. Six evening meals each week. **75-120** includes utilities. UNFLOWN **$120**
Available now. Two bedroom spacious apt
unfurnished, carpeted & draped, all electric
heater, 150+ square feet in campus, and
campus, and on bus route. $345 per month.
No pets. MEADOWBOOK 15th & Creativel
8th.
Sleeping rooms 1-3 bedroom Apts. Duplexes and an 8-bedroom house close to campus.
No pets. Call Apt. Learners or less than a year. Call Learners or Sat. or Sun. 4-14
TRAILMARK LEASING for all -Stuhlso-
houses. All have harvest gold appliances
houses. All have harvest gold appliances
Laundry facilities on the premises. Swim-
ing facilities on the premises. On KU.
5000 W, 619-843-7233. 4-30
5000 W, 619-843-7233.
SOUTHERN PARKWAY TOWNHOUSES,
Bisk & Hawk. If your tired of apartments
in the midst of a bustling neighborhood,
feature 3 br., all appliances, at-
tached garage. We have new baths now, and in the summer and fall. Call Craig Lea in
about our modestly priced townhouses!
Live in the CHRISTIAN CAMPUSE HOUSE
This summer and fall! Be a part of a
growing campus ministry. Call Alan Rosak,
camp minister 842-6329.
Summer and fall rentals, houses and apartments. Near campus, no oels. Lynch Real Estate 843-1601 or 841-3223. 4-14
We have a good place to live and study. We offer two half- and 12-month leave and August vacations in the fall and winter. We extend our courtesy of not having to pay any tuition. Please call for an appointment. 841-773-9000. www.usm.edu
MID CENTER BOUND? Newly refurbished 2 BAR Duplexes available now. Carpet, A.C.
Appliances, parking. Call (913)-381-2878-
4-903
Siblaneza 3 RORM 2 bath. fully carpeted
Parmalated, also central air, dwarf, and
dispersal. Great location at 919 Indiana, Apt. 1
749-33918 or 841-2535. 4-14
Stableleave 3 bedroom, $12; bish, carpeted townhouse, Summer only. Trailridge complex. Call 841-8190. 4-7
SUBLEASE Trailridge Studio Apt., watered
on Bus route $210 842-7330.
www.trailridge.com
MIDI-MOOG Synthesizer & HAMMON B-5
Organ. Priced to sell 841-1829.
SUBLEASE FOR SUMMER—1 br. apt. 32
blocks from campus. Furnished with AC
845-7237 or call collect (316) 683-3610. 4-8
Two bedroom apartment, one year old Energy efficient, on bus route, dishwasher water paid. Available after finals. 841-5634
- 841-5644
Sublease large 2 BR, apartment near stadium, water, gas paid, central air $320,
841-8235. 4-15
Summer Submarine: very large, $ 3 bld. 2nd duplex, semi furnished w. living, dining, din, am porch, 1½ bath, hdb for family, den, call D or Brett at 841-8066 for many 4
Sublease furnished住宅 apartment with
electricity $2,050; electricity $4,826;
$3,950; $2,050; $4,826; 4-16
Sublease — niced furnished 2 bedroom apt.
Sale — central apt, central cable TV
business route 84-710-763
84-710-765
Jayhawker Towers Apartments
Now taking applications for fall and summer leases. KU students only.
2 Bedroom apartments on campus
- furnished or unfurnished
1603 W. 15th
843-4993
outside at last years price 2 bt. ap. comp.
Call for an appointment 841-686-4698.
Call for an appointment 841-686-4698.
Summer abatee Nice 3 bedroom townhouse
21st per month utilities. 864-131-100
www.summerabatee.com
3 barm. 2 bath, furnished apt at Malls Oak
50 per month. Available from June 4-
12 per month. Availued from June 4-12
2 bdr. (6 rooms), furnished, a/c nice旧
room, 843-709 Avib. May 2019 New
4-13
houses. 843-709 Avib. May 2019 New
Summer subheads - Female - wanted 120-00
per month + 1/3 utilities 749-3420. 4-9
Studio Apt. furnished, quiet, clean, A/C.
Reference: Available May 15 or June 1.
Call 843-8000. tt
Subluex Meadowbrook studio apt. Furnished. Heat & water paid. Balcony. Across from pool. May 1-July 30. Call 843-6528 at 6:00 p.m. (591) 766-2222.
SUMMER SCHOOL SUBLEASE Date
Sunday, March 24 Bedroom home
negotiate. Pursued 3 – bedroom home
a/b, all furnished. On month 1,
c/a, all furnished. On month 2,
d/e, all furnished. On month 3,
Furnished one bedroom apt for sublease.
Central air heat. Available May 15. Combo
offered.
Available now: attractive cozy apt. Ideal for single person-unique extra's central location $185, 841-4144. 4-9
Thinking of Next Year?
Naismith Hall is the Place to
- Private Sleeping-Study areas
- *Private Baths & Showers
- Parties
* Pool
Check Us Out This Spring or Summer
1800 Naismith Drive
New orchards duplex 2 br- Large living
interiors too. $35 AU/day.
In-Jun 411 - 841-8400
In-Jun 411 - 841-8400
Applications are now available
We Think You Will Like Us!
Sublasea Meadowbrook Townhouse. Now
thru July 31, 3 bedroom, 1 baths; ifhurnal,
$400/mo. + bills $400. deposit.
Call 841-5329 After 5:30.
4-20
We Think You Will Like Us!
2 br. apt; very close to campus &
downsmall. Newly remodeled $120/month
lease required. 11th Efficient
remodeled $40/month. Remodeled
$40/month. Call 811-6441.
$140/month. Call 811-6441.
4-14
KZ750, many extras, excellent condition,
new tires, chain, sprockets, battery, & more.
Call 864-3018. 4-7
Space available in the Keithna Community for fall semester. Information and applications are available at the Eumenical Institute, 1848, Road Number 843-4533. 4-14
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale!
Sale ends on May 14. Makes sense to use them-1). As study guide,
maps make sense to use them-2). As study guide,
rationation. *New Analysis of Western Civilization*
by Robert L. Bunting. *Bookwork* and Orabook Books.
If you want a new book, or Orabook Books.
Call 843-8559 or Stop Bv
TORONADO 1971, auto. a.c. am/fm stereo,
must sell. Fernando. 749-0745 at 3:58-4
7:47
Beautiful bald evergreens reasonably priced.
Himmel's Rand Tree Farm—Eudora—Phone
532-139 or 542-3549. 4-20
Alternator, starter and generator specialists,
Parts, service and exchange units. BELL
AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC. 843-9069. 3800
W. 6th.
FOR SALE
Television-Telescope-Video Recorders. Name brands only. Factory-made curtains. Lowest prices in the K.C. area. Get your call to Cell Total Sound Recorders 915-384-4000 4-30
Pollen-fresh, frozen-rich in vitamins, minera-
lis, proteins. 842-5074 after six. *4-13*
TENNIS RACKETS—Good selection new/
used. Will buy years if in good condition.
649.873 after 6:00 p.m. **tt**
Elec. Guitar, copy, Arla, $165. 842-7530. 4-8
For Sale 1975 Yamaha XS 650 SPECIAL
842-5279. 4-9
Formula Six. Slakers $600.00 value, sell
400.00 or best offer, Pincer cane deck
$350.00 value $300.00 or best offer, Call
842-9962
4-13
73 TR 5-4 spd. with overdrive. New: paint, clutch, brakes, tires—Gary—841-0991. 4-8
BUY MY CAR: Must sell by 4-15 76 Chevy Monza, 8000, A/C, beautiful condition. VRY reasonable. Call 843-5134, keep trying. 4-9
B.W. TV 12" 6 months old, very good condition.
841-9659 4-9
'78 Suzuki GS520E. Looks and Runs great.
Good gas mileage. 10,800 miles. $1295. 749-
1705. 4-9
Double Red mattes, box springs and frame,
with headboard. $35.00. Call 749-545-2812
Each Wednesday 7:00 p.m.
This week okk kitchen table and 4
back chairs, two box springs and
box springs and 2 single mat-
tresses and springs, speed boat
with 6500 pound trailer, 3 pop
machines, other used furniture
Community Auction.
700 New Hampshire.
Community Auction
7:00 New Hampshire.
Each Wednesday 7:00 p.m.
Consignments accepted Wednesdays 10 am 'til sale time and Thursdays 10 am 'til 4.
Hon Double Pedestal Steel-Delk 30 x w/o:
O Sullivan cable-stretched cabinet; 6 drawer driver;
slope; dmable table; cork/wood/leap; 2 rails; armrests;
Call 843-8258 after 5 4-12
72 Toyota Corolla, new tires, new battery,
new transmission. Stereo. A/C, excellent
body, call 841-0477. 4-13
1976 Honda 400, cover, helmet, excellent condition, parking permit, etc. $650, 841-
3577. 4-13
BOKONON IMPORTS Large selection Hawaiian shirts. The original source. 12 E. 8th. 841-3600. 4-20
1975 CL. 369 Fairing, elec. start, rack, helmet.
Ex. cond. 841-8058.
4-15
IBM transmission 1150. Good.
Dark blue knit muffler in UDK box south of Murphy Hall. Mitch-749-0586. 4-7
1981 Yamaha XT500. Low mileage, excellent condition, $1,800. 749-1501 or 841-8876. Ask for Don. 4-13
Keys, Textbooks, Notebooks, jackets, gloves,
e. please come to Spanish and Portuguese
Department, 3062 Wescoe, to identify
claim.
4-8
Nice earring Kansas Union ladies room
Sunday, April 4th. Call Rebecca 8644-442. 4
HELP WANTED
Person interested in doing odd jobs please send resume to Person interested in doing odd jobs please send resume to Person interested in doing odd jobs Please use willingness to participate in cooperative labor in the field of construction.
Bartender—energetic and personable, contact Dan at the Exchange, 842-953-4-7
We are looking for 25 hardworking students for a summer work opportunity. If you are independent and want to earn $275.00 per week call 749-5227. 4-13
First Christian Church (Diaplhes of Christ)
for the time-sensitive applicants for the Part-time position with co-ordinator. The position would be approximately $26,000 per year salary beginning in the summer of 2014 on the Christian beliefs and two letters of recommendation, should be mailed to Mac Hacken First Christian Church (Diaplhes of Christ) 656448 #656448 by April 23, 1982 Inquiries welcome.
Secretary, National Association seeks energetic and efficient secretary with knowledge of organizational skills. Must be highly motivated and proficient in all aspects of the environment. Experiences in word processing helpful but not necessary. Excellent communication and cover letter to Karen K. Heskey 1694-7 6-19
100 Kentucky, Lawrence,
243, 1982. Inquiries welcome (845-
1209)
4-16
College credit available/American Montessori Society Certification
TEACHERS TRAINING/Academic phase—Summer 1982 in Kansas City area
GREAT PLAINS MONTESSORI
The Mathematics Department is accepting student assistants. Applicants must have a current student assistant. Applicants must have a student assistant will assist in the 113-114 consulting course. Applications are available in the at this office. Applications must be turned in at this office. Contact Professor Philip Montgomery, 256-890-7500 or contact Professor Phil Montgomery, 256-890-7500 for an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action employer. Applications are sought from 256-890-7500.
Contact: Caithe Slatup
12504 Pacific Street
Omaha, Nebraska 88154
402-333-4541
402-333-4541
The Mathematics Department is accepting applications for the position of Applicants must be graduate students with a strong background and will be recruited to pass an oral exam. Applicants should be responsible for teaching mathematics in grades 9 through 12, either lettering interest and/or the Department of Mathematics. Two letters of recommendation are required for selection, $2500 for academic year. The Department of Mathematics is an Associate Professor position. Applications are sought from all qualifying applicants.
area
Children's Counselors, Activity Instructors,
Cook. Kitchen Manager, Kitchen Help for
Mountain Summer Camp. Trojan Ranch.
Boulder, Colorado. Boulder, 8050, (914)
483-657.
the department of Mathematics is now accepting applicants. MAT 002 tutors for Fall 1982. Tutors will work approximately 10-15 hours per week and teach a classroom teaching assistant. Applicants must have successfully completed MAT 117. All students obtained from the Department of Mathematics will be contacted for interviews. For further information, contact the School of Writing. The Mathematics Department is an Affirmative Action Equity Organization. The program sought from all qualified persons. 4-8
Summer Jobs National Park Co. 21, Parks
Complete Information $5.00.
Park Report. Mission Mt. Co. 651 2nd Ave.
W.N. Kallpep. MT 99001. 4-19
Part-time help wanted, grill and fountain,
noons and night. Apply at Vista Restaurant,
1527 W. 6th. 4-13
Lost: Backpack with glasses in pocket, in 4020 Wesco Monday 3-29. Glasses needed, R84, 7552 ask for Kurt. 4-7
LOST
Lost large blue loose leaf notebook. Has all class notes. Please call 843-0673 or 843-8588 or ask for Dean.
Baseball hat, yellow. Indianapolis 500 patch,
left by tennis court Sunday. March 28
evening please phone 812-2561. 4-9
Instant passport, visa, ID, & resume photographs. Custom made portraits b/w, color. Swells Studio, 749-1611. tf
Lost! wallet camp or enroute Friday 2nd—Call C. Gels 864-3494. tf
Skillet's liquor store serving U-Daily since 1949. Come in and compare. Wilfred Skidmore Eudok. 1096 Mass. 843-8186. uf
SKI TRIPS SKI TRIPS SKI TRIPS SKI TRIPS
WINTERPARK, DILLON AND OTHERS.
Economical packages every weekend and
school break's kits Ski Etc. #813-8366 todds
Say it on a sweatshirt with custom silk-screen printing 1 to 1000 shirt art by Swella 749-1611. tr
The Kegger—Weekly Specials on Keggel
Call 841-9450—1610 W. 23rd. tf
HEADACHE, BACKACHUE, STIFK, NEEP
LEG PAIN? Find and correct the CAUSE
of the problem! Call Dr. Malak for more
info: 813-9236 or cepting Blood Cross and Lone Star insurance
For your party clothes, formal or costume,
check out the Inflation Fighter. E 7th.
Open 10:30 M- F 10:50 SAT. Open til 8
on Thursday.
MARY KAY COSMETICS—Full-time beauty consultant, 842-6641. tt
COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES:
Free pregnancy testing;耳 early and advanced
out patient abortion; gynecology contract-
ration; & Bori. Overland Park, KY
(913) 624-3100
(913) 624-3100
$6.95 Per Day SPECIAL
LEASE-A-LEMON
Rent any car (Mon, Tues, Wed.
$6.95 Per Week.
$60 Per Week.
$255 Per Month.
$225 Per Month
Cannot be combined with any other special ops.
All are mechanically sound, state inspected
clean & ready to rent. We accept cash, checks,
visa/mastercard, 749-4252
Exciting jobs at Lake Tahoe. Send $5.00 to
Tahoe Jobs, P.O. Box 7244, Kansas City, MO
64113.
4-22
Silk heads, wallets, jewelry bags from Korea. Barb's Second Hand Rose. SIB Indiana. 842-4746. 4-9
Spring formals-Praffle-book, 50's, beaded
Taffetas. Barb's Second Hand Rose. 515
Indiana. 842-4746. 4-9
GREEN'S CASE SALE. BUSCH $7.99. COORS
$8.99. BUDWEISER LIGHT $9.99. GREENS'
808 WEST 23RD. 4-9
Stereo-Televisions-Video. Recorders. Name brands only. Factory sealed cartons. Lowest price in the K.C. area. Get your best offer to call 301 Sound Test. 813-384-8600. 4-30
PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH-
RIGHT, 843-4821.
Men and Women play Ultimate in short shorts. 4-7
Remember, O most gracious Virgin Mary that never was it known that anyone who fled to thy help, sought thy protection
Remember, O most gracious Virgin Mary,
that never was it known that she had protection,
implied her intercession was left unadvised.
I pray for the Lord to grant her protection,
O Virgin Mary. To thiee, I come, before thine
Hand and suffer and unwieldy in the petition but
in the mercy, hear and answer my Amen.
Last fall Templin was a fluke. We are laughing at Templin now cause there's no way they can even make a decent showing The Blood Drive. The Greeks. 4-8
CHICAGO MATERNITY CENTER STORY, a film about an alternative to abortion, is April 16th Gallery Room, Lawrence Public Library KINGLE HOLIDAY COLLECTIVE CITY WORKS*
Temple Hall does not have blood in its veins. It has some mixture of beer & other substances. You'll be burried in the Blood Drive. 4-6
Grant Proposal Writing Workshop Learn a marketable skill in demand.
Attend an intensive one day workshop
Rhythm Guitarist, Vocalist--looking for Lead, Bass, and Drums--For 30 no riffs Rock & Roll. Call Chris after 3.0 p.m. (864-4295).
Established band looking for male/female
drums. Drums, guitar and keyboards.
immediate Need. Contact Gary at 842-617-
If not there, leave name & phone.
4-16
April 10
To register write: TCA, Inc.
Box 1179 Lawrence, KS 66044
Or Call: 749-3080
Lawrence
Arts Center
9th & Vermont
9 a.m.-4 p.m.
Looking for a person interested in going on a boat to coast Bicycle Trip this summer. Phone 841-668. 4-8
Remember. mother loves you, show her beauty feel this Mother's Day. Swell. Studio for portraits of fine quality, satisfaction guaranteed. 749-611. 4-30
MONTESSORI PLUS TEACHER PREPARATION is now enrolling for the summer training program to become a Montessori preschool teacher. Call 232-8183 for info.
Bombs From Hell, Wednesday 4/7/82. Down-
liner KCMO 9-1 am. Be there or be some
where else. 4-7
ATTN. MEN: Today is Ellen Badgley's 20th birthday! If you see her on campus, lay one on her!
4-7
Female Roommat+ wanted for summer (at
last). Nice 2 bedroom duplex $100 mo. +
utilities- Call 843-6436. 4-12
ARTISTS. THE COMMISSION ON STATUS
LOGO logo logo submit entries to
BK14 Alabama Musica.
Winning artist will receive a $15 gift card;
the artist's hostsite. Call 612-842-3064 for more info.
The treasure has been found by KU seniors Tom Hawkina, Tory Lacey, and John Mathy. Another $100 has been hidden somewhere in the Lawrence area. Latest for new class 2015.
Enjoy Play, Island during Spring Break!
Want to go to play in the sun but don't bake, firewood, & one meal?
7 day trips begin June 19th. Call (841)-723-1700; before April 18, 1986
WOMEN STUDENTS! Help build an organization to work with women of all ages and backgrounds, you want more women in your workplace. Trainee teacher, Publicity Chair, Political Action Chair or organize and manage a student organization. Student NURSING HOME AIDS! Share your experiences with us as a public service organization. KANSAS FOR IMPROVE-ON HEALTH! Call us: 817-265-3400 or input on conditions and quality of care. All support is needed! Call us: XINH; 2871; Mass St. SI.; 21, Lawrence; KK 6644 0131; 843-268-9088 or www.womenstudent.org
Wanted single female who enjoys excellent communication and fun. Someone not hump-up on age difference, interest in physical fitness and wishing to answer yes to the above requirements then answering yes to the below requirements. All serious letters answered. Write a letter to Margeleig M. Magrathie, Reagan, Kans 69044. D-4-14
Consigments Accepted
Wed. 10 am - all slots
THE FTC SHOP 10 W. 9th has tuxedo,
caps, red toppants, cap tops for
girls. We also have Laura Petry pants, mini
skirts, and wrap skirts. 4-8
Consignments Accepted
Community Auction 700 N.H.
Every Wed. 6:30 p.m.
Wed. 10 a.m. till sale
Sat. 10-5
To the family of 'Just Showin' OFF 'let's
mak: Dad proud of us on the 17th. 4-7
Wanting to talk with someone? Gay & Leisure Peer counselors available through headquarters (841-2345) or information center (864-3050) just call. 4-30
Dad proud of us on the 17th. **4-7**
The maiden called the Stables sit in her high chamber, looking out the window, or high ceiling, with a long instrument; but there is no lover between them. The Dear being the Jester and his court, the Orde being good cheer, and at night she watches **4-9**
have you ever been Gammonized? GAM-
4ONS 4-7
DID YOU KNOW The Community Mercantile 700 Maine has fresh baked whole grain bread, buns, sweet rolls, cookies and cakes. A one-basket item had been stocked until April 10.
GREEN'S CASE SALE. BUSCH $7.99.
COORS $8.99. DUEWISER LIGHT $9.99.
GREEN'S, WEST 23RD. $4.99
SERVICE
Lee
GENUINE
JEANS
For those confident few
who have acquired
a taste for simplicity.
ITWINS
831 Mass. Downtown Lawrence
FINANCIAL AID! We guarantee to
scholarships and grants which you are
signed to receive $1 for application mate-
ner FINANCIAL AID FOND! MATE 4-13
FINAHL IA, 25266.
**SPECTRUM** OFTICAL—Do you have a screw lock? Broken lens? broken frame? One day service on lens in most cases. Open 10-8, M-S 4,11, 4,13, E 7-9. 4-9
Schneider Wine & Keg Shop —The finest selection of wines in Wine-Laboratory—largest supplier of strong kegs. 1610 W. 23rd. 863-2312.
SERVICES OFFERED
Videtakes of Academic. Skill Enhancement Workshop. Time Management, Final Exam. More. Shown free Friday, April 9, 2:30 and 6:30 p.m. at Academic Center, 121 Stright, 864-4394. - 8-4
TUTURING MATH, STATISTICS, PHYSICS
COMPUTER SCIENCE. Call 641-9899 for
basis (B.S. in physics, M.B. in mathematics)
or call 841-4746 (alk for Robert). tf
WRITING A RESUME? What to say? How to say it? 117. Stop by The House of Uber and pick up our PRS homework on resumes from 9-3, 9-4 or 9-5. Mon-Non-Sun 3-9. Set 3-Non-Sun 3.
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EDITING, proofreading Professional
Mathematics. Paul 841-256-4.
available 223-309 (Tekoa) daytime. 4-14
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now at
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OF April 18th 1. Women's Support
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Training Group 3. Wellness Walks,
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Joe Williams 875-643
4-16
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LEARN TENNIS from experienced instructor in small groups with other K.U. students or private lessons 842-6713 after 9:00 a.m. tf
Experienced trythe. Theses, term paper.
IBM Systems Selectric Call Sand-
IMR 748-2918
**TYPING-EDITING-GRAPHICS**. IBM Corp. constructive, full-time ttylink, spelling, stringing service. Gmail gsms service delivery. 841-2907. **4-12 Experienced typist. Troubleshoot**. Call Sandy.
AT&T America 604-825-3900
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Experienced typist. Tern papers, theses, all miscellaneous. IB Correcting Selective. Elits; or Pite, and will correct spelling. tf 86-345. Mrs. Wright. **tf**
**TYPING PLUS:** Theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications, renames. Assistance with composition, grammar, spelling, etc. English tutorial for foreign students.
Experienced typist—thes, dissertations,
jerp papers, misc. IBM隶辖 selective.
Reports, dissertations, remines, legal forms,
graphics, editing. m-m-correct Selective
Call Elen or Jean Ann 841-2172. tf
For PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myfa.
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enforced typist will type letters thesis,
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Call Donna at 842-2744. tf
IRON FENCE TYPING SERVICE. Evenings tf
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Fast, accurate and experienced typist will type your papers. Reasonable. Call 842-8091. 4-30
AFFORDABLE QUALITY for all your typing needs: themes, dissertations, resumes, carts, mailings, min. Call Judy 842-7945 after 8:00 p.m.
Former medical research secretary will type books, theses, term papers. Call Naney, 841-5802. 4-9.
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Graduate students tired of tying, retyping and retyping your thesis or dissertation? Save time and money by word processing it at Encore! Call 842-2001 for more information. 4-30
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Roommate to sublease apt. on bus route
For summer. $180 monthly. If interested Call
Steve or Bobbil at 863-8649.
4-8
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148-0222
4-7
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call 841-5830 evenings.
4-21
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WANTED
Hair in need of styling, shaping or conditioning.
call 841-8276
HairLords
2 roommates for apartment 2 blocks from
KU Center, summer and/or next year;
Call Jan 841-8913 4-12
Sharra 4 bdmh, 2½ bath in quiet suburb 5½m
from campus. From Pred. Grad student.
103 mo/ + ¼ us. 843-3880 5pm-12 M
DAN.
ROOMMASTER Summer and/or next year.
Share. hgun, turn. fbr-2 arm. AC, bal-
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India cotton dresses, skirts and blouses.
Just arrival. Discount prices. At the INFLATION FIGHTER B. 7th. Open in June to 3:80AM through Friday and until 4-16PM.
Roommate for May 1 $110/mo. plus utilities.
442-908
4-21
Female Roommate wanted for summer (at la-
titude). Nice bed room duplex $100-142.
$25-$35. Available in Manhattan.
1.259
Page 12 University Daily Kansan, April 7, 1982
Scoreboard-
Basketball
NBASTANDINGS
Eastern Conference
Affiliate Division
Team W W L I Pct GB
Detroit L B 12 773
Philadelphia D 53 22 173
New Jersey M 39 39 520
Washington H 38 41 19
Washington M 32 41 427
Cleveland C 32 41 427
Western Conference Midwest Division
Milwaukee...58 23 697
Atlanta...53 22 697
Denver...53 40 667 14 %
Indiana...33 29 440 14 %
Chicago...29 42 380 19 %
Cleveland...25 40 380 22 %
San Antonio 44 41 587 1
Denver 49 43 573 1
Dover 43 33 168 1
Kansas City 26 61 347 18
Dallas 26 49 347 18
Oklahoma 22 53 390 2
Los Angeles 51 49 680
Seattle 49 28 533
San Francisco 42 42 9 9
Golden State 42 32 360
Portland 38 18 511
Pittsburgh 38 16 511
Washington 94, Cleveland 85
Atlanta 104, New York 104
Miami 102, Philadelphia 117, Chicago 104
Los Angeles 97, Houston 97
Detroit 102
Seattle 102, Phoenix 101
Denver 102, Golden State 110, San Diego 96
Hockey
Hockey
TODAY'S GAMES
Divisional Semifinals
Patrick Division
Pittsburgh at New York
Ilanders
Philadelphia at New York
Adams Division
Quebec-Montreal
Boston
Nortis Division
Calgary
St. Louis at Wimpey
Sydney Division
Los Angeles
Vancouver at Calgary
Soccer
MISL STANDINGS
Eastern Division
| Team | W | L | T | Pet. | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| New York | 29 | 7 | 806 | 36 | -- |
| Pittsburgh | 20 | 14 | 684 | 624 | 6½ |
| Buffalo | 21 | 14 | 175 | 623 | 9 |
| New Jersey | 13 | 14 | 393 | 390 | 15 |
| Philadelphia | 14 | 22 | 290 | 186 | 20¹ |
| Philadelphia | 10 | 22 | 290 | 186 | 20¹ |
WESTERN INVASION
St. Louis 11 15 .692 -- %
Wichita 12 15 .607 -- %
Kansas City 14 16 .608 -- %
Denver 14 24 .368 12% %
Phoenix 14 24 .368 12% %
Chicago 14 24 .362 12% %
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Memphis 6, Kansas City 5
Baseball
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Eastern Division
Team | W | L | Pct | GR
--- | --- | --- | --- | ---
Boston | 0 | 0 | .0000 | %
Bouston | 0 | 0 | .0000 | %
Detroit | 0 | 0 | .0000 | %
Dallas | 0 | 0 | .0000 | %
New York | 0 | 0 | .0000 | %
Seattle 1 0 1.000 --
Oakland 1 0 1.000 --
Tampa 1 0 1.000 --
Texas 0 0 0.000 --
California 0 1 1.000 1
Minnesota 0 1 1.000 --
Michigan 0 1 1.000 --
Boston at Chicago,ppd
Toronto at Detroit,ppd
Miami at Miami,ppd
Tennessee at New York,ppd
11-12 Boston at 11-12
Oakland,J. California, 2.11omm
NATIONAL LEAGUE Eastern Division
Team | W | L | Pct | GB
Team | 1 | 0 | 1.00 | -
Chicago | 1 | 100 | 1.00 | -
Louisiana | 0 | 0 | .00 | -
Montreal | 0 | 0 | .00 | -
Nationals | 0 | 0 | .00 | -
Philadelphia | 0 | 0 | .00 | -
Philadelphia | 0 | 0 | .00 | -
Los Angeles 1 1 0 1.000 - Atlanta 1 1 0 1.000 - Miami 1 1 0 .000 - Houston 1 1 1 .000 1 Carolina 1 1 0 .000 1 Cincinnati 1 1 0 .000 1
**VESTEDA Y RESULTS**
Municipality in Philadelphia, ppd
New York City, ny
Los Angeles, LA
*San Francisco 3*
St. Louis, 18
St. Louis, 26
BIG EIGHT STANDINGS
BOLLAGE BOARD
**Team** **Ballpark** **L** **P** **Pet.** **GB**
Oklaahoma State 5 3 1.625 625
Oklaahoma 3 2 2.000 500 ¼
Oklahoma 3 2 2.000 500
Kansas State 2 2 2.000 500
Nebraska 4 4 2.000 400
Missouri 4 4 2.000 400 ½
Alabama 2 3 3.75 375
A search will begin immediately to replace John Hadl, KU's offensive coordinator for the past four seasons. He will be available of this week after accepting a coaching offer with the Los Angeles Rams of the National Football League.
Hadl heads to Los Angeles
By GINO STRIPPOLI
Associate Sports Editor
Hadi, 41, will assume the duties of officer in charge of quarterback for Rama Kina Bay.
"John will certainly be missed," KU head Coach Don Fambraugh said yesterday. "He's done a lot to help us win." He told him, wishing him what nobody but the best in his new
job, and I can understand his taking this position with the Rams.
Hadl, whom the Rams have tried to lure away from KU on two previous occasions, signed a three-year, guaranteed contract for $60,000. The $60,000 is twice what his contract at KU paid him.
"That is one of the drawbacks of having a successful program—other people want to hire your coaches."
"This time around it was just an awfully good deal," Hadl said. "I think it's time to get a new experience."
distinction of being the only quar-
game victory. The Jayhawks to a bowl
game victory.
Hadi, one of the most celebrated athletes in KU history, earned All-American honors two consecutive years while playing for the Jayhawks, and his number, 21, is one of only two in KU history to be retired. Hadi also has the
Hal joined the 1U staff after a 16-year pro football career that ended with his being in the top five in career passing yardage in NFL history. He was named Most Valuable Player of the NFL in 1973 while playing for the Rams.
"Everything I've learned mentally I owe to him." KU quarterback Frank Seurer said. "He's put knowledge of the game in my head."
"We'll all have to pick up the slack to make up for the loss of John," offensive line Coach Kent Stephenson said on Hadi's departure in the midst of spring practice. "We'll just have to work harder.
B. M. HUBERTS
John Hadl
'Hawks face Blue Jaws
By MIKE ARDIS Sports Writer
The KU baseball team, whose record seems to be stuck at .500, will try to improve that mark as they take on a tougher team. If the beager at 1 p.m. today at Quigley Field.
In splitting with Oklahoma over the weekend, the Jayhawks did play better, but the Saints were stronger.
The Jayhawks, 12-12, have been at 500 since evening their record at 8-8 against Benedictine March 25. KU has won its series against Oklahoma since then.
The Jayhawk infidel had problems before the Oklahoma series, including eight errors in two games against Missouri Western. In the weekend match with Oklahoma, the infidel committed only one error in the four games.
The infield does not have a lot of experience playing together at KU, but it does have experience. Shortstop Pauley Anderson had earlier from last year, played summer ball
with second baseman Mark Gile, who was ineligible last year.
Jo Heeney, who was in right field last year, now is at third base. Heeney was originally stated to be the KU third baseman, but Rux Raylock was out there.
Freshman Phil Doherty took over first base, replacing four-year starter Brian Gray. Doherty, hitting 197, is in there for defensive努履。
"I'm pleased to be able to play," he said. "I haven't been hitting, but Coach Patton said defense and pitching win games."
Doherty has started all 22 games for KU and has committed only one error.
"They want me to hit," Doherty said. "I'm really not that terrible of a hitter. Skip (assistant coach Skip James) has been working with my hitting and it feels a lot more comfortable. I hope I can go out and produce."
Defense was expected to be the Jayhawks' strong point along with their pitching this year. The hitting was good, and the defense was good. Jayhawks are hitting .309 as a team.
KU will travel to Iowa State this weekend.
Swimmers travel to meet
Six Kansas swimmers will extend their swimming season as they participate in the U.S.S. Indoor pools in Gainesville, Fla., this week.
The four-day meet starts today and runs through Saturday, but not all KU swimmers who were eligible to go to the meet will go.
"It was their choice," Coach Gary Kempf said. "We had a couple of more girls make the cuts, but it was just who really wanted to go."
Wagstaff and Celine Cerny from the women's team, and Ken Grey, Brad Wells, Chuck Neumann and Ron Neuquet from the men's team.
The six swimmers are Jenny
This is the first year KU swimmers have gone to the U.S.S. Nationals as a team. Kempf said he hopes they will go every year.
"We're going for the exposure and experience that's missing in the Midwest," Kempf said. "It's another chance to see the best."
Comets blow three-goal lead, defeated 6-5
MEMPHIS, Tenn.—The Memphis Americans, using five fourth-period goals, beat the Kansas City Comets, 6-5, to push the Comets two games out of the last playoff spot in the Western Division.
By United Press International
The loss ruined an amazing performance by Comets goaltender Victor
Petroni. Petroni made numerous saves and stopped a Memphis penalty kick in the third quarter.
The Comets led 2-0 at haltime on goals by Val De Souza and Mike Bakic. Mark Fredrickson scored to open the game and extend the Comet's lead to 3-0.
The roof fell in on the Corns though, as they allowed Memphis to outscore them.
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Thursday, April 8, 1982 Vol. 92, No. 129 USPS 650-640
A woman walks on a wet path in the rain. She is wearing a dark coat and appears to be looking forward. In the background, another person riding a bicycle can be seen.
Caught in the heavy April snowfall yesterday, Sue Klielblot, Chicago, Ill., senior, walks through the wet flocks to class.
April snow surprises students
By COLLEEN CACY Staff Reporter
Students who packed away their winter gear in anticipation of basking in springtime sun receive a surprise yesterday morning when a brief April snow drifted across the KU campus.
Winter weather persists in chilling the Midwest, and the unseasonably cold temperatures will stay around until mid-October this week, according to data from meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Topeka.
Light snow fell across northeast and east-central Kansas yesterday afternoon, but it melted as it fell, and southerly winds changed most of it to light rain.
Crandall said a low-pressure system over southwest Kansas was causing the below-normal temperatures, along with moisture from Texas and Oklahoma, over cooler air from Indiana and Nebraska.
He said yesterday afternoon's precipitation might linger through this morning, but should end by this afternoon.
The rest of the week will bring temperatures in the 20s and 30s, warming to the 40s or 50s tomorrow. The extended forecast for Saturday is the Morning Monitors for lows in the 30s and higher in the upper 60s.
The high in Lawrence yesterday was 40 degrees.
Crandall said April snow in Kansas was not unusual.
"We've had snow in April as recently as 1979," he said.
never hot. But he said the aviring blizzard that was blazing across the East Coast was far more
The National Weather Service called the blizzard the "worst April storm in the history of New England," recording dozens of record-breaking seasonal snowfalls.
A storm swept out of the Rockies to dump another nine inches of snow on the Plains yesterday, pushing toward the Great Lakes and the East, where the blizzard killed at least 36 people and left some of the most brutal April cold weather on record.
Parts of Massachusetts were hit with more than two feet of snow, closing hundreds of schools and businesses in New England for the second day.
Wind chill readings in Boston plunged to 41 degrees below zero, and temperatures in New
York City dropped to a 101-year record low of 21 degrees.
The heaviest snow in New England was 26 inches at Stratton Mountain in southern Vermont and in New London, N.H. Some ski areas, like Montana, planned to reopen for an expected late rush.
Connecticut Gov. William O'Neill issued a limited mobilization order Tuesday for about 300 National Guardsmen to seek out stranded vehicles and assist in lowing cars blocking snowlowls.
The second punch of the April storm blew out of the Rockies early yesterday.
Winter storm watches and warnings were posted from Iowa and Minnesota through the Great Lakes, and more snow was expected to hit New York City by tomorrow.
The National Weather Service listed at least 40 cities with record-low temperatures from upstate New York to the deep South, but conceded that there were probably dozens of others.
See WEATHER page 5
Freezing temperatures harm foliage
Rv LISA GUTIERREZ
Staff Reporter
Yesterday's April snow did not harm camp foliage as much as Monday night's freezing temperatures did, which shattered bulb pipes, leaves and may have ruined the fruit of many trees.
"We won't know yet for another four or five days what the actual harm is," Jim Mathes, assistant director of landscape for facilities operations, said yesterday. "It'll take a little longer on the trees because they won't have fruit for a few more days.
"The snow's not unusual, but this one caught us at a bad time."
Mathes said most plants at this time of the year could withstand temperatures of down to 26 degrees. Monday night, temperatures dipped to 22 degrees, he said.
The cold air sapped the magnolia blossoms on campus.
"The magnolia were in full bloom and, being a lilac tree, the blossoms turned brown and died."
The fruit trees also may have sustained some damage, but Mathes said he would not be able to treat them.
"The buds on the crab apple trees may not open or they may fall off before they set fruit," he said. "Or, if they do open, they won't have any fruit."
Tuesday morning, Mathes and facilities operations personnel watered flower beds in front of Hoch Auditorium and Spooner Museum and watered other such plants. The flower beds were furnished from further freezing.
"It it slows down the process of opening up and takes some of the chill away so they won't freeze," Mathes said.
The process was similar to ones used in many fruit orchards.
Mathes said campus flowers might have been
"The rains saved them because the ground was wet and there was more moisture in the air," he said, referring to the flowers' resistance to frost.
saved by rains that fell in Lawrence Sunday night.
a snowfall in April did not surprise Mathes,
and she was clear to the near end of April in some part of Kampala.
Yesterday's snow, Mathes said, would not necessarily hurt any of the foliage.
"It in itself doesn't cause any damage," he said.
KU athletic official takes Big Ten job
"Our frost-free date isn't until the 10th of
march," he said, "so this snowfall wasn't
unusual."
A frost-free date is a historical date that
the latest known date on which snowfall
can occur.
"It carries with it nitrogen from the air and acts like a fertilizer."
Phyllis Howlett, KU assistant athletic director, was named yesterday as an assistant commissioner for the Bif Ten Conference.
By BARB EHLI Staff Reporter
Howlett, 49, said yesterday she would begin working in the conference's Chicago office May
See FREEZE page 5
Howlett's new job will entail many of the same responsibilities she had at the University of Kansas, as dealing with athletic directors, sports information and promotions, public relations, she said.
"I will have the major responsibility for the women's program in the Bie Trop," she said.
Howlett said she also would be in charge of the Big Ten championships for women's sports.
She said that her position in the Big Ten would be a newly created one.
Last May, presidents of the member universities voted to include women's intercollegiate athletics in the conference. This action created the job Howlett will fill.
Howlett described the job as pacesetting.
"It's the kind of job that one would have to look at. It's one of the premier jobs in the country for a woman," Howlett said. "You don't have a chance to write the book very often."
Howlett said she thought KU was a fine institution and that she was glad to have had the opportunity to attend.
one said she would miss the daily contact with the total athletic program, but there would be an additional challenge in administering an entire conference.
"The challenge is greater, and I think also the satisfaction may be greater," she said.
Charles Henry, assistant commissioner for the men's program for the Big Ten, said a fivemember committee screened 87 applicants and selected eight to interview for the position. The committee, composed of two athletic directors, two faculty members and Wayne Duke, commissioner of the Big Ten, conducted the interviews.
The universities of Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota, Wisconsin and Illinois; Ohio and Michigan state universities; and Indiana, Missouri, and New York universities compose the Big Ten Conference.
Howlett graduated from Simpson College in Iowa in 1964 and was a physical education instructor in the Des Moines, Iowa, area before attending Baylor University at Drinke University. She came to KU in 1979.
Howlett is a member of the National Collegiate Athletic Association's football television committee. She will retain her membership when she joins the Big Ten, she said.
Juel Shankel, KU acting athletic director, said
the department had not yet made plans to replace
the office.
"I've talked with Jim Lessig and I think we'll wait until he arrives and see how he wants to fill in."
Lessig, new KU athletic director, will start work Mav 1.
Sankel said that with the end of the spring sports season soon, Howlett would not need to be on the field.
Shankel said he knew a few weeks ago that Howlett was a candidate for the position. She told him of her resignation last week. The University did not release news of her decision until the other candidates had been notified by the Big Ten.
"We're pleased that one of our staff members has had this opportunity," Shankel said. "Phyllis has done a fine job, and we'll always be indebted to her contribution. We wish her well."
Howlett said the Big Ten was going in the right direction, "but there's a difference and that women's sports in general were moving away."
"I think they're headed to far more competence," she said.
Athletes are becoming "more skilled and more exciting to the consumer
"It's exciting to think I'll have a role in that."
By United Press Internationa $ ^{1} $
Britain vows to attack block Falkland Islands
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina—Britain said yesterday it would blockade the Falkland Islands starting Sunday and threatened to attack any Argentine ship that ventured within 200 miles. Argentine officials vowed to "defend" the island and announced a partial call-up of reserves.
The announcement of the blockade cut the time in which a negotiated solution could be found from about 10 days, when the British fleet was expected to arrive in the south Atlantic, to Germany.
President Reagan, in a hurried bid to avoid war over the islands, ordered Secretary of State Alexander Haig to Britain and Argentina hours before the blockade was announced.
As a British war fleet headed toward the disputed islands, an Argentine general took the oath of office as the Falklands' new military governor amid a rare display of national unity.
Britain's ambassador to Argentine, calling it a "bad day," left Buenos Aires under a military escort with 44 other diplomats and British citizens. They were among the first of Britain's 17,000 subjects to leave the South American country.
BRITISH DEFENSE Secretary John Nott announced the blockade in a speech to
"Our first naval action will be intended to deny Argentine forces on the Falklands the means of
reinforcement and supply from the mainland," Nott said.
IN BUENOS AIRES, an Argentine naval source said the British force would not be close enough Sunday to enforce the blockade and termed the announcement a "psychological"
He said the zone would extend 200 nautical miles around the islands, which are located 450 miles east of Argentina and 8,000 miles southwest of Britain.
"The British are way out of their theater for the military officer, said. "A blockade will not work."
The ruling Argentine junta, however, imme-
sured to restore blockade could succeed in retaking the islands.
"Any Argentine warships and Argentine naval auxiliary found within this zone will be treated as hostile and are liable to be attacked by British forces," Not said.
Money, fun, crowds lure strippers to nightclubs
Reagan, acting at the request of both Britain and Argentina, ordered Haig to travel to London and Buenos Aires to seek a peaceful solution to the crisis and "avoid further use of force," David Gergen, White House communications director, said.
Haig, who canceled plans to join Reagan on his Caribbean vacation, was expected to leave shortly after midnight for London, then fly to Buenos Aires and return to Washington by the plane.
Larry Speakes, deputy White House press
FELKALND LAPD page 5
By BECKY ROBERTS Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
Wild Willy pranced onto the dance floor wearing a gray three-piece suit.
To accompany cheers, applause, wolf whistles and beetle bat, willly begin his mission. "And look at the pack of hippos!"
A woman helped Willy with the vest. As she slowly unbuttoned the vest, he bent over the vest and pulled it off.
Minutes before, tall, blond Wild Willy had balanced calmly on the edge of a desk in a sparsely furnished, harshly lit office. He was wearing a wool coat shirt, blue jeans and loafers.
Before Willy began his first routine, the backstage at The Country Playhouse, 806 W. 24th St., was a jumble of four dancers organizing costumes and dance music. The cramped room was filled with friendly insults.
"We're all basic hams," Willy said recently. "We do this for the money and the fun, but when the crowd reaction is good, we work hardest. We're the best in the Mid-
"I feel good that these gentlemen dance a clean show. Their show keeps the women coming back because it's done in good taste. You can't use low-rent dancers." Joe Mandacina, owner of the Playhouse, said before the show.
THE SHOW GIVES women a chance to be equal to men in the spirit of ERA and other values.
Only women were in the audience. As they waited for the first dance, the disc jockey
They clapped and cheered as Dino glided onto the dance floor surrounded by shouts and long, low whistles. The women swayed to the beat. "Get Physical," Dino's personal dance music.
"Women today want to go out and have a good time. They're getting equal to men in other aspects. Why not a night out for them, too?" he said.
"Ladies, let's get those hands together ano welcome Dino!"
See STRIPPER page 5
His tight black pants clung to his muscular body. His red ensured suspenders and the red sequined choker on his neck reflected the dim yellow lights as he began dancing.
JOINE RICHARDSON/MALCOLM
JOHNE RICHARDSON/Staff Artist
Weather
WINDY
Today will be cloudy, windy and cold with a high in the 30s, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka. Winds will be gusting from the northwest at 15 to 30 mph through the afternoon, creating clear tonight with a low in the 20s.
Tomorrow should be partly cloudy with a high in the upper 40s or low 50s
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, April 8, 1982
News Briefs From United Press International
Tanker explodes in tunnel; at least six killed in inferno
OAKLAND, Calif. -- A tanker truck loaded with gasoline crashed into a runaway bus in a highway tunnel yesterday and exploded into a 1,000-degree inferno which melted several vehicles in seconds and incinerated their occupants.
At least six people were killed in their cars by a giant fireball sent hurtling by the crash through the tunnel, which runs more than half a mile under the Berkeley Hills, officials said. Authorities found a seventh body, thought to be that of an animal. Three people were hospitalized.
The tanker truck, carrying 8,900 gallons of gasoline, crashed into the side of the tunnel as the driver swerped in an unsuccessful attempt to avoid colliding with an out-of-control bus, which was empty except for its driver, the California Highway Patrol reported.
The ensuing blast and fireball melted vehicles into pools of metal and dissolved brass fitted on the tunnel walls. The heart popped tiles from the wall.
"It looked like a bomb had gone off," said a spokesman for the highway patrol. "It was just unbelievable."
The bus bounced off the wall of the tunnel and into the tanker truck, which overturned, spilling its load of fuel, witnesses said.
According to witness accounts, the bus driver lost control when he swerved to avoid hitting a car ahead of him in the tunnel.
Reagan begins talks in Caribbean
KINGSTON, Jamaica—President Reagan arrived yesterday to discuss
adaptive, the goals of freedom and prosperity we seek for the Caribbean,
would say.
Larry Speakes, White House spokesman, said Jamaican Prime Minister Edward Seaga and Reagan would discuss the economic development of the country.
Reagan is the first American president to make an official visit to Jamaica. He is renewing acquaintances with Seaga, who was the first foreign ambassador to Jamaica.
The president, whose five-day Caribbean journey was billed as a "working holiday," flies to Harbadines for a luncheon-meeting with several other members of the board.
Phone rates to jump. survev savs
ORKLAHOMA CITY—Telephone rates across the nation will rise 76 percent in the next four years because of inflation and deregulation, a govern-
Bernard Wunder, a Commerce Department assistant secretary, released the survey at a congressional hearing in Oklahoma City.
Some predominantly rural areas will experience even greater increases regions, where the higher cost of providing service to sparsely populated regions. Winters are
The survey said the basic charge for an average customer would increase from $1.16 to more than $18 by early 1986.
Wunder said most of the increase would be caused by inflation, but growing denervation of the industry would contribute to the higher rates.
growing deregulation of the industry would contribute to the higher rates. In the past five years, the basic charge for telephone service has risen 17 percent.
Trial date finally set for Hincklev
WASHINGTON—A federal judge yesterday set April 27 as the opening day or the trial of John Hinckley, 28, the young man accused of trying to assassinate President Ronald Reagan.
U. D. District Judge Barrington Parker issued the date in a brief statement just hours after Hincapie's lawyers asked that the trial not start for at least two months.
Vincent Fuller, head of Hinckley's defense team, asked for the extra time at a brief hearing on grounds that the defense needed it to fully prepare its case—that Hinckley was not mentally responsible for his actions when Reagan was shot on March 30, 1980.
Hinckey's trial has been postponed three times because of wrangling over legal issues.
Hickley faces up to life imprisonment if convicted of charges stemming from wounding Reagan, White House Press Secretary. James Brady, and Andrew S. Gorman have been charged with the crime.
Landon better, may return home
TOPEKA-AIF Landon, former Republican presidential nominee hospitalized for a virus, fell better yesterday and is looking forward to going back home.
Kathy Olson, spokeswoman for Stormtion-Vail Regional Medical Center, said a year-old Landon was in satisfactory condition after entering the hospital.
His doctor has scheduled several more routine tests. Olson said, but has told Landon's wife, Theo, that I landon will be able to go home in "a couple of
During his hospital stay, Landon has undergone a number of medical tests to determine the cause of the troublesome virus. The results of those tests were not available yesterday, Olson said.
House votes to revive gas tax bill
TOPEKA—The Kansas House had second thoughts yesterday about putting to death a gasoline tax increase.
During its morning session, the House had shot down 56-68 a bill that would raise the gallonage tax on motor fuels by 3 cents. However, late yesterday, the House voted to reconsider that action and then voted 71-50 to send the proposal to a six-member House-Senate conference committee.
The fate of the measure is still not certain because House Speaker Wendell Lady, who had opposed the bill, appointed himself to the conference committee.
The bill would raise the gas on gasoline from 8 cents to 11 cents a gallon. The tax on diesel fuel would increase from 10 cents to 13 cents a gallon.
GOP reps draft new budget plan
Lady and other lawmakers opposed the plan saying they could not support such a tax increase unless a severance tax was approved by the Legislature.
WASHINGTON (UPI)—Three Republican Congressmen have give President Reagan a few ideas on how to reduce the budget by $111 billion with
The administration still officially estimates its fiscal 1983 deficit at $1.5 billion, although it is expected to be much higher. Budget Director David Stockman has said the red ink will be at least $96.4 billion and his office of management and budget plans to issue a revised proposal Friday.
Reps. Stan Parris of Virginia, Henson Moore of Louisiana and William Dammeier of California outlined the budget options compiled by an ad hoc committee to consider the proposed budget.
They offered a list of $82.3 billion of potential spending cuts, in excess of the changes," for consideration by your administration and by the congress.
Pets' health can now be insured
LOS ANGELES—Canine TV star, Lassie, yesterday became the first pooch to be insured under a new plan to help pet owners pay for escalating veterinary costs for dogs and cats that might otherwise have to be destroyed.
Mayor Tom Bradley, a democratic candidate for governor, presented the four-legged TV star with her health insurance policy.
"We take for granted human for health beings, but there is also a great need for pet owners in this state to have insurance," Bradley said, before
*academic injury and comprehensive major medical coverage is best offered by Veterinary Pet Insurance the first company of its kind licensed in New York.*
City managers make policy,profs say
By STEPHEN BLAIR Staff Reporter
Although Lawrence city commissioners have said that a city manager was supposed to implement policy rather than make it, in practice a city manager should be expected to do both, Edwin Stone, who helped train about 200 city managers at the University of Kansas, said recently.
"When you have city managers who set the official agenda of the council, control the flow of information, coordinate and monitor the agency heads and don't let the council see the agency heads, provide budgetary information and are full-time, as compared with part-time, it's a real question whether that's administration or policy-making among the college of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
"They prepare the budget." Stene, a former professor of public administration, said of city managers. "The budget is the police instrument."
the general tendency in the city manager form of government and not necessarily to the government in Lawrence.
Robert Lineberry, KU professor of political science, agreed.
Other cities such as Chicago have a mayor-council form of government in which an elected mayor receives a full-time job, also does some administrative work.
LAWRENCE HAS a city manager-
commission form of government.
Lineberry said he was referring to
In February, Lawrence City Commissioner Tomegla wrote a letter to City Manager Buford Watson suggesting that he should face the possibility of being fired.
But following the commission's evaluation of Watson's job performance, no commissioners moved to fire Watson.
One problem with the mayoral form of government is that decisions are often made for political reasons rather than on a basis that is administratively efficient. In law, Edwin O. Stene. Distinguished Professor of Political Science at KU.
"When we have a city manager form of government, we have a chilling effect on politics—a depolarization," Levine said.
"It's a quieter form of political communication," he said. "And if you ever have to know city managers, you'll quickly know why. They are people very comfortable dealing with the issues they are people who are very oriented toward growth, and that's likely to lead the community to conflict."
BUT THE CITY manager form of government lends itself to a less visible kind of politics. Linebervy said.
Recently some people have questioned the value of overall growth,
"Fifteen years ago we almost never had a conflict in American communities about growth," he said.
"Now the city manager system, tied in with the business system, is very strongly committed to the view that growth is good and many parts of the business community don't care where growth takes place."
HOWEVER, PEOPLE in older neighborhoods have become concerned that the city is shifting its resources to the newer, expanding areas and they complain, "Hey, wait a minute, all the growth over here is reducing at the
tention the city pays to us in our neighborhood and we'd like to grow in quality rather than in quantity." Linebery said.
Levine agreed that neighborhood groups were influential in Lawrence and said that they were a new interest group.
"They're reopened the agenda of political discussion here," he said. "What we're seeing is the rise of politics."
an important factor in Lawrence politics is the tendency for middle-class people to move into the older neighborhoods, Linebird said.
"People in older neighborhoods as they have become gentrified—we see that process going on around here—middle-class people tend to move into a neighborhood that's been kind of their own and then sort of pick it again," he said.
"Those kinds of people have a lot of clout, and they don't like to be walked over by city hall. They're bright, young, aggressive middle-class doctors and nurses, and they are not necessary all chamber of commerce, small-business types."
State joins radioactive waste disposal plan
By KEVIN HELLIKER Staff Reporter
Kansas yesterday became the first of nine states to enter into a compact that would regulate the transfer and storage of low-level radioactive waste.
Earlier approved by both chambers of the Legislature, the compact yesterday received the signature of Gov. John Carlin, who dismissed as premature speculations that Kansas could become the storage state for all low-level radioactive waste in the region.
Although Kansas is the first state to enter the compact, Missouri is working on an identical bill during its legislative session this year, and Nebraska has agreed to work on a bill next year. After three states join the compact, the U.S. Congress would have to approve any agreement between the states.
Because Kansas is centrally located, some lawmakers argued that the state was likely to be chosen as the storage location for radioactive waste of the other states.
If no state volunteered to store the waste, a compact commission would choose a state to do so.
But State Rep. Betty Jo Charlton, LA-
Lawrence, agreed with Carlin that it
was too early to worry about the
sufficiency of Kansas being chosen for
this task.
"No state probably will volunteer," Charlton, a supporter of the bill in the Senate. "It's the wrong thing."
Carlin said the bill was the culmination of "many hours of hard work by concerned and dedicated individuals."
"By working with other states in this region, we can begin a common sense approach to the very real and complex problem of dealing with the waste products of our technological society," he said.
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Low-level radioactive waste is any material that is contaminated with radioactive elements up to a certain
The compact's purpose is to provide safe facilities for the management of low-level radioactive waste in the nine-state region. The compact would try to limit the number of facilities needed in the region and to encourage the reduction of the amount of waste generated by the member states.
degree. They are generally produced in Kansas at hospitals, research institutions, industry and some government facilities.
Kansas officials began meeting with other states in February 1981 to discuss the feasibility of creating a compact. A compact document was formally approved last January in Kansas City, Mo.
Recreation Services Golf Longest Drive Contest
will be Sat., April 17 at 10:30 a.m. at the Shenk Complex, 23rd & Iowa. Entry deadline is Thurs., April 15 at 5 p.m. in 208 Robinson. For more information call 864-3546.
98
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.
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University Daily Kansan, April 8, 1982
Page :
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Squatters celebrate Passover
By United Press International
YAMIT, Israeli-Occupied Sinai-
Three thousand religious squatters
sat down yesterday to a final
Passover Seder. Seven occupants
last month accompanied exodus from Egypt they soon will
retrace under Israel army orders.
"It's going to be one heck of a Seder," Yehuda Richter, a Jewish defense league member said shortly after bonfires lit the deserts and the leaven bread which Jews are forbidden to eat on Passover.
Yamit, a desert town carved out of
the sand nine years ago, was nearly cleared of its original settlers. More than 95 percent of the pioneer families are gone. There were 3,000 legal residents in the town in its heyday.
A special government order enabled the squatters to stay on until after Passover week. They face eviction by army troops after that, underscoring the determination of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to meet the April 25 deadline for handover under its peace treaty with Egypt.
As darkness fell, the squatters from a score of religious seminaries who replaced the settlers gathered to recount the exodus from Egypt
3,202 years ago across the same desert sand.
Under the lights of a giant tent in the shadow of a Yamit war monument, more than 200 Yeshiva students raised wine glasses and chanted the ancient prayers to start the Haggadah recitation.
Similar services were held in thousands of Jewish homes in Israel, the occupied West Bank, the an-ocupiedolan Heights and the east Jerusalem.
An estimated 105,000 Jews and Christian pilgrims arrived to celebrate Passover and Easter week in the holy land. Thousands of police, soldiers and troops stood watch against a possible Palestinian guerrilla strike.
HARRISBURG, Pa.—The U.S. Department of Energy agreed yesterday to dispose of the damaged reactor core at Three Mile Island, a move officials said would greatly aid the cleanup of the crippled nuclear plan.
By United Press International
TMI reactor to be removed
Under the agreement, DOE would acquire the core and take it to federal facilities in Idaho for research and development. The federal government is providing nuclear for nuclear research and development, which includes work on the core.
Robert Arnold, president of General Public Utilities Nuclear Corporation, who signed the agreement, said it was a "major accomplishment" in removing radioactive waste from the damaged unit No. 2 reactor.
GPU, owner of the plant, would reimburse the government for all other
costs, including shipment, storage and disposal.
Shelby Brewer, assistant DOE secretary for nuclear energy, said detailed plans for the transfer of the core would be completed in six to nine months, and the transfer to a government would cost $1 million $2 million.
He said the core would be examined "to determine a number of very important parameters associated with the user" at TMI more than three years ago.
Brewer said the core would be reprocessed and placed in a repository.
He said pieces of the core eventually would be sent to labs across the country. He speculated the parts would have been studied for study as samples from the moon.
Arnold said the head of the core was scheduled to be removed in 1984 and the fuel removed by early 1985.
Meanwhile, GPU-Nuclear officials
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Company officials said the repairs were scheduled for completion by late summer or early fall, and the company would be in the reactor before the end of the year.
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Opinion
Page 4 University Daily Kansan, April 8, 1982
Unseptered isles
Last weekend, a conflict erupted on the tiny Falkland Islands. And for many, the incident resembled a scene from a Gilbert and Sullivan operetta: A band of Argentine marines set out to capture an island the size of Connecticut from the peaceful British shepherds who lived there.
Argentine marines? British shepherds?
How amusing.
But now, less than a week later, those who have watched the situation closely are no longer laughing.
Fifteen Argentinian soldiers were killed in the takeover. More than 1,800 British citizens are now living in an occupied territory. Lord Carrington, the British foreign minister, who was nominated for the Nobel peace prize in 1980, resigned from his post. The British Labour Party also asked Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher to resign. She refused.
Meanwhile, the United States is carefully straddling the fence in this conflict between two of its allies.
Thatcher called a total embargo on Argentinian imports and sent an armada on a leisurely charge to the captured islands.
By now, most of us know that the Falkland Islands are at the center of these conflicts, but what are they, where are they and why are two countries so determined to possess them?
To start with, the Falklands consist of two large islands, and about 200 smaller ones, scattered from 250 to 400 miles off Argentina's coast.
The islands are covered with treeleas, windswept moors. It rains 250 days in the average year, and the islands are suited best to sheepherding. In fact, sheep outnumber the islands' human inhabitants 300 to one.
Great Britain traces its claim on the islands to 1592 when it says John Davis, an English navigator, discovered the islands.
Argentina calls the islands "the Malvinas" and it traces its claim to them to the day in 1520, when it says a member of
Ferdinand Magellan's crew discovered the islands.
The two sides have fought over the islands intermittently ever since then. Formal talks with the United Nations and the International Court began in 1947. But the struggle intensified in 1976, when an economic survey showed that there could be oil just off the Falklands' shores.
Black gold.
The fight for the Falklands has several causes. National pride is at stake, and so is a lot of offshore oil.
But the situation probably is most complicated for the United States.
For better or for worse, we are allied with Argentina. (Argentina, by the way, could be the most repressive government in the Americas. Amnesty International conservatively estimated that the country's military junta killed 5,000 people during its first four years in power).
In 1947, the U.S. signed the Inter-American Reciprocal Assistance Treaty, which calls for all signers to respond to an attack on any American country as if it were an attack on themselves.
But the U.S. also is bound to the British by its membership in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, and by a 1982 agreement to let the British use the U.S. air field on Ascension Island, a convenient stonower for Britain's southbound armada.
So far, the Reagan administration has kept a low profile in negotiations between the conflicting countries.
In staying calm, and staying neutral, the administration probably is doing the right thing.
Amid all the shouting and resigning and negotiating, it is important to remember that the Falkland controversy centers around underwater oilfields and 4,700 square miles of sheep pastures.
And it is important for the U.S. to remember a lesson it has learned in the past 30 years: when big countries step in to solve the small problems of small countries—they usually create big problems.
AS THE DEFENDERS PREPARE FOR INVASION.
A
UNCLE SAM IS PERPLEXED ABOUT WHAT TO DO.
colonialism? NAT.O.?
OAS? alliances?
supports revolution?
supplies
THE INVINCIBLE BRITISH ARMADA SPEEDS ACROSS THE SEAS,
UNION
AND THE NATIVES PLAN
THEIR COUNTERATTACK
AotBantos 82
Stay tuned . .
Letters to the Editor
Dean should 'reconfigure' Western Civilization's budget
To the Editor:
I am writing in response to your article of April 5 pertaining to the Western Civilization Program. There it is stated that Robert Lineberry, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, has "reconfigured" the Western Civilization budget, i.e. transferred control of 10 T.A. positions to the history and philosophy departments.
Recognizing the tenability of criticisms of Lineberry's decision made by James Seaver chairman of the Western Civilization department, the history department, as I understand it, has requested that its control of five of the 10 positions be transferred back to the Western Civilization department. The department has not requested that its control of the other five positions be re-transferred.
Your article states that Anthony Genova, chairman of the philosophy department, did not specifically request those five positions, but used the facts that (a) philosophy graduate students often are awarded positions in the Western Civilization Program and (b) the philosophy department does not control these positions; (c) the department's inability to award more T.A. positions than they were budgeted for at that time.
Thus, the principle involved here, it seems, is that if a department chairman can convince Lineberry of the need to upgrade its graduate program, then positions from other departments should be taken. The faculty are qualified to teach should be appropriated and the budgets accordingly, "reconfigured."
That is, the philosophy department was only budgeted for nine T.A. positions, in order to attract more and better graduate students and thereby to further upgrade the philosophy graduate program, the philosophy department would like to control another five positions.
In view of this, Lineberry has transferred control of five Western Civilization positions to the philosophy department. I believe this is totally inadequate ground for Lineberry's teaching role. The students have in the past often received T.A. appointments from the mathematics department; by parity of reasoning, Lineberry would be justified in "reconfiguring" the math curriculum and by providing the philosophy department could better their graduate program by awarding T.A. positions in mathematics.
Moreover, not only is Lineberry's decision untenable, but the fact that it was made without consultation with Seaver or interested parties is a significant factor in the decision, betrays its underhanded character.
A procedurally fair decision would have been preceded by open discussion with the parties affected. Procedural fairness is, I take it, incompatible with the automatic methods to which Lineberry is apparently given. Such methods are hardly consistent with the ends of the University.
$106,995. I also think that a first-rate philosophy program and a first-rate Western Civilization Program deserve much more funding than they do. The American Institute of Lineberry's salary should be "reconfigured."
I believe that Linneberg should reconfigure his reconfiguration, restoring the Western and Eastern branches.
R. H. Hall
K.R. Hau
Lawrence graduate student and assistant instructor of Western Civilization.
Jeans day not logical
To the Editor:
This letter is in response to the Gay and Lesbian Service of Kansas "wear blue jeans if you're gay day," it tells tale-clue that some of our public relations issues lacking in common public relations sense.
How absurd is it to assign a stigma to the staple garment of a college student's wardrobe? They might just as well have had a "wear underwear if you're gay day," or perhaps "anyone with a face is gay today day." The whole concept defies logic.
In Jeff Thomas' column, "Purpose of blue jeans day to increase understanding" it was stated that we are supposed to be ticked-off by being helplessly frustrated as we sit in class wearing jeans, wondering what others are thinking.
I know that when I saw other students with jeans on it didn't send signals rushing to my head, "Oh my God, he's a homosexual." That have been as fatous in logic as the day itself.
I wore jeans with the knowledge of what day it was and I am certainly not gay. It wasn't that I was intent on not being intimidated by this queer faction of students. My attitude was more apathetic than that. Who cares what other people may think?
Also, what kind of group is it that is searching for a negative response from people whose support and understanding it desires? Their reverse psychology is not only warped, but it also alienates those of us who might be inclined to be sympathetic to their cause. Why or how could anyone support any group whose goal it is to intentionally angry people? It defies logic.
Essentially, it was a copout. Jeans day was supposed to be the day when straight people were supposed to think about what it must be like for gay people to live with large parts of their lives hidden. Well, GLOSK, nobody knew who didn't. Don't worry, you are safe in your closet.
If the GLSOK truly wanted its numbers to stand up and be noticed, then they should have worn something out of the ordinary to make their numbers recognizable for our gay students to remain anonymously gay.
As far as he is being ticked-off goes, I perforce must say that you provided me with the greatest comic relief and all we need. I can hardly wait to about do this. I will be ready, in a "carry a backpack if you're gay day?"
It's Kansas Relays time again.
Terence O'Malley, Leawood graduate student
Dollar pinch hurts Timmon's Relays
I remember the Relays well, it's one of my favorite times.
Eight years ago I was a freshman distance runner walking into Coach Bob Timmons' training room.
Coach was hunkered down among mountain ranges of stacked manila folders and empty R.C. Cola cans. All I could see of him was his face, a blurred half-melted black eye with blue wedge eyes — he was once a drill sergeant.
"Key Wild Will," he greeted me and then
said, "is the most important question, "Did you run this morning?"
I had, but said "No. I ran eight mornings last week, Coach."
"You rascal "he said and smiled
He was heavily into organizing the Kansas Relays, the middle and perhaps most important leg of the relay Triple Crown—with Texas before and Drake after.
A big black phone sat ominously in front of Coach and jingled-in information that he transferred onto sheets in folders that were placed on the table to reactive stacks. The whole meet was on his table.
As Coach finished marking a minute number in among lots of other numbers on a sheet in one of the folders, I heard the phone in the other office ring.
I answered it and heard the familiar fuzz of a long-distance call.
"Coach, someone on this phone for you," I half-yelled.
"Hello, is Timmie there?" Just a cool 'llaid.
"Who?" I said, too loudly into the phone.
"Frank Shorter."
"Who," he half-yelled back.
"It's Frr..." I stopped and thought Frank! I calmed myself.
"Ubbh, just a minute Frank, he's tied up at it. So he's been getting in some good work," Frank said.
"Huh? Oh, well. I did ten quarters on the track today, and . . ."
"Just a minute Frank." Coach came out of his office.
"Frank Shorter." I handed him the phone.
"Probably wants more money, the rascal . . .
Frankl 'obudy, how ya doing?"
Ten quarters on the track is what we'd done that day, too. Running on the track during a race was not fun.
consuming country road workouts, Coach could zip from the fieldhouse to the stadium in his diapidated '60 Chevy truck and arrive through the gate as we finished our warm up. This way he could escape from the confines of the office building, where he would put us through our daily death simultaneously.
"... okay Frank, we'll see what we can work out, bye."
"Frank Shorter. huh?"
"Yup. What did you say to him?"
"You racalas," he said, and gave me that one. He stared at me. He went back to his stacked folders and I was in a state of shock.
America used to be intent on proving amateur status, so little money was available for them. Now, it's easier.
P. SINGH
W.J. ANDREWS
Olympic athletes competed known they had
more than the Soviet-funded
"amateurs."
This ascetic practice of true sport lived on most noticeably among track athletes. Track amateurs found it especially difficult to earn a place in a team, but they chose chances at competition in away meets.
Track clubs were helpful, but woefully underfunded themselves. Some clubs more closely resembled gypsy bands that gathered as family to promote a few star talents—a pecking order of limited opportunity to compete.
The other source of money for top amateur athletes has been meet sponsors. But meet directors like Coach Timmons rarely have access to the money needed to talent-track is definitely a non-revenue sport.
And there are no guarantees that athletics will show up, run well or not apply pressure for them.
Guy's like Frank never asked for much, and you were glad to have them. It was the big question.
almost was's that milked your competitor's budget.
Lately track clubs have been getting stronger and "entertainment" with its wily nice awards have become popular. Frank is pushing shorts and shoes and doing okay.
But since the ante has been upped, the talented amateurs are avoiding traditional events and are vying for sweet rewards on the pavement under banners. Meet directors who could scarcely meet the buoyant before find themselves in a draw today. And the recession makes it worse.
So much so that Coach Tingtons has had to dispense with tradition and change the format of his team.
The meet will be run along a standard NCAA format.
Most open individual events, many junior college and high school events, and the occasional tournament.
But it is not for trying that the meet has had to change. These last couple of months that windowless office has been lighted and warm long into the night.
Some athletes have avoided their truest support, the traditional relays. More athletes should make a commitment to return the favor they've received, and meet with them where they've previously fared well.
And what about community support? Couldn't the populace invest some effort, if not some cash, to specially dress the Relays with an air of festivity? At least attend?
As a former KU runner, I can guarantee that the performance you will see if that stadium fills even half as much as for a football game, will be a rabbit-run competition of exciting dimensions. Runners love crowds. They go nuts up like a steam engine and start moving faster.
I guarantee it won't rain and you can count on bringing your tanning oil.
And watch for Coach Timmons, the diminutive wise man. You can recognize him by the dark circles under his eyes and that object of attraction in charge of the Rel晖's too busy to see.
If you enjoy yourself, next year about this time send Coach a check. He'll appreciate it and make a mark in one of the folders from one of the stacks.
And I'll appreciate it too. TheRelays is one of my favorite times.
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USP 850464) 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 66945. Subscriptions by mail are $15 for six months or $7 a year in Douglas County and $18 for six months or $8 a year. Mail orders must be sent to the station; not forward the address. Postmaster: Send changes of address to the University Daily Kansan, Flint Hall, The University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 66945.
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University Daily Kansan. April 8. 1982
Page
Stripper
From page 1
"Those black pants couldn't get much higher, could they?" one woman commented.
DINO EMPHASIZED the throbbing beat of the music with pelvic thrusts. Gyrating across the floor, he stripped down to a red, glittering G-sstring.
One woman, maybe a little braver after a few highballs, ventured onto the stage to award the dark-haired dancer the first tip of the evening. As he stepped forward and backward over the railing, when she placed the bills in his G-string, Dino thanked her with a kiss.
"I lift weights during the day. I dance at night and have lots of girlfriends," the woman
"I take it seriously that I look good and that I'm a good dancer."
Dino left the stage to more whistles and sighs.
It was, of course, ladies' night at the
Platium Playhouse - Thursdays, as always
For the past year, Mandacina has hired male burlesque dancers to draw the women of the city.
The Playhouse is one of about eight clubs in Kansas City, Topeka and Lawrence that have featured male dancers for ladies' nights entertainment.
In Lawrence, the start started at the Flamingo Club, 501 N. Ninth St., and continued at the Playhouse and occasionally at
the Mingles. Ms. Mississippi St., and Mingles,
2223 W. Shrub St.
"I come out here to get away from it all. It
takes time, and it's good therapy," one woman said.
"I think it's great! Women have been doing it for men for years" is about time women had to do it.
Besides providing entertainment for the women at ladies' nights, male dancers can rake in large sums of money from one night's work.
THE BASE RATE of pay for male strippers ranges from $25 to $70 a night depending on the club and how much experience the dancer has. For a single dance, are added to his base pay each night he works.
The coveted tips are also an indication of a desire to remain as well as a large portion of the biceps.
You have to know your audience", 'Rich a,
25-year-old KU student and part-time dance-
you can hold a crowd in the palm of your hand, but there also the chance of falling flat on your back.
The money was his biggest reason for beginning to dance, he said.
"I began dancing because I was broke. It was electrifying an egg trip, and I got caught up in the moment," he said.
"Now, it's just a job. It'll be nice not to dance, but I can't argue with the money."
A stripper can collect more than $5 a night in tips and audience he pleases or he can take them away.
"It's a risk—tips make you or break you," Dino said.
Back in the club, the women waited eagerly for the next dress. Wry, blond-headed Mark
"It's fun, energetic and it keeps me feeling young," the 25-year-old stripper said.
"I always wanted to be an entertainer.
Here, you're in control and comfortable,
and can entertain you with what you want."
Mark, who has been dancing for three years, said he spends the day running, tanning and playing pinball.
"Always found a notch at something—something I'm good at," he said.
ON STAGE, Mark began to undo his black leather jacket, black chaps and sunglasses.
He quickly stripped down to a G-string and pulled it off to reveal a second, smaller G-string. He danced off the stage and threw the woman in a deep seat. The woman, a woman seated there, She blushed and let it fall.
As Mark continued his routine, Dino wandered through the audience barely
covered in a G-string, carrying a drink and
cutlery out kisses and dancing on chairs and
tables.
Mark finished his routine by peeling off the second G-string and revealing a third, still smaller. G-string, which consisted of two thin sticks and three rounded tips, stage to prepare himself for the final number.
"We're quality performers." Mark said. We don't get any allyse people. We're a party company.
Dino and Mark are both members of a male dance troupe called First Class Male. The 12 members of the troupe perform in groups of three or four at the Kansas City, Topeka and Lawrence clubs that hire male dancers. They also perform at private parties and take occasional road trips to other Kansas towns, such as Dodge City.
All the dancers had performed twice, and it
was 10 n.m. — finale time.
stripped again.
The women mobbed the stage for the last
Dancing to "Macho Man," all the dancers stripped again.
By the end of the act, half of the audience was on stage dancing with the strippers,
Even after the dancers left, some women lingered on stage. A few left to go home, but most stayed for the second half of the evening as the men outside crowded the doors to get in.
Sound economic future seen
By United Press International
A top economist in President Reagan's administration said yesterday that the recession was all but over, but that unemployment—now 10.5 million—a growing number would likely remain high through next year.
Robert Dederick, assistant secretary of commerce for economic affairs, also said that how well the economy recovered would partially negotiated action to cut federal budget deficits.
Afterward, House Budget Committee Chairman James Jones, D-Dokla, said a bipartisan compromise to reduce the deficit under the Obama administration month to avert pertious economic consequences.
And House Republican Leader Robert Michel of Illinois said Congress and the White House must come up with about $30 billion in tax increases, plus significant spending cuts, to keep the 1983 budget deficit below $100 billion.
Dederick told reporters that while the administration thought the recession "has just well blown itself out," what he predicted to be one of the best post-war economic recoveries depended largely on a federal budget that reduced deficits in the years ahead.
After deficits are decreased, he said, interest rates could be reduced, which in turn would allow recovery in housing, automobiles and other sectors of the economy.
Investors in the financial markets interpret federal decisions as meaning high interest rates on credit.
"It is of great importance that steps be taken
that budgets deficits are declined," Dedekind says.
Investors on Wall Street yesterday ignored current economic trends and looked toward a compromise on deficits, which resulted in mixed trading.
Soap opera actress commits suicide
By United Press International
LOS ANGELES—Brenda Benet, who for four years played the scherping, often faced accusations of inscrutely "days our Laws" 'shot and killed herself in an apparent suicide yesterday, police said.
She was 35.
A police department spokesman, Lt.丹 Cooke, said Benedy's body was found by her secretary and police officers who broke down the door. The officers acted 'spectacularly' Parkaide, Calif., area home.
Cooke said a gun was in her hand when police found the body.
Benet was the former wife of actor Bill Bixby, the star of the series "The Incredible Hulk" and appeared regularly in the soap opera since 1979.
Freeze
From page 1
"At this time, the plants are smart enough to know that it's still cold outside and can rely on their own mechanisms to keep warm," Mathes said.
The plants may need to depend on those mechanisms tonight, because temperatures are expected again to fall below the freezing mark, and therefore they will not be right for the National Weather Service in Topeka.
"There's a very good possibility for freezing temperatures tonight and Friday morning." Cory
The lows were expected to be in the upper 20s today, he said.
He said freezing temperatures over the weekend were doubtful.
The last average date for freezing temperatures in northeast Kansas, Cramdall said, is October 19.
Falkland
secretary, said that in Kingston, Jamaica, the British blockade announcement had been no surprise to the White House, but he dented that Haig had been sent in response to the British
From page 1
The U.S. diplomatic offensive—the first break in the crisis since Argentine troops invaded the Falklands on Friday—damage both countries' relations, and force them to act as a "honest broker" to settle the dispute.
But leaders in both capitalis vowed that, if necessary, they would fight for the islands, which have been a disputed British colony since 1783. The colony is inhabited by 1,800 people of British stock
"Britain," he said, "does not appease dictators."
"We intend to see that the Falkland Islands are freed from occupation and returned to British administration at the earliest possible moment." Britain's new foreign minister, Francis Pym, told Parliament to cheers from the Conservative bench.
Weather
From page 1
Major airports, including Boston's Logan International, Connecticut's Bradley International and the Portland, Maine, International Jetport, reopened yesterday after white-out conditions reduced visibility entirely overnight.
Most colleges and secondary school classes were canceled, and state and local governments maintained skeletal staffs as plow crews battled floods. The residents of England roads with drifts even after being cleared.
Temperatures across Kansas ranged from freezing in the northeast to a sunny 80 degrees in the south.
Precipitation fella mainly over the eastern third of the state in the form of rain, sleet and snow.
Yesterday's afternoon temperatures were in the lower 30s over the northeast and in the 40s through the central and southeast portions of the state.
Mid-60s to mid-60s were reported over the northwestern 70s, while southwest temperatures in the 70s to
High ranged from 40 in Lawrence and Pitt-
ton to 54 in Bucktonhill, 39 in Topknot, 49 in Wichita,
and 57 in St. Louis.
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Page 6 University Daily Kansan, April 8, 1980
Byproduct might ignite Fireplaces may be firetraps
By STEPHEN BLAIR Staff Reporter
April has turned cold and wet and so more people are piling wood into their fireplaces and stoves.
But many do not realize how to burn wood safely, Larry Hess, a chimney sweep, RFD 1 in Clinton, said yesterday. RFD
"A lot of people don't 'think fireplaces can catch fire,' he said. "You're dealing with a different heating system than people in this century are used to."
Fireplaces, stoves and chimneys can catch fire because of the buildup of creosote, a flammable, oily liquid, he said.
Cressote formed by burning wood is "condensation of vapor, moisture and wood." Hess said.
Creosote created from burning wood is different from industrial creosote created from coal tar, he said.
Although periodic cleaning of a chimney is important, improper use causes accidental fires, too, he said.
When someone is using wood for fuel, a hot fire is better than a low-smoldering fire because a cool chimney inside a dresser can燥 inside a dome.
"Burn a couple of good hot fires during the day," he said. "It's better to let the store do some work."
Because of a nationwide increase in accidental woodfires, a local ordinance to regulate the installation and use of wood-fuel systems is being prepared, Harley Garvey, building inspector for Lawrence, said.
Gover, who is preparing the ordinance, said it should be ready for submission to the city commission before next fall.
"The national statistics have been rather scary," Gover said. "The occurrence of wood-energy fires between 1974 and 1987 percent. People are just not aware."
"That's 90 percent of my job," Hess said. "Educate yourself about your stove and its operation. Every stove is equipped with different kinds of stoves we have now."
HESS, WHO sometimes advises Gover, said that people's lack of awareness had led him to try to educate him whenever he cleaned their chimneys.
In addition to preparing a wood-fuels ordinance, Gover said, he would be giving talks to various local groups, including Firewolf firefighters.
One of the biggest dangers is the installation of fireplaces too close to windows.
"I Improper maintenance on old chimneys that weren't lined is another problem," he said. "The masonry has deteriorated, and the bricks are loose."
They seem to think that just because a chimney is there, it's OK to use it.
"Year before last, there were about 100,000 fires that were directly related to wood fuels. Eight-three percent of these were improper installation and operation."
People are unaware that there are so many different factors that influence safe operation of a stove or fireplace, Hess said.
"Where your fuel is located in your house makes a big difference." he said.
A fule that runs through the center of the house will stay warm from room heat, and creosote will not condense inside it so quickly, he said.
"If it's on the north side of the house
on the outside, it different," he said.
Then, creosote will form inside the cool chimney more quickly, he said.
During the first stage of formation, creosote is a fine, powdery soil. Then, in the second stage, it begins to form clay and eventually build up to a third stage.
"Then, it's a real oily, tarry sort of stuff that bakes on like enamel," Hess said. "It doesn't ignite quite as easily, but it gets going, it burns with abandon."
If people paid attention to what they were doing, a wood-fuels ordinance would be written.
"I don't think they're planning to
increase the butter, but they're not planning to
to her."
LOOK BEFORE YOU LEAP.
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SPRING JACKETS reg. to $50...29.99-39.99
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ANNOUNCEMENTS
B. S.U. announces its upcoming elections. Applications for:
- President
- Vice-President
- Treasurer
- Recording Secretary
- Corresponding Secretary
Applications can be picked up in the B.S.U. Office.
Friday Night at the Movies
B. S.U. will be showing: Richard Pryor-Live in Concert and Tales From the Crypt
Friday, April 9th
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University Daily Kansan, April 8, 1982
Page 7
Computerized card catalog to save money, time
By DOUG CUNNINGHAM Staff Reporter
1984 is approaching fast, and computers are taking over—at least they are in Watson Library's card catalog.
"We're a little bit out in front. We're not doing much in this area," Ramaz said, doing much in this area. "Ramaz said,
Jim Ranz, dean of libraries, said recently that the computerized card catalog system the library plans to install in its kind will be the first in this area.
Library budget figures show that the one-time cost of starting up the system will be $19,033. That includes money for computer terminals and printers that will be used by the library staff in cataloging books.
The continuing yearly cost for the new card catalog will be $111,282. However, the actual figure spent on the new system will be considerably less than that spent on the old system, because of its greater efficiency.
The computerized card catalog project is part of a long-term effort to computerize library functions, said Mark Anderson, manager at the Academic Computer Center.
Plastic cards of microfiche, used in a special reader, will tell people if the library has a certain book. Sausit said. In columns on the microfiche cards,
ONE ADVANTAGE of microfiche cards is that people looking for books can compare catalog entries more easily, Susso said. Instead of having to flip through dozens of paper cards, you can search a microfiche card and place it in a reader.
Because what is printed on the microfiche cards is controlled by
computer, librarians will be able to change headings for different books and authors more easily, Suott said.
Mary Roach, supervisor of the automated card catalog system at Watson Library, said changing the only computer would be a big advantage.
"As the situation exists now, we have to physically change the cards," she said.
With the new system, an entry such as "Samual Clemens" could be changed to "Mark Twain" simply by typing the change into the computer, changing each paper card individually, or be done under the old system.
The library files an average of 10 cards for each new book, Roach said. Even with older books, the library would have to change at least three cards for each heading change, she said.
Roch predicted that acceptance of the new system would be good, partially because many students would be familiar with it.
"A lot of people, even coming out of high school, are receiving training in, and have access to, computers," she said.
Paulette DiFilppo, head of catalog maintenance at the library, said the library would have an educational resource that would get used to the new microfiche system.
"It doesn't hurt to have a good educational program at the outset," she said. "That has to be a crucial part of the whole project."
Roach said that the new card catalog would be updated monthly to include any additions or heading changes.
ALBERT WEAVER, a programmer at the computer center, said because
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Watson from being included in the new system.
ances to have their own copy," he said. Roach said that residence halls and branch libraries also would be able to have copies of the catalog. Having catalogs at the branch libraries would save students a lot of time, she said.
the microfiche cards were not very expensive, card catalogs of library materials could be duplicated easily.
Students in the science or engineering libraries could check on the holdings of
Mr. Lee Douglass, a self-employed handman and Eudora resident, fell from a tree on March 19 and suffered injuries which will require a recuperative period of some two months. Because of the Reagan Administration's new rules governing welfare eligibility, Mr. Douglass' family was denied public assistance by the state Department of Social and Rehabilitation Services. Even as this victim of circumstances beyond his control was denied public assistance in the name of governmental frugality, a federal mediator ended one of baseball's longest arbitration hearings by deciding that stoppage Ozzie Smith should be paid $450,000. Mr. Smith had sought $750,000 for playing baseball this year with the St. Louis Cardinals. Upon hearing of the attorney connected to mispaced governmental concern, an optimist said night concert instance of the Reagan Administration is only relatively, not entirely, at risk of the irritating Journal World Edition记者 responsible for several sentences describing those persons who give "in absentia" advice," without "having to shoulder any responsibility for implementing their alleged expertise." 'I'd like to present some evidence to the con-
Roach said having two catalogs would not be a big disadvantage because people generally look for books that have been published in the last five years. But if you want to find something would also become more useful as more and more new entries were added to it.
The main costs for the project, Suosti said, would be for the microfiche cards and the hardware such as the readers
Last year the National Center on Child Abuse and Neglect's budget was 22.9 million dollars. In the coming year this worthy program will receive only 16.2 million dollars while next year's its budget will be reduced to 4.6 million dollars. The following sentences are columnist Jack Anderson's reaction to this display of organizational myopo:
CARNIVOUS CAPITALISM CLOSES EYES TO REAL WORK
to lighten the budget just a little, the Reagan Administration has chosen to strangle the federal child-abuse its corp. the abused kids have no control over them.
situations.
Let's look at how we are liberating all obscure expressions or depictions produced for profit, every kind of sexual favors, each successful abortion, while conservatives consider productive a legal mechanism which permits more automobiles, guns, and air pollution; hidebound ideologues who people both of these group members are in country in which, in the words of the book, "The care of human life and happiness, and not their destruction," is the first and only legitimate object of good government.
*This year in America, 4,000 babies will be slugged, slammed and battered to death by fists, belts, clubs, baseball bat or other weapons. Child abuse an intrinsic part of American culture.*
"It will be possible for departmental
offices to have their own copy." he said.
An administration which can convince the electorate that purchasing a new car is more important than protecting a battered child has unwittingly discovered that, in the words of Adolph Hitler, "The great masses of the people . . . will more easily fall victims to a big lie than to a small one."
William Dann
2702 W. 24th St. Terrace
less more books and materials.'
—Paulette DiFilippo, head of catalog maintenance
at Watson Library
at Watson Library
'In the long run, it will allow the cataloging department to process more books and materials.'
Books purchased since 1976 will be included in the microfiche card catalog, Roach said. All of these books are presently on a computer record.
the math library without going to that library, she said.
LIBRARIANS NOW spend 100 hours a week filling cards, Diflippoo said. With the new system, librarians will have time for other tasks.
The library will purchase 25 microfiche readers and 70 holders for the microfiche cards out of the initial start-up money.
"In the long run, it will allow the cataloging department to process more books and materials." she said.
Even though Watson will be switching to a new card catalog system, the old system, with its thousands of paper cabinets, will not disappear.
Susott said the enormous cost of putting all books purchased before 1975 on computer records would prohibit
and the computer terminals that librarians will use to type in new catalog entries or headings.
The library also will save money by
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not buying and processing new catalog cards, and it will not have to buy any cabinets to hold the cards.
Last year, librarians filed 280,000 cards, Roach said. The library buys eight to nine cabinets each year to hold the new cards, she said.
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other libraries with computerized card catalog systems include those at Harvard and UCLA. The system at Harvard has worked very well and received excellent acceptance by library patrons, Roach said.
The computerized microfiche system that Watson Library is working on now will evolve into an "on-line" card catalog system. The microfiche system
The computer record developed for the microfiche system will be used for an on-line system, if that ever becomes practical, Suotti said.
The main limitation on buying such a system would be the cost of the hardware, such as the large number of terminals that would be required, he said. Over time, the cost of that hardware may drop drastically, similar to what happened with pocket calculators, Sus屯 said.
Because all books purchased since 1976 are on a computer record, library patrons will eventually be able to sit at a computer terminal, type in the entries they wish to see, and a list of books whose headings will appear on the screen.
can be considered a backup for what is to come, Susott said.
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57th Annual KANSAS RELAYS
April 14-17,1982
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Page 8 University Daily Kansan, April 8, 1962
JOHN EISELE/Kansan Staff
Corky Weston, with the Bratton Corp., grinds excess metal from part of the new bridge being built between Marvin Hall and the Visual Arts Building.
Senate increases allocations over budget
By ANN LOWRY Staff Reporter
The Student Senate voted last night to increase its 183 allocations to student groups by $3,000 more than the amount it had to spend.
Instead of cutting any recommendations submitted by the Budget Subcommittee, the Senate actually raised several groups' allocations, increasing the allocations that were more than the revenue code budget.
"I can't submit a budget that that's $30,000 over." David Adams, student body president, said. "I'd like to think more," but we have only so much money."
Adkins can either approve the budget and send it on to David Ambler, vice chancellor for academic affairs, or veto it.
The Senate had time to review 43 of the 60 groups, the requests for which the Budget Subcommittee had parded down from $121,000 to about $70,000. The Senate has only about $52,000 to allocate
Choices now available to the Senate are to either reach into its unallocated funds, a savings account of about
$74,000, or reconsider the motions passed last night.
But several senators protested the financing going that far over budget.
"I think we're going ridiculously above and beyond what we have to do," the miller-man senator, said. "We need to make cuts, not raises. We're in trouble."
Cramer said using up the surplus in the unallocated account could work this year, but in future years, when groups manage the accounts, licensing, the money would not be available.
Despite their complaints about the oversized budget, the senators offered rationalizations for not cutting it down or submitting a subcommittee's recommendations.
Steve McMurry, transportation director and veteran of seven budget proceedings, said senators should not be expected to make judgments on the
budget because they had not had time to review copies of the groups' requests and the reasons they gave for them.
Adkins said, "They couldn't get it typed—logistics."
Toward the end of the meeting, senators started to come up with alternatives to leaving the budget over the limit.
"We've got to figure out which of our groups we should fund and which we should't," David Van Parys, law school student counsel, said.
Van Parys questioned the value of some of the financed groups for all KU students.
"A lot of groups provide services to themselves—they're very specialized, special interest groups," he said. He said the Senate should finance groups helping other people and cut groups that served only their own members.
Several sematars mentioned the possibility of making across-the-board changes.
Bren Abbott, former student body vice president, pointed out that the Senate had voted to consider the bill, but bills, not the entire budget as one bill.
This means that if the Senate decides to change any of its decisions, it would take a motion from one of the senators to add a two-third majority of the Senate.
Tom Berger, Finance and Auditing Committee co-chairman, refused to comment until the Senate had heard all budget requests and made a decision.
The Senate should finish reviewing the subcommittee's decisions and interviewing groups' representatives who wish to defend their budgets at tonight's 6:30 Senate meeting in the Kansas Union.
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Cameras and cards secure Med Center
KANSAS CITY, Kan. — The innocuous blue signs warns University of Kansas Medical Center visitors about camera surveillance are not simply invisible thieves—they are an integral part of the Med Center's security force.
By TOM HUTTON Staff Reporter
Connection"
SENIORS!
But the Med Center is nearly impossible to secure completely because of its more than two million square feet of space and because of the 24-hour operation. The Med Corps, Sargent, RU division commander for community services, said yesterday.
Farewell to Bars
'82
TONIGHT
Television monitors are prominently placed throughout the 22 miles of corridors at the Med Center, allowing the campus police dispatcher to oversee the activity of the hospital from a central office.
"The normal procedure for securing an establishment—the one used by most businesses—is to lock up at 5 p.m. in the office." Sargent said. "We can't do that."
'82
The shootings, however, did show the necessity of having tough security measures.
Although many of the cameras and other security devices are recent additions, they all had been ordered before the March 1811 shootings deaths of Charles S. Kirkpatrick and a visitor in the Med Center's emergency room, Sarreau said.
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Defending the Med Center against burglaries is especially difficult because of the constant movement of patients and visitors, Sargent said.
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"If we deny access, then we might deny medical aid to a person," Sargaret said. "If we had a choice of letting in three people—a thief, an officer, or injured person." Rather let it die than let the injured person die.
Many of these doors sign calls limiting exit hours after 7 p.m. If opened, they trigger an alarm heard only by the dispatcher. After-hours Sargent said, but the main concern of the police is when the doors stay open
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All doors at the Med Center carry
armored vehicles, and are
monitored by the dispatchers.
"We're always going to students studying late for exams and doctors attending to patients."
The 28 cameras at the Med Center
Med Center employees must insert an identification card into an electronic scanner, state the reason for entering the information and give it to the building before entry to the building is allowed.
Specific entrances are designated for after-hours entry into the building, and a photo identification procedure is used.
"A lot of times, the staff will wedge a rug into a door while they go after a hamburger or something." Sargent also made sure that it closed if it and make sure that all it was.
Along with cameras, the Med Center offers sophisticated methods to attend to security incidents.
1
Sargeant compared these 35mm cameras to models used in banks because they can be activated when an employee sees suspicious activity or an actual boldup. These special cameras, which have better print reproduction than the television cameras, are placed in high-risk areas, such as the hospital cashier station and the pharmacy, he said.
can record events on film. Several are 35mm models activated only in special situations, such as holdups.
The Med Center uses 10 emergency phones, placed throughout the campus, for urgent calls and to install three more phones soon. Last year, the Med Center police received about 5,000 of these calls either for information or assistance, Jack Pearson, director of campus police at the Med Center, said.
'82
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- and a whole lot more
Come by the Kansas Alumni Association Office, 403 Kansas Union and register for these great prizes and more, April 12-15 from 8:00-12:00 and 1:00-5:00 daily.
And don't forget to purchase your discount Senior alumni membership!
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University Daily Kansan, April 8, 1982
Page 9
IUD thought toxic shock death cause
By United Press International
CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa—An ininterpreter device, rather than a tampon, may have caused Patricia Kehm's 1980 death from toxic shock syndrome, defense attorneys argued yesterly in a lawsuit against Procter and Gamble Co.
$PG attorney Tim White questioned Kehm's doctor, John Jacobs, as to why he did not keep the tampon that allegedly caused her death. The suit, filed by Kehm's husband, Michael, seeks at least $30 million from the company, which manufactured Rely tampons.
jacobs denied that the IUD could have prompted the illness and said the tampon was not saved because he was unable to attend at the time with treating Kehm.
White noted that Jacobs did save the IUD worn by the woman when she died. He attempted to show that the IUD, which contained bacteria, could have caused the death.
Jacobs said he could not remember seeing the tampon, although White prodded him by asking, "Do you wear it?" He holding it up and showing it to you?
Arguing further that the IUD could have been the source of the deadly bacteria. White showed the federal document copy of Kshim's death certificate.
The document said death was due to "toxic shock, secondary to staff colonization in cervix and uterus." A staff infection in the uterus would have indicated the IUD was a source of the bacteria, medical experts testified.
Jacobs testified, however, that the information on the death certificate contained a typographical error in referencing to the uterus.
"I think the IUD played no role in her problem," he said, "if the IUD had been the problem, the area where she should have been inflamed or infected.
---
What Jacobs said he meant to write was "cervix of the uterus." It was in the cervix only; it did not extend into the uterus.
The defense earlier said that Jacobs had altered the death certificate to the Keim family could sue the company. He also said the allegation "absolutely false."
Even the flowers were caught unaware yesterday as wet snow covered the campus in a chilling blanket of white. The snowfall lasted about three hours. See related story page 1
TRACEY THOMPSON/Kansan Staff
Place a want ad in the Kansas Call 864-4358
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The applications are for R.A. positions
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Applicants must have at least a Sophomore status next fall and a 2.5 G.P.A.
If you have questions, please call 843-8559.
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Kassebaum visits KU, area
Nen. Nancy Kassabeh, R-Kan, will use part of Congress' Easter ecess to speak today to groups at the University of Kansas and elsewhere in Lawrence.
Kassebaum will talk about budget cuts in higher education before the KU chapter of the American Association of University Teachers. At the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
David Shulenburger, KU president of ADAP, said recently that the national ADAP suggested local chapters meet with their area representatives to hear the representatives' views and to express their own views on cuts in higher education in light of the Reagan administration's threat to reduce funding.
Kassebaum also will meet with the African Studies Steering Committee at 2:30 today. Choi Herbison, graduate teaching assistant in African studies, said the meeting would inform Kassebaum about the program, which
is the only African studies program in the Big Eight.
He said Kassebaum could be a contact in the government to help increase resources for the program.
Kassebaum also may help communicate between KU and other universities in the between KU and the black community in Kansas, he said.
Members of the KU Committee on South Africa plan to speak with Kasshemea for a few minutes in front of the Union before she meets with the African states commemorating. They plan to hold a meeting presiding KU investments in South Africa.
Kassebam also will speak at room to the Chamber of Commerce about the recent elections in El Salvador. Kassebam was one of several U.S. officials who went to El Salvador last month to monitor the elections there.
On the record
A 23-year-old Lawrence man died late Tuesday afternoon after he was accidentally shot Sunday night, police said.
Lee McCullough, 1035 Sunset Drive, died about 4:40 p.m. Tuesday at Stormt-Vail Regional Medical Center in Topeka.
McCullough was accidentally shot when he and his father, Bryan Kent McCullough, were taking inventory of their gun collection. Police said Bryan McCullough was attempting to clear a catch in the cylinder of a .22 caliber revolver when he accidentally fired it, hitting his son above the left eye.
Mike Malone, Douglas County district attorney, said yesterday that the shooting was accidental and he was routinely reviewing the case.
Parsons men charged in connection with a cocaine sale in Douglas County.
THE DOUGLAS County District Court has set preliminary hearings during the week of April 19 for two
Moore, 21, is charged with the sale of cocaine, and Hall, 25, is charged with aiding and abetting the sale of cocaine.
The two men, Tony Hall and Kevin Moore, were arrested on March 30 and April 2 by the Labette County Sheriff's department.
Malaise said the two men allegedly sold one quarter ounce of cocaine to a Kansas Bureau of Investigation last month. The drugs were worth $404.
Hall is being held in the Douglas County jail, and Moore was released on $10,000 cash bond.
BURGLARS STOLE a typewriter worth about $715 sometime between 3:30 p.m. March 26 and 8:15 a.m. March 29 from Flint Hall, police said. Burglar's broke into room 308 and took the typewriter, police said.
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Page 10 University Daily Kansan, April 8, 1982
Mexico merits U.S. notice, speaker says
By JIM LEHNER Staff Reporter
The United States should pay more attention to the actions of the Mexican government in order to understand it better. Mr. Sánchez in Mexican affairs said yesterday.
Tom Sanders, a member of the University's Field Staff International, told a University Forum audience that Mr. Rodriguez had agreed to deported Mexico as not very important.
"The United States has always looked upon Mexico as a Third World country," Sanders said. "It's only been the past four or five years that the United States has even given some thought to the importance of Mexico."
Sanders said Mexico had received little attention because it had been viewed as a very weak country—with its border with Venezuela and other countries for its commodities.
However, some of that thought is
changing because Mexico is now the world's fourth-leading exporter of petroleum, he said.
He said Mexico always associated the United States with an imperialistic nature.
"The school children are taught about how the United States acquired California and Arizona from Mexico," he said.
He said Mexico acknowledged its dependence on the United States but did not like it. The United States, he said, had already agreed to allow Mexico's foreign investments and tourism
A major reason Mexico and the United States are not the best of friends is the differences between their systems of government, Sanders said.
He said Mexico identified with such countries as Cuba, Nicaragua and even El Salvador because of their revolutions.
"The United States doesn't regard these revolutions very fondly," he said.
After the forum, Sanders told about
35 people attending a United Nations Association Student Organization conference that Mexico took an interest in its southern neighbors to prevent them from, to keep its own frontiers stable and to keep the region disuntused.
"It's difficult for Mexico to project north because the United States is there, so when thinking of extending its influence in the world, it tends to look toward the Caribbean and Latin America," he said.
U. S. interventionist policies toward Cubaand the Dominican Republic cause a split between the United States and Mexico, he said.
And Mexican support of Third World issues has further isolated the Central American nations from the United States, he said.
"Mexico is a relatively highly developed country when compared with other countries of the Third World in terms of per capita income and the general complexity of society," Sanders said.
Another source of strain between the two countries is Mexico's supply of natural gas. He said the United States exports to it to sell it at a below-market price.
Sanders said that the two countries for years had not seen eye on the immigration of Mexicans into the United States in search of work.
"Mexico wants to diversity its markets for petroleum sales," Sanders said. "It's concerned with overcoming its dependence on the United States.
The United States, he said, looks upon the threat to American jobs, which are not made by the US government.
Sanders said American officials had recently been studying the illegal immigration problem and had found many of the immigrants were filling jobs that Americans did not want anyway.
"They're not the welfare types that Americans think they are," he said. "They actually pay Social Security taxes, and many are considered respectable people—they just can't find work in Mexico."
U.S. influences cause tension, prof says
By SEEMA SIROHI Staff Reporter
There is tension between the United States and Central American nations because the United States sees the region as its own sphere of influence, Robert Oppenheimer, professor of history, told a United Nations Association Student Organization conference last night.
Oppenheimer spoke on "Is Mexico a Challenge to U.S. Leadership in Latin America" to about 30 people in Blake Hall.
The United States does not recognize native insurrections and instead divides the world into two homogeneous parties in democracy and communism, he said.
"Anyone who is anti-America must be eliminated, and America doesn't have to have economic interests in the United States in other countries." Oppenheimer said.
"It bolls down to a pure ideological issue of being either with them or against them when it comes to the U.S. foreign policy," he said.
"The only viable country the United States should support in the region is Nacaragua from an economic, agricultural and demographic point of view," he didn't support it and Reagan won't support it. "Oppenheimer said."
Openerheme said he had talked to Daniel Ortega, Nicaragua's U.N. envoy, about the situation. Nicaragua would prefer to get support from the United States because it did
not want to depend on Russia as Cuba did.
Nicaragua is being forced to lean toward Russia because of the U.S. policy in the country, Oppenheimer said. The United States trained 500 Nicaragua in Florida and they are operating on the Honduran border against the Sandinista government, he said.
While the United States continues to "speak loudly and carry a small mind" according to Oppenheimer, Mexico sees as a potentially stronger nation.
"Mexico supports the Sandinista government because it's the only stable government to support and also oppose the legal reasons." Oppehheimer said.
There is a gulf between Mexican and
He read parts of the White Paper on El Salvador, a U.S. State Department document, to the audience. It was published in February 1861 and it remained in the form of articles in El Salvador from Cuba, Russia, Vietnam, Ethiopia, Bulgaria and Iraq.
U. S. views on the political situation in El Salvador, Robert Tomasek, professor of political science, said at the conference.
"The Communist movement outside has made El Salvador a test case for the U.S. and if America can't stop them, it will be a communism anywhere," Tomasek said.
This view does not have a good balance, Tomasek said, because it disregards the social conditions which are important for insurrection.
School of Journalism to adopt new name
By JIM EVANS Staff Reporter
The new name, if approved by the Board of Regents later this month, will be the William Allen White School of Journalism and Mass Communications.
The KU School of Journalism is changing its name in an effort to better reflect the school's program. Del Reed, dean of the school, said recently.
The change drops the rarely used
phrase "public information" and substitutes "mass communications."
The radio, television and film instructors are being moved to full time appointments in the School of Journalism, Brinkman said.
The name change was proposed, Brinkman said, because there was a question of whether advertising, radio, television and film was journalism.
"The school is more than journalism," he said.
describe all the programs, Lee Young,
professor of journalism, said.
The school's current name does not
"There is a desire for an encorming title. The title, journalism, is held narrowly to mean newspapers," he said.
Brinkman said several journalism schools and organizations have added "mass communication" to their names. "We're keeping with what is going on," he said.
The proposal was approved at the
architect's March 11 faculty meeting.
Brickman staff
The proposal was next approved by the Council of Chief Academic Officers of the University.
It now must be approved by the Council of Presidents and the Academic Committee, both Board of Regents and finally by the Regents on April 16.
"Public information" has since lost its meaning, Brinkman said.
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ZIGGY STARDUST
AND THE SPIDERS FROM MARS
Includes: Starman - Moonage Daydream
Safrague City - Five Years
The Kinks Anthem
Life Includes
Acoustic + Shift and Bone
Shaking in My Head!
AYL1-3869
RCA
DAVID BOWIE
THE RICE AND FALL OF
ZIGGY STARDUST
AND THE SPIERS FROM MARS
Includes: Starman - Moonage Daydream
Suffragella City - Five Years
AYL 1-3849
SURREALISTIC PILLOW
STAR WARS
PERFORMANCE LIGHTS ON AFL 1-3798
PERFORMANCES APPLIED TO AFL 1-3798
RCA
GLENN MILLER
PURE GOLD
LET'S BUY IT NOW
PERFORMANCE RECORDING
ON JULY 1, 2004 AT 9:30 P.M.
Choose from these and many other great "Best Buy" titles from RCA records
Victoria M. C.
MARK McDONALD/Kansan Staff
Dennis Darvillie from the University of North Carolina preaches in front of Strong Barrville is a member of Maranatta Ministers whose outreach program began this year.
THE AURH ASSEMBLY will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Council Room of the Union.
on campus
THE WESTERN CIVILIZATION FILM SERIES will present "I have a Dream: The Life of Martin Luther King Jr.," and "Black History: Stolen, Storied or Strayed" beginning at 7:30 p.m. in 303 Dvche Hall.
TODAY
In conjunction with NUCLEAR AWARENESS WEEK, Arthur M. Cox, consultant for the U.S. Committee on
THE AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF UNIVERSITY PROFESSORS will meet the Forum Room of Kansas University in Kansas. Nancy Kasebaum will address the group.
East-West Arm Control, will speak at 8
in Woodruff Auditorium at 8 p.m.
TOMORROW
Dennis Darvile will speak at the meeting of the MARANATHA CAMPUS MINISTRY at 7 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Union.
A RED CROSS BLOOD DRIVE will be underway all day in the Ballroom of the Kansas Union.
THE UNDERGRADUATE BIOL OGY CLUB will meet at 4 p.m. in the Sunflower Room of the Hotel.
A MASTERS RECITAL on piano will be performed by Suzana Puckett at 8 p.m. in Swartbout Recital Hall.
No Coupons
Accepted
With This
Offer
MASS STREET DELI
1041 MASSACHUSETTS
Homemade
CHOCOLATE, CHERRY OR
BLUEBERRY
No Coupons
Accepted
With This
Offer
Coke
Cheese Cake 75¢
reg. $1.25
Offer good Wed. Apr. 7 thru Sat. Apr. 10
Closed Easter Sunday.
SUA
Special
Events
Do you own a Barry
Do you own a Barry Manilow polyester suit? Do you love music? Have you ever wanted to ally work "behind the scenes" at concerts?
If you answered all these questions correctly, then SUA Special Events could be looking for YOU. We will be interviewing for the following positions on
Monday, April 19:
Security Director
Ushers Director
Publicity Director
Stage Manager
Photographer
Lighting Director
Communications Director
Sign up for an interview time in the SUR Office.
Deadline is Friday, April 16, 5 p.m.
University Daily Kansan, April 8, 1982
Page 11
KANSAN WANT ADS
The University Daily
Call 864-4358
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five six seven eight nine ten
$1.25 $1.25 $1.75 $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $3.00 $3.25 $3.50 $3.80
$4.25 $4.50 $4.75 $5.00 $5.25 $5.50 $5.80 $6.00 $6.30 $6.50
AD DEADLINES
to run
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
ERRORS
ANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4258
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.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
WORKED ABOUT April 157 Call Don's Tax Service for fast, accurate tax return preparation
Call 481-8938. 60-day extension of time to file are available. 4-15
ATTENTION. BLUE JEAN OWNERS. We like you jean and we love your stock so we can open to you. We own our stock so we can sell it to you in store, all it takes is a phone call to 841-612-9537.
Jam and Mineral School. April 17, 10:00 a.m.
Chairman's Hall, Building 21. Demonstration:
CCH Fairgrounds, Building 21. Demonstration:
Shimbawshroom. Sandpainting. Stained Glass.
Sandpainting. Door-Door Painting. $49-
F-Free Admission
The board of class officers will be interviewing prospective product managers. April 4th for the 1983 BOCC Variety Show, Doha & appl. The students will work with the Student Union. Deadline for application is March 20th.
FOR RENT
Must see to believe. Furnished rooms with utilities paid near university & downtown.
No pets. Phone 841-3500. tr
HANOVER PLACE. Completely furnished,
studio, building. Only 2 blocks from
KJ. DON'T DELT. Reserve your apt
number. 841-1212 or 843-4455.
w/ 841-1212 or 843-4455.
Jayhawker Towers Apartments
PRINCETON PLACE PATIO APPAREMENTS.
New, available. Custom-designed features wood burning fireplace/ dryer hookups. Efully equipped. 9-23-50 daily at 208 Princeton Place, or. 9-24-50 daily at 208 Princeton Place, or.
2 Bedroom apartments on
Now taking applications for fall and summer leases. KU students only.
- utilities paid
- air conditione
- on bus line
- cablevision
- laundry facilities
- swimming pool
- air conditioned
- furnished or unfurnished
843-4993
For rent to mature male student. Quiet,
comfortable efficiency apartment. Private
kitchen. Close to the Union. Reasonable
price. 842-4135. If
TRY COOPERATIVE LIVING. Sunflower House, 842-9212. tf
Available now. Two bedroom magnificent apt.
2 bedrooms, 1 bathroom, all electric
kitchen, electric sink and water closet,
campus, and on bus route. $45 per month.
MAINLOOK BRIDGE *85* & CREATIVE
*85*-4290.
Sleeping rooms 1-3 bedroom Apts. Duplexes
and an 8-bedroom house close to campus.
No pets. Call 626-4500.
Call alfamore or Sat, or
Sun. Call alfamore or Sat, or
4-18
Established STUDENT COOPERATIVE close to campus and downtown. Owner/business. Six evening meals each week. SUNFLOWER HOUSE. 842-9421. tf
--or the equivalent. Applications may be obtained from the department's website www.maths.leeds.ac.uk. Applicants will be contacted for interviews further information or are asked to fulfill FULLY IMMEDIATE JRK强。The Mathematics Department is an Affirmative Action,Equal Opportunity,Non-discriminatory department from all qualified persons. 4-8
AT NAISTH HALL
JUST SOUTH OF CAMPUS
• Private Baths
• Academic year lease
• Also Summer leases
• Parties and Social Events
• Air Conditioning
• Fire Utilities
• Color. Cable TV Lounge
• Maid Service
• Nineteen and Fourteen Meal Plans
• Swimming Pool
• We are privately owned and
operated
• Much more for the Student
Visit or Call 843-8559
1800 Naismith Drive
Applications Now Available
--or the equivalent. Applications may be obtained from the department's website www.maths.leeds.ac.uk. Applicants will be contacted for interviews further information or are asked to fulfill FULLY IMMEDIATE JRK强。The Mathematics Department is an Affirmative Action,Equal Opportunity,Non-discriminatory department from all qualified persons. 4-8
TRAILRIDGE. Have for fall-Studios,
sports fields, tennis courts. All have, harvest gold appliances, all have harvest gold appliances, mainly finished on the premium Swimming, tennis &跑球房. On K.U., Tennis, Fitness & Sports.
SOUTHERN PARKWAY TOWNHOUSEs,
with Kassia Kassia. If you tired of apartments
and renting out your old house, try this
feature $ 3 or $ 14. baths, all appartments at
a discount. We have openings now, and in the
weekend evening at 749-1501 for more information
about our moderately priced townhouse.
Live in the CIRKINSTAM CAMPUS HOUSE
This summer & fall! Become a part of a
agreeing campus ministry. Call Alan Rose,
campus minister 842-6923.
tf
Summer and fall rentals, houses and apart-
ments. New campus, no pets. Lynch Real
Estate 863-1601 or 841-3223 4-14
We have a good place to live and study. We have 18- and 20-bedroom apartments with 13-month lease and 15-month lease, and August 19th is the final semester of details and we extend the courtesy of matriculation. Please fill in an appointment (841-579-7777) or visit us at www.harvard.edu/sohr.
MED CENTER BOUND? Newly refurbished
2 BR Duplexes available now. Carrier, A/C,
Appliances, parking. Call (913)-381-2878.
4-30
Sublease 3 BDRM 2 bath. fully carpeted or Furnished, also central air, whirlpool, and disposal. Great location at 910 Indiana, Apt. 1, Phone 749-3318 or 841-2555. 4-14
SUBLEASE FOR SUMMER—1 br. apt. two
brackets from campus. Furnished with ACA
843-7237 or call collect (316) 683-3610 4-8
Two bedroom apartment, one year old.
Energy efficient, on bus route, dishwasher,
water paid. Available after finals. 841-5634.
4-9
Sublase large 2 BR. apartment near stadium, water, gas paid, central air $320.
841-8225.
Summer Subleave: very large, bd. 2 level,
duplex, semi furnished w. living, dining,
dun, sun perm. 1p; bath, 5h for family
Dave or Bret at 841-8066 for
4-9
Sublease furnished studio apartment with pool, tennis courts for summer. $230 + electricity. $200 deposit. 749-4526. 4-16
Sublease—a nice furnished 2 bedroom apt. with water paid. Central air, cable T.V. On bus route. 843-703-4
4-96
For Rest 2 br. apt. convenient to shopping c
a heat, carpet & drapes, complete kitchen,
garages available. Call 841-8689 for an
appointment.
Sublase at last years prices 2 br. apt.
complete kitchen c/ a heat. Carpet and drapery
Call for an appointment today 841-6688 - 4-19
Suburban sulease. Nice 3 bedroom town-house. On KU bus route. A.C. dishwasher. 25 per month + utilities. **684-16310** or **684-1626** 4-14
3 lehm, 2 bath, furnished app. at Maleo Old
English. Gas & water paid. On bus route.
501 per month. Available from June. 841-
4709.
2 bdr. (6 rooms), furnished, a/c, nice old home; $225 mo. Avlb. May, 920 New Hampshire; 834-8645. 4-13
Summer subleases-Female wanted -120.0
per month + 1/5 utilities 749-3420. *40*
Studio Apt. furnished, quiet, clean. A/C
available. Available May 15 or June
483-8000.
Subluea Meadowbrook studio art. Furnished. Heat & water paid. Balcony Above. Across from pool. May 1-July 30. Call 643-452-682 at 6:00 p.m.
Summer student/Fall Option 2 bdm. apt.
$255 ms. Houghton Place. Mature applicants only. References required. 841-6194.
SUMMER SCHOOL SUBLEASE. Dates negotiable. Furnished 3 + bedroom home with grand plano and screened in porch, kitchen, laundry and utilities. 841-5195 after 4 p. 4-13
Furnished one bedroom apt. for sublease.
Excellent location to campus and downtown.
Central air/heat. Available May 15. Call
842-656-86.
4-30
Available now: attractive cozy apt. Ideal for single person-unique extra's central location $185, 841-4144. 4-9
New orchards duplex 2 br—Large living area Garege W/D Hookups too. $375 Available June 1. Bank-8459. 4-21
Sublease Meadowbrook Townhouse. Now thru July 31, 3 bedrooms, 11 baths, infurnished, $440/mo. + bills + $440. deposit. Call 814-5838 After 5:30. 4-20
Small 2 br. apt, very close to campus & downtown. Newly remodeled $210 month lease required. Rent: June 1st Efficient. June 1st Annual. June 3rd Annual. $141 monthly. Call 841-4441. M-4-14
Wanted outgoing Christians and conscious
wanted students to share 5 Bedroom house at
10k & Kentucky next fall & spring $180-
$190 per student. Utilities included.
Garry Darryl 814-762-8000
Space available in the Kokoto Community for fall semester. Information and applications are available at the Ezemel University Center, 1984 Avenue, 681-4933.
2 Bdrm., 11; Bath, Townhouse. All Appli-
Utilities. Microwave. C.A.W. Woolenhouses, Low-
Utilities. Close to Shopping. K.U. 842-3891-
4-15
SUBLEASE - 2-bedroom, 2 bath, fully equipped, air conditioned apt. Available June 1 nine months with option for new lease at 13:58 am. @ 14:38 pm. 13:56 up from 9:00 am.
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale
Make sense out of West. Work with
them in a classroom. As a study guide.
For 2: Class preparation, of West
Civilization available now at Town. Crete
available now at Town. Crest.
Furnished Studio Close to campus on the bus route. 842-4455. 4-15
TENNIS RACKETS—Good selection new/ used. Will buy yours in good condition. 842-6713 after 6:00 p.m. ff
FOR SALE
Alternator, starter and generator specialists,
Parts, service, and exchange units. BELL
AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC. #43-3069. 3800
W. 6th.
Beautiful bald evergreens reasonably priced.
Himmel's Rand Tree Farm—Endora—Phon-
542-319 or 542-349.
SUMMER SULEBASE May rent free, walk to camus or downtown, June & July rent negotiate. 2 bedroom, utilities reasonable. Summer, Call 842-716-1786. 4-30
Formula 5k Six Snorkels $60.00 value, sell
600.00 or best offer. Pioneer canteen deck
$55.00 value $300.00 or best offer. Call
412-9962
4-13
Elec. Guitar, play, Aria, $165, 842-7530, 4-8
73 TR - 4 - gnd, with overdrive, New; paint,
dust brakes, Tina-Gavin, A81-0991, 4-8
Pollen-fresh frozen-rich in vitamins, minerals, proteins. 842-5074 after six. 4-13
Stereo-Telescopes Video Recorders. Nname brands only. Factory sealed cans. lowest price in the K.C. area. Get larger sound total. Sound Distributors 913-84-3840. 6000.
MILY MY CAR; Must sell by 4-15. 76 Cherry
Made in AWC, A/C, beautiful condition.
VERY reasonable. Call 843-5134, keep try-
ing 4-9
For Sale 1975 Yamaha XS 650 SPECIAL.
842-3279 4-9
78 Suzuki GS530E. Looks and Runs great.
Good gas mileage. 10,800 miles. $1295. 749-
1795. 4-9
B.W. TV 12" $^{181}$, 6 months old, very good condition.
B41-96598. 4-9
Fashion bead mattress, box spring and frame,
with headboard. $35.00. Call 749-4543 after
5.30. 4-8
Hon Double Pedestal Steel Desk, 30 x 60; O Sullivan shelf cabinet; 14 cabinet; 5 desk; 14 table; 2 cork/wood lamp; 2 rain coat lamp; 2 rain cover; Call 842-8258 after S. 4-13
BOKONON IMPORTS Large selection Hawaiian shirts. The original source. 12 E. 8ln. 841-3600. 4-20
1976 Honda 400, cover, helmet, excellent condition, parking permit, etc. $650, 841-
3577. 4-13
72 Toyota Corolla, new tires, new battery,
new transmission. Stereo. A/C, excellent
body, call 841-0477. 4-13
Must sell IBM typewriter $150. Good condition.
Albo Royal -cheap. 841-4144. 4-9
1981 Yamaha XT600. Low mileage, excellent
1975 CL 360 Faiting, elec. start, rack, helmet,
Ex. cond., 841-8058.
4-15
Must sell immediately 1974 Vega, Passes
impection Good transportation $450 or
best offer 841-1898 or 842-4182. 4-14
Mattress, box spring sofa-bed and 12-speed
bike. Call 841-7723. 4-15
ALPINE 3023 w/papers 7 bd eq. 18w x 2
1000 $841-8090.
4-15
1979 MAZDA RX7-GS PURRFECT 843-852S
or 842-633S 4-50
Hammond B-3 Organ Hammond Amp. f.
pedals + Leslie Speaker. 749-3412 4-15
Keys, Textbooks, Notebooks, jackets, gloves,
eice, please come to Spanish and Portuguese
Department, 3062 Weiseo, to identify and
claim.
4-8
FOUND
Surplus jeeps, cars and trucks available.
Many sell for under $200. Call 212-743-1433
Ext. 3294 for information on how to purchase
4-8
Nice earring Kansas Union ladies room
Nice, April 4th Call Rebecca 8442-4432
www.kansasunion.com
Found on campus, 4/1, young, male dog
beige & white, short hair, collar. 843-7402
after 5:30 p.m. 4-13
Found Ladies watch in X- lot Monday night.
Call 864-4770 to identify. Ask for Ira. 4-13
Found on campus 4/1, young male dog
HELP WANTED
We are looking for 25 hardworking students for a summer work opportunity. If you are independent and want to earn $750 per week call 749-6221. 4-13
First Christian Church (Dipheses of Christ)
of Lawrence, Kansas is working applicants
for a position as co-dvident. The position would be app-
licated in a $250,000-$3,000 per year salary beginning in
the summer of 2018 to serve on the mission of Christian belief and two letters of recommendation, should be mailed
to Lawrence, KS 60044-400
1000 Kentucky, Lawrence, KS 60044-4
21, 28, 1982 Inquiries welcome
2429).
Secretary, National Association seeks energetic job to support jointly a spinoff correspondence and organizational skills. Must be highly motivated and have strong leadership environment. Experience in word process or writing benefits. Salary open. Send resume and cover letter to Secretary, KS 6000-1617 4-9
The Mathematics Department is accepting applications for the position of Applied Mathematics Professor. Applicants must have completed 5 years of teaching and must will assist in the 133-118 recruiting course and graduate training to 20 jobs within the department office or at Worcester College. Compete in the job offered by the department office. Contact Professor Philip Morell at philip.morell@worcester.edu Strong. The Department of Mathematics at Worcester College is seeking an applied engineer. Applications are sought from 8-4.9
The Mathematies Department is accepting new applicants for the 1985-87 Applicants must be graduate students in mathematics. Foreign applicants will be required to provide proof of citizenship and competency. Assistants will be responsible for teaching or calculus. Applicants should submit a resume, cover letter, and two letters of recommendation to Charles Hummelberg. Department of Mathematics is an faculty department of the University that offers two letters of recommendation. Totally $2000 for a academic year. The Department of Mathematics is an fellowship offered by the University. Applications are sought from all qualified applicants.
Summer Job National Park Co.'s 21. Parks
500. Openings. Information $5.00.
Park Report, Mission Min. Co. 651. 2nd Ave.
W.N. Kallippe, Mt. M9910.
The Department of Mathematics is now at the position of MATH 021 tutors for Fall Tutors. We tutor students in math under the supervision of a Math coach who supervised completion of MATH 017, 112, 128, and completed MATH 117, 128.
Position Available: Gift Shop Manager, Museum of Natural History Study Center, perience museum and pursue bookkeeping skills; ability to deal with the public and to supervise library staff; need preferred. To be envolved in at least 1 university; need not have a job already. For interview appointment call Mary Amn Munch, 864-5451. Applicant should submit a Letter of Support, Opportunity Affirmative Action Employer
Need a part-time summer job? The 8-11
employees of the Kaiser Cancer
Kanese City give out enrichment and
mature individuals to umpire for the 1982
Summer Olympics. The 500-meter race
provides. Clinics will be underway soon.
If you like working in sports, you
may want to pass up Givn
Give 8-11 baseball or call Call (631) 497-
2800.
Part-time help wanted. grill and fountain,
noons and night. Apply at Vista Restaurant.
1527 W. 6th. 4-13
Children's Counselors, Activity Instructors,
Cook, Kitchen Manager, Kitchen Help for
Mountain Summer Camp, Truck Burial,
Boulder, Colorado, 80388, (412) 445-837.
baseball hat, yellow. Indianapolis 500 patch, left by tennis courts Sunday, March 28 evening please phone 412-5611. 4-9
Lead Guitarist needed for established professional contemporary rock group. Serious players only, 841-9797. 4-22
LOST
Lost large blue loose text notebook. Has all class notes. Please call 843-0673 or 843-8588 and ask for Dean. 4-11
PERSONAL
Lost wallet campus or enroute Friday 2nd—
Cali C. Gee 864-3491. tf
Instant passport, visa, ID, & resume photographs. Custom made portraits b/w, color. wells Studio, 749-1611. tf
Say it on a sweatshirt with custom silk-screen printing 1 to 1000 shirt art by Swellers 749-1611. tf
Skillet's liquor store serving U-Daly since
1949. Come in and compare. Willford Skillet
Eudaly. 1906 Mass. 843-8136. If
The Kegger—Weekly Specials on Kegz! **Call 841-9450–1610.** W 23rd. **tf**
HEADACH, BACKACHE, STIFF NECK,
LEG PAIN? Find and correct the cause
of the problem. Call Dr. Mark K.
Kramer (312-549-3680). Accepting
ice Crack Cross and Lone Star insurance.
For your party clothes, formal or costume,
check out the Inflation Fighter. E 8. Tb.
Open 10-5-30 M-F 10-5-30 Sat. Open ill 8
to thr.
MARY KAY COSMETICS--Full-time beauty consultant, 842-6641. tf
COMPENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES
preferred pregnancy testing; early and advanced out patient abortion; gynecology contractions; & Rox Overland Farms, Fla. (913) 621-3000
(913) 621-3000
Exciting jobs at Lake Tahoe. Serve $5.60 to Taboo John, P.O. Box 7244, Kansas City, MO 64113.
4-22
SIK heads, wallets, jewelry bags from Korea. Barb's Second Hand Rose, 515 Indiana. 842-4746. 4-9
Spring formulae-Prairie-look, 50's, beaded
Taffer Taffer Barb's Second Hand Rose, 515
Indiana. 842-4746. 4-9
GREEN'S CASE SALE, BUSCH $7.99, COORS
$8.99, BUDWISER LIGHT $8.99, GREEN'S,
808 WEST 23RD.
4-5
Stereo-Televisions-Video Recorders. Names brand only. Factory sealed cartons. Lowest prices in the K.C.A.域. Get your best offer to call Total Sound Center 913-346-0600 4-305
Community Auction 700 N.H.
Every Wed. 6:30 p.m.
Consignments Accepted
Wed. 10 a.m. till sale
Sat. 10-5
PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH-
tf:
843-4821.
841-2212
Remember, O most great praise Mary, that never was it known that anyone knew of her, but when she imploded the intercession was left unaddressed by this credible witness. Before her I stand unfearful and sorrowful. O Lady of the earth in my mercy, hear and answer me, Ameer.
Give your favorite kid (young or old) an Easter surprise! Special editions of Emanuel's chocolate eggs and jelly beans, with pan垫 (pan lids) from Bakery-A-Bloom. 841-848-5-45
bakery-A-Bloom AGR. 841-848-5-45
Last fall Templin was a flicker. We are laughing at Templin at night 'cause there's way they can even make a decent show in The Blood Drive. The Greeks. 4-5
eee
GENUINE JEANS
Branded by Lee. Strong, simple and absolutely authentic: American classics.
- Genuine Lee Riders are made of 100% 14-oz. cotton denim.
- Genuine Lee Riders are cut to fit right and retain their fit, washing after washing
- nobody makes a better western jean than Lee. Also available in corduroy and twill.
- Genuine Lee Riders . . .
LTWIN'S
Blythem Guitarid/Vocab-liciting to
Lead, Bum, and Drums>For 30 no frills Rock
& Roll. Call Chris after 3:00 p.m.
(864-
6025)
Tempil Hall does not have blood in its veins. It has some mixture of beer & other substances. You'll be buried in the Blood Drive. 4-5
Established, hand looking for male/female
drums. Drums, guitar and Keyboards.
Immediate Contact. Need Gary at 842-0280.
If not there, leave name & phone:
4-613-798-5555
KANSAS RELAYS APRIL 14-17
Friday—Students $1.50
Saturday—Students $2.00
Tickets available at:
SUA office—Kansas Union Athletic Ticket Office
Allen Field House
Looking for a person interested in going on a coast to coast Bicycle Trip this summer. Pioneer 841-6688 4-8
Remember . . . mother loves you, show her how you feel this Mother's Day. Swell's Studio for portraits of fine quality, satisfaction guaranteed. 749-811. 4-30
MONTESSORI PLUS TEACHER PREPARA-
tion is now enrolling for the summer
training program to become a Montessori
teacher. Call 223-5185 for infor-
mation.
Female> Roommate wanted for summer (at least). Nice 2 bedroom duplex $100 mo. + utilities-Call 843-6436 4-12
THE ETC. SHOP. 10. W 9th has tuxedo,
dinner tuckets, cumbrunders, hats for hats
we. We also have Laura Petry pants, mini
skirts, and wrap skirts.
4-8
ARTISTS, THE COMMISSION ON STATUS OF CNDAMOE needs a logo. Submit entrances to the CNDAMOE website. Winning artist will receive a $10 gift card for more info. Call Baskett at 4-69
The treasure has been found by KU seniors Tom Hawkins, Tory Lacey, and John Mattyhall. Another $1000 has been hidden somewhere near the KLZR arena. Lates for new games on KLZR-106.
Enjoy Palm Island during Spring Break
Want to go back this summer?
Try Palm Beach or its other
one meal? 7 day trips begin June 18th. Call
641-7123 (seasonal) before April 10, 1989-4
WOMEN STUDENTS! Help build an organization to involve more women in teaching. Vice President, Treasurer, Publicity Chair, Interacted group. Call Commission On the Relationship Between Women and Children interes
Wednesday April 14 7-9 p.m.
Templin Hall.
All-University Passover Seder
COASTAL BANK
All University Residence Hall Members: FREE
Others: $2
Tickets available from March
29-April 9 at main desks in
Residence Hills, Hillel office,
B-117 Kansas Union,
Canterbury House,
1116 Louisiana
The masteren called the Staceid childs in her high chamber, looking out the window, or drumming on her spinning. She plays with her little ones, and she dances over her music to. She laughs with them and watches them go good cheer, and at night she watches the stars, and dreams.
4-3
Washed single female who enjoys excellent cooking good wine, and all types of different ice cream. Even if I witten your age, a female with two children should be spotted not owned "if you can moble we should get to know each other." We should not buy mobles we should get to know each other. Larry Freeze 21 Morninggate Dr. Laurel Lynch 21 Morninggate Dr.
Wanting to talk with someone? Gay & Lean皮 Peet consultants available through headquarters (814-2534) or information center (864-2506) just call.
DID YOU KNOW The Community Mercantile 70 Maine has fresh baked whole grain bread, buns, sweet reils, cakes and biscuits. One包包熟食 with this April 10.
GOOD FRIDAY SERVICE
at Danforth Chapel 12:00 Noon Sponsored by
GREEN'S CASE SALE. BUSCH $7.99.
COORS $8.99. BUWDISER LIGHT $9.59.
GREEN'S, WEST 23RD. 4-9
FINANCIAL AID! We guarantee to find scholarships and grants which you already are eligible for $1 for application at Fairfield, PA. 82556 AID FINAL FEE 105-43
Fairfield, PA 82556
**SPECTRUM OPTICAL--Do you have a screw loose? Broken lens? Broken frame? One day service in most cases. Open 10-6, M-S II 811, 4 I 720. 4-9
Spring has irpne. Fall is dead! Summer
has come. You need new threads!
For sawing and Alterations call Chrys. 841-1962
-455
Have a little BUNNY for Easter or when you feel the urge. Call Denise Preitzer, 864-
3720-853-5038.
4-14
Wainwright uncle at Ichabod's tonight. Live on stage is Dave the Hare No doubt about it, he's the one. Let's drink some water, the detim he sent him, then he can't go wrong. Kev the Rev will be coaching them. Be at Ichabod's and Rocky Ict-honley Kev the Rev. 4-8 and Rocky
Finwick—Thanks for the best months of my life. We're off to a great start—Happy Birthday! 4-8
Scott—Thanks for being warm and fun and
full of hugs. I had a great time! You're
super. T. P.S. Happy Easter! 4-8
Toto, I don't think we're in PENNSYL-
VANIA anymore. Welcome to KANSAS.
Beth! 4-9
LZ: Here it is! Your first cute UDR and
Too bad I didn't find it of course sooner.
might have seen it on your birthday. Oh
maybe I should just like it since later.
Tim (your boyfriend)?
*POWERQUES*2*POWERQUEST*3 A play-
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Vid-tapes of Academic Skill Enhancement Workshop. Time Management, Final Exams. More shown Free Friday. 8:00 a.m.-12:00 p.m. Assistance Center. 121. Strong. 864-604-4
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WOMEN'S GROUPS STARTING THE WEEK
Supporting Women's Support and
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Training Groups
Training Group, Wellness Call,
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Judy Wadlow, 4-167
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LEARN TENNIS from experienced
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students or private lessons 842-6713 after
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TYPING
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WANTED
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WANTED: 2 NON-SMOKING Roommates to share 2-Bdrm. MOEV Apt starting Aug. 4g and for sublease from 842-965-4825.
Page 12 University Daily Kansan, April 8, 1982
Scoreboard
Basketball
NBA STANDINGS
Eastern Conference
Athletic Discussion
Team | W | L | Pct. | GB
--- | --- | --- | --- | ---
Miami | 8 | 12 | .71 | 48
Philadelphia | 54 | 22 | .60 | 35
New Jersey | 39 | 37 | .513 | 19½
Washington | 39 | 37 | .513 | 19½
Oklahoma City | 39 | 37 | .513 | 19½
Western Conference Midwest Division
Milwaukee ... 53 23 .697 ...15
Atlanta ... 38 38 .697 ...15
Detroit ... 38 38 .474 ...15
Dallas ... 33 43 .434 ...20
Chicago ... 33 46 .394 ...23
Cleveland ... 30 36 .170 ...23
San Antonio 45 13 592 —
Boston 14 13 579 —
Houston 14 33 696 2
Kansas City 26 26 342 19
Dallas 26 50 142 19
Oklahoma City 28 14 289 19
Los Angeles
Seattle
San Francisco
Golden State
Portland
Michigan
52 49 24 684
39 38 631 694
43 50 650 974
42 34 34 553
32 34 34 101
16 16 50 385
盐城师范 116, New Jersey 113
Washington 97, Indiana 85
Minnesota 84, Ohio 82
Detroit 120, Atlanta 113
Indiana 120, Atlanta 113
San Antonio 118, Kansas City 113
Nebraska 118
TROUKEY
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Darden vs. Stanford
Best of Five
Division
New York Islanders vs.
Philadelphia vs. New York Hangiers
Division
Monteverde vs. Quebec
Division
Boston 3, Buffalo
Battle
Chicago 3,曼哈顿 2,OT
St. Louis 4, Warnertown
Battle
Los Angeles 10, Edmonton 8
Soccer MISL STANDINGS
Team W W L Pct. GB
New York 30 7 .611 - -
Pittsburgh 20 15 .642 - -
Buffalo 23 14 .824 - -
Buffalo 15 18 .532 7
New Jersey 15 12 .396 15½
Cleveland 15 23 .396 15½
Indiana 15 22 .296 12
St. Louis 27 12 692
Wichita 25 12 692
Chicago 19 10 8%
Denver 14 24 368
Minneapolis 13 26 314
Kansas City 12 26 314
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS No games scheduled.
Baseball
Team W L Pct. GB
Ballimore 1 0 1.000 ---
Boston 0 0 1.000 ---
Cleveland 0 0 1.000 %
Detroit 0 0 1.000 %
Milwaukee 0 0 1.000 %
Wichita 0 0 1.000 %
Toronto 0 0 1.000 %
AMERICAN LEAGUE Eastern Division
wheelchair DRAFTS
California 1 1 1.000
Minnesota 1 1 1.000
Michigan 1 1 1.000
Seattle 0 0 1.000
Texas 0 0 1.000
Tucson 0 0 1.000
Oklahoma City 0 0 1.000
RESULTS
Kansas City at Baltimore, at
Toronto at Detroit, atppl
Cleveland at Milwaukee, atppl
Minnesota, at Seattle 5
St. Louis, at Minneapolis
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Team W L Pct GB
Washington 1 1 .560
St. Louis 1 1 .560
Mittalway 0 0 .000
New York 0 0 .000
Philadelphia 0 0 .000
Philadelphia 0 0 .000
Atlanta 2 2 1.000 —
Los Angeles 2 0 1.000 —
Los Angeles 2 0 1.000 —
Cincinnati 1 1 500 1
San Francisco 1 1 500 1
San Diego 0 2 0.000 —
Montreal is Pittsburgh, pphl.
New York at Philadelphia, pphl.
Atlanta 6. San Diego 4.
Houston 1. St. Louis 2.
Toronto 1. Montreal 3.
Team W L W Pct. GB
Okahanna State 5 3 2 .625
Okakoma 3 2 2 .500
Oklahoma 3 2 2 .500
Kansas State 2 2 2 .500
Nebraska 4 4 3 .500
Missouri 4 4 3 .500
Utah State 4 4 3 .500
Allen, Berger to buv Alouettes
Berner, Alouette owner from 1790 to 1890 after owning the Owain Riders in the 1600s, said he was informed after yesterday's meeting that Skalabia had agreed to produce signed waivers from the team's creditors and would pay off debts up run during Skalabia's disastrous one-year ownership.
Allen also said former Alouette owner Sam Berger would join the new owners as a minor shareholder.
the differences have been resolved and that by next Wednesday, significant details of our agreement will have been completed by Nelson Skainbana."
"The problem was that new debts kept surfacing all the time," Berger said. "They want Skalabain to clean them up; to come back in a few days (next Wednesday) and say, 'here it all goes,' they can go ahead and buy the team."
Questions over responsibility for several large debts incurred by the Alouettes in their disappointing 3-13 season in 1981 had blocked negotiations for the sale between Skalabia and Allen.
Jayhawks sign two players
"I'm more optimistic than ever that the recent rocky history of this team is on the way to resolution," Allen said. "I have been assured and expect that all
By United Press International
MONTREAL--Montreal Alouettes owner Nelson Skaklainia agreed yesterday to sell the troubled Canadian Football League franchise to a group of investors led by ly Coach President George Allen, but first must release the new owners from several large debts incurred by the team last season.
Tina Stauffer of Emporia, Kan., and Valerie Quarles of Madison, Wis., signed letters-of-intent yesterday to play basketball for the Kansas women's football team.
By GINO STRIPPOLI
Associate Sports Editor
In a brief statement following the second day of meetings between the two parties and their lawyers, Allen said Skalbania had until next Wednesday to complete "significant details" of the agreement and said the Alouettes' troubles were 'on the way to resolution."
Associate Sports Editor
"We are happy that Tina and Valerie have decided to join our program at KU." Head Coach Marian Washington said. "They both will make fine contributions to our team, each having certain strengths we need. Their attitudes are fantastic and we're looking forward to having them here."
STAUFFER, a 5-foot-10 guard, lettered each of her four years at Emporia High School. She averaged 18 points, seven rebounds and five steals a game during her senior season. Stauffer was named to the All-State-Acll first class team as a senior, All-State Class 5A and All-State All-Class second team as a
Quarries, a 5-foot-8 guard, averaged 21.8 points and 7.8 steals and 4.5 assists per game during her senior season to lead her team in each category. She was the second to the All-City Conference, City-Area联盟 to the All-City Conference, City-Area联赛. Her junior year, she was named to the All-Conference and All-City teams.
Quarles and Stauffer bring the total number of newcomers to KU's team to four. Earlier this semester, sophomore Philicia Allen and freshman Mona Nance, transferred from south Carolina, to Kansas. They will be eligible to play for the Jayhawks in the fall.
One sad note for the Jayhawks: Mary Chrnelch, a part-time starter and the past two years for the Jayhawks, has joined the University and attend the University of Wisconsin.
Staffer, who plans to major in premed, said, "I didn't meet Coach Washington before my visit here, but when I did I was really impressed. My visit here went great and I really liked the staff.
junior. She was voted the Centennial League's Most Valuable Player her junior and senior seasons, and was also named Centennial League Sophomore for the season.
ball handling and get more aggressive to play the college game."
"I feel my shooting, when it is on, is the best thing I have to offer the team," Stauffer said. "But right now, I know I can help. But I can I help the team as soon as possible."
STAUFFER FITS the mold of present KU player, Angie Snider. Like Snider, Stauffer will be counted on for her shooting and playmaking.
"Another reason I decided to come here was that it was close to home."
"On the college level, I'll have to play smarter. I will also have to improve my
Favorite falls in NHL playoff action
By United Press International
Last night marked the opening round of the National Hockey League playoffs. Game two of the best of five series will be played tonight, while game three will be played Saturday. Games four and five, if necessary, will be scheduled and then bashed. In last night's action, the eight home teams won.
BOSTON—Peter McNab and Brad Park staked Boston to a 2-10 lead and rookie Mike Moffat, playing just his third National Hockey League game, made it up with fine goal-keeping by Brains to defeat the Buffalo Sabri-3.
and Bryan Trotter scored two goals each to lift the New York Islanders to a 8-1 thrashing of the Pittsburgh Penguins.
New York Islanders 8, Pittsburgh 1 UNIONDALE. N.Y.-Clark Gillies
MONTREAL-Mario Tremblay and Marc Napier scored two goals each to lift the Montreal Canadians to a 5-1 victory over the Quebec Nordiques.
Philadelphia 4, New York Rangers
5, Minnesota Nuggets 2, Philadelphia
penalty-killing team that stopped five
New York power plays giving the
Flyers a 4-1 victory over the Rangers.
Bill Barber had two assists for the
Hawks to a 3-2 victory over the North Shore.
St Linie 4 Winningline 2
Chicago 3, Minnesota 2 (OT)
BLUMINGTON, Mimm - Greg Fox
blumington.org
Soula Gilles Meilee at 3:34 of sudden-
dowest overtide to lift the Chicago Black
WINNIPE, Manitoba - Defensmen Guy Lapointe and left winger Brian Sutter scored third-period goals within a span of 2:45 to spark the St. Louis Blues, who won their first game ever at the Minnesota 4-3 victory over the Winnipeg Jets.
Los Angeles 10, Edmonton 8
Delaware scored two goals and the Los
Angeles Kings to a 10-8 upset victory
over Wayne Gretzky and the Edmonton
Vancouver 5. Calgarv .3
Vancouver 5, Calgary 3,
VANCOUVER, British Columbia—
Lars Lindgren, Lars Molin and Gary
Lapul scored third-period goals to
power the Vancouver Canucks to a 5-
victory over the Calgary Flames.
Baseball team gets snowed out
A late-winter snowstorm caused the cancellation of the Kansas baseball team's scheduled double-header with Creighton yesterday.
The Jayhawks, 12-12 and 2-2 in conference play, will play Iowa State in Ames this weekend, weather and field conditions permitting. Iowa was hit harder by the same storm that hit Lawrence.
Spurs beat Kings, Mitchell scores 40
SAN ANTONIO, Texas--Mike Mitchell scored 40 points last night to help the San Antonio Spurs past the Kansas City Chiefs in a National Basketball Association action.
By United Press International
Mitchell grabbed 10 rebounds and scored 9 points in the fourth period, including 4 during a 10.3-stretch late in the game. Ben Simmons and Antonio lead into a 18-14 advantage.
Dave Corsez, who also had 4 points during that run, added 17 total points, 9 rebounds and 3 blocked shots.
The Spurs took a 57-56 halftime lead using 21 points from Mitchell and held the game at 3-0.
The Kings, who had four players fouled out, stayed close behind with eight fourth-quarter points by Ernie Grunfeld who finished the game with 19.
Mike Woodson, who led Kansas City with 21, and Larry Drew, who added 20, each hit three-point field goals to close the scoring for the Kings.
San Antonio, which shot 65 percent from the field in the third quarter, shot a dismal 36 percent in the final stanza and 48 for the game. The Kings hit 57 percent from the field, but were outshot at the free-throw line, 30-19.
[Name]
Thomas Hearns
15* DRAWS
75* BAR DRINKS
until 10.30
coven only $1
Hearns-Hagler championship fight set
... and your enthusiasm are needed to fill active committee positions. Sign up at the Student Union Activities Office to be a part of SPECIAL EVENTS, (concerts), FORUMS, INDOOR RECREATION, OUTDOOR RECREATION, FINE ARTS, TRAVEL, and PUBLIC RELATIONS FOR SUA.
STUDENT UNION ACTVITIES—Kansas Union Level Four—864-3477
We need you.
YOU
By United Press International
At a news conference, Hearns said he had insisted that the fight be held in Michigan, preferably Detroit, but Hears had also allowed Hearns the home-field advantage.
DETROIT—Detroit's Thomas Hearnes said last night that he would reclaim the title of "hit man" for his May 24 middleweight bout against Marvin Hagler at Windsor Arena in Windsor, Ontario.
Hagler, who many boxing experts consider to be the best boxer in any class in the world today, won the middleweight championship from Alan Minter in 1980. Hagler, who holds both the World Boxing Association and the IBF, has had many memorable bouts during his reign, most notably, his two fights against ex-middleweight champion Vito Antufermo.
It has been nearly 80 years since the last middle-weight title fight was held on Canadian soil. On Sept. 15, 1902, Tommy Ryan successfully defended his crown with a sixth-round knockout over Kid Carter in Ontario.
"I tried to do all I possibly could to get the fight in Michigan, but Hagler just wouldn't go for it," Hears said. "So we did the next best thing. It will be in Canada, right next to Detroit. Of course, Hagler does not know about the try."
The Hearns-Hagler fight will be shown on closed-circuit television if the Windsor area is sold out. Ringside seats are $300.
would be held across the Detroit River in Windsor.
It was then agreed that the fight
MISTER
GUY
Genuine Topsiders/khaki separates by Mister Guy TOPSIDERS + KHAKI
KANSAN
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
Friday, April 9, 1982
Vol. 9, No. 130 USPS 650-640
Regents budget approved
By COLLEEN CACY Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
TOPEKA-A—The 1982 Board of Regents budget, including a $900,000 faculty salary enrichment fund, was approved by the Kansas Legislature yesterday and is in its way to Gov. John Carlin's
The enrichment fund, which previously was killed in the House, received a shot in the arm with support from Speaker of the House Wendell Lady and Senate President Ross Doyen.
During a Wednesday afternoon bargaining session, members of the House and Senate Ways and Means committees decided to trim the fund from $1.5 million to $900,000. They recommended that the University of Kansas receive 28.9 percent of the funds, or about $270,000.
They also decided to designate the funds for faculty only in engineering, computer science and business. Faculty are leaving these areas for private industry. University administrators said.
"I think it's a tremendous step forward," Bob
talks it in a speech for the Kansas Engineering
Society, said veteran Edith Hoyle.
"It sets a precedent that the state has a responsibility to respond to market problems."
HARSOOK SAID he was hoping that 70 percent of the money would go to engineering faculty.
"Our review of the situation is that most of the faculty members impacted by this situation are not involved."
"It's a nationwide problem. We're probably one of the first states to deal with it."
Doyen, R-Concordia, who proposed the fund early in the session and pushed it through the committee.
"I just felt they needed some extra help," he said.
He said he'd been pushing for the fund all session and had convinced House members who
House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Mike Hayden, R-Atwood, spoke out against the fund on the House floor, saying the state could not afford more money for faculty salaries.
BUT LADY, R-Overland Park, joined the movement for the extra salary money by appointing himself to the conference committee to pull for the fund.
Conference committees are formed to settle data between House and Senate budget recommendations.
Both chambers voted to accept the conference committee report yesterday. The enrichment fund was the only significant difference between the two budgets.
State Sen. Jane Eldredge, R-Lawrence, said she was worried that Democrats did not like the legislation redirecting
"Is this opening the door for law and business to come ask for their own enrichment money next year?" she asked. "This was a concession of the conference committee alone."
Hayden originally had suggested limiting the fund to the three high-demand areas because he said he wanted to make sure the money went where it was most needed.
The fund is in addition to a 7.5 percent faculty increase already approved by both chambers. The other Regents' budget items approved were the college's student salary increases and an 8.75 percent student salary increase.
SENATE WAYS and Means Committee Chairman Paul Hess, R-Wichita, said he agreed that the fund was setting "a dangerous precedent, but it is the will of the body."
The conference committee also removed two appropriations from KU's budget, but Bess said that it would be good to do so.
The omnibus bill is the last appropriations bill of the session and it includes money for all programs the Legislature has already approved, but not yet funded.
The two items left out of KU's budget were
$50,000 for the Kansas Applied Remote Sensing
$119,500 for the Bureau of Child
Research.
Both programs need the money because of cuts in federal grants next year.
HAYDEN SAID the Legislature was considering financing the Remote Sensing Program from the Geological Survey fund and was looking into the possibilities of funds for the Bureau of Child Research.
Hess said, "It's highly likely we will end up in the Remote Sending Program in the orphan girl."
The conference committee report also included $30,000 to establish a poison control hotline and hire one nurse at the KU Medical Center.
State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, which was approved on the floor of the House.
"So when your child gets poisoned in the middle of the night, you can call the poison control hotline, and they'll tell you what to do," Hess said.
Committee reports included a financing cut for the Med Center of $2,695,722 because of a reduction in the number of hospital beds to be staffed and operated there.
AS OF MARCH, the Med Center was operat- ing 464 patients of 664, partly because of a shortage of 200 nurses.
The Legislature also approved funding funds for 446 full-time positions from the hospital staff. However, 140 of those positions will be shifted from funding to funding by private practice corporations.
It will force clinics receiving a heavy dose of income from taxpayers - over 50 percent - to get help.
An updated patient billing system, financed by the 1981 Legislature, will allow the elimination of 33 positions. The total of 293 positions that were cut reflects the reduced number of hospital beds.
KINSALE HOUSE
WAYS INTO U.S.
DEPARTMENT
IS CONGAESS
CITIZEN LEADER AMONG
VOTES HERE OR FOR
WHERE THE DEPARTMENT
GET WITH IT
NANCY!!
Sen. Nancy Kassebaum talks with members of the KU Committee on South Africa in front of the Kansas Union yesterday. Later that afternoon, Kassebaum, R-Kan., spoke to the American Association of University Professors.
JON HARDESTY/Kansan Staff
Gleason decides to abandon recall drive court challenge
Staff Reporter
By STEPHEN BLAIR
"I trust the people to recognize a raw power play when they see one," Gleason said.
Lawrence City Commissioner Tome Gleason said last night he has decided not to challenge in court the legality of the May 11 election to recall him.
Marnie Argersinger, former mayor and member of the Lawrence Committee, which organized the recall drive, said, "I'm glad to not going to take it to court. It would be messier."
Gleason said he was sure he would have won the case if he had challenged the election in court, but he wanted to prevent people from doubting that he was accountable to voters.
FRED PENCE, former mayor and member of the Lawrence Committee, said that Gleason
"Some people would claim. 'You are only here because you got a judge to prevent the people from getting into the building.'"
probably would not have won and was wise in declaring against a legal challenge.
"It was probably a smart thing to do," Pence said.
Gleason said the recall effort would not have withstood a court challenge because Kansas law required definite grounds for recalling an elected official.
"The statutory grounds for recall are
See related story page 7.
Universities must determine priorities, Kassebaum says
misconduct, incompetence or failure to perform "he said recently.
Last night he said, "I've talked to other attorneys, and more than one of them urged me to fight."
The recall resulted from a petition drive organized by the Lawrence Committee in response to Gleason's letter to City Manager Buford Watson in early February.
In his letter, Gleason asked Watson to resign or face the possibility of being fired.
during an evaluation by the city
see GLEASON page 5
See GLEASON page
A LITTLE WARMER
Weather
Tomorrow will have decreasing cloudiness and a high in the 40s.
Tonight will be cloudy with a 35 percent chance of light snow flurries. The temperature will be cooler.
Today will be warmer, with a high in the mid-80s, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka. Winds will be from the northwest at 10 to 20 mph.
By ANNE CALOVICH
Nen. Nancy Kassebaum said yesterday that universities were as responsible for financing higher education as the federal government. Kassebaum addressed the KU branch of the American Association of University Professors at the Kansas Union.
Staff Reporter
"We can point to the federal government-it's a wonderful scapegoat," Kassbauen, R-Kan., said. "It behoves administrators, faculty and students, understand what they feel are priorities on campus."
Kassebaum said the question to be asked was how much the federal government should be involved in financing higher education. Although cuts are being threatened, she said, university self-evaluations would help the government determine what was really essential.
"The universities have a responsibility of letting into their own budgets to see what what's going on."
"As we look to educational needs in the future, it's not a question how much money, but where purpose goes."
"No one wants to give up what they already have had. But I think it can only strengthen higher education to take a longer look at what is important and how it is to be funded."
Cold temperatures did not keep these two ducks from preening their feathers in Potter Lake.
KASSEBAUM, who is a member of the Senate Budget Committee, said she favored retaining 1982 spending for 1983.
Kassebaum said she was not sure when, if ever, the 1983 budget would be settled, but said, 'I feel certain there will be a capping of discretionary funds to the '82 level.' Such discretionary funds include funds for higher education.
"I believe we should cap all spending to the 1982 level," she said. "Some say that's simplistic, but it seems equitable me. It's a way to make significant changes in the budget and
Regarding possible Reagan cuts for international studies, Kassebaum said she thought those funds would remain the same for next year, but that the Senate Appropriations Committee might redirect some of them to other areas.
"The more we can understand neighborring nations and other countries, the more exchange of students, the better off the world will be," she said.
KASSEBAUM ALSO said at the AAUP meeting that she favored the student loan backacks that went into effect this year, and which
See KASSEBAUM page 5
U.S. attempts Falklands negotiations
WASHINGTON - Secretary of State Alexander Hajfle飞到 London early yesterday in an effort to mediate the growing crisis between Britain and Argentina over the Falkland Islands.
By United Press International
The United States, maintaining a neutral position in the dispute, is seeking a diplomatic solution in an attempt to head off a military clash between the US and Russia. The naval fleet steamed toward the contested islands.
British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher told Haig that Argentine troops must be withdrawn from the Falklands and British rule
restored before negotiations can begin on the future of the disrupted South Atlantic colony.
British officials said Thatatcher asked Haig to relay London's position when he travels to Argentina today on the second leg of a peace mission ordered by President Reagan.
ARGENTINA VOWED yesterday to defy a British blockade of the Falkland Islands and put on alert an estimated 50,000 reserve troops
The military junta reassured apprehensive patriots it had the might to hang on to the South Atlantic archipelago and rebaptained Britain's sea base in Argentina home. Argentina seized the British colony last Friday.
Naval officials said they were confident that Argentina could whip the British, who will be operating "way out of their theater of war" in the Philippines also enjoys air superiority, they said.
Although the United States is remaining neutral, it will let British planes use a U.S.-controlled airfield on a British island in the South Atlantic and refuel the planes if they land there en route to the Falkland Islands, the Pentagon said yesterday.
pentagon spokesman Henry Cato said no U.S. assistance beyond that was planned in connection with the British attempt to regain control of the Falklands.
See FALKLAND page 5
Computers help handicapped to cope
By DEBBIE DOUGLAS$
Staff Reporter
A man's best friend could be his computer.
For K.C. Huang, graduate student in mechanical engineering, the computer has been his closest working partner since the beginning of this academic year.
Huang and his computer have been redesigning a machine that can recognize faces by tilting it to feed themselves.
Huang said a computer helped him find the problem areas of the Beeson Feeder, analyze data.
"I changed everything," he said.
THE ANGLE at which the spoon formerly was held was too sharp, Huang said, and the spoon would catch on the edge of the food dish and flip the food.
"I used the computer to develop my own mechanical design," he said.
Huang said he made the switches, which turn the feeder machine on and off, easier to operate. He also worked to slow the speed at which the spoon would move, in order to serve the spoon and the angle of its holding arm.
"K.C. does most of the work, and the department just gives him moral support once in a while," Baer said.
IF HUANG can get the feeding machine to work more smoothly, he said, more people might buy it, and its cost could go down.
Charles Baer, professor of mechanical engineering, said that Huang spent hundreds of hours working with the computer, which he programmed to graphically draw better angles for the spoon and its holding arm.
"Now, only a dozen or so feeders are being sold each year," Baer said. "There are several thousand quadriplegics in the country, and we need more feeders, but we can't until we work better."
Paul Fortin, associate director of the University of Kansas Center for Research Inc., said the redesigned Beeson Feeder would cost the same as other feeding machines on the market, but he said, "It will be more functional and less frustrating for its users."
He said the machine would cost between $400 and $500.
New technology has made the use of the computer in mechanical design possible, Fortin
"The development at the University of computer-aided design, and also of computer-aided manufacturing, has the potential of bringing research area of great importance," he said.
HE SAID the work on the Beeson Feeder was the first step toward becoming the Midwestern leader in computer-assisted mechanical design and manufacturing.
Baa said that Huang had the most sophisticated knowledge of computer graphics
"He is pushing the state of the art, really," Beer said.
Huang said he hoped to have the Beeon Feeder redesigned and ooo built by the end of M6.
After this project, he said, he wants to continue
See EQUIPMENT page 8
Page 2 University Daily Kansan, April 9, 1982
News Briefs From United Press International
Soldiers shoot Arab woman; Bethlehem town hall seized
BETHELHEM, Israeli-occupied West Bank-Iraeli soldiers shot and killed an Arab woman at an army camp yesterday, and 300 Palestinian students seized Bethlehem's town hall for five hours to protest the beating of a university dean.
The woman, from the nearby village of Ein Yardub, was walking toward the camp's munitions dump when she was seen by the soldiers, military personnel, and other rescuers.
The Israeli military said Aziza Hussein Aisu, 5a, was fatally shot by an Army Camp A, six miles north of Ramallah, after she displeased orders to halt.
In Bethelhem, 300 Palestinian students seized the town hall and used bulb horns to shout anti-Iraeli slogans from the building's upper windows as hundreds of Easter pilgrims filled Manger Square to visit the birthplace of Jesus.
The students left the building peacefully five hours later, after an Israeli colonel promised to investigate the beating Wednesday of the dean of students at Betheim University by five men reportedly armed with machine guns. A university watchman also was beaten.
Politicians want gas trucks limited
OAKLAND, Calif.-To prevent a recurrence of the freeway tunnel explosion that incinerated seven people in a 2,000-degree inferno, local politicians yesterday demanded urgent measures to ban gasoline tank trucks from such routes.
"Suppose this occurred at 8 a.m. or 5 p.m." said Contra Costa County Supervisor Nancy Fahden. "We could have had a couple of hundred lives."
Shortly after midnight Wednesday, a car stalled on two lanes. A bus without passengers swerved to miss it, bounced off a tunnel wall and collided with the bus.
The rig jackknifed, and its 8,000 gallons of high-octane fuel exploded, shooting a fireball through the tunnel.
Seven people, including the drivers of the stalled car and the bus, were taken. The gas truck driver, Mervyn Lee Metzker, 42, escaped by running out of the garage.
Hincklev's trial to center on sanity
WASHINGTON-Government attorneys acknowledged yesterday they would have the burden of convincing a jury starting April 27 that John Hinkley Jr. was sane when he allegedly tried to assassinate President Reagan.
But the government said it would be up to defense attorneys to prove Hinckley was not mentally responsible for the 10 violations of District of Fortune.
Hinckley's court is scheduled to begin April 27, and his state of mind at the trial in March 18, attacks the focus of the debate, which is likely in turn based on his views.
The federal charges accuse Hincley of trying to assassinate Reagan, using a firearm while attempting to kill Reagan and assault with intent to commit a crime.
Syria closes its border with Iraq
DAMASCUS, Syriac - Syria announced yesterday the closure of its border with Iran, inviting residents between the two neighbors ruled by rival (the Aman-Arab Bin Aath Fath) forces.
The closure of the border was announced by Interior Minister NasseridderNasser, who said his government's "patience has run out with Iraq's refusal to stop sending arms,explosives and mercenaries to create unrest in the country."
Both countries have been involved in a war of words, with charges and counter-charges of interfering in the other's internal affairs.
The longstanding ideological differences between the leaderships in Baghdad and Syria worsened in late 1980 and led to a total break in diplomatic ties after Syria publicly voiced full support for Iran in the war that began Sept. 22, 1980.
Hiring freeze barely affects costs
WASHINGTON—President Reagan's federal hiring freeze provided "an illusion of control," but had little effect, and in some cases, it increased the number of workers.
- runs is another example of the American people being mistreated by public officials, "Rep. Geraldine Ferraro, D-N.Y., chairman of the House Human Resources Committee."
"We know hiring freezes do more harm than good," she said. "The administration's wild predictions of savings from the freeze are a serious risk."
Reagan ordered a freeze on federal hiring immediately after taking his oath, making it retroactive to election day, Nov. 5, 1980.
U.S. grants Polish cellist asylum
HARTFORD, Conn. — Cecilia Barczyk, the foremost female cellist in Poland and a supporter of her university union movement, has been named as the new U.S. State's official.
Barczyk's request for asylum was granted by the Federal Immigration and Naturalization Service in a decision announced by the office of Semenko on November 30, 2014.
Barczyk announced on Christmas Eve she would seek asylum in New avena, where she had been an invited resident at the Yale University School of Medicine.
"I believe in democracy. There is none in Poland," she said in an interview at the time. "I can't live in a country without democracy. I believe in freedom."
Video games may be too stressful
WASHINGTON-Video games, those seemingly innocuous battles of human responses against electronic wizardry, could zap you.
At least that is the theory of Robert Eliot, a physician at the University of Nebraska Medical Center, who warns that the stress of fighting off space invaders or devouring the ghosts on a Pac-Man screen can mean dangerous pressure on the heart.
After monitoring the reactions of more than 1,000 men and women pitted against video demons, Elliot "reported that" hot reactors" might have more
"It is like drag racing a car with the brakes on," he said. "Your heart is pumping against dramatically increased pressure. There is a limit to what
Corrections
Because incorrect information was given to a reporter, the Kansan misreported that date that the Kansas Board of Regents will consider a name change for the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information. The Regents will consider the change at their May 21 meeting.
Because of an editing error, yesterday's Kansan said that books in Watson Library could not be included in a new card catalog system. Actually, books purchased or processed at the library before or during 1975 cannot be included in the new system. In the same story, because of a reporter's error, Gary Succott was incorrectly identified. He is a project manager with the office of information systems.
By DAN PARELMAN Staff Reporter
Study shows changes add to crime rate
Changes in living patterns, primarily the increased number of women in the work force and the growing affluence of Americans, have contributed to the increased crime rate in the United University researchers have concluded.
Lineberry, who before coming to the University of Kansas was a professor of political science and urban affairs at Northwestern University, teamed with Northwestern colleague Herbert Jacob and Northwestern research associate Anne Heinz to study crime in U.S. cities.
Although cities have increased spending on law enforcement—some as much as triple what they spent 30 years ago—there has been a down the crime rate because living-pattern changes are beyond the control of local police, Robert Lineberry, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Science, assistant professor of political science, said recently.
"We cannot pretend that police forces can control the social processes that affect our lives."
Lineberry said that at the same time possessions in U.S. homes had become more valuable, women had left their families to work abroad so these items unprotected during the day.
In this period, as the United States became more affluent, Americans accumulated belongings that are more desirable to criminals. The researchers found, for example, a "distinct connection" between the number of color televisions in the United States and the crime rate, according to Lineberry.
The research team studied crime and the efforts of nearly 400 cities with populations of more than 50,000 to control crime from 1948 to 1978.
THE STUDY, "Governmental Responses to Crime," will be published by the U.S. Department of State this year.
"The pickings are better." he said.
The research team's findings show social factors that many people consider positive—more working women and a higher standard of living—are causing a social problem: crime, Lineberry said.
"It poses a very, very real social dilemma," he said.
LINEBERRY SAID he was "absolutely certain" that the United States could make a significant dent in crime if the nation's wealth was cut and more women stayed at home. But these solutions are undesirable, he said.
In concluding that lifestyle changes have contributed to crime, the team concluded that lifestyle is a factor.
traditionally been considered causes of crime.
"Commonly, people think of crime as being a result of poverty, race and other social forces. We argue that crime is one of the lifetimes of lifestyle changes." Lineberry said.
The team rejected race as a primary cause of crime when it found that cities with predominantly white populations, such as Minneapolis, had the same rate of hate crimes with predominance of black populations, such as Newark, N.J., he said.
The research team found no connection between poverty and crime; because cities with high income levels, urbanization and suburbs all had similar crime rates.
SenEx positions filled after council's elections
By BARB EHLI Staff Reporter
The University Council elected six faculty members and three students to the University Senate executive committee yesterday. At the same time, it elected the University Council officer and assistant presiding officer.
James Seaver, director of the Western Civilization program, was elected chairman of SenEx.
Faculty Council, which is composed of faculty members on University Council, elects faculty members on SenEx.
Senate members on University Council elect student members of SenEx. Six faculty members and three Senate members from SenEx, and 12 Senate members and 39 faculty members form University Council.
The other five faculty members elected to SenEx were Edwyna Gilbert, associate professor of English; Ellen Reid Gold, associate professor of speech and drama; Gerald Mikkelson, associate professor of Slavic languages and literature; James Carothers, associate professor of English; and Charles Kahn, professor of architecture and urban design.
THE THREE STUDENT members elected by the Student Senate last night were Loren Busby, vice chairman of SenEx and Hutchinson junior; Lisa Ashner, Mission sophomore; and Tom Berer, Lawrence graduate student.
Busby, Berger, Seaver and Gilbert
served on University Council this past year.
May 18 will begin Busby's second consecutive term and Seaver's third time as chairman.
Ernest Angino, professor of civil engineering and geology, was elected presiding officer of the University Council and University Senate. This will make him non-voting member of SenEx.
ANGINO IS currently serving as chairman of Faculty Council and SenEx.
Seaver said there were no specific agenda items for next year, but that the University Council would decide on future plans and handle specific issues as they came up.
Lisa Ashner, Mission sophomore, was elected assistant presiding officer of University Council.
Bursby said the sexual harassment policy and financial exigency policy were two important issues the University Council addressed this year.
"I's inadvertent for the most part," bushy said. "In their hate to impulse and issue, they not realize that it entices the entire Senate to approve it."
He said he did not think administrators were deliberately going around the University Council.
Busby said he hoped the administrators would bring ideas to the University Council and SenEx before approving them.
He said he hoped the University governance groups would continue to have a voice in University policy.
KANSAS CITY, Kan.-Coroners, unlike their Hollywood counterparts, are not exciting crime solvers, Victor Roseen, a former coroner in Los Angeles and the technical medical consultant for the television show, "Quincy," said yesterday.
Work of real-life coroners glossed in television drama
"The first time I took Jack Klugman into the L.A. County morgue, he couldn't believe the cord wood stacks of bodies." Then said Jack Klugman, "so easy say no." It's good thing they can't reproduce the smell on T.V.'."
Rosen, who is an associate professor of pathology at UCLA, spoke at the University of Kansas Medical Center's Hixon Hour Workshop. He also coreren and his work with Jack Klurman, the star of "Quincy."
A coroner's work, especially in a large metropolitan area, has little in common with the job that Quincy performs on television. Rosen said.
By TOM HUTTON Staff Reporter
"Everything comes out well in Quincy," he said. "Unfortunately, it doesn't always happen that way in real life."
IN THE TELEVISION show, Quincy is on the scene of every homicide and investigates each death for days. Quincy also talks in depth with the victim's family and teaches them how to respond rather than a skeleton. Rose said
'I'm constantly being bombarded
with questions like, 'How do you let him get away with acting as a cop?' he said. 'Well, if he were a police officer, an investigologist, no one would watch the show.
"Every day, we see the ugliest parts of life and can do absolutely nothing about them. In fiction, it can be done."
Rosen said he performed thousands of autopsies yearly while working as a coroner in Los Angeles.
However, Rosen said, the dramatization of the program didn't bother him because Quincy used it for his own purposes and sometimes uneconical, methods.
FOR EXAMPLE, on one show,
Quincy reconstructed a body from
an unidentified skull and other
particles of bone.
Rosen said although such feats were possible, a real coroner would have neither the time nor the funds to reconstruct a human.
The low budgets allocated to county coroners' offices throughout the United States have made them unable to purchase and maintain expensive medical equipment. The cuts are also making the field untractive for medical school graduates, Rosen said.
"Allough crime and deaths are up," he said, "we are perversely seeing severe cuts in our budgets."
"I'm sure that with massive local budget cuts, we're missing homicides," Rosen said. "However, if we had the budget of 'Quincy,' the would be in clover—it kind of shows us where our priorities are."
Wacko.
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But why should you get the American Express Card now?
Well, if you are planning a trip across country or around the world, the
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Of course, the Card also helps you establish your credit history. And it's great for restaurants and shopping right at home.
So call 800-528-8000 for a Special Student Application or look for one at your college bookstore or on campus bulletin boards.
The American Express Card. Don't leave school without it.
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University Daily Kansan, April 9, 1982 Page 3
This Bud's for You.
Opinion
Page 4 University Daily Kansan, April 9, 1987
Tearing down barriers
Not too long ago, a series about "men's awareness" probably would have been laughed off campus.
But not too long ago, men were the undisputed heads of families, sole or primary wage earners, and political and business leaders of America.
And these powerful roles were accompanied by powerful constraints on men's images of themselves and on their behavior.
As women have angrily fornew places for themselves in American society, men have also had to re-examine and redefine their time-honored roles.
And though there may still be a few snickers, KU's Men's Awareness Series is in its third year and thriving.
The series, which began this week and continues through April 15, is a collection of programs exploring such issues as intimacy and trust in relationships, parental roles and handling guilt feelings.
About 300 men and women attended this year's first program, which included a role-reversing male beauty pageant.
If the series' success is any indication, many KU students are ready to tear down gender barriers that have stifled men and women in the past.
Projects such as the Men's Awareness Series may help us see beyond the inapplicable roles created centuries ago.
And, as we look back at the broken molds we have left behind, we can all have a good laugh.
Abortion argument rages around definition of terms
If columns can sprout as grass roots affairs, this is one of those pieces. Throughout the past two weeks this page has carried a series of letters to the editor wrestling over the right or wrong of abortion. Today, the controversy creens unward.
One letter Monday is a compact example of the glasses, skips, and missteps many people make in opposing abortion. “A fetus doesn’t Z-APP-become a human being at Day 127, but at Day One, it does not qualify, human life could be protected from a time far before birth, from the moment of conception.
Like many anti-abortion positions, this argument slobes around critical terms. Consider that some of these are:
1974
JEFF THOMAS
headway by jumbling "human life" and "human being," and shying away from defining either
Opponents of abortion typically lay out their cases like this: Just looking at a fetus or checking its chromosomes shows that the fetus is human. Of course, it is also alive and growing, thus, it is a human life and human being and deserves the right to life. Abortion is wrong.
Yet centering the abortion question on the human categories—human life and beings—makes the conservative position meaningless. Whether you use genetic measurements or appearance, our appendages, livers and lungs are all human organisms. Their cells are active, multiplying and dying, thus, they are living in the same sense that a fetus lives. Our appendages are also alive and alive; they should be given the right to live. Operations to remove them are wrong.
Prodding conservatives to follow their line of thought those extra few steps tripm them into the absurd. Rejecting abortion because the fetus is a woman, rejecting the sense as outlawing appendicitis as murder.
Evidently, the right to life should be reserved for organisms that are more than human and living. According to this definition, we should go only to the 'person', The Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments both
guarantee that no "person" will be deprived
*life, liberty or property, without due process of*
*court.*
Stopping abortions constitutionally requires establishing "the unborn child's status as a person," Stephen Galebach, a Jarvard legal scholar, writes.
Two rare parents who have lived both sides of the issue—with the same child—may have the experience to tell us whether the fetus should be counted as a person.
Several years ago, Frank Speck Jr., of West Homestead, Pa, had a vasequestet. Yet months later, his wife, Dorothy, became pregnant. Stubbornly, she had an abortion, or so she tried. The child that neither parent wanted was born seven years ago this month.
Their third child, Francine, was born
suffering from a rare genetic pecks
children. Elephant Man's disease.
How can two parents explain to their youngest child that they did all they could to prevent her birth, that they still believe so strongly in their parents' claims? How can doctors sue to she the doctors, and that they still love her.
The Specks' answer is probably going to be the difference between the prospect of another crippled child and Francine, that when they chose the vasectomy and the abortion, Francine didn't exist. The story shows the distinction between a fetus and a child, between human and person.
1. a fetus in Dorothy Speck's womb was not the person they later named Francis Speck; no the child with a mind that may have taken an early life. 2. a girl born to a mother who may have begun craving music at an early age.
Throughout the ages, our species has complied a lengthy list of characteristics we think makes us human. We have developed intelligence, a sense of self separate from the world, a desire to live, emotions, a sense of the past and the future, hopes and more. At the same time, these are precisely the characteristics that define us.
"I fail to see where the controversy about abortion lies," Monday's letter says. The conflict the writer overlooks is her confusion of living human tissue with a person.
In a sense, she sees something hard and glittering and wants to value it as a diamond. Yet for a couple who had to make some difficult decisions, it still stands by them, the feus was not Francie.
CHARIOTS OF FIRE
ARMS
RACE
CWB2MIAMI NEWS
Some 1972 stories still in the news
The other day, my curiosity drove me to look back at what was happening at the University of Chicago.
The first thing I found on the microfilm is a corrupted stereotype of campus life during the early 1950s.
The 1972 version of the Student Senate passed a resolution recommending that the Kansas Legislature take action toward legalizing narrijuana.
Although that cause is still heard from once in a while, happily in a more muffted tone, today's Student Senate isn't touching as many external issues as its predecessor seemed inclined to.
Let's flip back a few days to April 7, 1972. Rock Chalk and KU-Y are in the news then, too.
A glance through 1972's April 10 University Daily Kanran has an interesting page on Page 2. At A college Assembly workshop, the main purpose of this workshop is the possibility of establishing a B.G.S. degree at KU.
The idea was generally well-received, with members rationalizing that the B.G.S. degree would allow a student more flexibility in developing a liberal course of study.
One member of the assembly said this week that the intent of the program was not to provide an easy way to get a degree. That I don't know, but the students were honorable when first considered in 1972.
But advising problems and student abuse of the program in subsequent years have made the B.G.S. the laughstock of the University in many cases.
Ah, the best laid plans of mice and men. . .
This week the same group discussed eliminating the degree by closing it to all students who are in the age range of Liberal Arts and Sciences after next fall.
It seems that controversy arose after a skit by McCollum Hall students was removed from the show at the last minute because of its "obscene and blasphemous" nature. The action: left the show with all Greek participants, and the characters were ignored about the discriminatory nature of the show.
However, one letter to the editor made such a convincing argument that it surely put an end to the debate. Praising the University's action in defending the honorary degree, McCollum skit had the ignorance and McCollum skit had the ignorance and
DAN BOWERS
portray God as a woman instead of a man. To quote the writer, "How stupid can you get?"
I'll stay out of this one, but with the women's movement taking root at the time, do your research.
KU-Y was determined to change the format of the show, and the Kanans's editor crouted our more than 100 episodes.
If this didn't happen, the editor warned, Rock Chalk would remain a "sick, tired joke."
Well, after 10 years, the editor may have gotten what he wanted. It appears that the recent afford producing a Rock Chalk skit, sponsor a show that transfers the profits back to the show page, and then the show to the page who previously has the show unable to afford producing a Rock Chalk skit.
Moving on, who can forget last summer's
baseball strike. You know, the one that made the summer an incredible bore. The networks achieved the impossible, while they tried to move away from their mistake while they tried to minor league ball swallow down viewers' throats.
Baseball's first general strike was 10 years ago this spring, and the迫报 postponed the month of the fight.
Someone at the time figured out that the strike was costing Hank Aaron, baseball's highest-paid player at $200,000 a year, about $1,250 for every game he missed.
Just think what every game would cost Goerge Foster of the Mets this year. His annual salary is $750,000.
The comparisons and contrasts rolled by. 1972 was Ted Owen's second losing season as KU men's basketball coach. 1982 marked his third losing season.
There was unending talk of a recession, inadequate funding from the Legislature, and of course, complaints about the Kerry arming Serking in 1996. The latter generally depositing tickets on the cars of struggling college students.
But two things distinguished the KU of 1972 from the KU of friday
The first is an advertisement for a liquor
sold a six-pack of Budweiser for a more $1.15.
The other was more dish恳席ing. It was the most visible story of the day, running. On Page 1
While each day brought with it a different account, the accounts all looked the same:
"Air and naval operations continue north of and south of the dillermilled zone in Vietnam
As I listened to the squeal of *the* microfilm looked awfully good to a draft-age college student.
Letters to the Editor
Student proud to claim KU
To the Editor:
In May, I'll be graduating from the University of Kanaa, going on to other experiences, other
In leaving this lovely campus and my many experiences therein, I simply want to say thanks to the University and all the people who compose it. Through our learning experiences, both academic and personal.
In particular, I'd like to thank professors such as Carl Leban, who passed away this year, and Feliz Moes for their continual effort to keep the school alive. I also wish to thank their students as theirs offer students an honest opportunity to
delve to the core of things and to grow intellectually. There is (and was) no dull didacticism or programming, but instead, an open, and interactive, environment. For opportunities such as this, I'm grateful.
Since I'm a "non-traditional" student, let me say that I've never felt different or unaccepted. Rather, my experiences with people for the most part have been very good at KU.
Soon I'll be looking at the University in a new light. It will seem a bit strange and foreign to be an alumna, but if I must be one, I'll be proud and pleased to claim KU, as my Mla Mater!
Martha DuBois, Lawrence senior
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Pot Shots
In junior high, it was half-form sleeveless sweatshirts and nighttop, striped athletic socks that were hip. But those were the silly, vain years of adolescence and I knew that in the sophisticated college environment, stupid fads would be a thing of the past.
I thought I'd seen the end of it in high school. Everyone would put on rugby shirts and painter's pants and think they were really chic.
Not so! Along with green grass and warm temperatures, this spring has brought us
Why is it that people ahead of me at the express checkout counter never can count
Yesterday I was walking up to the checkout line with a carton of milk under my arm when some pregnant lady arrived from behind and nudged her brimming cart in front of me.
Hey, I don't mind waiting my turn in line,
but I know what the sign says, and the sign
means that you are waiting for me.
Well, there's no way that lady had ten items or less. Even if you counted her four cans of coffee, she would have been right.
The roar coming over the radio sounded like a den of lions, but it was only the House of Commons, hungry for more heads. The general outcry already had felled Lord Carrington, Britain's unimpeachable Foreign Secretary, now victim to the country's 'rage at allowing a "tin-pot dictatorship" to take over the Empire's Falkland Islands.
The ferociousness of British politics belies the Britons' reputation for reserve. Members who have gone to drown out the nation's elected leader, who is a lady no less. Whatever became of
for Bantos
But most likely, my belly's grief is due to the realization that even after you've left high school and junior high, some things haven't changed much.
To see a simple, red cotton headband on the head of a short-haired, clean-cut paused-propriety leisurely across our campus is enough, in current college lingo, to make one gag. I don't know whether it is the wearer's silly face or the feeling that he somehow thinks he looks spiffy that makes my inwards churn.
Jeresa Piordan
Perhaps it is the absurdity of seeing someone wearing a headband who will never sweat or need to keep the hair out of his eyes that does it.
another stupid jad. What was once functional apparel and standard wear for jippies, hippies and manual laborers has become the domain of hip-hop clothing, black, the bandana headband has become chic.
As I said, I don't mind waiting in line, but I know what the signs say. And right below that sign about 10 items or less is this other sign with blue letters. "Absolutely on cash." Check only.
soup, she still had better than a week's worth of groceries in that cart.
I know because I counted every item, from the box of minute Rice to her Sara Lee cheesecake, while we were waiting for the man ahead of her to get his check cleared.
I guess I'm finally catching on to the fine art of going through the checkout line. I was out of the door before the checker even got that Sara Lee cakecake into a sack.
Bujain < jones
Well, I had enough of waiting for the manager to come clear that man's check, so I migrated to one of those old-fashioned checkout lines—you know, the ones where you can buy the whole grocery store if you want to and pay for it with your checkbook.
etiquette, and tipping the derby, *and all of*
that? Quite.
The halls of Parliament, for all of their bannisters and barristers polished through the years by layers of bass rhetoric, sound like a crowd at a Philadelphia Flyers hockey game. In contrast, the sleepy congressional chambers might as well be a smattering following Dow Finsterwald in the staid Masters golf tournament.
Americans by reputation are supposed to be loud and emotional; it is the British who are regarded as cool and dignified. So why is it so prominent in Parliament and a drone in Congress?
Possibly because Parliament dates from the Middle Ages, when men were more emotional, and the cacophonic custom has carried over. But could part of the reason also be that the British care about their politics more than Americans do?
ed
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es
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University Daily Kansan, April 9, 1982
Page 5
---
Gleason
From page 1
commission of Watson's job performance, none of the commissioners moved to fire Watson.
Members of the Lawrence Committee have said that Gleason acted illegally in writing the letter to Watson without the consent of the full commission.
If the Lawrence Committee really believed that, Gleason said, they would have had him prosecuted instead of starting a recall drive.
Arngersinger said, "That's a very good point. I've wondered about the penalty clause the whole time. If we can push through the recall, it won't be necessary."
"We have a general penalty clause in the city ordinances, if I remember correctly," he said.
Although Gleason did not move to fire Watson, there is still a danger that Gleason will try to replace Watson with a puppet city manager who would be responsive to special interests, Pence said.
PENCE ALSO discussed the rationale for not prosecuting Gleason.
"We're not interested in that kind of Mickey mouse stuff. We’re not interested in cruising any bigger things."
According to Pence, Gleason did not act with the knowledge of the full commission when he attempted to get Watson to resign, and that, Pence said, is illegal.
"He went off to overthrow the city manager form of government," he said.
THERE are two ways to do that, and the first way is by doing it legitimately through an election, but Gleason took a second way, Pence said.
Gleason said, "I feel that voters of Lawrence have more sense than to fall for this sort of power play. I think a number of my opponents feel they lost a favored position, and the recall effort is an attempt to regain that position, as well as an attempt to intimidate other commissioners."
you operate just like you don't have a city manager form of government," he said. "A city commissioner has a right to vote his composition." He doesn't have a right to go off half-cocked."
11 The second way is to get a patsy in there, and
"Grasping for straws," Pence said. "We're not trying to secrete information." We are running an campaign."
Kassebaum
From page 1
She said that before the cuts, those who did not needed the money were taking out loans anyway because the interest rates were low and everyone else was doing it. She said there were wealthy graduates who still had not paid their loans back.
placed income restrictions on those who could take out loans.
Kassebaum was asked about U.S. involvement in El Salvador. She traveled the last month as a
Earlier in the afternoon, Kassabe met for a few minutes with about 20 members of the KU Committee on South Africa in front of the Kansas Union.
The members carried signs protesting U.S. involvement in South Africa and El Salvador, and they gave Kussebaum a letter saying they would Reagan administration's policy on South Africa.
part of a U.S. delegation to observe elections and she said it was important that people saw both sides of the issue. She said she had attempted to do that.
Kassebaum told members she didn't think divestment in South Africa would change the South African government's policy.
Members include band leader Dwight Friziel,
writer performer from Kansas City, Mo; Marie
Bond, a writer/performer from New York City;
Allaudin Ottergen, a multi-percussionist from
Kansas City; and the singer-nurmer from
Kansas City, Mo.; and Ed Herrmann,
a composer/performer from Columbia, Mo.
She said she had visited with leftists, peasant and urban labor leaders and the AFL-CIO members who were involved in a land reform program there.
BCR takes KJHK contest
"I visited with many people. I visited the "poll areas," she said. "I hope I'm not just feeling it from one side. It's not just clear-cut good guys, bad guys."
BCR, a hard-driving, free-form New Wave group, won top honors at JKHK radio's annual Battle of the Bands competition last night at Off the Wall Hall, 737 New Hampshire St.
BCR members wore masks and original attire that impressed the audience of new wavers.
Judging were Diane Olmsted, disc jockey with KLZR-FM and KANU-FM in Lawrence; Charles Brown, DJ with KJKH; Blake Gumprecht, DJ with KJKH; Frank Loose, drummer for Get Smaa, a Lawrence-based rock music director. Jason KJKH, DJ and KJKH; Anne Hellman, DJ and music director of KJKH; and Dave Drumm, program director with KJKH.
The music hall was packed with more than 400 spectators who saw BCR top five bands to win $50 in grand prize money and an opportunity to perform in KJHK's annual end of the Year Bash, scheduled for May 1 in Lawrence's Centennial Park.
The five finalists were chosen from a total of 20 newly formed bands that submitted demonstration tape to KJHK-FM91, KU's student-operated EMP radio station.
THE BANDS began at 9 p.m., and each had 30 minutes to perform.
Competing were winners BCR, which has members from Kansas City and Lawrence; the Raves, from Manhattan; and three Lawrence-affiliated Romance, the New Spiders and Voo Dube Cube.
BCR (Black Crack Review) review seasoned musicians on saxophones, violin, clarinet,
The KJKH End of the Year Bash, where BCR can next be heard in Lawrence, is the radio station's way of saying "thanks to the public" and "goodbye to the year"; according to KJKH DJ Risa Kanter.
Falkland
From page 1
CATTO TOLD a Pentagon news conference that under a 1962 agreement the United States was obliged to permit the landing and refueling of British military planes on the 10,000-foot runway built by the United States on Ascension Island during World War II.
Haig's trip, which also will take him to Buenos Aires, has been described by the State Department as a preliminary effort to obtain a negotiated settlement.
Estelle Parsons on
"Miss Marsarida's Way"
Written + Directed by
Robert ahtaunde
8:00 pm, Friday April 16, 1987
University Theatre, Murray Hall Box Office
Tickets on sale in the Murry Hall Box Office
All seats reserved. Public $9 $8 $7 Student and senior citizen discounts available
For reservations: call us at 864-3982
This program is partially funded by the Uniate Arts Commission
For mature audiences
Some material may not be suitable for children
Patronize Kansan advertisers.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
- Recording Secretary
- President
B. S.U. announces its upcoming elections. Applications for:
Applications can be picked up in the B.S.U. Office.
- Vice-President
B. S.U. will be showing:
- Corresponding Secretary
- Treasurer
Friday Night at the Movies
Richard Pryor- Live in Concert and Tales From the Crypt
Friday, April 9th
7:00 p.m.
Big 8 Room
Price $1.00
Kansas Union
749-0613
7th & Massachusetts
Paid for by the Student Activity Fee.
The Eldridge House
"We Serve Your Dining Pleasure"
Congratulations to Graduating Seniors
Nichol Barrett
President, General Mgr.
Sunday May 16, 1982 marks the 110th Commencement at K.U.
Sunday May 16, 1982 marks the 110th Commencement at
We at the Eldridge House would like to congratulate you, the Class of '82 After four years of hard work you have finally graduated. To celebrate this special occasion we would like to invite you to dine at the Eldridge House.
Your family will appreciate the traditional elegant Eldridge House style.
They will also appreciate our fine food.
Make Your Reservations Today! 749-0613
THE JAYHAWK INVITATIONAL SOCCER TOURNAMENT
SATURDAY & SUNDAY, APRIL 10 & 11 O-ZONE FIELDS: 18th & NAISMITH
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Page 6 University Daily Kansan, April 9, 1982
Spare time
A MEDALLION BY THE GUILLEMETT FESTIVAL OF CINEMAS, 1962
TRACEY THOMPSON/Kznsan Staff
Monte Malinourie, Lawrence sophomore, (back) and Marcia Sambol, Leawood, Kan., junior, (front) rehearse a scene from the Pot PourrI Productions which will be staged nightly next week.
Students direct 'Pot Pourri'
Susan Croft, Manchester, England, graduate student, held the headset to her ear, listened intently and spoke softly in her English accent into the mouthpiece.
"lower general illumination. Put the houselight in. That that's fine." director
Both Croft and the light technician had to work quickly and accurately—Wednesday was the only night they could work together with the cast in the William Inge Theatre in Murphy Hall where "Vinegar Tom" will be performed next Wednesday.
"Vinegar Tom" is one of six plays that five graduate students have been working on since the beginning of the semester, preparing for next week's series. "Pot Pourri Productions."
"POT POURRI PRODUCTIONS" begins with
the "Inmover." directed by David Schuster.
Los Angeles graduate student, to be performed April 13. Jan O'Connor will direct two short plays, "A Young Lady of Property," and "The Midnight Caller," on April 14. Croft will direct "Vinagear Tom" on April 15. Ola Barrantes, San Jose, Costa Rica graduate student, will direct the play "Bernardine Semervyrtl, Oceanide, Cali," graduate student, will direct "The Mound Builders" on April 18.
Each play will be presented at 8 p.m. in the William Inge Theatre.
The students directing "Pot Pourri Productions" are enrolled in advanced directing courses. Jack Wright, professor of speech and drama and instructor to Croft, O'Connor and Tyrell, said the students did the entire production themselves.
THEY ARE ADVANCED DIRECTING projects. They do the entire production—written
preparations, casting, rehearsal and a final postscript the way they want to do it," Wright said.
ALTHOUGH DIRECTING a play is always hard work, for these five students, the pressure is even higher.
Because all six plays will be performed in the Inge Theatre, much planning has gone into rehearsal scheduling.
"It is like playing musical chairs with the props," Wright said. "When the students are not rehearing in the Inge Theatre, they must drag them into the stage, and have to have with them to their alternate rehearsal site."
"It's a real cooperative effort," he said.
"It's a real cooperative effort," he said. As Croft helpt her hay bales over to the Military Science Building for her rehearsal last night, she said. "It's very hectic."
milestones
ZAC GRANT, Manhattan senior, was selected by the Delta Sigma Rho-Tau Kappa Alpha National Debate Fraternity as the OUTSTANDING STUDENT SPEAKER OF THE YEAR last week. Grant was selected out of a full list than 300 college students from across the nation.
At a recent conference of the MID-AMERICA THEATRE CONFERENCE AND THE ASSOCIATION OF KANSAS THEATRE, two KU faculty members and one KU student were honored. RICK MASUSSEM. Bountiful Utah. graduate student, WON FIRST PLACE IN THE GRADUATE DIVISION OF THE MACD DESIGN COMPETITION. JACK WRIGHT,
professor speech and drama, RECEIVED A CERTIFICATE OF RECONGNITION FOR HIS PERFORMANCE IN THE PLAY "THE SAGE OF EMPORIA." ANDREW TSUBAK1, professor of speech and drama, RECEIVED A CERTIFICATE OF RECONGNITION FOR HIS WORK WITH THE CHHAU INDIAN DANCE THEATRE.
RALPH N. ADAMS, University Distinguished Professor of Chemistry, recently received a $2,000 award from the AMERICAN CHEMISTRY SOCIETY for his work in the field of electrochemistry. He also solved electrochemistry, which is the study of the relationship between electricity and change.
DAVID CHASINH, Manhattan senior, was selected as a SECRETARY OF THE NAVY DISTINGUISHED MIDSHIPMAN GRADUATE. Cashin will officially receive his award from Lehman, Secretary of the Navy, at a ceremony in the U.S. Naval Academy at Annapolis, Md.
JUDY L. CALDWELL, Wichita senior, received a FULL-TUITION SCHOLARSHIP to a week-long Direct Mail Marketing Educational Foundation program at the Foundation's In-Person Education Center. Caldwell, an advertising student, was selected from more than 24 applicants to attend.
on campus
TODAY
There will be a RED CROSS BLOOD DRIVE all day in the Ballroom of the Kansas Union.
THE UNDERGRADUATE BIOLOGY CLUB will meet at 4 p.m. in the Sunflower Room of the Kansas Union
Dennis Darris will speak at the meeting of the MARANATHA CAMPUS MINISTRY meeting at 7 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Kagasai Union.
A MASTER'S RECTAL on piano will be
Paulett Puckett at 8 p.m. in
Saworth Recital Hall.
TOMORROW
THE SIMULATIONS GAMING GROUP will meet at 10 a.m. in Cork II of the Kansas
THE KU SOCCER CLUB will sponsor the JAYHAWK INVITATIONAL SOCCER TOURNAMENT from 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. at the O-zone fields.
SUNDAY
THE FINALS OF THE JAYHAWK INVITATIONAL SOCCER TOURNAMENT will begin at 1 p.m. at the O-zone fields.
THE KANSAS UNION will be closed all day.
THE KU CIRCLE K CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in 641, Mall Hall.
THE ALL SCHOLARSHIP HALL CHRISTMAS
THE ALL SCHOLARSHIP WILL meet at 8:30
p.m. in Danforth Chapel
Pryor's 'Hero' adequate
By MIKE GEBERT Contributing Reviewer
RICHARD PRYOR—LIVE ON THE SUNSET STRIP
SOME KIND OF HERO
Richard Pryor is one of the two or three funniest people on earth. His movies, on the other hand, are more often the punishment we must endure to enjoy a few choice bits of pure Pryor.
Two new Pryer films are now in the theaters, one a better-than-average comedy-drama, the other a concert film similar to one he made four years ago. Both present Pryer at his best and suggest how, with any luck, he finally may have a movie career worthy of him.
It may be that the best way to showcase Pryor is simply to stick him on a stage, turn on the cameras and let him work the audience over. Certainly, none of his dramatic films have had the intensity or the confidence of his stage performances. His comedy depends on an instant rapport with the audience, a trust that allows him to express himself without the most private and common sexual matters with an easy grace and to pepper his speech with the most offensive profanities.
**PRYOR IS SERIOUS about racism, but he's not solemn. Unlike Dick Gregory, who stopped being either funny or listened to, Pryor knows how to de-fang it—as beftits the only black superstar in the movies today. His ability to defuse racism—to take the color out of even the most black-orientated material—is also brought over to a more volatile subject: cocaine.
PRYOR'S TALENT FOR ANTHROPomorphism is one of his greatest assets—recall his characterization of his heart during a heart attack. The movie uses the same dreadnaught. And no doubt that he got many of his early movie roles, allowing him to steal in bit-pun films like "LadyS blues the Blues" or "Silver
A long talk about his 1980 accident, in which he was burned while free-basing cocaine, makes up the last third of "Richard Pryor: Live on the Sunset Strip." He knows that what's everyone is curious about and he doesn't shirk. He makes it paralyzingly funny, with a particular urgency being his portrait of his pipe, which set the two of them work things out together.
Streak." In one of his first starring films, "Which Way is Up?" he played typical characters, such as a crooked preacher and a lusty grandfather, in addition to the hero.
but he seems to understand that real movies need more than bits. He was the straight comic to Gene Wilder's weirdo in "Sir Crazy" and made a stab at being funny in a sensitive way. But not so much, as in "Some Kind of Hero," he tries to mix the two, and the result, if not entirely successful, is at least encouraging.
HE PLAYS A POW return from Vietnam who finds ecstasy at being home a bit premature. His wife's in love with someone else, the Army won't give him his back pay because he signed a confession to get medical help for a friend and had a stroke, requiring very expensive care.
Review
the raw deals Pryor gets, and the comedy comes very naturally out of the situation. Pryor proves capable of considerable subtlety, reminiscent of his excellent film, "Blue Collar."
The first half of the film is good, as it portrays
Unfortunately, the movie backs itself into a corner and has to get out by way of improbable shenanigans involving robbery, the Mafia and some "Walking Tall" type get back-at-the-system nonsense for them. I'm not sure I will see the entirely serious and depressing film that would have resulted if the film had been more honest, but the way out here is too easy.
Pryor's solution is simply to offer himself as he is—an articulate, funny comedian whose color and whose interests are black. It may be a woman who is not afraid of themselves, helps the harriers, at least for an hour and a half.
THERE HAS BEEN A RECENT trend in movies to bring back something the movies haven't seen in 20 years—comical "darkies," as in "Seems Like Old Times" or "Modern Problems," and even a little in Pryor's role in "Dearborn." When we see a woman when a funny black character becomes a stereotype or when a realistic character stops being funny.
leather Benez, a member of the Chihu Indian Folk Dance Theatre, performs "Sandha," a solo female offering dance in Swarthout. Recital Hall on Wednesday and Thursday nights.
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JOB OPPORTUNITY 1982-83 ACADEMIC YEAR
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Naismith Hall announces that applications for R.A. positions are now available at the Naismith desk between 8:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. Monday through Friday.
The applications are for R.A. positions commencing next Fall.
and are due for completion by April 20,1982.
Applicants must have at least a Sophomore status next fall and a 2.5 G.P.A.
If you have questions, please call 843-8559.
E. O.E.M/W
University Daily Kansan, April 9, 1982
Page 7
Thefts. equipment shortage hurt art program
By LISA GUITERREZ Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
Students in the visual communications program in the School of Fine Arts need "Lucy" for their everyday work.
But school officials have had problems for the past few years keep-ing them busy to enlarge art materials, and other art equipment safe and in working condition.
"We do have serious equipment problems," James Moeser, dean of the School of Fine Arts, said recently.
Theft and a lack of funds have caused the problems.
It is, fine arts faculty agree, a basic budget dilemma.
'We have a repair problem, and
that's a basic money problem," Moeser
said. "And people stealing
lenses off the machine."
THE SCHOOL OF Fine Arts receives between $15,000 and $17,000 a year for art equipment from money the legislature gives KU, Mooser said.
"If we had an adequate equipment, we'd have $75,000 a year," he said.
A supply and expense fund appropriated specifically for the design department of the school, of which visual communications is a program, supplies that department with $20,000 annually.
"This is about half of what it ought to be," Moeer said. "It's been gradually getting worse, but it's been going on for a long time."
Moeser said the problem of
inadequate equipment for the art
students, and used the school since
become dean in 1987.
LACK OF MONEY has stymied efforts to alleviate the growing equipment problem.
"One proposal is a new restricted fee of $25 for students in the fine arts school." Moeser said.
Amplifying the money problem this year is a sudden increase in stolen equipment and equipment parts, Steve Skaggs, assistant professor of design and visual communications area coordinator, said.
"This is a perfect example of what can happen when you resort to deal with it." Skagsley said.
*Everything is happening at once.*
Our problem is one that is happening to
SKAGGS SAID there were only two viewer machines in working condition now.
fit focal equipment that all the students use."
"We started the semester with four of them and had the lenses stolen off of two of them," he said.
Skaggs said the equipment, used by students in the illustration and graphics sections of the visual communications program could not be kept under lock
"We have a basic problem. We have a lot of students who need to work, and if we limit the hours they can work, they won't set the work done." Skaggs said.
The school follows an open-door policy, Skaggs said. Students have access to the school's equipment 24 hours a day.
"For some reason, this semester, someone has noticed that the lenses can easily be taken," he said. "No one else knows the problems we've had with threes."
"For a while, at the beginning of the semester, we only had one machine."
HE SAID someone stole the lenses from two viewers last fall during Thanksgiving break and Christmas vacation.
Skaggs said the school planned to place all equipment in one room this summer to make security of the machines easier.
"What we're trying to do right now is find the money to do this," he said.
The search for money has not been very successful.
Jonn McKay, professor of design and
chairman of the design department, said the school had requested a separate equipment area four or five years ago.
"It's just a lack of supply and budget money for the School of Fine Arts," McKay said.
McKAY, WHO has been with the school for 14 years, said the problem of deceptive and old equipment had existed since he had been with the school.
"There has been consistently, year after year, a lack of money for repairs and new equipment," he said.
That the problem had been a consistent one does little, however, to appease students who must make do with existing equipment.
Polish actor sees duty in Solidarity benefit
By CYNTHIA HRENCHIR Staff Writer
Rajmind Klekot will appear in a benefit for Friends of Solidarity, but the Polish actor claims no knowledge of politics, only a duty to his people.
"Not politics, not Solidarity, but my duty as a Pole," the 43-year-old performer said. "I know the situation and what is possible."
Klekot, who began his 22-year professional career as a mime in the world-famous Polish Mime Theatre and has traveled internationally, will give a benefit April 10 at Swarorth Recital Hall in Murphy Hall. Proceeds will go to Lawrence Friends of Solidarity to purchase packages of food for Poland.
Klekot said he had once experienced the shortages the people in Poland had now.
"I remember in Poland between 1948 and 1955, how crazy it was. The whole world was fighting," Kleot said. "There was war in Korea and in Vietnam."
"And there was nothing to eat."
In 1797, during the Warsaw Theatre
KLELOT WAS BORN at Czeitstockowa, Poland, 150 miles southwest of Warsaw. After a sojourn with the Polish Mime Theatre, he and three other mimes formed the Warsaw Mime Theatre in 1974.
The group toured the United States and Europe from 1976 to 1979. In 1978, he was one of the few international stars invited to perform at the first Festival of American Mime in Milwaukee. Wis
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"I was under contract still to the Warsaw Theatre, so we had to return to Poland," he said. "The situation began to deteriorate, and we were a little tired." We divided up an upstairs you know, she would have gone to the West, and I stay there.
"So we decided to leave."
He aims to help the Polish people, he says, but as an artist, Klekot's first concern regarding his upcoming show was that people enjoy his work.
"I am an actor and I want to create a performance. That is the main thing, to involve the audience in theperformance," he said. "The rest is the second part."
KLEKOT IS realistic about what he can do to help in Poland.
"I will not send them the money. That is not what they need," he said. "There is nothing there to buy. Food is what they need."
Kleket arrived Thursday in Lawrence at the invitation of the local Friends of Solidarity with sponsorship by the KU international Theatre. He is staying with Jarek Piekakiewicz, professor of Soviet and East European Studies and political science, and Piekakiewicz's wife, Maura.
In February, the Lawrence branch of Friends of Solidarity, along with other Kansas and Missouri groups, was able to CARE $8,000 to send food to Poland.
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Gleason recall group plans to use 'facts'
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By SUSAN AHERN MARUSCO Staff Reporter
The group that is campaigning to remove City Commissioner Tom Gleason from office held a closed meeting next night to plan its campaign.
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Fred Pence, spokesman for the Lawrence Committee, said after the meeting that there were two ways to run a recall election campaign.
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"One way is through articulate garbage that fills the air so thick that it sticks and misleads the public," he said. "The other way is to present facts that can't be denied. I'm for using facts."
Pence said that Lawrence residents would vote against Gleason when they saw facts that the Lawrence Committee had researched.
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"I think our campaign will be successful because we plan to present facts so that the people of Lawrence can see how well they did and did warranty recalls," he said.
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of changing the form of government in Lawrence from a commission form to a council-mayor form.
Pence said there was a “pretty logical connection” between Gleason's views in 1777 and the letter he sent asking Watson to resim last February.
Pence said that his group would sponsor radio and newspaper ads, and that Lawrence Committee members drove the campaign to drive home drives and campaign door-to-door.
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Pence said that as of yesterday, his group had about $1,500 to work with. Miller and Midtye Realtors and Insurance Company provide the services in Bergen County. E. 7th St. for free. But the group must pay for its own utilities, Pence said.
Pence said that the money in his groups' treasury had been raised through $1, $5 and $10 donations.
"If the average citizen sees that Gleason was active in trying to change the form of government in 1977 and then sees that he wrote a letter to the city manager trying to fire him without just cause, I think they're going to see a link there," Pence said. "But our campaign won't draw conclusions for the people of
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Lawrence. It will just present the facts."
Gleason said that when he ran for the commission last year, these same clichés were
GLEASON SAID that if that was all the Lawrence Committee could come up with, "the people of Lawrence will ask them to answer on question one on May 11."
"There were ads run saying that I was trying to get on the commission to get Watson out," Glesson said. "But they wanted me to work and they'll see through them again."
Gleason said that he was asked in 1977 to participate in one public debate on the issue of changing the form of government in Lawrence. He also said that he would argue with his petitions that ultimately forced the proposed change to a citywide vote.
It is impossible for one member of the commission to "get Watson out." Gleason said. He said that Pence failed to realize that this was a commission-manager form of government, not just a manager form of government.
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"And it's the responsibility of each individual commissioner to come to a judgment about the city manager's job performance," Gleason said. "Then, the commission will act collectively on that issue."
PENCE SAID that the Lawrence Committee's campaign would focus on the fact that some of Gleason's supporters had appeared in different activities opposing the manager form of government over time. He said that Tim Miller, a Gleason supporter, carried a "petition to overthrow the city manager form of government in 1977."
Miller, 936 Ohio St., said that was "ridiculous."
"I was sympathetic to the issue, but I don't remember whether I ever carried a petition," Miller said. "This is a serious, deliberate misrepresentation of the facts. I was not trying to overthrow anything. I was only trying to change the form of government in Lawrence. I think this speaks volumes on the recall committee's ability to tell the truth."
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Page 8 University Daily Kansan, April 9, 1982
merger
JOHN HANKAMMERiKansan Staff
K. C. Huang, mechanical engineering graduate student, demonstrates his machine that helps quadriplexes eat.
"I'm really interested in continuing this type of research because I can see it is really a help to a lot of people," Huang said.
KU-Y's allocation was tabled because senators questioned where the $10,000 in profits from the 1983 Rock Chalk Revue, their primary fund-riser, that had been donated to the Rock Chalk money should be enough to take care of KU-Y's functions.
The senators voted to cut K.B.K. because it was a regularly funded, revenue code group. They said it should be made available for libraries for funds in these budget hearings.
"I also think it's an advanced technology worth developing. In the future, this technology can be used for anything."
David Adkins, student body president must decide whether to veto the budget.
By ANN LOWRY Staff Reporter
THIS MEANS that, after deliberations by both the subcommittees and the entire Senate, the budget stands at $72,467—$40,452 over the $52,000 amount set by the revenue code for student activities.
FORTIN SAID the refinement of quadriplic equipment such as the Beeson Feeder would make it possible for more quadripligics to live at home. He said that with a feeder, quadripligics could be more independent, allowing their families more freedom.
Equipment
From nave 1
Baer said the mechanical
"Independent living seems to be the theme for today," he said.
Anything that can get people out of centers and back home is helpful. Fortune.
continue developing other equipment for quadrinlexics.
Senate approves '83 budget
The only changes were that KJHKFM91's $3,660 request was cut to zero; KUY-V's $1,567 allocation was tabled for further investigation; and a rider, or riderer, must establish permanent criteria to guide budget proceedings in the future.
After a seawan fight of about eight hours last night and Monday, the Student Senate voted to approve the fiscal year 1983 budget almost exactly as the Senate Budget Subcommittee presented it.
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Amco Steel and Butler Manufacturing in Kansas City have already
According to Fortin, the money received thus far to back the research has come from several sources.
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He said $1,800 had come from the School of Engineering, $1,000 from Phillips Petroleum Co. and $1,200 from the University Center for Research Inc.
THE DEPARTMENT of mechanical engineering, Fortin said, also provides $125 a month to pay Huang.
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Huang said he decided to improve the
feeders. He feeder as a master's degree project.
made commitments to support the research, Fortin said, and the Veteran's Administration in Topek might also give financial support.
According to Baer, Perry Beeson, a KU student, designed the original machine in 1972 for the Capper Foundation. He said Beeson, who now works at Petroleum Co., designated the feeder in a mechanics design for juniors.
He said the state of Kansas, through its General Research Fund, had given $4,572 to assist Huang and Baer in the research of other quadriplec aids starting July 1.
Baaer said the feeder was bought and manufactured in 1975 by a New Jersey company that makes equipment for bandicapped people.
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Actress' approval of the budget as it stands would necessitate taking the $23,432 out of the Senate's unallocated money, a savings account now holding more than $74,000 from past years' student activity fees.
"I think there's still a little more that can be trimmed," Adkins said. "As student body president, I feel I have to give budget to Vice President or Arbiter."
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"Do hate to see them slip into using unallocated." Ambler said. The KU administration had asked the Senate committee unallocated usage additives.
Workshops, Lectures, Performances
One of the two bills making up the budget legislation passed by only three votes, with two abstentions.
Throughout the session, the Senate went through several motions, amendments and riders before it found the once it passed.
ALSO AT LAST night's meeting, the Senate approved three other pieces of legislation—a resolution in support of the Swartborn Society student union and a resolution to establish the University to establish a committee to investigate the beer-in-Memorial-Stadium issue and a bill to ensure the senators to speak before the Senate.
He also said, "Based on the vote, I'm not sure there's a consensus in the Senate."
At Monday's meeting, the Senate elected student representatives to the University Council and Senate Executive committee.
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FIVE YEARS ago, Ambler said, the Senate allowed the unallocated account to be paid to $123,000. The Senate was able to invest in lights, sprinklers and drainage for the practice fields at 25th and 41st streets.
"We would have never had that done if Student Senate had not had those fandis," he said. "We would have seen it as an adap to a philosophy for the use of that money."
He said that the Senate would have to start policies questioning the value of groups to the entire student body.
He said the Senate could reallocate it for use immediately when it is left over at 'the end of each year, instead of letting it accumulate.
"if senators aren't well enough informed to make value judgments on a group, I think they're denying them their rights if their investments." Adams said.
SEVERAL SENATORS suggested groups they thought should be cut
addition said he could make his recommendations for further cuts to the Senate as late as its last meeting in April and still give his recommendation University budget is due to be presented to the Legislature for fiscal year 1983.
The seven undergraduate senators appointed to University Council by nomination were: Sarah Duckers, Katie Tucker, Jill Sargent, sophomore; David Allen, Terry Frederick, LenaX sophomores; Julie Menzle, Hays junior; Kristian Anderson, Hutchinson freshman; and Chris吞ohomone, Kansas City, Kan吞ohomone.
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University Daily Kansan; April 9, 1982
Page 9
Writing center keeps its funds
By SUSAN BROSSEAU
Staff Reporter
The Communications Resource Center will continue for another year to serve students who have writing problems.
The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences decided yesterday to continue financing the CHC at current levels, and will not change. Adams, associate dean of the college.
Since the CRC's inception in 1978, both its budget and the number of its student customers have declined. In its first year, the CRC had a budget of $1,300 for year's budget was $1,300. Michael Johnson, the CRC's director, said recently.
During the 1981 spring semester, 149 students used the service. Last semester, only 33 students did, according to department statistics.
THE DECREASED financing was responsible for the declining student participation, Johnson said, because it had resulted in a lower advertising budget and necessitated a change in the nature of the center.
Until this fall, the center kept hours convenient to students' schedules. The staff was paid whether or not there were students to help. Johnson said.
Students must now make appointments for help and this change has made the service more cost-efficient, he said.
Reduced budgets everywhere have created the need to eliminate such waste and to rearrange priorities, Johnson said.
"Chools must be made," he said. "If it is a choice between classes and the center, we would rather spend the money on the classes."
JOHNSON SAID, however, that the center served a need and it should be expanded.
"But students with problems would be far better off taking a class than using the service," he said.
One student who has benefited from the service believes that CRC, in conjunction with classes, was helpful.
"A teacher can refer a student with a problem when he does not have the time to give." Aimee Stallworth, Hartell. Al., graduate student said.
Stallworth was referred to the service by a teacher who had noticed a problem in her writing.
Pat Catto, CRC staff member, who assisted Stallworth with her problems, also supports the program. However, Catto said, she believed the program should be open to English 050, 101, 102 or 203 students.
Catto she enjoyed working on CRC's staff and thought it was a good way to earn extra money.
THEY ARE THE ones who need the most help, she said.
"You become, very quickly, interested in the students' work on a one-to-one basis and you get a peek into other disciplines," she said.
Most of the students she has helped, she said, were graduate students who had not yet learned to write well.
"They are given a writing assignment and they don't know how to handle it," she said.
She gives them suggestions on where to start, she said.
Students have various difficulties, Catto said, but organization and pronoun reference problems are most common.
Hocson said the center did a lot of ad hoc business—"when a student is having a particular problem with a paper in a particular course."
A student who should use the CRC, he said, is one who finds he is having trouble doing work equal to his ability in a course because of problems with
Students wishing to use the center should call the freshman-sophomore English department office at 864-4523 and arrange an appointment.
"Everyone who thinks a nurse is and frequently, they think everyone wearing a hospital as a nurse," the doctor, or technologist at Watkins, asked chief.
Mini-tours of Watkins Memorial Hospital's laboratory next week may enlighten many people to the behind-the-scenes world of a hospital.
Watkins to show other medical fields
The laboratory tours, from 12:30 to p. m. Monday, April 12, through Friday, April 16, will mark Watkins' parade and National Medical Laboratory Weeks.
Watkins' technologists hope to show people otherwise.
"We're hoping to educate people that
"PARAMEDICAL fields are areas that don't require a medical school degree." Dellor said.
there are a lot of paramedical fields," Detlor said.
Dellor said demonstrations set up in the lab would show the various kinds of lab work that the nine registered registrants at Waskin perform every day.
She said the work included blood counts, blood banking, liver function tests, syphilis tests, urinalysis and coagulation studies.
One of the purposes of the open house, Detlor said, was to show KU students who had not decided their majors the
"It's a good field for men, as well as women," Detlor said, who has been with Watkins for 45 years.
The fire damaged three cars. One of the cars, a 1970 Triumph worth about $500, was inside the garage and was destroyed, said Jim Woydiak, department training engineer.
SHE SAID some of the career opportunities were in bacteriology, chemistry and histology.
"Histo-technologists deal with tissues and prepare them for doctors to examine under the microscope," Detlor said.
"It's a very interesting field and sounds kind of repulsive until people find out about it."
A fammable liquid was probably used to ignite the fire, which started about 4 p.m., according to Jim McSwain, Lawrence fire chief.
Two other cars were parked outside the garage, one in a neighbor's driveway, Woydziak said.
A fire that may have been arson caused more than $9,000 damage to a garage and three cars Wednesday at the St. Clare St. fire officials said yesterday.
On the record
The fire cannot be officially called arson until lab results confirm the report, fire officials said.
No charges have been filed.
KU POLICE ARRESTED a 25-year-old KU student Wednesday at Watson Library for lewd and lascivious behavior.
Police arrested Mark S. Messina, Overland Park senior, after he allegedly exposed himself to, or engaged in, what was identified as student who was studying in the library.
Messina was released from Douglas County Jail on $1,000 bond and will make his first appearance in court April 13.
KU POLICE reported a bomb threat about 5:30 p.m. Wednesday at McCollum Hall. Police said a suspect called the front desk and, "Because of the louse food, I was taken to 6 p.m." There have been no arrests.
VANDALS CAUSED about $625 damage to Carruth O'Leary Hall sometime Wednesday night,
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Attention
An Everyday Special
The KU Student Awards committee is accepting nominations for The Agnes Wright Strickland Award and the Class of 1913 Award. These are awarded to graduating seniors.
- The Strikland Award is given in recognition of a good academic record, demonstrated leadership in matters of all University concern, respect among fellow students and recognition of future dedication to service to the University.
The Class of 1913 is given in recognition of herri-
evidenced intelligence, devotion to studies and
The awards will be presented during 1982
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Numbers govern money for athletic scholarships
By BARB EHLI Staff Reporter
There is more involved in granting scholarships to athletes than having them sign on the dotted line.
Rules, residency and equivalency ratios govern who receives scholarships and how much money they get.
"The Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women counts noses," Pat Collinson, administrative assistant for the athletic department, said recently, "with each athlete receiving aid, no matter what the amount."
She said the AIAW's rules allowed coaches to give aid to 12 players, and that could mean 12 full scholarships or 12 scholarships of $1 each.
"The amount of money is not important," she said. "It's the number of athletes."
The reason for this rule, Collison said, was that when schools first became members of the AIAW, many did not have a lot of scholarship aid
USING A BASEBLE BALL team as an example, she said, "Forty-right people could get one-fourth of a full scholarship, and up to more than 12 full scholarships."
"They didn't want one school with $3,000 to siphon all the talent off of others," she said. "Now that more money, more dollars, it doesn't work as well."
Each sport is allotted a certain amount of money under the rules of that national Collegiate Athletic society. In some cases, scholarships as it wants, as long as it
does not exceed the budgeted amount. Collinson said.
"The funds for full scholarships are not as much for an in-state student as for an out-of-state student," she said.
She said that $2,843 for a Kansas resident would equal $4,159 for a non-resident, because out-of-state athletes had higher expenses.
SHE SAID the NCAA based its scholarships on equivalency ratios. For example, a full scholarship for a Kansas resident would be $2,843, while a full scholarship for an out-of-state resident would be $4,150. Under the scholarship plan, there would be a difference of about $2,000, would have an equivalency of 1.
A $2,000 scholarship divided by the $4,159 tuition amount of a non-resident would equal a 481, or almost one-half, equivalency. A $2,000 scholarship offered to a resident would be divided by the $6,000 tuition amount or almost three-fourths, equivalency.
Collison said that she figured the equivalency on the scholarships by taking the amount of money athletes received and dividing it by the amount of a full scholarship, depending on whether the athlete was a resident.
Collison said coaches depleted their budgets less quickly if they had more recruits from Kansas. The coaches could continue to give scholarships until either the money or the equivalency was used up.
SHE SAID that coaches could also divide the money and pay only partial scholarship费. A full scholarship consists of room and board, tuition, books, books and supplies.
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Page 10 University Daily Kansan, April 9. 1990
Ex-CIA man decries military solution
By NEAL McCHRISTY Staff Reporter
The Soviet use of force in Afghanistan, Angola and other countries has led to a mistaken reliance on military, rather than diplomatic, solutions to this aggression, an ex-CIA officer told the State Department said last night.
Before a group of about 150 people in the Kansas Union, the former agent, Arthur Cox, said that Soviet "blunders" had led to a turnabout in opinion about the nuclear arms race by the American public.
Cox, a consultant to the United States Committee on East-West Arms Control, gave the speech as part of 'Ground Zero Week' activities. The speech was sponsored by the University of Kansas department of political science and the Lawrence Coalition for Peace and Justice.
AFTER THE Vietnam War, the United States public was opposed to intervention in other countries' affairs, Cox said, but the Soviet use of force in other countries has provided ammunition for those who favor a buildup of nuclear arms to deter Soviet aggression.
"If there's one message I have for the American people, it's that we have to get back to diplomacy and that we are in a very dangerous situation with us as they are between the United States and the Soviet Union," Cox said.
And "cosmetic" maneuvers such as the recent negotiations in Geneva to limit Soviet deployment of nuclear weapons in exchange for limited cutbacks in weapons by the United States, are not genuine diplomacy. Ox said.
"The deal that the president proposed is a phony—it's not a genuine proposal," Cox said of the Geneva office.
Eventually, such maneuvers will lead European leaders to take the issue of
nuclear cutbacks into their own hands,
Cox said.
AND HE SAID that the Europeans were capable of serious negotiations on arms control.
"The Europeans today—they are doing their homework—and no one is going to pull the rug over their heads, so we are concerned about survival." Cox said.
He said that Europeans had faced attacks from other countries for centuries. The United States, by comparison, has been a more militarized nation at the Japanese Pearl Harbor in 1941.
The greatest advance in detente, Cox said, was the non-preferitation treat that was begun by Germany, and he said the threat of nuclear war had been a topic of conversation in Europe since World War II.
And limited nuclear is a myth, Cox said. Other myths include one that the Soviets have a sophisticated civil-defense system to use in case of nuclear attack.
"This is just nonsense," he said.
'ALIFORNIA CAMBOUT'
Another myth that appears yearly before Congress is that the Soviets are preparing to invade West Germany, Cox said.
COX SAID that although the Soviet civil defense procedures were superior to those of the United States, the Soviets still feared attacks by China more than any other.
After talking to defectors from Eastern European countries, Cox said that he had concluded, "If the Soviets ever tried an invasion of West Germany, they would have been Russian, Czech and Yugoslav allies. They would literally be shot in the back."
Negotiations for pulling away from Germany by the United States and the Soviets should begin as soon as possible, Cox said, emphasizing that
But total disarmament is not feasible, be said.
negotiations should bring about cutbacks.
"I think the genie is out of the bottle, and we will always have nuclear weapons." Cox said.
HOWEVER, HE SAID the Soviets, who ratified SALT II and were ready to move toward cutbacks in nuclear weapons under SALT III, seemed eager to state, particularly about the weapons "called 'desilentizing' weapons."
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Destabilizing weapons are those that wipe out central command centers that control when missiles are fired, such asuchs II and the C船 missiles, Cox said.
"I am confident that the Soviets know the potential of these weapons and I know that they are probably willing to negotiate," he said.
If Cruise missiles are deployed in Western Europe, the potential is greater that command centers will be destroyed, leaving each individual missile base to rely on its own computers as to whether to launch the missile. Such a system is called a "launch-on-warning" system, he said.
"Launch-on-warning reliance almost guarantees that an accidental nuclear launch can happen," Cox said.
HE SAID that inefficient communication systems could lead to a breach of the system and the General Accounting Office; in a recent test of missile communication systems, determined that the present United States missile communication system was not efficient.
"When two people in a silo decide that the proper signal has come to deploy a missile . . . when that happens, we should all be saying our prayers."
TOPEKA-Kansas lawmakers yesterday approved a plan to re-draw the state's congressional districts, despite lawmakers that the map divided their ranks.
From Staff and Wire Reports
Under the redistricting map, which the House and Senate approved on votes of 72-58 and 23-17, Douglas County would remain in the third District, but Reno, Wyandotte and Sedgwick counties would straddle congressional districts—a situation that lawmakers early on said they wanted to avoid.
One Democrat in the Senate, Joe Morvell of Hays, accused Republicans of purposely splitting those counties to benefit three Democratic strongholds in Kansas.
"I will personally ask the governor to veto this," he said.
ANOTHER DEMOCRAT, State Sen. Blench Taney of Hutchinson, which is in Reno County, asked whether nurses were serious in offering the map.
Reps pass redistricting plan
"The governor has indicated he won't sign a bill without input from both parties." Solbach said. "This map was created to represent the complaint that was chosen as a compromise."
"You've got to be kidding," he said. "I can't figure out why you're doing this to me. You come to Hutchinson, and I'll take you to some grade school kids who would take up with a better map than this."
The map now will go before Gov. John Carlin, who already vetoed one redistricting plan this year. And he is pushing for more conservative State Ree. John Solbach, D-Lawrence.
mittee chose the map on a 4-2 party-line vote yesterday.
HOWEVER, ONE improvement the new plan has over the earlier map is that it divides the state into districts that are nearly equal in population.
Carlin said he vetoed the first plan because it called for redrawing congressional lines around districts that were unequal in population.
"We can't turn this one down on grounds of population variance," said State Rep. Betty Jo Chariton, D-Lawrence.
Charlton said she supported the map because it left Douglas County in the 3rd District.
BESIDES SPLITTING counties, the measure would move Harper County from the 5th to the 1st District, Kingman County from the 4th to the 5th District and Franklin County from the 1rd to the 5th District.
A House-Senate conference com-
"And this is the first one we've seen that might hold up in court," she said.
Solbach, who argued against earlier maps on grounds of the population deviance, said the sole purpose for creating a new district was to create equally populated districts.
Referring to the new plan, Solbach said, "At least we've finally got our point across about population deviaton."
Although both chambers of the Legislature approved the map and then toiled into the late hours on other matters, time run out on Lawmakers' hopes to begin a two-week adjournment today.
After breaking for dinner last evening, House and Senate leaders announced that deliberations on other issues, notably on public school finances, would continue through today.
The decision to delay adjournment was made because legislators, unhappy with the prospect of working past night, had become unreliable, Charlton might.
"Then the sessions run late like this, a sort of mob psychology sets in," she said. "People become unruly."
"They were starting to vote crazy ... 'no on' everything. It was pretty bad for the people standing up there supporting bills."
But Solbach said the Legislature always grew intense near the finish especially every fifth year when it had to approve the state budget for public schools.
In 1947—the year I was born—school finances stretched the Legislative session into the wee hours of Easter morning," Solbach said. "The legislators broke off to go to church, then reconvened later on Easter."
Solbach said school finances could create the same problem this year.
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 • 1340 OHIO
BUSINESS CARDS
LETTERHEAD
Service Beyond Duplication
HOUSE OF USHE:
838 MASS. — 842-3610
...
the hairst
810 W.23rd Lawrence, Kansas (913) 843-2696
"Looks good, Feels good"
Theresa Schmidt, Lee Lane, Mary Traul Elniff and Dee Williams
For appointment call 843-2696
Tie In With Us Recreation Services
Tennis Doubles & Mixed Doubles Tournaments
ENTRY FEE: One can of unopened tennis balls submitted with completed entry form
ENTRY DEADLINE: Wed., April 14, 5 p.m.,
in 208 Robinson
MORE INFORMATION: Visit the Recreation Services office, 208 Robinson, or call 884-3548
PLAY BEGINS: Sun., April 18
LATINO DONDE ESTAS ?
Bucky's
98
--shop
4 p.m.
"Midnight Snack"
All this week
April 5-11th
10:00 to close
+
Queremos Conocerte:
Sabado 10 2:00 p.m.
McCollum Cafeteria
Asociacion de Estudiants Latinos
Buckeye
Last day to Donate
Sponsored by IFC and Panhellenic
Save a Life Donate Blood
9 a.m.
American Red Cross
Bocky's
In the Kansas Union Ballroom
$1.39
2120 WEST NINTH
Double Cheeseburger and French Fries
A privately owned residence ball.
Then you'd better choose Naismith Hall!
Want to be known by your name a the University of Kansas?
- private sleeping study areas
* wall to wall carpeting
* home cooked meals
* you can eat
* hosted swimming pool
* private telephone service available
* maid service
* cable tv lounges
* air conditioning
* mat heating bills
* an active social program (parties, contests . . . )
For Application
And Color Brochure
Please Call or Drop by
NAISMITH HALL
1800 Misonth Drive
lawrence, Kansas 66044
913-843-8559
318 640 5000
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Office of the Student Senate
B109 Retain Union
1800 Crown Ave.
(913) 264-3710
(913) 854-3710
Completed applications, which must include a resume, are due Thursday, April 15 at 5:00 p.m. in the Student Senate office. Interviews will be scheduled at a later date.
BENEFICIENT OF THE UNION FOR THE RIGHTS OF WOMEN
The Student Body President is now taking applications for the positions of Administrative Assistant and Treasurer. Job descriptions and applications are currently available in the Student Senate office, B-105 Kansas Union (Third Level). Both position requires background in accounting and business procedures. Applicants must in good academic standing and a working knowledge of university financial statements. The position pays $ 250,000 monthly. The appitions are effective May 15.
Should you have any questions call 864-3710
Funded by the Student Activity Fee.
❤
842-1811...ASK FOR STATION #6
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University Daily Kansan, April 9, 1982
Page 11
The University Daily
Call 864-4358
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five six seven eight nine ten
13 words or fewer $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00 $3.30 $3.60 $3.90 $4.20 $4.50
Ratchet Eats Panda $8.50 $8.75 $8.95 $9.15 $9.35 $9.55 $9.75 $9.95
ERRORS
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Thursday 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; please call the Kauai Business office at 443-4586.
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 First Hall BELLEVUE
ANNOUNCEMENTS
WORKED ABOUT April 157 Call Don's Tax Service for fast, accurate tax return preparation. Call 681-6883. 60-day extensions of time to file are available. 4-15
ATTENTION: BLUE JEAN OWNERS. If you can listen to us get our stock, we can be open to the public soon. We meet your needs in person or by phone. All it takes is a call phone - 841-1234 or
Paid Staff Positions Business Manager, Editor
The Kansan is now accepting applications for the Summer and Fall Semester Business Manager position. Students must pay paid positions and require some newspaper experience. Application forms are available in the Student Senate Office, 105 B. H., Kansan. Students must register with Student Organizations and Activities, 220 Strong Hall; and in Room 200 Flint Hall. Completed applications are due in 200 Flint Hall by 5:00 p. m. Monday, April 27.
The University Daily Kansan is an Equal Opportunity Affirmative Action organization are sought from all qualified people regardless of race, religion, color, sex, disability, national origin, age, or ancestry.
The board of class officers will be inter-
viewed on Thursday, April 31st for the
1983 BOCO Variety Show. The BOCO & Appl-
lication Student Union. Deadline for application
to the Board of Class Officers is April 24th.
Gem and Mineral Show, April 17, 16:00 am
Gem and Mineral Show, April 17, 16:00 am
4-H Fashion Building, Building 23,
Demonstration Hall in Laundry Silverminting, Canning,
Painters, Craftsman, Home Decor, Designer-Door-piece Snacks-Smack
Sandwich
FOR RENT
PLAN TO ATTEND DISABILITY AWARENESS WEEK EVENTS. SEE THE ON CAMPUS COLUMN FOR TODAYS EVENTS.
4-16
Must see to believe. Furnished rooms with
utilities paid near university & downtown.
No pets. Phone 841-5500. If
Jayhawker Towers Apartments
PRINCIPAL PLACE PAISO APARTMENTS.
for renovations, features wood burning fireplaces,
water dryer hookups, fully-supplied water
dryer (water) hookups, 9:30-5:30 daily at 29th Principial Bldr., or
9:30-5:30 daily at 29th Principial Bldr., or
29th Principial Bldr.
HANOVER PLACE
student, in 2岁学. Locally furnished,
study room, in 2岁学. Located between
KU. DONT DELLY. Reserve your visit.
KU. DONT DELLY. Reserve your visit.
mouth-waited. hourly.
841-121 or 842-445.
2 Bedroom apartments on
Now taking applications for fall and sum
mer leases, KU students only.
- utilities paid
- swimming pool
- swimming pool
- air conditioned
- on bus line
- cablevision
- landmark facilities
- furnished or unfurnished
843-4993
For rent to mature male student. Quiet,
comfortable efficiency apartment. Private
kitchen. Close to the Union. Reasonable
price. 842-4185. If
Available now. Two bedroom spacious apartments, unfurnished, carpeted & drapery installed. Close to campus, and on bus route. $35 per month. NO MEALMORE BACKDROP 10th & Credits!
Established **STUDENT COOPERATIVE** close to campus and downtown. Own bedroom/study. Six evening meals each week. $75-$100 for meals unless needed. **SIDWAY HOUSE**. 842-941-21.
Sublease 3 BDRM 2 bath. Fullly carpeted 60'
almost entire central air, window, and dishwas-
er. Great location at 919 Indiana, Apt. 1,
749-3310 or 841-2535.
4-16
Sleeping rooms 1-3 bedroom Apts. Duplexes and an 4-bedroom house close to campus. No pets. Call 842-8971. Leave for summer or full year. Call after afternoons. **4-14**
TRAILRIDE. Leasing for fall - Studios.
All rooms are furnished. All have harvest gold appliances.
All rooms have hardwood floors. Laundry (facilities on the premises). Swimming, tennis & rugby. Races 233, 234, 235
R 4-20
Summer sublease - Female wanted=120.00
per month + 1/5 utilities 749-348-496
4-9
86th & Kassol. If your tired of apartments 28th and Kasol, you can rent a feature 3 br., 15' baths, all appliances, attached garage, swimming pool, job of summer care, Call Craig or in summer and 49-1507 call Craig for info on about our modestly priced townhouses. ff
Summer and fall rentals, house and apart-
ments. 421-650-8391.
Estate 843-1601 or 841-3232.
Limited time offers.
MED CENTER BOUND? New reburbled furniture
Availances, parking. Call (013) 261-2847.
Availances, parking. Call (013) 261-2847.
TRY COOPERATIVE LIVING. Sunflower
TRU, 812-9421. tf
Two bedroom, apartment, one year old, oak
watered pool. Available after finals. 941-624-8348
Subbase large 2 BR, apartment near stadium, water, gas paid, central air 4-15
Summer Sublase: very large, b 3d, b 2 level duplex. semi furnished w. living. dining. den, sun porch. 1½ bath. ideal for family Dove or Dare & Hare at 841-8060 for 4-9
Sublease furnished studio apartment with
postpaid courts for court fees $325-$4
electricity $90-$126 $95-$126
Bulbsare-a nice furnished 2 bedroom afternn
air central air cable TV 4-8
bus route: 883-7104 4-9
For Next 2 hr, apt. convenient to shopping
for games available. Call 81-6686 for an app.
or visit www.sportsnet.com for an app.
Sublease at last years price 2 br. apf. comp.
Call for appointment 811-648-6-19
Call for appointment 811-648-6-19
summer, Abu Dhabi Nice 3 Bedroom townhouse
705 sq ft 22'7" month utilities *Bachelor* 841-130-190
600 sq ft 23'5"
3 berm, 2 bath, furnished apt, at Malls Oak
Lease, for rent or lease for $69.00 per
month. Available from June. 8415
1200 South Ave, Los Angeles, CA 90021
2 bdr. (6 coops), furnished, a/c; nice kit
room. Avb. May 920 New Hampshire.
843-646-3944
Studio Apt. furnished, quiet, clean, A/C
Reference: Available May 15 or June 13
Sublease Mendowbrook studio apt. FF2718
Mendowbrook studio 443-6450
from May 1 - July 30 Call 4-454-8589
Summer tablet/Safi Option 2 bdrm. agt
summer tablet/Agents only. References required. 841-61948
calls only. References required.
SUMMER SCHOOL SUBLEASE Dates
May 16 - May 25, 2023. Dates with
grand piano and screen in porch,
kitchen, dining room, pool, deck,
post and utilities. 811-319-2400 a p.m.
4:18 p.m.
Excel location to campus and downtown.
Excellent location to campus and downtown.
Excellent location to campus and downtown.
Air/heat/Airfare. Available May 15.
842-856-6056
Available now: *attractive* cory apt, Idea
room *1250*; *extra large* extra room,
*$185*; *841-1416*
New orchard duck 2 bit—Large living
deepest hide 375 AU$ living
June 14, 841-849
July 6, 841-849
Small 2 unit, apt. well close to campus & downtown. Newly remodeled $210/month lease required. Wed June 11 First Effective rental date. Newly remodeled avail. May 4-14 $140/month. Call 811-6441. May 4-14
Sub-Acct. Meadowbrook Townhouse. Now $140,000.
Meadowbrook Townhouse. Now $140,000.
bills $40,400
bills $40,400
Space available in the Kolina Community for fall semester. Information and applications are available at the Ecumenical International Center, 1843 Kirstenstreet, 834-4933 4-14
Room available for summer $180-$140 per
room, with desk, chair, and quiet atmosphere. Call Darryl '81; 555-236-9721.
Wanted outgoing Christians and con-
scientious students to share 5 bedroom house at
14th & Kentucky next fall & spring $100.
Unholdable. Utilities included. Cf
Darryl 841-7692.
SUMMER SULLEASE May rent free, walk to camou or downtown, June & July rent neglected, 2 bedroom, utilities reasonable, quiet. 484-717-650, comfortable quiet. 4-30
2 Bdkm. 15 Bath, Townhouse. All Appli-
tions. Warehouse. All Utilities.
Utilities, Close to Shopping. K.U. 442-3891.
Cabinets.
WANTED _ FOR _ SUMMER and/or fall semester: two roommates to live in a nice four-bedroom suite. $75/month + 4 rooms. Available May 15-4 Call Mike at 749-0653.
SUBLEASE IN STYLE for SUMMER. NEW-
ALLEY, inside a newly renovated room,
(easily made up of second bedroom),
study area, laundry and storage in gable
door, office space, kitchen, study area,
lym or POGEY at 842-6131. Saundance apds
are available.
SUBLEASE- 2 bedroom, 2床, fully carpeted, air conditioned ap. Available June 1 (regulated) with cotton for new lease. Prices $18 per month. $138 per month. 5136 after 5.90 p.m. 4-16
2.B.R. completely, refinished close to K.U.I.
Just S. of O. zone: On good house-
keeper; nonnumer. To see como to
Maine–Sunday, April 11
p.m.
Furnished Studio Close to campus on the bus route. 824-455. 4-15
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale!
Makes sense to use them1. As study guide,
makes sense to use them2.
aviation. New Analysis of Western Civilization.
Bookmark, and Orb Bookstore.4
*The bookmark, and Orb Bookstore.*
R價合期限 female to share 3 bibs; house
room 6-8 bibs; May 13 to summer camp
462-290
Room 5-8 bibs; May 13 to summer camp
462-290
FOR SALE
Altrimer, starter and specialisers
ALTRIMER 843-0600, 850
AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC 843-0600, 950
For Sale 1975 Yarnah XS 650 SPECIAL
843-5279
4-9
Beaufortshire bold evergreens required priced.
Beaufortshire bold evergreen farm - Eudora -
54319 or 54249 - Shipment:
4-20
TENNIS HACKET--Good selection new/!
842-6713 at 6:50 p.m. **off**
**ff**
Stereo-Televisions-Video Recorders. Name brands only. Factory sealed cartons. Lowest prices in the K.C. area. Get your best offer call Total Sound Distributors 915-384-0300 4-30
Pollen-fresh frozen-rich in vitamins, minerals, proteins. 842-504 after 7 a.m. 4-13
**Formula Six** Six Speakers. $600.00 value, sell for $500.00 value.
$600.00 value. $300.00 or best offer, sell for $200.00 value.
MY BUY CAR; Must sell by 4-15 76 Chevy
Monza. 60,000, A/C, beautiful condition.
VERY reasonable. Call 843-5134, keep try-
ing. 4-9
B.W. TY 12", 6 months old, very good condition
$45.00, 841-9698 4-9
78 Sunxi G3506L. Looks and Runs great.
1745 gasolines, 10.800 miles $125, 4-9
1705 gasolines
BOKONON IMPORTS Large selection of
Hawaiian shirts. The original source. 12-
4-20 4-20
Hon Double Denatured Steel Desk 20 x 60; O' Sullivan stereo cabinet: 6 drawer bass; guitar; 2 cork/wood lamps; 2 retuned night light; guitar. Call 842-8285 after 5. 4-13
72 Toyota Corolla Corolla, new battery,
battery, call 841-0477. Stereo, A/C,
body, call 841-0477.
1976 Honda 400, cover, permit, excellent
condition, parking permit, etc. $650.
4-13
CL 35. CL 36 Fairing, cite, start, rack, helmet.
Ex. cond. 841-805. 4-15
Must sell IBM typewriter $150. Good condition. Also Royal-cash. 841-4144. 4-9
Must sell immedately 1974 Vega 65a. Passes
best offer. 841-1988 or 842-1982. 4-14
4-14
1981 Yamaha YXA 750. Low mileage, excellent
performance. $1,360. 749-101 or 841-848-
4-12 for Don
Mattress, box spring sofa-bed and 12-speed
hall. Call 841-7723.
4-15
1979 MAZDA RXT-GS PURRFECT 842-825
or 842-835
4-30
ALPINE 2023 w/papers 7 bd eq. 18w x 2
$100. 841-8909
4-15
Hammond B-3 Organ Hammond Amp. 4t
pedals + Leslie Speaker 749-3412 4-15
JVC A-S5 Integrated Amp. Fisher Speakers
FZ-200 841-6246 4-15
1979 Vespa Bravo Moped. 2200 miles. Exc.
condition 864-1092. 4-23
1967 Bair Mirc Merc, Cougar, 289 el., auto. A/C/M/ FM/cassette, runs good! Call Jack—
749-2501. 4-23
Washer and dryer, excellent condition $150
each. Call 843-2196. 4-13
Stereo, very loud, 200 watt fifteen inch speakers hooked up to a two-month old Onkyo ampu only $450 Call 864-862-1025 kineskiles. Dual 225 twisters 4-16 included.
FOUND
Nice eating Karsa Union ladies room
Sunday,
April 4th, Call Rebecca 8644-142 4
Lady Karsa Union
Nice sailing Kuala Lumpur hotel room sunrise
and dinner. Found Round Lake in X-lot Monday night.
Found Lakes watch in X-lot Monday night.
Found on campus, 4/1, young, male dog bedge & white, short hair, collar, 843-7402
after 5:30 p.m.
Found pair of prescription, brown rimmed
glasses, outside of Green Hall. If they're
yourse call 842-8639 4-14
HELP WANTED
Secretary, National Association seeks energies
workers, typing, correspondence and organiza-
tional skills. Must be highly motivated and
environment. Experience in word process
benefits. Salary open. Send resume and
cover letter to National Association 181
Lawrence, Lawrence K 65044 4-9
First Christian Church (Dieleges of Christ) of Lawrence, Kansas is seeking applicant for the position of co-ordinator. The position would be appointed to a $25,000-$30,000 per year salary beginning in the summer 2018. Resumes including a Bachelor's degree in education or related markers of recommendation, should be mailed to Lawrence, KS 60644 from 100 Kentucky, Lawrence, KS 60644 by June 2, 1982. Inquiries welcome at 2429; 4239; 4-16
We are looking for 25 hardworking students for a summer work opportunity. If you are independent and want to earn $275.00 per week call 749-3227. 4-13
Children's Counselors, Activity Instructors.
Cook Kitchen Manager, Kitchen Help for Mountain Summer Camp. Trojan Hater
Boulder, Colorado, 80306, 4-93
442-4557
Part-time help wanted, wanted at villa and fountain,
W 6-81 Appet. at Vita Restaurant
W 6-81 4-13
Position Available: Gift Shop Manager, Museum of Natural History; Requires experience in bookkeeping, bookkeeping skills, ability to deal with the public and to supervise hourly employees. Preference needed. Need to be enrolled in at least 20 hours of work per week - 30 hrs wk. For interview appointment call Mary Ann Munch 864-4141. Applicants should have a Bachelor's Degree or Opportunity Affirmative Action. Employer
Load Guitarist needed for established pro-
fessionals 4-819-7977 5-422
players only. 819-7977
Need a part-time summer job! The 8-11 Need a part-time job to you teenager in manhattan Kansas City, CA. Help mature individuals to unwrap for the 1982 Summer Camp program. Provided. Clinics will be underway soon. Opportunity you won't want to miss. opportunity you won't want to pass up. Call (914) 123-4567 123-4567
SUMMER WORK students earn college credit while you work this summer. Interviews will be held on Monday, April 10, Mon. 1:00 p.m. & 4:00 Gore Rm. Kurtas Union. Must be able to relocate
Summer, John National Park Co. % SI Parks,
Report Mission Misc. 651 Aid N.Advis.
Report Mission Misc. 651 Aid N.Advis.
LOST
Miron's glass, dark plastic frames, righ-
htie hinge broken & glued. Frida 3.26 between
Robinson & Watson. Please call Mark. 749-
3221
Lost large blue loose leaf notebook. Has all
leaves. Call for details: call 863-0673 or ask
and for Dean
Baseball hat, yellow. Indianapolis 506 patch
left by tennis court. Sunday. March 4-
28.
PERSONAL
Instant passport, visa, ID, & resume photographs.
Custom made 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 Swellens 749-1611. tf
The Kegger—Weekly Specials on Kegs!!
Call 841-9450–1610. W 23rd.
Skillful's liquor store serving U-Daly since 1904. Come in and compare. Willard Skillet Eudaly. 1906 Mass. 843-8188. M
KANSAS RELAYS APRIL 14-17
HEADACH, BACKACHE, STACHE, NICK, NECK, LEG PAIN? Find and correct the CAUSF of the problem! Call Dr Mark Johnson for assistance. Send a check to ceeping Blue Cross and Lot Star Insurance.
Friday—Students $1.50
Saturday—Students $2.00
For your party clothes, formal or costume,
check out the Inflation Fighter 8. E T. Th.
Open 10-5-30 M-F 10-5-30 Sat. Open ill to
8 th. On Thursday
MARY KAY COSMETICS—Full-time beauty consultant. 842-6641. tf
Exciting jobs at Lake Tahoe. Send $5.00 to TaohoJobs, P.O. Box 7244, Kansas City, MO 64113.
West Coast Saloon
You get more for less,
for longer at the Coast.
25' Draws
NOON-6 p.m.
EVERY FRIDAY
2222 IOWA 841-BREW
Silk heads, wallets, jewelry bags from
St. Louis Hard and Hard Hand. Jordan
Hannah 82-476-476 4-9
Spring formals—Prairie look, 50's, beaded Taffetat. Barb's Second Hand Rose, 515 Indiana. 842-4746. 4-9
GREEN'S CASE SALE, BUSCH $7.99, COORS
$8.99, BUDWISER LIGHT $9.59, GREEN'S
808 WEST 23RD 4-1
Steriences-Television-Video Recorders. Names-brand only. Factory-made cardboards. Lose prices in the KC area Get your pounds in the 1913-240-4000 4-10-30 8:00AM
PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH-
FIGHT. 843-4821
GOOD FRIDAY WORSHIP
12:09 noon—Danforth Chapel Sponsors: University
Sponsors: Universal Lutheran Church
Remember, O most gracious Virgin Mary, that never was it known to me that she was the only protection implured thy intercession was left unaid; inspired by this canid hemless. I flew to three, and there was a lord of the earth. I stand sinful and sorrowful. O Lady of the earth, in thy mercy, hear and answer我. Amen.
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Female housemate for 3-bedroom house 1
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Page 12 University Daily Kansan, April 9, 1982
Scoreboard
Basketball
NBLASTINGS
Eastern Conference
Team W 9 L Pct. GB
Boston 59 14 Pct. 78
Delhi 54 22 Pct. 63
New Jersey 39 37 Pct. 51
Washington 39 37 Pct. 43
Houston 32 44 Pct. 20
Western Conference Midwest Division
Milwaukee ... 53 38 28 .697
Atlanta ... 53 38 28 .500
Baltimore ... 41 47 18
Indiana ... 33 43 434
Chicago ... 30 46 28 23
Houston ... 43 16 30 23
San Antonio 45 31 592 1
Denver 44 31 592 - 2
Dallas 43 31 596 1
Kansas City 26 30 342 1
Dallas 26 30 342 189
Buffalo 22 54 123 24
Los Angeles
Seattle
New York
Golden State
Portland
Texas
52 24 684
32 54 258
42 34 10
42 34 553
42 34 103
42 34 103
16 16 618
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Boston 110, New York 106
Portland 106, Phoenix 104
Seattle 117, San Diego 115, OT
Hockey
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Divisional Semifinals
Best of Five
Women's
New York Islanders 7, Pittsburgh 2 (New York
Islanders lead series, 24)
New York Rangers 7, Philadelphia 3 (Series tied,
11)
Adams Divisio
real 9 / Series th
Quebec 3, Montreal 2 (Series tied, 1)
Boston 7, Buffalo 3 (Boston leads series, 2-0)
North Division
Chicago 5, Minnesota 3 (Chicago leads series,
2-0).
Edmonton 3, Los Angeles 2, OT (Series tied, 1-1)
Vancouver 2, Calgary 1, OT (Vancouver leads
series 34)
Soccer MISL STANDINGS
St. Louis 24 18 692 --
Wichita 15 15 613 --
Wichita 14 15 613 --
Denver 14 24 361 12%
Denver 13 24 361 12%
Kansas City 15 27 304 15%
Western Division
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Wichita 3, Kansas City 2, OT
Team Wm w 30 L pct. GB
New York 30 7 811 - -
Pittsburgh 20 14 684 - -
Buffalo 21 14 652 - 7
Buffalo 21 18 638 10
New Jersey 15 14 396 15%
Philadelphia 14 22 396 15%
Philadelphia 15 22 396 15%
Baseball AMERICAN LEAGUE Eastern Division
Team W L Pct. GB
Balkmore 1 0 1.000 %
Rockford 0 0 1.000 %
Cleveland 0 0 .000 %
Detroit 0 0 .000 %
Milwaukee 0 0 .000 %
Fort Collins 0 0 .000 %
Toronto 0 0 .000 %
VESTERDAY'S RESULTS
winter division
Minnesota 2 1 667
Cleveland 2 1 0 ‡
Chicago 1 0 389
Oakland 1 0 0 ‡
Washington 1 1 390
Seattle 1 2 333
San Francisco 1 2 0 ‡
City of 1 1 300
Minnesota 4, Seattle 5, Louisiana 8, Oakland 6, 16 innings
Toronto at Detroit, ppp.
Tampa at Boca Raton, ppp.
Boston at Atlanta, ppp.
NATIONAL LEAGUE Eastern District
Eastern Ontario
Team | 1 | 2 | Pct. | GR
--- | --- | --- | --- | ---
Cleveland | 1 | 0 | 1.000 | %
Chicago | 0 | 0 | - | -
Montreal | 0 | 0 | 000 | %
Boston | 0 | 0 | 333 | %
Portland | 1 | 2 | 1.000 | St. Louis |
VESTERDAY'S RESULTS
WEATHER DIRECTION
Atlanta 2 0 1.000 -
Los Angeles 2 0 1.000 -
London 1 0 1.000 -
Cincinnati 1 1 500 1
San Francisco 0 1 500 1
New York 0 2 2.000 -
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
New York 7, Philadelphia 2
Houston 1, St. Louis 6
Montreal at Pittsburgh, ppd.
Jayhawks meet Kansas State
Team | W | L | M | Pct. | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Oklahoma State | 5 | 3 | 1 | .625 | 1/8 |
| Oklahoma | 3 | 2 | 0 | .600 | 1/4 |
| Kansas State | 2 | 2 | 0 | .500 | 1/2 |
| Nebraska | 4 | 2 | 0 | .500 | 1/2 |
| Missouri | 4 | 4 | 0 | .400 | 1/2 |
| Iowa State | 2 | 17 | 0 | .250 | 1/4 |
By TOM COOK
Sports Writer
The KU women's softball team had its second straight double-header cancelled yesterday when cold weather games with Creighton at Omaha, Neh.
No makeup date has been set for the Creighton games. KU assistant coach Cyril Thomas will be in attendance.
The Jayhawks had a twinbill with the Missouri Tigers posted Tuesday. Those games have been tentatively scheduled for Monday, April 12, at Columbia.
Kansas is scheduled to play Kansas State today in a double-header at the Holcom Sports Complex, 25th and Iowa streets. The first game has been scheduled for 3 p.m., and the nightcap will begin at about 4:30.
WET GROUNDS could pose a
problem, however. Posey said yesterday that the field was too wet to be raked, but that if the temperature were higher, conditions probably would be all right.
The Jayhawks also are scheduled for a pair of games Saturday here with Oklahoma City at 3 and 5 p.m.
Because of the inclement weather, the Jayhawks have been practicing in Allen Field House for the past two days. A batting cage was set up on the third floor, as well as other hitting stations in the area.
It has split with K-State in two games, both in the KU Invitational.
Kansas has yet to play Oklahoma City this season.
The Wildcats pulled off an upset, 3-2, in the opener of the tournament before the Jayhawks came back to blank K-State, 2-0, in the championship game, on Rhonda Clarke's second no-hitter of the season.
Baseball team reschedules double-headers
The Kansas baseball team will head for Iowa State on Sunday, hoping that the Iowa State ground crew can get the day's start to Kendall's and Tuesday's double-headers.
By MIKE ARDIS
The games were scheduled for Saturday and Sunday, but the recent snow delayed the series. With a forecast of higher temperatures, the ISU grounds crew will try to get the field in shape.
Sports Writer
what the Jayhawks thought was a violation of Big Eight rules.
Yesterday, the Jayhawk coaching staff cleared up a controversy about an alleged misconduct on Oklahoma City State baseball coach staff scouted the games, in
IN A TELEPHONE conference yesterday, the Big Eight coaches made a gentleman's agreement not to scout children in schoolsschools, assist coach Skin James said.
"Some thought it was an unwritten Big Eight rule," James said. "Aparently, in the NCAA book rule, its legal if the coach pays his own way. According to the NCAA, it was all right."
The confusion came about because some of the coaches thought the Big Eight had a rule covering scouting.
If the 'Hawks, 2-2 in conference play, can't play this weekend against Iowa State, 3-5, their next games will be
By the time the Missouri series starts, Quigley Field should be green. The grounds crew has seeded the field and is using the Bermuda grass hasn't come up!
against Emporia State on Wednesday and Missouri next weekend.
The condition of the field has caused barricade with the players' field, James Adams.
"The OU players were upset about the conditions," he said. "Our field is rough, and our guys have got hungry about making plays. At Texas A&M, with a good field, we played the best we've played this year."
KU WILL face Oklahoma State and Nebraska on the road this year. Nebraska has artificial turf, and Oklahoma State just re-did their field
this year James said playing on the better surface could help the Jayhawks.
said "We'll make fewer errors, but so will they. It's sort of a psychological advantage playing here. The kids play on it everyday and they've got to realize that."
many times before. James works with the hitters, and with the team hitting .309, he said he was pleased.
"We've worked really hard at it," he said. "The kids have gotten a lot more swings. They're hitting better than I expected.
"In conference play, you'll probably see the averages go down. The situation will have more pressure. I don't expect them to come up," the coach will go down, and others will climb."
Home teams fare better
By United Press International
The National Hockey League moved into the second night of its playoff schedule, and the favorites fared better than on opening night.
Edmonton came back from an opening night loss to even their series, and the New York Islanders continued to roll.
The New York Rangers, Boston Bruins, Quebec Nordiques, Chicago Black Hawks, Winnipeg Jets and Toronto Maple Leafs also winners in the second day of action.
New York Rangers 7, Philadelphia 2
NEW YORK - Mikko Leionen set an NHL playoff record with six assists, and Ron Dugua, Don Maloney and Robbie Foresk scored consecutive power-play goals to lead the New York Rangers to a 7-3 victory over the Philadelphia Flyers.
Quebec 3 Montreal 2
The win evened the series at one game apiece. The series now shifts to Philadelphia for games three and four. Nintendo Wii, Nintendo 2.
The Islanders, who now lead the series 2-0, could complete a sweep of the series tomorrow night by beating the Penguins in Pittsburgh.
QUESTION 3: MONTREAL—Rookie Pierre Anby scored the game-winning goal with 2:30 left in the final period, and goaltender
UNIONDALE, N.Y. - Stefan Persson helped set up two goals keying a four-falst first period that carried the New York Giants to 21thashing of the Pittsburgh Penguins.
Dan Bouchard turned away 33 shots to spark the Quebec nordic to a 3-2 triumph over the Montreal Canadians.
BLOOMINGTON. Mann—Denis BLOOMINGTON, goal his march through the third period helped the Chicago Black Hawks defeat the Minnesota North Stars, 8-3.
Winnipeg 5, St. Louis 2
WINNIPEG, Manitoba—Rookie right wing Paul MacLean scored twice during a surge of five consecutive Winnipeg goals, and his rookie linemate Dale Hawkerson collected four assists in a 5-3 victory over the St. Louis Blues.
ine victory by Winnipeg evens the series at one game apiece.
BOSTON—Rookie Barry Pederson scored three goals and tied a pair of playoff bouts to lead the Boston Bruins to a 74 victory over the Buffalo
Boston 7. Buffalo 3
Edmonton 3, Los Angeles 2 (OT)
EDMONTON, Alberta — Wayne Greykret scored on a 45-foot slapshot at 6:20 of sudden death overtime to life the Edmonton Oilers to a 3-2 triumph over the Los Angeles Kings.
The Oilers, who rebounced from a 10-8 setback yesterday, now travel to Los Angeles for games three and four of the series.
Vancouver 2. Calgary 1. OT
VANCOUVER. British Columbia—Dave Williams scored from close range at 14:20 of sudden-death overture to lead the Vancouver Canucks to a 2-1 victory over the Calgary Flames and a 2-0 advantage in their playoff series.
Netters face Big Eight foes
The seasons are winding down for the Kansas men's and women's tennis teams, and the Big Eight teamships are just around the corner.
The women's conference championship will be next weekend in Kansas City, Kan., at the Woodside Racquet Club. The men's championships are set for April 29-30 at the same site.
Both teams are on the road against Big Eight foes this weekend. The women are in Columbia, Mo., where they will play Nebraska this afternoon and Missouri on Saturday. Meanwhile, the men are in Stillwater, Okla., today to take on the Cowboys. The Jayhawks will play Colorado on Saturday and Missouri on Sunday.
THE CONFERENCE favorites this season in the men's division are Oklahoma State and Oklahoma. The Big Ten titles, four consecutive Big Eight titles.
Wichita beats Comets in overtime, 3-2
Luckily for the men, who are now 4-5, they have finished playing NCAA Division II schools. Southwest Missouri State, Northeast Missouri State and Northwest Missouri State received the Jayhawks by 8-4 scores.
"Upsets can happen, we've found that out," senior Ed Bolen said. "Now it's our chance to turn the tide."
After scoreless second and third periods, Zoran Savic hit the back of the net two minutes into the fourth quarter for the Comets.
the quarter. The Comets' record is now 12-27.
"OSU, MU and CU are three of the toughest teams in the conference," he said. "They probably won't be expecting too much from us, so this ought to be a good chance for us to surprise some people."
"OUR DOUBLES play should be better than it has been." he said. "I think maybe we need to find some different combinations."
Men's Head Coach Randy McGrath hinted last week that he might revamp his lineup.
"It's not too late to still do some experimenting with our lineup," he said. "I'm not set on anything yet, we'll just have to wait and see."
freshman Craig Tidwell thinks the Jayhawks can stand some lineup changes, particularly in doubles.
According to McGrath, the Big Eight is as strong as ever this year.
"Everybody in the conference is tough this year," he said. "We're going to have to be at our very best, if we want to do well."
THE WOMEN, who are coming off a 5-4 backset to Denver in the KU Invitational last week, are 8-7 so far this season, thanks to strong doubles play.
Senior Corey Nason said the doubles team has succeeded chiefly because it is a close-knl troup.
"We're not a bunch of individuals, we're a team," she said. "We're all the best of friends. We can depend on us. We have confidence in one another."
By United Press International
"We always try to be as positive as possible. Nobody gets mad at the other player.
"You see some teams where all the two players do is fight and bicker with one another."
WOMEN'S HEAD COACH Kathy Merrion said her team had been relying too much on doubles and teamwork, it was going to catch up with them.
KANSAS CITY, Mo.-Mek Roentveld scored with 1:27 left in overtime last night, pushing the Wichita Wings past Indiana and a Major Indoor Soccer League game.
"It's kind of been a general rule with our team that doubles will always pull us through," she said. "That's not always going to be the case, but if we do, the competition is going to be a whole lot tougher from here on out.
. eeny seen like we need a good showing in singles this week, so it can take some of the pressure off of our doubles teams. Our singles play has to come through for us, and soon."
Reentved put the Wings up 1-0 with his 23rd goal of the season seven minutes ahead of the comeback. He skated back for the comeback ninth goal of the year with 1:09 left in
YOU
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KANSAN
The University Daily
Tuesday, April 13, 1982 Vol. 92, No. 131 USPS 650-640
Haig's visit delayed British offers termed unacceptable; Argentina prepares its navy to sail
By United Press International
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina—Argentina yesterday早逝antly postponed Secretary of State Alexander Haig's planned return trip to Buenos Aires to sail to sail, possibly against the British blockade.
Argentina also pushed ahead with plans to airlift more troops, weapons and equipment to the Falkland Islands. The islands are located 450 miles east of the southern tip of South America
Argentine naval forces were withdrawn from the waters around the Falklands shortly before the blockade went into effect late Sunday, enforced by British nuclear submarines reportedly prowing the area. The bulk of the British fleet was still at about 10 days away from the islands.
HAIG PLANNED to fly from London to Buenos Aires early today to continue his frantic shuttle diplomacy, but the trip was suddenly called off by Argentina in an attempt to regain Argentine Foreign Minister Nicanor Costo Mendez.
A U.S. statement, without giving further details, on "a complication" had arisen in Belgium.
Diplomatic sources in Buenos Aires said Costa Mendez told Haig that the new British responses to the Argentine peace proposals were
unacceptable, thereby triggering the post-
ponent.
The sources said differences continued to reside in the basic question of sovereignty—who has control over the territory?
AR ANGENTINE NAVY communique said navy Commander Jorane Anaya had visited the navy base at Port Belgrano to give a farewell message and to ready to head out "when the commander is given."
A news source in Port Belgrano said the fleet had not sailed and it was not known exactly when it would. NBC said the fleet could sail during the night.
The Argentine foreign ministry said Argentina had, "with a broadly favorable spirit," received Petro's proposal for a 72-hour truce and would continue the action that could lead to an armed conflict."
PRESIDENT LEOPOLDO GALTIERIS' government hopes the Pervian proposal, "if it is accepted by the other side, may contribute to the effort to validate the efforts of the U.S. secretary of state.
"But if the British government follows through with 'If it threat to bring a blockade into effect, the Argentine government will not have any responsibility to respond to the aggression,' the statement said.
SOCA B/M 2/11
TRACEY THOMPSON/Kansan Staff
The University Daily Kansan is now accepting applications for the summer and fall editor and business manager positions. The positions are paid and require some newspaper experience, but any student may apply.
Application forms are available in the Student Senate office, 105B Karsas Union; in
the office of student organizations and activities, 220 Strong Hall; and in 200 Flint Hall.
two fives. 228 Strong hall; and in 230 A mid hall.
Three fives are at die p. 59, April 19 in Finall Hall.
Racers from a four-state area traveled to Lawrence on Sunday for the annual Sports Car Club of America race held in K Mart's parking lot, 3106 Iowa St. Erik Berman, a racer from Kansas City, Kan., crushed car 7/11 around the track.
Selection of the editor and business manager will be announced later this month after interviews with the Kansan Board. All interviews are filled out of the time and place of their interviews.
Women,grad students to have own Towers
By JAN BOUTTE Staff Reporter
The KU housing department has decided to offer two of the four buildings of the Jayhawker Towers apartments to special student groups: women and graduate students.
J. J. Wilson, director of housing, said yesterday the plan would offer women more secure housing and offer graduate students the atmosphere needed for their studies.
Tower B will be for women students only, and
A will be designated for graduate and
professors.
Wilson said the decision to restrict the two towers to specific groups was to fill a demand that the housing department had seen in recent years.
"We are trying to not discriminate or secrete or anything like that," Wilson said.
"I think there's a demand. At the moment, we have every reason to believe that we can fill B
EACH TOWER in the complex has about 64 two-bedroom apartments.
Wilson said the women's tower was to make female students feel more secure at home.
Tom Pratt, Towers manager, said the KU sororites had already made commitments to reserve two floors of the women's tower to use as annexes to their houses.
rei said that next year, the doors to Tower B would locked, and women residents with children would be locked.
ne housing department also would install an intercom system that would allow residents to let their guests in the doors with a buzzer.
"It comes expensive, but we think that it will be worthwhile," he said.
Wilson said that the men's athletic training table, which is located in the basement of Tower B, would only be accessible by its outside door, and would not be open to the rest of the tower.
CURRENT MALE residents of Tower B have not been allowed to renew their leases for their apartments, and Pratt said that non-commercial having to switch to another tower for next year.
Wilson said that he also hoped to fill Tower A with graduate and professional school students.
David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said that the graduate tower would be one method of responding to the special housing needs of graduate students.
"One goal with the Towers was to change its image by making it more compatible with the devices."
"We've had a lot of support from the graduate schools and research division," he said.
HE SAID THAT the graduate schools were enlisted to help publicize the Towers offer.
Ambler said he saw the Towers responding to the needs of students and becoming more a part of the community.
If the housing department is successful in filling the two of the four towers with women and graduate students, two will remain open for all other students, including women and graduate
See TOWERS page 5
By COLLEEN CACY
Legislators take 2 weeks off
Staff Reporter
THE REASON behind this is an issue that has managed to become entangled in almost every major piece of legislation for the past two decades. John Carlin's proposes severance tax on gas and oil.
The House and the Senate have been unable to agree on several major issues—such as a plan for public school finance and a statewide repeal of the intangibles tax—largely because legislators are unsure of how much money they have to work with.
TOPFKA-Kansas lawmakers, tired and frustrated after a seemingly unproductive session, will have two weeks to relax and plan new strategies before they return at the end of April with most of the important issues still left unresolved.
"The central issue here is the severance tax," State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, said yesterday. "That's exactly what's been holding a lot of things up."
Senators wrangled for nearly four hours last Friday before finally agreeing with the House to adjourn that evening and come back April 27 and 28.
The latest issue to become complicated by the tax dormant production is the date of the legislation.
The Senate recently killed the tax by a 19-21 vote, but the supporters of the tax vow that they would not accept it.
"It it took too long, when we could have spent that time doing other things." Sate Sen. said. "The truth is that we're not having a good time."
SHE SAID she and other lawmakers were frustrated by the deadlock, and most needed a break from the late-night sessions of the past week.
The Senate was divided on whether to concur with a House decision made Thursday afternoon to adjourn for two weeks or to stay through Saturday evening and finish the year's business.
The reason behind the disagreement between the two chambers on an adjournment date once again is that it was not a vote.
Legislators who oppose the tax feared that Carlin would use the time before the Legislature
reconceived for a final blitz across the state—to say the necessary two more senators to his sides.
State Rep. Keith Farrar, R-Hugoton, went so far as to propose to the house that Carlin not be reimbursed for the use of the state airplane during adjournment.
"You know what happened last year," Farrar said, referring to Carlin's unsuccessful year-end severance tax campaign during last year's adjournment.
ALTOUGH CARLIN had said early last week that he would not attempt to push another severance bill through the Legislature unless he had indications that some senators had changed their minds, Solbach said "it wouldn't bother if he did" lobby for the tax during adjournment.
House Speaker Wendell Lady also has said that the severance tax issue was dead until there were no longer such issues.
"I no idea about the future of the severance tax until there are indications that some senators have changed their thinking," he said at a meeting last month. "I will not be campaigning for the severance tax."
But Lady R-Overland Park, said he had several speaking engagements during the break, and had never left.
Several senators have maintained that all minds are made up on the issue and are not likely to be convinced.
But Solbach, who also voted for the tax,
issreed.
"People are on record as voting one way or the other," Eldredge, a severance tax supporter, said. "It's awfully hard to change your vote on an issue like that."
"The vote taken in the Senate was billed as a clean vote, but it came up as a motion to concur, and there were no opportunities for amendments," he said.
The bill voted on began in the Senate and the severance tax was amended into it on the House
1068. The bill was then returned to the Senate, because any changes one chamber makes in a bill must be approved by the other.
THE SENATE voted not to concur with the House amendment.
"Some of the senators who voted against the tax indicated it was because they had no opportunity to consider any amendments," Solbach said. "I don't think we should just roll over and play dead because the Senate has had one opportunity to vote on this issue."
But Senate President Ross Doyen, R-Concordia, the tax's most influential opponent, is unlikely to refer it directly to the Senate floor for debate again, where amendments to make it more acceptable to some senators could be made.
Lyon successfully kept the tax off the floor all session by referring it to two different committees. Previous versions of the tax were killed in the 1980s, and Means Committee, of whom Bowyer is a member.
But Doyen said Friday that mounting pressure from the press and other legislators had forced him to cancel the runoff vote.
He said most lawmakers were tired of the issue and were ready to let it die.
BUT THE ARGUMENT over adjournment reflected many tax opponents' uncertainty that the state's tax rate was up.
After protracted debate in the Senate Friday over the constitutionality of adjourning before the required 90 days of the session were over, and after protests that the House was giving up too easily by adjourning early, several frustrated senators denounced their fellow lawmakers for trying to cover up their real reasons for not wanting to adjourn.
"This is all a faacade," State Sen. Norman Gaar, R-Overland Park, told the Senate.
He said they all knew that the real reason for the clash between the House and Senate was the
BUT SOLIBACH said that despite continued failures between the House and Senate to agree on the issues, he thought they would be resolved successfully.
"The chances for agreement on the major issues remain good," he said. "But if we're not able to do it all in those two days, we'll either move into the end of April or the beginning of May."
A two-thirds majority in both chambers of the Legislature is required to extend the session beyond 90 days. If they don't agree, all legislation still unfinished would be dead.
FUJIAN
The warm spring sunshine drew people outside yesterday, including Teal Rodgers, Lawrence High School sophomore, who sprayed her 1965 Ford Mustang clean at the Westridge Car Wash, 3300 W. Sixth St.
MARK McDONALD/Kansan Staff
Weather
KU
It will be mild today, with temperatures reaching the low to mid-70s, according to the National Weather Service in Tonga.
Winds will be variable at 5 to 15 mph.
The low tonight will be in the mid-80s.
The extended forecast calls for cooling temperatures and a chance for showers by Saturday.
SenEx opposed to cuts in Western Civ budget
the Senate Executive Committee wishes to express its concern and dismay over recent action taken to reduce the budget of the western department, which has supported two other departments," the resolution stated.
The University Senate executive committee unanimously passed a resolution Friday opposing recent cuts in the Western Civilization budget.
By ANN WYLIE Staff Reporter
"SenEx reaffirms the historical and essential policy that departments must be consulted in advance regarding decisions affecting the quality and viability of their programs. In this particular case, we are also concerned about the quality of undergraduate instruction."
ON MARCH $5, James Seaver, director of the Western Civilization program, discovered that Robert Lineberry, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, had cut the budget in half,
The resolution will be sent to lineherry
The other $33,500 will be turned over to the history and philosophy departments to finance
graduate students who would be willing to teach Western Civilization.
The resolution will be sent to Lineberry. At a College Assembly meeting April 6, Lineberry said he would discuss the budget again at the next assembly. April 27.
"We were enhancing a graduate program at the expense of an undergraduate program," George Woolfe, ex-officio member of SenEx and professor of English, said Friday.
IN OTHER BUSINESS, Tom Mulinazi, chairman of the Parking and Traffic Board and associate professor of civil engineering, appointed his committee's annual report to Senate.
The report included changes in rules and regulations, such as visitor parking, and recent parking lot improvements, such as the construction and paving of Zone X.
The Faculty Senate executive committee accepted an annual report from the Committee.
The report reviews the committee's actions during the 1981-82 year, which included assigning a subcommittee to revise Faculty Senate Rules in working with destroying confidential materials.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, April 13, 1982
News Briefs From United Press International
Reagan dispatches mediator to ease tensions in Mideast
With the invasion in the area rising on several fronts, the White House announced Reagan is sending Walter Stoessel, deputy secretary of state, to
Nicholas Veliotes, assistant secretary of state, who has been in the Middle East since last Thursday, will confer with Stoessel in London today.
Steelers' mission, as described by the State Department, was arranged "because there are things that remain to be worked out" on the final Israeli
In Jerusalem yesterday, Israeli soldiers shot and wounded 11 rock-throwing Palestinians in clashes on the occupied West Bank and the Gaza Strip. The confrontations were provoked by a Jewish gunman's Easter attack on the Holy Dome of the Rock Mosque, police said.
ack on the Holy Donkey in the market at least 10 other people were injured and 37 Palestinians were reported arrested in east Jerusalem, where Israeli police halted a march of Moslem notables to the temple area, where the attack took place Sunday.
KC Times, Star share a Pulitzer
NEW YORK—The Kansas City Times, the New York Times and the Associated Press each won two 1982 Pulitzer Prizes, Columbia University
It was the 66th annual awarding of the prestigious prizes for American journalism and the arts.
Rick Atkinson of the Kansas City Times won the Pulitzer Prize for excellence in reporting and writing of stories of national import.
Atkinson's newspaper and the Kansas City Star shared the Pulitzer for local reporting for their coverage of the Hyatt Regency skywalk collapse that killed 114 people last July during a crowded tea dance. In the first week alone, the two papers published more than 50 full pages of news on the
The Detroit News won the Pulitzer Prize for meritorious public service for exposing a Navy coverup in the shipboard deaths of sailors.
Intangibles tax deadline extended
TOPEKA—Because of the Legislature's failure to deal with the issue, Kansans with intaglio can hold onto their tax forms until May 17, which will be thursdays by Thursday.
the state department of Revenue, on the order of Gov. John Carlin, has extended the deadline for filing intangibles tax returns until May 17. Lawmakers left Topeka for a two-week break Friday without resolving the controversial issue.
A recent Kansas Supreme Court decision declared the statewide tax valid, but struck down a 1979 law that had allowed local governments to reduce or免除 the state's income taxes.
I will remedy the situation, Senators and House members have been wrestling with two bills. One would repeal the statewide tax, and another would repeal the federal income tax.
Bely makers knew about dangers
CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa.-Procter & Gamble was aware of links between tampons and toxic shock syndrome more than a month before taking its Rely tampons off the market, but company officials, worried about slowing sales, decided not to act immediately, testimony revealed yesterday.
Michael Kehm, who is seeking more than $30 million from the company for negligence in the death of his wife, testified in federal court yesterday that his wife had never heard of toxic shock before she died of the disease Sept. 6, 1980.
Kehn's wife died 18 days before Rely was removed from store shelves. Reading from Procter & Gamble memos, Kehm said the company discussed toxic shock Aug. 6, 1980, but talked about a possible loss in company profits—not a concern for human safety.
"If a clear correlation between tammps and TSS is established, and if the mortality rate on TSS increases, the tampon business could be in real need."
Space weapon development urged
WASHINGTON—The Pentagon needs to speed development of laser-ray battle stations in the near future to侦察 nuclear missile attack, researchers warned yesterday.
The recommendation by the General Accounting Office was made in a secret report to Congress earlier this year. A four-page unclassified digest of the report is available at www.ga.gov.
The usually budget-conscious GAO, which monitors government activities for Congress, said the Pentagon had not moved fast enough with a coordinated laser program and probably had insufficient funds for such research and development.
"Laser" stands for "light amplification by stimulated emission of radiation." Lasers accumulate energy and concentrate it into an extremely powerful beam that, in the form of heat, can destroy a space target thousands of miles away.
Republican will fill Williams' seat
TRENTON, N.J.-Gov. Thomas Koean appointed Republican Nicholas Brady to the Senate yesterday to fill out the term of Democrat Harrison McNary.
Brady, expected to be a strong booster of President Reagan, said he would serve as a caretaker senator until the November election.
"I certainly support the president's economic program," Brady said shortly after his appointment was announced.
He also said he had no interest in running for the Senate set in November. "I am not, nor will I be, a candidate in the Senate race," he said.
His appointment raises the GOP margin in the Senate to eight, 54-46.
Man wants Nixon library in Indiana
TERRIE HAUTE, Ind—Downtown Terre Haute be a perfect
businessman the Richard M. Nixon Library, says Richard Eldred, a local
businessman.
Although other cities have refused the collection of important Nixon documents, Edited is sparrowhunting a drive to build the controversial library
"We read an article about how the people in Independence, Moe, didn't want the library, and I thought, Why not Terre Haute?" said Eldred, "and the people in Independence."
'ree said he had received a "beautiful" reaction from many Terre Haute leaders, but only a jukewarm response from some city leaders, including
Eldred said the library would help revitalize the city's downtown and attract tourists.
Reagan to outline tuition tax credit
WASHINGTON—President Reagan plan to unveil Thursday his proposal to give tuition tax credits to parents of the five million students in private schools.
But it could hit roadblocks in Congress. Senate Finance Committee Chairman Bob Dole, R-Kan., whose panel would have jurisdiction over the plan, said recently it could be too expensive in a year of soaring deficits and cuts in public education programs.
The proposal, to be outlined to a meeting of the National Catholic Education Association in Chicago, would fulfill a Reagan campaign
The White House aide, who asked not to be identified, said the proposal had been anborrowed by the Cabinet and could be phased in over several years.
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KU INTERNATIONAL CLUB
... invites nominations, from qualified members, to run for President and Vice President positions for the year 1982-83. The last date for filing nominations is Thursday, April 15, 1982.
For further details stop by the KU International Club office. B115 Kansas Union.864-4824.
Funded from the Student Activity Fee.
FRANK SEIBER QB KANSAS UNIVERSITY
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'82 - '83 ALL-SPORTS SEASON TICKET SALE
MON., APRIL 19-
WED., APRIL 21
9:00 a.m.-4:00 p.m.
in front of WESCOE HALL —K.U. I.D.s REQUIRED—
FREE T-SHIRT TO FIRST 1,000 TICKET PURCHASERS.
TICKET PRICE—$45.00
Includes These K.U. Home Events:
TRACK-KANSAS RELAYS
FOOTBALL-ALL 6 GAMES*
(REGULAR SEASON GAMES ONLY—DOES NOT INCLUDE PRE OR POST-SEASON GAMES)
HOW IT WORKS:
—Receipts will be issued to purchasers. The ticket office will have copies if you lose your receipt over the summer.
Tickets may be picked up next fall according to the SR., JR., Soph. Fresh, schedule.
BLOCK SEATING in Football will be available by turning your receipts in together next fall.
Football-Only Student Season Tickets go on sale next fall.
Allen Field House Student Seating is limited to 7,000. Therefore, Basketball-Only Student Season Tickets will be available only if less than 7,000 All-Sports Tickets are sold.
For more information contact
ATHLETIC TICKET OFFICE
ALLEN FIELD HOUSE
864-3141
1
University Daily Kansan, April 13, 1982
Page 3
On the record
The body of a 28-year-old Olathe man was discovered early Friday afternoon at Clinton Lake, Douglas County. Griffith's officials said yesterday.
The discovery ended a week-long search for the body.
Lee's Summit, Mo., Underwater Recovery divers, who volunteered to aid local searchers, found the body of John Runny less than an hour after a boat crashed near Creek Branch of Clinton Lake, sheriff Capt. Robert Casstyake.
Earlier last week, sheriff's officials found the body of James Henlay, 49, who had been fishing with Runyan. Officials also found their 14-foot aluminum fishing boat filled with water.
The sheriff's department listed drowning and over exposure as the cause of death for both men.
The search began for the two men April 4 after their wives reported them missing. The men had gone to fish in Clinton Lake on April 2 when they were released. The men were expected to return home April 3, sheriff's officials said.
BURGLARS STOLE more than $1,900 worth of tools sometime Friday night from Custom Body and BURGLARS Route 3, sheriff's officials said.
Burglaries broke in the back door and stole paint guns, wrenches, sandpaper and other tools. There are no suspects, sheriff's officials
BURGLARS ALSO stole more than $300 worth of tools sometimes between 5:30 p.m. Friday and 8:30 p.m. Saturday, Motors 123, E 23rd St., police said.
Burglaries pried the lock off the front door and stole paint guns, air files and sanders, police said. There are no suspects.
BURGLARS STOLE a rifle, a police scanner and rolls of quarters sometime between Tues., April 6. A bullet was found at 1045 E. 23rd St., police said.
After prying open the rear door of the trailer home, burglars took the items, valued at more than $400, police said. There are no suspects.
KU POLICE reported the theft of a drum sometime between 11 and 11:30 p.m. Friday from the parking lot outside the Military Science Building. The drum, worth an estimated $25,000, lot while the victims were moving some things to Murphy Hall, police said. There are no suspects.
Maneuvering a wheelchair through an obstacle course could give KU students an idea of how architectural barriers affect the daily lives of handicapped students and staff at the University of Kansas.
Barriers affect handicapped Disability awareness planned
This Barriers Awareness activity is just one of the events planned for Disabled Awareness Week. April 12-18.
Jan McKown, president of Students Concerned with Disabilities, said yesterday that the week grew out of an online course activity SCWD had last year.
Also, she said, there was more
communication between handicapped
persons and the international
body of the Disabled Person.
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"We're trying to eliminate stereotypes people might have if they don't have much contact with the handicapped," McKown said.
Films on the lives of handicapped people will be shown from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. today and at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the Council Room of the Kansas Union
The Barriers Awareness program will be from 10:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Thursday on the east side of Wescoe Hall.
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All events are co-sponsored by SCWD and KU's Circle K Club and are open to all interested people.
Speakers at a panel discussion at 8 p.m. Thursday in Parlor A of the Union will present perspectives on coping with, and adapting to, a disability and how society meets the needs of the handicapped person.
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THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Officin of the Student Senate Office
B 105 Kansas Union (Third Level)
Lakeview, Kansas 80454
(915) 664-3710
The Student Body President is now taking applications for the positions of Administrative Assistant and Treasurer. Job descriptions and applications are currently available in the Student Senate office. B 105 Kansas Union (Third Level).
Both positions require backgrounds in accounting and business procedures. Applicants must be in good academic standing and a working knowledge of university governance is useful. Each position pays $250.00 monthly. The appointments are effective May 15.
Completed applications, which must include a resume, are due Thursday, April 15 at 5:00 p.m. in the Student Senate office. Interviews will be scheduled at a later date.
Should you have any questions call 864-3710
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Opinion
---
Page 4 University Daily Kansan, April 13, 1980
Unfinished business
Last Friday, on the first day before Easter break, most KU students were hard at work packing up their cars and planning homework avoidance strategies.
And last Friday, the Kansas Legislature was hard at work, too, at finishing up the first part of its session.
During the session, the legislature completed some big tasks. For example, it approved a $700 million appropriations bill that included KU's budget for fiscal 1983.
But some lawnmakers are complaining that their colleagues didn't work hard enough—either during their eleventh-hour session last Thursday and Friday or during the rest of the session.
"Are they going to go home having done nothing for schools, nothing for highways and having set the stage for a financial crisis in 1983?" Governor Carlin asked during a weekend interview with the Associated Press.
The answer is yes. Between 8 and 9 p.m.
Friday, both houses of the Legislature
decided to adjourn and to mop up their
unfinished business on April 27 and 28.
In those two days, the legislature will try to settle some of its leftover conflicts over school finance, the proposed highway fund and the intangibles tax.
And many say the fate of all these issues hinges on the fate of the minerals severance tax—or more precisely, on the extra money that the tax's supporters say it will bring in.
The future of the severance tax is cloudy. Even though the House of Representatives approved it last week, the Senate later defeated it, 21-19. Now, supporters of the tax are trying to resurrect it and swing more votes to their side.
Much clearer is the fate of a subject that is much closer to our hearts—the KU budget.
Last week, the legislators approved a $570 million appropriations bill for Kansas Board of Regents institutions. The bill now awaits the Regents' approval, and insiders say that that approval will come quickly.
Among other things, the bill zives KU:
Among other things, the bill gives rise
· a 7.5 percent faculty salary increase,
not the 13 percent increase that the
University and the Regents requested.
- a $800,000 enrichment grant to boost the salaries of individual business, computer science and engineering professors. The fund originally was to hold $1.5 million.
- $254,444 to pay for salaries of 16 more full-time unclassified staff members.
- a 8.75 percent increase for the student hourly program. KU can use the money either to increase hourly wages or hire more students.
- In many ways, the Legislature's version of the KU budget does not meet the expectations of many at the University. The 7.5 faculty salary increase and the $900,000 enrichment fund are much needed, but they could be too little, too late.
- a $900,000 enrichment fund to boost the long-awaited Haworth addition in the coming four-year period.
However, considering the economic climate, the University probably did not fare too badly.
Nuclear porn. "On the Beach." "Fail-Safe."
"Alas, Babylon." All of these deals deal with nuclear destruction. All are nuclear porn, a term in a few years ago by an Esquire magazine writer.
At the very least, we should be grateful that lawmakers acted on the appropriations bill more quickly than they did on the severance tax.
If they hadn't, we'd all be in legislative limbo.
'Ground Zero' spreads nuclear porn
Ground Zero Week was a nuclear porn festival. Last week, the Lawrence Coalition for Peace and Justice and various departments on campus participated in a public literature dealing with the biggest bang of them all.
Nuclear porn is very similar to erotic porn. There is an initial excitement. In spite of ourselfs, we are thrilled by talk of such massive destruction.
But soon, the excitement dulls. Figures become jumbled. The degree of destruction becomes relative. You discover that nuclear war is unthinkable. It is thinking the incomprehensible.
It's fairly easy to confront the fact that United States and the Soviet Union have enough nuclear weapons to destroy the world many times over. But that's not the kind of destruction the weapons would inflict.
There is a whole new language—vulnerability, parity, reductions, freezes. A new bowl of alphabet soup—MIRV, ICBM, MAD, M-X. There are conversions.
For example, a one-megatron bomb is equal to 1 million tons of TNT, which is equal to a 200-mile freight train packed with it, which, exploded, would melt 1.5 tons of ice into instant steam. But an average bomb is usually 20 megatrons. And the answer to how to compare one- and 20-megatron bombs.
What does all this mean to the average person who is scared of dying in a nuclear war? Those who took the time to attend last week's events were very interested in the issue.
But judging from the numbers that stayed away, nuclear disarmament is destined to strike the KU consciousness the way KU divestment, the Middle East and nuclear power have.
older people, activists who regularly get involved in causes.
The teach-in on disarmament was the most informative event of the week. About 170 people attended, though 52 chairs were set up in the Kansas Union ballroom. What was impressive, despite the numbers, was the wide cross-section of people who did attend-students, faculty,
The disarmament conflict was borne out in two panelists' statements:
"This preoccupation with nuclear war is a form of illness. It is committing suicide for fear of death," Harry Shaffer, professor of economics and Soviet and Slavic Studies, said.
Don Vouch, retired Army Lieutenant Colonel,
said, "The very weapons we are concerned about have kept the peace for these three decades. The conventional forces would reduce the nuclear risk."
Everyone makes a convincing argument when they passionately believe in a subject. But how do you convince them? How can you make it work?
DAN TORCHIA
have plausible arguments? The more you learn,
the more you're confused.
The many variables became especially evident when the question-and-answer session began. The talk turned to statistics—how the United States is vulnerable because its population is clustered on the coasts and the Soviet Union's is scattered. The same is true, it was pointed out, for the industrial centers of both countries.
We have no equal yardstick to measure the superpowers' superiority. It depends on how many warheads they have on a certain kind of aircraft and how much makes for different standards of superiority.
But some say the numbers are irrelevant and the only issue is how to eliminate the weapon.
About halfway into the session, one such advocate stood up to comment, lrate because he was angry.
"I think the colonel has talked enough. We need to look at the fact that an imperialistic
economy and exploitation is the cause of war," he said. "If we need to take it out in the streets, that's what we'll have to do, the way we did in Vietnam."
Some of the crowd applauded. He continued . . .
"War is done by the profit-makers. It is them who are doing this."
"Rockefeller, Reagan, those kind of people.
They are raining the economy of the country!"
Workforce Reagan, Reagan.
They are raping the economy of the country!'
"Who the hell are 'Them'? " Vought asked.
"Rockefeller, Reagan, those kind of people.
but the evening's last question held the key to understanding people's fears.
"What are the chances of my generation having to do something like this with his 30s to the frontline in last year's 80s and 90s to the frontline in last year's 80s and 90s?"
"Unless we have a radical disarmament, I don't think we'll make it," said John Duerkens, a physician at St. Luke's Hospital in Kansas City, Mo.
"Enjoy life. I agree with you," Shaffer said.
"I'm pessimistic, but not to the point to move to Tahiti. We better start working and stop counting," said John O'Brian, associate professor of systematics and ecology.
"I suspect we'll survive," Vought said. "The United States has a residual pragmatism to it. I think the world needs it."
The survival question is the key to understanding why the disarmament movement is growing nationwide. People are becoming preoccupied with the fear that they will die from a nuclear attack. The fear of a possible attack and fear of a potential Pear has always been a factor in deterrence.
Now, people are not only afraid, they are certain that it will happen. That adds a new dimension. But many people are still not aware of the enormity of the issue. That was evident by the low attendance of the Ground Zero Week meeting in October, and attitudes, nor does it even make the issues clearer.
All you reach is a "higher sense of befuddlement, using the Moore, Tom Moore, a darker and more objective
The mighty realms layeth siege and maketh war
HOW TRUE-MAN'S GHOST APPEARED TO KING RONALD, AND WARNED HIM NOT TO FIGHT, AND HOW BY MISADVENTURE OF AN AWACA BATTLE BEGAN, WHICH DID ESCALATE TO A GREAT HOLOCAUST. Being the third part of Trilogy of Tales taken from accounts of ages long ago, and especially from Sir Thomas Malory.
The first step is to learn dispassionately about both sides of the issue. In the nuclear disarmament game, the stakes are too high to rely on morality.
So one night, King Ronwald dreamed a wonderful dream, and in his dream sat King Ronwald in the richest cloth of gold that might made. And the King thought there was under him, near within his hemisphere, an hideous deep black communist plot, and therein was all manner of infiltrators, and guerillas, and military advisers, foul and horrible.
R
And then the King cried as he lay in his bed:
"Military aid, military aid!"
A. G. MARX
Then advisers and yea-men awaked the King, and he was so amazed that he wist not
SIR CLAY of Horton-upon-Otter
where he was. And then he fell on slumbering again, not sleeping nor thoroughly waking to the dangers of nuclear war all about him. So it seemed to the King, verily, that there came True-man unto him with a number of Third-World countries with him.
So when King Rowland saw him, he said: Welcome, True-man, I weened ye had been dead. Ah, what been these ravaged ladies that were the same people that dwells in their hair and faces scarred and bloody?
Sir, said True-man, all be the Third-World countries for whom our realm have fought for when I was a man living—when all of the forces in our forest stopped here—and since that time.
And all these are those that this realm did battle for in righteous U.N. quarrels. And because we did battle for them for their right, they have brought us hither unto this predicament. Thus much hath History given me leave, for to warn you of your doom. For an ye fight with Sir Breznev, as ye both fought with Sir Breznev, and the most party of your people on both parties. In no wise do ye battle, but take ye a SALT treate. And proffer you largely.
Then True-man and all the countries vanished in a sudden cloud shaped as a mountain.
So then they departed and came to Sir Brezhnev at Kremlin Castle, where he had a grim host of an hundred thousand, and there they entrapped Sir Brezhnev long time. And at the last, Sir Brezhnev was agreed for to have Afghanistan and Poland by King Ronwald's days, and after that, all the world, after the days of King Ronwald.
sellers, advisers and yea-men, and charged them in any wise to take a treatise with Sir Brezhnew; And spare not: proffer him as well, and wheat as much as ye think reasonable.
And anon the King called upon his coun-
Then were they coundescended that King Ronwald and Sir Brezhney should meet betwixt both their hosts, as of at Yalta, when Rozevelith and Joestalla in met days of
And when King Rinowald should depart, he warned all his chain of command that, an they see any missile fired: Look ye come on brevetion, the traitor Sir Brennay, for I in no wise trust you.
yore, and each of them should bring fourteen diatoms.
In like wise, Sir Brezhney warned his host that: An ye see any manner of missile fired, look that ye come on fiercely, and so slay all that ever before you standeth, and lay it low in smithereens, for in no wise I will not trust for this treatise.
were agreed and accorded thoroughly. And wine was fetched and they drank together. Right so came an AWAC out of a little air base and stung a pilot on the tail. And so when the pilot felt him so stung, he looked down and saw that the pilot had moved to slay the AWAC, and rued none other harm.
And so they came with this word unto Ronald. Then said he nothing of open cheer in a mystic statment, and so he went into Air Force One.
And when the host on both parties was the AWAC go down in flames, then they blew trumpets and horns, and shouted grumility of war. They would press their button. And then all manner of brittle loosened.
And never afore was there never seen a more doleful battle in no Christian land, for there was but bombing and disintegrating, and blowing and leveling, and many a grim ultimatum was there given of either to other, and many a deadly blast.
And thus they obliterated for all the long day, and never stinted till the strategic cities and defense plants were laid to the cold and contaminated earth. And ever they fought still, till it was near night, and the holocaust lit the city. Then the enemy planted an hundred million钻 dead upon the down.
And so they met as their pointment was and
Then was King Ronwald wood-wroth out of measure when he saw his people so slain from him. And so he looked about him and could see him. He said to Duke Hailewulf that no on-live, but one knight. Duke Hailewulf
Jesus, mercy, said the King, where are all my noble marines become? Alas that ever I should see this doleful day! Would to God, said he, that Jesus was the Messiah, Sire Brezney that has caused all this misfortune
My time passeth on fast, said the King, Therefore, said he unto Duke Haigwulf, take thow here Hicailre my good sword and go with it to yonder pentagonal lake's side; and when I had come across these throw Hicailre with full might into water and tell me what thou saw there.
So Duke Haigwulf departed, and by the way he beheld that noble weapons stockpile in his hand; and then he said to himself: If I throw these rich armaments in the water, thereof shall never come good, but harm and loss. And then Duke Haigwulf had Hicaliral under a missile slo. And so, as soon as he might, he came again unto the King, and said he had been at the pentagonal lake, and had thrown the sword back at it, whence it had come.
What saw thou there? said the King, Sir, he said, I saw nothing but the waters wap and waves wan. Ah, traitor untrue, said King Haigh thought that his commander him go again and throw it in. Duke Haighwould think it sin and shame to throw away that noble military might, but obeyed, and took Hicallure up, and went to the five-marchers who set fire the sword as far into the water as he might.
And there came a mushroom cloud above the misty water, and met Hicallire, and caught it, and so shook it thrice and brandished; and then vanished away with the sword in the water.
And the last gleam of the sun wend its way through the day's black clouds, and caught on the sword, but vanished as it sank into the lake. Then all was dark, and the night was come.
THUS ENDS THE DOMESDAY TRIOLOGY
Editor's note: Ben Jones, a Kansan columnist, unearthed the Sir Clay manuscripts in Tintgell Castle in Cornwall during his year of study abroad.
KANSAN
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(UPS$ 65544) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Monday and Thursday and June July and August Saturday, Sunday and holidays. Second-class class booked at Lawrence, Kansas $65543. Subscriptions by mail are $15 for six months to the $7 a year in Douglas County and $18 for six months or $15 for a year. Postmaster: Send changes of address to the University Daily Kansas, Flint Hall, The University of Kansas.
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Managing Editor Tracee Hamilton
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Letters to the Editor
Not all KU women aspire to be playmates
To the Editor:
In her March 29 article, "Closet Playmate" Lisa Boltton did more to harm the efforts of women today who wish to elevate their status in society beyond that of playboy Bunny material than Playboy magazine does each fall with its "Back to School" feature.
Her claim that "every woman" at the University of Kansas secretly indulged in the fantasy to be "chosen" (a misuse of the word, if we ever heard one) for the feature imposes her values on those who do not wish to adopt them and is downright false in at least five cases.
Ms. Bolton feels that "fame is brief and thrilling" and that "most people grab it if they
can." She may have been referring to women grabbing at the chance to appear in Playboy magazine, but the underlying tone of the editorial implied that women also secretly participated in the world of Playboy.
Diane Olmsted, Chicago graduate student
Fight for loans
To the Editor:
Strong and responsible support for the continuation of Guaranteed Student Loans is urgently needed as the hour of decision by the Bank has come to a close. Representatives know that the weakening of
higher education would be detrimental to America's national interest.
The administration's budget would give away billions of dollars in price supports for farm products to the owners of factories in the field, thereby fueling the fires of inflation, but not one cent for Guaranteed Student Loans for graduate students.
Denying assistance to graduate students would restrict America's progress in technology and
Robert L. Gulick, Jr.
Dean of admissions
American Graduate School of International Management
University Daily Kansan, April 13, 1962
Page 5
Day care seeks OK
By STEPHEN BLAIR Staff Reporter
Some children of KU students stay in day care homes while their parents are in school.
But many of those homes are operating in violation of city laws because they care for more than a maximum of six children, Janice Fisher, president of the Douglas County Family Day Care Association, said yesterday.
The Lawrence City Commission in its meeting tonight will consider amending local ordinances so that they will be similar to state laws and would allow the homes to keep from 10 to 12 children.
The commission meeting starts at 7 tonight
at City Hall, Sixth and
Massachusetts streets.
"None of us want to be illegal," Fisher said.
"None of us want to be illegal," Fisher said. THE DAY CARE HOMES are in compliance with state law, and until last fall, the association did not know they were in violation of local law, which takes precedence over state law, she said.
The commission must amend both the building code, which regulates the number of buildings of other utility items, and the zoning ordinance, which regulates population density in neighborhoods.
Because day care homes are private family homes, they are safe for numbers of children, p
"The average family has at least five people in it, and our homes are built for that," she said. "They're not going to be in the home 8 to 10 hours."
The children are closely supervised, and part of their time is spent in learning, she said.
"It's a profession," she said. "We function very much like a family. We don't just have a baby, we have a family."
IN ANOTHER MATTER, an attorney for five property owners will ask the commission to reject a proposed development plan for construction of apartments in the Naismith
The plan for the 26-acre area bordered by 24th and 27th streets, Ousdahl Road and the Nais姆 drainage channel allows building at multi-family density.
But Jane Eldridge, attorney for five property owners who live on Ousdaid Road, said construction of apartments would increase traffic on that road.
There is already more traffic on Gusdahl Road that the road is designed to handle, said Eldredge, who is also a Republican state senator from Lawrence.
Allen Moore, the developer for Naismith West, could not be reached for comment.
students who choose not to live in the special towers.
This year, the housing department has been taking advantage of vacancies at the Towers to offer vacation housing during semester break and long vacations and has also housed visitors to the campus, such as the Watkins-Berger and Summerfield scholarships finalists.
Towers
Wilson and Pratt said that 36 apartments rented by the athletic department for scholarship athletes would be in C and D towers next year.
From name 1
the University-owned apartment complex next year.
Although they are a dairy farmer, an airplane plot and a banker, they are alike in at least three ways—each is Republican, each blames Gov. John Carlin for the state's economic problems and each hopes to win Carlin's job in the November gubernatorial election.
But only one will win in the GOP primary election in August, and the front-running candidate appears to be Dave Bye, a banker from Stanley who began his campaign in January
Candidates criticize Carlin
By KEVIN HELLIKER
Wilson said he hoped to improve occupancy at
Staff Reporter
"The state budget rose from $1 billion a year in 1974 to more than $3 billion during Carlin's term," Owen said Friday at the 10th annual University of Kansas Broadcast Seminar.
Owen's campaign promise is to tone down state spending.
"I believe he has concluded that the only an-
swar in Kansas is to raise taxes, said Owen, the Lieutenant governor of Kansas from 1972 to 1978.
LOUIS KLEMP, a candidate from Easton, agreed with Owen, even borrowing one of Owen's terms—"witch hunt"—to describe what he would do to the state budget.
"Government in there to serve the people through services and must垫持 that Carlin must be benefited."
welfare of one business—agriculture. Ibetson, a dairy farmer, said the sate of farmers in Kansas had a "snowballing" effect on all other aspects of business.
When asked why Kansans should elect him as governor, Klempnitz did not owe anything to him. He simply doesn't own you.
Klemp, a pilot with Trans World Airlines, said also that his experience as a Leavenworth county commissioner had opened his eyes to the smaller issues in Kansas, such as bingo.
BUT RON IBETSEON, a candidate from Colby, said the state economy depended on the
"Most legislators have not had in-depth involvement with bingo," Kemp said, "and the legislature has been inefficient."
"Agriculture is the backbone of the state," he said. If the Legislature was sympathetic to farmers, Ibbenson predicted, "a agriculture could tomorrow turn this economy around."
Ibebona criticized those who viewed Kansas issues as divided into city and rural interests, saying the county had not been made up.
Although Owen, Klemp and Ibetsbon are the only announced GOB candidates for governor, there are other candidates.
"None of us can prosper very long without all of us prospering together," he said. "We can do everything."
AMONG THOSE expected to campaign for governor are Kansas House Speaker Wendell Lady R-Overland Park, and Sam Hardage, a law professor at the University of Kaysburg in the 1978 GOP senatorial primary.
Elderhostel offers classes, activities
Youth hostels, which have long offered an opportunity for inexpensive travel, have grown into elder hostels at colleges and universities throughout America.
For the third year, during June 29-26, the UIC provided a fee to offer an adult-hostel program for certain seniors.
Beulah Duncan, coordinator of the program, said yesterday that people 60 or older would live for the week in Gertrude Sellars Pearson Hall and would attend classes during the day.
The classes have no educational requirements and give no college credit but offer a learning experience.
During the week, the people must enroll in one class, but have the option to take all three.
The classes offered are Remote Sensing: An Overview, taught by Edward Martino, courtesy assistant professor of entomology and researcher at KU's Space Technology Center; Intergenerational Communication, taught by Bobby Patton, chairman of the speech and language department, Honorance of Things Past, taught by Timothy Mitchell, assistant professor of art history.
The classes would be scheduled during the day and would leave the evenings free for other activities.
BECAUSE HOSTELS are offered in all 50 states, Duncan said, some people spend several weeks of their summer traveling from one hostel to another.
She said some of the out-of-class activities would be a wine and cheese party, a picnic and square dancing and a performance by the Lawrence Senior Citizens Band.
She said that the scholarships would be awarded to individuals based on need.
"We designated a certain care the first day and will take care of anyone who requests it." she said.
Other Kansas schools that provide elder-hostels are Washburn University, Benedictine College, Pittsburg State University, Kansas State University, Salina College and Bethany College in Lindsborg.
The program accepts a maximum of 40 people, and 16 spaces are already filled.
A Festival/Symposium
Contexts and Perspectives:
Contexts and Perspectives:
Latin American Theatre Today
April 13,17,1982
The University of Kansas
Lawrence, Kansas
--will interview for the positions of PRODUCER
Workshops, Lectures, Performances
K
KANSAS
ARTS
COMMISSION
FOR THEATRE TICKETS Call Murphy Hall Box Office 913-684-3981
This event is made possible in part by grants from The National Endowment for the Humanities, The Kansas Arts Commission, a state agency, and The National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency. FOR INFORMATION go to www.long.org, Division of Music 913-864-3284 FOR THE THEATRE TICKETS Call Murphy Hall Box O
When we think about a man in positive terms, it is generally with regard to his accomplishments or "good deeds." For example, Martin Luther King, FDR, or Sitting Bull. And, if you listen carefully, you can hear men expressing themselves these days with a different, healthy sense of self-esteem . . . Men are feeling good with respect to internal accomplishments . . . where it really counts. Men and women will both benefit from this new definition—personally and interpersonal. This series will explore possible ways women and men can integrate The New Maculcain into their lives.
Intimacy and Trust in Relationships led by Scot Corbett and Pam Manifold, Meyn Coalition members, and Ana Orchid, University Center Center, Meyn, Phi and Scott addresses, as a discussion format, basic issues in intimative relationships.
Led by Tom Dougherty, Mural Cross member (passed members Jim Kornbeil, Annisteri Coach, Coaching Consultant,
TUESDAY APRIL 13th
International Room
7:30 p.m.
All workshops are FREE and will be held in the KANSAS UNION from April 5th to April 15th.
"The New Masculinity: Living Together in Self-Respect"
Sex-role Changes: What's in it for Men and Women?
For further information contact John Macchietti at 843-8267 or Tom Dougherty at 843-3224.
WEDNESDAY APRIL 14th
THURSDAY APRIL 15th
Guit! It isn't Fun Anymore.
Partner C
7:30 p.m.
Led by Todd Damberg and John Machiettie, Men's Coalition members. Tom and John will conclude this series, with a discussion of how gossip communication in multilevel relation-
ness can be建构.
MIDNIGHT SNACKS
Bucky's
MIDNIGHT
SNACKS
10 to close
Two Hamburgers and
French Fries
$1.19
Bocky's
come as you are . . . hungry
2120 WEST NINTH
Special Thanks to the Student Senate which funds the Men's Coalition
STAGED BY ANDREW TSUBAKI AND A COMPANY OF SEVEN DANCERS
PERFORMANCE WILL
INCLUDE MASKS, HEAD
GREAT AND COSTUMES
DR. DKR,
TUSABIK STUDIED
CHIAU DANCING
IN INDIA.
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS THEATRE PRESENTS
THE FIRST UNITED STATES PERFORMANCE OF
8:00
CHHAU INDIAN FOLK DANCE THEATRE
Walnut Room
7:30 p.m.
SATURDAY, APRIL 17, 4:00 SWARTHOUT RECTAL HALL MURPHY HALL
M
TICKETS ON SALE
IN THE MURPHY
HALL BOX OFFICE.
ALL SEATS GENERAL
ADMISSION $3 PUBLIC.
$1.50 KU STUDENTS,
$2 SENIOR CITIZENS.
FOR RESERVATIONS,
CALL 913-864-3982.
THE BOARD OF CLASS OFFICERS
and BUSINESS MANAGER for the 1983 BOCO Variety Show Thursday. April 15
Details and Applications available at the BOCO office in the Student Union. Application Deadline:
Thursday, April 15
Wednesday, April 14.
1970
ELLENA HONDA
LAWRENCE AUTO PLAZA PROUDLY INTRODUCES GORDON WILLIAMS, OUR NEW SERVICE TECHNICIAN
GORDON BRINGS WITH HIM 15 YEARS OF IMPORT EXPERTISE SERVICING HONDA,TOYOTA AND DATSUN
LET GORDON SERVICE YOUR CAR WITH THESE SPECIALS
*AIR CONDITION CHECK AND CHARGE *
INCLUDES INSPECTION OF BELTS, HOSES, LEAK TEST, COMPRESSION TEST
AND ONE CAN OF FRE-ON.
SPECIAL LOW PRICE $12.95
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COUPON
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INCLUDES POINTS, PLUGS, CONDENSER AS REQUIRED, ADJUST TIMING AND CARBURETION
4 CYL. $32.50 6 CYL. $41.50
CHECK ON OUR VALVE ADJUSTMENT SPECIAL
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HONDA
843-0550
OPEN SATURDAY TIL NOON LOCATED AT THE END OF THE AUTO PLAZA
Page 6 University Daily Kansan, April 13, 1982
Spare time
Latin festival marks contrast
Staff Writer
By KATHRYN KASE Staff Writer
This week's "Latin American Theatre Today" festival/symposium promises to offer more than "Contexts and Perspectives," as it is subtitled.
The festival seems destined to teach by contrast, by the contrast of plays and scholarly papers presented in Spanish or English and by works in other languages; theatre by artists from the U.S. and Latin America.
The international conference opens this evening with the performance of two plays at Murphy Hall, one in Spanish and the other in English. By the time the conference ends Saturday, ten plays will have been performed as part of the festival.
THE UNIVERSITY COMMUNITY is invited to attend the conference, which will focus on the counter-theatre movement in Latin America, said Kristen Nigro, co-director of the festival with George Woodyard, associate dean of the graduate school.
"What there is in Latin America is a very strong counter-theatre movement, which has never in the United States, except for a spark of enthusiasm," he said in mind that this is not the standard theatre fare.
"You're going to find this type of theatre in universities in Latin America and in small theatre groups, not in those groups which travel in the mainstream."
Latin American theatre is earmarked, Nigro said, by its experimental form and political
"It has the dynamics of theatre, which goes to the people and is not within the architectural limits of any one place."
ONE SUCH PLAY is is "Miss Margarida's Way," by award-winning Brazilian playwright Robert Athayde, which concerns a dictatorial, tyrannical president who demands and requiring few props, the play is used
metaphorically to comment about politics in Brazil.
In keeping with the festival's unspoken theme of contrast, the play will be presented twice, once in English and once in Spanish, by the two authors. The first is the Spanish and English "Miss Margaridas."
Colombian actress Rosita Alonso will star in the Spanish version at 8 p.m. Wednesday in Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall. U.S. actress Estleine Parsons will play the English Miss Margarida on Friday at 8 p.m. in University Theatre.
Although "Miss Margarida's Way" was written by a Brazilian, there is no Portuguese version of "Miss Margarida". Nigro said, the play has never been performed in Brazil.
"THE BRAZILIAN CENSORS have never allowed the play because they say it is too profane, and, really, the language is quite bad," she said. "The real reason, of course, is that 'Miss Margarida' works on many levels, but they say that it is too dirty."
The conference has also attracted four Latin American theatre groups, two from Latin America and two from the United States.
we wanted to have some from the U.S. doing Spanish-speaking theatre because we think it's important that people know we have groups doing Spanish plays here in the U.S." Nigro
The groups have chosen the plays they wished to perform. All plays by the invited groups will be performed in Spanish, but that should not deter those whose knowledge of Spanish is shaky or non-existent because all play programs will contain plot-summaries.
THE FOLLOWING PLAYS will be offered in Murphy Hall as part of Latin American (Latin) and European (European) festivals.
A dollar sign indicates an admission charge, and all plays have student rates. For further information, please call (800) 254-7961.
- "Historiaes para ser Contadas," by Osvaldo Dragon. Performed by the Elenco Experimental, University of Texas - El Paso, p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall. Performed
ticket information, contact the Murphy Hall box office
TONIGHT
...ne Imperson... by Rododo Usgiati. Performed
in the William H. Reese Theatre 8 p.m.
in the Willis Theater
WEDNESDAY
- "El Vendedor," by Mariela Romero. Performed by La Compania de los Cuatro de Caracas, Venezuela, at 3:30 in Swarthout.
* "La senora Margarita," by Roberto Athayde. Performed by Rosita Alonso of Bogota, Colombia, at 8 p.m. in Swarthout.
THURSDAY
- "Flores de papel," by Egon Wolf. Performed
universidad of Vargasruza in Swarow at 43.98
of Vargasruza in Swarow at 43.98
FRIDAY
- "Auto de Lampiano no Alem," by Jose Gomes Campo. Performed by the Center for the Hispanic Performing Arts of the University of Colorado at Boulder in the Inge Theatre at noon. * "El Cipilho de Dientes," by Jorge Díaz. Performed by the Nuestra Teatro of New York in
- "Por la Razon o la fuerza," by Jaime Miraña. Performed by La Compañía de los Cuzato of Caracas at 2:01 on Swarthout.
* "Pinocchio the King," by Antonio Inglesias. Performed by the University of Kansas Pot-Pourri at 8:00 in the Inge Theatre.$
"Miss Margarida's Way," By Roberto
New York at 10:15 a.m. in University
Tower, New York City.
SATURDAY
Internationally renowned playwright Edward Abell will be the final speaker in this year's Humanities Lecture Series this Thursday.
Albee to discuss theatre
Albee, the author of 14 plays and four adaptations of novels for theater, will discuss "The Playwrights or The Theatre" at 8 p.m. in woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union.
Albee's humanitarian lecture will supplement an international conference on "Latin American Theatre Today," being held at KU beginning today and running through April 17. Albee is expected to participate in some of the conference workshops featuring playwrights, actors, directors and Latin American theatre scholars from the United
States, Central and South America and Europe.
RECENTLY, ALBEE HAS BUILT a reputation as a lecturer and platform personality by speaking about theatre, reading from his works and conducting workshops for college students on creative writing, acting and directing.
He gained international recognition in 1962 with his play, "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" The play, later made into a movie starring Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Nixon, was adapted to several foreign languages. It remains one of the most produced of recent American plays.
'Art in the Park' deadline
Tomorrow is the deadline for artists who wish
to participate in the annual Art in the
Park show on Sunday, May 2.
"We have maybe 50 to 60 applications already." Connie Friesen, registration cochairman for the show, said recently. "I expect some at the last minute."
ARTISTS WHO ENTER the show will be given up to 16 feet of show fences or two tables on which to display their works. They will be charged a $10% commission on all items sold to help the Art Guild, the show's sponsor, further community art activities.
The entry fee is $2 for Art in the Park. Mem-
berships in the Art Guild may also be purchased
Friesen said the show, held in South Park,
grows in popularity each year.
on campus
TODAY
THE NON-TRADITIONAL STUDENT ORGANIZATION will sponsor a Dutch lunch for members at 11 a.m. in Cork II of the Kansas Union.
TOMORROW
Staff International, at 11:45 a.m. at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center, 1201 Oread Ave.
THE UNIVERSITY FORUM will be addressed by Dennison Rusinow, from Universities Field
There is a $ P. M. ENTRY DEADLINE for
there is a $ P. M. ENTRY DEADLINE for
Doubles Tennis;
Tournament, sign up in 2018
THE KU SAILING CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in the Union parlor.
Band Banquet
Free tickets for Marching Band members
April 24, 6:30 p.m., Holidome
members
$10.00—guests
Tickets required for admittance, available in band office until April 20.
KANSAS
RELAYS
CANADA
Jeff Buckingham
57th Annual KANSAS RELAYS
April 14-17,1982
Jim Hershberger Track Memorial Stadium
Friday Events "Preliminaries"
- NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP FORMAT AND SCORING
- TEAM CHAMPIONSHIP COMPETITION
TICKET PRICES:
All Seats: $1.50
Saturday Events "Finals"
ADULTS—$4.00
STUDENTS—$2.00
- TYKE PEACOCK—WORLD'S NO.1 RANKED HIGH JUMPER
CHILDREN UNDER 12 —FREE—BOTH DAYS
ATHLETIC TICKET OFFICE ALLEN FIELD HOUSE 864-3141
JOB OPPORTUNITY 1982-83 ACADEMIC YEAR
Naismith Hall announces that applications for R.A. positions are now available at the Naismith desk between 8:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. Monday through Friday.
The applications are for R.A. positions commencing next Fall, and are due for completion by April 20, 1982.
If you have questions, please call 843-8559.
Applicants must have at least a Sophomore status next fall and a 2.5 G.P.A.
E. O.E.M/W
SNA FILMS
A thriller by John Boorman, director of EXCALIBUR and DELIVERANCE "David Thomson
"A masterpiece."—David Thomson
HE THRIVED ON
KINDS OF
PEOPLE ...
His victims
and his
women!
LEE MARVIN ANGIE DICKINSON POINT BLANK
$1.50
Presents TONIGHT
rWO
7:30 p.m. $1.50
WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM
后見神楽
IWAMI
KAGURA
OF JAPAN
TRADITIONAL MASK FOLK DANCE
Wearing masks and elaborate costumes, Japanese dancers perform the ancient KAGURA (Music and Dance for the Gods) as they reenact the brave deeds of ancient heroes.
The dancers come from Shimane Prefecture, which was the center of many events in ancient times.
TICKETS $2.00
8:00 WEDNESDAY
AT THE DOOR OR
AT MURPHY HALL
BOX OFFICE
AT MURPHY HALL
APRIL 34
WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM
KANSAS UNION
Sponsored by The Japan Foundation; the Consulate-General of Japan, Kansas City, Missouri; International Theatre Studies Center and East Asian Studies Center University of Kansas
GAWWONS SNOWWONS
Proudly Presents
TICKETS
FUNKY ROBOTS
Tuesday is Preview Night at Gammons—no cover charge for the band.
Wednesday Ladies Night - the ladies get two free drinks after 9:00 pm. 25¢ draws 10-11 pm.
Thursday—15$ Draws 75$ Bar Drinks 8:10:30 P.M.
50$ Draws 1.25$ Bar Drinks 8:10:30 to close
Friday and Saturday come alive at eleven! $1.25 drinks, 75e draws 11 p.m. 12 a.m.
2 for 1's & Free hot Hors de oeuvres from 5-7 pm every Friday.
University Daily Kansan, April 13, 1982
Page 7
KU administration: the people behind the titles
Editor's Note: The purpose of the following "Who's Who in the KU Administration," feature is to promote understanding.
Most students know the titles of KU administrative offices. And some even know the names of the people who run them.
But most of us have a less-than-clear understanding of what these offices do, of what they mean to students.
"Who's Who" will give readers a closer look at the decision-makers who affect their daily lives at KU. And it will show how much they really are people behind the long titles
Staff reporter Ann Wylie compiled information on the Lawrence campus, and staff reporter Tom Hutton com- mended information on the Kansas City Kan-, campus.
C. R. WILLIAMS
GENE A. BUDIG Chancellor
Gene A. Budig's responsibilities include representing the academic aff financial needs of the University of Kansas to the Board of Regents, Gov. John Carlin and the Kansas Legislature.
He also seeks financial support from private groups and individuals.
"I am the one who works with alumni and citizens groups to gain support for our institutional requests," he said.
Budig spends a lot of his time traveling around Kansas, giving an average of three speeches a week.
"Most of these events give me a superb opportunity to outline the long-range aspirations and needs of the University," he said.
"But I do much more than just travel the state in search of external support. Much of my time is spent on the campus with faculty and student groups."
Budig teaches one graduate course each semester and lectures to undergraduate students in journalism. This semester, he's teach Organization and Administration of Higher Education.
He also serves on doctoral committees.
ROBERT COBB
Executive Vice Chancellor
JOHN M. CAMPBELL
Robert Cobb internal affairs for the Lawrence campus, oversees the functions of programs and offices and coordinates communications between the chancellor and the three vice chancellors.
He communicates daily with the University directors to coordinate their efforts with his.
University problems, including those that are unresolved elsewhere at the University, usually end up in his office, Cobb said.
"This office is concerned with human problems—human and materiel." Cobb
One materiel problem that Cobb is working on this semester is KU's equipment needs.
Cobb is working with the vice chancellor for academic affairs, the Long-Range Planning Committee and the Committee for the Improvement of Undergraduate Education. Help ensure the quality of education for KU students.
PETER M.
DAVID WAXMAN Executive Vice Chancellor of Med Center
David Waxman has the final word in all matters at the University of Kansas Medical Center, in Kansas City, Kan.
Waxman, who joined the staff of the Med Center in 1961, oversees the operations of the hospital and its more than 6,000 employees. He also directs the College of Health Sciences, which has an enrollment of more than 2,200.
Waxman was appointed to his present position in December 1977 by then-Chancellor Archie Dykes. Waxman had served as the chair of the commission months before his appointment.
Since Waxman's appointment, the Med Center has undergone several expansion and renovation projects.
Two of these projects, the construction of a new hospital and the Archie Dykes Library, have drastically altered the appearance of the Med Center.
These expansions were not forecast, Waxman said, even as recently as 1961.
"At that time," Waxman said, "we had just a medical school." Now, "it's a medical school, a nursing school, a school of allied health, graduate school, research院应答. There would be no way you could have foretold the growth here."
PETER SMITH
RICHARD VON ENDE
He also is in charge of special assignments for the chancellor, such as getting corporate contracts developed and signed for the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan., and heading search committees.
Richard von Ende is the director of University Relations offices on the Lawrence, Kansas City, Kan., and Wichita campuses. He is in charge of KU's relations with the state government.
"But most of this semester has been supposed so far to legislative matters," he said.
Von Ende has been working with the Legislature this semester on issues such as the University's operating policies and the law enforcement training center.
D. J. BURGESS
He also prepares reports to help the
Kathleen of Business Attuits
Kathleen also works with the chancellor on校外教育和 developing policies for all fiscal-related matters on all the KU campuses.
KEITH NITCHER
INVEST AN EVENTING. CONSIDERING WAYS TO PREPARE FOR THAT IMPORTANT STEP INTO THE IPO WORLD
"I try to be a staff person to the chancellor to make sure that he has the financial information that he needs and to provide unparalleledurities that develop." Nieber said.
chancellor explain to the Board of Regents and the Kansas Legislature the financial status of the University.
He also oversees the preparation of budgets and makes sure that department budgets don't exceed the totals required. He also supervises preparation of audits.
RICHARD MANN
PETER L. SCHMIDT
With the office of information systems, Mann works with the Administrative Computer Center on projects such as developing a computerized KU catalog at Watson Library.
Director of Institute Research, Information Systems and Personnel
This semester, that office is distributing a senior survey to help the office of academic affairs and the office of finance to improve their programs and services.
A. S. SMITH
Richard Mann is involved with the office of institutional research and planning in analyzing student, financial and budget request information.
MARKETING YOURSELF
In personnel, Mann is trying to plan for the effect of legislation on the Merit Pay Plan.
Rodger Oroke attempts to provide the best environment for University faculty in Florida.
RODGER ORKOLE of Support Services and Facilities Operation
Director
He is responsible for campus police, security and parking at the Lawrence and Kansas City, Kan., campuses and installations on those and the Wichita campuses.
However, his office rarely gets to finish a project. Oroke said.
"We're here. We're a support unit,"
he said. "By and large, there's not a complete product. Finally, we get another project."
This semester, his office is helping Printing Services change from "antiquated type settings" to new printing operations.
Another of Oroke's concerns is energy conservation. Since 1974, University fuel bills have "shot off like a rocket," he said.
PETER B.
ALLEN WIECHERT Director of Facilities Planning
DEANELL TACHA
Regionalist Room, Kansas Union
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION PLEASE CONTACT THE WOMEN'S CENTER. 864-7552
The cycle follows the legislative calendar, rather than the University calendar, he said.
In addition, the office of academic affairs is working on a paper for the Kansas Board of Regents about retirement alternatives. Tacha said she hoped to develop a policy for the KU to make recommendations to the Regents.
"In the end, it does save the state of Alabama," she said. "It’s important to bring young scholars in."
Alen Wiechert is in charge of all capital improvements plans and projects at the University.
Counselor for Academic Affairs
Danell Tacha oversees all academic institutions and the budgets for all the schools in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
This year, Wiechert's office has worked on large projects—such as the renovation of Watson Library, Lindley Hall and Marvin Hall—and minor projects, such as putting smoke detectors and emergency lights in the swimming pool and repairing the swimming pool in Robinson Kymnasium.
PETER T. MILLER
the one mission of student affairs' primary responsibility is to provide services and programs that supplement a student student life in the University."
DAVID AMBLER
She also is working on the Undergraduate Education Committee report and with the Committee for Academic Promotions and Tenure on the final stages of the promotion and tenure process this semester.
Finances for each project are up to the Legislature. Wiechert must use the bidding process—obtaining the lowest cost of each project after it has been financed.
Tacha directs individual departments' internal studies, which help them develop new programs.
"But our environment is not a classroom, it's the campus," David Ambler said.
Then he tries to schedule projects between semesters and during breaks, so they will cause as little disruption on campus as possible.
Wednesday, April 14,1982 3:00-5:00 P.M.
"Planning at the University is really based on a cyclical process," he said.
Vice Chancellor for Student Affairs Most administrative offices stress classroom education
In student affairs, Ambler provides leadership for student programs, develops policies and procedures and works with budgeting for student services.
Some projects cannot be scheduled conveniently, however.
A WORKSHOP DESIGNED TO IMPROVE AND ENHANCE INTERVIEWING SKILLS AND RESUME WRITING TECHNIQUES
A. L. B.
"This time of year, the most important project is the fiscal year 1983 allocations." Tacha said.
"But I consider the most important part is helping the staff to develop the programs for this area," he said.
He's working now on pre-enrollment and the Student Assistance Center, which tries to help with academic problems that hinder academic life.
As dean of the graduate school, Horowitz develops university policies for graduate schools at KU and UCLA. He is also a student travel and graduate fellowships.
Frances Horowitz oversees the graduate school, KU research administration, all research centers and institutes, and University research development.
FRANCESCHOROWITZ Vice Chancellor for Research and Graduate Studies
"That's one of those administrative programs that's essential to the life of the student," he said.
Another of his responsibilities is working with campus student organizations on special projects, such as Higher Education Week.
FRANCES HOROWTZ
There are 27 research centers and institutes on campus, and Horowitz has administrative responsibility for them as well. There is one animal as the care unit for laboratory animals.
Horowitz also is in charge of developing KU research.
For this, she maintains contacts in Washington, D.C., and publicizes the availability of research funds and current KU research.
Her research administration responsibilities include managing research from researchers and giving them to the office of research support
He encourages each of his staff members to get involved with students by advising student organizations or teaching
He works directly with the President's Round Table, a group of student groups' presidents and leaders, meeting with them every two weeks for
"That's primarily my advisory group of the different student leaders on the campus," he said.
(1)
GIL DYCK
Dean of Educational Services
He took on the additional responsibilities for the Counseling Center and the Placement Center when his job was completed to dean of Educational Services.
His responsibilities in admissions include processing applications, transferring credits from other colleges universities and student recruitment.
I. F. A. SABER
As dean of admissions and records, Gil Dyck had the responsibility for admissions, records and financial aid at the university.
"We make a great effort to ensure that prospective students get the correct information about our program," he said.
With the office of records, Dyck provides diplomas and certificates, prepares the timetable and maintains student records.
In financial aid, Dyck manages grants, an undergraduate scholarship program and a financial resource package.
Because he is new to the Counseling Center and Placement Center, his job responsibilities have not yet been determined in these centers.
Hogan also is an associate professor of electrical engineering and spends about half of his time doing engineering research.
M. R. B.
He also serves in Cobb's absence and works on repair and improvement.
WILL.IAM HOGAN
Associate Executive Vice Chancellor
"This is an abstract for a research project," be said, pointing to a pile of documents.
"This is a global office," Hogan said. "That's why it's hard to define what I do."
William Hogan works with Robert P. Cobb, executive vice chancellor, on University budgets, space, finances and computing.
"It's on top of a request for equipment."
JEANNETTE JOHNSON Assistant to the Executive Vice Chancellor
JANE LUNGE
After six years at KU, Jeannette Johnson can direct a person with a problem to the place in the University that is most likely to help.
One of her latest projects has been analyzing a sexual harassment policy.
She reviews suggested policies to see 'he relates to' other University policies; he
"In the end, he is the person who is responsible." she said.
I 'view myself to a large extent as art information clearing house', she said.
Johnson also assists the executive vice chancellor by drafting policy statements, memoranda and possible responses to requests.
She helps one or two people daily "cut through the maze" at the University.
Kearns is an ex-officio member of the:
Parking and Traffic Board, which sets:
goals for traffic safety.
Don Kearns works with the Board of Parking and Traffic Appeals and the Parking and Traffic Board to make sure the faculty, staff and students on the Lawrence and Kansas City, Kan. campuses get the parking they need.
DON KEARNS Director of Parking Services
"I'm looking at the total picture," he said.
He makes sure the Board considers existing policies when developing new rules.
DON KEARNS
Kearns oversees applications for;
staff and student parking permits each;
Tie In With Us Recreation Services
Tennis Doubles Doubles Tournaments
ENTRY FEE: One can of unopened tennis balls submitted with completed entry form
ENTRY DEADLINE:
Wed., April 14, 5 p.m.,
In 208 Robinson
MORE INFORMATION: Visit the Recreation Services office, 208 Robinson or call 864-3546
PLAY BEGINS: Sun., April 10
9R
AN INVITATION TO ALL LA & S UNDERGRADUATE STUDENTS
You are cordially invited to make an appointment for an EARLY-ADVISING session with your academic adviser before the semester ends. You may contact either your adviser or your adviser's departmental office to schedule an appointment.
EARLY-ADVISEMENT this semester will enable you to skip some of the enrollment maze next fall.
For details, contact Nunemaker Center. 864-4223 or the College Office, 864-366)
Page 8
University Daily Kansan, April 13, 1982
Bicycles Car Stereo Equipment
Don't Take Everything Home
Store It For The Summer
Fort Knox Mini Warehouse
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Birkenstock
Feet in the sand make footprints.
Feet in Birkenstock footwear do the very same thing.
The Birkenstock footbed is heat and pressure sensitive, to mold to your foot. and become your footprint.
So walking in Birkenstock is a lot like walking barefoot in the sand, with one very convenient difference.
You can walk in Birkenstock all year long.
Birkenstock
Let your feet make a place for themselves.
1339 Mass
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842-3131
Place a Kansan want ad
Call 864-4358
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COMING TO KANSAS UNIVERSITY Broadway's Biggest Hit!
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Saturday, April 24 8 PM
Hoch Auditorium
Students Save $3 with ID
PURCHASE TICKETS AT
Regular Price: $12 & $10 Students: $9 & $7.
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
BOX OFFICE OR
CALL 864-3477
Presented by Theater League
& Student Union Activities
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"Seniors, don't leave
without it!"— Annette Fischer
Spirit Square
Annette
5th Annual Senior Open House and Party
Thursday, April 15
7:30-11:00 p.m.
403 Kansas Union
- and a whole lot more
- Free Soft Drinks
- Free Popcorn
- Football Ticket Giveaways
Come by the Kansas Alumni Association Office, 403 Kansas Union and register for these great prizes and more. April 12-15 from 8:00-12:00 and 1:00-5:00 daily.
- Jayhawk Apparel
Gifts and prizes contributed by KU Endowment Association, Kansas Union Booksstore and KUAC
And don't forget to purchase your discount Senior alumni membership!
- Free Beer
403 Union · Lawrence, Kansas · 66045
KU ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
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ad
The Kansan's ad number is 864-4358.
Astille Parsons on "Miss Murgarida's Way"
Written + Directed by
Sarah to a stage
American Theatre today in cooperation with
The University of Kansas Theatre present
Estille Parsons in
"Miss Mararida's Way"
Written & Directed by
Robbie Attyke
8:00 pm, Friday April 16, 1982
University Theatre, Murphy Hall, University of Kansas
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office
All seats reserved. Public $9, $8-$7. Student
and senior citizen discounts available.
For reservations, call 013-864-3982.
This program is partially funded by
the Kansas Arts Commission
For mature audiences.
Some material may not be suitable for children.
---
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Western Auto
1
The Auto Supply Company
University Daily Kansan, April 13, 1982
Page 9
The University Daily
KANSAN WANT ADS
Call 864-4358
CLASSIFIED RATES
ERRORS
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be displayed in person or simply by calling the Kansan business office at 844-358.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
The Kanisan will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flat Hall 864-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
WORKED ABOUT April 157 Call Don't Tax Service for fast, accurate tax return preparation. Call 841-6838. 60-day extensions of time to file are available. 4-15
The board of class officers will be inter-
viewed at 6 p.m. on Thursday, April 16th for the
1983 BOCC Variety Show, which will take place
at the BOCC Office in the Student Union Dodgeton for application
and orientation.
Paid Staff Positions
Business Manager, Editor
The Kansan is now accepting applications for the Summer and Fall Semester Business Manager and Edinburgh and Edinburgh and require some newspaper experience. Application forms are available in the Student Senate Office, 105 B. Flint Hall; and the Student Organization and Activities, 220 Strong Hall; and in Room 200 Flint Hall. Completed applications are due in 200 Flint Hall by 5:00 p.m., Monday, April
The University Daily Kansan is anEqual OpportunityAffirmationandnationalations are sought from all qualified people regardless of race,religion, color, sex, disability,national origin,age, or ancestry.
PLAN TO ATTEND DISABILITY AWARENESS WEEK EVENTS. SEE THE ON CAMPUS COLUMN FOR TODAYS EVENTS.
FOR RENT
Must see to believe. Furnished rooms with utilities paid near university & downhill.
No pets. Phone 841-5500. **u**
Jayhawker Towers Apartments
HANOVER PLACE. Completely furnished,
studios, and 2 & 2 baths. Computer between
two bedrooms. Refundable KU. DON'T DELAY. Reserve your apt.
Address: 841-112-120 or 848-485-65
Now taking applications for fall and summer leases. KU students only.
- utilities paid
- 2 Bedroom apartments on
- swimming pool
- air conditioned
- on bus line
- enclosing
- furnished or unfurnished
- laundry facilities
603 W.15th
843-4993
PRINCETON PLACE PATIO APEARMENTS,
for comfortites, featured wood burning fireplace,
for comfortites, featured wood burning fireplace,
weather deck, hookups, fully-completed
3-6-9-10-20 day kit at 2000 Princeton Blvd., or
3-6-9-10-20 day kit at 2000 Princeton Blvd., or
For rent to mature male student. Quiet, comfortable efficiency apartment. Private kitchen. Close to the Union. Reasonable price. 842-4185. **if**
Thinking of Next Year?
Naismith Hall is the Place to live
- Private Sleeping-Study areas
Check Us Out This Spring or Summer
We Think You Will Like Us!
Applications are now available
1800 Naismith Drive
Available now. Two bedroom spacious apt.
unfurnished, carpeted and drape; all electric.
Bathroom includes pool, sauna, compact,
and on bus line $150 per month.
No pets. MEDROURING II & Creation.
No parking.
Established STUDENT COOPERATIVE close to campus and downtown. Own bedroom/six. Sleep eight mornings each. Attend school. SUNFLOWER HOUSE. 842-9421. **tf**
Sublase D 82M D bath. Fully carpeted and Furnished, also central air, dwelr, and dwelf. Great location at 919 Indiana, Apt. I, 749-3310 or 841-3255. 4-14
Sleeping rooms 1-3 bedroom Apts. Duplexes and an 8-bedroom house close to campus. No pets. Call 824-8971. Leave for summer in full year. Call on afternoons or 4-14
TRAMRIDGE. Leasing for fish-Funds, studios,
studio rooms, laundry facilities. All have harvest gold applianc
Law in the CHRISTIAN CAMPSUS HOUSE
this summer & fall. Become a part of a
growing campus ministry. Call Alan Ren-
ak, campus minister 842-692-1.
tf
SOLIHERN PARKWAY TOWNHOUSES.
26 & Kincoln. If your lived of apartments
in the neighborhood, feature a 3-br. 115s, all appliances,
anterior garage, swimming pool, and in the
summer and in the winter. Call Craig Levin
at 491-1077 about our modelled townhouses!
for more information.
Summer and fall rentals, houses and apartments. Near campus, no pets. Lynch Real Estate 843-1601 or 841-3222. 4-14
We have a good place to live and study. We have 12-hour on-campus and 12-month lease and August minimum stay. We offer a variety of adults and we extend the courtesy of our student housing. 841-577-7077 APPLICATE. APPLIANCE PLACE. 841-577-7077
MED CENTER BOUND? New refurbished
DR Duplexes available now. Carpet, A/C/
Appliances, parking. Call. (913)-381-2878-
4-50
TRY COOPERATIVE LIVING. Sunflower House, 842-9421. tf
Subcase large 2 BR, apartment near stadium, water, gas paid, central air $320,
841-8235
4-15
Sublease furnished studio apartment with pool, tennis courts for summer. $230 + electricity. $200 deposit. 749-4526. 4-16
For Best 2 br. apt, repair to shopping c/o heat. Carpet & drapes, complete kitchen, garages available. Call 841-6868 for an appointment.
Subjects at last years prices 2 br apt. comp.
Call for appointment today 846-1380-4195
Call for appointment today 846-1380-4195
Summer sublease. Nice 3 bedroom town-house. On KU bus route. A.C. dishwashers, 275 per month + utilities. Call 864-1310 or 864-1262.
3 bernie, 2 bath, furnished apt. at Malts OLD
Rockwood, available for rent. 252 per month. Available from June. 84-
100.
2 bdr. (16 room), furnished, a/c, nice old
room, avb. May $299 843-750-1888 4-13
Studio Apt. furnished, quiet, clean, A/C.
Reference. Available May 15 or June 1
Call 843-8000. tf
Sublime Mode mdewbrook studio apt 614 For
furniture panel from pawn May-1-2013 Call 649-8251
for details.
SUMMER SCHOOL SUBLASE. Dates negotiable. Furnished 3 + bedroom room in porch, all appliances. $500 per month. post and utilities. 841-5129 after 4 p. 4-13
Parnassus one bedroom apartment for sublease
Central air condition, heat. Available May 15, 2014.
29th Floor.
New orchard duplex 2 br -Large living
space $149,000 35-49 $42,111
ample June 1 814-869
Suburban Meadowbrook Townhouse New
York $289,000, bills $400,000,
$440,000 bills $440,000 bills
$150,000 bills $150,000 bills
Small 2 br, apt; very close to campus & downtown. Newly remodeled $21/room lease require $10. Jan 1st EAT 18hrs. Newly remodeled avail. $140/room. Call 811-6441. M-4-14
Rooms available for summer $109-$148 per room,
and quiet atmosphere. Call Darryl 843
212-7678.
$ 128m., $ 115m., Townhouse, All Appliances,
Utilities, Close to Shopping. KU: 943-898-3600.
Space available in the Koinoma Community for fall semester. Information and applications are available at the Eucalyptus University Center, 1024 Orchard Avenue 843-4933. 4-14
SUBLEASE IN STYLE for SUMMER. NEW-
age furniture, ready to be used (easily made into second bedroom); study area; laundry and storage in same room; rug; floor lamp; or Peggy at 842-6218. Sundance apts or Legget
SUMMER SUBLAGE May rent free, walk to campus or downtown, June & July rent negotiable, 2 bedroom, utilities reasonable in summer, Call 848-7176, comfortable for 4-30 months
Wanted outgoing Christians and cone-
lusion students to share 5 bedroom house at
& Kentucky nor fall & sprint 684 &
Kentucky nor fall includes:
Call Darryl 81-7692
Responsible female to shore 3 hamburg; house
responsible male to shore 2 hamburg; June
June to May 3 or Bits summer outing
with your boyfriend.
SUBLEASE—2 bedrooms, 2 bath, fully carpeted, air conditioning apt. Available June (regustable) with option for new home. Price $151 per month. Call 709-5136 at 5:00 p.m.
Furnished Studio Close to campus on the bus route. 842-4455. 4-15
WANTED FOR SUMMER and/or fail
semester: two roommates to live in a nice
four-bedroom duplex.
Please call 850-7423 or plug
phone number plus 850-7423. Available May 15.
Call Mike at 79-695-03.
Sulisher-- May 15-Aug. 15. Spacieles 2 bedroom -
apartments. Fully furnished, pliances, TV, t.v. - Near Campus. Master couple耐
referrals. Required. 280 units + 4-21
Summer sublease. Three bedroom, two
bathroom. Call 843-292-3067. TiremortgageApartment.
Call 843-292-3067. TiremortgageApartment.
Summer rubble- One female to share a b bed.
Bathroom, it both central / A/C,
furnished, great location. Fall option. Sharon.
864-401. 9:00 - M-F. 4-19
SUMMER SUBLEASE—1 br, apt. 3,
blocks from campus. Furnished and A.C.
Only $199. 843-7237, or call collect (316)
935-6310.
SUBLASE ME. I am a two bed-room apt in the Malls Old Orchid Eng. Park, located on street corner and surrounded by groves and pizza. I have a dishwasher, air condition, a sea and pool spa, an elevator and a large YLE room. If you would like to live within my rent. You would like to live within my private quiet, call 811-9533 or 848-9526. **4-23**
1 Female—for June 1st-Aug. 1st, $137.50,
pet okay, garage, great duplex, 2 bedroom.
Born or Barla B. 841-7901. 4-16
FOR SALE
Summer sublease May 15-August 15, May rent free. Furnished studio, tennis courts,
pool. 749-2083 4-19
Fun 2 bdrm. apt, seks 2-3 summer sub-
leakers. A/C, dishwasher, new carpeting.
$285/mo. 821-741-74
4-19
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale!
Mike makes selections to use them-1) As study guide,
2) For preparation for the test, 3) For preparing
for Western Civilization
available now at town, Crest,
New York.
Alternator, starter and generator specifying
AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, 433-0695, www.automotives
electrical.com
Beautiful bald evergreens reasonably prized.
Himmel's Rand Tree Farm-Eudora-Phone
542-3139 or 542-3349
4-20
Sterne-Radiation-Video Recorder. Nau-
mble system. Fiat Chrysler automobiles
present in the K.C. area. Get your beetle
called in the K.C. area. Get your beetle
called in the K.C. area. Get your beetle
called in the K.C. area. Get your beetle
called in the K.C. area. Get your beetle
called in the K.C. area. Get your beetle
called in the K.C. area. Get your beetle
called in the K.C. area. Get your beetle
called in the K.C. area. Get your beetle
Formula Six Speakers $600.00 value, call
400.00 or best offer. Pioneer cassette deck
$530.00 value $300.00 or best offer. Call
842-9962
4-13
Pollen-fresh frozen-rich in vitamins, minerals, proteins. 842-5074 after six. 4-13
TENNIS RACKETS- Good selection new/used. Will buy yours if in good condition. 842-6713 after 6:00 p.m. tf 842-6713 from fresh-rich in vitamins. min
BOKONON IMPORTS Large selection Hawaiian shirts. The original source. 12 E. 8th. 841-5000 4-20
72 Toyota Corolla, new tires, new battery,
new transmission. Stereo. A/C. excellent
body, call 841-0477.
4-13
1975 CL 360. Firing, elec. start, rack, helmet.
Ex. cond. 841-8058.
4-15
Hon Double Pedestal Steel Desk. 30 x 60; O'Sullivan shelf cabinet; 6 drawer drum; butcher block dining table; large stand; classical guitar. Call 842-8258 after 5. 4-13
1981 Yamaha XT500, Low mileage, excellent condition, $1,800. 749-1501 or 841-8876. Ask for Don. 4-13
1976 Honda 400, cover, helmet, helmet,
parking permit, etc. $850-84-13
1976 Honda 400, cover, helmet, helmet,
parking permit, etc. $850-84-13
instrument, or instrument, vega, vagus,
inspection,
bottle offer,
bottle 181-1888 or 421-4182
4-14
condition, $1,800, 749-1501 or 841-8876,
for Don
4-13
1079 MAZDA RX7-GS PURRFECT. 843-825 or
842-6335. 4-30
Mattress, box spring sofa-bed and 12-speed bike. Call 841-7723. 4-15
ALPINE_3024 w/papers 7 bd eq. 18w x 2
49657936
$1000 841-6500 4-12
Hammond B-3 Organ Hammond Amp, ft.
1500 798-5400
JVC A-85 Integrated Ampl. Fisher Speakers
FS-220 841-6246 4-15
1967 Blue Merc. Cougar, 289 el., auto. A/C,
AM FM cassette, runs good! Call Jack-
428-2501
4-23
colent condition. 864-1092
4-23
500 200 400 A1F
1979 Veppa Bravo Moped, 2200 miles. Ex-
Washer and dryer, excellent condition, $150
call. Each. 843-219-6
1982 Suzuki GS450T Black, beautiful,
burgage rack, backpack, crash brake, must sell,
married - 842-6864 at 4:00 p.m.
p. 13
Stereo, very loud, 200 watt two-inch inch speakers hooked up to a two-inch tenon Onkyo amp only $450 #864-862 8-10 included. Dual 225 twirls required. 4-16
Motorcycle—Honda 360 CB. Excellent condition. New engine only 3,500 miles. 842-7314 4-15
Woman's wedding and engagement bands
appraised at $850, will sell for $600. Call
Linda events. 864-2207. 4-10
Ship- Government Surplus Property, Electricity
sellers, 15 to choose in IBM, Royal, Olivetti, 1st come lt serve. 841-4144. 4-19
SUPPLY JEES, CARS, TRUCKS. Car-inv value $243, $243 for $100. For information on purchasing similar bargains, call 653-988-6575. Ext. 3083. Call Refundable. 4-13
Found pair of prescription, brown rimmed
glasses, outside of Green Hall. If they're
please叫 call 842-8639. 4-14
We are looking for 25 hardworking students for a summer work opportunity. If you are independent and want to earn $275.00 per week call 749-5227.
4-13
Found on campus, 4/1, young, male dog
bite & white, short hair, collar. 843-7602
after 5:39 p.m. 4-13
FOUND
HELP WANTED
Found Ladies watch in X-lot Monday night.
Call 864-1770 to identify. Ask for Ike 4-13
Summer Jobs National Park Co. k-21, Parks
500 Openings. Complete Information $5.00.
Park Report, Mission Mn. Co., 61st 2nd Ave.
W.N. Kallpie, MT 39901.
First Christian Church (Diplines of Christ) of Lawrence, Kansas is seeking applications for a junior co-ordinator. The position would be approximately 15% less pay than the previous year as salary beginning in the summer. Renames, including a senior teacher of recommendation, should be mailed to Lawrence, KS, 60544, at 100 Kentucky, Lawrence, KS 60544, by April 23, 1982. Inquiries will be addressed to 4-16
We offer professional discounts on all paint jobs. We can paint the house yourself or paint houses for a summer job. We will provide equipment and techniques and carry materials and supplies. We also promise a priority, please come in person to try our services.
Part-time help wanted, grill and fountain,
noons and night. Apply at Vista Restaurant.
1527 W. 6th. 4-13
Position Available Gift Shop Manager, Museum of Natural History Requires knowledge of bookkeeping; purchasing; bookkeeping skills ability to deal with the public and to handle customer engagement and advertising experience preferred. Need to be enrolled in at least 10 positions within the museum during a 30-hr. wk. For interview appointment call Mary Ann Munch, 864-453-1988 or Emily Munch, 864-453-1988. Ensure Opportunity Affirmative Action Employer
Load Guitarist needed for established professional contemporary rock group. Serious players only, 841-9797. 4-22
New Wave/Progressive danger band sounding energetic, enthusiastic, drummers;
Siren? Call 842-7966, after 2/842-8953 4-19
Are you commuting to from Kansas City?
I need a car. I need a drop off of UDK's at the KU Med Center. For more information, go to www.ku.med.edu/institute-of-Continuing-Biology, KU-Med, and Gladite, KS, 65131.
***
Mine's glasses, dark plastic frames, right hinge broken & glued. Friday 3/26 between Robinson & Watson. Please call Mark. 749-3221.
Lost large blue loose leaf notebook. Has all class notes. Please call 843-0673 or 843-8588 and ask for Dean. 4-11
LOST
Instant passport, visa, ID, & resume photographs. Custom made portraits b/w, color.
Swilds Studio. 749-1611. *tt*
Skillet's liquor store serving U-Daly since 1949. Come in and compare. Willard Skillet Ridalty. 1906 Mass. 843-8186. **tf**
Say it on a sweatshirt with custom silk-screen printing 1 to 1000 shirt art by Swells 749-161.
ATTENTION—ALL ENGINEERING STUDENTS: There are no Engineers.
ATTENTION-ALL
there will be an Engineering Ethics Workshop held on Sat. 10th January at Learned Hall. Advance registration is requested before April 16th in 4010 Learning A. Continental will be provided for all registrants.
Sponsored by KU Student Chapter of the National Society of Professional Engineers (KUNSPE)
For your party clothes, formal or costume,
check out the Inflation Fighter 8. E. Th.
10-5-30 M-F 10-5-30 Sat. Open till 8
On Thursday.
MARY KAY COSMETICS-Full-time beauty consultant. KA42-6641. tf
KANSAS RELAYS
APRIL 14-17
Friday—Students $1.50
Tickets available at:
SUA office—Kansas Unior
Allan Field House
Athletic Ticket Office
COMPRESIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES
free pregnancy testing; early and advanced out patient abortion; gynecology; contra-
nancy; & Bott. Overland Park, PA.
(912) 623-1400
(912) 623-1400
Exciting jobs at Lake Tahoe. Send $5.00 to
Tahoe Jobs, P.O. Box 7244, Kansas City, MO
64113. JOB 4-22
Startech-Televisions-Video Recorders. Name brands only. Factory-made cartons. Lowest prices in the K.C. area. Your best choice is to call Total Sound Discount 318-340-6900 4-30
PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH-
RIGHT, 843-4821.
If
Green's Spring Keg Prices
Budweiser 16 gal $39
Busch 16 gal $38
8 gal $24.50
Coors 16 gal $38
Old Milwaukee 16 gal $29.95
Michelob 16 gal $44.50
Jalons $89.25
(prices include complete CO
808 W. 23rd 841-4420
Remember. O most gracious Virgin Mary,
that in known the name of your own
and to thy bequeath, that you implored,
implered the intercession was left unassid.
O Virgin Mary. To thee. I come, before the
heath, as I am now; and I implore
O Virgin Mary. To thee. I come, before the
heath, as I am now; and I implore
Would she despair, dope not my petition but
in thy mercy, hear and answer me. Amen.
Rhythm Guitarist/Vocalist—looking for Lead, Bass, and Drum> For 3 no frills Rock & Roll. Call Chris after 3:00 p.m. (864-4925).
Remember... , . mother loves you, show her how you feel this Mother's Day. Swell's Studio for portraits of fine quality, satisfaction guaranteed. 749-6013. 4-30
DESIGN-A-SHIRT CONTEST
1st Prize
$100
Entry Deadline April 23rd
Enter now at:
kansas
union bookstore
Wanted single female who enjoys excellent health and fitness. Born in Somerset but not hunt-up on age difference. Sent from Boston to work in physical therapy and wanting to be interested in physical therapy and wanting to answer her to the above requirements then maybe to the above requirements then maybe to get them arranged with Write Larry Freeman, 2517 Morningide Dr. Lauren B. Freeman, 2517 Morningide Dr. Lauren B. Freeman
FINANCIAL AID! We guarantee to find scholarships and grants which you are required to pay $1 for scholarships. FINANCIAL AID FINDER, Box 435, Fairfield, IA 23256. AISD 8-133
Wanting to talk with someone? Gay & Lebian Peer counselors available through headquarters (814-2345) or information center (864-3596) just call. 4-30
Established hand looking for male/female lead singers and lead guitar players. Drums, guitar and Keyboards. Immature level. 843-7568. If not, leave name & phone.
*Requirements for the major
UNDERGRADUATE
PSYCHOLOGY
MEETING
Spring has spring. Fall is fall! Summer has comosus. Winter has winter! And alterations call Chrys. 441-1902
--dents interested in psychology are urged to attend.
- Jobs with a B.A.
Main Union Satellite
All psychology majors and students interested in psychology are
3140 Wescoe 4:00 p.m.
*Other topics of interest
Wednesday, April 14th
--dents interested in psychology are urged to attend.
*POWERQUEST*1 *POWERQUEST*2 *A play-by-mail game of naituring civilization Morningstar Productions Box 154 Lecompton, KS 60500*
4-15
Vegetarian Lunch, 11:30-1:30, Mon.-Fri.
749-1517, 4-20
Personal problems? Concerns? Confidential Professional Counseling. Specializing in life changing change. Free initial consultation. 841-144. 4-26
Are you H.O.T? (Hooked on Television)
Forming a Call Kathy forathy
804-1822-365
4-15
Female Roommate wanted for summer (at least). Mice 3 bedroom dapher $100 no. + utilities - Call 843-634-612
4-12
Spring formal. Barb's Second Hand Room.
515 Indiana. Open 10am. p. 842-4746. Rows:
3
Jill: Your faux Rick is not an innocent as he appears. For information about his interestingly sordid past, meet at Louisa's on Wednesday at 8. Mara. Joan and Mei. 4-14
Wanted single females who enjoy a good life, an open minded and meaningful relationship. If you can answer the following questions, we should get to know each other better: How do you meet people in social interviews conducted if YOU LOOKING FOR A WOMAN?
The ETC. SHOP 10 to W. 9th has a new shipment of miniskirts, wrap skirts, and Laura Petry pants. For guys, we also have dinner jackets and tuxes. 4-14
SPECTRUM OPTICAL. Bring in your Dr's prescription or we can duplicate prescriptions, including a just-in-time and lower frame frames. Complete repair service. Open 10-44. M-F 6-25. (800) 737-9800.
SERVICES OFFERED
TUTORING MATH, STATISTICS, PHYSICS.
COMPUTER SCIENCE. Call 841-699-096
(just) IS in physics, M.A. in mathematics)
or call 841-699-041 (akk for Robert).
tft
Schneider Wine & Keg Shop—The finest selection of wines in lawrence—largest supplier of in wine kegs. 1610 W. 23rd. 843-3212.
WRITING A RESUME? What to say? How to say it? Stop by The House of Uber and resume the house of Uber. $88 Munchies, 8-12; 9-3, Sat. 0Noon-Sun. 3
Have a little BUNNY for Easter or when
you need to call Della Rescue 4-14
782-345-0089
Drafting (chart's, maps, etc.) 6 years experience, competitively priced. Also script lettering for certificates. 841-7944. 4-21
31/
now at
Safety First
3 1/2¢ self service copies
ENCORE COPY
CORPS
25th and Iowa 842-2001
Professional Stringing Tennis and Racquet-
ball. Best Prices in town. Call 842-5521 or
842-6528. 4-30
WOMEN'S GROUPS STARTING THE WEEK
1. Problem Solving Group 2. Facilitator's
Training Group 3. Wellness Workshops, Call
4. Training Group 5. Judy Woolley 257
for information 4-16
257 for information 4-16
EDITING, proofreading. Professional copy editor. Prompt service. Pick up. delivery available. 232-3890 (Topeka) daytime. 4-14
GRADUATE STUDENTS THEISIS COPPIES
quality awards based on total volume of product sales, and quality certifications in the shop that can offer variable reduction. training in customer service. Encore Copy Corp. 280-756-3191. Encore Copy Corp. 280-756-3191.
Pit your best foot forward with a professionally printed resume from Encore. We can write it, type it, and print it for you. Call Encore 842-3001, Stlw & Itha. 4-30
RESUMES - Professional; students' resumes a. sociality, 841-2554. 4-30
LEARN TENNIS from experienced instructor in small groups with other K.U. students or private classes 842-6713 after 6:00 p.m.
MOPED RIDERS' It's time to get your bike tuned up for the season. Experienced cycle mechanic will do tune-ups or maintain reasonable rates. Call Jerry #8451, 4-238.
Need clothes? Swat what! Everything for
sweeting and alterations Call Gail 4-15
4-15
TYPING
It's a Fact. Fast, Affordable, Clean, Typing
843-5820. U
Experienced tylem. Touch papyrus, beeswax,
and worm shells. Use spool pins, blades of
glue, and pipe, and will cover, spelling,
writing in cursive.
Acceptance only to students with pre-
defined criteria.
Experienced typist. Theses, term papers,
etc. IBM Correcting Selectric. Call Sandy
after 5 p.m. 748-8181. tf
TYFING-EDITION-GRAPHICS IBM Computer Systems Correction to comparison assistance. Enter correction to comparison assistance.
IRON FENCE TYPING SERVICE. Evenings
842-2507. ff
For PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myra.
11
TIP-TOP TYPING—experienced typist—IBM Correcting Selective II; Royal Correcting S 500 000. CD 843-5675. **tf**
Experiented typist—thesis, dissertations,
term papers, misc. IBM correcting selective.
barb, after 5 p.m. 842-2310. *If*
Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms,
graphics, editing, so-m-correct. Selectric.
Call Ellen or Jean Ann 841-2127. if
Experienced typist will type term papers, thesis, dissertations, books, etc. Have IBM self-rectoring Selective II. Call Terry 842-7454 anytime or 843-2671.
MAGIC FINGERS TYPING SERVICE. 843
6129 4-30
Fast, accurate, and experimented typist with type your papers. Reasonable. Call 4-30
Quality typing and word processing await-
from Encore Corp. Copy 259.
4-20
4-20
Would like to type dissertations, terms, term papers, etc. Call 842-3203. 4-30
Graduate students tired of typing, retraining and retraining their thesus or dissertation? Save time and money by word processing it at Encore! Mail 842-5061 for more info. 436
Shakespeare could write. Elvis could wiggle,
and weekdays. Call 842-3456. 4-19
www.shakespeare.com
Fast, accurate, professional typing. Thousands of lines of code written in C++.
833-0288 after 5.
4-22
Professional tying Dissertations B-46-
Selective Selecting Dept. B83-9022 B-46-
Selective Selecting Dept. B83-9022
Experienced typist. Will correct punctuation and spelling. Call evenings and weekends: 841-7620 4-26
For a good type call Debby for dissertations,
theses, term papers, letters etc. at 749-1730.
4-30
2 roommates for apartment 2 blocks from KU Med. Center, summer and/or next year.
Call Jan 841-893-1
4-13
WANTED
dark and nightly凌晨班。 At the In-
ningsburg Dinner, at 12:30,
5:39 Monday through Friday and until
6:49.
Roommate for May 1. $110/mo, plus utilities
842-0038
4-21
Female Roommate wanted for summer (at least 10% of duplex $100 max; roommates $400 max) 844-843-600
Wanted outgoing Christians and concientious students to share 5 bedroom house at 14th & Kentucky next fall & spring 2018. Volunteers Utilized. Call Darryl 841-7692.
Young Bass Player to play in a musical
group. Must sing 843-7454 4-15
SUMMER ROOOMMATE Furried apart-
ment in Rent. Apply by
after Graduation. Rent $75 utilizes
own credit card.
WANTED: 2 NON-SMOKING Roommates to
share 2-Barm, MOEV Apt. starting Aug.
and/or sublease for summer. 842-9965. 4-22
Female roommate needs to share 2 bdm.
apt. during the summer: $100 a month + ½
utilities. 864-1092. 4-23
Recertification part time. Afterwork in off-
ice. Call 841-2090, for appointment. 4-15
for fall and spring semester. Call Lz. at:
749-369-316
4-16
Persons wanting to share 2-3 bedroom apartment this fall, call Ninan 864-2811 evenings. 4-14
Female housemate for 3 bedroom house in block N. of stadium. Serious students, pre-fer grad. $137.00. $81.-65.45. 4-19
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Page 10 University Daily Kansan, April 13, 1982
Kansas softball team splits double-header
By TOM COOK
Sports Writer
For the KU women's softball team,
the double-header yesterday at
Columbia with the Missouri Tigers was
both a sweet dream and a nightmare.
Rhonda Clarke pitched her third-no-hitter of the season in the first game as the Jayhawks won, 4-0. However, Missouri came back in the nightcap to dish out their own shutout medicine, 4-0.
The split gave Kansas a 25-ounce record. The Jahaways also swept Kansas State, 1-0 and 4-1, Friday before winning two games from Oklahoma City by forift
CLARKE WAS brilliant in the opener against the Tigers. She tossed her 18th shutout of the season while striking out 11 batters and not giving up a walk. Cindy Tate, 3-3, took the loss for Missouri.
The Jayhawks plated three runs in the fourth inning and added an insurance tally in the fifth.
Tammy Hoffman led off the fourth with a single and went to third on a single by Clarke. Baker Hoffman scored the first run on Becky Ascendon's single, then followed second record when Tiger center fielder Chris Blokom displayed a fly ball.
Gusty conditions played havoc with the fielders, said Missouri Head Coach Barb Priest.
"It was really windy," said Priest. "It bothered all of the players, and quite a few balls were dropped that normally would have been caught."
THE JAYHAWKS' run in the fifth was scored by Pam Cox. She tripped and scored on an error by the pitcher.
Missouri jumped on Kansas for six in the second game. Clarke suffered the loss as her record fell to 21-7. He walked and wailed for four batters.
"Kansas handled us in the first game," said Priest. "Clarke is a very, very good pitcher and she pitched a smart game.
"But we got our timing down in the second game and got used to what she was throwing. Anytime you throw a pitcher in back-to-back games, the other team can begin to expect what she will throw.
"We just figured her out."
The TIGERS scored all four of their runs in the fourth inning. Liss Burke led off the inning with a single and moved to third, scoring on Manege. Manegue was safe at first.
Burke scored on a single by Bullock, and Manegre came around to score on the same play when Cox booted the ball in center field.
Pattie Crowe's single scored Bullock, on the plate on the base by laurie Kulcek.
Teresa Wilson checked the Jayhawks on four hits, upping her record to 9-5. Ascencio had two singles for KU, and Clarke and Cobb each stroked one hit.
"TERESA THROWS more off-speed pitches than Cindy does," said Priest. "Having a different pitcher in the second game definitely helped us defensively. And the best thing to do for a pitcher is to give her a cushion."
In Friday's double-header, it took 10 innings before the Jayhawks pulled on the slim victory. Shelly Fox ripped a double down the left field line to score Liz Commmo, who had singled and stole second.
The Wildcats got seven hits off of
the counterattack by 18 strikeforce
on a walkoff performance.
Hoffman had two of the Jayhawks' five hits, and Craft had the other.
IN THE SECOND game against K-State, Kansas got on the scoreboard earlier en route to victory. Ascencio scored, owing a walk, and Commino scored on a sacrifice fly by Fox in the second
Cobb's RBI in the fourth with the bases loaded scored Clarke. Craft tallied the final run in the fifth on a fielder's choice by Ascencio.
"We had problems scoring runs in the
first game," said KU Head Coach Bob Stanciflut. "But we got going in the last part of the game, and our bats came alive."
The Jayhawks have been without the services of All-Big Eight shortstop Sue Sherman, who reinjured her right knee in southwest Missouri State Invitational.
Shawn Myrtle, utility infielder, also is out with a bad ankle. Stancifl said he hoped to have both players back in time from the amputation, April 23-28 at Norman, Okla.
JAYHAWK NOTES: KU Head Coach BOB STANCILE has announced the signing of two players to national softball letters-of-intent.
ERIN HANNAGAN, Topeka, and DEBIE RANDEL, Baldwin, will have a chance to step into the starting rotation next year.
Hannagan, a first baseman, attends Seaman High School, which does not have a softball program. However, she has played in the American Softball League recently and is recently for the Topeka Amazons and the Team Sporting Goods Hit and Run.
Randel drew high praise from Stanclift.
"She tested out as one of the best all-around athletes we've ever seen," he said. "Her speed, strength and arm will us tremendously in the outfield."
Javhawks win two.close on leaders
By MIKE ARDIS
Sports Writer
After yesterday's sweep of Iowa State, the Kansas baseball team has a chance to move into first place in the NCAA Championship and they can sweep Iowa State again today.
KU won yesterday, 4-3, in the first game and 10-2 in the nightcap. Randy McIntosh pitched his first complete pitch, the opener to improve his record to 4-1.
"I was pretty pleased to go mine," he said. "In the past few games, I’ve had trouble getting past the sixth inning. The main thing is to know I can go
Heeney got on with a single and went to second on a ground out. He went to third on a passed ball and home on a wild pitch.
KU FELL behind in the opener in the third inning when in town State got a run on a double and a single. KU tipped it up when he when Joe Heeney scored the hard way.
ISU got two in the fifth before KU
took the lead on three runs in the sixth. LeWallen walked, Heeney singled and both moved up a base on Mark Danker's balk. Phil Dohert tripped to score Heeney and LeWallen, and Kent scored in winning run with a sacrifice to her.
In the second game, Mike Watt pitched his first complete game at KU to raise his record to 1-2. In Watt's last 15 innings covering 3 games, he has only allowed two earned runs. His ERA lowered 4.62 with the two-run, six-hit pitch.
"VEEN BEEN throwing the ball good
the last few times," he said. "There
were also several good plays behind
me.
several good plays.
McIntosh said the defensive play also helped his pitching.
"The turning point of the game was when Dick Lewallen made a sheeost catch in center in the sevent. We had a very hard moment that made the difference in the game."
In the second game, the 'Hawks got
five runs in the first and seventh. In the first, KU sent 10 men to the plate. Jim Heeney had the big hit in the first with a two-run single with the bases loaded.
The Cyclones got one run back in the first and got their other run in the second. They were better. The next man hit a run-scoring triple before Watt got out of the inning.
IN THE SEVENTH, KU sent 11 men to the plate in collecting their five runs. Joe Heeney had a two-run triple in the inning and went 4 for 6 in the double-breaker. Dick Lewallen had a good day at the plate, going 4 for 8.
The Cyclone pitchers also helped the Jayhawks in scoring in the seventh, three Iowa State pitchers combined to walk five straight KU batters to score two runs. Overall, they walked 14 Jayhawk batters.
The Jayhawks also showed some of the speed that they were expected to revel in.
Oilers tie series
The 'Hawks stole four bases in the second game, including two by Joe Heeney. Heeney has four stolen bases this year and has not been caught.
Rv United Press International
INGLEWOOD, Calif.-The Edmonton Oliers standed off playoff elimination last night, edging the Los Angeles Kings 3-2 behind a goal assist from Jordi Kuri and tied their best-of-seven matchup. Cup playoff series at two games apiece.
The teams return to Edmonton for the final game of the series tonight. The winner will advance to the second round, with a buff against the Vancouver Canucks.
Edmonton also got goals from Pat Huebes and Glenn Anderson.
THE BOOK END
Thousands of quality used books at reasonable prices including half price paperbacks.
811 New Hampshire, Weekends 10-5.
WE ALSO BUY BOOKS!
DON'T LET
KU
Buy your yearbook at the
information booth April 13,14,15
SUA Forum Presents
THE JAYHAWKER DIE!
PETER N. JAMES SPY
Tuesday, April 13
Scoreboard
Tuesday, April 13 Kansas Union Ballroom 8:00 p.m. Slide/lecture presentation "The Castro Connection"
$15
Basketball
NBA STANDINGS
Eastern Conference
Quarterback
Team
Boston
Minnesota
Philadelphia
Washington
New York
Newark
L W L Pct. GR
81 54 28 7
61 48 33 7
41 37 35 20
41 35 35 20
41 35 35 20
Milwaukee...54 24 692 ...14
Atlanta...40 38 513 ...14
Chicago...37 41 474 ...14
Indiana...37 44 438 ...20
Chicago...34 48 486 ...24
Chicago...34 48 486 ...24
San Antonio 46 32 590 1
Denver 44 32 594 2
Delaware 44 32 594 2
Dallas 28 51 354 18 %
Kansas City 28 51 354 18 %
Miami 27 51 354 18 %
Atlantic Division
Western Conference Midwest Division
Los Angeles 54 24 .692
Seattle 50 28 .641
San Francisco 54 28 .641
Golden State 43 35 .551
Portland 41 37 .518
Pittsburgh 41 37 .518
Alabama 41 37 .518
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Soccer
MISL STANDINGS Eastern Division
western Division
St. Louis 16 16 673 2 -
Wichita 12 16 600 - -
Chicago 14 15 590 7 -
Denver 15 15 375 12 -
Phoenix 14 12 379 12 -
Phoenix 14 12 389 12 -
Team W L U Pct. GB
New York 32 17 821
Borough 32 17 790
Ballpark 22 16 500
Buffalo 22 18 550 9
New Jersey 19 14 378 17
Evergreen 15 14 378 17
Philadelphia 14 23 374 17
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS No games scheduled.
Team Pct. GB
Milwaukee 2 W 1 687 %-
Baltimore 2 W 2 560 %-
Detroit 2 W 2 560 %-
Toronto 2 W 2 560 %-
Cleveland 1 W 1 530 %-
New York 1 W 1 350 %-
Denver 1 W 1 350 %-
Chicago 3 0 0 1,000
Minnesota 3 0 0 500 %1
Missouri 3 0 0 500 %1
Oakland 3 2 0 900 %1
City of Chicago 3 2 0 333 %1
Texas 1 2 0 333 %1
Texas 1 2 0 333 %1
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Baseball AMERICAN LEAGUE Eastern Division
Hockey
VESTERDAY A RESULTS
Division finals
Wilson vs. Dewey
Stay the game
Tie vs. Drewy
Tied by 2-1
NATIONAL LEAGUE Eastern Division
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Toronto 9 Detroit 5
Chicago 8 Boston 2
New York 10 Texas 7
Atlanta 3 2 1,000
Los Angeles 3 2 600 2½%
Los Angeles 3 2 400 2¼%
San Francisco 2 3 400 3¼%
Cincinnati 2 3 400 3%
San Francisco 2 3 280 4
Team 2 1 2 Pct. GB --
New York 2 1 1 667 -
Chicago 3 3 3 500 %
Pittsburgh 3 3 3 300 %
Boston 1 2 1 233 %
ST. Louis 5, Pittsburgh 6,
Chicago 8, New York 4
Atlanta 6, Cincinnati 1
Houston 2, Los Angeles 1, 11 innings
BIG EIGHT STANDINGS
BIG-HIGH ROWS INFORMATION
Team | M | L | Pct. | GB |
Nebraska | 8 | 4 | 667 | -- |
Oklahouan State | 8 | 4 | 667 | -- |
Oklahoma | 2 | 4 | 165 | 1 |
Okahanna | 4 | 5 | 454 | 2½ |
Missouri | 2 | 3 | 400 | 2½ |
Iowa State | 2 | 3 | 300 | 4 |
Illinois | 2 | 3 | 260 | 3 |
Satellite Union
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Kansas 4-10. Iowa State 3-2
SUA
Special
Events
Josten's
Do you own a Barry
Have you ever wanted to
Do you own
Manilow polyester suit?
Do you love music?
really work "behind the scenes" at concerts?
If you answered all these questions correctly, then SUR Special Events could be looking for YOU. We will be interviewing for the following positions on
If you answered all these
Mon. April 19 & Wed. April 21
Ushers Director
Security Director
Publicitu Director
Lighting Director
Photographer
See your Jostens' Representative.
DATE: April 13 & 14 TIME: 10-4
PLACE: Kansas Union Bookstores
Main Union
Satellite Union
Stage Manager
Communications Director
Sign up for an interview time in the SUA Office.
Deadline is Friday, April 16, 5 p.m.
--union bookstores main union level 2, satellite shop
Sell it, too. Call 864-4358.
S.F.
$15/$30REBATE On your College Ring
Attention
The KU Student Awards committee is accepting nominations for The Agnes Wright Strickland Award and The Class of 1913 Award. These are awarded to graduating seniors.
The Strickland Award is given in recognition of a good academic record, demonstrated leadership in matters of all University concern, respect among fellow students and indications of future dedication to service to the University.
The Class of 1913 is given in recognition of her/his evidenced intelligence, devotion to studies and personal character.
The awards will be presented during 1982 Commencement weekend. Self nominations are welcomed. Applications must be received by the Awards Committee in the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 220 Strong Hall, by Monday, April 19, 1982.
Design-A Shirt CONTEST
3rd Annual
$100
FIRST PRIZE
2nd-3rd Prizes $25 Gift Certificate
$100
Entry blanks and details available at the Main Union or Satellite Union Stores.
Deadline April 23rd.
kansas
S
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, April 14, 1982 Vol. 92, No. 132 USPS 650-640
Budig says money will not create faculty posts
By ANNECALOVICH
Staff Reporter
Chancelor Gene A. Budig said yesterday that the extra $465,000 the Kansas Legislature gave the University of Kansas for next year's budget because of increased enrollments in 1979 and 1980 would not be used to hire any new full-time faculty members.
Buddy said the money would be used in the following ways:
- Forty percent for instruction. That would not include new faculty positions, but probably would.
- forty percent to the Other Operating Expenses budget, which includes budgets for everything outside of salaries, including the library and equipment.
- Twenty percent for student employment.
- Thirty percent for academic.
progress at the University of Kansas, $ ^{70} $ Budig said.
THE SAID new faculty positions could not be created because although there would be money for them in next year's budget, there would not be in, 1984. A lot of the same money would be taken away in the fiscal year 1984 budget because of a decrease in enrollment in 1981.
money is now allocated by the Legislature to the state's universities according to the number of students enrolled. That plan was adopted by the Legislature in 1981 so that KU would receive the $405,000 in fiscal year 1983 as a result of the 1979 and '80 enrollment increases, but would lose a lot of that money in fiscal year 1984 as a result of decreased enrollment in the fall of 1981.
Budig and he was glad the Legislature gave the universities flexibility to decide how to spend
"We are being hurt by inadequate OOE," he
said. "This will support research and instruction that needs immediate assistance."
Robert Cobb, executive vice chancellor, is deciding this week exactly how the money will be used and in which departments.
EMPLOYMENT INCREASES will help shorthanded departments and schools and aid students who need jobs, Budig said.
"It supports the operation of academic units, while providing meaningful work opportunities for students."
for students. He said it would show KU's concern for students at a time of financial aid cutbacks by giving them more job opportunities.
Budid said he could not say when KU might be able to hire new faculty, but if increasing admissions and applications to KU are any sign, it may not be too long.
There were 500 more students admitted to KU by March 26 this year than by the same time last.
year, David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said.
IF SOME of the 500 students enroll, he said,
could take up in enrollment next year what
would be available for them.
That does not mean that all 500 students will receive enrollment, but it is a good sign. Rude.
Budig said he did not know when KU might hire more faculty because enrollment patterns were not fixed, but said that, "We are confident enrollment will hold in the 1980s. We hope the future enrollment will justify increased staffing."
The number of applicants to KU this year is increasing despite the fact that the number of graduating high school students in Kansas has risen to 28,000 in the last five years. Amber said.
are a greater number of graduating high school students going on to college," he said.
The number of admissions is not yet final for this year because students can be admitted up to the first day of classes, Ambler said.
HE ALSO SAID freshmen were a small part of the total enrollment, and because this year's freshmen and sophomore classes had been small, next year's sophomore and junior classes
Ambler said those students had to be retained.
Amber said some students married or收养 Last year there were 3,873 admissions to KU but only 412 students and 4,466. In 1981, 2,837 of those admitted actually enrolled as new students in the fall. There were 4,825 applicants by March of last year, compared to 5,507 this year.
But Amber said the number of high school seniors would continue to drop in future years.
"Our task is still before us," he said.
A
Under yesterday's sunny skies, students and faculty dot the lawn in front of Fraser Hall.
KU refuses comment on NCAA letter
Staff Reporter
Rv RARB EHLI
Dr. Snakek, acting athletic director, said that it was a “confidential matter within the institute,” according to the source.
KU officials refused to confirm or deny yesterday whether the National Collegiate Athletic Association had approved the department about alleged recruiting violations in the KU football program.
"I'm not in a position to confirm or deny it," he said.
According to yesterday's Kansas City Times, an unidentified KU athletic department official said the NCAA had notified KU that it was considering an investigation into KU's football program because of alleged recruiting violations.
THE TIMES article reported that the source had said the letter was sent to KU officials two
cancer age s
Chancellor Gene A. Budig's secretary deferred
the chancellor's comment to Sid Wilson, sports information director.
"Our comment is no comment," Wilson said.
"Our comment is no comment," Wilson said. Officials at the NCAA also refused to comment.
Rhate McMenamin, assistant director of enforcement for the NCAA, said, "We take the position that we can't confirm or deny it."
When Budiq's office was contacted again, Jim Scaly, administrative assistant to the chancellor, said, "He's going to be in, but he won't return it." He could leave a message, but he wouldn't return it.
WILLIAM HOGAN, associate executive vice chancellor, said that he had not seen the letter and that he had no comment.
"I would defer all comments on that to the chancellor." Hoaz said.
Bill Hancock, director of the Big Eight's service bureau, said, "Our line is a standard no comment."
Both Del Brinkman, KU representative to the NCAA and the Big Eight and dean of the School
or journalism, and Don Fambrough, KU football coach, had no comment.
Some people in the Big Eight Conference said they had heard rumors but declined to say what those stories were about.
"Our people brought it to the attention of the bishops in our city, Missouri, which not complained to the NCAA.
"I've heard our coaches speak of some alleged violations," Dave Hart, athletic director at the University of Missouri, said.
JM DICKEY, Kansas State University football coach, told the Times that K-Stare knew of 20 violations by KU over a three- to four-year period.
If the NCAA investigates, a letter to the institution to be investigated is the first step in the process. Shankel explained how the process worked.
"The ones that I heard were primarily from this year," he said.
*In the NCAA, if they receive allegations that
INVESTIGATION GAME $
Kansan applications taken
The University Daily Kansas is now accepting applications for the summer and fall editor and business manager positions. The positions are paid and require some newspaper experience, but any student may apply.
See INVESTIGATION page 8
Application forms are available in the Student Senate office, 105B Kansas Union; in
the office of student organizations and activities 298 Flint Hall, and in 200 Flint Hall
Ivami Strong film and in no
Ivami Strong film are due at 5 p.m. April 19 in
Flug Hall.
Lawrence legislators divided on approaches to tax issues
BvKEVIN HELLIKER
Only two days remain for the adjourned Kansas Legislature to mop up funding problems that lawmakers failed to resolve during almost 12 weeks of work.
Staff Reporter
Can it be done?
Can't be sure. Lawrence legislators are divided in their views of what will happen when the session reconvenes April 27.
"There's so much left to do that it's hard for me to imagine us cleaning up in two days," Rep. Sharon McCaskill said.
But Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, said issues such as highway funding and school finances had been tossed around the Legislature all session, so dealing with them should not take
"We know our way around these issues!"
So she said all of them have been through bai house.
THE REMAINING tasks before the Legislature will be resolved, Solbach said, when we know what we've spent and haven't spent, and what funds we've got and haven't got."
However, a question that still looms before the Legislature is whether funds will be gathered
from a severance tax. Although the Senate killed a severance tax bill on a 21-19 vote on April 5, Gov. John Carlin and others have vowed to implement such a tax this session.
"The central issue here is still the severance
of the contract. I think the opportunity to
get one pass this year will be worth it."
The contingency of the severance tax has caused other issues, such as a proposed increase on the gasoline tax, to become pawns in the game of chess. The company is revenue, Rep. Jess Branson, D-Lawrence, said.
Branson said the gasoline tax and other bills that beer "held hostage" in the Senate, pending a vote on the bill.
If the severance tax were passed, for instance, and increase in the gasoline tax might not be required.
BECAUSE THE severance tax still is up in the air, however, other issues, including wage increases for state classified employees and employers may be hard to settle in two days, Branson said.
"Perhaps we can get it all done in two days," she said. "But I really wonder."
However, Sen. Jane Eldridge, R-Lawrence, said the severance-tax issue almost certainly was settled, which would facilitate passing other bills.
See LEGISLATURE page 5
BEAUTIFUL!
Weather
Today will be sunny with a high between 75 and 80 and winds out of the south at 10 to 20 mph, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka. Tonight will be partly cloudy with a low in the 50s.
Tomorrow will be partly cloudy with a high in the low 80s.
Haig returns home weary after first Falklands talks
By United Press International
WASHINGTON—Secretary of State Alexander Haig returned from London last night to brief President Reagan on his 23,000-mile mission to avert war between Argentina and Britain over control of the Falkland Islands.
Haig was hoarse and appeared weary from his shuttle diplomacy that began Thursday with a flight to London, then to Buenos Aires and back to the British capital. Upon landing at Andrews Air Force Base he had talks with the governors and Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher and with the Argentine military junta headed by Lt. Gen. Leopoldo Galtieri.
Hag said he had given both governments
for negotiations that they were
now considering and would report on his progress to Reagan this morning.
KU trving to pinpoint drop-out causes
THE SOLUTION, whatever it may be, must accord with U.N. resolution 502, which calls for Argentine withdrawal from the 149-year-old British crown colony.
"I had planned to go on to Buenos Aires for the continuation of our efforts to help solve the crisis," Haig said. "But difficulties developed to change these plans.
"We have now received some new ideas, and while the parties are considering those ideas, it will provide an opportunity for me to speak about this issue before Reagan before going to Buenos Aires."
During his 36-hour stop in London, Haig said it was evident that British leaders would not recall the armada dispatched to reclaim Atlantic islands they had rulled for 149 years.
See FALKLANDS page 6
By ANN WYLIE Staff Reporter
Every semester, some students decide not to return to the University of Kansas.
The Office of Academic Affairs is trying to determine how much attrition—the number of students who leave school—is necessary, and to help the students who have the potential to succeed in college finish school.
"Our first priority has got to be the students and their education's." David Armber, vice president.
"Some students fail because they know nobody cares. We've got to demonstrate more visibly."
Certain types of students are especially high drop-out risks.
Percentage of students quitting school
THOSE WHO are put on academic probation early in their college careers are likely to drop out.
In an attempt to develop programs that would
"It's not enough to say, 'You're on probation and that's a warning,' " he said.
| Year | Fall 1978 | Fall 1979 | Fall 1980 |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 1st semester | 10.8 | 10.8 | 10.8 |
| 2nd semester | 24.3 | 25.8 | 25.6 |
| 3rd semester | 28.1 | 30.0 | |
| 4th semester | 35.0 | 36.7 | |
| 5th semester | 36.9 | | |
| 6th semester | 41.3 | | |
But past suggestions have had limited success, Ambler said.
ROBERT LINEBERRY, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, sent letters recommending services to the 1,100 students that his college put on probation last year.
PART 15
methods of helping probationary students may be suggested to campus ser-
ers by using skill class skills
help KU's protabinary students, Ambler meet Friday with the academic deans whose colleges and departments attract a high number of freshmen, such as the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and the Schools of Engineering and Fine Arts.
Of the 700 who returned to KU, only 50 have enrolled in the study skills class.
Another way to help students on probation is to make requirements for them, such as seeking
"If probation is simply an alert, then we failed." Ambler said.
"We'd say, If you don't get in to see your
talk, we're going to whip your tail. "Ambler said.
enhancing the advising program may be another way to help students remain in school.
HE SAID he would like to start an advising
See ATTRITION page 5
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, April 14, 1982
News Briefs From United Press International
Unemployment rates surge; 4 states escape increases
WASHINGTON - Unemployment rose in all but four states during the one year period ending in February, the government reported yesterday. The
The Labor Department said preliminary data showed unemployment surged 1.6 to 9.8 percent between February 1981 and February 1982.
The figures were not seasonally adjusted. The official unemployment rate in March was reported at 49 percent with about 10 million Americans looking for work.
Michigan, which depends largely on the auto industry, had the highest unemployment rate of all the states with 16.1 percent, the report by the Bureau of Labor Statistics found.
The four states where unemployment declined during the year were Delaware, New Mexico, South Dakota and North Dakota.
Delaware, New York
Wyoming and Oklahoma had the lowest unemployment rates with 4.8
percent each in the department said.
Among 223 major areas reporting for February 1982, unemployment rates ranged from more than 20 percent in Modesto, Calif., and Anderson, Ind., to less than 5 percent.
35 percent Michigan was not included in this breakdown, and a department spokesman said it was possible that some Michigan towns or cities had jobless rates higher than 20 percent.
Plane crash kills 27 servicemen
ANKARA, Turkey - A U.S. C-130 cargo plane crashed in central Turkey yesterday, killing all 27 American servicemen aboard, U.S. officials said.
A Turkish military spokesman said an official team sent to the crash site, 285 miles east of Kufaru, found no survivors. Rescuers recovered 22 bodies in the crash.
The U.S. embassy spokesman said earlier that the plane carried 18 passengers and 10 crewmen and that 28 male servicemen died. But U.S. Air Force officials have denied the claim.
A Pentagon spokesman in Washington said the four-engine, propeller-driven plane was on a routine supply mission and was attached to the 458rd Air Force Wing.
The identities of those on board were not immediately released and the cause of the crash was not known. Officials said an inquiry into the crash has
Israeli soldiers kill 7-year-old boy
JERUSALEM—Israeli soldiers shot and killed a 7-year-old boy yesterday and wounded 16 other Palestinians in escalating violence throughout the occupied territories sparked by an Easter Sunday attack on a sacred Moslem shrine.
Four Israeli soldiers were injured by a mob of 1,500 rock-throwing Palestinians who attacked an army installation at the Jabalai refugee camp.
At the United Nations, the Security Council was called into emergency session to discuss the violence in the occupied territories.
more sharply Goodman, the bearded American-born Israeli charged with spreading sneeze in the sacrilegious act of death, deed or pretend that the act was political, not criminal.
In other Midestae violence, rivalt leftist and Iranian-inspired argyurs went on a kidnapping and killing rampage in Lebanon yesterday, leaving dozens of dead.
The violence erupted as Palestinians and leftist forces were on full alert in preparation for a feared Israeli attack.
Christian Democrats reject coalition
SAN SALVADOR, EI Salvador—EI Salvador's Christian Democrats rejected calls by rightist parties for a coalition government yesterday and charged that death squads were stalking the ruling party's deputy-elect, sources said.
Leaders of the U.S.-backed Christian Democrat party were expected to announce their decision to reject the proposal at a news conference last night. Sources in the ruling Democratic party said they would boycott the convention, which they own only two cabinet posts—the foreign ministry and the treasury ministry.
One Christian Democrat source said the party's deputies-elect were in hiding because groups of armed rightist killers were attempting to
The Salvadoran election commission, meanwhile, began paving the way for selection of a new interim president by presenting credentials to the newly elected assembly that will choose a new leader and rewrite the constitution. The rightists won 33 of the 60 assembly seats.
Church urges release of Walesa
WARSAW, Poland.-Poland's Roman Catholic Church yesterday urged the release of 107 prisoners and other insurgent Solidary leaders on the four-national universities of Warsaw.
A document drafted by the advisory council of Archbishop Josef Glemp and sent to Poland's 27 bishops and the military regime said only a new social agreement between the government and unionists could restore hope for Poles.
The church has called for the release of the interned leaders before, but yesterday's request was its strongest, most direct statement since martial
The government said there were 3,154 interred Poles, but underground Solidarity sources placed the number at more than 4,000.
In its first broadcast, clandestine Solaridarity appealed to Poles late Monday to switch off their lights and light candles for 15 minutes starting at 9:30 a.m.
Arms package planned for Taiwan
WASHINGTON - In a move that could strain, if not snap, America's tess
illion worth of military materials to Taiwan, $60 million
The package, submitted to Congress for approval, features spare parts and supplies for Taiwan's American-built aircraft, including jet fighters, helicopters and transports. Congress could veto the deal if both houses don't give it a majority vote by May 13.
The Chinese government has objected vigorously to U.S. assistance to the Taipei regime, declaring they will not negotiate the issue. Peking considers the United States to be an obstacle for its trade relations.
Police nab singer for drugs, gun
Aid to Taiwan is a key concern to the stance conservative supporters of President Reagan, who argue that the island's anti-communist government was betrayed by the restoration of friendly relations with Peking started by President Richard Nixon's administration a decade ago.
DALLAS--Rock singer David Crowby, who founded Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, was arrested yesterday in a dressing room on cocaine charges and possession of a 45-caliber pistol. It was his second arrest on similar charges in two weeks.
Police on routine rounds at the rock club Cardi's found Crosby sitting in the dressing room with a bag of what they suspected was cocaine and a 48-hour jail sentence.
Crosby, 40, was arrested between sets in a show played to a sellout crowd of about 750. He was released on a writ of habeas corpus at 4 a.m. Habeas corpus is a form of petition filed to seek the prompt release of a person in custody. Those holding the person must justify the detainment.
Commencement plans to weather storms
Organizers of the 1982 KU commencement on May 16 hope this year's weather will be better than last year's.
In case their dreams don't come true, however, Ed Julian, secretary for the Commencement Committee, said yesterday the committee was planning to move the ceremony from Memorial Field House in case of bad weather.
or our weather.
"It rained cats and dogs last year, but fortunately we got everyone inside and dry" he said.
The committee, a group of administrators, faculty and students selected by the chancellor's office, coordinates the commencement activities of the individual schools and departments at KU.
CHANCELLOR Gene A. Budig will speak at the ceremony, which will begin at 7 p.m. Graduates will begin theatrically at 7 p.m. the Cramanile to the stadium at 7 p.m.
The preliminary schedule for the 1982 commencement, the 110th at KU, was released recently and is still being revised, Julian said.
James Scaly, administrative assistant to the chancellor, said Budig had planned to speak at the ceremony since he was named chancellor last year. He did not know what Budig would be short, but that the speech would be short.
Gil Dyck, dean of admissions and records, said about 5,100 people would be eligible to participate in the ceremony. The total includes 1,500 graduate, 3,600 summer and fall students, 3,600 students who plan to graduate this spring.
"There are always many people who there are in planning to graduate soon, he said.
However, he said, only about 3,000 to a might actually graduate this spring.
Julian estimated that about 3,000 people would participate in the campaign.
THEOSE PLANNING to participate may order caps, gowns, tassels and hoods until April 30. A $10 late-order may be charged for orders after that date.
Students at the Lawrence campus may send orders by mail or make them in person on the main floor of the Kansas Union. Rental rates for a bachelor's cap, gown and tassel are $11; for a master's, $12; and for a doctoral, $13. A hood, optional for master's candidates, is $10, and for a doctoral, $12.
Other activities scheduled for commencement include the Senior Breakfast, the Chancellor's Reception and holding ceremonies.
Local tax preparers swamped
The 1982 Senior Breakfast for students and their spouses will be at 8
Uncle Sam is breathing down your
Tomorrow at midnight is the deadline for filing 1981 tax returns.
Business has been brisk at the local income tax preparers' offices for the past two weeks.
Peggy Barlow, tax preparer for Beneficial Income Tax Service, 946 Massachusetts St., said yesterday the office had been very busy since about three months ago. She said she was not sure whether this year was any buster than last year.
"I it always seems like this," she said. But Barlow said not many students had been to her class.
"Most students have the short forms (104A) and they do them early," she said.
PAT DUERKESEN, office manager H & R Block, 23rd and Ousdahl streets,
said that office also had been very busy for the past two weeks.
"It's been much heavier at the end of this year than last year," she said.
She said that if a person had earned less than $3,900, he did not have to file a return. But, she said, most people do not get back to ghek whatever taxes they paid.
Bill Lawrence, assistant postmaster in Lawrence, said because of work cutbacks, the postal service would not extra people on duty Thursday night.
Returns must be postmarked no later than midnight April 15 to avoid a penalty.
But, he said, any mail placed in the box at the Vermont Post Station, 645 Vermont St., by 2:30 a.m. Friday would have a p.m. postmark on it.
in 208 B
Entry Deadline for the
Recreation Services
Doubles Tournaments is 5 p.m. TODAY
Tennis Doubles and Mixed
in 208 Robinson. An unopened can of tennis balls must be submitted with a printed entry form.
with completed entry form.
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ELLENA HONDA
LAWRENCE AUTO PLAZA PROUDLY INTRODUCES GORDON WILLIAMS, OUR NEW SERVICE TECHNICIAN
GORDON BRINGS WITH HIM 15 YEARS OF IMPORT EXPERTISE SERVICING HONDA, TOYOTA AND DATSUN
LET GORDON SERVICE YOUR CAR WITH THESE SPECIALS
SPECIAL LOW PRICE $12.95
INCLUDES INSPECTION OF BELTS, HOSES, LEAK TEST, COMPRESSION TEST
AND ONE CAN OF FRE-ON.
COUPON
TUNE UP *
*AIR CONDITION CHECK AND CHARGE *
INCLUDES POINTS, PLUGS, CONDENSER AS REQUIRED, ADJUST TIMING
4 CYL. $32.50 6 CYL. $41.50
CALL BRIAN FISHER (SERVICE MANAGER) FOR AN APPOINTMENT
CHECK ON OUR VALVE ADJUSTMENT SPECIAL
ELLENA
843-0550
HONDA
OPEN SATURDAY TIL NOON LOCATED AT THE END OF THE AUTO PLAZA
a.m. May 16 in the Union Ballroom.
Tickets are $4.75 and must be purchased in advance. They are available at the Alumni Association by mail or in person.
The Chancellor's Reception for graduation candidates and their parents, which will follow the Senior Course, will be at the chancellor's residence.
HOODING CEREMONIES for
children who will be
will take place the morning of May 16.
The School of Social Welfare will have a ceremony at 11 a.m. in the University Theatre in Murphy Hall; the School of Law, 1:30 p.m. in the University Theatre; and the School of Doctoral degrees in Medical Auditorium. The Graduate School will have a ceremony for those receiving doctoral degrees this spring or last
October at 4 p.m. in the University Theatre.
Other activities involving students, faculty and alumni are also scheduled. The Alumnae Association board of trustees, May 14 in the Holiday Inn Holdemore.
the foundation for the
The initiation ceremony for Phi Beta
Kappa will be at 11 a.m. May 15
Wooldruff Auditorium in the Union.
ERNEST L. BOYER, president of the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, will speak at 2 p.m. on May 15 in the School of Education Alumni Society meeting in the Kansas Room of the Union.
Budig will give the annual "State of the University Address" at the All-University Supper at 6:30 p.m. May 15 in the Union Ballroom. The Distinguished Service Citation and Distinguished Teaching Awards will be presented.
on campus
TODAY
Dennison Rusinow, of the Universi-
ties Field Staff International, will
address THE UNIVERSITY FORUM
Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center.
THE KU SAILING CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in the Union Parlors.
TOMORROW
THE DUNGEONS AND DRAGONS
CITY Center at 8 p.m. in the Trail
Room of the Dungeon
There is A 5 P.M. ENTRY DEADLINE for the Recreation Services Mixed Doubles Tennis Tournament. Sign up in 208 Robinson.
THE SCHOOL OF EDUCATION STUDENT ORGANIZATION will meet at 3:30 p.m. in 103. Bailey Hall.
THE WESTERN CIVILIZATION FILM SERIES will present the films "Einstein: The Story of the Man by His Friends" and "Knowledge or Certainty" beginning at 7:30 p.m. in 308 Dyche Hall.
THE STUDENT SENATE STUDENT SERVICES COMMITTEE will meet at 4 p.m. in the Regionalist Room of the Kansas Union.
AN INVITATION TO ALL LA & S UNDERGRADUATE STUDENTS
You are cordially invited to make an appointment for an EARLY-ADVISING session with your academic adviser before the semester ends. You may contact either your adviser or your adviser's departmental office to schedule an appointment.
EARLY-ADVISEMENT this semester will enable you to skip some of the enrollment maze next fall.
For details, contact Nunemaker Center, 864-4223 or the College Office, 864-3661.
"Seniors, don't leave the Hill
without it!"—Gene Budig, Chancellor
WITHOUT IT
5th Annual Senior Open House and Party
Thursday, April 15
7:30-11:00 p.m.
403 Kansas Union
- Free Beer
- Free Soft Drinks
- Free Popcorn
- Football Ticket Giveaways
- Cash Prizes
* Jawhulu Azz
- Jayhawk Apparel
- and a whole lot more
Come by the Kansas Alumni Association Office, 403 Kansas Union and register for these great prizes and more, April 12-15 from 8:00-12:00 and 1:00-5:00 daily.
And don't forget to purchase your discount Senior alumni membership!
KU ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
403 Union · Lawrence, Kansas · 66045
Gifts and prizes contributed by KU Endowment Association,
Kansas Union Booksellers and KUAC
University Daily Kansan, April 14, 1982
Page 3
You Can't Afford Not To Care...
The Reagan administration has proposed extensive reductions in federal funding for many student aid programs for federal Fiscal Year 1983 (academic year 1983-84). The American Council on Education has estimated that under the Reagan proposals approximately $17,695,788 less federal student assistance funding would be available to Kansas students in academic year 1983-84 than was available in academic year 1980-81. This would mean that only $54\%$ of the money available to assist Kansas students last year will be available in the 1983-84 school year. At the same time, the cost of attending a Kansas college or university is expected to increase by 20 to 25 percent.
In addition, the American Council on Education estimated that phasing out of Social Security educational benefits means that 5,155 Kansas college students will lose $14,952,000 in financial assistance. The Reagan administration has also proposed the elimination of the $650,000 of federal State Student Incentive Grant (SSIG) funds that Kansas receives annually. These federal funds have become an integral part of the $4,175,000 General Use appropriation for the Tuition Grant and State Scholarship Programs in Kansas.
Finally, the administration proposes to eliminate graduate and professional student eligibility under the Guaranteed Student Loan Program. This change could seriously disrupt graduate enrollment in all Kansas universities.
1. Pell (Basic) Grants reduced 40%.
2. Guaranteed Student Loans reduced 60%.
3. College Work Study reduced 27.6%.
4. Complete elimination of Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grants, National Direct Student Loans, and Student Incentive Grants.
THOSE ARE THE FACTS. Final Congressional action on these proposed cuts is not expected for several weeks. You have several options; You can ignore the proposed cuts and hope that someone else will speak up for you; you can hope that the state legislature will pick up the difference in the cuts; you can allow aid programs to be discontinued . . . OR, you can write or call your representatives in Washington. Let them know how you feel about the proposed reductions and the effect such cuts will have on your ability to complete your education. You will join thousands of other students from throughout the nation who have joined together to fight the cuts. You can make a difference!
Here's your chance to be heard.
If you are concerned about the future of student financial aid, social security benefits to students, higher education funding, or other federal programs here is your chance to be heard.
The University of Kansas Student Senate will sponsor a reception for Congressman Larry Winn-R. who represents the Third Congressional District of Kansas this Friday evening, from 5:00 to 6:00 pm in the Kansas Room (Sixth Level) of the Kansas Union. This is an informal opportunity for you to express your concerns to the Congressman that represents Douglas County in the House of Representatives. All students, faculty, and staff are encouraged to attend.
★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★
★★★★★★★★★
MEET CONGRESSMAN LARRY WINN
FRIDAY, APRIL 16th, 5 to 6 pm
KANSAS ROOM in the KANSAS UNION
★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★
FREE ADMISSION, REFRESHMENTS SERVED
Let them know you care . . .
Senator Bob Dole
2214 Dirksen Senate Office Bldg.
Washington, D.C. 20510
FIRST DISTRICT KANSAS
Rep. Pat Roberts
1428 Longworth House Office Bldg.
Washington, D.C. 20515
Senator Nancy Kassebaum 304 Russell Senate Office Blvd. Washington, D.C. 20510
SECOND DISTRICT KANSAS
THIRD DISTRICT KANSAS
Rep. Larry Winn
2416 Rayburn House Office Bldg.
Washington, D.C. 20515
Rep. Jim Jefferies
128 Cannon House Office Bldg.
Washington, D.C. 20515
FOURTH DISTRICT KANSAS
Rep. Dan Glickman
1507 Longworth House Office Bldg.
Washington, D.C. 20515
FIFTH DISTRICT KANSAS
Rep. Bob Wittaker
518 Cannon House Office Bldg.
Washington, D.C. 20515
If you have any questions, would like to have more information, or need help in contacting your legislators please drop by the STUDENT SENATE OFFICE, 105 B KANSAS UNION, or call 864-3710.
How Many Of Your Friends Won't Be Back Next Year?
pd.for by student act. fee
Opinion
Page 4 University Daily Kansan, April 14, 1982
A call for comment
In spring, the thoughts of young journalists turn lightly to recruitment violations.
Last year, at about this time, area newspapers and newscasts were full of stories about Kansas colleges' violations of NCAA recruitment guidelines.
The stories told of credit card monkey business, almost free houses and big, fat checks. They provided lots of excitement, but very few reliable facts.
This week, the tradition continues. Yesterday, the Kansas City Times printed a report from an unnamed source in the KU athletic department that the National Collegiate Athletic Association was considering an investigation of KU's football program.
Other sources in the story were athletic officials from the University of Missouri and Kansas State University. Those officials said—with halos shining and eyes reverently uplifted—that "there was something wrong" with KU's recruiting practices.
Throughout all this unnamed source quoting and intercollegiate finger-pointing, two parties have remained silent—the NCAA and the University of Kansas.
The NCAA said it traditionally has refused to comment on its investigations of college athletic programs. And the NCAA has little to lose by refusing to comment on the reported KU investigation.
KU, on the other hand, has everything to lose.
On the day the investigation rumors were made public, KU officials dodged reporters' telephone calls, and answered questions with terse refusals to comment.
KU officials are at least partially correct in refusing to comment. It would be foolish for them to make hasty statements.
The phrase "no comment," is not as simple as it sounds. For many, it implies a reluctance to reveal the truth—and an admission of guilt.
But it could be even more foolish for them to say nothing at all.
So far, most people have heard a one-sided account of the possible NCAA investigation of KU. And in the absence of comment from KU officials, we are free to imagine the worst.
When faced with sensitive issues such as this, how wise is it for officials to remain close-mouthed?
No comment.
THE COLUMBUS PERCH COFFEE BY THE TRIALNE COMPANY
Letters to the Editor
History department provides good Western Civ teachers
To the Editor:
I am writing this letter in response to the controversy that seems to be brewing concerning the recent budget decision affecting the bailiff billwick—the Western Civilization Program.
Specifically, I would like to offer an alternate viewpoint to Seavers' contention that the recent decision to give the history and philosophy departments a portion of the line items for assistant instructors will somehow adversely affect the caliber of instruction KU students will receive in Western Civilization. To such statements, I must politely say—bunk!
As an assistant instructor in the history department for four years—1974-78 and as one who was hired by the Western Civilization program as an instructor (though I left the job for greener pastures), I feel qualified to be instructed by both the history and Western Civilization departments and, accordingly, on the quality of instruction delivered by such personnel.
Since I have been associated with the history department, dating back to 1974, it has seemed obvious to me that there has been a certain level of interchangeability between the assistant instructors in the history department and those in the Western Civilization department.
Many fine instructors, some of whom are close personal friends of mine, have commenced their graduate studies and worked in either or both departments. I am sure the former students of instructors such as Tom Brown, Steve Janean or Bernie Williams were teachers; most men were teaching history courses or sections of Western Civilization, the University was providing high quality education.
Williams began in the history department, switched to the Western Civilization department and has found a temporary home back in the history department again. Both Brown and Jansen started in the history department and then moved to the Western Civilization department because of them and I were hired by either department, were hired because of their skills and talents and were representative of the selection process of both departments.
I'd like to ask Seaver, if he has some problems with the quality of people hired by the history department as instructors, then why, over the years his department hired so many of the same people? Furthermore, I find it interesting that Seaver is so suspicious of the motives of his employees. He is also likely to enjoy the years (often at his behest), striven to provide the best instruction possible to undergraduates.
Finally, it appears to me that Seaver is doing what is natural when such organizations face budget cuts—i.e., save his own baby from overexposure to the cold winds of economic realities. In a way, I can applaud Seaver's quiotic efforts to do so.
Nevertheless, I resent deeply the implications that the history department would not take seriously its duty to students enrolled in Western Civilization and that the history department would employ substandard instructors to be assigned to teach those sections.
If any of the readers of this letter should care to challenge my position on this issue or cast doubt upon it, I would be a mentor on the matters or as a classroom instructor, then I suggest they review the results of the old system of student feedback that was used to evaluate instructors each semester while I wrote.
P. Scott Corbett,
Templin Hall resident director
ERA a fraud
On April 6, we were appalled to read a letter by a Wichita graduate student, Peter Gray, protesting the appearance of Phyllis Schlafly on our campus April 20.
To the Editor:
We are glad to see our student funds spent on such a worthy, honorable and eminent speaker: Indeed, Student Union Activities has done a great job in preparing the courageous and herodine woman to grace our campus.
and the women's movement in this country." The ERA is one of the biggest frauds and hoaxes in the history of this country. If it ever passed the women in this land would have no rights, if they do not consider being drafted into the armed forces a right.
We certainly agree with Gray that Schifly has been responsible for "the subversion of the ERA
Also, this "women's movement" is not what it claims to be. It does not represent all women. It is merely a handful of leftists, Marxists and other activists determined to destroy all civilization and culture.
We wish to call upon all people in our area who have any degree of common sense, good taste, intelligence and culture to attend Schaffly's lecture and give her an enthusiastic welcome to
Let's help to nail on the lid to ERA's coffin and put an end to this nonsense of "progressive social change" (it should be called "regressive social change").
Let us demonstrate that there are still some serious people living and studying here who are calm, rational and not given to the sort of stuff they want. The porters of the ERA have displayed over the years.
These radicals have had their way long enough. For once, a voice of common sense and sanity will be heard at the University of Kansas in the person of Schlafly.
David Whalen and Robert Heschmeyer Prairie Village seniors
Let Schlafly speak
To the Editor:
I am writing this letter in response to Peter Gray's denunciation of Phyllis Schlafly that appeared on April 6. Gray attempts to explain to the readers that Student Union Activities is doing a "great disservice" to the students of the University of Kansas by providing an intelligent, well-versed and competent woman a forum in which to express her opinion (and the majority opinion of this nation).
Here, here! Well spoken. Peter! No, sir, we will have no views other than our own expressed opinions. We are not interested.
Demonstration is the only intellectual, rational way to handle contrasting opinions. Gray seems to believe. Yes, students, let us act as uneducated, strong-armed goons by removing a knowledgeable professor from KU students displayed last year at Ian Smith's appearance at Kansas State University.
"I would call on all people committed to the concept of equal opportunity . . . to demonstrate . . . and let Phyllis leave Lawrence with a bitter taste in her mouth," Gray wrote. Does the denial or attempted denial of a forum for the airing of a statement with the concept of equal opportunity? I think not.
Having to sit through the endless tirade of jeets that greeted Smith's every attempt to speak was one of the most infuriating situations in which I have ever found myself, not because I agreed with what the man had to say (I did not), because he was never given the opportunity to speak.
I was delighted to discover that John Kenneth Galbraith was a potential speaker possibility at this University, and, although I think his ideas on economics are balderdash, I did not feel compelled to into motion a call to arms for all conservatives to formulate a battle plan that would assure Galbraith the maximum amount of discomfort while he was on campus. If, in fact, he comes to Lawrence to speak, I plan to attend at the university where I work as a national human being, and I would ask all students to show the same consideration to Schlaffy.
To be so myopic in one's thinking as to go to the extent of demonstrating to the level of "bitter taste" is extremely sad to see in a "Witchita" book. But it's a kind of good thing, the remainder of Schaffly's derogators is wrong.
I would display the University of Kansas as a progressive, tolerant school, open to all opinions, rather than a stagnant, repressive university, run by thugglish students who justify their brutish actions by hiding under a false banner marked "progression."
Michael Welsh,
Topeka freshman
U.S. should use Soviet weaknesses
By MARSHALL I. GOLDMAN New York Times Special Features
WELLESLEY, Mass.—Whether Leonid Brezhnev is merely fatigued or near death, it is clear that Soviet leaders have embarked on what may be far-reaching initiatives.
Brezhnev's call for a freeze on placing missiles in Europe, followed immediately by his appeal for better relations with China, may be propaganda or a leader's attempt to take bold initiatives because he realizes little time is left to mark his place in history. It is even more likely that these initiatives also reflect fundamental pressures in the Soviet system itself.
Thus, whether Brezhnev continues or is replaced, President Reagan may be making a mistake if he seems to turn aside Brezhnev's missile proposal. Unbalanced as Brezhnev's initial plan may be, there is good reason to believe that he may have made his offer as a starting point for discussion. Certainly, he would like to end his reign with a reduction of tensions.
But what may be as important as anything else, he and the Politburo may have decided that they had to act to reduce pressures on their European and Chinese fronts because domestic economic circumstances were so desperate. The Russian people would afford to continue their heavy military expenditures, given the need to devote increased resources elsewhere in the Soviet economy.
Breznev, in an unusual comment, reflected this pressure in his missile-freeze speech. Normally, Soviet leaders do not mention cost considerations when talking about military equipment because it is unclear how will we spend, a single ruble more for these purposes than is absolutely necessary."
that Kremilin leaders are facing the most severe monstrous but remote warehouses. Instead of the long-run prospects for fundamental improvement are very bleak.
Whatever the Soviet motive, there is no doubt
Thus, even if the weather improves this year, there still will be fundamental agricultural shortcomings. Breznev himself has just acknowledged that the huge agricultural investment campaign that has taken as much as 27 percent of total investment has been wasted.
Instead of smaller but more numerous grain elevators and barns, the Soviet Union built monstrous but remote warehouses. Instead of farm-to-market roads, it built massive dams and drainage systems. As a result, farmers often are isolated by mud three or four months a year and are unable to move grain off of fields or seed out of regional cereal markets because their supply history why up to 25 percent of the Soviet harvest never finds its way to processing centers.
This basic problem, combined with three successive bad harvests, has forced the country into the hard-currency markets for grain and beef. This harvest year's cost will be at least $8 billion. In addition, the hard-currency expense of Iran in Afghanistan, Poland and Cuba hampers the Soviet Union.
But while needs have increased, the Soviet Union's ability to earn hard currency has diminished at petroleum and gold prices have fallen. This is a serious matter because the Soviet Union earns more than 60 percent of its hard currency from such exports.
The situation in industry is equally depressing. The Soviet Union has had almost no luck in mastering high technology. Computers are a masterpiece of technology in the industry lags far behind the rest of the world's.
Even more surprising, there are no serious problems in heavy industry. The Soviet Union
used to boast how fast its steel production grew. Although it indeed produces more steel than the United States does, it produced less in 1981 than in 1978.
Nor is there much sign of improvement. Steel production in January and February was about 5 percent below the figures for both months last year. In the same period, auto, cement and paper production fell even more. In fact, cereal output declined in dustries, and of course, the grain harvest fell by more than 10 percent last year. Similar dechines in production in the West are called a recession.
The drop in agricultural and industrial output means fewer goods for consumers and lower morale. It has been almost 65 years since the first farm-funded loan has been reinstituted in nearly a dozen cities.
No wonder worker discipline is poor. Money has lost much of its value. Rumors spread about a currency reform that would wipe out deposits in savings banks. Frictions accumulate and generate national tensions and economic instability, when a growing number of riots and even strikes.
In the past, Americans frequently criticized our negotiators because they did not take advantage of Soviet weaknesses. In part, this was due to the fact that we had to how weak the Soviet Union was. Now we know.
Given their problems, Soviet leaders may be prepared to cut back military expenditures and thus make some serious concessions. At the least, Washington should make a counteroffer to Breznev. We may lose a historic opportunity if we ignore this possible opening.
(Marshall I. Goldman, professor of economics at Wellesley College and associate director of the Russian Research Center at Harvard University for the Book-Chronicle bookching, "The Soviet Union in Crisis.")
'Good citizen's' civic responsibility falters
I've been trying to fight City Hall since November. I think City Hall is about to win.
my saga started early last November, when a Lawrence policeman pulled me over for cruising Jayhawk Boulevard at 31 mph in a 20 mph zone at 1:30 a.m.
He refused to yield to my tears and pleading. He wrote me a citation for all 31
Well, I signed my name on the dotted line, but I still didn't think I deserved the ticket.
After all, I was going only 11 miles over the river in the morning, and then over the river again, 20 miles ones—applied after midnight.
Nov. 24 had almost rolled around by the time I realized that my trial date was scheduled at the same time as a class—in which the professor was not sympathetic to the cause of justice and who would have shown me his own actions and had I skipped class for a speeding ticket,
But when I got back, a letter from the court awaited me:
"Dear Ms. Riordan:
Time and Reason also had diluted my anger over the ticket, I was beginning to think that maybe I did deserve it. I guess I was speeding, even though it was just a little bit.
I resolved myself to paying the ticket, so I called Municipal Court to see how much I owed. Twenty-four dollars, I was told. I mailed a check that afternoon.
The next day, I left for Thanksgiving break home. I had home 55 mph all the way with a clear cover.
Enclosed please find the twenty-four dollar ($24.00) check forwarded to our office. The fine for 31/20 on Jayhawk Blvd. is only twelve ($12.00). Please submit the correct amount."
I was delighted. I would have sent off the check right away, but finals were coming up.
TERESA
RJORDAN
And during finals, I tend to put off trivial paying bills and taking care of traffic tickets.
But before I left for Christmas break, I resubmitted the ticket with a $12 check.
When I returned from Christmas break, I found a new letter from the clerk. I thought maybe she had taken to corresponding with me. Wrong.
"Dear Ms. Riordan
Enclosed please find the above ticket and your twelve dollar ($12.00) check. The ticket is now an active bond warrant. The bond amount is twenty dollars ($20.00). The bond money may be satisfied with cash or money order."
Well, I thought it was time I had a chat with the clerk to straighten out the matter. I explained that I had paid the ticket in good faith. I said I would have resubmitted the check earlier had she told me when it had to be in. I said it wasn't very just that I had to pay in time and money for a bureaucratic mistake.
It didn't matter to her that I had won the Good Citizenship Award in third grade, that I was to belong to the Girl Scouts, that I used to volunteer Red Cross swimming lessons.
She didn't care about justice. She said rules were rules and the law was the law. She said laws are rules.
She didn't even care that I had never had a ticket before in my life.
That was January. I hadn't thought about it since. Until last week, when I began to worry that my third-grade teacher would rise from her grave and retract my citizenship award.
I told her that it was a rare day in River I told that I had $20 cash to post bond for an offer to sell my house.
I called Municipal Court and asked what they were going to do to me.
They don't care about Justice, either. We'll probably arrest you, the voice on the phone.
I think that rare day in River City is coming. Soon.
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.
KANSAN
The University Daily
(USPS 500440) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday during June and July abrupt Saturday, Sunday and holidays. Second-class postage paid for Lawrence, Kansas on June 1st and July 6th at the county post office. Earning $2 a year out the county. Student subscriptions are $2 a semester, paid through the student activity fee. Postmaster: Send changes of address to the University Daily Kannan, Funk Hall. The University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kannan
Editor Business Manager
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Managing Editor Traveled Hamilton
Editorialist Karve Schleierster
Sales and Marketing Advice Susan Ohnan
Executive Manager and News Advisor Bark Musk
University Daily Kansan, April 14, 1982
Page 5
Legislature
From page 1
Eldredge, a supporter of the severance tax, said he was surprised by the Senate discussed the issue again this session.
Although she spoke out in favor of the tax on the Senate floor last week, she said the bill's defeat there could bring about compromises on alternative consonants for drawing state revenue.
"This could be a great step forward toward realizing that we can not hold up state government just because we don't have a severance tax," she said.
WITHOUT THE severance tax, which estimates said would draw more than $100 million a year, the legislature will have to increase the gasoline tax by 3 cents a gallon. Solbach said.
"There are going to be some very angry property owners," Solbach predicted.
He criticized the Senate's refusal to pass a severance tax at a time when the state faced losses of about $20 million from the federal government. The law provides no protection because of rising unemployment in the state.
But Eldredge said, "The House and Senate
approach problems differently. The Senate has tried to make up for sinking revenues by increasing other taxes, such as on gasoline.
Almost everyone in Topeka agrees that an impasse between the House and Senate on the severance tax has increased the Legislature's workload for the final two days.
BUT THE cause of the impasse is debated.
"We've had bipartisan cooperation in the House," Solbach said. "And we're chipping it together."
Eldredge suggested House members might have slowed dog legislation this session.
"House members have to deal with elections in the fall," she said. "That sometimes affects how they vote."
Branson agreed that elections played a role in lawmaking, but said elections kept legislators on the ground.
"The House and the governor have worked
together," she said. "The problem has been working with the Senate."
"But the Senate, of course, is up for re-election. That does not feel the responsibility to their constituents."
Attrition
An adviser's students would meet once a week to discuss career options and services, such as job opportunities.
course that freshmen could take for one hour of credit a semester.
"Advisors would also help students address the难题: 'Who are you here?' he said.
The attrition rate is highest among freshmen and sophomores.
"A standard statement in freshman orientation is, "Look at the person on the right of you and look at the person on the left of you, because you are here," here after your second year." **Amber said.**
THE GTETD drop-out figures compiled by the HE Office of Institutional Research and Planning. Of the students who enrolled at KU in the fall of 2013 and dropped out by the end of their second year.
But by spring 1981, the end of their third year,
a total of only 41.3 percent had quit school.
"If they survive the first two years, the attrition rate slows down tremendously." Ambler
The students with academic difficulties have been dismissed or discouraged enough to drop out by the end of their sophomore years, he said. The student will not leave the University will return, Amber said.
"The persisters are going to stay there."
"Some of that 35 percent of the sophomore year are going to come back," he said.
"There are students in this day and age who go to school for a semester or two and don't come back."
THEY MAY leave to get work experience,
money or attend to a family problem, be
hospitalized.
But others may have dropped out because they had 'miserable academic failures', he said.
Some of the students who fail academically have the potential to succeed, he said, but because they are not prepared how to compete with the wrong academic program for their abilities, they make low grades.
"We've got to do more for the middle student and those who are having trouble making good grades."
Pimpinning students who, based on their ACT scores and high school grades, are potential drop-outs, and advising them of ways to help themselves before they start school, may be another way to keep students from leaving school. Ambler said.
HIS OFFICE would suggest that the students with low ACT scores work harder and attend special workshops to enhance their study skills, he said.
ACT scores have been declining at KU and across the country. Ambler said.
"If you can assume that the ACT is a good indication of potential college success, then when you have 44 percent that are scoring in the top of the bracket in 1967 compared to 24 percent in 1979, then you'll have more people graduating," he said.
The interest in student attrition may be based as much on financial reasons as on concern for the student. Ambler said, because University rates are determined by the number of students enrolled.
"But I'll take the interest in it any way I can get it," he said.
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Page 6 University Daily Kansan, April 14, 1982
KANSAS RELAYS
MENS DIVISION
123456
D. W. Acker, Lawrence special student, finishes painting a scoreboard in preparation for the 57th annual Kansas Relays. The relays begin today in Memorial Stadium with the men's decathlon and the women's heptathlon.
JON HARDESTY/Kansan Staff relaxs begin today in
Reagan is using propaganda against Cuba, ex-agent savs
The U.S. government is feeding its citizens propaganda about Cuba instead of informing them about what is actually happening, Peter James, ex-CIA agent, said last night.
By JIM LEHNER Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
Speaking to an audience of about 46 people in the Kansas Union Ballroom, James said that Americans had a distorted view of Cuba because of the U.S. government's propaganda.
our government, ever since the Bay of Pigas held resentment toward Cuba," James said.
"Now the Reagan administration is trying to exploit a potential fear of Castro because he wants the people of the United States back his military forces, or increase military spending over the next five years."
James also gave a slide presentation that was aimed at giving the audience a new look at Cuba. He said that he wanted to change America's policy toward Latin America and Cuba, and added ideas and issues that the American government had tried to hide from the American people.
He said that as an ex-spy who knew what to look for, he found that Cuba was different from what the Reagan Administration would want the American public to believe.
"The Cuban citizens I have talked to have been very pleased with the Castro regime," James said. "They are not the distraught people that our government has projected to us."
"They have much pride in Castro's regime, but to appreciate this one must go back into burglaries."
James said that the Cubans he talked to spoke negatively of the Fulgenio Batista regime, which preceded Castro's. They said that Batista was known for his underwater connections with
"castro, a 28 year old attending the University of Boston and to lead a revolt against Bathlyn," said lawyer
"Although it failed, Batista's ruthless method of power eventually led to his escape from Cuba and to the United States."
James said that Castro decided to become more independent of the United States, so he resisted the CIA-sponsored Bay of Pigs invasion. The United States decided to crush the revolution, which left Cuba nowhere to turn for support but Russia, he said.
"Cuba was justified in doing this," James said. "They had a revolving door of corrupt government from 1902 to 1859. They viewed Castro as their shining light."
He said that the U.S. government had led Americans to believe that Cubans dislike them. Contrary to that opinion, James said, Cuba are not a respect to treat the Americans as human beings.
From page 1
"I was shocked to learn how open-minded the Cubans are to Americans," James said. "They are not denied freedom of speech like our government would like us to believe. I asked them some pointed questions, and they answered them as openly and honestly as possible."
the Mafia and his brutality to Cuban citizens, he said.
"I believe the problem lies with a few money-stainty bankers who have backed dictators in countries because of the stability of interests in them. And when I have been especially true with Central America.
Investigation
If the NCAA enforcement staff believes there has been a serious infraction of rules, it may make an official inquiry. The staff will then send an official listing of rules that it thinks were broken.
there is a violation in the program, then they will inform the institution," he said.
He said that if the allegation was sub-
jective, he would begin an in-
vocation into the school's program.
"What we should be doing is backing the people in these countries. I feel that no country should enter a country and own more than 50 percent of that country's stock. It's called exploitation, and it's very un-American. We must change our ways because our foreign policy the last 20 years isn't been worth a damn in Central America and Cuba."
A preliminary letter does not always lead to an investigation. In NCAA standard procedure, the letter informs the institution that field representatives will come to the institution to interview coaches, athletes and administrators about possible violations.
The institution then must send a response to the NCUA staff and to each member of the NCAA Commission.
Finally, a hearing is scheduled to determine whether the institution is guilty. The institution can appeal to the NCAA Council before any sanctions are enforced against it.
Falkland
From page 1
Hlai said he had offered the United States to serve as a third-party intermediary while Argentina and Britain worked on negotiations.
the third party proposal included an offer by Argentina to withdraw an estimated 9,000 troops from the Falklands if Thatcher would recall the naval armada and rescind her threat to sink any Argentine ship within 200 miles of the islands.
BUT THE British apparently found Argentina's offer inappropriate because it also provided that the islands remain under Argentine control.
The Argentines were equally firm in negating any proposal that restored British control to the islands, which were seized April 2.
A number of British warships were in the area already, enforcing a naval blockade of the islands. Argentina reported that there were four British submarines, two of them nuclear, patrolling an area around the islands.
With the British naval fleet expected to reach the area in nine days, Haig cautioned
In related news yesterday, both the CIA and the Pentagon denied reports that the United States was secretly aiding the British by sending their assistance about Argentina locations in the islands.
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Buy your yearbook at the information booth April 13, 14, 15
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THE BOARD OF CLASS OFFICERS will interview for the positions of PRODUCER
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Details and Applications available at the BOCO office in the Student Union. Application Deadline: Wednesday, April 14.
University Daily Kansan, April 14, 1982
Page 7
Moore Hall work to begin in June
By LISA GUITERKEZ Staff Reporter
A Topeka construction company that submitted the lowest bid yesterday for a $1.5 million addition to Moore Hall, home of the Kansas Geological Survey on West Campus, will begin construction of the project in June, according to University officials.
"At this point, we're talking about completion in late summer of 1983," Allen Wiechert, University director of facilities planning, said yesterday.
The company, Douglas Construction Co. of Topeka, bid 400 days for completion of the project, Wiechert said.
Douglas Construction Co. submitted a base bid of $96,000 to outbid 12 other construction companies yesterday in the State Purchasing Office in Topeka, Wiechert said.
"They were mostly from northeast Kansas," he said of the companies that submitted bids. "Some were from Topeka, Lawrence, the Kansas City area, and there was one from St. Joseph."
THE ADDITION will contain 15,000 gross square feet and will be connected on all three floors to Moore Hall and on one level to Parker Hall, home of the U.S. Geological Survey at KU.
The addition will include laboratory and office space for oil and gas research, mapping and survey for the Kansas Geological Survey.
The Survey conducts research on Kansas water, energy, minerals and land resources and supplies information on resources and problems to public agencies, businesses and individuals.
It will also have offices for visiting scientists, a seminar-conference room, and computer graphics room. It has animated cartography lab and a computer graphics reading room.
The addition will replace a walkway that now links the two buildings.
Funding for the addition came from a special Geological Survey Fund established by the 1980 Legislature, Wiechcid said.
THE FUND is being generated by a $40 charge for each notice of an intent to drill an oil or gas well in either July 1898 and July 1893, he said.
"It changes everyday," Wiechert said of the amount in the fund. "But there's enough in it right now to fund the project."
The 1982 Legislature approved use of the money from this fund to build the addition.
Music collections sitting idle
By DOUG CUNNINGHAM Staff Reporter
Two music collections donated to the University of Kansas are important additions to KU's music library, but no money has yet been found to catalog the collections, the associate music librarian said recently.
Richard Wright, professor of music history, donated his collection of 18,000 jazz recordings, books, periodicals and jazz films to KU in December 1981.
James Seaver, professor of history and director of the Western Civilization program, donated his collection of recordings to KU in January 1979.
"They're most unusual collections," said Ellen McKay, librarian. "We're not afraid of a new world."
Cataloguing the music collections will be a large project because of the data that must be gathered, including the titles, composers, performers, date
THE LIBRARY has applied for both federal and University grants to pay for cataloguing the collections, Johnson said, but has not had any luck yet.
and location recorded and instruments, she said.
But the library also has some excellent reference materials that will assist people in finding records in the collections, Johnson said.
She said having the collections
available on public access was im-
mportant to the department.
"We hope that we can give access to students, teachers, scholars and staff who are ill or blind."
THE OLDER records in the collections are quite fragile, and sometimes crack while being lifted from the turntable, she said. The library staff will record the records onto cassette tapes. They will be able to take the cassettes home.
Johnson said the library probably would make arrangements for the copies of the cassettes.
The library will house the collections on the third floor of Murphy Hall. The moving of the two collections into Murphy began last week.
"We've installed heating and air conditioning, which is very important with these old records. They acquire mildew very rapidly," Johnson said.
The library also installed an exhaust fan in the room the collections will occupy, and the cement floor was covered with linoleum to keep down dust. Dust is almost as hard on records as rudely Johnson said.
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"They've been very well cared for," she said.
The library has purchased special needies and recording equipment to help in taping records in the collections, she said.
Having the Seaver and Wright collections will help KU attract donations of other collections, Johnson said.
"Sound recording collections are
important," said the producer,
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TOPEKA-Kansas House Speaker Wendell Lady says he will probably run for governor this November, "if everything falls into place," but he will wait until the end of the legislative session to announce his final decision.
Lady likely to oppose Carlin
By COLLEEN CACY Staff Reporter
"I'm leaning toward running," Lady R-Overland Park, said at a press conference in his capitol office yesterday. "But there are still few people I unanswered everything into place, I say yes. If it doesn't, I'll say no."
But Lady declined to say specifically what those unanswered questions were.
THREE OTHER Republicans have already announced that they will challenge Democratic Gov. John Carlin in the upcoming elections. They are Dave Owen, a banker from Stanley and a former lieutenant governor of Kansai. Louis Klerm, a pilot from Easton, and Idbettson, a dairy farmer from Colby.
Sam Hardage, a Wichita businessman, is also expected to run, as is Senate President Ross Doyen, R-Corporodia.
Lady said he would announce whether he is running by May 4.
"What happens in the rest of the session might have an influence," he said. "Politics can change very fast. The outcome is decided not to make that decision yet."
Lady said if future candidates challenged him for the Republican nomination, it might affect his decision to run.
"Based on the candidates so far, they would not stop me." he said.
When asked whether the prospect of facing Doyen in an election would stop him from running for governor, Lady said, "No, it really wouldn't."
Doyen and Lady have disagreed on most of the important issues during the session, notably the proposed severance tax on gas and oil.
LADY LED THE House in passing
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The Student Body President is now taking applications for the positions of Ad ministrative Assistant and Treasurer: Job descriptions and applications are currently available in the Student Senate office. B-105 Kansas Union (Third Level). Both positions require backgrounds in accounting and business process administration. Applicants must be in good academic standing and working knowledge of English. Each position will pay $250.00 monthly. The appointments are effective May 15.
Attention
The KU Student Awards committee is accepting nominations for The Agnes Wright Strickland Award and The Class of 1913 Award. These are awarded to graduating seniors.
The Strickland Award is given in recognition of a good academic record, demonstrated leadership in matters of all University concern, respect among fellow students and indications of future dedication to service to the University.
The Class of 1913 is given in recognition of her his evidenced intelligence, devotion to studies and personal character.
The awards will be presented during 1982 Commencement weekend. Self nominations are welcomed. Applications must be received by the Awards Committee, in the Office of Student Organizations, and Activities, 220 Strong Hall by Monday, April 19, 1982.
Completed applications, which must include a resume, are due Thursday, April 15 at 5:00 p.m. in the Student Senate office. Interviews will be scheduled at a later date.
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Republican Doyen, a severance tax opponent, receives strong backing from those industries.
several severance tax bills, but all died in the Senate.
Lady said that because he would not have the support of the state oil and gas industries, he would not be as well suited to the role of the other Republican candidates.
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But Lady said that despite earlier worries that lack of campaign money would keep him out of the running, his financial problems were nearly solved.
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"I'm pleased with the indication of financial support," he said. "We set a goal for this stage, and we're very close to the goal."
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Lady also discussed the progress of the Legislature this session. He said his priorities when lawmakers returned from a two-week recess at the end of April would be to reach agreement on a plan for public school finance and to pass a statewide repeal of the intangibles tax.
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HE SAID HE thought the House had behaved responsibly and accomplished a lot during the session, but had not filled deck with the Senate on many issues.
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and property tax relief," he said. "It seems to be content to hang in there another year.
"Inaction by the Senate merely postpones problems until next year. I think they ought to be faced at this time."
Carlin has said he will be visiting senators whose votes against the tax might be swayed, to gain the two more votes needed to pass a severance tax.
Lady said she was not optimistic that another severance tax bill could pass the Senate, even if Carlin, who has pushed the tax since the beginning of the 1881 session, campaigns for it during the recess.
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"I will say this, though," Lady said. "If, in fact, the senators voted their consciences, it will have little effect. If, in fact, they want to their constituents, it might."
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Page 8 University Daily Kansan, April 14, 1982
On the record
A 25-year-old KU student will go on trial May 3 for charges of lewd and lascivious behavior, the Douglas District Court decided yesterday.
Mark S. Messina, Overland Park senior, will stand trial for allegedly exposing himself on April 7 to another KU student who was studying at Watson Library.
Messina was arrested April 7 and released on $1,000 bond.
BURGLARBS STOLE more than $1, 000 worth of store equipment about 8 p.m. Monday from a residence at 1012 New York St., police said.
Burglaries may have used wire cutters to enter the back door. They took a metal knife and cut a $50-deck worth $50 and a turntable worth $20. There are no suspects, police said.
THIEVES TOOK a motorcycle sometime between 5 p.m. Sunday and
noon Monday from a Naismith Hall parking lot, police said.
Thieves picked up or towed away the 1975 Yamaha worth about $600, police said. There are no suspects.
VANDALS BROKE more than seven car windows sometime between noon Sunday and 10 a.m. Monday, police said.
Police said vandals used a B.B. or pellet gun to shatter the driver's side windows. The cars were all parked on Alabama, Kentucky and Indiana streets. There are no suspects, police said.
KU POLICE answered an intrusion alarm at Joliffe Hall five times between 5:30 and 8:20 p.m. Monday. Police said they searched the inside and outside of the building each time but found nothing out of the ordinary. The building engineer reset the alarm four times. After the fifth time, the alarm was turned off. Police did not learn what was triggering the alarm.
GSL cuts would hurt med school students
By TOM HUTTON Staff Reporter
"Reagan's proposal is to eliminate the GSL program for graduate students everywhere," Burge said. "It probably has less impact than a form, but there's always the possibility."
KANAS CITY, Kan.-Proposals to eliminate the Guaranteed Student Loan program would affect more than 30 percent of the students at the University of Kansas College of Health Sciences. Bill Je Burger, director of student financial aid at the Med Center, said yesterday.
Burge said if Congress passed President Reagan's proposal to eliminate the GSL program to graduate students, 608 of the 1,000 students at the Med Center would lose their school funding.
Graduate students now funded under
the GSL program can receive up to 85,000 yearly and must pay the loan back after graduation at 9 percent interest.
PROGRAMS IN jeopardy at the MEd Center include graduate nursing, medical degrees and other graduate-level health science programs.
Students at the Med Center, through the Medical Students Assembly, conducted a mail-in campaign against the proposed cuts earlier this year.
The students mailed more than 300 postcards to Sens. Bob Dole and Nancy Kassebaum, both R-Kan., and Rep. Dan Glickman, D-Kan., expressing their displeasure with the proposal to end student loans.
Nearly 80 percent of the medical students use some type of loan system, Burge said. The high cost of medical school, she said, undoubtedly played a large part in the need for medical student loans.
The Med Center's Student Financial Aid Office recently estimated the yearly cost of medical school at nearly $10,000 for a Kansas resident. Tution is $3,800 for Kansas residents and $7,445 for non-residents.
THE LARGEST state program for medical students, which pays school expenses if students promise to attend in Kansas, was also recently reduced.
"For the class of 1986," Burge said, "65 spots have been cut from the program. It's going to affect a majority of our medical students."
Burge said that now 168 of the Med Center's 200 medical students receive training in the use of the promise of working in understaffed Kansas cities after graduation.
Mike Jefferson, Fort Scott medical technology student, began to receive telephone calls.
work in Kansas for three years after his graduation.
"With Reagan, everybody seems to be worrying about the cuts," Jefferson said. "It wasn't really a problem with Reagan and his administration, several programs to choose from."
BURGE SAID that although medical students would be hurt by the proposed cuts, the nursing program at the Med Center would possibly suffer the most.
The only student loan provision for nurses at the Med Center, Burge said, was a $30,000 yearly state-sponsored program. A small program such as this one, she said, is little help when there are more than 300 nursing students.
"I'd say the nursing program could be hurt most by any reductions in GSLs," Burge said. "We just don't have many alternatives for them."
One of the few alternatives, Burge said, is the Health Education said. Law pro-
Commission returns plan
By STEPHEN BLAIR Staff Reporter
The Lawrence City Commission last night voted 3-2 to return a development recommendation for Naisnith West to the Lawrence-Douglas County Plan.
Mayor Marci Francisco had said she wanted to change the zoning of at least part of the city to allow the city could have some control over the area's development.
Development of the 28-acre area, which is bordered by 24th and 27th streets, Ousdahl Road and the Naismith drainage channel, would cause problems with increased traffic and storm water run-off, Francisco said.
"People are telling me that there's water in their yard. We've seen pictures of it," she said.
Since the city has no legal control over future construction, there is no way to ensure that building near the Naismith drainage channel will not cause erosion problems, Commissioner Nancy Zoncta said. The city is not expected to build.
"What we don't know now is how much of that vegetation would be retained," she said.
Shontz also said that it was a beautiful wooded area and ought to be purchased.
Francisco agreed
The three commissioners voted to return the recommendation after it became evident that there were not the three commissioners by law to lower the zoning density.
Commissioners Don Binns and Barkley Clark said they would never vote for the downzoning.
In returning the planning commission's recommendation, the three commissioners hope to pressure the department for the implementation of drainage and traffic. Clark said.
But Clark said he and Binns prevented that leverage from working.
concerned about increased traffic, said she would like to see a change to lower density zoning.
"Since the developer knows they don't have four votes, the sword doesn't have any edge to it," he said.
"The only control we is zoning." Eldridge said. "And that still hasn't been accomplished. Ousdahl is already overloaded."
Clark said he would rather solve those problems by having city staff work with all the people involved rather than changing the zoning.
Keith Switzer, the engineer for the development, said he was frustrated that the commission was delaying the release by returning the recommendation.
But Jane Eldredge, attorney for residents on Ousdahl Road who are
In another matter, local attorney Ed Colliser should submit a plan for renovating the Lawrence Opera House.
The commission is encouraging the building's renovation for use by local performing arts groups.
The commission also deferred action until next week on amendments designed to bring the city's home day care code in compliance with state law.
Also at the meeting, Francisco gave Commissioner Nancy Shontz a green T-shirt that read "City Mother."
Francisco, who was wearing an identical shirt, said that she had heard a lot about city fathers and wanted to provide a balance.
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Halls shut over semester break
The Residential Programs Advisory Board decided yesterday that KU residence halls would not be open to students for the interim between spring and summer semester this year.
The board acted on a recommendation from Fred McEhlenie, director of residential programs, that the halls close, but that residents who have summer hall passes must attend halls through May 17, the day after commencement. The scheduled date for halls to close is May 14.
The board, which has been wrestling with the problem of vacation housing all year, decided it
was fiscally impossible to keep the halls open for the longer-than-usual semester break of 23 days.
"I really feel like we're between a rock and a hard place," McElenie said. "It's a real hardship on people who must stay."
AS WITH other vacation periods, McElhenny said, it would have taken 50 residents each night of the break to pay the expenses of keeping a hall oop. The residents had been given $200 per person and the expense would be $207 for the entire period, all of which would have been required in advance.
McElhenie told the board that his office would assist any students in
Local motels also have been advertising special rates for the past two vacations, but they are annually booked solid for commencement. McEllenbia said this was the reason for allowing students with summer contracts to stay until after commencement.
finding accommodations for the 23- day break. He said the Jayhawker Towers and area hotels and motels were alternatives to residence hall
The Jayhawker Towers has offered vacant apartments to students during the last two vacation periods of four occupants per apartment.
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University Daily Kansan, April 14, 1982
Page 9
Senate says BSU bookkeeping inaccurate
By ANN LOWRY Staff Reporter
The Student Senate's finance and auditing committee voted yesterday to give the Black Student Union's representatives one more chance to explain its $8,596 budget request to the senate will cut its funding completely.
The entire Senate voted last week not to fund BSU and to send the group's request back to the finance and auditing committee for further questioning about BSU's budget request and its bookkeeping.
BSU has presented three different budget requests to the Senate's budget
subcommittee and finance and auditing committee, but none of the requests were fully explained. Tom Berger, who audited co-chairman, said yesterday.
And, Berger said, the individual line items did not add up to BSU's total budget request.
JOE ROBB, the Senate's executive treasurer, said the Senate had problems with the BSU's bookkeeping.
"There is no record-keeping by the BSU." Robb said.
Robb also said that the BSU had
He said yesterday he found two vouchers, dated seven days apart, to pay for the same $450 worth of film rentals.
KU to study cultural transition
Several KU students and faculty members will search for a missing link in the process of cultural evolution at an archeological site in New Mexico this summer. Alan Simmons, director of the archeological research, said yesterday.
A group of KU students will participate in an archaeological field school at the Caocha Shelters Project in Northern Illinois, where they will be sampling the first week of July, Simmons said.
They will excavate caves for 4,000-year-old evidence of the transition between hunter-and-gatherer and farmer cultures, he said.
Layers of soil in the caves provide a sequential record of time, Simmons said.
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THE FIVE-WEEK field school will supplement research done by Simmons with the Navaho Nation Cultural Center for a year at open air sites in New Mexico.
about $1,600 left in this year's account that he did not think it could spend.
During last year's excavations, Simmons said he found evidence that corn was used as long ago as 2000 B.C. Corn must be cultivated, he said, this so that the inhabitants may have dedicated that the inhabitants may have known something about agriculture.
Simmons said it was more likely that the culture was not a totally agricultural community, but used the corn as a supplement to its regular diet.
John Coleman, BSU's president, and Broderick Crawford, the acting treasurer, were asked to explain the budget at the meeting, but Coleman left a note on Berger's desk yesterday because he had physics test that night.
Rod Bremby, a member of the BSU who did go to the meeting, said some of the BSU's records might have been lost when it changed administrations this
The National Science Foundation is
funding the Chaco Project field school,
which focuses on natural history.
THE COMMITTEE voted to reconsider the BSU budget next Tuesday, along with the budget request from the Student Council for Minority Engineering, which includes Minority Engineers, whose request the subcommittee also questioned.
Bremby said he thought both the finance and auditing members and BSU officers were at fault for the stalled BSU budget request.
Gentry said that $9,900 would pay for the KU-Y director's salary and $75 for film rental, leaving only $25 unaccounted for.
AT YESTERDAY'S meeting, the committee also interviewed Keanan Gentry, director of the KU-Y, about how the KU-plan to spend its outside income-$10,000 from Rock Chalk Reuse proceeds.
"No other group has been asked to explain in detail the money it raises on its own, and I would like to ask what the reason is being asked to do this," he said.
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"I hope we can get beyond the hostilities," Bremby said. He said it would be a mistake for the Senate to withdraw funding from the BSU.
He said he thought that some members of the committee did not want to listen to its budget request again, and he asked them not to attend the call for not attending the budget hearing.
DAN LOYNE SCOTT SAVENY MARTIN PRYOR KEN PRENDERGAST
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ANN CROMWELL DAVE KLESE LIZ DESTEPANIS
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VOTE "INPUT" APRIL 23 & 24
10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32. 33. 34. 35. 36. 37. 38. 39. 40. 41. 42. 43. 44. 45. 46. 47. 48. 49. 50. 51. 52. 53. 54. 55. 56. 57. 58. 59. 60. 61. 62. 63. 64. 65. 66. 67. 68. 69. 70. 71. 72. 73. 74. 75. 76. 77. 78. 79. 80. 81. 82. 83. 84. 85. 86. 87. 88. 89. 90. 91. 92. 93. 94. 95. 96. 97. 98. 99. 100.
--in the KU Union.
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Page 10 University Daily Kansan, April 14, 1982
Jayhawk swim teams end seasons at nationals
by MIKE ARDIS Sports Writer
The Kansas swimming teams finished their 1982 season with the U.S.D. Inseason Nationals last weekend in Gainesville, Fla., and three swimers
They did a real good job," Coach Gary Kemp said. "It was well worth the trip. It was a real good way for us to end the year."
Neon. Renegent the best meet,
placing in three events. He had the best
finish by a Jayhawk with his 10th-place
finish in the 1,000-yard freestyle in
He also finished 15th in the 1,650 freestyle in 15:29.9 and in the 400 individual medley in 4:00.7. Only the top 16 players were awarded points. Neugen finished 23rd in the 500 freestyle in 4:31.1.
The Jayhawks had only six swimmers at the meet, including Jenny Wagstaff and Celine Cery from France, and Alexandra Pereira and the 100 flyball in 53.2, finishing 15th. She also
finished 30th in the 200 individual medley, 22nd in the 200 freestyle and 24th in the 400 individual medley.
Cerny finished 28th in the 100 backstroke and 33rd in the 100 butterfly.
in backstroke:
Brad Wells finished 20th in the 200 backstroke, and Ken Grey was 32nd in the 200 butterfly.
Chuck Neumann was the other Jawhayk to win points with his 16'-foot finish in the 100 breaststroke in the final finished in the 180 second breaststroke.
The four men swimmers also swim in three relays, but placed in none. They finished in the 800 freestyle and in the 400 relay and 25th in the 400 medley relay.
This was the first year the Jayhawks went to the U.S.S. meet, and Kempf said he planned to go again so the team could compete at the top of the swimers in the nation.
"Anytime you swim in national, you're swimming against the best," he said.
Kemfod said he hoped he could take a larger team next year, but that he was pleased with this year's performance.
Canadiens, Oilers eliminated
By United Press International
The New York Islanders, Quebec Nordiques and Los Angeles Kings advanced to the quarterfinals of the National Hockey League playoffs with wins in their best-of-five preliminary series last night.
The Islanders will now play the New York Rangers, Quebec will play the Boston Bruins and Los Angeles will play the Cleveland Cavaliers. Canucks in the best-seven series.
New York Islanders 4, Pittsburgh 3
The New York Islanders, displaying a tenacity that has won them the last two Stanley Cups, surged from a two-gap deficit late in the third period and used John Tonell's goal 6:19 into overtime to defeat the Pittsburgh Penguins.
Tonelli, who tied the game with 2:21 left in regulation, broke into the Pengui's zone on a 2-0-1 break with Bob Nystrom. Tonelli fired from 20 feet, and Penguins goalander Michel Dion kicked it aside. Nystrom got the
rebound and passed it back to Tonelli who pushed it past Dion.
Quebec 3. Montreal 2 (OT)
Quebec 3, Montréal 2 (OT)
Dale Hunter scored 22 seconds into sudden-death overtime to the quebec 16, 34 triumph over the Montreal Canadiens, forcing the Canadiens to make an abrupt exit from the playoffs for the third year in a row.
Los Angeles 7, Edmonton 4
Charlie Summer and Dan Bonar scored two goals each, and gaile Mario Lessard turned back 40 shots, giving the Kings a 7-4 triumph over the Edmonton Oilers and a stunning upset in their preliminary series.
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Men's tennis attempts comeback
By GARY GRIGGS Sports Writer
THINGS DON'T get any easier for the Jayhawks. They face another tough test in a road match against Wichita State today. The Shockers were ranked 19th in the latest college tennis poll.
The Kansas men's tennis team knew that its Big Eight season debut was not going to be an easy one. The Jayhawks were not surprised either, because they won at Colorado, 7-2, and Missouri, B-1, in Stillwater, OKa., this past weekend.
"We just ran into three good teams," Head Coach Randy McGrath said. "OSU is an outstanding team and has won the conference championship the past five years. Missouri has its best team ever this year, and Colorado has a solid team."
The Jayhawks, now 4-8, have four conference matches remaining before the Big Eight Championships, which will be held April 29-30, in Kansas City, Kan., at Woodside Racquet Club.
They will host Kansas State and Iowa State this weekend.
"I am really looking forward to playing WSU," McGrath said. "This match could help tune us up for the
FRESHMAN RICK AUBIN attributed the Jayhawks' losses to a lack of experience.
"We didn't have the kind of experience those other teams had," he said, "and that really proved to be a big disadvantage for us.
weekend if the guys go at it in the right manner and perform well."
"We're still maturing though, and it's still not too late for us to turn things around. We need a win badly enough before the Big Eight Championships."
According to freshman Craig Tidwell, this weekend is critical for the Jawhaws.
and Iowa State will be the most important matches of the season for us," he said. "This is our big chance to lead we need in the conference championships."
"THE MATCHES with K-State
"We know we can't win the Big Eight, but we still have a lot to shoot for. We have the potential to finish fourth or fifth."
"I'm glad we played these three teams first, because it's always kind of nice to get the tough ones out of the way early," Mr McGraith said. "Now maybe we'll be ready for the rest of the Big Eight schools."
. . . women prepare for Big Eight meet
Last year, the Jayhawks finished seventh in the Big Eight Championships.
By GARY GRIGGS Sports Writer
The Kansas women's tennis team will be trying to bring back memories of 1980 this weekend at the Big Eight Tennis Championships. It was then that the Jayhawks last won the title.
The championships are set to get under way at 8 a.m. Friday at the Woodside Racquet Club in Kansas and will continue through Saturday afternoon.
"I really think we're going to be ready," Head Coach Kathy Merrion said. "I think we have a vehicle at third or fourth place, at least."
Last year, the Jayhawks finished fifth in the conference championships.
"Oklahoma State has to be the favorite. They won it last year," Merrion said. "They are very solid and have a lot of depth.
"Oklahoma and Colorado should be tough, too, but I feel we can edge up there with them."
THE JAYHAWKS, now 9-8, split two matches last weekend in Columbia, Mo. They defeated Missouri, 5-4, but lost to Nebraska, 8-1. Both matches were forced to be indoors because of cold weather.
"It wasn't that big of a deal," Merrion said. "It's a lot easier going
from outdoors to indoors than from indoors to outdoors.
"We didn't play well at all against Nebraska. The girls just weren't concentrating."
Freshman Steffanie Dicke,
however, thought the team played
well in both matches.
"It just seemed like against Nebraska that no matter how well we played they always back with something better," she said.
Seedings for the championships will be determined at a coaches' meeting on Thursday.
SENIOR COREY Nason backed up her coaches sentiments.
"We don't want to have to play our way up through the loser's 'sacker,' Nason said. "It's really tough when you have to win," he added, "to want to feed in the winner's sack."
The championship will be double-
elimination, and points will be
awarded according to places. First
place will receive eight points,
second place will receive seven
points and so on.
Dicke said the team is excited and looking forward to the championship.
"It's been kind of tough trying to concentrate in practice lately, because we're all so anxious about it," she said.
"It's important for us to draw a good seed," Merrison said. "The higher the seedings you draw, the more likely it is that they would be in for the entire tournament."
P
You'll Love Our Style.
---
Headmasters.
809 Vermont Lawrence, Kansas 66044
841.8000
Put your best foot forward.
Jobs are tight and in order to compete in todays job market you must stand-out. Present your best image with a professionally designed and typeset resume. At the House of Usher we're experts at thesis binding and resumes. We'll help you put your best foot forward at a price you can afford.
Service Beyond Duplication
HOUSE OF USHER
638 MASSACHUSETTS STREET ▪ LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044 ▪ TELEPHONE 842-3614
后見神楽
IWAMI
KAGURA
OF JAPAN
Wearing masks and elaborate costumes, Japanese dancers perform the ancient KAGURA (Music and Dance for the Gods) as they reenact the brave deeds of ancient heroes.
TRADITIONAL MASK FOLK DANCE
The dancers come from Shimane Prefecture, which was the center of many events in ancient times.
TICKETS $2,00
8:00 WEDNESDAY
APRIL 14
WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM
KANSAS UNION
TICKETS $2,00
AT THE DOOR OR
AT MURPHY HALL
BOX OFFICE
Sponsored by The Japan Foundation; the Consulate-General of Japan, Kansas City, Missouri; International Theatre Studies Center and East Asian Studies Center University of Kansas
BOBBY
BELL'S
BAR-B-QUE
2214 YALE STREET
(BEING THE UNIVERSITY STATE BANK)
MOTORCYCLE ROUTING DIRECTORY
So Nutritious . . So Lo Cal . . So
MISS STREET DELI
now featuring . . .
Soft-Serve Frozen
DESSERT YOGURT
TJ
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 4/30/82
COMING TO KANSAS UNIVERSITY
Broadway's Biggest Hit!
C SHOPUS JR1
A CHORUS LINE
Saturday, April 24 8 PM
Hoch Auditorium
Students Save $3 with ID
Regular Price: $12 & $10 Students: $9 & $7
PURCHASE TICKETS AT
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
BOX OFFICE OR
CALL 864-3477
Presented by Theater League
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
University Daily Kansan, April 14, 1982
Page 11
The University Daily
Call 864-4358
CLASSIFIED RATES
one tie one two three four five six seven eight nine ten eleven nineteen eleven elev
AD DEADLINES
to run
Monday ... Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday ... Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday ... Friday 5 p.m.
Thursday ... Friday 5 p.m.
Friday ... Wednesday 5 p.m.
ERRORS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be found by visiting the $·ngan business office at 843-558.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
The Kanans will not be responsible for more than two incorrect inertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
KANSAI BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Fifth St. 864-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
WORRIED ABOUT April 157 Call Don's Tax Service for fast, accurate tax return preparation. Call 841-6983. 60-day extension of file to arefile. Available: 4-15
The board of class officers will be inter-
viewed on Thursday, April 18th for the
mandatory examinations at the ACCC.
Candidates are available at the BOCO Office
in the Student Union. Desired for application
are as follows:
PLAN TO ATTEND DISABILITY AWARNESS WEEK EVENTS. SHE THE ON CAMPUS COLUMN FOR TODAYS EVENTS.
4-16
PSST Have you seen the new Phillip Sailor Delly? Not. Not well you can do anything you want to with it and you know what else-it is for it to it! 4-20
Paid Staff Positions Business Manager, Edito
The Kanaan is now accepting applications for the Summer and Fall Semester Business Apps. These are paid positions and require some newspaper experience. Application forms are available in the Student Organizations and Activities, 220 Strong Hall; and in Room 200 Flint Hall. Completed applications are due in 200 Flint by 5:00 p.m., Monday, April 19.
The University Daily Kanans is an Equal Opportunity Affirmation Action Employer. Applicants are of diverse people regardless of race, religion, color, sex, disability, national origin, age, or ancestry.
Open House, Lawrence Community Nursery School. Wednesday, April 14. 6:30 p.m.-8:30 p.m. 642 Alabama. Parents and children 4-14
Free Massage Workshops taught by Dr. Free Massage Workshops taught by Dr. Mandy night.math. work in into your schedule. First session starts 6:00 p.m. 14 April to witness an evening Massage Workshop, visit enthert Fox. 841-205-3676 4-15
Gem and Mineral Show, April 17, 10 to 16
3-Hour Children's Building, 21 Demonstrations in Lajpatan, 21 Demonstrations in Lajpatan, Bandspairing, Sandpainting, Glass and more. Doorn-Door Show, April 4-16
Must see to believe. Furnished rooms with
uphillies paid near university & downtown.
No pets. Phone 841-5500. **tf**
FOR RENT
HAMOVER PLACE. Completely furnished, shiplahs, a ceiling fan, a table with only 3 blocks of furniture. KU. DONT DELT. Reservoir your seat. KU. DONT DELT. Warm-mat-wash. KU. DONT DELT. Your month-end gift: 841-1212 or 844-1255. **it**
PRINCETON PLACE RATIO APARTMENTS.
Now available, 2 bedroom, 2 bath, perfect
for roommates. 3 bedrooms, with electric open-
er, wash/dryer hookups, fully-equipped
kitchen, washer/dryer, appliances,
2-3 daily at 12:288 Princeton Blvd., or
phone 842-2875 for additional information.
THE FOOD-
★THE SOCIAL LIFE★
Are Just Three Of The Many Reasons
People Come To Nealsmith Hall Summer Or Fall/Spring
1800 Naismith Drive 843-8559
--available now. Two bedroom spacious apt.
unfurnished, carpeted and drapery. closet,
shower, kitchen, laundry and on bus route. $32 per month.
meets NEDRABOOK 10th & Crestfallen 17th
P rent to mature male student. Quiet,
comfortable efficiency apartment. Private
lodgehon. Close to the Union. Reasonable
price. 862-4185. tf
substantiated STUDENT COOPERATIVE on campus and downtown. Own bedroom/study. Six evening meals each week. $51-$79, including utilities. SUNFLOWER
Shalinec 3 DINAM 2 bath. Full carpeted and also central air, dryer, and dishwasher. Great location at 919 Indiana, Apt. 149-7310 or 841-1255. 4-14
*Bedroom rooms 1-3 bedroom Apts. Duplexes and an 8-bedroom house close to campuses NPcts. Call 642-725-0165 for full year. Call afternoon or Sat. or Sun. 4-14
Live in the CHRISTIAN CAMPAUS HOUSE
765 summer to fall. Become a part of a
campus ministry. Call Alan Roess
campus minister 842-503-762.
TRAILROAD. Leasing for fall - F-studios, Townhouses and studios in downtown HAUL. All have harvest gold applite wall to wait carpet & rugs furnished. F-unit 106, tennis & racquets. On R.U. bag, tennis & raquets. $250 each.
Summer and fall rentals, houses and apartments. Near campus, no pets. Lynch Real Estate 843-1081 or 841-3323. 4-14
We have a good place to live and study. We offer 24-hour student leave and 12-month leave and August paid maternity leave. We provide adults and we extend the courtesy of not having children. Please call for the appointment. 841-573-9296.
MED CENTER BOUND? Newly rehauled
2 BR Duplexes located. Now Custr. A/C
Appliances, parking. Call (913) 831-2678.
480 S. 15th St., Boston, MA 02118.
THY COOPERATIVE LIVING. Sunflower
TRUY. 842-9421. tf
Sublease large 2 BR apartment near star-
484-8333
paid, air conditioned
4-15
Subbase furnished studio apartment with pool, tennis courts for summer. $230 + electricity. $200 deposit. 749-4526. 4-16
For Nest 2 br. apt. comfort to shopping c/a heat. Carpet & drapes, complete kitchen, garages available. Call 841-8688 for an appointment. 4-19
Subluse at last years prices 2 br. apt. comp.
kitchen c/a heat. Carpet and draps.
Call for an appointment today 841-8688, 4-19
Summer sublease. Nice 3 bedroom town-house.
On KU bus route. A.C. dishwasher.
275 per month + utilities. Call 864-1310 or
864-1282.
4-14
Studio Apt. furnished, quiet, clean, A/C.
Reference. Available May 15 or June 1.
Call 843-8000.
oubless Meadebrook晨播 kit for 49"
from ppm 10 May - 1 July 2013 5n Call 4-205
from ppm 10 May - 1 July 2013 5n Call 4-205
Furnished one bedroom apt. for sublease.
Excellent location to campus and downtown.
Central air heat. Available May 15. Call
842-685-686.
4-30
New orchards duplex 2 br—Large living
area Garage D W Hookups too. $375 Available
June 1. 841-8459.
4-21
Sublime Meadowbrook Townhouse. Now
1295 West 46th Street. $340, 240,
$440 deposit. 81-3200 After 5 p.m.
81-3200 After 5 p.m.
raynawker Towers Apartments
Now taking applications for fall and summer leases. KU students only.
2 Bedroom apartments on
- utilities paid
- swimming pool
- on bus line
Space available in the Kokota Community for fall semester. Information and applications are available at the Equinecal University, Istanbul, 1824 Islamabad, 843-4533, phone 843-4533, 4-14
- laundry facilities
- furnished or unfurnished
Wanted outgoing Christians and concien-
lous students to share 5 bedroom house at
18 & Keeney to next fall & spring $160.
Sr. Librarian Utilities Jobs. include:
Darryl, 841-7892.
Small 2 br. apt. very close to campus & downtown. Newly remodeled $210/month. Bedrooms 3, 4, 5. First Entrance at al., newly remodeled await. Mkt $140/month. Call 841-0441. May 4-14
Rooms available for summer $100-$160 per
room and quiet atmosphere. Call Darryl
at 587-236-6936.
SUBLEASE IN STYLE FOR SUMMER! NEW-
BASement for up to 18 square feet (easily made into second bedroom); newly installed laundry room; study area, laundry and storage in same building; office space on upper floor or PAYS @ 843-6218. Sundance appraisal fee.
2 Bdrm., 1½ Bath, Townhouse, All Appliances, Utilities, Close to Shopping, KU, 842-593-9850.
WANTED FOR SUMMER and/or fall semester; two rooms to live in a nine-four bedroom room. $78/month. Available May 15. Call Mile at 769-0653. May-August 4-16. Call Mile at 769-0653.
1 Female -for June Int-Aug. i.t. $175.00,
1 Male -for June Int-Aug. i.t. $187.00.
Call Barb Baird Ln. 841-7901.
Call Barb Baird Ln. 841-7901.
SUBLAGE-2 bedroom, 2 bath, fully carpeted, air conditioned apt. Available June 1 (negotiable) option for new lease. Apt. 495. May 15 month. Calls 4-16 13:58 a.m. 5:00 p.m.
SUMMER SUBLEASE May rent free, walk to campus or downland, June & July rent negotiable, 2 bedroom, utilities reasonable. Call 811-416-1185, quiet
Sublaumen - May-15 Aug. 15. Spaciosa 2 bedroom apt. Fully furnished, appliances, plano, T.V.e. Near campus. Mature couple required. Rates required. 200-ull.仪空. After.
Furnished Studio Close to campus on the hsr route. 842-4455. 4-15
Summer mublease: Three bedroom, two baths, furnished townhouse, price negotiable. Call 842-3586. Trilidge Apartments. 4-19
SUMMER SURLEASE - by ps
SEASONAL SURLEASE - by ps
OFFER 1906 - 832-733, or call collect
OFFER 1906 - 832-733, or call collect
4-19
4-19
Summer sublet - One-floor share to 3 bedrooms with private yard and garden. Fall option. Shade-covered large location. Fall option.
SUBLEASE ME: I am a two bedroom apt in the Malls Old Edge Epic, near Manhattan. I walk distance of grecieties and pizza. I have a dishwasher, air conditioner and cabbage T.V. included in rent. If you would like to live within my about quietness, call 814-933 or 843-5035. 4-23
SUMMER SCHOOL MAY 15-August 15. MatY
society business male 15-18 yrs.
*74 boys; 192 girls.*
Fun 2 bdrm. apt. seeks 2-3 summer sub-
leasers. A/C, dishwasher, new carpeting.
$285 ms. 842-7147. 4-19
Summer sublease. 2 BR Apt. Close to
the main street in the heart of Downtown.
Available after hire, $290. 8-425-8-422
www.downtowndallas.com
Summer bagless, large 9 bdm, brdm,
2-4 bdm, htm, sham 16 bdm, nxt
fabric subl $C, $A$ $S$, uf0 -74-20-
fabric subl $C, $A$ $S$, uf0 -74-20-
Summer sublease. Fem. only. Clean, close to campus. Low until. 841-7086. 4-30
2 bedroom apt. May 1 sublease
tension option in building.
curved entrance, curved
electric pool. Sleep on
business line—across the street from grass坪.
841-7548. Call evening from grass坪.
4-205
FOR SALE
1-bedroom duplex. Covered balcony. Off-
road carport and downtown. Phone after 6 p.m.
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Makes sense to use them-1). As study guide, m
TENNIS RACKETS—Good selection new/used. Will buy yours if in good condition.
842-6713 after 6:00 p.m. tf
Stereo-Televisions-Video Recorders. Names brands only. Factory sells cartons. Lowest prices in the K.C. area. Get your best price. call Total Sound Center. 4-305-722-1928. 4-305-722-1928.
Alternator, starter and generator specialists,
Parts, service, and exchange units. BELL
AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-9065, 3800
W. 6th.
Beautiful bald evergreens reasonably prized.
Himmel's Rand "Tree Farm" - Buddha - Phone
542-3139 or 542-3249.
4-20
BOKONON IMPORTS Large selection Ha-
lton Suites. The original source. 12 B-40
841-360-9000
12 B-40
1975 CL 360 Fairing, ee start, rock, helmet,
CL, cond. 841-8058.
4-15
Mattress, box spring sofa-bed and 12-speed A-15
1979 MAZDA RX7-GS PURRFECT. 4-83-825
or 842-633. 4-83
ALPINE 3023 w/papers 7 bd eq, 18w
$100. $841-8090.
4-15
pedals + Leslie Speaker. 749-3412 4-ft JVC A5-1 Integrated Amp. Fiber Speaker
Hammond B-3 Organ Hammond Amp. ff.
pedals + Leslie Speaker. 749-3412. 4-15
1979 Vespa Bravo Moped. 2200 miles. Ex-
cellent condition. 864-1092. 4-23
1985 Blue Merc. Cerec, 25th ed.; Call Jack-
749-2501-5002 cassette, runs good! Call Jack-
4-23
Stereo. very loud, 200 watt fifteen inch speakers hooked up to a two-month old Okaymp kock only $450.叫码 604-9828 8-10 p.m. weekdays. Dual 223 turntable
1982 Suzuki CS407D Black, beautiful, luggage rack, backrest, crash bar, must-sell- married 842-4864, after 4:30 a.m.
4-19
Blues Brothers Concert Tickets! Half price.
867-359-eyes. 4-14
Motorcycle—Honda 360 CB. Excellent condition.
New engine only 3,500 miles. 842-
7314. 4-15
1881 GN400X Suzuki NEW $1495. Asking
$1250. Only 37 miles. Call 842-7679 after 6
p.m.
4-27
1878½ Honda CX500, fairing, trunk, crash-
bar. Well-cared for. $1695. Call Charlie at
842-4400. 4-20
MICROCOPIES FOR SALE-One Nikon
($50), One Swift ($50). Both are perfect
for med school. Contact Jeb Brown. (913) 422-5610 evenings.
SPRING LAMBS. Organically grown. Ready before May. Beef also! 913-796-6279—McLouth, KS. 4-20
BASS guitar—Fender copy, w/case. $70.
864-6889. 4-16
1980 Datsun 200SX PS, PB. AT, AM/FM
stereo. 37,000 miles. 845-8910. After 6 p.m.
4-16
1981 Yamaha WT500. Low mileage, excellent condition. $1,800. 749-1501 or 841-8876. Ask for Don. 4-14
First Christian Church (Disciples of Christ)
President, 1987-92
for the First-time position of college ministry co-ordinator. The position would be supervised by a staff of $25,000 per year salary beginning in the fall of 2016 and will be the statement of Christian beliefs and two letters of recommendation, about which no further information is needed. First Christian Church, 100 Kentucky, Lawrence, KS 60044 for April 23, 1982. Inquiries welcome. 4-16
One umbrella. Call to identify. Suzy, 841-
7955, 4-16
HELP WANTED
FOUND
Found, puppy. In front of Lippincott Hall on Friday, 841-8072 or 843-7614. 4-16
Found pair of prescription, brown rimmed glasses, outside of Green Hall. If they're yours please call 842-8639. 4-14
Summer John National Park Co. 21 Parks.
Hopperstown Mission Co. 651 and Ave.
Hopperstown Mission Co. 810 and Ave.
Are you commuting to from Kansas City? Yes. They are now a full-service dug out of DUKs at the KU Boiler. For information on KU Boiler, f
New Wave/Progressive dance band seek
band members; C. Hammersley 4-1985, after 2-1983-4-1985, 4-19
1986-4-1986.
WANTED: EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR for a student institution. Responsibilities include coordination of activities on several unitary and non-university student institutions and federal affairs of the association, research, utility andJobbing on issues in full-time position. Send an application to 1070 College, Topeka, Kansas, 6k821 Att; Chris Graves by 12-82. Equity Opportunity Employees 14-19
Lead Guitarist needed for established professional contemporary rock group. Serious players only, 841-9797. 4-22
We offer professional discounts on all paint jobs and provide the opportunity to paint house for a summer job. We will paint a home with our quality materials, stores and techniques and carry materials to meet your customer's needs and provide a positive opportunity. please come in person to view our products and services.
Programmers. Local Company needs part-time programmers for microcomputers. We can supply equipment. Send resume to P.O. Box 385. Lawrence: Attention Davenport.
Position Available: 5 Graduate Teaching
grounding in women's studies scholarship with teaching experience in Women's Studies
job description and application procedures
to position offered, or contact Diane McCremont, 4-601-DLL.
opportunity/affirmative action employer.
LOST
Instant passport, visa, ID, & resume photograph.
Custom made portraits b/w, color.
Wells Studios. 749-1611. tf
PERSONAL
Skillet's liquor store serving U-Daly since 1949. Come in and compare. Wilfred Skillet Rudaly. 1906 Mass. 843-8188. tf
Say it on a sweatshirt with custom silk-screen printing 1 to 1000 shirt art by Swells 749-161. tf
KANSAS RELAYS APRIL 14-17
Friday—Students $1.50
Tickets available at:
Athletic Ticket Office
The Kegger-Weekly Specials on Kega!!t
Call 841-9450-1610 W. 23rd.
For your party clothes, formal or costume,
check out the Inflight Fighter. E 8. Thr.
10:30-5 M-F 10:5-30 Sat. Open tl 8
on Thurs.
HEADACH, BACKACHE, STREK, NECK
LEG PAIN? Find and correct a muscle
function. Johnson for modern
chirurgical care. 849-9336. Accepting
Blue Cross and Lone Star insurance.
Green's Spring Keg Prices
Busch 16 gnl $38
8 gal $24.50
Coors 16 gal $38
8 gal $25.50
Coors Life 16 gal $58
Michelob 16 gal $44.50
8 gal $29.95
(prices include complete $ \mathrm{C O}^{2} $
tapping equipment)
808 W. 23rd 841-4420
COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES:
Free pregnancy testing; early and advanced out pattern abortion; gynecology; contours (341) 621-3067 & Roe, Overland Park 642-3100. "IF"
MARY KAY COSMETICS—Full-time beauty consultant. 842-6641. tf
A
Entry Deadline April 23rd
DESIGN-A-SHIRT
$100
1st Prize
Enter now at:
kansas
union bookstores
Main Union Satellite
Stereo-Televisions-Video. Recorders. Name brands only. Factory sealed cartons. Lowest prices in the K.C.A. area. Give bulk prices then call Total Call Products 4-30
Remember, O most gracious Virgin Mary,
that never was it known that anyone would
be taken to prison by the intercession was left unaddressed.
Inspired by this confidence I came, before three
i stand sinful and sorrowful. O Lady of the Word,
incride me with answer and me answer. Amen.
PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH-
TR
843-4821.
*Requirements for the major
- Jobs with a B.A.
- Other topics of interest
Wednesday, April 14th
Wednesday, April 14th
2:40
3140 Wescoe 4:00 p.m.
3140 Wescoe 4:00 p.m.
All psychology majors and stu
Remember, mother loves you, show her love.
Studio for portraits of quality, quality,
sustainability.
All psychology students dents interested in psychology are urged to attend.
Wanting to talk with someone? Gay & Leanab Peer counselors available through headquarters (814-2383) or information center (844-5000) just call.
--copies
Exciting Jobs at Lake Tahoe. Send $5.00 to
Tahoe Jobs, P.O. Box 7244, Kansas City, MO
64113.
4-22
Established, hand look for male/female lead singers and lead guitar players. Drums, guitar and Keyboard. Immediate New 4-16, Revised 4-20, 4-46, 6-18, there leave name & phone.
Have a little BUNNY for Easter or when you feel the pain. Call Denise Pretzel, 984-3720/959-5983.
4-14
Wanted single female who enjoys excellent living and working environment. Someone not hung-up on age difference. Please provide interest in physical fitness and wanting to be involved. Please answer yes to the above requirements then maybe answer yes to the above requirements then maybe answer yes to the above requirements. All serious letters answered. Write Larry Freeman, 2517 Mormingide Dr. Laurel, OH 43032.
Vegetarian Lunch. 11:30-1:30. Mon.-Fri.
748-1517 4-20
Soring has sprung. Fall is dead! Summer has come And you need new threads! For sewing and alterations call Chrys 841-1962.
Community Auction 700 N.H.
Consignments Accepted
Every Wed. 6:30 p.m.
Wed. 10 a.m. till sale
Sat. 10-5
841-2212
*POWERQUERY*P*POWERQUEST* I A play-by-mail game of restaining lost civilization Mormonger Productions Box 156 Lecompton KS. K60500 4-15
Personal problems? Concern? Confidential Professional Counseling. Specializing in life skills. Free initial consultation. 841-4144. 4-26
Wanted single female who enjoy a good life and feel confident in meaningful relationship. If you can answer the following questions, we should get to know each other better: What are your goals? Our social interviews conducted at FOLOIGHTS
There once was a boy named Mimi
Who considered himself a prince.
Met a man from Venus.
Got hold of his.
And he has been bi ever since
Are you H.O.T.7 (Hooked on Television)
New club forming. Call Kathy for details.
864-1922. 4-15
Spring formals. Barb's Second Hand Rose.
515 Indiana. Open till 5 p.m. 842-4746. 4-30
Jill. Your fiance Rick is not an innocent as he appears. For information about his interestingly sordid past, meet us at Louses on Wednesday at 8:35 a.m. Merla, Janine and 4-14
THE ETC SHOP 10 W. 9th has a new shipment of miniskirts, wrap skirts, and Laura Petty pants. For guys, we also have dinner jackets and totes. 4-14
LEASE-A-LEMON
Bent any car (Mon, Tues, Wed.
$6.95 Per Day.
$60 Per Week.
$225 Per Month.
Cannot be combined with any other specials. All cars are mechanically sound, state inspected, clean & ready to rent. We accept cash, checks, e-mail mastercard. 749-4252
**NORMAL OPTICAL.** Bring in your Dr's prescription or doctor's recommendation, including existing frames. Pre-adjustment and lenner frames available. Complete repair service. Open 10-5a M-4-16
Free massage workshops taught by Dr. Diane Cannon, 7:30 a.m., day night days. Work in into your schedule. First sessions start 6:00 p.m. 14 April. Call 800-245-2454. Contact Ether Fox 841-255-3536. 4-15
Buy your yearbook today at the information booth in front of Flint Hall. 4-16
Bick Springfield Concert Tickets for sale.
1-299-8324. Mike.
4-19
Wanna have a good time? Call birthday girl Coriine - age 20 - She's a party animal and needs relief sex. 4-14
**STUDENT NURSING HOME AIDES:** Share your experiences with students. Our students, our organization, WANAM, your students. O
SERVICES OFFERED
TUTORING MATH, STATISTICS, PHYSICS,
COMPUTER SCIENCE. Call 841-4996-091
(bas. in physic.马. in mathematics)
or call 844-4716 (ask for M.A. in Roberts)
tf
31/2¢ self service copies
HAND
ENCORE COPY
CORPS
25th and Iowa 842-2001
Schneider Wine & Keg Shop—The finest selection of wines in Lawrence—largest supplier of strong kegs. 1610 W. 23rd. 543-2312.
Drafting (ehachi, maps, etc.) 6 years exp.
employees, competitively priced. Also script
letter for certificates. 841-7944. 4-21
WRITING A RESUME? What to ask? How to say it? Buy the House of Uber and pick up our FREE brochure on resume in the library or museums, 8-4 M-F 9-3 Sat. NOON-Sun. 3-5
Professional Stringing Tennis and Racquetball. Best Prices in town. Call 842-5521 or 842-6582.
4-30
WOMEN'S GROUPS STARTING THE WEEK
OF April 1, 2018
Women's Group 1 (M) - Wellness Workout, Call
Facilitator's Training Group 3) Wellness Workout, Call
Facilitator's Training Group 3) Judy Wheatley
257 information for
4-16
EDITING, proofreading, Professional copy editor. Prompt service. Pick up, delivery available. 230-3890 (Topeka) daytime. 4-14
RESUMES—Professional; students' resumes a specialty. 841-2654. 4-30
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 842-2601, Stk & Iowa. 4-30
GRADUATE STUDENTS THEMS COPYERS
qualify quality discounts based on total course
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Page 12 University Daily Kansan, April 14, 1982
Investigation stuns. silences KU officials
Don Fambrough was a somber man after yesterday's practice.
'ne weather was perfect and the workout went well, but once again Fambridge is coaching under a cloud—the cloud of an NCAA investigation.'
The Kansas City Times said yesterday that KU's football program was being investigated by the NCAA for alleged recruiting violations. As usual, the NCAA would neither confirm nor deny the investigation.
Tracee Hamilton
And, as usual, the news came at an awkward time. Today is national a letter-of-intent signing day for basketball recruits in different sport, but the stigma remains.
Fambridge is probably not surprised by the timing, either. Last spring, the Times released a similar story the next week, the biggest recruiting wrecked of the year.
The news probably came as a surprise to few people. Rumors have been
flying for the past few weeks concerning an investigation.
But the number of people who have already written off Kmasas as guilty is amazing. There are a few things to be considered.
FIRST. The NCAA must make an inquiry into the charges brought to it by another institution. The initial investigation may be either additional investigation is needed.
Second, the alleged violations concern a player whose name has been mentioned before concerning violations—Richard Estell. During the final days before national letter-of-had changed his mind about coming to Kansas, that he was going to Oklahoma, and that that OU Coach Switzer was going to make a formal complaint against the Kansas football staff.
Fambrough called Switzer, who said there was no truth to the story. In the meantime, Estell did an about-face and he said he was indeed coming to Kansas.
Switzer told Fambrough he would never turn him in for anything. And Fambrough told Switzer the same thing.
APPARENTLY NONE of the other coaches have the same scruples.
It's hard to believe that one con-
rence school would turn in another. K-State, Missouri and Kansas all compete for the same athletes year after year, and the coaches have known each other a long time. That doesn't make them the best of friends, but, nonetheless, most of them seem to get along fairly well.
But why do something that will ultimately hurt the conference and all the conference schools? When one school is in the forefront of the school sheep the monetary benefits.
If there have been violations, naturally the guilty school, KU or otherwise, should be punished. But if one conference school is going to turn in another, it soon may become a finger-pointing fest. And where does the loyalty to the NCAA rules end and petty jealousy begin?
AN NCAA official, when asked how that organization would distinguish between vengeful accusations and solid complaints, said he couldn't answer that question. When asked if it was usual procedure to ask a source as a source in an investigation against a violator, he couldn't answer that question.
That's the usual NCAA response. But it's hard for me to believe in a cloak-and-dagger investigation to uncover
claak-and-dagger violations. More cover-up work goes into hiding the investigation than goes into hiding the original violations.
By saying nothing, the NCNA compounds the problem. If there is no investigation, who would ever know? They will neither confirm nor deny
But more galaling than the fact that the NCAA will not comment is the fact that no one in the KU administration will comment, either.
I DON'T expect the administrators to jump to Kansas' defense, no matter what the charge. That would be unrealistic. To withhold comment denotes guilt, pure and simple. Any and all information about administration would have been taken as a sign of support of Fambrough and the team.
Instead, silence. I remember a day last fall when Chancellor Gene A. Budig went to football practice and spoke to the players, telling them to win the Tulsa game for Famibrouw and that they would address them. Pictures of the chancellor addressing the team made it into several papers, including the Kansan.
'Hawks split with Cyclones
Where is that support, now that it is needed?
By MIKE ARDIS Sports Writer
The Kansas baseball team split its double-board with Iowa State yesterday, but for a while it didn't look like the Jaybawks would get their split.
After losing the first game, 4-3, the 'Hawks faced another defeat as Iowa State had the bases loaded with no outs in the first half and it went on to win in the eighth of it and went on to win in the eighth.
KU, 15-13, will take on Emporia State today at 1 p.m. at Quigley Field in a double-header.
Coplen then struck out Mike Hocutt, the ISU all-time home run leader to end the inning.
COPLEN THEN faced Craig Howard, who hit a run in the first game. With the infeld draw in, Copelin got Howard to hit a pitch back to him. Copelin then threw to the plate, and Shally threw to first for a double play.
Todd Robbe opened the seventh for Iowa State with a single to right field, and Jim Walewander bunted for a base hit. Robbie was struck out in Copenhagen, who threw to three too late.
the mingling. In the eighth, Joe Heeney sacrificed Bill Yelton home for the winning run.
To get out of the inning and win the game was very important, second baseman Mark Gile said.
"We were very happy, elated," he
said. "It looked pretty bad. You just think to do the best you can. We got the lucky break.
"It really could be the turning point. It keeps our record above 500 and in the top of the conference. Every win counts."
In the opener, Jim Phillips, 3-3, got the loss as he gave up his seventh home run of the season, losing 4-3. Phillips only gave up five hits: two doubles, a triple, a single and a home run. He walked three batters.
Iowa State get single runs in the third and fifth innings, before KU tied the game in the sixth. The Cyclones in the sixth with single runs in the seventh and sixth.
Dick Lewalien's third home run for the season which came in the ninth inning, turned it into a close game. But the Jayhawks were defeated, 4-3.
Kevin Kroeker started the second game and had a one-hitter going into the fifth innning. Chris Ackley replaced him after Kroker gave up two straight singles. A sacrifice by Robbe, Ackley gave up a single to Walewander, scoring two runs. Ackley got out of the innings, leaving a man at third.
Coppen got the win when he came in in the seventh, pitching his way out of the jam and retiring the Cyclones in the sixth, giving up 11 runs in the four-game series.
THE KU HITTERS managed only 19 runs, with 10 of those in Monday's second game. Although they didn't score a lot, Gile said they hit the ball.
"It was better pitching in conference," he said. "We hit the ball a lot. They just wouldn't fall. As long as we play in play, we'll make things happen."
Gile, who played errorless ball over the weekend, 24 chances without an error, said the Jayhawks were pleased with winning 3 of 4 from Iowa State.
"We would have liked to take all four, and we expected to take three," he said. "They were at home, and it's harder to road. We had the ball club to beat them."
Joe Heeney had the best series at the plate, going 7 for 13 and also stealing three bases.
When the Jayhawks face Emporia State today, they will be looking for an interim coach and 185, in a double-header in March. The players want to make up for that.
"It was the first thing we started to talk about." Gle said. "We're a lot different team now. Everyone is hitting better. We'll definitely be ready."
Royals rally beat Orioles
By United Press International
KANSAS CITY, Mo.—Amos Otsi' RBI single in the sixth innning capped a Kansas City loss and gave the Royals a 6-8 victory last night over the Baltimore Orioles.
John Wathan singled in the sixth and took second on a two-out walk to Willie Alkens before Otis, who won the game for the Royals in their home opener against Detroit with a grand slam, knocked in his second run of the game to make a winner out of Dave Frost, who pitched one and two-thirds innings in his Kansas City debut in relief of Larry Gura.
STANLEY BLACKER
BRITCHES CORNER
LAWRENCE
Dan Quisenberry hurled the final three innings for the Royals to pick up his second save of the season.
Kansas City tied the score with five runs in the fifth off starter JalPalmier. With runners on first and third, George Brett blooped a single to left for the first run, and Aikens followed with a single to load the bases. Otis lost a sacrifice fly for the second run, Hal McRae doubleed home the third and Jerry Martin knocked in the final two with a single.
Scoreboard
Basketball
NBASTANDINGS
Eastern Conference
Team W W L Pct. GB
Boston 13 54 2.07 — —
Philadelphia 55 24 1.94 — —
Washington 42 37 532 19
Indiana 38 35 430 17
New York 36 35 347 26
BRITCHES CORNER LAWRENCE
Milwaukee ... 54 21 684
Atlanta ... 41 43 694
Detroit ... 37 37 18
Detroit ... 34 31 430
Chicago ... 31 45 200
Chicago ... 64 24 684
Western Conference Midwest Division
San Antonio 47 35 .598
Houston 45 34 .570
Miami 44 34 .3
Dallas 28 51 .384
Kansas City 28 51 .394
Oklahoma 26 51 .384
Tennessee 25 51 .384
Los Angeles 54 21 684
Seattle 51 21 684
San Francisco 44 35 10
Phoenix 44 35 557
Portland 44 35 10
Portland 45 35 557
New York 64 24 209
Golden State 188, Los Angeles 101
Houston 142, Miami 95
Philadelphia 83, Indiana 69
Phoenix 74, Illinois 111
Chicago 120, Jackson 87
Washington 119, Minnesota 99
Houston 98, Kansas City 127
Seattle 88, Portland 124
Seattle 87, Portland 124
Hockey
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Divisional Semifinals
Best of Five
Best of Five Patrick Division
New York Islanders 4, Pittsburgh 3, OT
Adams Division
Quebec 3, Montreal 2, OT (Quebec wins series
9.0)
Camilla Díclafan
Los Angeles 7, Edmonton 4 (Los Angeles wins
winning 3.2)
Soccer MISL STANDINGS Eastern Division
Team
W W L Pct. GB
New York 15 7 100
Pittsburgh 12 7 100
Baltimore 18 10 100
Buffalo 23 14 361 10 %
Cleveland 13 18 181 10 %
Cleveland 14 18 384 10 %
WEIGHTED OVERALLS
St. Louis 20 167
Wichita 34 16 878
Wichita 14 16 680
Denver 15 25 371
Denver 14 25 371
Kansas City 13 27 325
Kansas City 12 27 325
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS New York 7, New Jersey 4
Baseball AMERICAN LEAGUE Eastern Dickson
Chicago 3 0 0 1,000
Kansas City 3 0 0 1,000
Kansas City 4 3 371 1
Oakland 4 3 371 1
Oakland 3 3 360 1%
Texas 3 3 250 1%
Texas 3 3 235 1%
Team W 1 W 1 Pct. GB
Milwaukee 3 1 175
Charlotte 3 1 500
New York 2 2 500
Baltimore 2 2 400
Detroit 2 2 400
Toronto 2 2 400
Cleveland 1 1 333
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Miwakeau 9. Clevelanum 8, 10 innings
Detroit 4, Toronto 2
Oakland 5, Miami 6
Oakland 8, Mimenea
Kansas City 8, Dallas 8
Sacramento 3, spad. 17)
Atlanta 4 2 1,000
Los Angeles 4 2 580
San Francisco 3 5 800
Houston 3 5 379
Cincinnati 3 5 280
St. Louis 3 5 49
NATIONAL LEAGUE Eastern Division
Team A B C D E F GB
Matthews 4 2 167
Montreal 4 2 167
St. Louis 4 3 571
Philadelphia 4 3 429
Pittsburgh 1 2 332
Houston 1 2 300
Pittsburgh at Montreal, ppd.
Pittsburgh at New York, ppd.
New York & Philadelphia 2
San Francisco 3, San Diego 2
Atlanta 4, Chicago 3
Team Miami Bayou Pct. GB -
Nebraska 8 4 8467 -
Okahanna State 6 3 667 -
Kansas 3 5 165 -
Oklahoma 4 5 825 -
Missouri 2 3 4544 2½%
Iowa State 2 3 400 2¼%
Louisiana 2 8 333 2%
West Virginia 2 8 250 2
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Iowa State 4, Kansas 3-3
Plavoff-bound Houston beats Kansas City
By United Press International
HOUSTON-Elvin Hayes had 26 points and 13 rebounds last night to power the Houston Rockets to a 9-95 victory over the Kansas City Kings.
The Rockets won despite a poor shooting night in which they made only 38-of-94 field goal attempts. The Rockets outrebounded the Kings, S2-32.
The victory left Houston with a 45-34 record in the fight for a playoff spot in the Western Conference.
U
With six minutes remaining, the Kings led 87-40, but Houston went on a 12-0 spurt to lead 92-87 with two minutes remaining.
Moses Malone added 23 points for the Rockets, and Robert Reid and Mike Dumleavy added 13 points apiece.
The Kings had a well-balanced attack, as five players scored in double figures. Ernie Grunfeld led the Kings with 23 points. Mike Woodson scoreled 18 points. Phil Riegle King, Johnson and Phil Ford scored 11, 12 and 11 points.
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Thursday, April 15, 1982 Vol. 92, No. 133 USPS 650-640
KU classified employees want salary increase
By COLLEEN CACY
Staff Reporter
KU classified employees, upset by a proposed cut in their salary increase for next year, want legislators to consider increasing a state commuted 7 percent salary increase for state employees.
Jan O'Neil, president-elect of the Classified Senate, said yesterday that the Senate Ways and Means Committee's recommendation would not alter the status of its Classified employees the raises they deserved.
"It is unfair to wait on classified employee salaries until the end of the year," she said. "We always seem to take the brunt of the talk. They say. If they don't, then you should, take it from state employees, it seems to me."
Classified employees, which are generally all University employees except members of the faculty and the administration, have their wages guaranteed by employers at the rate of each legislative session.
Their salaries are part of the last appropriations bill of the session, called the emphis appropriations bill.
The 7 percent increase recommended to the House of Representatives by the Senate last Friday would be divided between a 5.75 percent increase and an increase and a 1.25 percent merit increase.
The House will vote on the omnibus bill when the legislature returns April 27.
The Board of Regents had requested a 10 percent increase for classified salaries, and Gov John Carlin's recommendation was 8.75 percent.
Carlin recommended a 7.5 percent cost-of-
fruit plus an additional 1.25 percent
for market incentives.
But O'Neill said that because of a complicated system of figuring merit increases that varies in each department, some employees might receive only a cost-of-living increase, while some might receive more than the average merit increase.
Merit increases are determined by each department and are based on staff evaluations of employees and how long they have been employed at the University.
O'Neill said that the current Classified Senate president, Gail Hamilton, wrote a letter to several legislative leaders April 9.
In the letter, Hamilton told them the 1.25 percent would not be enough to fund merit increases for all KU classified employees.
"We need a 3 percent increase to adequately fund merit," Hamilton said.
But Hamilton asked in the letter that if the Legislature planned to fund an increase of only 7 percent, that it all be allocated in a cost-of-living increase.
"O'Neill said, 'If it's all in cost-of-living, all emperors are assured they'll get a certain price.'"
She said that their proposal would involve the same amount of money the committee recommended, but it would eliminate the merit increase system.
But she said that "it'll probably go over like a lead balloon."
Sen. Paul Hess, R-Wichita and chairman of the Senate Mental Means Committee, told the House on Friday that he would not vote for Thursday.
a higher increase, because the cost of living was predicted to go down.
"The odds are the inflation rate for 1982 could be well below 5 percent," he said. "It's time for this body to change our mind-set. We're not living in a time of double-digit inflation.
"The amount we've given here is extremely realistic. We've had to bite the bullet."
O'Neill said classified salary increases have been way behind inflation in the past.
"Let's worry about the last 10 years that we've been so far behind that it wasn't funny," she said. "We've lost power because the cost-of living has increased far more than salaries."
O'Neill said that Classified Senate representatives planned to talk to members of the administration to find out how classified the administration had indicated if the 7 percent increase were approved.
increase were approved.
Hamilton said she did not know whether all classified employees would get the merit raises they were in line for.
"I don't think anyone knows the answer to that yet. " It's kind of a wait-and-see situation."
Rep. Betty Jo Charlton, D-Lawrence, said she is aware that the state was trying to keep state salary increase as low as 10 percent.
"What's happened is what I suspected would happen," she said. "They wait until the end of the session and then find out they don't have enough money.
"it's not fair to save state employees until the end."
Charlson said that a statement Hess made in early March implied that classified salaries would be cut to help finance a faculty salary fund, but she also said this was foolish.
"That was a very unfortunate statement that Hess made early in the session," she said. Classified employee salaries at KU are voted with the president, and shouldn't be connected with faculty salaries."
MARK McDONALD/Kansan Staff
102
A student walks alone on a stretch of sidewalk in front of Fraser Hall, taking advantage of yesterday's sunny weather.
Kansas Appeals Court travels to KU to hear arguments in local rape case
By BECKY ROBERTS Staff Reporter
The Kansas Court of Appeals yesterday traveled to the KU School of Law to hear an appeal by the Douglas County district attorney's office. Because evidence the state wants to use in a local rape case,
Mike Malone, Douglas County district attorney, appealed a decision made last fall to suppress evidence, a set of 10 KU keys, in the Sherman Galloway rape case.
Galloway, 21, was convicted of rape and aggravated sodomy last December after he forced a former KU student to perform oral sex and then raped her at knifepoint last July. The 25-year-old woman was jogging along Memorial Drive behind Snow Hall.
Galloway is now serving a 30-year to life sentence for the crime.
The three appeal judges, Chief Judge J. Richard Foth and judges Corwin C. Spencer and Sherman A. Parks, also heard six other appeal cases.
The Court of Appeals occasionally comes to the School of Law for learning experience for law students. Malone says
THE DISTRICT attorney's office wants to try Galloway for another rape of a KU graduate student which occurred last May.
"If the Court of Appeals overturns the trial court's decision, then we'll be in a position to go on with the second rape trial," Malone said.
The disputed set of KU keys linked Galloway to the May rage after they were taken during a search of his evidence for evidence. A search of his evidence for evidence in the July rage on Memorial Drive.
in the case appealed Paddock's ruling to the Court of Appeals. The court and about 25 spectators listened yesterday to the state's and defendant's arguments.
Douglas County District Judge James W. Paddock decided that the keys were taken illegally and that evidence had been obtained from Glowayo. He said the detectives did not have probable cause to take the keys.
Greg Hammel, assistant district attorney representing the state, told the judges that during the course of the investigation of the July rape, a KU police officer, KU detective and Lawrence detective took a warrant to search Galloway's residence. The search warrant listed a three-to four-inch long knife and a sleeveless tank too shirt.
While the officers were searching the residence, two officers saw a 10 KIU keys, and they took the keys with them.
HAMMEL ARGUED that the detectives had
probable cause to think that Galloway and his wife did not legally have possession of the keys since they thought neither Galloway nor his wife was employed by or attended KU.
"Someone with no connection with KU shouldn't have KU keyes," Hammel said.
Jeff Heeb, Galloy's court appointed lawyer, said the keys were illegally seized by the detectives did not know for sure whether the Galloywars were employed or enrolled at KU.
"They know nothing was unusual about finding KU Jews in Lawrance, Mr. "Hebe said.
After taking the keys, the detectives found out that they belonged to the May rape victim. She
Heeb pointed out that the keys were not reported missing at the time of the rape.
With the keys and some other articles as evidence in the May rape, the district attorney's office amended its charges against Galloway to two counts of rape, four counts of aggravated sodomy, one count of kidnapping and one count of aggravated robbery.
After Paddock ruled to suppress the evidence, the two cases were separated and Galloway was tried only for the July rape on charges of aggravated sodomy and rape.
The May rape case is pending the Court of Appeals decision about the suppressed evidence.
The Court of Appeals will on the case after deliberations.
Student Senate budget sent for cuts
Staff Reporter
By ANN LOWRY
The Student Senate's fiscal 1983 budget will go back to the Senate to be trimmed down again, David Adkins, student body president, said yesterday.
proved a $72,000 budget using its own set of criteria to decide which groups to fund.
Adkins said he vetoed the budget, which the Senate passed because it allocated more money than the Senate.
"The easy thing to do is give money to
them," he said. "But that might not be the
things to do."
The Senate's budget subcommittee had ap-
"I'm more inclined to perhaps weed out some of the groups serving a more narrow group so that these serving a broader group will flourish and attract a larger number of students."
But Adkins said the subcommittee was certain that it did not feel comfortable deciding up to the whole Senate.
The senators, however, did not make the necessary cuts.
"The Senate expected something it could rubber stamp." Arkin said.
rubber stamp," Adkins said.
He said the subcommittee was justified in
that he was the chair of the trustees.
"I'M NOT SURE the Senate was willing to take that on." he said.
Some senators favored taking the extra money out of the Senate's unallocated account, a savings account of about $74,000. But Adkins said that solution was unacceptable.
The Senate's $2,000 allocation limit for student groups was determined by the revenue
code established last year, based on $1.42 from each student's activity fee, Adkins said.
"To go beyond that $1.42 is unfair to revenue code groups that don't have the opportunity to profit."
He said that the $74,000 should not be regarded as students' money but as a Senate account.
"That is a working capital account for the Senate to spend," Adkins said. "In the past that's been used for projects to benefit large numbers of students."
Past expenditures from that account have included a sprinkler system for the practice fields at 23rd and Iowa streets and lighting for the University tennis courts.
Adkins said he had tentative plans to present to the Senate concerning where that money would be.
See PLAN page 5
KU campus buildings cool off
By LISA GUTIERREZ
Staff Reporter
Cool air began flowing into many campus buildings this week as facilities operations personnel switched the University from its heating systems to its air conditioning systems.
"April 15 is the date we set to put the air conditioning on and take the steam off." Robert Porter, associate director of the physical plant, said yesterday.
"Eighty percent of the major buildings on the immediate campus have air conditioning on," said Don Beerms, assistant director of electricity and refrigeration.
The major buildings included Haworth, Snow, Dyche and Jollie halls, Watkins Memorial Hospital and the Computer Center.
Porter said the transfer from heat to air conditioning actually began Monday, when facilities operations started turning heat off, filling water towers and draining hot water
"October 15 is the day we'll return to heat."
"And the health center is number one," Porter said. "Buildings that have machines, such as computers, and animal research, are a close second."
Hospital and the Computer Center Porter called these buildings "critical" and said they were among the first of the 150 campus buildings to receive cool air on Monday.
"Most computer environments are run between 72 and 80 degrees and after that, the computers shut themselves off."
Temperatures in campus buildings remain at 78 degrees in the summer and 68 degrees in the winter. Beems said.
along, we would have to change our pans.
In that case, Porter said it would be 48 hours before the heat could be restored to most of the campus buildings.
"We were ready to come on with air conditioning a week and a half ago," he said. "We turned warm off a week ago Friday, but had to turn it back on the following Monday."
Unexpected cold weather postponed the switch to air conditioning, Porter said.
Beaams said, "Of course, if a blizzard comes alone, we would have to change our plans."
"Some buildings, like Murphy, take 24 hours," because you have to get temperatures moderate.
"By 4:30 this Friday night, all the buildings should be on, if nothing goes awry."
Cold weather and equipment failure notwithstanding, Porter estimated that the entire process of transferring to air conditioning would take 240 man-hours.
"The chiller and the heat plant is in Murphy. So whatever we do to Murphy, Sumneral goes off."
He said that Murphy and Summerfield fells were heated and cooled by the same system.
Fifteen facilities operations workers are involved in the process, Beams said.
Weather
mKU
The high temperature will be 80 to 85
degrees, and the low will be in the 50s.
Today will be partly cloudy with a 30 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms and southwest winds at 10 to 20 mph, according to the National Weather Service.
Tomorrow will be partly cloudy and cooler with the high temperature in the morning. In the evening end will be in the 60s to low 70s, and the low will be 40 degrees.
Templin elections disputed; charges against director filed
Staff Reporter
By JAN BOUTTE
A candidate for president of Tempelm Hall filed a complaint against the hall's resident director with KU police yesterday after the director refused to approve his campaign literature.
The action came at the end of the campaign, with elections beginning tonight.
Mark Fusaro, Topeka fresman who is running for hall president, said that when he presented his campaign flyers to the resident director, Scott Corbett—a standard procedure for any materials to be posted or distributed in the halls—Corbett took the flyers.
will be temporarily assumed possession of said materials until after the
"I'm thinking about suing him and KU housing."
"It comes down to principles—whether I have the right to carry on a free election," Fusaro
The police complaint was filed with the
Fusaro said, however, he saw the action as an infringement on his freedom of speech.
Corbett said he refused permission for the flyers to be distributed in order to insure a fair election and protect the candidates from possible civil suits resulting from slander.
Douglas County District Attorney's office which
will defend him on a case to investigate the case.
But Corbett said police involvement was unnecessary.
"I ALSO THINK the district attorney's going to laugh him out of his office," he said.
Corbett said that after the KU police left, he returned the flyers to Fusaro and apologized publicly, but he refused to approve the flyers for distribution.
Fusaro was placed on probation with the residence hall after his campaign flyers were distributed to the residents in their rooms later in the day.
Door-to-door solicitation is prohibited in the University residence halls.
Corbett said that he acted out of his responsibility to keep the elections fair by preventing door-to-door solicitation, and by protecting the mailboxes of the residents.
Corbett said that the hall was not allowed to put materials not directly addressed to the residents in the mailboxes, and that what Fusaro wanted done with his campaign flyers.
Corbett also said that he had talked to both candidates about campaign standards earlier this week, after he felt that the mudslinging was getting out of hand.
"Mr. Fusaro and I reached a verbal agreement that he would cease and desist using
See TEMPLIN page 5
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, April 15, 1982
News Briefs From United Press International
Education cutback protests recommended by O'Neill
AMHERST, Mass.—House Speaker Thomas O'Neill yesterday called on students to oppose proposed education cuts by the Reagan administration in the anti-war spirit of students of the '60s and '70s.
O'Neill urged students to "mobile" against proposed cuts in financial aid for both private and public school students.
"We are turning back to the high-button shoes and then we look at when only the women wear them. Of Newell's 2,000 students is a University of Massachusetts rally."
for both private and public institutions.
"I think Research's policies are about as bad as any president we've had in the past," Della said to the students.
this month."
O'Neill told the students to "get the ball rolling" and organize a national protest against the cuts. "That's the way the war stopped in America," he said. "Because the students started to see, as you have here."
"The greatness of this nation was not because of defense," he said, noting that the Pentagon budget was growing at the expense of student aid programs. "It was because of our economic stability and ability to move. That harms because of our educated students in America."
O'Neill then he chose to address a University of Massachusetts rally because the national student protest in Washington began in October 1981 when University of Massachusetts students went to Capitol Hill to lobby against the cuts.
Insults disrupt Red Brigades trial
"If you take us away from the courtroom, we will have the building bombed, yellow narcissus Piccioni, one of the suspects on trial. Family members included."
The trial was adjourned for a week after the outburst in the courtroom. The trial is regarded as Italy's highest anti-terrorist case.
The Red Brigades kidnapped More, then the 61-year-old president of the Christian Democrats, on March 16, 1978, and killed his five-man police force.
The trial is expected to last several months.
Arms balance vital, Schmidt says
BONN, West Germany—Chancellor Helm Schmidt said yesterday that new U.S. nuclear missiles had to be based in Europe to keep the Soviet Union out of reach.
1974. "Never was the situation more unbalanced," said Schmidt in reports published in two German newspapers.
can later be used to paddle U.S. S.S. Schmidt said the installation of new U.S. Pershing II missiles would
destroy the Northwest Froge.
The Soviet Union has completed the installation of 300 inter-range SS-29 missiles in united east of the Ural Mountains. Each missile has
Schmidt, who has threatened to resign if his arms policy is repudiated,
faces a challenge in a party Congress next week.
Whooping cranes on annual flight
PRATT—Central Kansasans may hear strange whooping calls in the next couple of days from about 50 whooping cranes—a nearly extinct species of North American birds—flying across the state on their way to Northwest Canada.
A flock of the 4-foot-tall cranes, the largest flying and the second-largest birds in the world, left behind the Gulf Coast of Texas Tuesday, where officials said救援 was underway.
Reportedly, there are only 100 of the birds which are white and have black wings in the world.
Every year about this time the birds, on their way to Buffalo National Park in Canada, pass through the Cheyenne Bottoms, east of Great Bend, where a large natural marsh is located.
Egypt wants back all of the Sinai
CAIRO, Egypt—Egypt insisted yesterday on getting back every "single inch" of the Sinai as Walter Stossel, deputy secretary of state, arrived in Jerusalem to smooth out a border dispute threatening Israel's withdrawal from the occupied region.
The state-controlled Middle East news agency said Egypt's no-concessions position would be stressed to Israeli Defense Minister Ariel Sharon when he flew in today for a day of talks about the Sinai border dispute.
"There will be no tampering with a single inch of Egyptian territory as outlined by the 1966 border agreement" with Ottoman-ruled Palestine, the
The noreorter dispute, as well as Israel charges that Egypt has not abided by the 1978 Gump David accords and the 1979 peace treaty, has threatened the Israelis. Mr. Nasser said the United States had an interest in the agreement.
TV device blocks offensive shows
NEW YORK-Starting this summer, parents will be able to prevent their children, with the aid of a remote control television device, from tuning in to broadcast TV.
The channel blocker will be available only on remote control receivers selling for $650 and up, GE said yesterday. It will not be possible to retrofit
The device, developed by General Electric, will enable parents, by means of a remote controller, to watch hours channels showing programs they do not want their children to watch.
Roger Sweney, manager of GE's TV program products, said the device would give parents a sense of security when they leave kids home along with the TV—particularly now that "X" and "R" rated programs are becoming frequent on cable stations.
Philippine promotion meets protest
NEW YORK—First lady Imelda Marcos of the Philippines launched an exhibit yesterday of her nation's products at the fashionable Bloomingdale's department store as about 25 Filipinos hanged her in effigy during a protest outside the store.
The 25 anti-Marcos demonstrators at the store's entrance called the promotional display "a whitewash" to improve the Philippines' image in India.
The promotion, "The Philippines—Land of Friends," is the world's largest exhibit of furnishings, and clothing from that Southeast Asian nation.
There were no arrests or disturbances.
Marcos denied there was any oppression by the government of her husband, President Ferdinand Marcos.
Chamber studies Nixon library idea
INDEPENDENCE, Mo.—The city gained a partner yesterday in its study of the possibility of housing the Richard M. Nixon presidential library to
The Chamber of Commerce board of directors voted unanimously yesterday to work "positively" with the city on the matter and to appoint a
The council of Independence, which already has the Harry S. Truman Presidential Library, voted last month to keep Independence a one-person institution.
Haig returns to Buenos Aires to arbitrate
By United Press International
WASHINGTON—President Reagan yesterday ordered Secretary of State Alexander Haig back to Buenos Aires to try to defuse the "exceptionally dangerous" Falkland Islands crisis. However, Argentina's president vowed his motion would not relinquish control over the islands.
"We are trying to be a fair broker." Reagan said at a White House conference the day after Haig returned from an unsuccessful six-day peace shuttle between London and Buenos Aires.
Haig told reporters he was flying to Buenos Aires today with "new ideas" to find a solution to what he called an alarming crisis and exceptionally dangerous" crisis.
Argentine leaders, however, issued new intransigent statements.
"Leaders of both countries have assured me, again today, that they are prepared to go working with us to reach targets and goals," the will require flexibility on both sides.
THE BRITISH "are not going to push us off," said the Argentine military governor of the Falklands, seized from Britain April 2.
The main British demand is that the Argentines evacuate their troops before negotiations on the islands' future can begin.
President Leoipo Galetti issued an "America's Day" message, insisting throughout the statement that President Obama must have sovereignty over the islands.
"There has been no progress in the negotiations," Foreign Minister Nicanor Costa Mendez said.
"Our people will defend their sovereignty,"he warned.
He also attacked the countries that were supporting Britain in the dispute.
"WE CANNOT forget the attitude of those, who perhaps seek rewards like Judas" 30 pieces of silver, deny the ideas they say they support and instead defend the practice of imperialist privilege."
Dipolitical sources said Galatii may have been referring to European countries that banned Argentine imports.
ABC news said Tuesday that the United States was providing vital communications assistance to the British war fleet. The fleet is in control of about 450 miles away from the Falklands, which lie 450 miles off the coast of Argentina.
Gallitier had been expected to read his speech over national television, but instead copies of the message were released to the press.
Earlier, Reagan described the situation as "critical," but neither he
Argentina announced it had sent two gunboats into the waters near the Falklands for the first time since a blockade was imposed by Britain late last year. The British military Buenos Aires said there were no incidents or hostilities, however.
nor Haig gave details on the new peace proposals to be made to the Argentine government.
Britain's defense ministry said it was doubling the force of about 20 Harrier jump-jet fighters now heading for the Atlantic in Britain's naval task force.
Backing U.S. news reports, the ministry said Soviet spy ships shadowing Britain's naval task force were passing on information to Argentina, a substantial Soviet trading partner.
An Argentine reporter who visited the Falklands Tuesday said Argentine forces had heavily fortified their position at the airport and the capital of Stanley.
reports that the Soviets were giving
him a phone number to call, said,
"I'd like to see them but out,"
REAGAN, COMMENTING on
At the United Nations, Britain accused Argentina of defying the Security Council resolution that called for an end to hostilities in the islands. Argentina said it had "no intention" of provoking a battle with the British.
An Argentine Coast Guard spokesman said the two gunboats arrived Tuesday night in Stanley.
It it was the first time Argentina admitted any of its vessels had challenged the British blockade, imposed on a 200-mile radius around the islands and firmly enforced by British nuclear submarines already around the Islands.
FRANK SEIER . OR KANSAS UNIVERSITY
FRANK SEURER
KANSAS
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KELLY KNIGHT
KANSAS
KANSA
DEON HOGAN KANSAS
DEON HOGAN
'82 - '83 ALL-SPORTS SEASON TICKET SALE
in front of WESCOE HALL K.U. I.D.s REQUIRED-
MON., APRIL 19-
WED., APRIL 21
9:00 a.m.-4:00 p.m.
FOOTBALL-ALL 6 GAMES*
FREE T-SHIRT TO FIRST 1,000 TICKET PURCHASERS.
BASKETBALL-ALL 14 GAMES*
*(REGULAR SEASON GAMES ONLY—DOES NOT INCLUDE PRE OR POST-SEASON GAMES)
TICKET PRICE—$45.00 Includes These K.U. Home Events:
TRACK-KANSAS RELAYS
HOW IT WORKS:
Receipts will be issued to purchasers. The ticket office will have copies if you lose your receipt over the summer.
—Tickets may be picked up next fall according to the SR., JR., Soph., Fresh, schedule.
BLOCK SEATING in Football will be available by turning your receipts in together next fall.
Football-Only Student Season Tickets go on sale next fall.
Allen Field House Student Seating is limited to 7,000. Therefore, Basketball-Only Student Season Tickets will be available only if less than 7,000 All-Sports Tickets are sold.
—For more information—contact
ATHLETIC TICKET OFFICE ALLEN FIELD HOUSE
864-3141
University Daily Kansan, April 15, 1982
Page 3
TED BURTON
This is the second student opinion survey of the year, recently released by the Student Opinion Survey Committee and of institutional research and planning.
The survey asked 480 students-47 percent of them female and 53 percent male—questions submitted by the Spencer Museum of Art, the Student Development Center, the Student Senate and Associated Students of Kansas.
Questions for the survey were approved by the 12-member committee made up of faculty members, students and staff.
The survey was given the week of March 29-April 2 to 25 to 30 classes representing every level of study, and a representative man of the committee, said recently.
"The basic idea is that there be one clearing house for these kind of
questions so we don't have a great amount mailing, disrupting of classes and numbers of times students are interviewed," she said. "This prevents overlap of groups, and of two groups asking the same questions."
Any person or organization can ask questions to be asked in the poll, she says.
All the percentages shown in the survey are percentages of the total number of students polled. But Paschke answered to all the questions to answer all of the questions.
"The feedback is useful for the improvement of programs or for the programs to see if they are serving us as well as what they wanted to so she said.
Student opinion
The surveys were started in spring 1981. The first survey was taken last fall and one more survey for this school year will be taken next week.
The questions and results are
Arts
A man looks at a vase with figures in it.
Have you ever visited the Spencer Museum of Art for any of the following reasons?
YES
• to view the exhibits for personal enjoyment 60.2%
• to take a guided tour of the exhibits 14.2
• to view exhibits for class 32.3
• to attend class 22.9
• to see a film 6.7
• to attend a lecture or gallery talk 14.0
• to attend a musical performance 7.1
• to visit the book shop 21.7
• other 14.8
• I have never visited the Spencer Museum of Art 25.6
THE CASTLE
TEA ROOM
1307 Mass phone: 841-1151
If you have never visited the Spencer Museum of Art, why not?
- lack of interest in art 9.2
- lack of information about the museum 12.7
- problems with location, building or parking 2.1
- problem with museum hours 2.1
- other 10.4
COOP
CHEF
| | YES | NO |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Have you ever looked for a job on campus? | 55.8 | 43.4 |
| If yes, did you get an on-campus job? | 33.1 | 27.1 |
| Have you ever looked for a job off campus? | 54.8 | 43.4 |
| If yes, did you get an off-campus job? | 42.1 | 19.8 |
| Are you employed now? | 45.4 | 53.8 |
| Are you looking for a job now? | 34.0 | 63.5 |
| Have you heard of the Student Employment Center? | 60.0 | 38.1 |
Jobs
Which of the following Student Employment Center services have you used?
| | USED |
| :--- | :--- |
| • job boards | 32.9 |
| • employment counselor | 4.8 |
| • babysitter list | 2.5 |
| • temporary job list | 9.0 |
| • I have never used their services | 60.6 |
The
Yello Sub
*delivers*
841-3268
How would you rate the services of the Student Employment Center?
• Not helpful 2.7% 4.2% 13.1% 7.5% 3.8% Very helpful
• I have never used the Student Employment Center services = 65.0%
If you ever looked for an on-campus or off-campus job, was the job hunting:
* Easy 9.4% 12.9% 18.3% 19.0% 11.0% Difficult
* I have never looked for an on-campus or off-campus job = 26.0%
ACADEMY
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Voting
STUDENT SENATE VOTE HERE
YES NO DON'T KNOW
Did you vote in the last Student Senate election? 24.8% 74.0%
Do you feel that voting hours were flexible enough in that election to allow you to vote conveniently? 46.0 6.9 44.6
Were the ballot boxes in a convenient place? 50.2 6.9 40.0
Do you feel that the Senate adequately serves your interests as a KU student? 16.7 22.1 59.2
Have you ever served on a Senate committee as a non-senator, senator or interested party? 5.8 92.1
Do you know the purpose and functions of the Associated Students of Kansas?
24.6 38.3 35.6
Should ASK take stands on issues other than higher education?
• Yes 9.2
• Depends on the issue 32.9
• No 12.1
• I don't know 43.1
Can KU students represent KU interests in the Legislature better than a state-based student lobbying organization?
YES NO DON'T KNOW
39.0 16.7 41.9
25.8 41.9 30.0
Should student activity fees be used to support any student group lobbying for student interests in Topeka?
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Page 4
Opinion
University Daily Kansan, April 15, 1982
Time to pay attention
A city the size of Lawrence cannot easily ignore a school as large as the University of Kansas.
The converse is not necessarily true. It may be because of academic pressures, allegiances to hometowns or the temporary nature of their stay in Lawrence, but students often ignore the city.
Next month, students can prove that they are paying attention. If they register by April 19, they will be eligible to vote in the May 11 special election.
Or maybe students don't care about city politics and policies.
But the issues that affect the rest of the city also affect students. Zoning decisions influence the availability of housing and the character of neighborhoods. City drinking ordinances shape student social habits. And fees to be tacked on utility bills dig into student pockets just as they dig into those of everyone else in town.
Next month's election will decide two questions.
The first is whether the city will attach a 50-cent monthly fee to residents' water bills. The fee would be used to finance a study of storm water drainage problems in Lawrence.
A citizens' group collected enough signatures to force the recall election after Gleason wrote a letter to Buford Watson, city manager, asking him to resign.
Students can register to vote at the Douglas County Court House, 11th and Massachusetts streets, or the Lawrence City Hall, Sixth and Massachusetts streets.
The second question is whether City Commissioner Tom Gleason will hang on to his place on the Lawrence City Commission.
The city purposely scheduled the elections to take place when the students would still be in town.
The least the students can do is return the favor by voting.
Mideast peace an illusion security a goal unreached
The latest brouhaha in northern Israel has brought back memories of an exciting jaunt through the area I took with a couple of buddies during another military mobilization in Jordan. *Jerusalem systems.*
It was a few weeks before阿努沙 Wadat was to come to Israel for the first time in November
we'd gotten into Israel by flying to Cyprus from Cairo. This was before Camp David, when direct passage between Egypt and Israel was not permitted.
There were no flights from Nicosia on Cyprus to Athens, but we were told we had dismissed the twice month bid.
Rather than hang on out Cyprus—where the CIA was in great disfavor —we opted for a short flight to Jordan. When we got to Jordan we would get passage visas and cross at the Allenby Bridge on the Jordan River—come in to Israel by the back door, so to speak.
We had no idea what to expect in Amanm, where we would land. It was hot, dirty and poor.
W.I. ANDREWS
with a rank mystery of lost purpose permeating the ocean, a vast island of self-doubt among the Arab world.
We had to stay in Jordan a total of 48 hours in order to qualify for passage to Israel, and sign a treaty with Jordan.
Everyone signed the vouchers, but we had no intention of returning.
A bus took us to the bridge our third morning in Jordan and we were all shuffled into block houses, searched and asked a few questions: "What did you see?" "What is your religion?" "Are you going to stay?" "What is your religion?"
And they made us open our cameras, exposing the film we had, and ripened two maps we had of Israel. One booklet, we convinced the guard, need only have the Israeli section ripped out.
We grew accustomed to this friction and we accepted it. In Egypt, while securing tickets to Cyprus, one of my friends had let on that our final destination was Israel, and the clerk took pains to remind us that in the tourist office this remark would be overlooked, but that in public, measured words were necessary when mentioning Israel.
We were loaded onto the next bus, a heavily cased in and dirt one that barely ran.
The change was like night and day when we got on the Israeli said. The Israeli guard smiled and waved as we approached his sandbagged post. Our bags were unloaded, we received cups of cold lemonade, and were placed in the shade to wait for our next bus.
Arriving in Beirut for a night, we went through the Moslem and Christian guard posts, submitting to body and luggage searches by both sides.
In a movie theater in Jerusalem, the young soldiers laughed at my skittishness over the Israeli policy of armed domestic guards, in green fatigues, appearing everywhere. I was watching Richard Pryor and Gene Wilder in "Silver Streak" but couldn't manage a laugh with a balcony of laps laden with M-Irs surrounding me.
We visited Masada in the South, along the Dead Sea. We could spot the Israeli and Jordanian patrons as they kept watch over that area, as we saw them carrying bags to see "the beautiful superstel in the world."
On the coast road to Haifa, the day before we traveled it to go north, there had been a PLO ambush that had killed some civilians and destroyed a bus.
The next day, we waited at Galilee to board a
bus for Methullah, near the border with the U.N. buffer zone.
I was anxious and wondered into the commercial area of the neighborhood looking for nothing in particular until I found a flea market. I was fascinated and distracted by the nature of the bargaining, not noticing the time until Randy helped me find a different my diversion and tell me we had missed the bus.
On the way, some of the Israelis were aroused for some reason and chattered among themselves. When we reached Methullah we found out why.
Then Randy and I went back to join Steve and take the next bus to Methallah.
The bus had traveled a different route to avoid the scene of a guerrilla ambush that had killed many civilians and two soldiers, and had burned the building. In it. It was the bus to Meibushi that we had missed.
Meetman that we had mistaken
From Methullah we had to hoof it to the hostel.
We arrived at the hostel at sunset. It sat on a small hill overlooking the U.N. buffer zone less than a mile away. The expanse below was a maze of rolling hills and hidden valleys. U.N. troops meandered along the dusty path among the observation huts scattered about the zone.
That night we sat on a bluff at the edge of the hostel area and watched the Israeli Kirf jets, the orange spheres of their engines, as they coiled in front of us. We fired rockets at suspected guilder hide-ups.
The Israeli soldiers we sat with applauded their comrades in the sky. To me it looked like the world.
We went to bed late and woke up early. Steve had gotten a map to a preserve area to the northeast that rimmed the U.N. zone and thought catching a good view from a mound on the reserve.
We walked about an hour and a half that morning and reached the base of the preserve bluffs. We went down a reentrant and into a cavern with a tricking waterfall. It looked like a scene from a rocky island, colored and orange with light reflecting off the spray of water as the stream hit the shallow pool.
It was completely quiet, and in the dome enclosure of the rocks, whispers were amplified to
As we walked out and away from the cavern, we suddenly emerged to within earshot of the cave.
The noise, to me, sounded like a train, and to Randy, an out-of-tower tractor trailer. What it was, we saw as we created the ridge, was three miles of infantry infantry moving into position along the zone.
The terrorists' attacks had prompted the move and the sharp look troops rumbled by us below, the treads of their armored personnel carriers gouging great divides in the roads crushed rock bed. The troops smiled, a couple waved; they looked confident and determined. A Mirage jet screamed and by out over the valley. I slid back down the ridge and went toward the cavern. Again the sound immediately disappeared. ALL I could hear were
If we make 'peace', he said, the hatred will not go away. We prefer security without peace, and security without peace.
And then I thought of my awe as I emerged from the peace of the cavern waterfall, to see the army rolling by. I never knew they were there. The peace was illusionary.
I don't blame the Israeliis for professing their belief that peace is illusionary, for it may be just that in the Middle East. But if they should choose to never peace, then that security should be made safe.
I thought about the buses, and the terrorism, and could not imagine that as safe.
I thought about what an Israeli soldier had said the night before at the Youth Hostel.
I slid back down the ridge and went toward the cavern. Again the sound immediately disappeared. All I could hear was the peaceful solitude of the flowing water.
I don't want to have to rely on missing buses.
The University Daily Kansas welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten, double-spaced and should not exceed 300 words. 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 university should not edit or reject letters.
Letters Policy
WE SHALL FIGHT ON THE BEACHES, WE SHALL FIGHT ON THE LANDING GROUNDS.
WE SHALL FIGHT IN THE FIELDS AND IN THE STREETS, WE SHALL FIGHT IN THE HILLS: WE SHALL NEVER SURRENDER.
U.S. policy should sail with Britain
One of the more barren, storm-swept spots on earth suddenly has become the center of world tension. Until two weeks ago, the Falkland Islands were nearly as obscure as South Succotash. But when Argentina invaded the Fort Stanley became a modern-day Fort Sumter.
It is easy to see why Argentina covets the islands: they are flat, treeless, rocky moors, bare to the chilly South Atlantic sea and lashed by winds that buffet a few hundred thousand barrels.
They are shepherded by less than 2,000 inhabitants, most of them Scots, who may have migrated because the desolate terrain of the Orkneys reminded them of the Shetlands and the Orkneys.
But these few carry on a rough love affair with the dog, whose terrain is an ever-changing reminder of a distance.
The islands' bleakness allowed their inhabitants to live in peace until the daring Argentine navy forced upon another people the salty realization that the world continually grows smaller as countries bulge at their boundaries.
The history of the world is only a million tragic tales, most of them longer and more grim, but similar to the one unfolding in the Falklands. Invaders always have trampled the everyday lives of peoples, often more cruelly than the Argentineans have. The current crisis, in terms of human suffering, is only a nick amid gashes.
Yet it matters. By the accord Roosevelt and Churchill struck in the Atlantic Charter to preserve peoples' right to self-government, it matters.
Pragmatists argue that these 1,800 shepherds and fishermen—not enough to make a decent-sized small town—are not worth spilling blood for. They see the British fleet dispatched to retake the islands as an overblown reaction of an affronted people who long to hearken back to Nelson's glorious triumph at Trafalgar. They think the British are swelling their chests as the brisk, salty breeze of nostalgia enters their nostrils.
The British do have pride, and it may be overblown. But it is as invagoring as a whiff of Old Spice to see a country acting firm for her era when we are made to feel guilty for fighting for
what is ours, and what is right. Great Britain has shown that, although it may not have the great naval grip on the Seven Seas that would prevent a war with Germany, the Falklands invasion, it still has a lion's spirit.
The lion may have been caught napping before the invasion, but since then Britain's course has been right. Nothing less than a full blaze of ambush would succeed, will bury Ardeinta from the archipelago.
And the Argentine troops must be removed before any negotiations can take place, for, despite the willingness of the pragmatists to appease General Galtieri's government so lives may be saved, lives ultimately will be lost, if the Argentine force is allowed to remain.
PETER BURGER
BEN IONES
The Falklands will become a precedent for other territorial disputes, and in the future nations will be less hesitant to flout international law as flagrantly as Argentina has. If negotiations fail, there must be retribution against Argentina.
Until now, the United States has tacitly taken Britain's part in the dispute, but should Secretary of State Alexander Haig's attempt to mediate a solution break down, the U.S. should come out stamatically for Britain, imposing sanctions on Argentina and carceling military aid.
Galetti's government, with U.S. support, is swimming along in 140% inflation; with our censure it would either topple or be forced to be more responsive to its citizens.
If the United States did withdraw its support from the military junta, Argentina probably would turn to the Soviet Union for support. Argentine wheat helps the U.S.S.R.'s logistical collection of goods in other parts of the Union, although it did not veto a U.N. vote that censured Argentina for the invasion, has shown sympathy for that country in Tass agency news reports.
Russian bear loose on the Argentine pamps, U.S. sanctions against Argentina would strengthen our influence with South American countries by showing that we back our words with actions. Our influence certainly could not get much weaker: President Reagan spent nearly an hour on the telephone to afflict Pankalski, Galtieri attacked, immediately. So far, the only U.S. retribution has been a vote of disapproval in the U.N. resolution.
But even with the dangers of turning the
If Argentina does not feel a backlash for blatantly ignoring the will of a country it depends upon, it will assume our foreign policy has become, "Speak pleadingly and leave the big stick in the closet guarding us." We should be intent on peace-keeping factor will be diminished even further than it is now.
Reagan should learn what Britain learned after Neville Chamberlain signed away Sudetenland to Hitler at Munich: that to appease dictators only whets their appetites. The German war machine fed upon the annexation like a hurricane that sucks up power as it moves over more water. Galitzer's junta is not a threat like Hitler, but it would be an accident. According to a Jack Anderson column already Argentina has flown pregnant women to Antarctica to give birth there, in a perverse effort to shore up that country's claim to the continent.
Argentina's strongest claim to the Falklands is based on the islands' nearness to its coast. But in race and customs, the Falklanders are nearer to Britain. The conflict raises virtually every detail of the situation and determines sovereignty—discovery, settlement, military might, or proximity.
Land, because it outlasts explorers, settlements and governments, seems to defy solid claims to ownership. Land should be seen as a place where people can live in cavities of inhabitants, not apothesis to be coveted.
The Falklands rightfully belong to the people who have lived on the land. If Argentina wants to acquire the islands, it should gradually buy the land as the present owners die or move off the islands. Britain may agree to other ways of transferring ownership of the islands to Argentina, but Britain, under the Iron Lady Maggie Thatcher, will never tolerate a military takeover. The U.S. should back Britain all the way, if it has to come to war.
Letters to the Editor
To the Editor:
First, builders do not request changes in building plans. Perhaps architects or control
As president of the Students Concerned with
Drug Abuse in the School System, he worked in the April 7 article on handcuffed students.
Second, SCWD does not work through the Student Assistance Center. We work with them, just as we work with other offices on campus. Then, Paulette Strong, however, works in the center.
Story based on stereotypes
Your statement perpetuates the "handicapist" stereotype that we, as disabled people, do not have the ability to work as an independent group. You can also be less likely to have ability to work as an independent group. It assumes that disabled people need help from a more powerful source than themselves—usually defined as nondisabled people. This myth has a counterpart in sexism—women cannot be or do
Third, I suggest you also interview disabled women on campus, including myself. All of your interviewees were men with very visible disabilities. This may be appropriate when covering physical barriers, but it conveys that the disabled community is not varied. It is varied. There are disabled staff and students at the University of Kansas. There are people with visible disabilities, with mental disabilities and with invisible disabilities (such as diabetes, or psychological disabilities).
biodiversity of mental disability.
Fourth, the statement that our members have
We of SCWD have been working with both disabled and nondisabled people at KU, including administration. But, we are not a "crippled" organization working viciously through another office. SCWD works to eliminate physical and communication barriers facing disabled people (and nondisabled people). In this spirit, SCWD invites students, staff and faculty to participate in the Disabled Awareness Week activities which began on April 12.
negative attitudes was incorrect. SCWD members are disabled or concerned with disabilities. They and others affiliated with SCWD have more positive understandings and attitudes than those who may not be affiliated with the organization.
Janice M. McKown.
president of Students Concerde with Disabilities
I hope that the spelling "drys" was a mere sleep of the pen because, if it wasn't, it makes one wonder whether there is anybody over there who knows how to spell. I don't want to put you in the pillory, but perhaps it's time to invest in a copy of Webster's Dictionary at last!
To the Editor:
Spelling lesson
W. Keith Percival, professor of linguistics
The University Daily
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University Daily Kansan, April 15, 1982
Page 5
Plan
From page 1
HE SAID ABOUT $30,000 could go toward establishing a student-sponsored speaker series. The Senate also would solicit private donations, but Adkins said people would be more willing to contribute if the Senate would also show a commitment.
Another $6,000 to $10,000 could pay to bring the Senate on line with the University's computer system.
Adkins said that student leaders from three out of 10 schools at a national convention he attended last month in Philadelphia said their schools had computer capabilities.
These capabilities would improve the Senate's record-killing efficiency, allowing the Senate's
Templin
treasurer more time to work with student groups, he said.
The Senate also must keep at least $30,000 of the unallocated account as contingency fund. *Audited*
Taking money out of the unallocated account would not only take away from future large purchases, Adkina said, but it also would lead to a huge loss in much next year, which he said might not be true.
"He and other senators have called the budget question $n$ 'short-term problem with a long-term solution.'
"I guess the folks I would like to think I represent might not want money going to individual groups as much as long-range programs," Adkins said.
From page 1
certain information in his campaign that was
bordered and bordered on slander and libel."
Gottesbitt says.
He said that Fusaro had broken this verbal agreement with the content of his flyers.
Fusaro's opponent, Steve Tinsley, Kansas Ciyt, sophomore, said he did not understand why mudling was used in the campaigns.
"No matter what happens, I refuse to stoop to that level," Tinsley said.
Orientering is a sport that has attracted tens of thousands of participants in Europe and is quickly gaining recognition in this country. Geneva Convention Activities program adviser, said recently.
By JIM LEHNER Staff Reporter
“It’s a sport that has been popular for a long time in Europe, but it’s just been over the past 15 years that the United States has heard about it.” Wee said.
Staff Reporter
WEE said that SUA and Orienteer Kansas sponsored the four-year-old Orienteer Kansas Club.
Orientering is a navigation sport that uses compasses and typography maps. The objective of the sport is to locate, in the shortest time of course, control points that are set up in the woods.
Orienteering sport gaining popularity
"It is a group of nearly 50 people, with 10 being active members," he said.
He said that active members were those who competed in the orienteering functions of the country.
Recently, the KU Orienteer Club took second place in the club competition at the United States
The University of Kansas was second to the UCLA in academy, which brought 37 competitors as合赛队。
HE ALSO SAID that two of the three members who competed for KU were on the U.S. team that competed in the 1980 World Student Championships in Switzerland.
Intercollegiate Orienteering Championships held in St. Louis, Wee said.
One of those members, Karan Keith, Leawood senior, who finished fifth in the women's elite category, said that orienteering had its roots in Europe.
Europe.
"Orienteering got its start in Sweden before World War II as a training session for its military," she said.
"It took off as a sport all over Europe after we gained gaining popularity here for just the last 10 to 12 years."
"Clubs have now been organized in many universities across the country," she said.
Keith also said that the sport took great physical stamina as well as intellectual
"Each orienter uses a map and compass to where each control point will be. They transfer what's on the map into their minds, giving them clues about stimulating as well as physically rewarding."
SHE SAID THAT what made the sport so physically rewarding was the terrain that each participant would have to encounter.
"The terrain is much more difficult than cross-country courses," she said. "A person can run as fast or as slow as they like and they must use a certain skill to conquer the hardness of the routes."
The courses vary in length wherefrom two kilometers to 12 kilometers, she said, with age and ability determining the course in which one participates.
Reagan urges sober driving seat belt use
"Red is the elite women's race, consisting of six to eight kilometers, and blue is for the men's elite, the course running between nine and 10 kilometers."
From Staff and Wire Reports
the type of race that one participates in is named after a color, beginning being white, followed by yellow, orange, green, red and blue," she said.
Keith said that the sport was particularly attractive to people who wanted to keep physically fit and also enjoyed the outdoors.
WASHINGTON—Last year, about 50,000 people were killed on highways in the U.S. during the coronavirus pandemic.
President Reagan, seeking to reduce the "slaughter," has named a commission to get drunken drivers off the roads and has begun a campaign to encourage the use of seat belts.
"The meets are a lot of fun," she said. "We usually campout after a meet and enjoy nature."
On the average, 130 people are killed in traffic accidents every day. One official said as many Americans die on U.S. roads every year as were killed during the entire Vietnam war. Every year, another 3.5 million are injured and about 3,000 are crippled for life.
Keith said that the orienteney season usually ran from mid-March until mid-November during the winter.
The mood of the nation is ripe to make headway to solving the problem," Reagan said yesterday at a White House ceremony attended by many lawmakers and many federal transportation officials.
Reagan said the number of highway fatalities could be in half if all the victims had been dead before he took office.
The president's 36-member commission on drunken driving will be chaired by John Volpe, a former secretary of transportation in the Nixon administration.
Roger Smith, chairman of general motors, Lee Iacocca, president of Chrysler Corp., and Philip Caldwell, chairman of Ford Motor Co., all issued permission to participate in the seat belt campaign.
latest techniques in curbing the intoxicated
law enforcement against such drivers.
but it was under pressure from the automakers that the safety administration last November scrapped requirements for air bags or automatic belts beetened during the administration.
That panel intends to increase public awareness of the problem; helping states "attack the drunken drive problem in a more systematic manner," encouraging the use of the
in its place, the government began its $5 million campaign to urge motorists to voluntarily use seat belts, which are still required in new cars.
Reagan put the presidential seal on that campaign yesterday.
For example, more and more people drive small cars, which are more fuel efficient, but give less protection than larger cars. Fewer people use seat belts, and more people speed.
The National Association of Independent Insurers has challenged the administration's decision in court, saying that 10,000 lives would be saved if the standard for passive restraints were retained.
The Wall Street Journal reported yesterday that traffic deaths would rise to 70,000 a year if
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CHOOSING LOVE AS A STRATEGY
The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center Invites You To Join Us In Viewing The Film
A Wedding in the Family,
A sensitive portrayal of one daughter's decision to choose marriage in contrast to her sister's decision to direct her major energy towards a career. An informal discussion will follow.
DATE: Thursday, April 22, 1982
TIME: 7:00-9:00 p.m.
PLACE: Pine Room, Kansas Union
Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, 864-3552.
For further information call the
Jeff Buckingham
April 14-17, 1982
KANSAS RELAYS
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Page 6 University Daily Kansan, April 15, 1982
The KU School of Education Alumni Society is now accepting nominations for its outstanding educator award.
Groups look for outstanding educator
Larol Immel, chairman of the award's selection committee, said yesterday that the award would be given to a KU graduate who had made significant contributions to the field of education.
education. She said the committee would take nominations for the award until April 24.
The selection committee, which is made up of three other School of Education alumni is looking for a candidate who has earned recognition in education, she said.
Recognition in education.
Nominée for the award, Immel said,
could be from any area or level of
education.
The outstanding educator award, she said, would be given at the annual School of Education Alumni Society
meeting,which will be at 2 p.m., May 15 in the Kansas Room in the Kansas Union.
"The meeting is a chance for the education society to get together at commencement time, and we thought it would be an appropriate time to present the outstanding educator award," Immel said.
This is the second time the award has been given, she said.
Last year, William P. Foster, a 1941 KU graduate and now a band director at Florida State University, received the award.
The guest speaker for the meeting, Immel said, would be Ernest L. Boyer, president of the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching.
She said nominations for the award should be sent to her at 1220 N. Walnut St, Iola, Kan., 66749.
Each nomination should include a letter explaining why the nominee should be considered for the award. A short narrative biographical sketch and a resume about the nominee should also be included.
Nomination letters should be no longer than five typewritten double-spaced pages, she said.
Immel said that people making nominations should also include their names, addresses and telephone numbers.
She said she was very impressed by last year's nominations and she hoped the outstanding educator award would become an annual event.
"The University of Kansas can indeed be proud of the outstanding achievements in education by so many of its graduates," she said.
On the record
A KU fraternity reported a fraud Tuesday of more than $250, police said. The fraternity, Beta Theta Pi, said it was investigating the case. Rock Chalk that were never delivered.
Members of the fraternity said Catherine S. Farley, a commercial artist from Kansas City, Mo., was supposed to design the swentshirts and dress them. Farley never delivered the shirts and could not be reached, they said.
Farley's attorney said he would send her statement to the police.
Eight KU fraternities and sororites already have reported frauds after dealing with the same artist, police officers who were accused and ordered swaintons for Rock Chalk.
There have been no arrests or charges filed, police said.
THE DOUGLAS County Sheriff's department arrested two men Tuesday in connection with the recovery of a stolen car, sheriff's officials said.
Sheriff's officers arrested Earl D. Sifretts, 47, and Carl V. Stinnes, 54, both from Kansas City, Kan., for possession of property and possession of stolen tags.
A sheriff's officer noticed that the car the men were driving had a back Missouri license plate but not a front plate. Missouri requires both front and back license plates, sheriff's officials said.
The officer ran a check on the car and discovered it was stolen.
Earl Stinnels was released on $1,500 bond tuesday and Carl Stinnels was released on $1,525 bond.
BURGLARS STOLE a chair worth about $300 at about 8:15 p.m. tuesday from the Lawrence Golf and Country Club, 400 Country Club Terrace, police
P police said three suspects entered the club and were asked for identification, but none of the three had a membership card because they were visitors.
The Victorian-style chair was discovered to be missing after the three left the club, police said.
The doorman was able to give a description of one of the suspects but could not remember the other two, police said. There have been no arrests.
KU POLICE reported a $110 forgery Tuesday. Police said the victim told them his checkbook was stolen in January during enrollment at Allen Field House. He found that a check had been caused for $110 on his account after the checks were stolen. There are no suspects, police said.
THEIEVS STOLE a watch and a ring worth about $209 between time 4 and 6 p.m. Friday from a jacket in Robinson Center, KU police said. The victim said he left his jacket unattended in the bleachers near the swimming pool. There are no suspects, police said.
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Economic findings mixed
BY VINCE HESS Staff Reporter
Workers in urban areas who are still employed in automobile- or oil-related industries probably will keep their jobs, but workers in the private sector may be more likely to lose their jobs, an economic report by KU researchers stated.
The report, to be published soon in Kansas Business Review magazine, predicted that seasonal improvements in such industries as construction and agriculture would help jobs for many lad-of-workers.
Cita wrote that Kansas was just now feeling the effects of the nationwide recession. While national unemployment in January was 8.8 percent, the Kansas figure was 4.6 percent. However, the December 1981 figure for Kansas was 4 percent, and the April 1982 figure showed a steady growth in unemployment. The February figure indicated the highest
However, the report said, the key to sustained national and state economic recovery was low, steady interest rate.
KU's Institute of Economic and Business Research releases bimonthly reports summarizing trends in the national, regional and state economies. Rich Sexton, research economist, and John Cita, research assistant, wrote the current report, which covers the first three months of this year and projections for the rest of 1982.
KANSAS IS faring better than other states in the region, according to Cita. The January unemployment figure in Kansas was the lowest in the region, while in each state except Nebraska, unemployment increased because of one or two weak industries. In Missouri, the automobile industry had many layoffs, and in Iowa, employment in construction and farm equipment manufacturing fell.
Cita said yesterday that layoffs in Kansas City and Topeka leveled off by February, but more Wichita workers may lose their jobs.
unemployment in the state since January 1976.
"I don't think things are going to get better until at least June," he said, "but I don't know if they'll necessarily get worse."
"During the second half of the year, if recovery takes place, the combination of (increased) private sector plus public sector demand for credit, coupled with a restrictive interest rate and a Reserve Board), would once again provide the impetus for major increases in interest rates."
Proposed cuts in defense buildup could cost the Wichita aviation industry in the future, he said.
Sexton wrote that the prime rate, now around 16 to 17 percent, may fall to 12 percent this year, then possibly rise again.
"Kansans should watch with interest what happens with defense spending," he said.
One good sign, Cita wrote in the report, was that people were saving more money and taking out smaller loans.
this, he wrote, "may indicate a building up of 'pent-up demand' which, upon the arrival of cheaper money and/or greater confidence in the economy, adds to the strength of a recovery once a recovery got underway."
"ANALYSTS GENERALLY agree that the strength of the recovery will be tied to moderations
in the level of interest," he wrote in the report.
He also predicted that unemployment would top 9 percent this year and would remain above 8 percent through the end of the year.
intention for 1982 should be about 5.5 to 6.5 percent, he wrote. Among the factors that would keep prices from rising are failing petroleum and other energy sources and by conservation. Other factors included wage freezes agreed to by large industries and unions, and the large 1981 food harvest and projected future consumption in 1982, causing an abundance of food.
The outlook for agriculture in 1982 is not good, Sexton wrote. Overall prices farmers received in February were 7.6 percent below 1811 levels, and prices for such crops as corn, sorghum and soybeans fell by 28 percent or more from 1981. While farmers may get some relief from lower inflation and interest rates, Sexton wrote, they would not receive more money for their crops.
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1982-1983 SPIRIT SQUAD (Pom Pon/Yell Leader) TRYOUTS
INFORMATION MEETING:
Thurs. 15 5:00 p.m.
Jayhawk Rm. Kansas Union
INFORMATION MEETING:
PRELIM TRYOUTS:
Fri. 23 5:30 p.m.
Allen Field House
CLINICS:
Mon. 19 Thurs.22 5:30 p.m.
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Sun. 25 8:00 p.m.
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University Daily Kansan, April 15, 1982
Page 1
Spirit squad tryouts planned for April 23
By BARB EHLI Staff Reporter
Cathy Cuey, a new spirit squad coach, said there would be an organizational meeting for next year's 5 p.m. today in the Satellite Union.
Queen, who was named the coach April 8, said the meetings would inform people who were interested in her work and about the voices of cheering they will do.
"We need some people with original ideas." Queen said yesterday.
Queen said she is bringing several ideas with her from Pittsburgh State University, where she is presently on a master's degree in speech.
Queen said she worked with the pompon squad at Pittsburg for three years and had been a sponsor for the cheerleaders and yell leaders for two
Queen said she was looking for some specific things in the next year's spirit squad.
"We want people who have a genuine interest in athletics," she said. "We want people who are outgoing, but not aware that there are squad conflicts."
Queen said some of the present spirit squad members were upset that they
would not be doing any gymnastics and would strictly be a "rah-rah squad."
SHE SAID THAT ATLABIC department coaches wanted more of a cheering squad and less of a performance squa, and less of a performance squa, still be allowed to do gymnastic stunts.
"By no means are we going to cut out the gymnastics," she said. "It's a must."
But she said she hoped to incorporate more dancing with the gymnastics and add more partner stunts to the eightman and eight-woman spirit squab
She said the men and women would be required to do a toe-touch, jump and front flip off the trampoline, as well as a roller coaster ride. Who will be required to do a partner stunt.
In addition, the women will be required to perform the dance to the "I'm a Jawhawk" fight song.
A clinic is planned from 5:30 to 8 p.m.
April 19-22 for people to learn dances and stunts for the preliminary tryouts
April 23. The final tryout will be April
Queen, however, will not be at the University of Kansas permanently until July 1.
Queen said she hoped to continue her master's program and begin a doctorate program while at KU, but during the summer she will concentrate on her new job.
The Southwestern Company, which can trace its roots back to the Civil War, annually provides summer income for nearly 5,000 college students, a student manager for the company said yesterday.
The student manager, Daryl Schueler, Wichita junior, said the company got its start when a group of Confederate soldiers began smugging plates in order to print copies of the Bible for themselves.
"It got its official start in 1888, and its purpose was to help college students from the devastated South Pacific by selling books," he said.
NEW YORKER PRIMO ITALIAN PIZZA
"The sales manager was up here at KU in February talking to prospective candidates that I had talked to about joining the company," Schuler said. "The sales manager's job is to visit various colleges and universities around his assigned region of the country."
Summer sales jobs give business skills
He said the students were selected if they showed a positive interest in the company and a willingness to learn their trade and to get as much monetary gain out of the work as possible.
Furthermore, he said, if the applicants appeared to be easy to work with and showed leadership with them, he would determine whether they got the jobs.
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SCHUELER SAID the company was now a subsidiary of the Times-Mirror Corporation, and has had more than 50,000 students working for the company during the past decade.
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Schuler said that the purpose of Southwestern was to teach college students sales and management techniques and also to improve their skills in communications and working with people.
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He said the workers were selected after he and the sales manager interviewed them.
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"Seniors, don't leave the Hill
without it!" — The Jayhawk
PARKING
Today, April 15
7:30-11:00 p.m.
403 Kansas Union
Senior Open House and Party
- Football Ticket Giveaways
* Cash Draw
- Free Beer
* Free Soft Drink
Tillie Olsen, an award-winning author, is on campus this week as the writer in residence for the department of English.
- Jayhawk Apparel
- Cash Prizes
- and a whole lot more
- Free Popcorn
Award-winning author speaks about writing
Come by the Kansas Alumni Association Office, 403 Kansas Union and register for these great prizes and more, April 12-15 from 8:00-12:00 and 1:00-5:00 daily.
Olsen is the author of "Tell Me a Riddle," a book of short stories; "Vonomido," an unfilled novel written in the 30s; and "Silences," a collection of essays and lectures on the life of Silences in many author's experiences.
Most of Olsen's fiction is concerned with the silencing of human potential by life's circumstances.
During those years, she became involved in labor and school organizations and political campaigns. She was even jailed in Kansas City, Mo., in the '30s for trying to organize packhouse workers.
And don't forget to purchase your discount Senior alumni membership!
KU ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
Although the 69-year-old writer's short stories have appeared in more than 50 anthologies, she has said that her work described she has those unnatural silences.
Last night Olsen read from her works in the Kansas Union. She will be speaking at 4 this afternoon in 4019 Wescos, and at nontown, she will lead an open discussion and brown bag lunch in the Pine Room of the Union.
403 Union · Lawrence, Kansas · 66045
This concern for people, especially working class people, has continued throughout her life.
Olsen's writing was delayed by 20 years of marriage, the nurturing of four children and the necessity of working at an outside job.
"In all my work there is that celebration of human beings. There is so much more to people than their lives permit them to be," Olsen said.
Gifts and prices contributed by KU Endowment Association,
Kansas Union Booksstore and KUAC
Part of "Yonnoondi" was first published in 1934 in the Partisan Review when she was 21, and it was acclaimed as a work of genius. Soon
after this time, though, her "silence" began.
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University Daily Kansan, April 15, 1982
Local campaigns begin GOP predicts close House race
By KEVIN HELLIKER Staff Reporter
Political campaign signs are yet to riddle the laws of Lawrence. And commercials about candidates have not been heard on Lawrence radio. But the political machinery in Lawrence has begun to rumble toward November, when elections will be held for the city's three seats in the Kansas House of Representatives.
the three Democratic incumbents—State Reps. John Solbach, Betty Jo Charlton and Jessie Branson—have unofficially announced their intentions to run again.
sut Hank Booth, Douglas County's Republican chairman, said yesterday that the election of 1982 could turn out better for his party's candidates than did the election of 1980.
"The votes that the incumbents have recorded definitely will give Republicans the chance to take over seats in November," Booth said.
However, Booth predicted the campaign would be a clean one.
"Rather than a personality campaign, I think the election will be decided on issues," he said. "The reason is that philosophy will provide the issues."
On the Republican side, only one person has surfaced as a candidate. Doug Lamborn, 27, a Lawrence painter, and 1978 graduate of the University of Kansas, announced last January that he would run in the 46th District, represented now by Charlton.
But several other Lawrence residents are toying with the idea of running for a legislative seat, Booth said.
Lamborn said the thrust of his campaign would be selling himself
as a candidate who would make accomplishments in Topeka.
When asked what he would accomplish that Charlton hasn't, Lamborn said, "You can look at her record and let it speak for itself."
Lamborn said he would be helped in his campaign by his recent association with the University, from which he has a journalism degree. He will attend the campus as well as residential areas where mainly students live.
"On the local level, people have a better perception of individuals," he said. "I think students view elections on an individual basis."
LAMBORN DECLINED as yet to discuss legislative issues, but said he would wait until the present session ended later this month.
"I'm very sensitive to the tax burdens that the government puts on young people," said Lamborn, who is married and the father of three children. "There just has to be some respect and thriftiness in the Legislature."
Although Lamborn never has been involved in politics, his inexperience does not intimidate him. he said.
When asked whether he knew much about the legislative process, he said, "I feel comfortable with it."
But the incumbents said their experience gives them a deserved edge.
"I would not want to see these four years of experience I've gained go to waste," said Solbach, who first won a legislative seat in 1789.
Although Solbach said yesterday that he had not officially decided to run again; he "fully expected to."
"Right now the important thing is the legislative session. That's what I'll be concentrating on until the session is over," Solbach said.
In the 1890 election, Solbach defeated Republican Kent Snyder by a 3-2 margin in the 45th District. Snider has not announced any plans
to run again, and neither has Wint Winter, who lost to Branson in 1980.
BUT BRANSON said she definitely would be a candidate again.
"I've just plain enjoyed working with my constituents," she said. "I've invested a lot of effort in a lot of different issues, and I have developed a rapport within the Legislature."
Charlion also said she had enjoyed her term in the Legislature, although the job brought "no instant gratification."
"I suppose I'll run again for the same reason I studied political science—because the answers are all political," said Charlton, who received a graduate degree from KU.
"The social and economic problems all have political solutions, but they're slow in coming. In the long run, though, you feel that you're doing something beneficial for society."
Although Charlton is yet to officially announce her bid for reelection, she has read in other newspapers that she will run again,
"I really haven't taught very much about the campaign," she said. "Except for a treasurer, I haven't gotten anything together for it."
Beside Lamborn, only Art Wolf, a Lawrence businessman, has made public statements about his intentions to run. But according to Lamborn and other Lawrence Republicans, Wolf has decided against those plans because of an illness in his family.
Because the deadline for filing an application for the campaign is not until June, the full picture of this available for another month. Booth said.
TODAY
The Students Concerned with Disabilities will sponsor a BARRIERS AWARENESS ACTIVITY program at 10-30 a.m. east of Wesco Hall.
THE STUDENT BAR ASSOCIATION will sponsor Attorney General Robert Stephan speaking at the NOON
on campus
FORUM SERIES at 12:30 in 107 Green Hall.
THE SCHOOL OF EDUCATION STUDENT ORGANIZATION will meet at 3:30 p.m. in 183 Balley Hall.
THE STUDENT SENATE STUDENT SERVICES COMMITTEE will meet at 4 p.m. in the Regional Hotel of theKansas Union.
THE GAY AND LESBIAN SERVICES OF KANSAS will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the International Room of the Union.
THE STUDENTS CONCERNED WITH DISABILITYS will sponsor a panel discussion on Adaptations at 8 p.m. in Parlor A & O the Union.
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"The United States would not just be content with stopping Russia—they want to crush them."
Power balance needed, speaker says
Rusinow said that Europe was becoming more neurotic because the United States is becoming alarmingly complacent about beginning a war with Russia.
By JIM LEHNER Staff Reporter
With defence being a thing of the past in U.S. U.S.S.R. relations, Europe must devise a way to keep the two superpowers from clashing, Dennison Rusinow, a specialist in European affairs, said yesterday.
"Because Europe feels that the United States has become more cavalier about war than Russia has, they think it's their duty to find out how the United States stands on important issues and crises happening throughout
Angola was one example of this, he said.
He said that Yugoslavia President Tito, in 1978, was the first to adopt the United States' version that detente must be multilateral and indisplible.
It fears that any confrontation between the two countries would find them in the middle of it.
The present cold war that exists between the two countries could turn into a hot war much faster than anyone would like to believe, Rusinow said.
Rusinow, a University Staff international correspondent, told a University Forum audience of 40 people that the reason the two countries failed in their defence talks was because they lacked different perception of what it meant.
"In the Helinski Accords, the United States regarded detente as a world process, whereas the Soviet Union regarded detente as including Europe as fair game," he said.
The Soviet Union's intervention into
"The misunderstandings between the two countries lead to the demise of a company."
Europe is the key. he said.
"They are more concerned with the United States entering a major war with Russia than the opposite. It's not that Russia is less threatening, it's just that America has been more involved. States has more influence in determining if a war will happen or not."
HE SAID THAT Europe feared the intentions of the United States much more at this time than those of Russia and hawkish Reagan administration.
Anonymous calls harass city leaders
"I had a guy drive in my driveway and honk until I got up at 3:02 in the morning."
"I got a lot of phone calls," said Fred Pence, a member of the Lawrence Committee which is trying to recall Gleason. "People have said terrible, horrible things," he added, but he got my 17-year-old daughter out to answer the phone late at night.
By STEPHEN BLAIR Staff Reporter
The most recent calls were about two weeks ago, said Pence, who is also a former mayor.
Pence said that the harassing calls and letters were determined in his effort to recall Glasser.
"It sets my feet in concrete that we've really got a problem if people are going to carry on like this," he said, "and kinds of tactics are for the Mafia."
But Gleason said that the recall campaign was hostile and may have brought out hostilities in other people.
Gleason said he also was against such tactics.
Committee member Marnie Argersinger said that she had been similarly harassed.
signatures on a petition to force a May 11 election to recall Gleason.
"I think it's terrible," he said. "I did a particularly welcome support of the union."
Gleason said he also had received some anonymous calls.
However, during the commission's evaluation of Watson's job performance, no commissioner moved to fire Watson.
"I guess it works both ways," he said.
"I've received some of that myself. I've had some obscure and some threatening calls.
"Most of them were veiled threats, like. 'You'd better get out of town.'"
The recall effort began in February in response to Gleason's letter to City Manager Brian Blank, whom, which was appointed Watson resign or face the possibility of being fired.
The Lawrence Committee collected
"When you present yourself in a hostile and angry manner, it's not surprising when people who disagree respond in kind," he said.
Don't get SWAMPED by high utility bills. Naismith Hall has a better idea and way of doing things. Our totally furnished residence hall has air conditioning, free utilities and much more. CHECK US OUT!
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LOOK BEFORE YOU LEAP.
ATTENTION ARTISTS
SHOW OFF YOUR TALENT AND HELP THE LAWRENCE ARTS COMMISSION
Come Design A Piece Of Our Car
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Sign up March 29 - April 30 at Dale Willey Pontiac - Cadillac 2840 Iowa Street First Come - First Serve So Hurry and Reserve Your Section. All Artists must supply own points, brushes, etc.
Finished Car Will Be Auctioned Off at Art In The Park Sunday, May 2nd
DALE WILLEY
PONTIAC CADILLAC
Proceeds from the sale of the car will be donated to the Lawrence Arts Commission.
University Daily Kansan, April 15, 1982
Page 9
Court ruling blocks anti-nuclear group
By JANET MURPHY Staff Reporter
A temporary injunction issued Tuesday will restrict the Kansas Natural Guard, an anti-nuclear group, from entering the grounds at the Wolf Creek Power Plant site near Burlington.
Jack Klinknett, attorney for the guard, said yesterday that the injunction, issued by the Coffey County District Court, prevents any member of the guard or anyone who alleges wrongdoing in the group, from entering the property.
The court's action was the result of a petition filed in late March by the Kansas Gas and Utility Department in conjunction to "prevent irreparable damage" to the plant site.
The guard held a demonstration at the plant's gates on March 28. At that time, Coffey County officials served summonites to eight guard members. The summonites contained restraining orders for the weekend demonstration
to prevent guard members from accessing on the land to plant trees and seed.
Klinknett said the head of security for Wolf Creek testified Tuesday that he knew the summonses had been served to the demonstrators.
But, Klinknett said, KG&E officials said they spent more than $9,000 on extra security for that weekend.
Klinknett said the law states that an jurisdiction should be issued only if it is found to be illegitimate.
He said KG&E's claim that they needed the injunction to save money on extra security was invalid because the company spent the money even though they had a judge issue the restraining order.
Klinkett said officials testified they had kept the demonstrators under surveillance, filmed the proceedings, taken down names and auto license numbers and had security posted at the dropouts along the route to the plant site.
Marvin Hall dedication set
The dedication of Marvin Hall's $2.8 million renovation, at 10 a.m. Saturday, will be one of two such ceremonies planned for this week.
The Donald E. and Mary Bole Hatch Memorial Architecture Reading Room, in Marvin Hall, will be dedicated at 3 p.m. Friday.
The Marvin Hall dedication signals the end of renovations which began in August 1980 and were completed last October.
Gov. Carlin will speak at an invitational dedicatory luncheon at noon Saturday in the Kansas Room of the Kansas Union.
Speakers for the Saturday dedication will include Joanne Hurst, Gov. John Carlin's constituent aide; Warren Corman, architect for the Kansas Board of Regents; Charcellon, Gene Titre; and Max Lean, sean of the School of Architecture and Urban Design.
The reading room, which is on the fourth floor of Marvin Hall, was made possible by $400,800 from Donald E. Hatch, who died in 1979 at the age of 67.
"This is the most significant gift in the history of our school," Lucas said last week.
"Reading rooms such as this are found in the better architecture schools in the country," Lucas said. "But they don't have any through state allocations alone."
The Hatch bequest, he said, funded the purchase of architectural periodicals and reference works and funded [for the facility's] supervision.
Hatch was a 1930 KU architectural engineering graduate who had a 40-year career as a professional architect and art dealer.
In addition to the reading room's dedication to Hatch, there also will be an open house from 2 to 5 p.m. to show the art collection Hatch gave to the School of Architecture and Urban Design. The collection will be displayed permanently throughout Marvin Hall.
The bequest also established the Mary Bole Hatch Distinguished Professorship in Architecture as a memorial to Hatch's late wife.
WHY NOT STUDY IN OLD MEXICO?
A Course in Spanish:
The institute will issue a transcript of studies. The University will give credit after an examination. Reservations will have to be in before May 21. Summer school begins June 7 until August 7. Tuition is $360, room and board with a Mexican family $395.
For Information Write:
Magdalena Valdez
Lawrence, Ks. 66044
Special Events
Do you own a Barry Manilow polyester suit? Do you love music? Have you ever wanted to really work "behind the scenes" at concerts?
If you answered all these questions correctly, then SUA Special Events could be looking for YOU. We will be interviewing for the following positions on
Mon, April 19 & Wed, April 21
Security Director
Ushers Director
Stage Manager
Publicity Director
Photographer
Lighting Director
Communications Director
Sign up for an interview time in the SUR Office.
Deadline is Friday, April 16, 5 p.m.
A NIGHT OF ROCK & ROLL! DON'T MISS
BLOOD
THE J.GEILS BAND
MONDAY, APRIL 19
AHEARN FIELDHOUSE 8 PM
KANSAS STATE UNIVERSITY
GOOD SEATS STILL AVAILABLE
TICKETS CAN BE PURCHASED AT THE SUA TICKET OFFICE
UNDER THE UU Uniing
in the KU Union.
Ticket Prices: $9.00, $8.50
--k-state union
unc special events
THE JAYHAWKER DIE!
DON'TLET
KU
Buy your yearbook at the information booth April 13, 14, 15
$15
Band Banquet
April 24, 6:30 p.m., Holidome
Free tickets for Marching Band
members
$10.00-guests
Tickets required for admittance,
available in band office
until April 20.
图
INTERNATIONAL CLUB The University of Kansas Proudly Presents
A link to the brevity of the world
30th Annual International Festival of Nations
Exhibition starts at 8:00 p.m. @ BJJ-Wayne Room, Kansas Union
& BJJ-Wayne Room, Kansas Union CableTV
& BJJ-Wayne Room, Kansas Union CableTV
& BJJ-Wayne Room, Kansas Union CableTV
SUNDAY, APRIL 18, 1982
Exhibition
Display of Artifacts, Slide Show and Documentary Films from several countries.
African Moi Mol
Chinese Egg Roll
Indian Chole
Latin American Rice & Beans
Cuisine
Malaysian Kairipop
Pakistani Goeht
Palestinian Stuffed Grape Leaves
Philippine Pork Adobo
Thai Dessert and Beverages
Cultural Show
Fashion Show, African Falk Dance, American Combo, Arab Music,
East European Folk Dance, Indian Chihuahua and Classical Dance, Latin
American Folk Dance, Malaysian Wedding Ceremony, Middle Eastern
Belly Dance, Pakistani Bangra Dance, Palestinian Falk Dance,
Thai Rum Maa Bot Etc.
Tickets for
Banquet 14 NO for Adults
$4.50 for Adults
$3.00 for Children
Tickets are available at
sUA OFFICE, KU International Club (B115 Kansas Union) and
Office of Foreign Student Services (112 High Hall)
(2037), 900-600-8200.
Funded by Student Activity fee.
Japan social scholars highlight free seminar
Lectures by four Japanese scholars this afternoon and tomorrow will highlight a seminar on various aspects of Japanese culture, history and politics.
The seminar is free and open to the public. All lectures will be in English.
The seminar starts at 3 p.m. in the Council Room of the Kansas Union with a presentation by Toru Haga, a professor at Tokyo University. He will give an illustrated lecture on "Hokusai and Mount Fuji in Japanese Culture."
Atsuru Yagi, a professor at Yamaguchi University, will speak on "The Japanese Emperor in Ancient Times" at 7:30 that evening in the
Castle Tea Room, 1307 Massachusetts St.
Joji Watanaki, a professor at Sophia University in Tokyo, also will speak that morning, on "Social Structure and Behavior in Japan," following Solu.
Takao Sofue, a professor at the Japanese National Museum of Ethnology, will open Friday morning's session with a lecture on "Continuity and Change in the Japanese National Character after the War." The session will start at 9:30 a.m. in the Council Room at the Union.
The seminar is part of a four-stop tour of the United States sponsored by the Japan Foundation and the Japan-United States Friendship Commission.
EARLY-ADVISEMENT this semester will enable you to skip some of the enrollment maze next fall.
AN INVITATION TO ALL LA & S UNDERGRADUATE STUDENTS
You are cordially invited to make an appointment for an EARLY-ADVISING session with your academic adviser before the semester ends. You may contact either your adviser or your adviser's departmental office to schedule an appointment.
For details, contact Nunemaker Center, 864-4223 or the College Office, 864-3661.
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Friday, Saturday, 9:00 to 5:30 Kansas Relays Weekend April 16 and 17
- Sign up! Six lucky Nike winners!
- 10% off all Nike merchandise in stock
- "Running Magazine," free, each Nike purchase
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1 pair Nike shoes (your choice)
2 unisex Nike windbreakers
2 Nike Stuffer bags
1 Nike shoe bag
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JIM RYUN Running Clinic
Community Bldg., 115 W. 11th, basement
April 16, Friday, 7 p.m.
Jim Ryun, American track star, a world's record middle-distance runner, in person!
Ask questions. Get answers. Watch films. Hear Ryun's recommendations on running shoes for running events.
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Sporty things for sporty people
Page 10
University Daily Kansan, April 15, 1982
Med Center holds olympics
By TOM HUTTON Staff Reporter
KANAS S CITY, Kan- Teams of students, faculty and employees at the University of Kansas Medical Center will shed white laboratory coats and scrub uniform next month to participate in the现代化普及 the Olympic Games.
But instead of seeking international prestige, the contestants will raise funds for the Ronald McDonald House in Kansas City, Kan.
The McDonald House, which opened last year, provides free lodging for families of seriously ill children while their child is in the hospital.
"This is only the second year of the Olympics," Tammy Mauck, cochairman of the organizing committee, said yesterday. "We raised about $2,500 last year, and we are expected to raise a lot more this year."
On May 8, 24 teams of Medical Center personnel will test their medical skills in races that bear little resemblance to those in the Summer Olympics. These events include "Gurney Go," "Bedman Waddle" and a wheelchair race.
The "Crutch Crunch," Mauck said, a 30-yard race on crutches between the teams. The "Gurney Go" is a race in which one member of the team pushs another for 30 yards on a wheeled stretcher, and the "Bedpan" assistants must carry a bedpan between their legs and pass it to another member of the team.
"We had to turn people away this year," Mauck said. "We limited the number of teams, not because we couldn't use the money, but because we just don't have enough room in the parking lot."
The teams, consisting of six men and six women, are sponsored by individual Kansas City area businesses for a minimum of $23, Mauck said. Finding sponsors and contestants was no problem, she said.
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AMILI the SIXTEENTH
Nineeightwheed eightytwo
841-DIRT
THURSDAY
DRINKATHON
$1.00 at the Door
25¢ DRAWS
It Could Only Happen at
THE HAWK
1340 Ohio
SANCTUARY
1401 W. 7th Lawrence, Ks 843-0540
THE SANCTUARY
Home of Great Specials
75' Pitchers
Friday 6-9
Saturday 1-8
BOBBY BELL'S
BAR·B·QUE
2214 YALE STREET
(BEHIND THE UNIVERSITY STATE BANK)
MARKETING SYSTEMS
SITE 1 & 2
SITE 3 & 4
SITE 5 & 6
SEVEN 20
Entry Deadline for the Recreation Services Golf Longest Drive Contest m. TODAY in 208 Robinson.
is 5 p.m. TODAY in 208 Robinson.
SKY DIVING Come Fly With Us Greene County Sport Parachute Center Wellsville, Kansas
Student Training Classes
First Jump Course $55.00. Groups of 5 or more—only $45.00 per person. Price includes: log book, textbook, materials. Students required to show proof of age. Located 4 miles west of Wellington. For further information call 866-273-8911.
MAKE $12,200 FOR COLLEGE WHILE YOU'RE GOING TO COLLEGE.
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? For more information call the number listed below. Or stop by.
ARMY RESERVE.
BE ALLYOU CAN BE.
PHONE: 843-0465
883-4210 or 883-2535
Thursday
LIVE MUSIC LIVES!!
Terry Ebeling & the Benton Homes Band
ALSO THIS WEEK
FRIDAY Eebling Bros.
Billy is Back!
WESTERN LINES UNION
27TH ST.
Western Drive
ANFIELD RD.
CUB JACKMAN HILL
Saturday In cellar Benton Homes Band In balcony Dr. Carryn's Prom Night
Sunday 25' Pool is back.
This Coupon Is Worth One Free Drink ($1.90 Value) Limit One Coupon Per Night Per Person
Lynch & McBee
with Liz Anderson & Rick Krause
7th SPIRIT
642 Mass. 642-9549
25+ Pool is back.
HAPPY HOUR ON CALL 800-1000
25° Pool is back.
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.
The University Daily
KANSAN WANT ADS
Call 864-4358
CLASSIFIED RATES
15 words or fewer ..
Each additional word
one two three four five six seven eight nine ten
use $1, $2, $3, $4, $5, $6, $7, $8, $9, $10
use $1, $2, $3, $4, $5, $6, $7, $8, $9, $10
use $1, $2, $3, $4, $5, $6, $7, $8, $9, $10
use $1, $2, $3, $4, $5, $6, $7, $8, $9, $10
Thursday 5 p.m.
Friday 5 p.m.
Monday 5 p.m.
Tuesday 5 p.m.
Wednesday 5 p.m.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
AD DEADLINES
to run
Monday...
Tuesday...
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday...
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.
ERRORS
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 864-4358
WORKED ON April 15th 157 Call Don't Service for fast, accurate latex return preparation. Call 814-6033. 60-day extensions of time to file are available. 4-15
**PRST.** . Have you seen the new Phyllas Schaffy Doll? . No! Well you can do anything you want to with it and you know what else — it asks for it to!) 4-20
PLAN TO ATTEND DRAFTABILITY AWARENESS WEEK EVENTS. SEE THE ON CAMPUS COLUMN FOR TODAYS EVENTS.
Gem and Mineral Show. April 17, 10-16pm.
4pm - 5:30pm. Ground Building. 21 Demonstrations,
4pm - 5:30pm. Ground Building. 21 Demonstrations,
Schmithawt. Sanddraining. Sanddraining. Sanddraining.
Dracaena-Drucifera. Drama-Door prizes.
Snack Bar - Prices vary.
FOR RENT
Must see to believe. Furnished rooms with utilities paid near university & downtown.
No pet. Phone 841-5500. If
Established STUDENT COOPERATIVE closure to campus and downtown. Own bedroom/ house. Six evening meals each week. $75-$100. STUDENTS: SUNFLOWER. BOOKS: 862-9421.
HANOVER PLACE. Completely furnished,
studios, kitchen, apt. Located between
15 on Main St. On 40th floor.
K.U. DON'T DELAY. Reserve your apt.
room. 841-121-2 or 843-445-3. month-waived
Jayhawker Towers Apartments
Now taking applications for fall and summer classes, KJJ students only.
2 Bedroom apartments on
- utilities paid
- on bus line
- cablevision
- air conditioned
- swimming pool
- laundry facilities
- furnished or unfurnished
1603 W. 15th
843-4993
Sublease large 2 BR, apartment near stadium, water, gas paid, central air $320,
841-8235.
4-15
For rent to mature male student. Quiet,
comfortable efficiency apartment. Private
kitchen. Close to the Union. Reasonable
price. 842-4185. **if**
PRINCETON PLACE FATIO APEMENTS.
For roommates. Featured wood burning fireplaces
washers/rayles. high ceilings. fully equipped
bathrooms. 3-4 bedrooms. 250 sq ft. 30-day
rental at 2500 sq ft. Additional information
is available.
Live in the CHRISTIAN CAMPSUS HOUSE
This summer & fall. Become a part of a growing campus ministry. Call Alan Leah, campus minister 842-609-1f
Available now. Two bedroom spacious apt.
with large living room, kitchen, and water
inside. Kitchen, and water inside. Closed
to campaise, and on bus route. $35 per month.
MEADOWBROOK 84-2000 & 84-2000
$42-2000.
TRY COOPERATIVE LIVING. Sunflower
House, 842-9421. if
SOUTHERN PARKWAY TOWNHOUSES,
60 Kirk Case will you tred or apartments
with an apartment feature 3 b., 15½ ft. all appliances, at-
tached to a private residence.
We have openings now, and in the summer and fall Call Crake Levin in
about our modestly租墅 townhouses. If you
about our modestly租墅 townhouses.
TRAILRIDE. Leasing for F-studios, studios, apartments and houses. All have harvest gold appliances. All have laundry facilities on the promises. Swimming, ignition equipment. On RU. Buy. Inspection. Req. RU.
MED CENTER BOUND? Newly refurbished
2 BR Duplexes available now. Carpet, A/C,
Appliances, parking. Call (913)-381-2878.
XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
AT NAISMITH HALL ST SOUTH GEOAN
SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE
2 2 2 2 2
JUST SOUTH OF CAMPUS
- Academic year lease
- Also Summer leases
- Parties and Social Event
- Free Utilities
- Color, Cable TV Lounges
- Air Conditioning
- Free Utilities
- Partners and Social Events
- Air Conditioning
- Nineteen and Fourteen Meal Plans
* Outstanding Day
- We are privately owned and protected
Visit or Call 843-8559
1800 Nalsmith Drive Applications Now Available
---
Institute education to Christian faith and carein university to guard bachardum hiatus at 14k and 8K university not fall in school $1200
University Daily Kansan, April 15, 1982
Page 11
We have a good place to live and study. We have a well-established senior-lease and 12-month leases and August adults and we extend the courtesy of our staff to all applicants, appointment 841-377-8700 HOUGHTON PLACE, BROOKLYN, NEW YORK
Sublease furnished studio apartment with pool, tennis courts for summer, $220 + electricity, $200 deposit, 749-4536, 4-16
For: Rent 2 hr. ap. convenient to shopper
for: Rent 2 hr. ap. available
For: Rent 814-688 for an app.
or: Rent 814-688 for an ap.
Sublease at last years prices br. apt. contact
Carrie for appointment today 841-608-4198
Call for an appointment today 841-608-4198
Studio Ap. furnished, quiet, clean. A/C/
WIFI. Available May 15 or June
Bldg. 841-608-4198
Sublease. Meadowbrook studio apt. Furnished. Heat & water paid. Balcony. Across from pool. May I - July 30. Call 843-4582 at 6:00 p.m.
Furnished one bedroom apt, for sublease.
Excellent location to campus and downtown.
Central air heat. Available May 15. Call
842-6856.
4-30
New orchids duplex 2 br—Large living area Garage W/D Hookups too. $375 Available June 1. B41-B469. 4-21
Sublease. Meadowbrook Townhouse. Now thru July 31, 3 bedroom, 12 baths, huffiness. $440/mo. + bills + $400 deposit. Call 811-8538 After S20. 4-20
Now Leasing
Furnished or Unfurnished Studios, 1,2,3 & 4 BR Excellent Location
Excellent Location Throughout Lawrence Area
Kaw Valley Management Inc.
901KY, Suite 205 "Professional Real Estate Management."
2 2
Rooms available for summer $100-$140 per
room utilities included. Close to campus
and quiet atmosphere. Call Darryl 841-
7602.
2/Bdm, 1/1; Bath, Townhouses. All Appliances, Microwave, C/A, W/D Wackups, Low Utilities, Close to Shopping, KU, #42-3891.
4-15
Furnished Studio Close to campus on the bus route 824-4455. 4-15
SUBLIFE-2 - bedroom, 2 bath, fully carpeted, air conditioned. Available June 1 (negotiable) with option for new lease. $356 after 5:00 p.m.
4-16356 after 5:00 p.m.
WANTED FOR SUMMER and/or fall semester two roommates to live in a nine-fifth bedroom at $34,000 / month & 1k/room at $54,000 / month.
Call Mike at 745-6033. Marianne 4-16
SUMMER SUBLEASE. May rent free, walk to campus or downtown, June & July rent payable, 2 bedroom, utilities reasonable, quiet. Call 847-216-7450, 4-304 quiet.
**Sibuenee** - May-15 Aug. 15. **Sibuenee** 2 bedroom apt. Fully furnished, appliances, piano. Tvc. ete. New campus. Mature couple present. Required. 200-c. tuition. $355. After 5. **Apollo** 4 - 421
SUBLEASE IN STYLE for SUMMER; NEW,
SUMMER; NEW; NEW; NEW; NEW;
(rarely made into second bedroom);
shades area, laundry and storage in same
room; bathroom;
1 & 2 BR S-Purified on
Unfurnished-on Bus Route
New Leasing Avalon and Harvard Square Apartments
Summer audible—One female to share 2 bedroom townhouse, 2 bath central A/C / furnished, great location. Fall option. Sharon.
864-401-195-9:0-F M. - 4-19
Avalon Office-905 Avalon Rd.
Open Sat. 10 AM 2 PM
Sun. 1 AM 4 PM
OR Call 841-6800
For Showings.
1 Female—for June 1st-Aug. 1st, $1375.00
pet okay, garage, great two-droom, 2 bedroom.
Call Barb or Linda. 841-7901. 4-16
Summer sublease May 15-August 15. May rent free. Furnished studio, tennis courts.
pool. 749-2083. 4-19
SUMMER SUBLEASE-1 bpr. apt., three blocks from campus. Furnished and A.C. Only $190. 843-7237, or call collect (316) 653-3610. 4-19
Fun 2 bdmr. apt. seeks 2-3 summer sub-leaders. A/C, dishwasher, new carpeting.
$285/mo. 842-7147. 4-19
**SUBLAGE MX.** I am a two bedroom apt in the Malta Olds English Village located on the opposite side of the houses, goreses and pizza. I have a didweller, air cond, fireplace, sauna and pool, Gas. We are a very large family and you would like to live within my apartment. Call 841-5532 or 842-5532 4-23
Summer sublease, large 2 bath, april, bath, bathing full appliances, pool by front door, free cable, C/A, $280 + util. 749-219-4
Keeprying
Summer sublice. 2 BR Apt. Close to campus. 10th Mississippi. A.C. dishwasher. Available after finals, $290, 842-2655, 4-22
Summer sublease. Fem. only. Clean, close
to vampus. Low util. 841-7086. 4-30
*tension option in fall.* Fully carpeted, curtains, dishwasher, electric store. Power on bus line— across the street from grocery store. Call events. (800) 745-8481 814-7548 4-20
1-bedroom duplex. Covered balcony. 0-street parking. Walking distance to KU and downtown. Phone after 6 p.m. 843-3301. 4-16
2 bdr. (6 rooms), furnished, a/c; size old home, $225/mo. Available May. 920 New Hampshire, Inc. 834-3645. 4-15
**IMPEXENSIVE:** MODERN! I couldn't believe it; only $40. 3 bedroom, spacious. Unit or room. At least call: 789-211 or 811-2116. 4-21
Unfurnished two bedroom apt, for summer
sublease. One block north of Kansas Union.
Call 843-4525. 4-21
Summer sublease or June to June lease.
2 bedroom apartment, d.w. a,c pool,
paid etc., Near Hillcrest, walk bike,
or hot to bus. 749-0258. 4-23
Wanting to sublime bleach, 2 blem. arm,
for summer. New AC, dishwasher, carpet,
electric garage owner, 11 bath. Within
walking distance of campus and parking.
4-28
4-28
Attractive 2 bedroom apartment, unfur-
rished, near campus, $210 + 1 mo. deposit.
Applicants May 1. 842-3946, after 6. 4-23
Siparien 3 bedroom 1st floor of house. 936
New Hampshire. 4-21
Wanted: Female non-smoker to share 3 bedroom fully furnished, air conditioned apt for summer nubility. 4 blocks from the Union. Call 749-3403. 4-21
QUIPT Meadowbrook studio to subdue, June and July, option to rent. $215/month, water tank, indoor/outdoor, ground level, lots of grass and trees, swimming pools, length. A/C, Cable TV, 4-8-28
will pay you $20! Just adhere our two bedroom bathroom suite in the renovated. It is one year old, has reconfigured utilities and is a tidy dweller. It is on the main route, and has a laundry in the basement.
May rent free! Summer exchange-fall onwards. Upgrade to an SU bus route 3 pools, teens unit or a bus route 4 pool.
GREAT LOCATION. Sublease mod. 1 bed room apartment. Summer/suppose fall. 1 block from campus, walk down麓山, rent & utilities. 703-2482, after 4. 6-20k work-4-20
June-July sublease. 8th & Miss. 2 bdm.
duplex, air cond. furnished. $225/month.
843-5230 (eve.) 4-28
Furnished one bedroom apartment. Bills paid. No pets. 813 Louisiana. 4-23
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Saleb
Makes sense to use them-1) As study guide,
makes sense to use them-2) As study guide,
class presentation, Analysis of Western Chie-
glemental Analysis of Western Chie-
glemental Analysis of Western Chie-
c
1975 CL. 360 Fairing, elec. start, rack, helmet.
ex. cond. 841-8058.
4-15
Alternator, starter and generator specialists.
Parts, service, and exchange units. BELL
AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-9068, 3000
W. 6th.
Beautiful bald evergreens reasonably priced.
Himmel's Rand Tree Farm - Eudora - Phone
542-3139 or 542-3349.
4-20
BOKONON IMPORTS Large selection Hawaiian shirts. The original source. 12 E.8th. 841-3600. 4-20
Mattress, box spring sofa-bed and 12-speed
bike. Call 841-7723. 4-15
1079 MAZDA RX7-GS PURRFECT. 843-8825
or 842-6335. 4-30
ALPINE 2023 w/papers 7 bd eq. 18w x 2
415 1000
Hammond B-3 Organ Hammond Amp. f-
edals + Leslie Sweaker. 749-312. 4-15
JVC A-SS Integrated Amp. Fisher Speakers FS-220 814-6246 4-15
pedals + Leslie Speaker. 749-3142. 4-15
IAC A5-8 Integrated Amp. Fisher Speakers
F-220, 841-6246. 4-15
1979 Vespa Bravo Moped, 2200 miles. Ex-
cellent condition. 864-1939. 4-23
1967 Blue Merc. Crouch, 289 ed., auto. A/C/
cabinet, cassette, runs good! Call Jack
Lee.
Sierra, very loud. 200, wight fifteen inch speakers hooked up to a two-month old Onkyo amp only $450. Call 864-902-6910 p.m. weekdays 12:45, 22:45, 32:45, 42:45, 52:45, 62:45, 72:45, 82:45, 92:45, 102:45, 112:45, 122:45, 132:45, 142:45, 152:45, 162:45, 172:45, 182:45, 192:45, 202:45, 212:45, 222:45, 232:45, 242:45, 252:45, 262:45, 272:45, 282:45, 292:45, 302:45, 312:45, 322:45, 332:45, 342:45, 352:45, 362:45, 372:45, 382:45, 392:45, 402:45, 412:45, 422:45, 432:45, 442:45, 452:45, 462:45, 472:45, 482:45, 492:45, 502:45, 512:45, 522:45, 532:45, 542:45, 552:45, 562:45, 572:45, 582:45, 592:45, 602:45, 612:45, 622:45, 632:45, 642:45, 652:45, 662:45, 672:45, 682:45, 692:45, 702:45, 712:45, 722:45, 732:45, 742:45, 752:45, 762:45, 772:45, 782:45, 792:45, 802:45, 812:45, 822:45, 832:45, 842:45, 852:45, 862:45, 872:45, 882:45, 892:45, 902:45, 912:45, 922:45, 932:45, 942:45, 952:45, 962:45, 972:45, 982:45, 992:45, 1002:45, 1012:45, 1022:45, 1032:45, 1042:45, 1052:45, 1062:45, 1072:45, 1082:45, 1092:45, 1102:45, 1112:45, 1122:45, 1132:45, 1142:45, 1152:45, 1162:45, 1172:45, 1182:45, 1192:45, 1202:45, 1212:45, 1222:45, 1232:45, 1242:45, 1252:45, 1262:45, 1272:45, 1282:45, 1292:45, 1302:45, 1312:45, 1322:45, 1332:45, 1342:45, 1352:45, 1362:45, 1372:45, 1382:45, 1392:45, 1402:45, 1412:45, 1422:45, 1432:45, 1442:45, 1452:45, 1462:45, 1472:45, 1482:45, 1492:45, 1502:45, 1512:45, 1522:45, 1532:45, 1542:45, 1552:45, 1562:45, 1572:45, 1582:45, 1592:45, 1602:45, 1612:45, 1622:45, 1632:45, 1642:45, 1652:45, 1662:45, 1672:45, 1682:45, 1692:45, 1702:45, 1712:45, 1722:45, 1732:45, 1742:45, 1752:45, 1762:45, 1772:45, 1782:45, 1792:45, 1802:45, 1812:45, 1822:45, 1832:45, 1842:45, 1852:45, 1862:45, 1872:45, 1882:45, 1892:45, 1902:45, 1912:45, 1922:45, 1932:45, 1942:45, 1952:45, 1962:45, 1972:45, 1982:45, 1992:45, 2002:45, 2012:45, 2022:45, 2032:45, 2042:45, 2052:45, 2062:45, 2072:45, 2082:45, 2092:45, 2102:45, 2112:45, 2122:45, 2132:45, 2142:45, 2152:45, 2162:45, 2172:45, 2182:45, 2192:45, 2202:45, 2212:45, 2222:45, 2232:45, 2242:45, 2252:45, 2262:45, 2272:45, 2282:45, 2292:45, 2302:45, 2312:45, 2322:45, 2332:45, 2342:45, 2352:45, 2362:45, 2372:45, 2382:45, 2392:45, 2402:45, 2412:45, 2422:45, 2432:45, 2442:45, 2452:45, 2462:45, 2472:45, 2482:45, 2492:45, 2502:45, 2512:45, 2522:45, 2532:45, 2542:45, 2552:45, 2562:45, 2572:45, 2582:45, 2592:45, 2602:45, 2612:45, 2622:45, 2632:45, 2642:45, 2652:45, 2662:45, 2672:45, 2682:45, 2692:45, 2702:45, 2712:45, 2722:45, 2732:45, 2742:45, 2752:45, 2762:45, 2772:45, 2782:45, 2792:45, 2802:45, 2812:45, 2822:45, 2832:45, 2842:45, 2852:45, 2862:45, 2872:45, 2882:45, 2892:45, 2902:45, 2912:45, 2922:45, 2932:45, 2942:45, 2952:45, 2962:45, 2972:45, 2982:45, 2992:45, 3002:45, 3012:45, 3022:45, 3032:45, 3042:45, 3052:45, 3062:45, 3072:45, 3082:45, 3092:45, 3102:45, 3112:45, 3122:45, 3132:45, 3142:45, 3152:45, 3162:45, 3172:45, 3182:45, 3192:45, 3202:45, 3212:45, 3222:45, 3232:45, 3242:45, 3252:45, 3262:45, 3272:45, 3282:45, 3292:45, 3302:45, 3312:45, 3322:45, 3332:45, 3342:45, 3352:45, 3362:45, 3372:45, 3382:45, 3392:45, 3402:45, 3412:45, 3422:45, 3432:45, 3442:45, 3452:45, 3462:45, 3472:45, 3482:45, 3492:45, 3502:45, 3512:45, 3522:45, 3532:45, 3542:45, 3552:45, 3562:45, 3572:45, 3582:45, 3592:45, 3602:45, 3612:45, 3622:45, 3632:45, 3642:45, 3652:45, 3662:45, 3672:45, 3682:45, 3692:45, 3702:45, 3712:45, 3722:45, 3732:45, 3742:45, 3752:45, 3762:45, 3772:45, 3782:45, 3792:45, 3802:45, 3812:45, 3822:45, 3832:45, 3842:45, 3852:45, 3862:45, 3872:45, 3882:45, 3892:45, 3902:45, 3912:45, 3922:45, 3932:45, 3942:45, 3952:45, 3962:45, 3972:45, 3982:45, 3992:45, 4002:45, 4012:45, 4022:45, 4032:45, 4042:45, 4052:45, 4062:45, 4072:45, 4082:45, 4092:45, 4102:45, 4112:45, 4122:45, 4132:45, 4142:45, 4152:45, 4162:45, 4172:45, 4182:45, 4192:45, 4202:45, 4212:45, 4222:45, 4232:45, 4242:45, 4252:45, 4262:45, 4272:45, 4282:45, 4292:45, 4302:45, 4312:45, 4322:45, 4332:45, 4342:45, 4352:45, 4362:45, 4372:45, 4382:45, 4392:45, 4402:45, 4412:45, 4422:45, 4432:45, 4442:45, 4452:45, 4462:45, 4472:45, 4482:45, 4492:45, 4502:45, 4512:45, 4522:45, 4532:45, 4542:45, 4552:45, 4562:45, 4572:45, 4582:45, 4592:45, 4602:45, 4612:45, 4622:45, 4632:45, 4642:45, 4652:45, 4662:45, 4672:45, 4682:45, 4692:45, 4702:45, 4712:45, 4722:45, 4732:45, 4742:45, 4752:45, 4762:45, 4772:45, 4782:45, 4792:45, 4802:45, 4812:45, 4822:45, 4832:45, 4842:45, 4852:45, 4862:45, 4872:45, 4882:45, 4892:45, 4902:45, 4912:45, 4922:45, 4932:45, 4942:45, 4952:45, 4962:45, 4972:45, 4982:45, 4992:45, 5002:45, 5012:45, 5022:45, 5032:45, 5042:45, 5052:45, 5062:45, 5072:45, 5082:45, 5092:45, 5102:45, 5112:45, 5122:45, 5132:45, 5142:45, 5152:45, 5162:45, 5172:45, 5182:45, 5192:45, 5202:45, 5212:45, 5222:45, 5232:45, 5242:45, 5252:45, 5262:45, 5272:45, 5282:45, 5292:45, 5302:45, 5312:45, 5322:45, 5332:45, 5342:45, 5352:45, 5362:45, 5372:45, 5382:45, 5392:45, 5402:45, 5412:45, 5422:45, 5432:45, 5442:45, 5452:45, 5462:45, 5472:45, 5482:45, 5492:45, 5502:45, 5512:45, 5522:45, 5532:45, 5542:45, 5552:45, 5562:45, 5572:45, 5582:45, 5592:45, 5602:45, 5612:45, 5622:45, 5632:45, 5642:45, 5652:45, 5662:45, 5672:45, 5682:45, 5692:45, 5702:45, 5712:45, 5722:45, 5732:45, 5742:45, 5752:45, 5762:45, 5772:45, 5782:45, 5792:45, 5802:45, 5812:45, 5822:45, 5832:45, 5842:45, 5852:45, 5862:45, 5872:45, 5882:45, 5892:45, 5902:45, 5912:45, 5922:45, 5932:45, 5942:45, 5952:45, 5962:45, 5972:45, 5982:45, 5992:45, 6002:45, 6012:45, 6022:45, 6032:45, 6042:45, 6052:45, 6062:45, 6072:45, 6082:45, 6092:45, 6102:45, 6112:45, 6122:45, 6132:45, 6142:45, 6152:45, 6162:45, 6172:45, 6182:45, 6192:45, 6202:45, 6212:45, 6222:45, 6232:45, 6242:45, 6252:45, 6262:45, 6272:45, 6282:45, 6292:45, 6302:45, 6312:45, 6322:45, 6332:45, 6342:45, 6352:45, 6362:45, 6372:45, 6382:45, 6392:45, 6402:45, 6412:45, 6422:45, 6432:45, 6442:45, 6452:45, 6462:45, 6472:45, 6482:45, 6492:45, 6502:45, 6512:45, 6522:45, 6532:45, 6542:45, 6552:45, 6562:45, 6572:45, 6582:45, 6592:45, 6602:45, 6612:45, 6622:45, 6632:45, 6642:45, 6652:45, 6662:45, 6672:45, 6682:45, 6692:45, 6702:45, 6712:45, 6722:45, 6732:45, 6742:45, 6752:45, 6762:45, 6772:45, 6782:45, 6792:45, 6802:45, 6812:45, 6822:45, 6832:45, 6842:45, 6852:45, 6862:45, 6872:45, 6882:45, 6892:45, 6902:45, 6912:45, 6922:45, 6932:45, 6942:45, 6952:45, 6962:45, 6972:45, 6982:45, 6992:45, 7002:45, 7012:45, 7022:45, 7032:45, 7042:45, 7052:45, 7062:45, 7072:45, 7082:45, 7092:45, 7102:45, 7112:45, 7122:45, 7132:45, 7142:45, 7152:45, 7162:45, 7172:45, 7182:45, 7192:45, 7202:45, 7212:45, 7222:45, 7232:45, 7242:45, 7252:45, 7262:45, 7272:45, 7282:45, 7292:45, 7302:45, 7312:45, 7322:45, 7332:45, 7342:45, 7352:45, 7362:45, 7372:45, 7382:45, 7392:45, 7402:45, 7412:45, 7422:45, 7432:45, 7442:45, 7452:45, 7462:45, 7472:45, 7482:45, 7492:45, 7502:45, 7512:45, 7522:45, 7532:45, 7542:45, 7552:45, 7562:45, 7572:45, 7582:45, 7592:45, 7602:45, 7612:45, 7622:45, 7632:45, 7642:45, 7652:45, 7662:45, 7672:45, 7682:45, 7692:45, 7702:45, 7712:45, 7722:45, 7732:45, 7742:45, 7752:45, 7762:45, 7772:45, 7782:45, 7792:45, 7802:45, 7812:45, 7822:45, 7832:45, 7842:45, 7852:45, 7862:45, 7872:45, 7882:45, 7892:45, 7902:45, 7912:45, 7922:45, 7932:45, 7942:45, 7952:45, 7962:45, 7972:45, 7982:45, 7992:45, 8002:45, 8012:45, 8022:45, 8032:45, 8042:45, 8052:45, 8062:45, 8072:45, 8082:45, 8092:45, 8102:45, 8112:45, 8122:45, 8132:45, 8142:45, 8152:45, 8162:45, 8172:45, 8182:45, 8192:45, 8202:45, 8212:45, 8222:45, 8232:45, 8242:45, 8252:45, 8262:45, 8272:45, 8282:45, 8292:45, 8302:45, 8312:45, 8322:45, 8332:45, 8342:45, 8352:45, 8362:45, 8372:45, 8382:45, 8392:45, 8402:45, 8412:45, 8422:45, 8432:45, 8442:45, 8452:45, 8462:45, 8472:45, 8482:45, 8492:45, 8502:45, 8512:45, 8522:45, 8532:45, 8542:45, 8552:45, 8562:45, 8572:45, 8582:45, 8592:45, 8602:45, 8612:45, 8622:45, 8632:45, 8642:45, 8652:45, 8662:45, 8672:45, 8682:45, 8692:45, 8702:45, 8712:45, 8722:45, 8732:45, 8742:45, 8752:45, 8762:45, 8772:45, 8782:45, 8792:45, 8802:45, 8812:45, 8822:45, 8832:45, 8842:45, 8852:45, 8862:45, 8872:45, 8882:45, 8892:45, 8902:45, 8912:45, 8922:45, 8932:45, 8942:45, 8952:45, 8962:45, 8972:45, 8982:45, 8992:45, 9002:45, 9012:45, 9022:45, 9032:45, 9042:45, 9052:45, 9062:45, 9072:45, 9082:45, 9092:45, 9102:45, 9112:45, 9122:45, 9132:45, 9142:45, 9152:45, 9162:45, 9172:45, 9182:45, 9192:45, 9202:45, 9212:45, 9222:45, 9232:45, 9242:45, 9252:45, 9262:45, 9272:45, 9282:45, 9292:45, 9302:45, 9312:45, 9322:45, 9332:45, 9342:45, 9352:45, 9362:45, 9372:45, 9382:45, 9392:45, 9402:45, 9412:45, 9422:45, 9432:45, 9442:45, 9452:45, 9462:45, 9472:45, 9482:45, 9492:45, 9502:45, 9512:45, 9522:45, 9532:45, 9542:45, 9552:45, 9562:45, 9572:45, 9582:45, 9592:45, 9602:45, 9612:45, 9622:45, 9632:45, 9642:45, 9652:45, 9662:45, 9672:45, 9682:45, 9692:45, 9702:45, 9712:45, 9722:45, 9732:45, 9742:45, 9752:45, 9762:45, 9772:45, 9782:45, 9792:45, 9802:45, 9812:45, 9822:45, 9832:45, 9842:45, 9852:45, 9862:45, 9872:45, 9882:45, 9892:45, 9902:45, 9912:45, 9922:45, 9932:45, 9942:45, 9952:45, 9962:45, 9972:45, 9982:45, 9992:45, 1002:45, 1003:45, 1004:45, 1005:45, 1006:45, 1007:45, 1008:45, 1009:45, 1010:45, 1011:45, 1012:45, 1013:45, 1014:45, 1015:45, 1016:45, 1017:45, 1018:45, 1019:45, 1020:45, 1021:45, 1022:45, 1023:45, 1024:45, 1025:45, 1026:45, 1027:45, 1028:45, 1029:45, 1030:45, 1031:45, 1032:45, 1033:45, 1034:45, 1035:45, 1036:45, 1037:45, 1038:45, 1039:45, 1040:45, 1041:45, 1042:45, 1043:45, 1044:45, 1045:45, 1046:45, 1047:45, 1048:45, 1049:45, 1050:45, 1051:45, 1052:45, 1053:45, 1054:45, 1055:45, 1056:45, 1057:45, 1058:45, 1059:45, 1060:45, 1061:45, 1062:45, 1063:45, 1064:45, 1065:45, 1066:45, 1067:45, 1068:45, 1069:45, 1070:45, 1071:45, 1072:45, 1073:45, 1074:45, 1075:45, 1076:45, 1077:45, 1078:45, 1079:45, 1080:45, 1081:45, 1082:45, 1083:45, 1084:45, 1085:45, 1086:45, 1087:45, 1088:45, 1089:45, 1090:45, 1091:45, 1092:45, 1093:45, 1094:45, 1095:45, 1096:45, 1097:45, 1098:45, 1099:45, 1100:45, 1101:45, 1102:45, 1103:45, 1104:45, 1105:45, 1106:45, 1107:45, 1108:45, 1109:45, 1110:45, 1111:45, 1112:45, 1113:45, 1114:45, 1115:45, 1116:45, 1117:45, 1118:45, 1119:45, 1120:45, 1121:45, 1122:45, 1123:45, 1124:45, 1125:45, 1126:45, 1127:45, 1128:45, 1129:45, 1130:45, 1131:45, 1132:45, 1133:45, 1134:45, 1135:45, 1136:45, 1137:45, 1138:45, 1139:45, 1140:45, 1141:45, 1142:45, 1143:45, 1144:45, 1145:45, 1146:45, 1147:45, 1148:45, 1149:45, 1150:45, 1151:45, 1152:45, 1153:45, 1154:45, 1155:45, 1156:45, 1157:45, 1158:45, 1159:45, 1160:45, 1161:45, 1162:45, 1163:45, 1164:45, 1165:45, 1166:45, 1167:45, 1168:45, 1169:45, 1170:45, 1171:45, 1172:45, 1173:45, 1174:45, 1175:45, 1176:45, 1177:45, 1178:45, 1179:45, 1180:45, 1181:45, 1182:45, 1183:45, 1184:45, 1185:45, 1186:45, 1187:45, 1188:45, 1189:45, 1190:45, 1191:45, 1192:45, 1193:45, 1194:45, 1195:45, 1196:45, 1197:45, 1198:45, 1199:45, 1200:45, 1201:45, 1202:45, 1203:45, 1204:45, 1205:45, 1206:45, 1207:45, 1208:45, 1209:45, 1210:45, 1211:45, 1212:45, 1213:45, 1214:45, 1215:45, 1216:45, 1217:45, 1218:45, 1219:45, 1220:45, 1221:45, 1222:45, 1223:45, 1224:45, 1225:45, 1226:45, 1227:45, 1228:45, 1229:45, 1230:45, 1231:45, 1232:45, 1233:45, 1234:45, 1235:45, 1236:45, 1237:45, 1238:45, 1239:45, 1240:45, 1241:45, 1242:45, 1243:45, 1244:45, 1245:45, 1246:45, 1247:45, 1248:45, 1249:45, 1250:45, 1251:45, 1252:45, 1253:45, 1254:45, 1255:45, 1256:45, 1257:45, 1258:45, 1259:45, 1260:45, 1261:45, 1262:45, 1263:45, 1264:45, 1265:45, 1266:45, 1267:45, 1268:45, 1269:45, 1270:45, 1271:45, 1272:45, 1273:45, 1274:45, 1275:45, 1266:45, 1267:45, 1268:45, 1269:45, 1270:45, 1271:45, 1272:45, 1273:45, 1274:45, 1275:45, 1276:45, 1277:45, 1278:45, 1279:45, 1280:45, 1281:45, 1282:45, 1283:45, 1284:45, 1285:45, 1286:45, 1287:45, 1288:45, 1289:45, 1290:45, 1291:45, 1292:45, 1293:45, 1294:45, 1295:45, 1296:45, 1297:45, 1298:45, 1299:45, 1300:45, 1301:45, 1302:45, 1303:45, 1304:45, 1305:45, 1306:45, 1307:45, 1308:45, 1309:45, 1310:45, 1311:45, 1312:45, 1313:45, 1314:45, 1315:45, 1316:45, 1317:45, 1318:45, 1319:45, 1320:45, 1321:45, 1322:45, 1323:45, 1324:45, 1325:45, 1326:45, 1327:45, 1328:45, 1329:45, 1330:45, 1331:45, 1332:45, 1333:45, 1334:45, 1335:45, 1336:45, 1337:45, 1338:45, 1339:45, 1340:45, 1341:45, 1342:45, 1343:45, 1344:45, 1345:45, 1346:45, 1347:45, 1348:45, 1349:45, 1350:45, 1351:45, 1352:45, 1353:45, 1354:45, 1355:45, 1356:45, 1370:45, 1371:45, 1372:45, 1373:45, 1374:45, 1375:45, 1376:45, 1
Sale—Government Surplus Property Electric typerwriters, 15 to choose from IBM. Royal Olivetti, 1st come lt serve. 841-4144. 4-19
Woman's wedding and engagement bands,
appraised at $650, will sell for $600. Call
+1-866-2707 4-116
appraised at $500, will for $600. Call Lindaenda. 844-220-378.
4-16
Motorcycle-Honda 360 CB. Excellent condition. New engine only 3,500 miles. 842-7314. 4-15
1978!² Honda CX500, fairing, trunk, cran-
bar. Well-cared for. for $1695. Call Charlie at
842-4600. 4-20
1981 GN400X Suzuki NEW $1495. Asking
$1200. Only 37 miles. Call 842-7679 after 6
p.m.
4-27
MICROCOPIES FOR SALE-One Nikon ($50). One Swift ($50). Both are perfect for med school. Contact Jeb Brown ($133). 423-581-605. 4-16
SPRING LAMBS. Organically grown. Ready.
before May. Beef also! 913-796-6279-
McLouth, KS. 4-20
1980 Datsum 200SX PS, PB, AT, AM/FM
stereo. 37,000 miles 843-8191. After 6 p.m.
*
1980 HONDA CX400 DELUXE shaft drive, water cooled, windshield, backrest, luggage rack. 2K00, MILES. 843-1484. 4-21
Bookcases, low as $3.00. I also build stereo cabinets, edder chairs, tables, benches, etc. Michael Stough 50 W. 12th. 843-892-4192
Surplus jeeps, cars and trucks available.
Many sell for under $200. Call 312-768-1243.
Ext. 3204 for information on how to purchase
4-15
80 Hondt 759K, 800K miles—many extra-
excellent tint 842-7316, 4-19
Good condition 76 AMC Hornet backpack.
Good condition 10 AMC Hornet! Under $1000.
2811 or 841-2116.
4-21
G79-C750 Sunriku *Looks & runs great*
12,600 miles. New tires up. Wind-up,
touring seat and handle bars, back
rest and saddle bags. Must sell $14,813-41. 83
1977 Pontiac Ventura. Gold with 4 new tires. Transmission trouble, but rest of engine in good shape. $550. Call Kent at 841-7732. 4-21
FOUND
TENNIS RACKETS—Head, Wilson, Dunlop,
Prince, Piney-GoodSelection, new/used.
Will buy yours if in good condition. 842-
6713 at 6:00 p.m. tf
Convertible 71 Olds 442. Must see to ap-
preicate. Taking offer, 845-555桑.
4-21
4-21
1982 HONDA XL500R. Street and Trail.
must sell, best offer. 864-6002 4-21
For Sale: 1979 RM125M, Great shape, Super
fair! Phone: 814-844-747
4-21
1978 Honda 500-4K, 8,000 miles, excellent condition. Black, 1200 with 0.06 wither
4-19
HELP WANTED
One umbrella. Call to identify. Suzy, 841-
3085. Call 4-16
on Friday. 841-5072 or 843-7614. 4-16
can also record file of Martin
First Christian Church (Disciples of Christ)
First Christian Church (Disciples of Christ)
first time part-time position of college co-ordinator. The position would be supervised by a $2,500-$3,000 per year salary beginning in the summer of 2017 in the institution of Christian beliefs and two letters of recommendation, should be chaired by Dr. Kathryn K. Johnson, 1000 Kentucky, Lawrence, KS 60044 by April 28, 1982. Inquiries welcome. 4-16
New Wave/Progressive dance band seeking
energetic, enthuasitive, lined drummer,
Sirius Call 842-7950, after 2/843-4955. 4-10
Found. ladies watch—on Naismith Drive.
Near Robinson 684-683. 4-19
Found: Man's watch—In Wescoe. Identify to claim-864-3061.
Are you commuting to *karaan City*?
I need someone to drop off of UDK at the AKU
Bob Bawls. Administrative for *Continuing*
Bob Bawls. Administered by *KC*, KS, 6511
30th and 41st, Glacie, KC, 6511
303-848-4889
Programmers. Local Company needs part-time programmers for microcomputers We can supply equipment. Send resume to P.O. Box 359, Lawrence: Attention: David.
Lead Guitarist needed for established professional contemporary rock group. Serious players only, 841-9797. 4-22
We offer professional on all paint and SUNRISES to anyone who wants to help you paint a house. We help you make a bid, give tips on procedures and techniques and carry man-made equipment on credit. We will work on your paint, please come in person to the Davis paint store, 918 Massachusetts. -4-19
Position Available 5 Graduate Teaching Positions Grounding in women's studies, scholarship with teaching experience in Women's Studies job description and application procedure Contact Diane McCermott, 4-011 Deadline opportunity affirmative action employer
Summer Jobs National Park Co. k-21. Parks
500 Openings. Complete Information $5.00.
Park Report, Mission Mt. Co., 61st 2nd Ave,
W.N. Kallippe, MT 59001.
"Elmo the eel" recognizable by purple helmet and blue longitudinally running fins, highly meandering and 1825 West Campus Park. If seen call 4-16 for P.J. urgent!
LOST
Lost—Lady Seiko watch, white face, black roman numerals. Sentimental value—reward. 842-5281. Tracy. 4-20
PERSONAL
Lost, large key ring. Friday afternoon, near
Pierce. Reward if find call—4-12
1276, eventally.
Skillet's liquor store serving U-Daly since 1948. Come in and compare. Willford Skillet Eudaly. 1906 Mass. 843-818. tt
Instant passport, visa, 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 749-1811. tf
For your party clothes, formal or costume,
check out the Inflation Fighter, E 8. Th.
10-5-30 M-F 10-5-30 Sat. Open tlf 8
on Thursday.
HEADACH, BACKACHE, STIFF NECK,
LGP PAIN
KONNELLA Dr. Call Mark Johannes for modern chiropratic care. 843-9336.
Accepting Blue Lone and Black Star insurance
The Kegger—Weekly Specials on Kegge!t
Call 841-9450 - 1610 W. 23rd.
Paid Staff Positions
The Kansan is now accepting applications for the Summer and Fall Semester Business Manager positions. Students need paid positions and require some newspaper experience. Application forms are available in the Student Senate Office, 105 B. Flint Hall; Student Organization and Activities, 220 Strong Hall; and in Room 200 Flint Hall. Completed applications are due in 200 Fliint at 8:00 p.m., Monday, April 19.
Business Manager, Editor
The University Daily Kansan is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employee who has all qualified people regardless of race, religion, color, sex, disability, age, or ancestry.
MARY KAY COSMETICS—Full-time beauty consultant. 842-6641. tf
Stereo-Televisionis-Video Recorders. Records brandly only. Factory sealed cartons. Lowest price in the K.C. area. Get your best 913-384-0300. Call Total Sound Center. 4-30 913-384-0300.
COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES:
Free pregnancy testing; early and advanced
out patient abortion; gynecology; contra-
natal care; and Roe, Overland Park,
(932) 842-1000.
There will be an Engineering Ethics Workshop held on Sat. April 17th, 1982 at 8:30 a.m in the Library of Congress. Request is requested before April 16th in 4010 Learned. A continental breakfast and buffet lunch will be provided.
ATTENTION-ALL
Remember, O most graceful Virgin Mary, that never was it known that anyone could come to her and implied her intercession was left unaid. Inspired by this confidence, I went and gave her for three I stand sincile and sorrowful. O Lady of the Cave, in thy mercy, hear and answer me, Amen.
Remember... mother loves you, show her love. Studio for portrait and fine quality; studio for interview and fine quality. Studio for portrait
Are you H.O.T.? (Hooked on Television)
New club forming. Call Kathy for details.
864-1922. 4-15
Sponsored by KU Student Chapter of the National Society of Professional Engineers (KUNSPE)
Friday—Students $1.50
Waiting to talk with someone? Gay &
Larry have some information from
headquarters (811-3434) or information
from the department.
Established band look for male/female lead singers and lead guitar players. Drums, guitar and Keyboards. Immediate rehearsal. 450-738. If not 6, leave name & phone.
KANSAS RELAYS APRIL 14-17
Spring formals. Barb's Second Hand Rose
515 Indiana. Open ill 5 p.m. 842-4746. - 4-30
Saturday—3,20
SUA office—Kansas Union Athletic Ticket Office
vegetarian Lunch, 11:30-1:30 Mon-Fri,
749-1517, 4-20
Spring has spring. Fall is dead! Summer has come And you need new threads! For sewing and alterations call Chrys. 841-1982.
Exciting jobs at Lake Tahec. Send $2.00 to
pjobs.PO.B.704.8544.Clayton Glynn.
64119
Coors 16 gal $38
8 gal $25.50
Green's Spring Keg Prices
Budweiser 16 gal $39
*POWERQUEST* "POWERQUEST" *A play*
*PowerQuest* productions *Morningstar*
*Productions Box 184 Leominster*
*Leominster, MD 20659*
Saturday—Students $2.00
Coors Life 16 gal $38
Michelob 16 gal $44.50
B gal $29.95
Allen Field House
busch 10 gal $36
8 gal $24.50
Old Milwaukee 16 gal $29.95
Pabst 16 gal $33.95
(prices include complete CO$^2$
tapping equipment)
808 W. 23rd 841-4420
Wanted: single female who enjoy a good relationship and feel meaningful relationship. If you can answer the following questions, we should get to know each other better: Can you tell us about your past interviews conducted FOOTLIGHTIING serial interviews conducted
Personal problem? Concern? Confidential Professional Counseling. Specializing in life changing skills. Free initial consultation. 841-4144. 4-26
DESIGN-A-SHIRT CONTEST
$100
1st Prize
Entry Deadline April 23rd
Enter now at:
Get ready for the lazy, GATOR daze of early spring. Friends (Nike, Boost, Sportstorm, Calvin Klein) and friends (Hugo Boss, Thirtyone thing!) are waiting during April at Alvarez University. A barge, all MANDERCHIESE IS 15% OFF a bang. ALL MANDERCHIESE IS 15% OFF Club or Golf Club; 'j' mile west of Kandahar Club or Golf Club; 'm' mile west of Kandahar Club or Golf Club; 'b' mile west of Kandahar Club or Golf Club; 'm' to 800 m., 7 a day, week a day.
Community Auction 700 N.H.
union bookstores
Main Union Satellite
There's no excuse for putting off something as important as Gammons for a few nearly hours of studying. Gammons. 4-15
Every Wed. 6:30 p.m.
Consignments Accepted
Wed. 10 a.m. till sale
Sat. 10-5
841-2212
Have the best seat at K.U. sporting event—Sqrt Spirit squirt tryouts, April 25th Sqrt spirit squad information meeting, Thursday, 4/15 5:00 Jaywalker Room, K.K. Building
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SPECTRUM OPTICAL. Bring in your Dr's prescription and bring in the patient to an unfamiliar setting. Free adjustment and lower frame available. Compose a mask. Open up the window. 1,437 & 4,718. **4-16**
Buy your yearbook today at the information booth in front of Flint Hall. 4-15
Spring Into Spring Katie's Cellar Shop
Buying a Selling
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745 New Hampshire
(Inside the Market Place.
842 7456
Mon.-Sat. 10:00-4:30
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843-8820.
Bick Springfield Concert Tickets for sale.
1-299-8324. Mike. 4-19
Applications at the KU-LY office for Business Manager and Producer of Rock Chalk Reve. Interviews on April 23. For more information, 664-3761. 4-16
Vintage & Classic Contemporary Clothing
Preparing For Finals-Workshop on Wednesday, April 21, 7:00-8:30. Room Council, Kansas Union, FREE. No registration required. The Student Assistance Center. 4-20
MASSAGE. The Human Body has 680 important pressure spots. Massage has then allowed people to perform for people to maintain excellent muscle condition & relaxation. 423-922-1420 4-30
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Helmut Harry, you queck, haven't seen you in a week, where is I Eimo L. Elmo?! Just remember the blue vanes (Sp-10) running longitudinally. P.J. & T.Q. 4-16
Looking for someone to take a coast to coast bicycle trip this summer. Phone 841-6588. 4-23
SERVICES 'OFFERED
Schneider Wine & Keg Shop—The finest selection of wines in Lawrence—largest supplier of in wine kgs. 1610 W. 23rd. 843-2312.
GRADUATE STUDENTS THRESI COPIES!
Why pay more and get less! Encore offers
discounts on Xero copies. We are the ONLY copy
shop that can offer variable reduction, en-
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º, 842-2001.
WRITING A RESUME? What to say? How to say it? 179. Stop By the House of Uber and pick up our FRESH resume on resume day! 180. SUN-Day, 8-3-Mon; 10-3-Sat. NOON-Sun. 3
Drafting (charts, maps, etc.) 6 years experi-
ence, competitively prized. Also script
lettering for certificates. 841-7944. 4-21
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BUREAU DE TECHNOLOGIE
Encore Copy Corps 25th & Iowa 842-2001
Professional Stringing Tennis and Racquet-
ball. Best Prices in town. Call 842-5521 or
842-6582. 4-30
WOMEN'S GROUPS START THE WEEK
Of April 1. Women's Starts
Solving Ground. Agilitate's
*Training Group 31 Wellness Workshops*. Call
416-257-2571. Judy Woolley. Judy Woolley
+257 2571 for information.
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, 825D, & Iowa. 4-30
RESUMES - Professional; students' resumes
a speciality. 841-2654. 4-30
LEARN TENNIS from experienced instructor in small groups with other K.U. students or private lessons 842-4713 after 6:30 p.m.
MOPED RIDERS—It's time to get your bike ready for the race. You'll need time to do turn-ups or register at reasonable rates. There's nothing worse than not knowing what to say! Everything for safety and alterations. Call Cheyenne. 719-423-6055.
TYPING
Experienced typist. Theses, term papers,
etc. IBM Correcting Selective. Call Sandy
after 5 p.m. 748-9818. tf
Experienced typist will type letters, thesas and dissertations. IBM correcting selective.
Call Donna at 842-2744. tf
For PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myra.
841-4980. tf
IRON FENCE TYPING SERVICE. Evenings tf
842-2507
TYPING PLUS. Thems., dissertations, papers, letters, applications, resumes. Assistance with composition, grammar, spelling, vocabulary, foreign students, or Americans. 814-6254.
Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms,
graphics, editing, self-correct. Selective.
Call Eilen or Jeann Ann 841-272-1.
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Experienced typist—thesis, dissertations,
term papers, mise. IBM correcting electric
Barb, after 5 p.m. 842-2310.
TIP-TOP TYPING—experimented typet-IBM Correcting Selective II; Royal Correcting 520.000 CD. 600 IU.
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6129. 4-30
Experienced typist will type term papers, thesis, dissertations, books, etc. Have IBM win-correcting Selective II. Call Terry 842-1475 anyone or 842-2671.
Would like to type dissertations, thesis, term papers, etc. Call 842-3203.
Graduate students tired of typing, retyping and retyping their thesis or dissertation? Save time and money by phone at procession at Encore! Call 846-2901; for more info. 4:30
Quality typing and word processing available at Encore Copy Corps, 25th and Iowa, 842-2001.
Fast, accurate and experienced typer with type your papers. Reasonable. Call 842-8901. 4-30
Shakespeare could write. Elvis could wiggle,
my talent, typing. Call 842-0043 after 5:00
and weekends.
4-19
Professional typing. Dissertations, theses,
term papers, legal, legal e, IBM Corp-
tering Selectric, Deb 843-8592. 4-26
For a good type call Deby for dissertations,
theses, term papers, letters etc. at 749-4723.
Fast, accurate, professional typing. Theses,
term papers, resumes. Will correct spelling.
grammar: 843-0288 after 5. 4-22
Experienced typist'. Will correct punctuation and spelling. Call evenings and weekends. 841-7630. 4-26
WANTED
Former medical research secretary will type term papers, theses, books, mice. Call Nancy, 819-5802. 4-27
SUMMER ROOMMATE. Furnished apartm
very close to campus. May move in.
ROOM MATERIAL: Rent + $1 utilizes 842-
42-22
UITTING AVAILABLE
Wanted outgoing Christians and concier-
ious students to share 5 bedroom house at
300 sqft next fall & spring $150-
$350 per month. Utilities included. Cases
841-789-7089.
Young Bass Player to play in a musical
Must sing 843-7454. 4-15
WANTED: 2 NON-SMOKING Roommates to share 2-Bdm. MOVE Apt. starting Aug.
and/or for release on campus 842-9985 4-22
Female roommate needed to share 2 bdm.
apt. during the summer. $100 a month + $\frac{1}{12}$
utilities. 864-1092. 4-23
Receptionist, part time. Afternoons, in law office. Call 841-2090, for appointment. 4-15
Call. Call 841-2000, for appointment. 4-15
Responsible Female roommate - 3-barm Apt.
for fall and spring semester. Call Llx, at
749-3619.
Female housemate for 3 bedroom house 1 block N of stadium. Serious students, prefer grad $137.00. 841-6545. 4-19
Responsible female to share 3 bdm. house on bus rte, $116 monthly + 1/3 utilities
June 8 to May 8 or this summer only.
842-5200
4-20
Roommate(s) to rent. Trailrattle apartment for summer. On bus route, pool. A/C natio. Fly May rent; no gas or water. To inquire ask of Steve or Bob 84-325 4-826
P female roommate May 15-July 31. All room with private 1st bath and study卫 Wather/Owner Included $133 + 1/2 meal 4-21
841-4178
Dependable female roommate wanted to share large furnished 2 bdrm. apartment on bus route. Call Linda. 749-1807. 4-19
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Page 12 University Daily Kansan, April 15, 1982
---
Javhawks land four recruits
By RON HAGGSTROM Sports Editor
Kansas basketball coach Ted Owens got exactly what he's needed the last three years, a strong, freshman recruiting class.
Four newcomers signed national letters-of-entrance with Kansas yesterday. KU's sigins are kerry Bogani, Renn Kellogg and Calvin Thompson.
Only one player remains from the recruiting class of the past three years: freshman guard Tad Boyle.
Two years ago KU's only freshman recruit was Jeff Konek, who packed his bags last fall and headed to Mississippi.
KU signed a pair of highly touted freshman three years ago in Ricky Ross and Keith Douglass, but, like Konek, they left. Douglass played for Quincy, this year, and Ross was the leading scorer in the junior college ranks, playing for Marin College in San Francisco.
All the Jayhawk recruits were All-State selections and two of them were All-Americans.
"This is a good strong freshman class that was badly needed," Owens said of the four recruits.
Here is a look at the recruits:
- Kerry Boagni, 6-9, 20, forward,
Boagni, from Serra High School in
Gardenia, Calif., averaged 24 points and
15.6 rebounds a game to earn All-State
and All-America honors. As a junior,
he averaged 20.5 points and 12.5 rebounds
and his sophomore year he averaged 11.4 points and 10 rebounds.
Besides his strong play on the court, Boagni is a 3.0 student and made the honor society. He was also named MVP for Super Bowl III. He's captain All-Star game in Washington, D.C.
In Street and Smith's College Basketball court, Serra High School's Coach Mike Chu said, "He's strong and shoots the 15 to 17-foot jumper very
—Ted Owens
'All four of them are fine athletes, with good physical skills. They all have an excellent attitude and are strong students.'
well. He has very good court sense, but his biggest asset is his team play. He led us in points, but could have scored much more."
Owens said, "He's versatile enough to play almost any place. He's an outstanding outsider shooter."
*Jeff Guilot*, 6-2, 17, guard, Guit, from Chanute High School, averaged 24 points and nine assists a game this past season. Besides being an All-State selection in basketball, he was also an All-State quarterback in football.
*R. Kellog.* 6,5-190, kallog. Kellogg,
from Northwest High School in Omaha,
Neb., averaged 21.1 points and 10.2
rebounds a game. *Jay* like Bogani,
Kellogg was an All-State pick as well as
an All-American.
As a junior he averaged 21.1 points and 9.2 rebounds.
With Kellogg and Boagni earning the same honors, it is only fitting that Kellogg also has a 'B' average.
Thompson, who picked KU over Missouri, may be the Jayhawks best-kent secret.
- Calvin Thompson, 6-4, 205, forward,
Thompson, from Wyandotte High
School, averaged 21 points and
12 rebounds a game and earned AllState
"All four of them are fine athletes, with good physical skills," Owens said. "They all have an excellent attitude and are strong students."
The Jayhawks will also issue a scholarship to Oklahoma City transfer Carl Henry, who was redshirted this season.
Henry, 6-6, averaged 19 points and 11.7 rebounds a contest in his freshman season at Oklahoma City. He also led the team's steals and hits 8.15 percent of his shots.
The Jayhawks, who still have one scholarship to offer, will continue to look for a big man who can fill the middle, Owens said.
JAHWAKY NOTES: KU assistant coach Jo Whole's jersey that he wore for the Boston Celtics was retired last Friday night in ceremonies at the Boston Garden. White, who also played with the Golden State Warriors and the Kansas City Kings in his MBA career, became the first Celtic to have his number retired despite not playing his entire career for Boston.
THE HOUGHTON VALLEY COUNTY PARKS BASKETBALL TEAM.
BICHARD SUGG/Kansan
Coach Ted Owens and a Big Eight official argue over a call during the K-State game in Allen Field House last season. Owens, along with assistants Bob Hill and Jo Jo White, had a very enjoyable day yesterday signing four high school seniors to national letters-of-intent to play with the "Hawks next year."
Scoreboard
Basketball
Basketball
NBASTANDINGS
Eastern Conference
Atlantic Division
Team W G L Pct. ---
Boston H 62 17 -778 -
Beijing H 36 24 -68 -
Washington 42 38 -525 20 -
New Jersey 42 38 121 28 -
New York 34 46 121 28-
Milwaukee 34 36 675
Atlanta 51 48 645
Chicago 37 42 12%
Indiana 34 48 430
Chicago 34 48 19%
Chicago 15 64 19%
Midwest Division
Western Conference
San Antonio 47 33 588
Houston 45 33 653
Atlanta 45 35 263
Dallas 28 52 350 19
Kansas City 28 52 350 19
Oakland 28 52 350 23
Los Angeles 56 25 688
Seattle 51 25 638
San Francisco 41 25 40
Golden State 45 35 343
Portland 41 35 10
Pittsburgh 45 35 10
Baltimore 41 35 10
Boston 100, Miami 91
New Jersey 84, Houston 94
Indiana City 126
Kansas City 114, Dallas 95
Minnesota 106, Pittsburgh 104
Houston 122, Louisiana 96
Phoenix 108, San Antonio 92
Golden State 102, Seattle 93
Hockey
Quebec at Boston Norris Division
HUCKINGTON'S GAMES
Divisional Finals
Best of Seven
Patrick Division
PARKER DIVISION New York Rangers at New York Islanders
Smythe Division Los Angeles at Vancouver
Soccer MISL STANDINGS Eastern Division
Team New York W 33 L 7 GDst Pct. GB Pittsburgh 20 18 15 12 10 Pittsburgh 23 17 18 14 10 Buffalo 23 18 17 361 10 Buffalo 23 18 17 361 10 New Jersey 16 25 390 174 Cleveland 16 14 300 384 173 Philadelphia 14 21 300 384 173
St. Louis 27 13 675
Louisville 24 13 675
Memphis 18 10 500
Memphis 13 15 7
Denver 13 15 379
Phoenix 13 27 339
Plano City 13 27 375 12%4
Chicago 13 27 375
Baseball AMERICAN LEAGUE Eastern Division
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
New Jersey 5, Baltimore 4
Pittsburgh 6. Cleveland 2
Team W 3 2 Pct. GB
Milwaukee 3 2 600
Cleveland 3 2 560 1/2
Tampa 3 2 360 1/2
Boston 2 2 400
New York 2 2 400
Baltimore 2 2 433 1/2
Dallas 2 2 433 1/2
Chicago 4 2 1 1000
Chicago 4 2 1 1000
Oakland 4 3 822
California 3 3 622
California 3 3 600
Texas 4 3 200
Texas 4 3 200
Chicago 5, Boston 4
Cleveland 6, Milwaukee 3
Toronto 5, Detroit 1
New York 6, Philadelphia
Kansas City 4, Baltimore 3
Oakland 7, Minnesota 2
Minnesota 10, Spartanburg (spind game), California 5, Seattle 1, 10 minutes
NATIONAL LEAGUE Eastern Division
| camp | W | 1 | 2 | Pct | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Montreal | 3 | 1 | 756 | 171 | 1.0 |
| St. Louis | 3 | 1 | 756 | 171 | 1.0 |
| Pittsburgh | 3 | 1 | 373 | 2 | 2 |
| Pittsburgh | 3 | 1 | 373 | 2 | 2 |
| Pittsburgh | 3 | 1 | 367 | 2 | 2 |
Atlanta 8 4 0 1000
Los Angeles 6 3 0 371 3½
San Diego 8 5 444 4¼
San Francisco 3 4 429 4½
San Diego 3 4 328 4½
San Diego 3 4 250 4½
St. Louis, Chicago
New York, Manhattan
San Francisco, Atlanta
Chicago, Cleveland 2, 10 miles
Houston, Los Angeles
San Diego, Miami
BAY LEAGUE
**Team**
Nebraska 8 | 1 | 4 | 687 | Pct. GB —
Okaloosa State 8 | 3 | 4 | 667 | 1
Oklahoma 8 | 2 | 4 | 162 | 1
Oklaoma 8 | 5 | 4 | 454 | 1/2
Missouri 2 | 3 | 4 | 400 | 2½
Kansas 2 | 8 | 8 | 333 | 1
Kansas State 2 | 8 | 6 | 250 | 1
KU wins nightcap after dropping opener
Bv MIKE ARDIS
Sports Writer
KU-16, 14, couldn't get anything going in the first game as Brent Dobbs on Friday and the Jayhawks only two men as far as second and left both stranded there.
The Kansas baseball team only scored two runs yesterday in their double-breaker against Emporia State, but that was enough for a split as they beat the Hornets 2-0, after losing the opener, 1-0.
sector to ensure the players "You're never pleased with a split." Coach Marty Pattin said. "We didn't score in the first game and they did."
DUKE LOHR, 2-1, went the distance in the first game, allowing one run on three hits. The only run of the game came in the sixth when Terry Nowak
had a one out single. He stole second and went to third on a wild pitch before Gree Strecker singled him home.
"Duke's been throwing well but I haven't been able to use him." Pattin
In the Iowa State series, KU starting pitchers completed three of the four games so Pattin didn't have to go to his relief staff much.
Pattin had to his relievers in the second game after Matt Gibson started and pitched five shutout innings for the win to raise his record to 3-1. Chris Ackley got his first save with two shutout innings.
THE 'HAWKS went ahead 1-0 in the third inning when Mark Gleib singled and went to third on Jeff Neuzil's single. After Bill Yelton hit into a fielder's choice and Dick Lewallen popped out to short, Joe Heeney singled
Gile home.
KU had a chance to extend their lead in the fourth but could not push a run across. With two out and Mike Bohn at third and Jim Heeney at first, Neuzil hit a ball to the pitcher who threw to second. Heeney was called for usportsman-like conduct when he hit into second. The umpires said on a play like that the batter is out, which ended the inning for the 'Hawks.
AT FIRST the umpires said the inning was over, but changed their minds, and the KU runners went back out. The umpires then changed their minds again, saying Nezuil was out because of Heeney's slide, and the inning was over. Heeney was ejected from the game.
"I was surprised they would throw my player out," Pattin said. "I'm going to fight for my player. I've never seen a guy thrown out like that."
Pattin and assistants Skip James and Roger Riley argued the call to no avail.
THE JAYHAWKS got their second run in the fifth on two hits. Yellow opened the inning with a perfectly laid bunt and beat it out. Lewallen sacrificed him to second and Joe Heeeny sent him to third with a single.
Heeney then stole second for his seventh stolen base of the year. Phil Doherty hit a ball to short center and Yellow tagged up. While the throw was close, he took the catcher Cliff Simmons his back to score and was greeted by the KU bench.
ACKLEY CAME in to pitch the sixth and had no trouble but had runners on first and third in the sevent when he breaked to ground out to end the game.
Kansas' Mortimer third in heptathlon
Sports Writer
By DAVE McQUEEN
Under warm, sunny skies, the 57th annual Kansas Relays got underway yesterday with the first day of competition and the second decathlon and the women's heptathlon.
In the decination, which is named after Jim Bauch, Lawrence native and 1932 Olympic gold medal winner, the leader after the first five events was Gary Kinder of Mississippi. A native of St. Louis, Kinder had 3.815 points, 85 points more than second-place John Harrel of Colorado State.
John Sayre, the defending Relays decathlon champion from Southern Illinois, was third with 3,698 points.
The long KU entrant, Jim Boushka,
Wichita junior, was seventh with 3.031.
In the heptathlon, which has been
included in the Relays for the second
time, the leader after four events was
kathy Gillespie of Iowa with 3,038
points. A distant second was teammate
Janet Adams with 2,653. Betsy Borth
Mortimer was 2,024. Betsy Rush was
entered in the hepta-ten, three of which are from Iowa.
MORTIMER'S BEST snowing of the day was in the 200-meter dash, which she won in 25%. She then rode for second in the high jump with Gillespie at 5-4.⁴
The only heptathlete on the team, Mortimer said that she sometimes felt like a loner going from group to group, practicing her events.
"I't hard at practice," Mortimer said. "I'm the one who has to run around to the different events. It's sort of a load, but I do get a chance to work with the best people in the different areas."
weakness, however, was the shot-pot. In the shot-pot, where points are scored by both distance and place, she said it was much harder to score points.
IN THE DECATHLON, Kinder looked impressive, winning three of the five events. He won the long jump, scoring 848 points on a 23-5¼ leap. he heaved the shot to win that event with a 43-4 mark, good for 678 more points. He also won the last event of the day, the high jump, with a 6-46 leap.
Mortimer said that her strengths lay in the high jump and the 800-meter. Her
Boushka, better known for his abilities as a wide receiver on the Jayhawk football team, competed in his first decimation.
Boushka's best event of the day was the shot-put, in which he placed second with a 49-2-4 throw.
Royals win, 4-3
Competition in the decathlon and the heptathlon will continue this morning, with the women's long jump slated to begin at 10 a.m. and the 1-meter hurdle to begin at 11 a.m.
By United Press International
KANSAS CITY, Mo.—Amos Ots singled in U.L. Washington from second base with two outs in the bottom of the ninth inning last night to lift the Kansas City Royals to a 4-3 victory over the Baltimore Orioles.
Dave Frost, who won his first game as a Royal on Tuesday night, pitched two hittess innings to up his record to 2-0.
15* DRAWS
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Top quality selection. Reasonable prices Famous for Army and Navy surplus, clothing and field gear.
SUNFLOWER
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804 MASSACHUSETTS ST. DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE, KS 86044
845-5001
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A
Pick your favorite Designer Frame and purchase a complete pair of lenses and frames for only
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regularly $65-$130. Purchase a complete pair of single vision lenses, any frame, and prescription, glass or plastic, with or without tint, for $49.95. Bifocals are $10 extra, Trifocals and Cataract are $20 extra. It only happens once a season, so save NOW! Photocramatic and oversize lenses, slightly additional charge.
- Pierre Cardin
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Boutique frames and invisible and executive bifocals excluded. Sale ends April 24th
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AUTHORIZED TRAVELLER
THE University Daily KANSAN
Friday, April 16, 1982 Vol. 92, No. 134 USPS 650-640
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
Special Kansas Relays Edition
Special Kansas Relays Edition
[Drawing of a modern stadium with a large seating area, a central stage, and a tall tower.]
Kansas Relays Index
College Men page 6 Framé . . . . . page 8 Santee . . . . . page 4
College High School page 5 Schedule . . . . page 3
Women . . page 9 Ryun . . . . . page 10 Tradition . . . . page 2
Page 2 University Daily Kansan, April 16, 1982
Kansan Telephone Numbers
Newsroom--864-4310
Business Office--864-4338
(USP 6546) #6401 published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday during June and July except Saturday, Sunday and holiday. Second-class postpaid call paid at Kansas Kaukaus $695. Subscriptions by mail are $1 for six months or $2 if a Daycare in Downtown Kansas or $3 per year outside the county. Student subscriptions are @ 8 per month, paid through the student account.
Postmaster: Send changes of address to the University Daily Kansan, Flint Hall, The University of Kansan, Lawrence, KS 60940
DKS
Kansas Relays Edition Staff
Sports Editor Henk Haggagton
Associate Sports Editor Ginni Ollipirn
Associate Management Vanaeena Herton
Management Editor Joe Bartos
Staff Artist Joey Bobos
Writers Mike Aaliyah Mike Aaliyah
Tom Cook, Gary Griggs Bil Horner
McQuinn
Business Manager Ben Monroe
Retail Sales Manager Honn Hornberger
Howard Shalainkary
Production Manager Larry
Campus Sales Manager Perry Beal
Classified Manager Sharon Bodin
Retail Sales Representatives Barba Buum,
Larry Mammart, Susan Kranen, Matthew Langham, Philipp Marchbanks, Liz-Mach Mildo, Millo Kooh, Kathryn Dayman,
Diamonds, Chuck Blumberg, Kady Duggan,
Denise A. Poppe, Yayza Kayanzak
General Manager and News Advisor Rici Muser
Kansas Relays tradition accepts change
1977 Kansas Relays
Photos courtesy of participating schools. Photo of Mike Egan courtesy of the Wichita Eagle-Beacon.
By DAVE Mc QUEEN
Tradition.
No better word summarizes what the Kansas Relays are all about. On a campus filled with traditions, nothing, save the Rock Chalk Chant or the waving of the wheat at a football game, is as tradition-rich as the playing field of the best track and field talent in the stadium each April at Memorial Stadium.
For the most part, the traditions connected with the Relays are good. Besides the color and pageantry of the opening ceremonies and all the excitement associated with a first-class meet, the importance of the world-famous collection of some of the world's greatest track and field talent in the past half-century.
UNFORTUNATELY, some of the recent traditions surrounding the Relays have not been as positive, namely:
multiway.
• Declining attendance and disinterested fans.
- A continuing problem with prestigious world class athletes who demand a king's ransom to show up, but never do.
- Adwindling budget,
- While there's nothing they can do about the weather, the organizers of the 57th annual Kansas Relays, running today and tomorrow at Memorial Stadium, are trying to deal with the other problems. While this year's version of the spring relay speed and top grip, is still being billed as a "track carnival," it's a carnival with a different look. The midway is still full of exciting rides, but many of the sideshows have been eliminated.
- And rain. Lots of rain
GONE FROM this year's meet are NAIA, junior college and NCAA division II schools. Also uninvited this year are all the unattached athletes and the track clubs. And all of the open events but two have been eliminated—the Glenm Cunningham Invitational mile and the open 10,000 meter run.
In its place is a streamlined NCAA Division I meet, featuring some of the top teams in college football.
Besides being a method to make the meet more streamlined and appealing,
IT'S A RADICAL change from tradition, for sure. But for Bob Timmons, KU Relays director and head coach of the Hawks, it's an experiment worth taking.
"If it doesn't work, we may go back to the other system." Timmons said. "We just want to try an ans see how the athletes and fans react to it."
Bob Timmons
'If it doesn't work, we may go back to the other system. We just want to try it and see how the athletes and fans react to it.'
for the first time in Relays history, team scores will be kept in both the men's and women's divisions, and a Relays team champion will be named
Besides some top-notch college competition, the meet will also feature some of the best high school athletes in the Midwest. Team scores won't be kept in the high school division, however.
or those not familiar with the NCAA system of scoring a track meet, it works like this: for a meet with seven or more teams like the Relays, the first six finishers in an event score points on the team score places first in an event, he scores ten points for his team; second place scores six, and so on.
the new format also came about because of some hard economic realities in the track and field world today. With a dwindling budget, KU has a hard time wooing the world class athletes, some of whom demand as much as $5,000 just to make an appearance. Last year, the Relays were budgeted for $28,000. This year, that figure is down to $25,000.
But the Relays meet is a little different from the run-of-the-mill collegiate meet. Along with the larger number of relay races there are a plethora of other events, such as the hammer throw, the decathlon and the pentathlon. At the KU Relays, these events will be scored too.
And besides being expensive, these athletes have a nasty reputation for not showing up at meets. In 1980, for example, Houston McCartan, one of the fastest sprinter's, told to show up after much advanced billing by the Relays.
"We could use up our budget on four or five people who are asking for the big money."
"They're going to do great damage to their sport," Timmons said. "It's not just the money, it's their attitudes."
The Drake Relays, by comparison,
are bankrolled for $170,000 this year.
THIS YEAR, Timmons didn't want to deal with those headaches.
It's not the money that bothers Timmons. In fact he'd like to see professional track attempted again. But if the professionals want to move money in the sport, they should stay out of their meet and needs set up their own division.
"If they want to make the big money, fine," Tirmons said. "But track and field is supposed to be amateur. Until that is changed, we have to stick by the rules."
If this year's Relays break even or make a profit, it will be the first time in five years the meet hasn't run in the红. Ever since the Relays turned a $10,000 profit in 1977, the meet has been running deficits. Last year's rain-soaked meet was particularly bad. In 1981, the Relays lost $12,000.
"We budget the Relays as a break-even operation," said Susan Wachter, KU athletic business manager.
"WE DON'T LIKE to have those losses, but a small loss isn't that bad."
But economic factors weren't the only reasons that facilitated the format change. Timmons said the new format would also make the meet more appealing to the team-oriented fan. In a separate lecture on his own philosophies about track and field.
"In a regular relays meet, you don't get any notoriety unless you win your event," he said. But now second place is worth eight points.
"Now you're contributing to a team effort. We like to think of KU as a team-minded track and field program. We're well aware that it's still an individual sport, but the collective achievements make up the team."
Even if the new look isn't appreciated by the fans, most of the coaches coming to the meet seem to like it.
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University Daily Kansan, April 16, 1982
Tradition
From page 2
"I THINK it's a good idea," Steve Miller, track coach at Kansas State, said. "The problem with the Midwest Relays is that there are very few in-place teams. It can be beneficial, but they are somewhat lacking in individual events."
"I think you can lose fans when you have a three-ring circus and they don't know what's going on," he said.
According to Southern Illinois coach Lou Hartzog, the new format should prove to be more entertaining to the fans.
"You can do all the things you want, but big-time college track is going to draw the people."
"Already this year I'm getting much better vibes about the meet than I did last year," he said.
Dick Wets, the women's coach at Missouri, said the meet this year should lack the resentment felt by a lot of coaches over the past few years. A lot of the bad feelings caused by competition who didn't like competing against unattached athletes.
BUT NOT ALL the coaches are completely sold on the idea. Gary Weinke, track coach at Illinois, said he was taking a "wait and see" attitude
"It is an interesting concept," he said. "We need to do something to revive track and field. I think it might be a steen in the right direction."
But Roger Kerr, Arizona State women's track coach, said the new format made the meet too expensive for his program.
"We can't afford to bring up a whole
tesentence," she said. "You don't enough
to imply in women's athletics."
Ever since the day 35 colleges gathered for a meet in Memorial Stadium back in 1923, the KU Relays have played host to some of the best athletes in the world. In the 1930s people crowded into the stadium to watch KU great Giann Cunningham, "The Elkhart Express," run the mile. Cunningham also placed third in the mile at the 1932 Olympics.
IN THE 1950S, the Jayhawk great Wes Sante was the big draw. In the 1962 Relays, he paused KNX and lost. In the 1972 Olympics, Wes Sante was named outstanding athlete at the meet.
Besides the performances of Santee, the 1850s were notable for other great KU athletes as well. In the shot put a
kid from New York named Al Oerter came to KU and set that event on its ear. He swept the disc titles at the Texas, KU and Drake Relaks for three straight years. Oerter dominated the disc even after he left KU.
He broke four world records, and won the Olympic gold medal four times—in 1956, 1960, 1964 and 1968. After retiring from competition in 1968, Oerter decided to make a comeback in 1976. He played for age 45. Oerter is still competing in the discus.
IN THE 1956 Relays, the fans were treated to one of the most dramatic shot put duals ever seen. KU weightman Bill Nieder, the first collegiate to break the 60-foot mark, was up against Paddy O'Brien, an unattached athlete who went to Southern Cal. That day O'Brien won the competition, throwing the shot 60-23'. Nieder, who went on to win a medal at the Olympic Games in Melbourne later that year, took second at 59-7/7.8.
In the 1960s, the meet was dominated by the presence of Jim Ryun. A soft spoken native of Wichita, Ryun went on to break the world record in the mile twice during his collegiate days and later died into the stadium to see him run. This year, Ryun will be back again, this time running in the open 10,000 meter run.
The 1970s, despite a large number of good athletes, didn't prove kind to the Relays. More often than not it rained, but when it didn't rain, the crowds were treated to performance at the spinner who became famous for raising his fist during the National Anthem at the 1983 Olympics, Dave Wottle, the gull-capped runner who went on to win the 800-meter gold medal at the 1984 Olympics, would become the darling of America after winning the decathlon at Montreal in 1976.
It's because of this tradition that Timmons will not let the Relays succumb to the economic troubles of the times.
"Traditions are important," he said.
"We can't afford to lose them. Just because something becomes old doesn't mean it becomes obsolete.
"No one wants to see the Relays fold. In fact, we've made great progress towards the future. I see the future as being bright for the Relays.
"I have a personal responsibility to continue a great tradition."
While the 57th annual Kansas Relays got away under Wednesday, the majority of events take place today and tomorrow.
Track finals close out Relays
This year's Kansas Relays will have a new format. In the men's division, only Division I schools will participate and in the women's division, only four-year schools will participate.
The high school boys and girls division will remain the same with students throughout the state of Kansas and those students living within the states adjacent to Kansas, with the exception of Colorado.
There will be team scores kept for the first time in the men's and women's divisions and a Raleys invitation will be crowned in each division.
Tickets for the Kansas Relays can be purchased at the gate today and tomorrow. All tickets are general admission. Tickets for today's preliminary events are $1.50. Tickets for tomorrow's final cost $4 for adults and $2 for students. Children under 12 get in free both days.
TODAY,APRIL 16
Field Events
Finals 8 a.m. Girls' Discus Throw—Prelims
8 a.m. Girls' Long Jump—Prelims and
and Finals
9 a.m. Boys' High Jump—Prelims and
Finals
9:06 a.m. Women's Two Mile Relay—
Morning Session
9 a.m. Boy's High Jump—Prelims and Finals
10 a.m. Boys' Shot Put—Prelims and Finals
10:30 a.m. Boys' Triple Jump— Prelims and Finals
6:30 a.m. Girls' 100-Meter Hurdles—Prelims
10:30 a.m. Women's Javelin Throw—
Prelims and Finals
Finals
9:20 a.m. Women's 200-Meter Dash—
Prelims
8:30 a.m. Boys' 110-Meter High Hurdles—Prelims
Hurries—Premios
8:30 a.m. Boy's 110-Meter High
8:30 a.m. Women's 100-Meter Hurdles—Prelims
Track Events
Phrases
9:32 a.m. Women's 400-Meter
Track Delegation
Hurdles—Prelims
Rd4-7age, Women's 5,000-Meter Run—
Prehins
10:23 a.m. Girls' 100-Meter Dash—
Prelims
10.20 Male 990 Yard Relay
1:30 p.m. Boys' Discus Throw—
Finges and Finals
10:55 a.m. Women's Sprint Medley Relay—Two Sections—Finals
Finals
10:08 a.m. Boys' 100-Meter Dash—
2:30 p.m. Women's Shot Put—
Delivery and Finals
2:30 p.m. Women's Offer
Prelims and Finals
3:00 p.m. Men's Long Jump—Prelimits and Finals
1:10 p.m. Men's Al Oster Discus
Tour—Prelims and Finals
and Finals
3:10 p.m. Men's Al Oerter Discus
1:15 p.m. Women's 100-Meter Dash—
3:15 p.m.
Track Events
1:01 p.m. Men's Sprint Medley
Delay - Finals
Prelims
1:29 p.m. Women's 800-Meter Run—
Plains
1:53 p.m. Boys' Jim Ryun 1,600-Meter
Run—Finals
2.p.m. Girls' 1,600-Meter Run—Finals
2.07 p.m. Boys' One Mile Relay—Prologs
1:38 p.m. Women's 400-Meter Dash—Rolls-Royce
2:21 p.m. Girls' One Mile Relay—Preplays
2:34 p.m. Women's One Mile Relay—Prelims
2:47 p.m. Men's 100-Meter Dash—
Prelims
2:50 p.m. Men's 110-Meter High Hurdles—Prelims
Hurdles—Prelims
3:10 p.m. Men's 400-Meter Dash—
Prelims
Prelims
3:22 p.m. Men's 800-Meter Run-
Pzelims
Prelims
14:45 m. Men's Cliff Cushman 400
3:53 p.m. Men's 200-Meter Dash—Prelims
3:34 p.m. Men's Cliff Cushman 400-
Mintermediate Hurdles - Prelims
3:34 p.m. Men's Crim Customel 400-meter Intermediate Hurdles—Prelimms
3:48 p.m. Boys' 300-Meter Intermedi-
4:47 p.m. Men's Chuck Cramer One Mile Belay - Prelims
Premis
4:07 p.m. Men's Billy Mills 10,000-
Meter Run—Finals
Meter Intermediate Hurdles—Finals
3:48 p.m. Boys' 300-Meter Intermediate Hurdles—Finals
4:55 p.m. Men's Bill Easton Four Mile Relay—Finals
7 a.m. Men's and Women's Open
10,000-Meter Town & Campus Run—
Finals
TOMORROW, APRIL 17
7 a.m. Men's and Women's Open Marathon—Finals
9 a.m. Men's Hammer Throw—
8 a.m. Boys' Long Jump—Prelims and Finals
Prelims and Finals
1:15 a.m. Girls' High Jump—Prelimls
and Finals
9:30 a.m. Boys' Pole Vault—Prelims
and Finals
9:30 p.m. Girls' Shot Put—Prelims and Finals
10 a.m. Women's Long Jump— Prelims and Finals
Prelims and Finals
10 a.m. Men's Javelin Throw—
Prelims and Finals
Track Events
8:15 a.m. Boys' Distance Medley
Baby, Finals
8:30 a.m. Girls' 440-Yard Relay-
Prelims
8:43 a.m. Boys' 440-Yard Relay—Prelims
Prelims
9:10 a.m. Men's Julius Marks 440-Yard
Replay - Prelims
9:25 a.m. Grills' 3,200-Meter Run—
Finals
9:34 a.m. Boys" 3,200-Meter Run—
Finals
9:49 a.m. Girls' Two Mile Relay— Finals
10:04 a.m. Boys' Two Mile Relay—
Circle
10:16 a.m. Men's Two Mile Relay—
Funnel
1 p.m. Men's Pole Vault—Prelims and Finals
Afternoon Session
1:30 p.m. Men's Triple Jump—Prelims and Finals
1:45 p.m. Women's Discus Throw Prelims and Finals
and Finals
2 p.m. Men's Bill Nieder Shot Put—Prelims and Finals
2 p.m. Boys' Javelin Throw—Prelims and Finals
p.m. Opening ceremony
1:15 p.m. Men's Larry Winn 3,000-
Meter Steeplechase—Finals
2:15 p.m. Men's Carl V. Rice High Jump—Prelims and Finals
Track Events
schedule
1:27 p.m. Girls' 440-Yard Relay—
Finals
1:32 p.m. Boys' 440-Yard Relay—
Finals
1:37 p.m. Women's 440-Yard Relay Finals
Finals
1:42 p.m. Men's Julius Marks 440-
Yard Relay --- Finals
1:47 p.m. Men's Ed Elbel Distance Medley Relay—Finals
1:58 p.m. Women's 1,500-Meter Run—Finals
2:05 p.m. Men's Wes Santee 1,500-
Meter Run—Finals
Finals
2:18 p.m. Girls' 100-Meter Hurdles—
Finish
Wetter Run-- 1- finals
2:15 p.m. Girls' 100-Meter Dash--
Finals
Finals
2:24 p.m. Women's 100-Meter Hurdles—Finals
2. 21 p.m, Women's 100-Meter Dash— Finale
Finals
2:30 p.m. Men's 100-Meter Hurdles—
2:33 p.m. Boys' 100-Meter Dash—
Finals
2:44 p.m. Women's 400-Meter Dash-
Finals
2:36 p.m. Boys 110-Meter Hurdles
Finals
9:44 a.m. Normandy 400 Meter Dash
Finals
3:01 p.m. Women's 800-Meter Run—
Finals
Finals
3:06 p.m. Men's 800-Meter Run--
Finals
Finals
2:51 p.m. Men's 400-Meter Dash-
Finals
Finals
3:18 p.m. Women's 400-Meter
Hurdles—Finals
Meter Hurdles—Finals
3:34 p.m. Women's 200-Meter Dash—
Finals
Hurrels—Finals
3:26 p.m. Men's Cliff Cushman 400-
Motor Hurrels—Finals
Finals
3:40 p.m. Men's 200-Meter Dash—
Finals
3:45 p.m. Men's Glenn Cunningham Invitational Mile Run—Pinals
Invitational Mile Run—Finals
3:53 p.m. Women's 3,000-Meter
Run—Finals
Finals
4:24 p.m. Men's Masters 800-Meter
Run. Finals
High-ffmats
4:06 p.m. Men's 5,000-Meter Run--
Finals
Roll—finals
4:32 p.m. Girls' One Mile Relay—
Finals
4:46 p.m. Women's One Mile Relay— Finals
4:38 p.m. Boys' One Mile Relay—
Finals
4:54 p.m. m.p. His Chuck Cramer One Mile Belay - Finals
o. u6 p.m. Presentation of Team Championship Awards
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan, April 16, 1982
HANSEN
Wes Santee, show. here running in Memorial Stadium in the early 50s, was a dreetime NCAA champion during his years at KU. Santee is now president of an insurance company in Lawrence.
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While most of the 12- and 13-year-old boys seemed intimidated by the distance, one of them, tall and lanky for his age, his muscles and endurance strengthened by hours of hard work on rock, 400-acre cattle work, wasn't bothered.
He suitably battened on his cocky face. Santée had a reason to be cozy after winning 29 straight mile races while competing for Ashland High, including smashing Glenn Cunningham in Kansas state high school record of 4:28.4 by rumor, and being named KU and immediately established himself as one of the country's premier miler.
On a warm, windy spring day on the plains of western Kansas several years ago, the track coach from Ashland High School went to the town grade school to assess his future talent. To see what kind of distance runners he could have, he made some of the boys run from the school to a distant grain elevator and back.
BUT WHILE Santee readily admits to being a success both as an athlete and a businessman, he still puts it all in perspective.
distance. He still beat them by 200 yards.
The Ashland Antelope was off and running.
"I've enjoyed the limelight," he said. "But I never felt that I was cockey. I might be a better runner than you are. I know more about selling insurance than you, but that doesn't make me a better person."
THE BOY was right. He won the race.
"I said big deal," he recalled many years later. "I knew I'd win because I had the stamina to do it better than anybody else could."
After setting several new freshman records, he won the NCAA outdoor 5,000-meter championship in 1952, his first varsity year. The following year, he won his first NCAA mile title in 4:03.7, leading the Jayhawks to their first national cross country title. All in all, he won the Big Seven indoor and outdoor mile titles all three years he competed for KU.
Soon the name Wes Santee would become a household word all over the country and the world, as a self-confidence beard as a teenager in Ashland, Santée, 50,
went on to become one of the great names in track and field, as well as a successful businessman, Marine Corps Colonel and controversial figure.
This word was used most frequently by sports writers and others describing the brash young miler going to KU in 1984, when he joined him the "Dizzy Dean of the cinders."
Most successful people, athletes in particular, usually downplay their achievements. Mention a successful athlete in your essay and they shrug it off or say, "oh it was nothing."
But not Wes Santee. He was good and not afraid to admit it.
THE WALLES of his spacious, wood-paneled office at the Hays-Richardson-Santee Insurance Agency, of which he was the chief officer of him during his glory days at KU. On a table behind his desk, underneath the Marine Corps emblem hanging conspicuously above his chair, is a plaque bearing the name of his track and Field Hall of Fame in 1975.
"This young man," said one writer, "is cocky to the point of exasperation, but he can run. At the drop of a pencil, Santee predicts he will run the four-minute mile 'probably within a year or so.'"
NOT EVEN his fraternity brothers at the Acacia house could keep him in line. In an effort to cut him down to size, they challenged him to a race from Tonganoca to Lawrence—a distance of about 14 miles. But there was one catch; his 28 brothers were running a relay, with each one running only a part
But, mostly, there are pictures—pictures of the champion relay teams an anchored in the 1950s. Pictures of the NCAA cross country champion team of 1953, KU's first-ever cross country championship. And lots of pictures with celebrities. Esther Williams. Ed Sullivan. And a personal favorite of his, an autographed picture of him with then-president Richard Nixon.
you've arrived when you make the "25 years ago" columns and the crossword puzzles," he said.
"I kid people when I'm out speaking by telling them that you know when
BUT WHAT made Santee a household word in the early 1950s was his quest for the four-minute mile. Although he failed to win a medal at the 1952 Olympics in Helsinki, where he competed in the 5,000 meters, he continued himself as one of the top contenders to shatter the elusive barrier.
In 1953, Santee set his first world See SANTEE page 8
10
FRANK SEURER
KANSAS UNIVERSITY
KANSAS
24
Nevada
KANSAS
KELLY KNIGHT
DEON HOGAN KANSAS
DEON HOGAN
'82 - '83 ALL-SPORTS SEASON TICKET SALE
MON., APRIL 19-
WED., APRIL 21
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FREE T-SHIRT TO FIRST 1,000 TICKET PURCHASERS.
9:00 a.m.-4:00 p.m.
—K.U. I.D.s REQUIRED—
Includes These K.U. Home Events:
BASKETBALL-ALL 14 GAMES*
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Allen Field House Student Seating is limited to 7,000. Therefore, Basketball-Only Student Season Tickets will be available only if less than 7,000 All-Sports Tickets are sold.
BLOCK SEATING in Football will be available by turning your receipts in together next fall.
Football-Only Student Season Tickets go on sale next fall.
—For more information—contact
ATHLETIC TICKET OFFICE
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864-3141
University Daily Kansan, April 16, 1982
Page 5
Top-ranked miler leads men high schoolers
By TOM COOK
Sports Writer
100-Meter Dash
An aspiring group of high school athletes, including the nation's No. 1 ranked miler, Mike Regan of Wichita, will converge on Memorial Stadium today for their portion of the Kansas Relays.
Regan, a senior from Kapau Mt. Carmel, is the top prepster in his category. He is the two-time defending state champion in the 1,000 and 3,200 meter races, and is also the state cordholder for both events in Class 5A.
In addition to his records on the crown court in the 1981 cross country stage champions.
Other top entrants include: Kyle Rose, Lawrence; Steve Spillant, Great Bend, two time cross country champion John Francis, Northwest Classen, Okla.
Legion is the top quarter of the Vienna Ryun One Mile Run. His best time of 4:11.9 is almost eight seconds better than the next best qualifying time of 4:19.7, set by Dodge City's Torey Keller.
This could be a very interesting event as all 24 qualifiers have broken the 11-second barrier. Kenneth Zachary, of New York, pack with the carper best of 10.2.
300-Meter Intermediate Hurdles
Northwest Classen has two of the top seven runners in this event. Anthony Germany and Wayne Cogburn each have personal visits of 10.6. But Willie Vinson, Omaha Burke; Mike Smith, Bishop Ward; Moses Aimable, Junction City, and Galen Faggitt, Wichita South, are in the 10.4 to 10.5 area.
110-Meter High Hurdles
Wyandotte's Robert Mimbs, who will attend KU this fall on a football scholarship, has recorded the best time of all qualifiers at 13.8. However, Scott Harris, Omaha Burke; Doud Henckrish, Shawnee Mission East, and Brian Reffern, Hutchinson, are within .02 seconds of Mimbs' time.
Harris may not have the best time in the 110 Meter Hurdles, but he definitely is the favorite in this race. His time of 37.6 is nearly a full second better than Hendrick's. Larry Hill, Blue Springs; Kent Engle, Ablene, and Chris Henry,
Northwest Classen, will push Harris for the title here.
Great Bend's Spiolar appears to be in the driver's seat. His best time of 9:21.1 is eight seconds better than that of Ricky Spragg, Salina Central. After those two come Bob Cingerman, Haysville Camps; Bayro Lopez, Buhler, and Chris Taylor, Northwest Clasen.
Omaha Central will put its top two muscle men to work in this event. Larry Station has heaved the discus 196-1 to lead the qualifiers. His teammate, Tom Stainwalt, follows with a toss of 82. Gene Abernethy, Kappan Smith, and John Burrill are all 15 feet better than the fourth best qualifier, Mark Henderson, Lawrence.
Discus Throw
Javelin Throw
Gary Arpin, Salina Central, has the best throw of the qualifiers at 217-8. Among the top entrants are: Jay Hilgen, Frankfort, Wisconsin; Dan Borshka, Northwest; Pat Boushka, Kapaun Mt. Carmel and Ron Bahm, Topea Seaman.
Omaha Central's Station has nearly a
two-fetet advantage in the shot put. his put of 61-8 is challenged only by Abernathy's loss of 58-9, and a heav of 20 pounds. Booker T. Washington, Tulsa, Okla.
High Jum
Smarriff Hazim, Topeak West, is one of five athletes to have cleared 6-10. Rob Castleberry, Papillon, Okla.; Whitney Smith, Sapura, Kaplan; Kevin Smith, Kansas City Washington, and Kenneth Santa Pe Trail, are the others.
Sixteen jumpers in this event have gone over 6-6. Hazim broke his school record with the 6-10 jump recently at the Ottawa Relays, West Coach Jerry Wright said Hazim cleared the bar by at least two inches.
"He had a real good jump at it," said Wright. "He's an aggressive jumper. He doesn't back off from the challenge at all."
Hazim's goal of 74 has been attained only by three Kansas high school athletes. Lansing's Dean Herzog holds the eight-year record. The others are Wichita North's Joe Edwards and Jayhawk-Lim's Tony Kastl.
Long Jump Ornaha Central, once again, has the
Long Jump
top qualifier. Nathanial Blanks' mark of 23-1 will be pushed by Mike Baumann, Concordia; Vincent Scott, Junction City; Tony Patterson, Shawnee Heights, and Mark Mitchell, Wyndotte.
Pole Vault
Trinity High School in Hutchinson has produced the top vaulter in the event. Denis Fraser has cleared 15-6. The closest competitors are Chad Sidles, Omaha Burke, and Jeff Holmes, Garden City.
Brian Burk, Shawnee Mission East; Jerome Spann, Junction City, and Mark Hursh, Shawnee Mission North, are among the top qualifiers.
Triple Jump
Mark Mitchell, Wyandotte; Nathanial Blanks, Omaha Central; Charles Fenness, Wyandotte; and Kevin Colon, Kansas City Washington.
400-Yard Relay
The team from Booker T. W. Washington has turned in the fastest qualifying time at 42.23. Omaha Burke has the second fastest time, followed by Wyandotte.
Leaping 48-1 1/2 this year, Chris Heeher of McCook, Neb., leads the qualifiers. Among the other entrants are:
Among the remaining top squares are:
Blue Springs, Hutchinson, Northwest Classen, Highland Park, Junction City,
and Kapau M. Carmel.
One Mile Relay
Two Mile Relax
Booker T. Washington also has the best time in this event at 3:20:00. However, Blue Springs has run it in 3:20:1. Omaha Central and Omaha Burke will be in contention along with Northwest Classen and Wyandotte.
Twenty-four teams entered in the tent have recorded times of less than 320 seconds.
Kapum M. Carmel is the only school to have broken the 8-minute mark (7:56.0). Among the top teams are Central High, Blue Springs, Wyandotte, Northwest Classen, Blue Valley, and Dodge City.
With a qualifying time of 10:23.2, Dodge must be to beat Shawnee Mission, Northwest and Shawnee Mission south each have run 10:30.0, while Central High comes in at 10:31.0.
Manhattan, Omaha Burke, Shawnee Mission East, Blue Springs, and Lawrence are some of the top teams.
Carter, Redo top Relays women's list
KMC B
Kapaum M. Carmel's Mike Regan (left) taps the men's high school list in the mile. Regan is the nation's No. 1 ranked miler.
. . .
By TOM COOK
Snorts Writer
Wichita is famous for its industrial production, namely Boeing airplanes. Wichita also is famous for its 1920s buildings, namely Jill Redo and Kym Carter.
Carter is the defending champion in the high jump, while Redo will run for the first time in the 100-meter hurdles. He was ranked No. 1 in the nation in their events.
Redo, a senior at Wichita Heights,
and Carter, a senior at Wichita East,
head the field of high school girls
in competition today in the Kansas Relays.
**RDOW EONS A personal best of 13.4, a mark she set last summer at a meet at the university of Arkansas. She ran a race with her classmate, the best by a junior in high school.**
However, she missed most of last season with an ankle injury she suffered in basketball. She came back just in time to make the 6A regional competition and proceeded to win her second straight state title.
Redo was ranked second in the nation as a sophomore and was the national champion in the AAU Junior Olympics in 1980.
Her best time this year is 14.4, which came in the only race she has been able to run. Inclement weather, along with a disqualification for a false start, have hampered her opportunities to run more.
This year's time of 14.4 is the best in the state by nine-tenths of a second, but she said she could go faster.
"ALWAYS START out slow," Redo said. "I do all right, but not as good as I'd like. Then I come on pretty good at the end."
Also a member of Wichita Heights' 4
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x 100 sprint medley relay team, Redo is expected to be challenged in the hurdles by Rhonda Lewis, John Marshall High School, and Melissa Burton, Ottawa. They are the only three qualifiers who have cracked the 15-second barrier, and Redo is the only one to have broken the 14-second mark.
Carter, said Track and Field News writer Don Steffens, "has the ability to become a world class track star."
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she holds the Kansas state high school record at 6-0%, a mark she set in a California meet last summer. She has never jumped 6-0 in high school competition, with Wichita East coach Steve Sell, but her leap in the California meet still counts as the Kansas state all-time best.
Helping you say it right.
CARTER HAS jumped 5-10 this year, a height she attained in the Southeast Invitational on March 26, but her inconsistency has shown, said Sell.
FTD
consistently has shown in the Last Saturday, she won the Emporia Invitational, but cleared only 5-6.
Ranked 11th overall in the nation, Carter is within one-half inch of the national high school record of 6-14. She is the two-time defending champion in 6A competition and went to the Olympic trials in Eugene, Ore., in 1980.
She threw 166 and 168 feet in competition last year, but neither mark counted because she scratched both times.
In addition to the high jump, Carter will compete in the shot put. However, she can all but scratch her hopes of winning that category. That's where Manhattan's Pinkie Suggs comes into the picture.
Lisa Suff, Kapun Mt. Carmel, is expected to be Carter's biggest challenger. Volk cleared 5-10 last year. Among the other top qualifications are: Graves, Topeka, Colts Seedt, West, and Melissa Burch-Ottawa.
In the discus, Suggs should be in perfect position to take the title. Kelly Abernathy, Kapau Mt. Carmel, is the closest competitor and her best toss is still more than 25 feet away from Suggs'.
Sugas, a 5-10 senior, is the defending, two-time 64 state champion. She also is the defending state champion in the and hold state records in both events.
"I think it has helped Kym tremendously to go to the camps in the
Last weekend, she set all-time state bests of 47-2 in the shot put and 158-2 in the disc. Those marks rank as the 15th best ever in the nation.
Suggs goal, she said, is to break the national high school discus record of 183-11. But her best mark in a decade — 189-18 — has thrown in the 170s, said Congleton.
Other top qualifiers for the discus are Amy Anderson, Clyde; Tracy Benning, John Ransom; Hewley; Manhattan; Becky Kaub, Owlsay, and Kelly Werner. Great Bend.
"BECAUSE OF basketball, she missed the first meet of the year," Sell said. "Then, we we've only had two days to do any really good jumping because of the weather. She just jumps better late in the season."
"She jumped her first year on sheer power. She was just physically better than anybody else. The last two seasons she has concentrated on technique."
"Hopefully, she will be able to establish strong KU Relays' records in both events," said Manhattan coach Bong Conelton.
summer," said Sell. "Her form and technique are better.
Sell said Carter has always been a late bloomer, but she manages to come around in time for the big meets.
A HIGH SCHOOL All-American for the past two years, Suggs gets most of her strength from her awesome ability in neck push, where she lifts 25 pounds.
See WOMEN page 10
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan, April 16, 1982
Strong group in men's field, team competition
By RON HAGGSTROM Sports Editor
A solid group of collegiate athletes tops the men's field in the 57th annual Kansas Relays.
Among the top athletes are three Big Eight stars, spinner Jupiter Butter from Oklahoma State, Kansas high school basketballer and Iowa disease blower Broger Scott Crawley.
The change from past years where the Relays have been more of an individual competition to team competition and team scores be kept this year (only NCAA Division I schools received invitations) has led to some strong team entrants in the Kansas Relays.
Relays. The top teams that will be represented in the Relays will be Southern
Methodist, who finished second in the NCAA outdoor a year ago, Brigham Young, sixth place in the NCAA last year, Michigan, last year's Big 10 outdoor champs, Illinois, Big 10 indoor champions in 1980, Iowa State, last season's Big Eight indoor champions, Southern Illinois, Missouri Valley Conference indoor champions in 1982 and outdoor in 1981 and the Kansas Jayhawks, Big Eight indoor champions in 1981 and 1982.
The pole vault will be the main event to watch as three of the top five finishers in the NCAA 1982 Indoor Championships are entered. Included in that field is Kansas State's Doug Lytle, NCAA indoor champion State's doe Diah, who finished fourth and Jeff Buckingham, who took fifth.
Also the Glenn Cunningham mile
196
Mike Lehmann, Illinois shot putter, is the favorite to win this year's Bill Neider Shot Put. Lehmann's throw of 89-2% is over five feet longer than that of his closest competitor.
should be a spectacular show with Olympian Randy Wilson and U.S. recorder Doug Padilla, formerly of Brigham Young, leading the field.
The Glenn Cunningham mile is one of the last remaining open invitational walks.
This event belongs to the Oklahoma State Cowboys.
The Cowboys have the top two
wins in the regular season with a time of 10.12, and Ron Ingram. 10.43
Butler is an Olympian and two-time All-American while Ingram, also an All-American, won the Kansas Relays last year.
Ingram, who plays football for the Cowboys, owns the school record in the Tigers' history.
After those two it's anybody's guess who will find where.
The other top qualifiers are: Andrew Bruce, Michigan, who is the Big Ten champion and owns the Big Ten meet record; Anthony Polk, Kansas; Veryl Switzer, Kansas State; Francis Ude, Minnesota; who last year as a freshman set the Gopher record in the 100-meter dash with a time of 10.2, and Northern Iowa running back Kelly Ellis.
Kansas' Adrian Jones leads the 200-meter dash field. Jones, the California state juc Champ last year, has been clocked at 20.39.
200-Meter Dash
Behind Jones comes the Cowboy's Butler. After Butler is another Big Eight member, Kansas State's Willie Major.
The other top qualifiers are: Mike Jorgensen and Mike Ockerman, Drake; Thomas Curts, Oklahoma State; Butch Woolfolk, Michigan, who was a running back on the Wolverines football team that ground gainer in Michigan history.
400-Meter Dash
Southern Methodist's Russell Carter and Linda Brooks are the top two candidates for governor.
Carter, a cornerback on the Mustangs football team, set the school record last year with a clocking of 46.02.
The ether top qualifiers are: Rondney Bullock, Kansas; Jorgensen, Drake, who won the Missouri. Ivy Walker, who won the NCAA interior; Mike Bradley and Bill Tanner, Kansas State, and Kevin Smith, Wichita State
Wyoming's Holton Roald and Kansas State's Sammy Rotich own the best times in the 800-meter run with a time of 1:49.34.
The other top qualifiers are: Keith Connolly, Marquette; Jeff Pixley, Colorado; Mike Shea, Michigan; Bill Bryan, Southernologist, andist,
110-Meter High Hurdles
10-Meter High Hurdles
Once again Oklahoma State has the top qualifier. With a time of 14.04 Albert Jones heads the field.
After Jones comes Kansas newcomer John Sease. Sease, a junior college transfer, has been clocked in 14.06.
Following Sease is another Kansas newcomer, Valentino Robinson.
MISSOURI
The other top qualifiers are: Derrick Gentry, Illinois; Shelby Johnson, Michigan; Craig Nordle, Northern Iowa, who is a wide receiver on the football team, and Brian Howie, Kansas State.
Larry Winn
Larry Winn
3,000-Meter Steeplechase
All-American Tom Stevens, from Illinois, leads the pack in the steelechase.
Stevens, an Illini co-captain, holds the school record at Illinois.
Big Ten counterpart, Brian Diemer from Michigan, has the second best qualifying time this year. Diemer, a cross-country All-American, was the Big Ten champion in the steeplechase last year.
Sophomore Francis Ude, who holds the record at Minnesota in the 100-meter dash, finished fourth in the 200 and fifth in the 100 at the Big Ten Outdoor Championships.
The other top qualifiers are: Vern Iwanich, Drake; Mike Baker, Illinois State; Ben Pacilio, Wyoming; Paul Schultz, Kansas, who won the Big Eight steeplechase in 1980, and Don Hurley, Minnesota.
Southern Methodist's Wilson Kigen is by far the top qualifier in the 5,000-meter run, Kigen, a native of Kenya, a transfer from South Plains Junior College. Kigen's qualifying time is 11 seconds better than the next qualifier.
The other top qualifiers are: Joe Nzau, Wyoming; Karsten Schulz, Southern Illinois; Mike Baker, Illinois State; Waid Johnson and Scott Fitzgibbons, Drake, and Gerard Donkowski, Michigan.
Wes Santee
500 Motor Bars
Chris Mares of Drake has the fastest time so far this season.
The next top five qualifying times belong to the Big Ten.
Illinois' Jon Schmidt has the second fastest qualifying time followed by Mike Gebeke and Dallas Alaire of Michigan's Dan Beck and Bill O'Reilly.
Billy Mills
The second best qualifier in the 5,000-meter run is the top qualifier in the
10,000-meter run. That individual is Wyoming's Nauu.
The other top qualifiers are: Herman Sahneyah, Illinois State; Joseph Kipsang, Iowa State; Gary Parent Eau, Michigan; Pete Fitch, Illinois, who is a cross-country All-American, Fitzzibbons and Johnson, Drake.
400-Meter Intermediate Hurdles
Oklahoma State also has the top qualifier in the 400-meter hurdles in college.
Following Patton are Kansas' Mark Rau and Robinson. Rau, who is coming on an ankle injury, was a four-time All-American. All-American before coming to KU.
The other top qualifiers are: Sam Nwosu, Southern Illinois, Charles Charle
Campbell, Southern Methodist, and Hal Martin, Oklahoma State.
Julius Marks
440 Yard Relay
Leading the 440-yard relay pack will be Oklahoma State's team of Butler, Ingram, Sterling Starks and Curtis Thomas.
"If those four stay healthy, then I think they should have a good shot at winning the Big Eight for the third straight year and compete for the national title," Oklahoma State coach Rahbah Tate said.
The other top qualifying teams are: Kansas, Southern Illinois; Michigan; Western Illinois; Wichita State, and Kansas State.
884-Yard Relay
The same Oklahoma State foursome heads the 880-yard relay.
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University Daily Kansan, April 16, 1982
Page 7
highlight changes in 57th annual Kansas Relays
Basisically the same teams that followed Oklahoma State in the 440 trail them in the 880.
Chuck Cramer One Mile Relay
The other top qualifying teams are:
Southern Illinois, Michigan, Kansas,
Western Illinois, Wichita State, and
Drake
Southern Illinois, who should give Oklahoma State a battle in the previous two relay events, has the best qualifying time in the one-mile relay.
Michigan is the nearest competitor for the Solukis. The Wolverines one-mile relay team finished third in the Biz Ten last year.
The other top qualifying teams are: Kansas, Oklahoma State, Western Illinois, Wichita State, and Kansas State.
Two-Mile Relav
Brigham Young's two-mile relay team heads the field. The Cougars best time is three seconds faster than the next-best qualifier.
Sprint Medley Relay
The other top qualifying teams are: Michigan, Kansas, Marquette, Minnesota, Illinois and Drake.
Sprint Medley Relay
Michigan heads the list in the sprint medley relay with a time of 3:20.50.
The other top qualifying teams are: Iowa State, Wichita State, Oklahoma State, Western Illinois, Drake and Kansas.
El Elbel
Distance Medley Relay
The Big Ten holds down the top two spots in this event. Minnesota's team, which won the Texas Relays last year leads the field, followed by Michigan.
are other top qualifying teams are:
Oklahoma State, Brigham Young,
Southern Illinois, Colorado and Wichita
State.
Bill Easton
Four Mile Relay
With a time of 16:12.10 in the fourmile relay Illinois tops the qualifying list.
The other top qualifying teams are: Iowa State, Southern Illinois, Minnesota, Michigan, Wichita State and Brigham Young.
Al Oerter Discus Throw
The top two qualifiers in the discus, Scott Crowell of Iowa State, and Matt Friedeman of Kansas, head the list.
Crowell and Friedeman have each thrown over 200 feet; the next best qualifier has only tossed the discus 184-7.
Crowell is the NCAA champion in the discus while Friedepan won the Big Eight Championships two years ago.
Two of the other top qualifiers come from Illinois. The Illi are headed by Kyle Jenner, who was the Big Ten champion two years ago, and Mike
The other top qualifiers are: Clint Johnson, Kansas; Goran Svensson, Brigham Young, and John Smith, Southern Illinois.
Hammer Throw
If you want to see a team dominate an event, watch Southern Methodist in the hammer throw.
100
The Mustangs have the top three qualifiers in the event in Robert Weir, Anders Hells and Keith Bateson.
Last season Weir finished second in
1978
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the NCAA meet, Hoff was fourth and Batessen took ninth. If you think that is awesome, SMU will be without their top hammer thrower in Richard Olsen, who owns the top four hammer throws in America.
"We are exceptionally strong here and I don't see any one challenging us in the hammer," Southern Methodist coach Ted McLaughlin said.
The other top qualifiers are: Tom Reints, Northern Iowa, who won the Kansas Relays in 1979; Marly Gottchik, Northern Iowa, who won the Lance Kreuger, Colorado.
A
Javelin Throw
Kansas State heads the field in the javelin throw having three of the top five qualifiers. The Wildcats are the Hairy Hawks, Donnie McKignee and Mark Perkeb.
The other top qualifiers are: Jari Keihas and Kjell Bystedt, Brigham Young; Steve Stockton, Northwestern Louisiana; and Tim Friess, Kansas, who also plays defensive end for the Jawahawk football team.
Bill Nieder Shot Put
Lehmann of Illinois, who is one of the top qualifiers in the discus throw, also heads the list in the shot put. Lehmann's throw of 69.2% is over five feet longer than the throw of the next best competitor.
Tyke Peacock, ranked No. 1 in the world by Track and Field magazine, easy creats the sur as a meet in Allen Field House. Peacock, who has not competed because of injuries since the Big Eight Indoors, hopes that he is ready to compete in KU's only home track meet of the season.
Early this year, Lehmann won the NCAA shot put championships indoors. A co-captain on the team ranked him among the top 10 in the world this year.
Normally, Michael Carter of Southern Methodist would win this event but he will not be participating. Carter won the NCAA indoor and outdoor championships as a freshman and sophomore.
The other top qualifiers are: John Campbell, Northwestern Louisiana; John Smith, Southern Illinois; Clint Johnson, Kansas; Reins, Northern Iowa; Johnny Nielsen, Michigan, and Gee Bartlett, Kansas State.
Jim Bausch Decathlon
JON HARDESTY/Kennan Stall
Jim Bausch Decathlon
The decathlon can turn out to be very interesting as the three top qualifiers best totals are within 10 points of each other.
Heading the field is John Harrel of Colorado State followed by Gary Kinder of Mississippi, and Owen Buckley of Kansas.
harrel was an All-American and nationally ranked last spring.
The other top qualifiers are: John Sayre, Southern Illinois; Mike Peht, Colorado State; Rick Schwitzer, Louisiana, and Andy Barnes, Illinois.
Triple Jump
The triple jump belongs to the Kansas Jayhawks, who have the top two qualifiers and three of the top four.
Leading the attack is Greg Johnson followed by Kevin Graham and Mike Kinder.
Johnson's jump of 51-8 is the fifth longest in KU history while Graham's leap is seven best.
Kinder transferred to Kansas from Hutchinson Community College where he was a two-time conference and state champions and a two-time All-American.
The other top qualifiers are: Mark Smith, Kansas State; Marvel Reill, Wichita State, who at Kansas City Southwest High School was the national Junior Olympic champion; Mike Murphy, Michigan.
Pole Vault
See COLLEGE page 11
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan, April 16, 1982
Frame coordinates for fourth year
By JAN BOUTTE Sports Writer
There is none like her in the field of Olympic hopefuls participating in this year's Kansas Relays.
She's Ann Frame, Kinsley junior,
and this will be her fourth year at the
Relays. And she comes from a long line of trackers.
Her father's portrait hangs in Allen Field House. He is Al Frame, the 1866 N-AA cross country champion, and KU long distance runner. Her sister, Sena, met her husband while he was memorialized by the KU track squads, so her brothers followed distance running tradition.
"I was born and raised a Jayhawk."Frame said.
But Frame doesn't follow the family mold of long-distance running. So that leaves out the marathon. And she won't be in the field of world-class milers, or lying for the record in the high jump, or sprinting down the straightaway in the 100-yard dash.
ANN PREFERS to run the Kansas Relays.
She's the coordinator of the officials for the Relys—the one who tells everybody where to go, what to do and when to do it—and gets away
"I love track, but I don't compete." she said.
But having grown up with track, Frame learned the ropes of big meets. And she said she hoped to go from the biggest in the Midwest to the biggest in the world, the 1984 Olympic Games in Los Angeles.
Frame said that through her experience with the Relays and the help of Coach Bob Timmons, she hoped to work for the Olympic summer in California this summer and each summer until the big event in 1984.
"I don't care, I'll carry the hurdles—I just want to work at the Olympics," she said.
Frame first officiated at the Relays as a senior in high school four years ago. She came to visit her mother, and was drafted to be a timer.
"The Relays were pretty great to me then," she said.
FRAME SAT in her apartment near a Relays poster, and animatedly spoke about her favorite tonic.
Sitting through a notebook overflowing with Relays information, computer printouts, lists and lists. Frame tried to explain her loss to the Reals that manages to present the Relays each year, come rain, come shine.
"Just so it doesn't snow this year," Frame commented.
Frame is getting to be an old hand at handling not-so-perfect weather conditions. Last year, she had the extra student officials out squeegying the track after a memorable dowpour.
"People tend to disappear when it starts to rain," she said.
Frame uses her computer studies to coordinate nearly 450 officials, assigning them to events and shifts for the four-day track meet.
SHE SAID that about 200 of the officials are recruited through KU living groups, mostly from fraternities, sororities and scholarship halls. She said about 75 more students and the remaining 175, adult officials who volunteer to help out at the Relays.
Most of the adults are from Lawrence, the Kansas City area and Topeka, Frame said. She said that the Jayhawks Track & Field Association and the Lawrence Track Association use their power and support for the Relays.
Frame said that some come from
'At first, the adult officials were hesitant to trust me with big jobs, but now they all know that I'm capable of handling the situations.'
—Ann Frame.
—Ann Frame,
coordinator of officials
as far away as Palo Alto, Calif., and Michigan to help with the Relays.
"They try to make it every year they can," she said.
Coach Timmons and the Relays Committee take the service of volunteers seriously. Each year, awards are given to officials who have passed milestone years with the Relays.
This year, Frank Guemple will be working his 49th Kansas Relays. Others passed 15, 20 and 25 year olds who have completed receive watches from the committee.
EACH VOLUNTEER has his own reason for helping. Some, like Frame, just love track.
"Some actually competed in the Kansas Relays as students," Frame said.
One, Merle Henry, ran in the first Kansas Relays.
Frame works with Timmons, the coordinator of the Relays, the Greater Relays Committee and the tri-chairmen of the Students Relays Committee. They've been organizing since September.
give as much as he does to the Relays."
Frame said she enjoyed working with Timmons, the perfectionist.
She said that at first, the adult officials were hesitant to trust her with big jobs, but she had proven herself to them.
"He's a hard person to say no to. He really expects everyone else to
"Now, they all know that I'm capable of handling situations," she said.
Frame's officials are jacks of all trades. They time the race, joucy hurdles and run the headquarters set up in the Victory Club in Memorial Stadium to handle the entries, heat sheets and scoring.
FRAME SAID she hoped that the changes in the meet would make it easier to finish the paperwork up-stairs.
The student officials work to earn a Relays T-shirt specially designed for the workers. Frame said that last year the officials were so numerous that a two-year supply of the shirts was distributed.
She said that this year, a student would have to work two shifts, the equivalent of one day, to earn the shirt.
She said that this year the Student Relays Committee made an effort to involve students outside the Greek and scholarship hall systems.
"We wanted to get other students involved because it's not just the Greek relays or the scholarship hall rails, it's everybody's relays," she said.
The committee ran an ad in February asking students to sign up at the track office.
"To me, the people who make the effort to come down to the track office are really interested in the Relays," she said.
SHE SAID that the high jump was the most popular event with the officials this year, probably because of KU's Tvke Peacock.
Besides the manpower that Frame lines up, the Student Relays Committee handles the sponsorship of events and housing for the athletes.
Tim Harrison, Overland Park senior, is the tri-chairman in charge of sponsorship. His committee tries to line up sponsors for each event. The sponsorship helps to pay for the women's watches and other expenses.
the sponsorship committee contacted former KU athletes for support of the Relays. Frame said the response had been great, both with financial help and physical help.
Frame was quick to insist that she was only one cog in the wheel that makes the Relays turn, and like all the other relays officials, she echoes the yearly prayer, "Just don't let it rain again."
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"That was a very exciting meet," he said. "There were 17,000 to 20,000 people yelling and screaming, pushing me on. It felt real good."
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Santee had a chance at becoming the first American to break the barrier, and he almost did it. At the 1955 Texas Relays, he ran his fastest time. 4:00.5
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BUT THE distinction of being the first to break the four-minute barrier would not be his. That same year, Roger Bannister, a milfer from Great Britain, ran a time of 59.4 at a meet in Vancouver, Canada. Later that year, John Landy, an Australian, ran it in 3:58.
Santee was to hold the world record in the mule twice. He set it the first time while still a senior at KU, running a 4:04:9 at a meet in East Lansing, Mich., in 1954. The following year, he tapped that with a 4:03.8.
But that was as close as he got.
Shortly after the Texas Relays, Santee was barred from amateur competition forever by the Amateur Athletic Union. According to the AAU, Santee accepted $1,333 above the amount he earned and he competed in that summer. Santee didn't take it sitting down. He took the AAU to court.
Soon he became a celebrate. Frank Carlson, then a Senator from Kansas, defended him on the Senate floor. Phoog Allen, the KU basketball mentor who had no love lost with the team, rules on an alumnus status 'antiquated.'"
BUT ALL OF this support was to no avail. The New York State Supreme Court upheld the AAU's decision . . .
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He seems especially bitter toward Avery Brindage, the long-time head of the International Olympic Committee. A man with much leverage over the AAU, Brindage declared publicity that Santee would not run in the 1966 games.
To this day, Santee remains bitter.
"I guess I'll never forgive Avery Brundage," Santee said. "I thought he was an American, but he allowed me to get away and to get away with so many rules. He even
thought that if we were on scholarship, we were tainted athletes.
"I think a lot of these people were very misjudged. A position like that gave them a sense of great power. They won the game of great athletes and that's really sad."
DESPITE CLAIMS by the AAU that he asked for extra money to hire a booking agent and take his wife to some of his meets, Sante claims that he had only one demand at a meet—and it wasn't for money.
"And then I get home and I'm put on the carpet by the AAU and I'm accused of hitting this guy over the head with a knife, looking back on it, I wished I would've."
"There was a double set of standards for the American athlete and the Russian athlete."
Today, Santee still isn't very positive about the regulation of amateur swimming.
"This athlete kept trying to step on me from behind," he said. "I wanted to prove myself."
"I felt that the money I took was utilized for expenses. I wasn't able to set up a trust fund or anything."
What was probably his most bizarre confrontation with the AAU occurred at a series of track meets he ran in Germany one summer. At that time, it was a team of four away prizes such as watches, crystal and other valuable items to winners.
But Santee had enough of these souvenirs by this time. Instead, he asked a German AAU official, who spoke English, if he could trade in his prizes on a camera he wanted. At the end of each recording to Santee, the German agreed.
"I WAS under the impression they were trying to clean up the mess, but with the current revelations about basketball players getting past scrimmage and track and athletes getting $8,000 a meet, then Iston and wonder," he said.
"I DIDN'T think there was anything illegal or unethical," he said. "They were spending the money anyway."
But when he tried to cush in, he was met with a big surprise. Not only did the official claim that he never agreed to a deal, but suddenly couldn't speak English anymore.
"If they are going to allow that, then they should come to me and apologize
"I didn't have any family to go home so, when I needed counseling, I'd go to Easton, and like a stern task master, he'd tell me what to do." Saeee said.
Easton was more than just a coach for Santee. To him, he's more like a father figure. In fact, they are still very close friends.
Most ex-athletes dread growing old. To them old age means a further decline of the skills that meant so much harm during an earlier time. It's very had to take.
"I was fortunate to have such good leadership, Hell. I could've gone wrong easily. I was a wild farm kid when I first came to KU."
"He would've whipped both Bannister and Landy with no doubt in my mind," he said.
"He could hear my voice above all the yelling and screaming," he said. "Now that's what you call concentration."
BUT NOT for Wes Santee.
"There's no argument that if I was in that race (the one in Vancouver where Bannister set the record) I would've blown them away."
first. What I did was technically wrong, and they tried to make an example out of me, but I don't think they succeeded."
The thing Easton remembered the most about Santee was the way he could concentrate in a race, even with crowds screaming all around him.
out one thing the AAU did succeed to do, at least in Santee's mind, was to keep him from the four-minute mile. He said that a lack of cooperation on the AAU's part kept him from meeting Bannister or Landy.
BILL EASTON, the KU track coach during Santee's days as a Jayhawk, agreed.
"If people are healthy and take care of themselves, why should they fear themselves?"
"Being older hasn't caught up with the population," he said. "My health has been super-excellent."
Indeed, Santee does look healthy for a man of 50. The crew cut is a little gray, but the boots are black and sagging, but he still looks very much like the young miler from Ashland.
"I like to think that for the next 30 or 40 years I should be able to keep doing the things that I like to do."
The Ashland Antelope is still running.
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University Daily Kansan, April 16, 1982
Page 9
Nebraska picked to win women's championship
By GINO STRIPPOLI Associate Sports Editor
Kansas Relays' meet director Bob Timmons said that the race for the men's title at the Relays would be a close one with no one team dominating. The other came to the women's title. Timmons had a more definite answer: Nebraska.
The Nebraska Cornhuskers come into the Kansas Relays as the overwhelming favorite. They won the 1981 Big Eight Indoor and Outdoor Championships and finished fourth and seventh at the national championships. This year, Nebraska dominated the Big Eight Indoor, defeating second place Oklahoma by 63 points, and won the AIAW indoor title. At the AIAW championships,NU took 14 athletes, 13 of whom end up being All-Americans.
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be run somewhat like the NCAA team format with teams receiving points for the first six places in each event; 10 for first, eight for second, six, four, two and one.
Nebraska has 22 athletes in the top six of their events with 15 of those athletes in the top three. The two teams closest to Nebraska are Iowa State and Kansas. The Cyclones have 15 in the top six, eight in the top three, and the Jayhawks have 14 in the top six, nine in the top three.
"We really like the concept of team competition," Nebraska Head Coach Gary Pepin said. "We just wish there were more good teams there."
The top individual performer should be Merlene Ottey, who will be competing in her first outdoor meet of the 1982 season. Ottey, a junior from Hanover, scored 31 points to go along with her six collegiate records. In her 2½ years at Nebraska, she has won eight national titles (indoor and outdoor). 10 Big Eight titles and has been an All-American 13 times. At this time she is ranked third for dawn-dashes and was a member of Nebraska's 4×22 relay team that took 300-
OTTEY, WHO competed with the Jamaican team at the 1980 Moscow Olympics and won a bronze medal in the 200-meter dash, has won three outdoor national titles. She has won the 200 twice and the 100 once. Last year, she was named the outstanding performer at both the Drake and Kansai Relays.
Relays.
Here is an event-by-event look at how the women's division shapes up at this year's Kansas Relays:
100-Meter Dash
Nebraska should dominate this event with four of the top six qualifiers. The Cornhuskers are led by Ottey and fellow Jamaican Janet Burke, Burke, a freshman, competed in both the 80-yard and 100-yard races. He won the assailant's Ramona Riley, who holds the second best time, could break up the Jamaican duo.
The other top qualifiers are Colleen Hanna of Iowa State, Deborah James and Alicia McQueen of Nebraska and Marcie Zall of Drake.
200-Meter Dash
Otley and Burke hold down the top two times in the event, but could be pushed by Kansas' Dora Spearman. Spearman, a freshman from Robbins, IL., has a best time of 23.0 in the 200. However, her best time has been 24.04.
Other top qualifiers are Sheila Barney of Western Illinois, Rosalyn Dunlap of Missouri and McQueen of Nebraska. Kansas' Tudie McKnight could push McQueen for one of the top spots.
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400-Meter Dahs
Nebraska's Jennie Gorham has the leading time in this event. Gorham, a two-time All-American and former world record holder in the 404-yard dash, should be UCLA's long entrant in the Rbails, Dean Gutowski
Sumetia Wells of Iowa State, Lora Tucker of Kansas, Barnes of Western Illinois and Marcia Tate of Nebraska are the other top qualifiers in the event.
100-Meter Hurdles
The Jayhawks should take in some points in this event with Donna Smithherman and Connie McKenried for the second best time at 14.04. Iowa State's Kelly Mathews is the leading qualifier with a time of 13.94.
400-Meter Hurdles
Other top qualifiers in this event are Konnie Mackey of Colorado State, Danette Onymeluke of Western Illinois and Nancy Roeller of Iowa State.
The state of Iowa looks to dominate this event with three of the top six qualifiers. Iowa has the first and third best time with Chris Davenport and Diane Steinhart, and Iowa State's Mathews has the sixth.
Other top qualifiers are Missouri's Cathy Gebhards, Brigham Young's Stella Edwinson and Colorado State's Mackey.
Brigham Young's Ailing Molly has the top time in this event, outdistancing her closest rival, Drake's Marie Simpsonson, by nearly a full second. Another second back is Nebraska's Tami Essington.
Iowa State's Dorte Rasmussen is the leader in this event, but could be pushed by Brigham Young's Judith Crosdale for the top spot.
Other top qualifiers are Kerry Cerdra of Wyoming, Wren Schafer of Iowa State and Anne Johannessen of Kansas. 190 Meter Run
800-Meter Run
3. 000-Meter Run
Rasmussen time of 9:00:94 for 24 seconds better than that of her closest competitor, Drake's Hjalmarsson, so he scored the first this one. Hjalmarsson should take
Janel Levalley of K-State, Liz Halimarson and Simonson of Drake and Jenny Hayden of Iowa should be impressed that Dennis don't figure to improve that much.
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Other top qualifiers are Margaret Davis of Iowa State, Chris Reid of Western Illinois.
second since her time is 12 seconds better than third qualifier Janell Neevel of Brigham Young.
5.000-Meter Run
The title of this event will more than likely be going back to the state of Iowa. Five of the top six times and seven of the top nine are all from colleges in
Nan Daok of Iowa and Letha Davis of Drake have the two top times, only one second apart. Drake's Peggy Saracino of Drake's Margaret Davis are tied for third.
Other top performers are Kathy McCray of Colorado and Hjalmarsson of Drake.
High Jump
The high jump should be one of the closest battles, with four of the contestants clearing 6-0. Brigham Young's Maria Zanadraea, Drake's Anne Kavanagh and Brigham Young's Julie Waters are all between the 6-0 and 6-1 mark.
10
Missouri's Helen Ogar and Western Illinois' Melinda Morris could push for a top spot in the event.
Long Jump
Discus Throw
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The real battle should be for second, with Kanasa' Kim Jones and Nancy McCullough. Kishle's Keale St. Fernback. Ojala's Joel Ojala's Annette Tannander fighting it up.
ruane Jones of Brigham Young and Dana Olsen of Houston will probably battle it out for the title, but Nebraska's Robin Small may push the two
KU should dominate this event with the first, second and fifth qualifiers all Jayhawks. McKnight leads the way for the Jayhawks. She is the only athlete entered in the event that has jumped more than 21 feet.
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WEBPRINT A4 page 12
Merlene Ottey, left, and Janet Burke are two of the reasons why the Cormuskers are to team at beat in the women's division. Ottey and Burke both from Jamaica, and Otey is from New York.
See NEBRASKA page 11
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Page 10 University Daily Kansan, April 16, 1982
Women
From nage 5
Following Suggs' footsteps in the shot put will be Pam Bascue, Garden City, whose best put is nearly five feet short of Suggs'.
100-Meter Dash
Anderson, Carter and Susan McFarland, Ottawa, appear to be the top qualifiers in the field.
Tisa. Johnson's time of 10.93 is the best of the qualifiers. Johnson, Great Bend, the only spinner to have run the 100-meters in under 11.0.
Mile Run
Four other qualifiers have run the event in less than 12 seconds. They include Carolyn Noller, Salina South; Karen Brown, John Marshall High; Monique Holland, Wichita Heights and Rachel Brockman, Ottawa.
Ottawa has the top qualifier in Cindy Blake, who has run the mile in 5:11. Following closely are Beth Cabbage, Hutchinson; Debbie Pintie, Highland Park; Anne Sadler, Shawnee Mission East, and Lori McElhennan, Manhattan.
Two-Mile Run
Once again, Blakeley owns the best qualifying time at 11:08. Alyson Deckert, Salina South, is only three seconds off Blakeley's pace, but the rest of the field trails by about 10 seconds.
Other top qualifiers include Pinter;
Andrea Tkach, Omana Central; Ross
Kelly, Washburn Rural; Kit Taylor,
Jacob Lewis; Jack Lewis, Shawnne Mission East.
Long Jump
Jackie Harris, Summer Academy, is the top competitor in this event at 18-9. Other qualifiers having cleared at least 18-0 are Margie Bolden, Highland Park; Terry Knox, Wichita Heights, and Alicia Barber, Topeka.
However, Alesia Cox, Salina Central,
and Dawn Porter, Summer Academy,
are within one-half inch of reaching the
18-foot mark.
440-Yard Relav
Omaha Central has the top qualifying time at 47.4, followed closely by John Marshall High at 47.6. Also among the top teams are Junction City, Memorial, Salina South, Lansing, Great Bend, Hutchinson and Topeca.
Mile Relay
Two-Mile Relay
Leading the pack is Ormahah Central, which has run 3:57:6. Other top teams are Memorial, Junction City, Great High, Sawdust High, High Central High and Salina South.
In the girls' final event, Memorial appears to have the upper hand. Their time of 9:37.77 is challenged seriously only by Omaia Central; 9:41.5.
Ottawa and Manhattan are within striking distance, while outside chances belong to Great Bend, Wichita Carroll and Shawnee Mission East.
Rvun returns to Relays after 10-year absence
By MIKE ARDIS Sports Writer
Jim Ryun, former Olympian and KU graduate, return to the Kanas Relux this week, 19 years after his first appearance.
"My first year there I won the mile," he said of the 1963 meet. "The great thing though was being on the two-mile relay team.
'We were hoping to break eight minutes in it, but we were behind and I was running anchor. I ran 1:53.4 or 1:54.3 and we won.
"THAT WAS BIG. My adrenalin was going fast and we pulled it out."
Tomorrow, Ryan will run in the 10,000 meter Open race, a road race. Gone is the pressure of the shorter races and the stress that the race came to the relays to watch him run.
Ryun runs in the road races these days, those 5,000 meters or longer. While the crowds are not there, he doesn't miss them.
"Frankly, you don't spend a lot of time looking at the crowd," he said.
IN 1972, the last time Ryun competed in the Kansas Relays, 32,000 people were there to watch him run the mile, including 2,000 who showed up just to participate. He was on by the crowd, Ryun and two other runners finished under four minutes.
In 1964, he became the first high schooler to break the four minute barrier. Ryun won the mile three times at the Kansas Relays, which included his 1971 time of 3:55.8 in front of 23,700 fans.
"THERE ISN'T much of a crowd now," he said. "This Relays I'm not running in a key event, but I'm anxious to participate."
Running in the longer events presents Rvun with one advantage.
"The big difference is pressure," he said. "How can you miss pressure. I enjoy what I'm doing. I'm happy to be where I am now."
Some of Ryun's greatest races at KU
were run in the Relays in the rain. Rain has always seemed to plague the Relays. It wasn't until 1970 that an artifact truck was installed.
"Obviously there have been some improvements," Ryn said of the Relays. "The new track. My ex-situator had the cinder track, mudtrack relay."
RYUN ONCE held many world records and American records, including the mile. The last record of his to fall was the American record of 3.404 km, 1,560 meters. Only last did Stuart Scott break it with a time of 3.33.8.
"I TOLD my wife when Steve got the record, "I a free man," Ryan said. "I was happy for Steve. I know what he was going through."
Ryun's world record in the mile, 3:51.1 set in 1987, held up until 1979. For Ryun, running was his life. It wasn't until his success started to slip did his
In 1972. Ryun's last year as an
amateur, he did not get the gold medal in Munich in what would he his last try.
Ryun never had much luck in the Olympics. In 1964 in Tokyo, Ryun was sick and did not make the finals of the 1,500 meters. In 1988, he was weakened by a pulled muscle and finished second in Keino in Mexico City's high altitude.
In 1972, he was tripped in a preliminary heat and despite two appeals, could not get in the finals.
"WHEN I WAS at school, I was more single-minded," he said, "Now as a result of being older and a Christian, I am more confident in my big difference is that I am a Christian."
AFTER 1972, Ryun turned pro in the International Track Association, which lasted only a few years. In 1976, Ryun retired from running competitively, saying that the Lord had told him to. He also moved to California.
He returned to Lawrence last September, working on rehabilitating his
achilles tendon, which was operated on last summer.
Recently he has worked out with the KU track team, which he likes.
"The real advantage is the camaraderie," he said. "Much of the work of running is monotonous. With the team, it's someone to train with."
Training with the team also gives Rym different perspectives on running—his, and the athletes on the team.
"They take it a little differently, in said. "I have a different view. Yesterday, the team was required to be outside where it was wet. I was able to go inside, with good footing, and get a good workout."
RYUN ALSO has another reason to return to KU and Lawrence. Track coach Bob Timmons, who was Ryun's coach in high school at McGraw Hill, told in high school, Timmons told Ryan that he would break the four-minute barrier even
See RYUN page 11
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University Daily Kansan, April 16, 1982
ack un's Cast cool, could even
Page 11
Nebraska
From page 9
won the 1980 Big Eight title in the discus.
Shot Put
Javelin Throw
Brigham Young's Jones is once again the top qualifier, but the second best qualifier, Small of Nebraska, is only five inches back. Kansas' Serr Lerdahl is the only other athlete who has thrown more than 49 feet.
Houston's Olsen should run away with this event. Her toss of 100 feet is 33 feet better than her closest competitor, Heidi Iranteah of Nebraska
Iracatabla a group of five bunched behind Leon. They are Cheryl Novak and July Madea of Western Illinois, Melanie Heitman of Iowa State
and Debbie Smallwood of Okiahora State.
440-Yard Relay
Nebraska, led by Ottey and Burke,
should win this one easily, with the
main battle coming for second place.
NU's time of 45 is as nearly one and one-
half as that of Kunnaas and Western
Illinois relay teams,
which are tied for two.
Mile Relav
Iowa State and Nebraska look to finish one-two in this event with two seconds separating the two teams. Kansas and Western Illinois have the third and fourth best times, less than one-half second apart.
Two-Mile Relav
Iowa State is a heavy favorite in this
relay. The team's time of 4.163 is 14 seconds faster than that of No. 2 qualifier. Nebraska. Nebraska. Nebraska. and Nebraska. should battle it out for the second spot.
Spring Medley Relay
This race could be the highlight of the women's relay events with three schools all under 1:44. Kansas has the top time in this event, but the Jayhawks are followed closely by Missouri and Iowa State.
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Jim Ryun, all-time great KU miler who was the first high school runner to crack the four-minute mile, is living in Lawrence and will compete in the 10,000-meter road race.
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Nebraska's Nancy Kindig, short of any miracle or injury, will win this event hands down. Her score of 5,799 in front of teammate Marian Goedhart.
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From page 10
Timmons was the one who got Ryun to return to the Relays and run in the 10,000 meter run.
"Coach Timmons asked me if I was interested in running," Rym said. "I'd like to be better prepared, more ahead and confident, still a lot to do. It takes a lot of time."
"It's good to have him back," he said. "I coached him for 13 years. He's made a lot of progress and I think he'll continue to progress."
RYUN SAID the interest in his life has kept him busy talking to people about himself.
Ryun will spend tomorrow running in Lawrence, the scene of some of his best moments there and he may not be a favorite. Jim Ryun is again running in Lawrence.
"I DON'T KNOW what the good Lord will have me do," he said. "Spread the gospel, that's exciting. People are interested in what I am doing."
"Everyone wants to know what I've been done," he said. "With the interviews and all those other things, it's not hard to spend my time."
When not running, Ryun keeps busy with his Christian running camps and making appearances for companies, such as Nike, for which he promotes products. As for his future, he isn't sure what it includes.
SUNA 87
Iowa State's Scott Crowell looks to add a Kansas Relays' title to his long list of collegiate accomplishments. Last year, Crowell won the Big Eight and NCAA titles in the discus.
College
From page 7
The pole vault list is headed by none other than Joe Dial of Oklahoma State.
Junior year.
Behind Dial comes Kansas' Jeff Buckingham and Kansas State's Doug Lytle.
Buckingham set four Big Eight records in his first two years while the Wildcats Lyle won the NCAA indoor and Texas Belays.
Dial, only a freshman, has a personal best of 18-3 and was named Track & Field News High School Athlete of the Year.
At 17 Dial set a record for his age clearing 17-5/4 at the Kansas Relays his junior year.
The other top qualifiers are: John Sayre and John Geiger, Southern Illinois; David Swezy, Oklahoma State, and Andy Howard, Kansas.
The battle for the top position in the
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long jump will be between four Big Eight members.
Going into the Relays the best jump belongs to Iowa State's James Moi. Moi finished second in the Big Eight indoor meet.
Closely behind Moi are Kansas Warren Wilhoite and Kansas State's Switzer and Rodney Brogden.
The other top qualifiers are: Derek Harper, Michigan, and Kevin Baker and Terry Taylor, Southern Illinois.
Wilhite was an All-American indoors last season after placing fourth in the NCAA meet.
Carl V. Rice High Jump
The No. 1 ranked high jumper in the world heads the list. Tyke Peacock, who was ranked No. 1 by Track & Field News, tops the field with a jump of $7\%$, which he set at the World Cup in Rome.
Peacock, also a guard on the basketball team, transferred to Kansas from Modesto 'Junior College in California.
Wichita State's David Vuprogel is right behind Peacock with a jump of 7-3%. Vuprogel is the school record holder and last season won the Texas Relay.
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The University Daily
KANSAN
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
Friday, April 16, 1982
Vol. 10, No. 34, NSPC
Vol. 92, No.134 USPS 650-640
Regents debate yearly tuition hike, fee changes
By ANNECALOVICH
Staff Reporter
The Kansas Board of Regents will consider possible fee adjustments that would begin the fall of 1982 and possibly tuition increases for the students in their meeting at Kansas State University today.
The Regents also discussed possible student tuition increases at their last meeting. There are no definite increases proposed, but the Regents are considering instituting yearly tuition increases, instead of increases every few years, so that tuition hikes would not be so large.
David Adkins, student body president, said there were advantages and disadvantages to
raising tuition every year. He said lower yearly increases would be good.
But, he said, if the Regents raised tuition every few years, they might not be so quick to raise it by a substantial amount. If tuition is increased it would require a substantial amount might be built up over time.
THE REGENTS will also consider several fees and decide on some of them today. Some fee proposals will come up for final approval at the Mav meeting.
The Regents will decide how to make permanent an originally one-time fee, such as the $4.50 KU students for women's and non-女学生 sports this year. KU wants to make it permanent.
At the same time, the University is asking that
a $4.50 fee paid by KU students for bonds on Wescoe Hall be dropped, as Wescoe has been paid for.
Fees up for approval in May include a $ 45 lab fee for students in introductory laboratory biology classes and a $10 lab fee for students in advanced laboratory biology classes.
Also proposed is a $5 fee for every credit hour of fine arts, not to exceed $25 a semester. The fee would be used to replace the present applied fee for materials and would pay for materials needed in classes.
BECAUSE OF inflation, an application fee of $20 for the graduate program of the School of Architecture and Urban Design is increased by $15 for the university UIS is increased by $15 the $15 graduate application fee to the School of
Engineering and a $5 raise in the $20 fee for graduates in the School of Law.
The student health facility fee of $7 would also be dropped because KU has paid for Watkins Memorial Hospital, but a new fee of $1.50 would be charged. This change would increase the maintenance and equipment replacement.
Fees for independent study would also increase from $24 a credit hour to $30 to defer inflationary costs in mailings, printing and processing of paper.
The Regents will also review several issue papers for the fiscal year 1984 budget, including papers on libraries, faculty salaries and fringe benefits, other operating expenditures, major repairs, special maintenance and remodeling, research and public service, effect of financing
cutbacks on tuition grant and scholarship programs, capital improvements, energy conservation and student accessibility to higher education in Kansas, given financial aid cut-backs.
Deanell Tacha, vice chancellor for academic affairs, said the papers on the library and faculty salaries and fringe benefits were the most important.
THE PAPER on faculty salaries and fringe benefits pays Regents schools have lagged behind their peer institutions in salaries and fringe benefits for the last 12 years.
The Regents have identified peers for each of the state universities in Kansas. The peers are in
University Council defeats abolition of Parking Board
By ANN WYLIE Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
A University Council member moved yesterday to abolish the Parking and Traffic Board after expressing his dislike for a revised 1983 parking budget.
The motion was defeated, 35-1.
"If the University is going to take the position that it will not compromise, then the Parking and Traffic Board is a complete sham," Kenn Himmelstein, council member and an associate professor of chemical and petroleum engineering, said yesterday.
Himmelstein was referring to changes in the budget made by University administrators who did not notify the board. These changes transferred additional costs onto Parking Services without taking away any costs or increasing Parking Services' revenue.
Although council members generally agreed with Himmelstein's thoughts about the budget, they disagreed with the method he chose to propose it.
SEVERAL MEMBERS thought abolishing the administration would overkill them because the administration would leave overtime.
"I think that the motion itself is totally automatic, so I don't have to board member and Hutchinson junior, sad."
"In all reality, there's going to be a parking board. We may as well keep it in our hands. I think it would be a calamity to abolish the city's power and leave it in the administration's hands."
Another member said he thought the motion oversimplified dealing with the problem.
The revisions were "housekeeping matters" George Worth, council chairman and professor of English, said, that made the wording of the document more precise than it was before.
"I don't think you can operate all these darn things in a vacuum," Ernest Angino, council member and professor of geology and civil engineering, said.
The policy prohibits any act of sexual harassment and states that anyone engaging in such behavior will face severe consequences.
"All I can say is I hope to hell there will be less of a breakdown in communications in the future. I don't know. My ability to predict the future is pretty poor."
If defines sexual harassment as unwelcome sexual advances, requests for sexual favors and other verbal and physical conduct of a sexual employee or employer or academic decisions or performance.
In other business, the council unanimously approved a revised policy on sexual harassment.
JAMES SEAVER, council member and director of Western Civilization, suggested trying to improve communications between the two sides and the council for a more effective board.
THE COUNCIL also voted to approve the Parking Board's 1981-82 annual report.
The report included rules and regulations that the board had passed this year, the 1983 and 1984 budgets and other concerns of the board, such as parking lot construction.
See COUNCIL page 5
Kansan applications taken
The University Daily Kansas is now accepting applications for the summer and fall editor and business manager positions. The positions are paid and require some newspaper experience, but any student may apply.
the office of student organizations and acco-
tions to 200.Hall Hallow, in 2000.Hall Hall
Application forms are available in the Student Senate office, 105B Kansas Union; in
tivities, 220 Strong Halt; and in 200 Fin Hall-
Hall: are due at a point. April 19 in Flight
Selection of the editor and business manager will be announced later this month after interviews with the Kansan Board. Willingness to place the time and place of their interviews.
100
Melissa Eichman, Wamego junior, tries her hand at the wheelchair obstacle course yesterday outside Wescoe Hall. The event was part of Disabilities Awareness Week, sponsored by Students Concerned with Disabilities.
Funds approved to build addition to Haworth Hall
By COLLEEN CACY
Staff Reporter
KU biology faculty breathed a sigh of relief yesterday at the news that they finally can look forward to a new, modern building and leave behind a cold-outdated conditions in 58-year-old Snow Hall.
The $13.8 million addition to Haworth Hall received final approval with the signature of Gov. John Carlin late yesterday afternoon. The project will be financed over the next four years and includes a walkway to connect Haworth and Malefit halls.
we've been waiting for this a long time" Schlegel, chairman of the division of Biology (BioLOG).
He said the addition would allow the application of modern research techniques, as well as make room for teaching labs and lecture rooms.
"In Snow Hall, we had some real problems with the plumbing and electrical wiring," he said. "And with modern scientific research, you need a lot of juice."
MICHAEL GAINES, chairman of the undergraduate biology department and associate professor of systematics and ecology, said the biology department in particular needed more space for large lecture classes. It now shares lecture rooms in Wescoe Hall with other classes.
"We need it just for the classroom facilities," he said. "And it's going to really improve research. We don't have the proper facilities, as they distilled water, ventilation, things like that."
The University put Haworth Hall first on its list of capital improvements for this issue.
The project's chances for financing were boosted by the Board of Regents' evaluation, which listed the addition fifth out of 29 priority building projects.
The project received another nod of approval from the Legislative Committee on State Budgets.
KU RECEIVED $18,000 from the state two years ago for preliminary and final planning of the construction and requirement works to begin in 2015. The contractors were错着 the state budget tight and denied the money.
See HAWORTH page 5
KU admits NCAA letter on allegations
Bv BARB EHLI
Staff Reporter
Del Shankel, acting athletic director,
acknowledged yesterday that the NCAA had
notified KU about allegations filed by other
institutions.
Shankel said in a press release that the NCAA was conducting a preliminary investigation, but had not informed KU whether it had sub-committee any of the allegations against the University.
"It is our understanding that when the NCAA receives allegations of recruiting violations, its normal procedure is to notify the institution on a confidential basis prior to beginning a preliminary inquiry to determine whether or not a formal investigation is warranted," Shankel
"We believe it is unfortunate that in our case, named and unnamed sources have chosen to make public information that is normally treated as confidential between the NCAA and its
filed, and, following its normal procedures, the
collecting a preliminary inquiry into the
allegations.
"The University of Kansas has been notified by the NCAA that such allegations have been
He said the University and the athletic department would cooperate fully with the NCAA.
"To date, our own internal review has failed to substantiate the validity of the rumors on which it was based."
SHANKEL SAID the University had not been informed by the NCAA of the substance of any of the charges.
DAVE HART, University of Missouri athletic director, said yesterday his coaches had informed the Big Eight office that there was room to play. A way KU had banded its football recruiting.
Rumora have circulated for some time that KU's football recruiting program might not be in its best shape.
culated." Shankel said yesterday. "We have not had any formal investigation."
Hart declined to specify what the coaches thought KU had done wrong.
"In this instance, since the University did acknowledge that it received a letter, it sounds ridiculous to say that I can't confirm or deny it, but that is the policy."
"The coaches, along with five or six other schools, had expressed concern to the Big Eight." Hart said. "I don't know what the Big Eight office did or how it got to the NCAA."
"If we had some concerns, we should express them," he said.
"We have simply visited with some of the people around whom the rumors were cir-
Hale McMenamin, assistant director of NCAA enforcement, said NCAA policy required that he
Albee decries the decline of U.S. art
By DAN PARELMAN
Staff Reporter
American's declining participation in the arts since the 1960s has reflected a decline in the freedom of Americans, playwright Edward Abaeid last night at the Kansas Union.
Alibee spoke to about 600 people at a human rights conference speech titled, "The Women Who Vast the Tshekis."
Since Richard Nixon was elected president in 1968, the United States has shunned the truths about U.S. society that art provides, said Albee, author of "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?"
"Concurrent with the election of Richard
Nixon, we began a cultural and intellectual retreat," he said.
AMERICANS HAVE retreated from art because they're uncertain about the future of the United States, and American art mirrors the life in the United States, according to Albee.
Rather than exposing themselves to the self-awareness that critical artists offer, Americans have deceived themselves with fantasy and art. They tell us that audiences want artists to lie to them, he said.
"We are permitting ourselves smaller and smaller access to the truth of art." Allee said.
At the same time that Americans have retreated from art, the government has rejected
Weather
its commitment to the arts, according to Albee. He cited the Reagan administration's cuts in grants to the arts as an example of the government's abandonment of art.
Who Americans elect to govern them relates to American participation in art, Albee said.
THE ELECTION of John Kennedy triggered, in part, American interest in art, he said.
The reduction in artistic involvement and awareness since Albee and his contemporaries wrote in the '60s, he said, should concern people because art, as a metaphor that man uses to defuse his world, represents a high form of evolution.
"We are the only animals who create art," Albee said.
KANSA
PELAY
Tonight's low will be in the mid- to upper 30s. Tomorrow will be sunny, with a high in the 60s.
It will be partly cloudy, windy and cooler today, according to the National Weather Service in Topela. The high temperature is from the northwest at 15 to 25 mph.
Gleason clarifies complaints forms No Recall Coalition
By STEPHEN BLAIR
Staff Reporter
Tom Gleason, Lawrence city commissioner, said yesterday that he thought City Manager Buford Watson had improved his job per son. He said the commission's February evaluation of him.
Discussing his relationship with Watson and the reasons for having wanted to fire him, Gleason said, "I'm quite a bit more satisfied with performance and the staff's performance."
GLEASON SAID Watson gave the commission poor advice about adopting the city code and showed favoritism to individuals and some areas of the city.
On Feb. 6, it was disclosed that Gleason had written a letter to Watson suggesting that Watson resign or face the possibility of being fired.
Gleason said he wrote the letter after concluding that Watson had inadequately performed his duties, but the commission decided not to fire him and instructed it to shortcomings during the evaluation.
Watson said yesterday he preferred not to comment on Gleason's charges.
"It's unethical for me to get involved in a recall campaign," he said.
The recall effort began when the Lawrence Committee circulated petitions to force an elec-
Gleason announced yesterday that he had formed the No Recall Coalition to campaign against the drive. The recall election will be May 11.
During the campaign, volunteers will make a special effort to contact people who signed the petition that forced the recall election, Gleason said.
GLEASON'S GROUP is a coalition, he said, because its members are both those who support him as Commissioner and those who are opposed to recalling a commissioner without sufficient votes.
Gleason said that as a commissioner, it was his job to see that the city manager was performing adequately.
Gleason gave examples of what he said were Watson's failures in his job.
Gleason said Watson should have read the code, which later was found to contain errors,
See GLEASON page 5
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, April 16, 1982
News Briefs From United Press International
Haig's diplomacy starts anew as Argentine ships set sail
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina—Several Argentine warships left port yesterday and headed south toward the Falkland Islands and the 200-mile British blockade zone, two Argentine agencies said.
The reports come as Argentine Foreign Minister Nicanor Costa Mendez prepared to meet Secretary of State Aleah Abdullah for a new round of talks with Iran.
Mendez said Haig had promised that the United States would not support Britain in the Falkland Islands dispute.
Britain in the Falkland Islands takes on Gaza, a region of occupation forces and vowed its army would not allow Britain "to push us off" the South Atlantic islands Argentina
British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher is preparing Britain for war if the U.S. peace shuttle to Buenos Aires fails. The Thatcher government has issued a declaration, saying it will "remain neutral" and
Thatcher described Haig's mission as crucial and she spoke of her determination to continue efforts for a peaceful settlement. But she and other British officials were not optimistic that Haig's mission would succeed.
Beagan proposes tuition tax break
CHICAGO-President Reagan, saying the government should give parents the "right to choose" where their children go to school, yesterday proposed federal tuition tax credits for families of students in private schools.
In a speech to the National Catholic Educational Association, Reagan announced a tax break plan that eventually would allow many families to subtract $500 a student from their federal taxes each year to make up for private or parochial school tuition.
The American Federation of Teachers, the National PTA and other groups representing public school interests vowed yesterday to fight Reagan's
"How can our federal government even think of spending billions of dollars on a tuition tax credit scheme when programs serving children with the greatest economic and educational needs are being shaded under an improper administration?" Albert Shanker, AFT president, said in a statement.
U.S. dead named in Turkish crash
AKNARA, Turkey—The U.S. Embassy disclosed yesterday the identities of 27 people killed four days ago in a C-130 military cargo plane that exploded on the runway at Ankara airport.
A U.S. official said all of the plane's occupants died in the crash near the Kizikid mountains of Sivas, 300 miles east of Ankara, while on a routine supply mission from the eastern city of Erzurum to the NATO communications base of Adana, near the northeast corner of the Mediterranean
Officials said the dead included two colonels, four intelligence officers, three captives, five lieutenants, a major and seven sergeants.
Three Kansans were drowned. J. El Dorado; MaJ. Lawrence Ballard Jr., 37, of Worfield; and Thomas Edwards, age unknown, of Overland Park.
Bridge ramp falls; at least 12 killed
EAST CHICAGO, Ind. —A concrete-and-stair bridge ramp being built 50 feet above ground collocation in piles of rubber yesterday, killing at least 12 people in a collapse near Chicago's North Side.
The ramp to the Clime Avenue extension bridge collapsed in two places while concrete was being poured. The ramp was being built over portions of an Inland Steel plant, U.S. Ship Canal and Indiana Harbor Belt railroad tracks.
A construction worker who survived the crash said he and another worker heard the first collapse.
"I heard a big crash—when I looked back, I said, 'Let's go!' " said the unidentified survivor.
He said he ran about 70 feet down the ramp, turned and saw the rest of the snake collarsing. He did not see his fellow worker again.
Five of Sadat's assassins executed
CAIRO, Egypt—Five Moslem zealots convicted in the assassination of the late Egyptian President Anwar Sadat were executed at dawn yesterday a few hours after their plea for mercy was rejected by President Hosni Mubarak.
Two of the men were shot to death as soldiers at a desert firing range east of Cairo, and the other three were hanged as civilians from a prison gallows near the city.
During the stormy three-month assassination trial, one of the convicted men, Lt. Khaled Al-Islamboul, 24, emerged as a hero of Egypt's increasingly militant Moslem fundamentalists by boasting of leading the machine run and grenade attack that killed Sadat and seven other people.
"I killed Sadat and I confess this and I am proud of it because the cause of religion was at stake," Al-Islambouli declared at a rare public session of the trial.
27 killed in West Beruit fighting
BEIRUT, Lebanon—Rival Lebanese and Palestinian gunmen using artillery and mortar fire battled throughout West Beirut for the third day yesterday, leaving 27 people dead in the worst fighting the capital has seen in nearly a year.
Several shells hit the campus of the American University of Beirut and ripped into apartment buildings in the nearby Hamra commercial district,
The battles followed the breakdown of a five-hour cease-fire negotiated in the morning between Lebanese Communists, pro-Iraqi forces and Palestinians on one side, and Shite Moslem gunmen of the pro-Iranian Amal Movement on the other.
Wayne Williams declared indigent
The fighting has its roots in the Iran-Iraq war and the Arab-Israeli conflict, as well as local disputes.
Clarence Cooper, Superior Court judge, ruled Williams' future court costs, which included a $10,000 transcript from the convicted murderer's two clients.
ATLANTA—Wayne Williams, convicted of slaying two of 28 young blacks murdered in Atlanta during a year-per week, was declared indigent and released.
The transcript will be used by Williams' attorneys to support their claims for a new trial.
Williams, a black 23-year free-lance photographer and talent scout, was convicted Feb. 27 of killing Jimmy Ray Payne, 21, and Nathaniel Cater, 27. He also was linked by court testimony to nine of the 26 other slayings and a 10th that was never added to the task force list.
Voters try to stem guru's control
ANTELOPE, Ore.—The 92 registered voters of Antelope, split between longtime residents and followers of an Indian kuru, voted yesterday on a vote to abolish the state's 18-day ban.
Residents stalled in to vote at the town's two-room schoolhouse, and oldtimers took advantage of the influx of observers to have a sale raise to obtain tickets.
Followers of Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh, many of them doctors and lawyers, held an upper hand in voting registration, with 52 voters when the polls opened at 8 a.m., while longtime residents numbered only 40 registered voters.
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University Daily Kansan, April 16, 1982
Page 3
Seven student senators suspended for absences
By ANN LOWRY Staff Reporter
Seven student senators received notice this week that they had been suspended from Senate because of their involvement in a political executive secretary, said Wednesday.
The suspended senators were: Krupa Billa, Bharathharp Gunt, India, graduate student; Krip Elliot, Hutchinson freshman; Brad Halid, Hailad, Okla, senior; Jay Jackson, Lawrence Sapporo, sophomore; Jim Rauch, Hutchinson graduate student; and Joe Weissbeck, Topeka uni
Elliott, who missed Senate meetings because of Rock Chalk practice, said he did not think the rules and situations concerning absences were fair.
"I am a little disturbed about the rule that the only excused absences can be illness and death in the family, etcetera." Elliott said.
He said he thought a motion to change the regulation to allow more absences would come up in the Senate next semester.
BUT RAUCH, who missed Senate meetings because his work schedule changed during February and March, thought the regulations were justified.
"Overall, it seems like that's probably a pretty good policy," Bauch said. "I think that's kind of an obligation you have."
Billa, who didn't have time for Senate
because of his involvement as International Club president, said he found the regulations fair, too.
"I don't have any grievances," Billa said. "I fully agree with it."
All three intended to appeal to Student Senate executive committee. The other four could not be reached for comment.
According to the Senate's rules and regulations, any senator who has two unexcused absences or four absences of any kind shall be immediately suspended from the Senate and incarcerated by the Senate executive secretary.
Kerwin Bell, Huntington Beach, Calif., sophomore, received a deferred sentence yesterday on conditions that he serve 20 hours of community service and cost $400 for reappear in Douglas County District Court on Oct. 22.
FOR A PERIOD of one week following suspension, the senators may appeal to StudEx. The committee's next meeting will be Wednesday.
On the record
- ridman said the senators she had talked to intended to appeal the decision.
Bell was to appear in court for a preliminary hearing on charges of consuming alcohol as a minor. The district attorney's office and Bell's attorney reached the deferred sentence agreement outside the courtroom.
If StudEx does not accept their appeals, the Senate elections committee will appoint new members out of the runners-up in last fall's Senate elec-
"There's a lot of people that ran for that seat and the 'we're waiting in line'."
District Court Judge Mike Elwell would not allow Bell in the courtroom because he was not properly dressed. Bell was dressed in shorts and a T-shirt.
"We need to keep this an efficient, smooth-running organization with efficient senators."
Feldman said the suspended senators had some legitimate reasons, such as Rock Chalk practices, wrestling meets, club meetings and work, "but the only excuses are class, family emergencies, illness, tests or religious holidays."
Bell was in assault in shoes and I拿
Bell was arrested March 11 at the
A 65-YEAR-OLD man and a 59-year-old woman pleaded not guilty Wednesday to possession and intent to sell marijuana.
Mad Hatter, 700 New Hampshire St., for consuming alcohol as a minor.
Joseph and Marjorie Cooley appeared in Douglas County District Court for a preliminary hearing on the charge of possession and intent to sell marijuana.
Michael Darrin Horan, Overland Park, pleaded guilty in connection with the $1,500 robbery of J.B.'s Big Boy restaurant, 740 Iowa St., on March 28.
The Coolies were arrested March 26 when Douglas County Sheriff's officers found 400 pounds of manicured mushrooms in the couples' Lecompton home.
The Cooleys't trial was set for May 7.
be tried as an adult Wednesday and pleaded guilty to robbery in Douglas County District Court.
robbed the east turnpike gate to 1-70 yesterday about 1 a.m. police said.
A male suspect, about 6 feet tall and weighing about 200 pounds, threatened the gate attendant with a knife and then ran into a cellphone 100 out of the cash register, police said.
The suspect then forced the attendant to give him the keys to the attendant's car. The suspect went to the car, but could not get it started. He then forced the attendant to start it for him and left, police said. The attendant was not hurt.
A 76-YEAR-OLD woman was arrested for indecent exposure Wednesday at Sneaky Pete's, 1717 W. Sixth St., police said.
Police said they recovered the 1973 police vehicle about $900, about 2 a.m. yesterday and 5 p.m. today.
A 17-YEAR-OLD juvenile agreed to
Police said that about 6 p.m., Thelma Johnson stood in front of a large window and opened her robe.
Johnson was being held in Douglas County Jail on $1,050 bond.
Ballot requests due May 10
KU students and faculty who will be out of Douglas County during Lawrence's first city commissioner recall election must apply for an abatement by noon May 10. Dorothy Baldwin, county deputy clerk, said yesterday.
Applicants for absentee ballots must be registered to vote by Monday, she said. Monday is the registration day anyone wishing to vote in the election.
The ballot will include a referendum on a city proposal to finance a study of Lawrence's storm water runoff with a
50-cent monthly fee on residents' water bills.
Any registered voter who has moved within the city, or changed their name, must re-register, Baldwin said. This can be done between a 8. a.m. and 5. p.m. through Friday at the county courthouse, 11th and Massachusetts streets.
"If they're registered where they live, they can either come in and apply for an absentee ballot, or call, and we'll send in an application," Baldwin said. "If we mail them the application, they can mail it in, and we'll send a ballot."
"This, of course, is only if they're going to be out of the county."
In the city commission elections of April 1981,192 absentee ballots were cast, she said.
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1982-1983 SPIRIT SQUAD (Pom Pon/Yell Leader) TRYOUTS
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Opinion
Page 4 University Daily Kansan, April 16, 1982
Fiscal unfairness
The Student Senate's fiscal 1983 budget has been put on hold, while the student body president tries to come up with some after-the-fact guidelines for allocation of the student activity fee money.
the student.
This week, David Adkins, student body president, vetoed the Senate's budget for student organizations, saying that the Senate had allocated $20,000 more than it could spend.
Adkins is partially right. The Senate did allocate more than the $2,000 it will receive next year for student organizations.
But, the Senate also has the additional $28,000 and the power to spend it. It exercised that power when it approved the budget last week.
The additional money would come from the Senate's unallocated account—a surplus of activity fee money unspent in past years totalling almost $74,000.
It seems Adkins has some ideas about how that extra money should be spent, although he has yet to present any of those ideas to the Senate for consideration.
He has also decided that the criteria for allocating money to student organizations need revision.
The Senate reached the same conclusion when it approved the 1983 budget.
But the Senate also recognized the unfairness of changing the rules in the middle of the game.
Adkins has not.
When the budget process began this spring, groups asked for money with the understanding that their requests would be considered according to certain standards—the Senate's funding philosophy and a few sections in the Senate's rules and regulations.
After applying those standards to the requests, the Senate's budget subcommittee was only able to justify cutting the requests, which initially totaled $121,000, to about $78,000.
The Senate listened to the subcommittee's recommendation, and after tabling a few unclear requests, agreed that the recommendations were justified under its current standards for allocating money.
It approved the recommendations, but attached a rider to the total bill, calling for new standards to be developed for future budget hearings.
The Senate and Adkins both realized that with the present standards, the budget process can only deteriorate as requests increase and the money does not.
UNRIGHT
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Letters to the Editor
Ignorance of history obvious
To the Editor:
Chris Cobler's column concerning the ignorance that some Americans (I would modify "Americans" with "educated," but that would probably be assume too much) express on such anurca and esoteric subjects as 30th century life is perhaps more revealing than he realizes.
I refer to his reference to "U-2 boats." U-2 boats? What are they? Are they, perhaps, long-wing, high-altitude submarines? Or are they airplanes with the uncanny ability to fly under water? Did not the Soviet Union shoot down (sink?) a "U-2 boat" piloted by Gary Powers?
After all, U-2 airplanes are still in use and became a household word in 1960 when one was shot down over the Soviet Union, and also for their role in the urban bombing crisis. Their role in American's next extinction can be about American ignorance of these two more recent episodes in history.
While ignorance of the world's second-bloodiest war is certainly pathetic, Cobler should "resolve to be different" and go to the library to learn the difference between a U-boat, which is the term commonly given to German submarines, and a U-2, which is the name of a Locked-held spy/reconnaissance aircraft, and refrain from confusion the two in the future.
Randel Messner, Shawnee law student
Allocation appalling
To the Editor:
An aspect of the KU Student Senate's funding institution is the nature of a group has no burden on its funding.
That means that students with a similar interest can form a group and submit a draft of their work. You may also penny
I was appalled last week when the Senate vote to allocate $338 to the KU Committee on South Africa. This group disperses information around the Israeli and American investments in South Africa.
was accounted for in that budget, then the Senate would have no grounds not to allocate the money requested. If that group was considered politically or socially extreme, according to social norms, it would be of no importance in the allocation of money.
Granted, if a group of people feel strongly about an issue they have every right to express their concern, but the Senate hasn't any right to give student money to a group which is dispensing information about a political activity outside the United States.
Randy Crow, Wichita freshman
It might be wise for the Senate to take a hard look at the type of groups they fund and their definition of political group, which is the supporting of a candidate or issue in any election or campaign. It is also important to define criteria to conserve money, yet still support activities pertinent to the University.
Surplus of experts
To the Editor:
The Kansan has everything! Where else may one be lectured by an assistant instructor in political science on the glories of Keynesian economics?
One question: With 100,000 Ph.D.s running at 60 percent accuracy for the past 38 years, why is it that the average is so low?
Assistant professor of educational policies and administration
Navv Rowman
One New Yorker has found a seat worth more than his old racing saddle that was aimed for more than $1 million each year—a desk in a college classroom. That may sound like an obvious reason, but it's the swap Kenny Skinner, a 26-year-old jockey, made on his own about two years ago.
At the close of 1979, Skinner's future as a jockey looked clear: He'd earned $1,154,200.
Pot Shots
Juff Thomas
that year and was expected to continue spiraling on into the tiny elite of the country's top riders. You could say he wasn't standing in line for a guaranteed jockey loan.
But in September, 1979, Skinner broke his knee, keeping him off the tracks for three months. He spent most of his recuperation time with his girlfriend, even following her to classes at Sarah Lawrence College in Bronxville, N.Y.
On April 7, this great-grandson of Slovak (as in Czechoslovak) immigrants read a statement by Francis Pym. Britain's new foreign minister. Regarding the British stand on the Falkland Islands affair, Mr. Pym said Britain "does not appease dictators."
"For the first time, there was a perspective for me, a sense of the world outside the track," Skinner said. "I wanted to know more." Last fall he entered Columbia University. After his education, he'll return to racing full-time.
Surely the wooden seat of a 15-year-old desk couldn't convince a high school dropout, a young millionaire, to yank the reigns toward a new direction in life.
To a hill of KU students, Skinner seems to be telling us to make our time here count, seriously. For at least one man, the real world was enough to make him want to go to school.
In 1838, the infamous German dictator Adolph Hitler stirred up disaffection among
George Follock Jr.
the Sudeten Germans of western Czechoslovakia. He threatened military intervention if the Czech government did not accept it on Sudeten demands. The Czechs refused.
But Britain and France, not wanting to arrouse Hitler's wrath, went to the notorious German-sponsored Munich Conference in September 1938. Czech representatives were not invited to the partitioning of their own country, and hand was handed to Germany without a fight.
The apostle of appeasement, British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain, said the act promised "peace in our time." Even so, German troops invaded the remainder of Czechoslovakia in March 1939. The regions of Bohemia and Moravia were absorbed into the Reich. Slovaki became a German puppet state. Wold War II started that September.
I guess I should have seen it coming
KU has one good year in football, follows it up with another good recruiting year and immediately it becomes the target of charges against him. The coach Pardon me while I shake my head in wonder.
- a group to the point in college athletics every school that has a winning record must be
Learn Spanish. Quickly.
Chris Cobler
Now K-State and Missouri, two teams KU beat last year, are trying to nail the Jayhawks to the wall.
Give us a break. KU may be guilty, but the
man can be true of every other school in
the Big Eagle.
Here's one charge made against KU as reported by the Kansas City Times, not exactly a good friend of KU athletes: Jeff Hake, a Blue Springs running back, was offered a $50,000 annuity to attend KU. Hake signed with the University of Oklahoma.
Boy, I guess even $50,000 couldn't keep Hake from pursuing his lifelong dream of seeing the Norman, Okla., nightlife and be a highly respected Big Red education.
Pardon the redundancy, but tell me anotherike about college athletics.
If KU, a perennial also ran in Big Eight school, guilty then, so is every other school in the city.
Consider that Oklahoma and Nebraska—two college football powers that year in, year out, sign the top players in the country—are about as appealing as the Russian front.
Many share blame for athletic programs' sins
Now that the University of Kansas may be the target of an NCAA investigation, it's time for that catch-all phrase to ring out from across the campus and state.
The phrase goes something like this: "Well, everyone else cheats too, it's just that we got caught."
However, there's a problem with that line of thinking.
It shows that violations of NCAA regulations have an accepted part of the college athletic system.
Any justification made on the basis that "the
DONNA ROSENBERG
DAN BOWERS
But let's face reality. Does any school, under the present system of college athletics, really have an alternative to hedging on the rules now and then?
To put it bluntly, in order to keep up with the Oklahomaans and Nebraskas, schools may have little choice but to offer their scholarship athletes some under-the-table support.
other guy does it" hardly holds water from an ethical point.
Coaches and athletic directors are under tremendous pressure to produce winning programs. If they show signs of failure, they need to use scanning the help wanted ads in Sunday papers.
The college athletic system carries with it certain generally accepted practices that are
essentially requirements for producing a winning program.
In the process of following these practices, a myriad of NCAA rules and regulations are
The individual program is caught in a system where it either "plays the game" and adds to the snowballing tendency to ignore NCAA tenets, or it stagnates in a state of mediaicity.
Since 1952, when the NCAA began an enforcement program, 253 probations have been slapped on its member schools for various reasons. A noble effort, but barely the tip of the iceberg.
Consider the loyal alumni, probably the biggest source of pressure for a coach in either of the two major revenue-producing sports. By way of contributions to wavering athletic budgets, these benefactors take on the attitude that they have bought into the operation.
When a probation or reprimand is handed down to a school, fingers start to point at the coach or athletic director who allowed the violations to occur.
But do they alone, bear the guilt?
Through this pressure to produce a winner and their own independent actions to aid athletes and entice recruits, alumni at countless universities have gotten programs into trouble over the
Too many athletic departments operate with a free rein, reporting only to their university presidents and a representative board at periodic meetings.
The collective university administrations the country must shoulder some of the blame also.
American departments are a unique part of a university, with their goals geared toward turning a profit. Winners draw in profits, and too often the rest of the University turns its head
away from the practices that develop a winning program, choosing instead to bask in the glory and attention that a successful athletic team can bring to a school.
Certainly an institution that allows a team to bear its name should be able to exert a considerable degree of influence on its athletic program. At least it should offer some encouragement to uphold the department's integrity, much the same way that an academic program strives to uphold its academic reputation.
The problem is, that with a bullying surplus of shady athletic programs operating around the country, it appears that the NCAA has failed to meet this responsibility effectively.
Now we turn to the body that is responsible for policing the entire spector of college athletics.
Sure, the body has levened nearly 260 probabilities have been distributed over a period of 30 years.
an fact is, a token probation issued to a few schools is not an effective means of deterring the widespread violations in recruiting and supporting athletes.
For example, the NCAA recently signed a contract with CBS and ABC that will bring in $263 million in television royalties the next three years.
Not only is the NCAA failing to effectively curb these violations, but in a sense, it is fostering
RAA member schools salivate at the sight of such suma, and immediately the cycle in-
In the race to sing a share of such lucrative figures, schools begin a violent competition to win the coveted title.
A general formula seems to fall into line: Talented, well-paid recruits build winning programs, which lead to TV appearances and
increased alumni contributions, which mean more money.
Nearly everybody plays that game, and random probabilities are not going to bring an end to it. Too often, these probabilities only serve to harm the already exploited student-athlete, the regular military departments, call together their forces and devise new ways to adapt the NCAA regulations.
So what does the NCAA do? Maybe its time to wipe the clean and get a fresh start toward collegiate athletics. Such a step would take a lot of work, but it could help coaches and administrators across the country.
Simplification of the NCAA's complicated regulations may be a good place to start. The NCAA Manual, every coach's bible of regulations to abide by and break, consists of 187 pages of rules and regulations with an additional 114 pages of cases and their interpretations.
A Rhodes Scholar would be hard-pressed to make sense of the muddled names.
Surely there is room for adaptation of the rules to apply to the college athletic department, as we did today.
In addition, the spiraling increase of violations may be pointing toward the inadequacies in services provided by the NCAA to its member schools.
But for now, KU may have to sweat out an NCA investigation, while the press and rivals bid for the university's approval.
If a probation is in the offing, tears are sure to fall from the chalk of Mount Oread.
With a large source of income on its way from the networks, maybe its time for the NCAA to develop some programs that will help aid them. Of course, the individual student-athletes in their programs.
Meanwhile, unblemished teams will continue to rise to the top of the polls, while their players have lost ground.
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University Daily Kansan, April 16, 1982
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Page 5
Regents
From page 1
states comparable to Kansas in state population, economic resources, educational programs
Each Regents school peer institution is also similar academically.
The paper says KU salaries and fringe benefits are approaching a point where they will not be able to pay.
To protect what the report calls "an investment in the future," the Regents are making faculty compensation their first priority again for fiscal year 1984.
The report says faculty resignations and low morale because of low compensation are hurting education at Regents institutions. It points to a faculty salary increase that has lagged behind the Consumer Price Index by 41.5 percent over the last 11 years.
IN TOTAL compensation, salaries and fringe
benefits may be larger behind its peer institutions
based in Lagos (Agverdiz 2015).
The report says morale is hurt in the universities when, in order to recruit new faculty members in competition with other schools, new faculty members are offered a great deal more than faculty members who are already at the universities.
A 4.3 percent increase above merit salary
to the new rate of 1886 is needed to bring KU
salaries to the needy.
The report also recommends an early retirement plan, options for health insurance programs, dental insurance, family paid health insurance, provisions for preventative health maintenance and optometric care, none of which Kansas provides its faculty now.
The Regents will also consider promotions, tenure and abatement leaves for faculty members. The Regents will also consider promotions, tenure and abatement leaves for faculty members.
Council
The report said there should not be an urgent need for new parking lots on campus.
From page 1
Instead, Parking Services would re-design lots, such as the N zone north of Allen Field House, to make additional parking spaces, Don Kearns, director of Parking Services, said.
One way to increase parking in existing lots is to designate lots for small cars. Kearns said.
"We started about three years ago, behind
our edges. "But to be honest with you, it is hard to edge."
TOM MULINAZZI, chairman of the Parking BOM and associate professor of civil engineering, said people came up with all kinds ofresses to get to park large cars in small-car encees.
"The First Amendment says you can park anywhere you want," he said.
A council member blurted out, "Very forested of the Faunding Eaters."
The council also passed a resolution that opposed discontinuance as a ground for firing the police.
The Kansas Board of Regents will discuss this possibility today.
Discontinuity is when a university abolishes an academic program or department when it has
Now, the only basis for dismissing tenured faculty members is University-wide financial exigency, which occurs when financing levels exceed the budget. Tenured faculty must be bedridden throughout the University.
THE RESOLUTION will be sent to the Reents, Worth said.
The resolution read, "We, the members of the University Council of the University of Kansas, resolve that the Regents should not consider adding 'program or unit discontinuance' to be
In another matter, the council approved an amendment to University Senate rules concerning grade changes.
grounds for termination of tenured individuals until this change has been considered by faculty governance, the Council of Chief Academic Officers and the Council of Presidents."
The amendment gives four exceptions to a rule that prohibits changing a grade after it is filed.
- A faculty member has been found guilty of sexual harassment or academic misconduct and has assigned a grade to the student who pressed charges.
- A faculty member dies or is seriously ill and incapacitated, and a clinical error is found in the records.
- A department chair cannot locate a faculty member who is not a professor or is found in the course of a course grade.
- A student is found guilty of academic misconduct after the course grade was assigned, and the faculty member is no longer associated with the university or is serious ill and incapacitated.
before he advised the commission to pass it into law
Gleason
All five commissioners and the city manager have said the code contains errors and would have to be corrected and repassed by the commission.
From page 1
"I think it was a failure of the city manager to provide us with professional advice when he urged us to adopt the modification without even having read it." Gleason said.
BUT FRED Pence, former mayor and a member of the Lawrence Committee, said that because Gleason voted to accept the city code, he was blaming Watson for his own mistake.
Mr. Gleason approved that ordinance, so why didn't he read it? Pence said, Mr. Watson said, "I was very happy."
Gleason also charged that before the last evaluation of Watson, the city manager examined proposals based on who made them, rather than on the merit of their ideals.
"The city manager made the comment to me on several occasions, 'Oh, that's just old-and-so. She never like what we do—'just dismissing the idea based on the source," Gleason said.
"Absurd. I'm not even going to comment on that." Pence said.
GLEASON ALSO charged that during a commission meeting to discuss a nuclear materials transportation ordinance, Watson left the room when he should have been advising the
"He was out in the lobby talking to an individual on a different matter," Gleason said.
Gleason was not at the study session, which reflects his credibility. Pence said.
In February, when Gleason mentioned the study session, he admitted he had not been
PENCE SAID Gleason's real motive in writing the letter to Watson was to change the city manager form of government by getting a new city manager.
But Linda Lubenky, 828 Arkansas St.,
is an assistant for the No Recall
Civilition, disagrees.
"I think Tom had a number of things in Buford's career that he was sincerely disturbed about before he began to work for Buford because of his double about his performance and that he planned to express them."
Haworth
From page 1
Allen Wiechert, University director of facilities planning, said the money for the addition would be available July 1 and the addition would accept bids for construction soon after that.
He said construction plans for the 104,000-crested foot addition were almost complete and would be built by mid-February.
SCHLAGER SAID the biology department would not begin moving into the new Haworth-Malot complex until its completion. Even then, the classes might remain in Snow, at least at first.
The Legislature spread funds for the addition across the next four years.
Weckier said the use of Snow after the biology department had vacated it would be "an all-time priority."
KU will get $2,098,633 for 1843, $2,500,000 for
1964, $5,000,000 for 1965 and $1,475,000 for 1968.
COMING TO KANSAS UNIVERSITY
He said the addition would be primarily for the use of biological sciences, including the departments of biology and biochemistry, and graduate programs in botany, entomology, physiology and cell biology and systematics and ecology.
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Page 6 University Daily Kansan, April 16, 1982
PATRICIA
Parsons 'high' on performing
By MATT DEGALAN Staff reporter
To the children playing in the courtyard of Murphy Hall yesterday morning, Estelle Parsons was just another grown-up.
Latte did they know that the Academy Award-winning actress would soon become the ultimate grown-up in tonight's production of "Miss Margarida's Way" in the University Theatre. Breaking from her buoy schedule, she slipped into steps of the courtyard and talked about the play.
"It's a very difficult role. I don't take to being a power figure very easily," the casually dressed Broadway veteran said in a slightly fatigued voice.
Despite her professed reluctance, Parsons, 55, has been portraying the ranting, dictatorial Miss Margarida since the play's 1977 American debut. The play, written by Brazilian Roberto Athyade, directs monologue with Parsons playing an eight-hour teacher and the audience playing her class.
THE ONLY OTHER performer is a "student" in the audience who Miss Margarida viciously abuses whenever he steps on the stage. Throughout the play, Parsons verbally assaults the "class," stresses the importance of respect, descentencies and absurdities on the blackboard.
Estelle Parsons
Various critics have seen the play as a metaphor of a totalitarian state, a bitting satire of disciplined education and a hilarious and haunting study of power. Though they can't agree on the play's genre, they are in accord about Parsons' performance.
New York Times critic Richard Edar noted the "spectacular performance of Estelle Parsons, while Time's T.E. Kalem said "she blows the roof of the Ambassador Theatre."
PARSONS, KNOWN mostly for her Oscar-winning role as the shrill Blanch in the 1960 film,
"Bonnie and Clyde," seemed genuinely unaware of the critics. She said she thought the play was what each member of the audience made it out to be.
"the political theme, of course, is most re-
motivating for experience with
totalitarian state," and Parson.
"When we were performing the play at the time of the mass suicide in Guyana, they thought it was a way for Jones to the Fallahd Islands, maybe this audience will look at it more politically."
Whatever the audience reads into the play, chances are they will enjoy it.
"It's the only play I've done that people come to see in droves. It's like I'm a rock star," she said.
"It's amazing. You're only one on the stage, and people get so excited. There's nothing like making people laugh. There's nothing like that sound. It's such a high—it's like angels in heaven," she said, throwing back her blood, raising hair and raising her arm towards the sky.
"It's much better than making them cry," she concluded.
NEVERTHELESS, crying gave the Lymn, Mass., native her start in acting. As a 5-year-old, she landed parts in local amateur productions because she cried easily.
After boarding school, she attended Connecticut College for Women and earned a bachelor's degree in political science. Parsons tried a year at Boston University Law School, but found that being one of two women in a class of 300 wasn't for her.
After the law school attempt, Parsons tried dabbling in local politics and working for the Republican National Committee. Consequently, she became the first woman political reporter for a television network during the early days of NBC's "The Today Show." The birth of her twin daughters—Martha and Abbie—ended her budding broadcast career.
SHE RETURNED to acting in the 1877 movie of "Happy Hunting" with Ethel Merman.
Since then, Parsons has appeared in nine
television programs and 40 plays and several films
and television shows.
Her latest roles have been Ruth in the award-winning Joseph Papp production of "The Pirates of Penzance," and, of course, the controversial Miss Maragarida.
When "Miss Margarida's Way" first opened in the playwright's homeland, the police shut it down. The ban was not lifted until sensitive parts were censored. Since then, those have been 56 times.
MUCH OF THE play's popularity stems from its unique format of incorporating the audience into the play. In New York's Ambassador Theatre, Parsons said, a man once ran on stage in response to Miss Margarida's demands that the thrower of a stink bomb come forth and confess. Her burlesk buried back Parson's insults and then made sure that at intermission, A few throw paper airplanes.
Does she expect tonight's audience to do the same?
"Each person has their own decision to "meach," she said. "They certainly aren't expected to respond. When they don't respond, it'S not a problem." And "how can you know what 1,000 silent people are thinking?"
WHATEVER HAPPENS, she said she was well-prepared and forewarned.
"People are so unique. Roberto Athayde, the playwright, said no matter how many times you play it, the audience will do things you will never dream of," she said.
PARSONS STREASSED that direct audience participation was not encouraged. Her attractive face broke into a smile and her sunken, yellow-eyed lips glittered. She would deal with unruly audience members.
"Punish them so they'll never forget," she laughed. "That's all I can say."
'Chorus Line' comes to Hoch by luck
BY CYNTHIA HRENCHIR
Staff Writer
Luck and quick moves last week were responsible for the road production of "A Chorus Line" coming to the University of Kansas April 20. Carr, SUA program adviser, said recently.
"A representative of Theatre League of Kansas City, the show's producer, came to SUA and asked if we wanted to have the show and we agreed. We will be in attendance technicians came and looked at the hall at Hoch
"We got some details worked out on Thursday and signed the contract."
AN OPENING OCCURRED in the show's schedule, Carr said, and the company, instead of losing revenue for the evening, agreed to perform at the University at a reduced commission.
"This is also the first time we have worked with the team," she said. "And I'm glad to say it's working out great, 'the team'."
"Rock groups all use this method," she said.
"It was lucid as us because we probably can learn from us."
Theater League representative, David Buckner, agreed that lack played a large part in the defeat.
TICKETS FOR THE SHOW went on sale Tuesday and orders were available Monday afternoon, Carr said.
"We have sold 800 tickets so far," she said. "It's been a good flow of people."
one added that there were plenty of "good" seats left for the single performance.
The cast and crew of "A Chorus Line," a touring company which originates from New York and is traveling throughout the United States, people count stage "ubicans, Carr said.
"They are the same group that performed in Kansas City a month ago," she said.
The show, which has won nine Tony awards, is performed mostly on a bare stage to recreate the atmosphere of a genuine theater audition. The set consists of only a series of mirrors, which are used to add depth to the show. The mirror tells you where and how much movement from one Broadway chorus line to another until either stardom beckons or age catches up with them. Carried said.
Carr said that SUA would be working with fasten operations to prepare the stage for the show.
"Right now we are waiting for the technical people of the show to come out and say where the lights should go and where to load things in and out." she said.
Bucksern said the campus was probably customized to working with rock groups, and the band would have to be a part of it.
"It's easy to set up the performance area for a
team member. He said, 'The hard part is working
with the performers.'
"WITH THIS SHOW it will be totally different.
The set of themselves, it's the set that will take time.
Bucksan said the stage would have to be covered with curtains, which he estimated would take 10 hours.
Tickets to the New York Shakespeare Festival production of "A Chorus Line," priced at $10 and $12, may be purchased at the Student Union Activities Box Office. Students with proper KU identification can save $3 on the regular ticket price.
milestones
KEVIN V. BOLDT, Overland Park senior, won one of 44 scholarships awarded nationally to undergraduates by the ASSOCIATED GENERAL CONTRACTORS' EDUCATION AND RESEARCH FOUNDATION OF Washington D.C. Bolt is pursuing degrees in civil engineering and business administration at the University of Kansas. The Foundation is a non-profit organization that has a program to improve construction science through research and development projects.
ALICIA GIBBONS, assistant professor of music therapy, is PRESIDENT-ELECT FOR 1983-84 OF THE NATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR MUSIC THERAPY. The 3,000-member organization is involved in education, research and training in music therapy.
GRANT RICHEY, Shawnee senior, has been selected for an INTERNSHIP WITH THE CIRCLE-IN-THE-SQUARE THEATRE in New York City for the coming fall semester. The internship, which Rickey will receive class credit for during his freshman year, a week in voice, movement, audition techniques and dance, all with a performance orientation.
CYNTHIA SUSAN BROWN, Leavenworth graduate student, was awarded the PHILIPL NEWMARK AWARD for significant investigation in biochemistry. Her research involved work concerning rheumatoid arthritis. The award is presented annually in October to Philip Newmark, who was a member of the KU biochemistry faculty until his death in 1962.
THE ALL SCHOLARSHIP HALL CHRISTIAN SUPPORT GROUP will meet at 8:30 p.m. in Danforth Chapel.
Weekend Arts
on campus
TOMORROW
SUNDAY
as part of the POT POURI PRODUCTIONS,
"PINOCIO THE KING" will be staged at 8 p.m.
in the Inge Theatre, Murphy Hall. General ad-
visory boards are available at the Murphy Hall
Box Office.
TOMORROW
THE CHHAU INDIAN FOLK DANCE THEATRE will perform at 4 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall, Murphy Hall. General admission tickets are available at the Murphy Hall Box
THE KU CHAMBER CHOIR will perform a
song from the play *In the University
Theatre, Audience is free*
THE SIMULATIONS GAMING GROUP will meet from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. in Cork II of the Kildare
TODAY
THE UNDERGRADUATE BIOLOGY CLUB
p.m. in the Sunflower Room of the Kansas Union
THE KU COLLEGium MUSICUM will per-
form a SPRING CONCERT at 2 p.m. at the Spruce
Inn.
THE POT POURRI PRODUCTION "THE MOUND BUILDERS" will be staged at $p.m. in the Inge Theatre. General admission tickets are available at the Murphy Hall Box Office.
THE NASAR REGION SPORTS CAR CLUB OF AMERICA
and THE JATARNK SPORTS CAR CLUB announce a
SPRING
ROAD RALLY
SUNDAY, APRIL 18, 1982
IN THE 0-ZONE PARKING LOT
REGISTRATION BEGINS AT 12:30 P.M.
ENTRY FEE: $5.00 Day of rally
$4.00 If you register early at the Kansas Union
SUA ticket booth
Trophies will be awarded for 1st, 2nd, and 3rd
- also -
FREE BEER AND POP AFTER THE RALLY!!
THE KANSAS CITY CHIEF'S former star linebacker invites
you to enjoy the MIDWEST's finest BAR-B-QUE!
2214 YALE STREET
inside the MIDWEST's ATTENTION
HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER
842-6121 CARRY OUTS AVAILABLE
HOURS: MON-THUR 11AM TO 9PM FR-SAT 11AM TO 10PM SUN NOON TO 8PM
THE KANSAS CITY SPORTS CAR CLUB of AMERICA
and THE JAYNWN SPORTS CAR CLUB announce a
SPRING ROAD RALLY
SUNDAY, APRIL 18, 1982
IN THE 0-ZONE PARKING LOT
REGISTRATION BEGINS AT 12:30 P.M.
ENTRY FEE: $5.00 Day of rally
$4.00 If you register early at the Kansas Union
SUA ticket booth
Trophies will be awarded for 1st, 2nd, and 3rd
- also -
FREE BEER AND POP AFTER THE RALLY!!
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843-8808
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Take a friend home to study.
Study with Cliffs Notes because they can help you the better in English class. Cliffs Notes offers more than 200 titles covering all the frequently assigned novels plays and poems. Use them as a guide while you're reading and praise an efficient review for exams. They're great for helping you understand literature, and they're ready to help you now.
Available at:
Town Crier
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842-2147
Headmasters.
809 Vermont Lawrence, Kansas 66044
843-8808
Take a friend home to study.
Study with Cliffs Notes, because they can help you do better in English class. Cliffs Notes offers more than 200 titles covering all the frequently assigned novels, plays and poems. Use them as a guide while you're reading, and again as an efficient review for exams. They're great for helping you understand literature, and they're ready to help you now.
Town Crier BOOK & PIPE SHOP
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We have more than your basic greys ... we have many new colors in sweat pants to choose from.
Also an assortment of swimwear available.
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LTWINS
University Daily Kansan, April 16, 1982
Page 7
Winn to hear student opinion on loan cut
A reception for Rep. Larry Winn, R-Kan, sponsored by the Student Senate, will be tonight in the Kansas Room of the Kansas Union from 5 to 6, David Adkins, student body president, said yesterday.
Adkins said students should take advantage of their last chance to tell Winn how they felt about President Reagan's reductions in federal aid for student loan programs before Congress in the issue and the school year ended.
"It's not a confrontative deal, where we hope to nail him to the wall," Adkins said.
"We hope it will remain informal, and the kids will feel comfortable to show up in jeans and T-shirts," he said.
ADKINS SAID that, as a Republican representative to Congress, Winn would be under pressure to support Resagan's efforts to remove the needed to impress their ideas upon him.
The proposal Congress will vote on in the next few weeks would cut federal and postassess students by about 250,000,000. The program is available in the 1980-81 academic year.
percent and College Work-Study 27 percent. Supplemental Educational Direct Student Loans and student enrollment grants would be totally eliminated.
Adkins said students should talk to Winn regardless of their home districts because he is the representative for the 3rd District, which includes Lawrence.
The cuts would reduce Pell Grants 40 percent, Guaranteed Student Loans 60
Maria McDougal, student senator, said the post card drive was part of a large effort to support several larger schools, including Universities of Missouri and Colorado.
The Senate also will sponsor a post card drive today, Monday and Tuesday on campus to send students' opinions to representatives all over Kansas.
She said the groups of schools were trying to organize a caravan to carry the post cards to Washington, D.C., probably originating in Colorado.
Mcdougal said the Senate probably would sponsor a rally in front of Wescow Hall next week, when the caravan is to come to Lawrence.
Are You Prepared for Your Finals?
Study Skills Workshop Emphasis on taking final exams.
Wednesday, April 21
7:00-8:30 p.m.
Council Room Kansas Union
No Registration/Free
The Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong 864-4064
I
Wichita Jazz Festival
Three Great Days of Jazz Entertainment
APRIL 23, 24, 25
Chick Cora & Friend
Art Pepper Quartet
Billy Taylor Trio
Jazz Ambassadors
Paul Grey & The Gaslite Gang
Dianne Reeves
Gaza Quietz
Rich Matteson
College Bands & Combs
FRIDAY. APRIL 23
12 hours of big band competition by some of the best college jazz
Admission $30.00 at Dueler Performing Arts Center, Wichita State University
SATURDAY. APRIL 24
SATURDAY NIGHT,APRIL 24
Seminars, vocal jazz clinic and critiques by Bily Taylor Trio, the Jazz Ambassadors and others. SPECIAL CONCERTS THROUGHOUT THE DAY.OLD jazz films shown by Dick Wright. Admission $3.00 at Duersken Fine Arts Center. Wichita State University.
SUNDAY. APRIL 25
7:30 to 11:30 p.m. A special warmup party at Holiday Inn Downtown with the Billy Taylor Trio, Jazz Ambassadors Big Band with Rich Matteson, Dianne Reeves and Paul Grey & the Gaslite Gang. Admission $8 per person at the door.
Starting at 1:00 p.m. and continuing till who knows with *all* of the above artists. This is a biggie, a concert you’ll never forget.
Reserved Seat Tickets: In advance, $12.00. At the door, $14.00.
General Admission: In advance, $10.00. At the door, $12.00.
Central Ticket Agency, Century II, 225 West Douglas, Wichita, KS 67201
Telephone (316) 263-4717
This program is sponsored in part by the Kansas Art Arts Commission, a state agency established by the federal Kansas Aerial Festival, Pizza Hall, Inc and the City of Wichita's Tourism Department.
K
A Roll in the friendship of the world
INTERNATIONAL CLUB The University of Kansas Proudly Presents
30th Annual International Festival of Nations
SUNDAY, APRIL 18, 1982
Exhibition start at 3000 p.m. Big-Big Jackson Booms, Kansas Union
Bouquet at 3015 p.m., Kansas Union Coffeehouse
Bouquet at 3020 p.m., Kansas Union
Bouquet at 3025 p.m., Kansas Union
Display of Artifacts, Slide Show and Documentary Films from several countries.
Exhibition
Cultural Show Fashion Show, African Folk Dance, American Combo, Arab Music,
East European Folk Dance, Indian Chhau and Classical Dance, Latin
American Folk Dance, Malaysian Wedding Ceremony, Middle Eastern
Belly Dance, Pakistan Bangra Dance, Palestinian Indian Folk Dance,
Thai Rum Moe Bot Etc.
African Moi Mai Malaysian Kariapir
Chinese Egg Roll Pakistani Gosht
Indian Chole Palestinian Stuffed Grape Leaves
Latin American Rice & Beans Philippine Adobo
Dessert and Beverages
Tickets for
Banquet
Tickets are available at
SUA Office, KU International Club (B115 Kansas Union) and
Office of Foreign Student Services (112 High Hall)
and limited number of tickets are sold at the door.
The Yello Sub *delivers*
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KATHLEEN TURNER
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PHOTOGRAPHY OF THE
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SAMPLE AMPLIFIED WRITTEN EVALUATIONS OF THE EXECUTIVE PRODUCER'S GENERAL WORK FOR MARKETING PROJECT. SAMPLE IS AN INDICATOR OF OUR QUALITY. ALL DOCUMENTS ARE PROVIDED BY MARKETING PRODUCER HELMES AND DO NOT CONTAIN ANY COPYRIGHT HOLDERS. THIS MESSAGE IS NOT TO SCALE. MARKETING PRODUCER HELMES RESERVE THE RIGHT TO EDIT, MODIFY, UPDATE, OR DISCARD ANY OF THE TEXT, IMAGES, OR DESIGNER'S EDITIONS.
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Page 8 University Daily Kansan, April 16, 1982
Upcoming Schlafly speech receives criticism
By JIM LEHNER Staff Reporter
The planned Student Union Activities Forum speech by Philly Schlaffy on April 20 has sparked some criticism in the U.S. SUA Forma directors, said yesterday.
Schlaffy, nationally known spokesman for the anti-ERA campaign against the passage of the amendment in the states that have yet to ratify it.
DuPree said that since he announced in March that she was coming, his office had received at least five phone calls a week about the speech, and there had also been three letters to the Kansai that had been opposed to her rape.
letter to the editor praised Schlafly's lecture.
He said he had received a few favorable phone calls, and at least one
THE NIGHT he proposed the Schlafly speech last month, he received telephone calls from two women who wrote to him about the forthcoming lecture.
He said the women were polite to him, wanting to know why she was coming and why SUA hadn't provided a pro-ERA speaker as well.
"I told the women that Phyllis Schlafly was considered because we felt that she would be an interesting speaker and that she was the first one to my knowledge of anti-ERA sentiment who has spoken here," he said.
He said the Forums had presented Bella Abzug, an ERA supporter, who spoke on campus in the past. He also said that Warren Farrell, the men's
"Warren Farrell was the first of our two-part series on sex roles in society," he said, "so we felt that we should invite someone with an opposite opinion to express themselves. So, we invited Schlafly."
Coalition advocate who spoke last week, was a supporter of ERA.
HE SAID THAT when he proposed that she speak, he wasn't concerned
"I was concerned with her credentials as a speaker," he said.
"Many people don't realize it, but Warren Farrell is a staunch supporter for equal rights," DuPree said. "He served on the board of directors for the National Organization for Women for several years."
then, and isn't now, that people would be upset with SUA.
"She's been the national chairman for the Stop ERA movement, is the national president of Eagle Forum, an anti-ERA group, and has written nine books, so I felt she was well-qualified for speaking."
One person who was adamantly opposed to Schlafy's speaking was Peter Gray, graduate student from Wichita. He wrote a letter to the editor of the Kansan, saying Schlafy's speech should be protested.
Gray, who said that he would attend
the speech, said he was upset that SUA would bring such a person as Schlaffv.
"I just think that the SUA was wrong in bringing her," he said. "I advocated a protest of the speech in my letter to the editor, but I haven't organized any protest. But I sure would like to see some of the women's groups protest. They have a much larger backing than I could ever assemble."
BARBARA BALLARD, adviser for the Commission on the Status of Women, said she did not know whether her group was going to protest.
"We almost plan on giving her as little fanfare as possible," she said.
"My office doesn't always know what the other members are planning. Who has been done before. They might decide to protest on the night of the speech."
DuPree said he didn't mind any protest as long as it didn't interfere with the speech.
"A protest is perfectly okay. It's a part of free speech," he said. "However, it should be done in the proper context—either before Schlafly speaks or after. If they protested during her lecture, it would be bastardizing a good form of free speech, being that of Schlafly's."
COMMONWEALTH THEATRES
GRANADA
MUSIC BY LANE HOLLAND
QUEST FOR FIRE
A Science Fiction Adventure
EV. 7:30 & 5:30 Mat Sat, 2:00
VARSITY
MUSIC BY ROSS HOFFMAN
PORKIES
You'll be glad you came!
EV. 11:50 & 16:30 Mat Sat, 2:15
HILLCrest 1
JULE ANDREWS - JAMES GARNER
VICTOR Victoria
EV. 7:15 & 8:30 Mat Sat, 1:15
PORKY'S
You'll be glad you came!
8:17 7:14 8:10 9:30 10:30 21:10
MIDNITE SHOW FRIDAY & SATURDAY
NASTASSIA KINSKI
EYE 7/25
Mint Sal
No. 310
2/15
WORSE THAN THE "HOLY GRAIL"
TO
HILLCREST 2
NASTASSIA KINSKI
8 & 25
Mat Sat
2:15
HILLCREST 3
Richard Puyor
Some Kind of Hero
EVE. 7:30 & 9:20
Mal. Sat. Sun. 2:15
CINEMA 1
BEST PICTURE
CHARIOTS OF FIRE
PG
EVE. 7:35 & 9:30
Wednesday Mal. 2:00
CINEMA 2
RONIN HOOD
TECHNOLOGY CORP.
EVE. 7:30 & 9:15
Wednesday Mal. 2:00
WALT DISNEY PRODUCTIONS
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University Daily Kansan, April 16, 1982
Page 9
Dvkes Library work on time
By TOM HUTTON Staff Reporter
KANSAS CITY, Kan—Construction of the $5 million Archie Dykes Library at the University of Kansas Medical Center here is proceeding on schedule and finished. Allan Wiechert, director of facilities planned, said yesterday.
"Once a project like this gets off the ground," Wiechert said, "the rest is easy."
The library, which was named after former KU Chancellor Archie Dykes last October, has encountered no lengthy construction delays, Wiechert said. Construction is scheduled for completion next December.
Wiechert said all the concrete had been poured for the building and the outside structure was nearly finished. The basement, completed in the next two weeks, and
roof construction will begin soon, he said.
“Once the roof goes on, the interior work starts.” Weichert said. “There’s really not a whole lot of things that can happen until the construction when the roof is on.”
WIECHERT SAID construction had been "exceptional," considering the harsh winter months and the short time schedule the University set for it.
Wiechert said the construction company, B.B. Anderson of Topeka, had set a schedule that was even more difficult than the University's. The schedules merged as the project grew more involved, he said.
Financing for the library's construction came from a $3.7 million allocation from the Kansas Legislature, $1 million from additional Med Center student fees and $250,000 from private donations.
When complete, the Dykes Library will house more than 127,000 volumes of material, including 2,000 current
medical journals, Earl Farley, direc-
tory of the Med Center, at the
Med Center, said recently.
The Clendening Library, which was named after a popular medical columnist and donor of rare books to the Metropolitan Center's library materials. The library has been seriously overcrowded for several years, Farley said.
"We were hanging on to tooth and
material into the library," Farley said.
THE CLENDENING Library has about 20,000 square feet of space, Farley said. The addition of the Dykes Library will double this amount.
Although details are not set yet, the Dykes Library will offer between 400 and 600 seats for library patrons. Most of this seating will be study booths.
The library will expand its already extensive use of computers to help trace books, Farley said, once the new building is completed.
New regent to address black students
Jim E. Dumas, newly appointed member of the Kansas Board of Regents, will be the featured speaker at Day banquet tomorrow night.
The Bruce-Smith Award Scholarships will be awarded to a continuing KU student and an incoming freshman during the banquet. The scholarships honor Blanche Bruce, KU's first black graduate (1885), and Lizzie Smith, the first black student admitted to the University (1876).
The 1962 recipients are Belva Kayne Wilson, Leavenworth sophomore, and Betsy Pugh senior.
Harmon High School, Kansas City, Kan.
The Chase Book Award will be given to Sanjuanka K. Wilhoite, Paola freshman. David Chase, a Topek physician, and his wife gave the award to the runner-up of the scholarship for a continuing student.
About 100 alumni will join black KU students in the day's activities.
REGISTRATION WILL begin at 8 a.m. in the Pine Room of the Kansas State University.
professor of law. Participants will be black leaders of KU student organizations, Lawrence churches and black office organizations and black KU alumni.
A symposium, "The Significance of
A Symposium," by Marilyn L. Ainsworth,
moderated by Marilyn L. Ainsworth,
There will be an informal luncheon at Nabil's restaurant at noon. The afternoon will be free for participants to attend the Kansas Relays. A reception sponsored by the KU Supportive Educational Services staff will be from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m. in the Military Science Annex.
There is no charge for the daytime activities except for the Relays tickets.
KANSAS
RELAYS
Building on Tradition
KANSAS RELAYS APRIL 14-17
Special Thanks to our Sponsors and Alumni:
Decathlon Ed Linquist
Alumni Luncheon Anonymous Host
Kansas Relays Banquet Jim Hershberger
Kansas Relays Sponsors
High School Relay Event
Jayhawk Siding and Guttering
Underwood Liquor
Opinion Oil Midwest Mineral Inc.
Jack and Barbara Deeter
M. Simmons
Clerone Coleman
Heptathlon Evans Grain Company, Inc.
Coaches and Media Hospitality Hour Security Benefit Insurance Co.
Special Invitational Athlete and Partial Team Sponsor
Manpower
John Kroh
Individual Event
Green Laird's
Nationwide Inc.
Kansas Public Service Company
Sunflower Cabinetry
Cabinets Inc.
University Relay Event
California In Management
Rockefeller University Raleigh Dale W. R. 'Bud' Schaffer
Rich Loughmore Chevrolethire
Richard Driscoll
Joe Hamm, Ralph Pool.
Hallmark Inc
West Coast Establishment Al A Frame
Halimark Inc
Co-Sponsors
Riss International Corp.
KANU Public Radio Station
Lawrence Surgery Associates, P.A.
New York
Lawrence National Bank
Gene Fritz Construction Company
University State Bank
Outwestern Bank
Mark's Jewelers
Packer Plastics
Sunder Travel Service
First National Bank of Lawrence
Dr. Paul Kincaid and
Dr. Charles Kincard
Bishop College
Golf Course Superintendent's Association
Orthopaedic Surgery Association, P.A.
Morris Sports
Amarillo Corporation
Odd Williams
Gibson's pharmacy
Peter Tahrer
Hayes-Richardson Santee Insurance
Rep. Larry Winn
C.O. Nauman, D.D.S.
Duquesn King
Dr. Dave Heibert
Midevent Paint Distributors
Robert A. Chemical Association
Robert A. Schroeder
Mainline Printing
Carl V. Rice
Ned Cushing
A1-1 Rentals
Ethan A. Smith North
American Van Lines
W. Clarke Wescoe
Maupittour
Lawrence Track Club
Lary Rogers
Rick and Michelle
Art Datzell
Etwyn Davis
Jordan Haines
Daniel Householder
Wessley G. Chamer
Emily Pailey MkA
Thomas Van Dyke
Neison Knueger
Olympic Club
Jim Hershberger
Glenn Martin
Co-sponsor
Jim Hershberger
Glenn Martin
Nike
Bronze Medal Club George Chase Walter Sutton
Bell Lap Club
John Simpson
Richard Driscoll
Kendall Smith
Patrons of the Relays Bob Fromme
Winged Foot Club Jordan Haines
THE BOOK END
Andy Galvin
Harris Construction Company, Inc.
Harry Reasoning
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Clinton Kanag
Round Corn Dug Store
Converse wax
Deluxe Check Printers, Inc.
Kansas Alumni Club
Practice Radiays
Jupiter Omega
Mallier Furniture
Julio Meade, CLU
Guy Barnes
Guy Barnes
TRW Lawrence Cable Division
Zanda Day
Waterloo Banks, Austin,
Brown & Enochs Charsted
Dunkin Donuts
Durham International
Diamond International Lumber
& Building Materials
Wickes Lumber Company
Balmire
Burmire
Burnert Instruments
Anchor Savings Association
Michael K. Leib, C.P.A.
Gibson's Discount Center
Michael K. Leib, C.P.A.
Kinder,肢体公司
Calvin, Eddy & Kappeiman
D. Brown III, D. Brown IV
Advance Office
Inc.
Gregte Truck
Flower Shop
First National Bank of Sainta
Whelan's Home Center
The Jay Shop
The Jay Shop
Whitteenght Town Shop
All Star Daily
Wooden
Don Steffens
WarrenMcCain Mortuary
William Plaza
William Lafe
Rep. Jess M. Branson
Shannon Shepherd
Rumsey and Hooge
Wesley G. Cramer
Elwin Dees
Daniel F. Housholder
Penton Tailbott
Allen Frame
Robert A. Schroeder
Thomas Van Dyke
Cenclist Club
Ralph M. King JR.
Don Johnson
David McGrath
William Dryer
Mary A. Hughley
Eschund Schulz
Bob Creighton
Jeffrey E. Smith
Emmit Edwards
Givance Vanderwaal
George W. Wilson
Baton Club
Larry Winn
John Hagenau
Karl Hanagan
Akari Denzel
Carry D. Riggs
Carry R. Rice
V. Rice
R. Vice
Friends of the Relays
THE BOOK END
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DIET CENTER
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$10.00—guests
Tickets required for admittance, available in band office until April 20.
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Band Banquet
April 24,6:30 p.m., Holidome
In the name of Allah, the Beneficent, the Merciful.
"Think not of those who are slain in the way of Allah, as dead. Nay, they are living. With their Lord they have provision."
صلى الله عليه وسلم
THE ISLAMIC UNION OF THE IRAQI STUDENTS IN U.S.A.
جہاں جہاں
will observe the second anniversary of the martyrdom of the eminent Islamic scholar Imam Mohammad Baqir al-Sadr by presenting an analysis of the Islamic movement in Iraq
الفروع الدينية للحضارة المالية من السنة العشر الأولى
الفروع الدينية للحضارة المالية من السنة العشر الأولى
الشيعة العامة
الشيعة العامة للحضارة العامة
الناشروك بالأجلالس
Place:
JAYHAWK ROOM Main Union
وُلد فيه أحمد صالح بن علي
أحمد بن إبراهيم بن إسحاق
أحمد بن سعيد بن أحمد
أحمد بن سعيد بن عمر بن
أحمد أحمد بن الإسراء بن
إسحاق ، بنت عمرو بن أسلم وول
أحمد بن الحسين بن محمد
أحمد بن الحسين بن شيخ
أحمد بن الحسين بن محمد
وستري واسترحان واستري واستري
أحمد بن الحسين بن كثير
أحمد بن الحسين .
Time:
Saturday, April 17,1982
7:00 p.m.
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
EVERYONE IS INVITED
Here's your chance to be heard.
If you are concerned about the future of student financial aid, social security benefits to students, higher education funding, or other federal programs here is your chance to be heard.
The University of Kansas Student Senate will sponsor a reception for Congressman Larry Winn-R, who represents the Third Congressional District of Kansas this Friday evening, from 5:00 to 6:00 pm in the Kansas Room (Sixth Level) of the Kansas Union. This is an informal opportunity for you to express your concerns to the Congressman that represents Douglas County in the House of Representatives. All students, faculty, and staff are encouraged to attend.
★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★
★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★
MEET CONGRESSMAN LARRY WINN
FRIDAY, APRIL 16th, 5 to 6 pm
KANSAS ROOM in the KANSAS UNION
---
FREE ADMISSION, REFRESHMENTS SERVED
pd.for by student act. fee
University Daily Kansan, April 16, 1982
Stephan discusses legal opinions at forum
About 30 percent of the inmates at Kansas State Penitentiary do not belong in a maximum-security institution. About 40 percent of Kansas attorney general, said yesterday.
By KEVIN HELLIKER Staff Reporter
Stephen told an audience of about 30 people at Green Hall that Kansas should develop a cheaper and less severe measure for non-violent criminals than sending them to the penitentiary at Lansing.
same money to lock up a bad-catch writer as we do to lock up a murderer." Stephan said, "I don't want to say it's idiotic, but I guess I should."
The prison problem was one of many that Stephan addressed at a forum sponsored by the KU Student Bar Association. He also remarked on the need for better law enforcement in the practice flourished because Kansas suffered a shortage of law enforcers.
"I don't understand why we spend the
"The drug problem in Kansas is very, very serious," he said. "It's not the high priority in the state that it should be."
Culture show part of festival
Students of about 30 nationalities will participate in the 30th Annual International Festival of Nations and Banquet on Sunday.
Krupadanam Billa, president of the International Club, said yesterday the event was the highlight of international students' activities.
include artifacts from different cultures, with slides and films.
The banquet will include food from 11
and 12 noon, a mariachi band
will play during the dinner.
Twenty national groups will present the cultural show, which will include music, belly dancing, a Malaysian show and a Chinese show in the show of costumes of different cultures.
Tickets for the festival are $4.50. All interested persons are welcome.
STEPHAN SAID his opinion of drug laws was forged in the same way he developed many opinions—by talking with officials from other states.
There will be an exhibition at 5 p.m. in the Big Eight and Jayhawk rooms of the Kansas Union. The exhibition will
Although he once favored legalizing or decriminalizing the use of marjuana, he said, his thinking changed after he talked with officials where offenses involving marjuana had been reduced to a misdemeanor.
"They told me they thought they'd made a mistake in decriminalizing it," he said. "Their drug problems radically increased."
Stephan said that of the opinions he had issued during nearly four years as attorney general, the most popular involved a law that forbade alcoholic drinks on airplanes that flew over Kansas.
Stephan's opinion was that the law seemed ridiculous. By pointing to court cases on the issue in other states, he manages to get liquor back on flights from New York.
One of the more interesting opinions stephan said he had issued involved a statement that he did not believe.
the names of doctors who received Medicaid for performing abortions.
BECAUSE THESE doctors received taxpayers' money, Stephan said, he determined that their names should be a matter of public record.
NOW, STEPHAN is working on an antitrust case involving companies that do highway construction for the state, he said. Several companies were found guilty regularly for contracts, and altogether they pay as much as $4 million in penalties.
But, Stephan said, he was surprised when the American Civil Liberties Union, which once had supported the rights of Nazis to march in a Jewish neighborhood, said taxpayers had no right to the names of those doctors.
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The case went to the Kansas Supreme Court, which this year upheld Stephan's opinion.
But Stephan, a Republican, also is concerned with his re-election campaign. Rumors last year said he would nominate Joe Biden, dismissed those speculations in October by announcing his intention to run again for attorney general.
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Include Your Address & Check* or Money Order For $1.50 (redeemable with first stamp order)
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SPECIAL
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Flavor
$3.50
Now thru Sunday
Coke
All Dinners Include Tater Curl Fries.
Choice of Side Dish and Bread.
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No Coupons
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Now that's something to do about.
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install, remitter,
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DEN SYSTEMS
Room 1344 Roomed
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%*.
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.
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SUA
Special
Events
Do you own a Barry Manilow polyester suit? Do you love music? Have you ever wanted to work "behind the scenes"
at concerts?
If you answered all these questions correctly, then SUA Special Events could be looking for YOU. We will be interviewing for the following positions on
Mon, April 19 & Wed. April 21
Publicity Director
Security Director
Ushers Director
Stage Manager
Communications Director
Photographer
Lighting Director
Sign up for an interview time in the SUR Office.
Deadline is Friday, April 16, 5 p.m.
MIDNIGHT SNACKS
MIDNIGHT SNACKS
10 p.m. to close
Two Hamburgers and
French Fries
$1.19
Bucky's
come as you are . . . hungry
2120 WEST NINTH
Bucky's
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS THEATRE PRESENTS
THE FIRST UNITED STATES PERFORMANCE OF
CHHAU INDIAN FOLK DANCE THEATRE
STAGED BY ANDREW TSUBAKI AND A COMPANY OF SEVEN DANCERS
PERFORMANCE WILL
INCLUDE MASKS, HEAD
GEAR AND COSTUMES
GATHERED WHILE DR.
CHIAU STUDIED
CHIAU TURING
IN INDA.
SATURDAY, APRIL 17, 4:00
SWARTHOUT RECITAL HALL
MURPHY HALL
TICKETS UN SALE
IN THE MURPHY
HALL, MOY OFFICE;
ALL SEATS GENERAL
ADMISSION: $3 PUBLIC,
$1.50 KU STUDENTS,
$2 SENIOR CITIZENS,
FOR RESERVATIONS,
CALL 913/864-3982.
University Daily Kansan, April 16, 1982 Page 11
101
Page 11
Du Pont helps KU programs
By DEBBIE DOUGLASS Staff Reporter
Thanks to a grant from E.I. duPont de Nemours & Co., of Wilmington, Del., KU professional schools will be able to purchase equipment and finance student scholarships and summer grants, Marlin D. Harmony, chairman of the chemistry department, said recently.
Since the beginning of 1982, the Du Pont Co. has given the University $47,000 to support research and application in education and Kansas City, Kan., campuses.
The Kansas University Endowment Association said DuPont gave a Science and Engineering Grant of $34,000 to support KU programs in mechanical engineering, chemical and petroleum engineering, chemistry and SCoRMEBE, the University program for training and training of minority engineers.
"The Du Pont grant is of major importance to us," Harmony said. "It is one of our most sizable industry grants, and without it, we would be in danger."
HARMONY SAID Du Pont gave the
chemistry department $8,000 in unrestricted funds.
The chemical and petroleum engineering department also received $8,000 from Du Pont.
Harold Rosson, professor of chemical and petroleum engineering, said Du Pont had increased its grants to the department by $2,000 each year since
"I wish all of our financial support had increased by that ratio." he said.
Rosson said the department could operate without private support, but it would be much harder.
"Private grants give us some flexibility." he said.
THIS YEAR, the grant money will be used to buy computer terminals, Rosson said, and will also supplement university programs and students to attend national meetings.
The department of mechanical engineering received $6,000 from Du Pont.
"It's the first grant that I know of that we have received from Du Pont," John Crisp, professor of mechanical engineering, said.
DuPont has not been one of the department's main contributors in the past, he said, but, "anything we get from private industry helps."
Sim High. Get Your Career Off To A Flying Start
It takes 4 years to get a college degree. How long will it take you to get a good job? If you have it satisfied on a company yet, give your executive officer a call at a sales or an HR position and explain how the pay is excellent, and you will enjoy the prestige that gets with the silver wings of an Air Force pilot or navigator. Find out today about the Air Force flight program.
Crisp said the money might be used to purchase equipment or to help finance student and faculty travel to meetings in their disciplines.
DU PONT also gave an Occupational and Health Grant of $13,000 to support research and teaching in toxicology for the Department of Environmental University of Kansas Medical Center.
"This was one of our most significant grants," Klaassen said.
Curt Klaassen, professor of pharmacology and toxicology, said the grant was the first one Du Pont had given to his department.
Klaassen said the money would help buy chemical supplies and equipment for student research projects. Klaassen determines whether a chemical is safe.
Massachusetts in Lawrence
"Without private support and some federal support, training in toxicology would almost be impossible," Klaassen said.
ATR
FORCE
A great way of life
Join Jayhawk West
Be part of the
"1st Annual Happening"
coming in May.
"You'll like the changes!"
John Young, Sports Car Club president, said rally contestants would be provided with a list of questions and riddles that, when solved, led to the rally's finish line. Cars will leave at one-minute intervals from the O Zone parking lot near Allen Field House.
Young said anyone could enter any type of car in the rally.
Now accepting $100 relater-
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The three cars that arrive at the finish line and correctly answer the most questions will receive trophies.
KU car club to sponsor sports rally
The newly formed Jayhawk Sports Car Club will sponsor a 50-mile road rally through the streets of Lawrence at 1:30 p.m. Sunday.
Young said a navigator must accompany each driver in the rally.
PAMIE "SUE"
PAMIE SUE
HOPE YOU HAVE A
HAPPY BIRTHDAY
LOVE YA,
BRENDA "LOU"
BOOG POWELL (Former American Baseball Great). Koichi here has been giving me a new angle on baseball. It seems the game's a little different in Japan.
TWO HEAVY HITTERS TOUCH BASES ON BATS, BALLS, AND BEER.
KOICHI NUMAZAWA (Former
Japanese Baseball Great)
そう,倒えばフィールドか小さめ
ですね。
BOOG: That's right. The field is
smaller over there.
KOICH!来つり,ショートて小さめ
な日本人の体格に合わせたんです。
BOOG: Well, now that you mentioned it, I guess you guys are kinda smaller. Does that mean you drink Lite Beer 'cause it's less filling?
Boys' Doyle-Antiques
Clos Rings
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KOCHI: いかに、おいしいから酔も
んでよ。
BOOG: Tastes great? That's why I drink it, too! I guess we have a lot more in common than I thought.
KOICHI: その通り!というです,日本のチーム子に入りません。
BOOG: Me? I'm too big to play on a Japanese team.
KOCHI! さんなとこないですよ,ショートに最適です。
BOOG: Shortstop?! Very funny.
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TICKETS
$1.25 Bar Drinks 75c Draws
11 p.m.-12 a.m.
Don't Forget Happy Hour.
2 for 1s, 5-7 p.m.
Phyllis Schlafly
SUA Presents
Author of nine books and the monthly PHYLLIS SCHL4FLY REPORT.
Tues. April 20, 8:00 p.m.
Kansas Union Ballroom
ALANNA M. HILFIGER
DO WE WANT A GENDER-FREE SOCIETY?
---
1
Page 12
University Daily Kansan, April 16, 1982
'Hawks face crucial series
By MIKE ARDIS Sports Writer
The Kansas Jayhawks face a crucial four-game series with the Missouri Tigers this weekend as Kansas attempts to keep abreast of division-leading Oklahoma State and Nebraska.
The Jayhawks and Tigers will meet in double-headers on Saturday and Sunday at Quigley Field. The teams will play the double-headers will be 12:30 p.m.
Kansas, facing Missouri, has the toughest draw of the top three teams in the Big Eight this weekend. The Tigers won by 12 points from the Tigers because Nebraska
meets to sixth-place Iowa State and Oklahoma State plays cellardwelling Kansas State at Stillwater.
"MISSOURI PLAYS pretty good ball, and we hope we can beat them," Head Coach Marty Pattin said. "I'd like to have that other win at Iowa State, but we're sitting in the same position ofference." KU won three games in two double-headers against Iowa State on Monday and Tuesday.
"I don't make predictions. We're going to have to have excellent pitching this weekend to win."
Pattin will rely on pitchers Randy McInloth, 4-1, and Mike Watt, 12, in Saturday's double-header. They each picked up complete-game
victories against Iowa State on Monday.
McIntosh will pitch the opener, and Watt, who has allowed only two earned runs in his last 15 innings on the mound, will pitch the nightcap.
On Sunday, Jim Phillips, 3-3, will start the opener with either Kevin Kroeker or Dennis Copen hurling the second game.
IN LAST year's meeting between the two clubs, Missouri took two out of three on its way to the Big Eight crown. This year, however, the Tigers are in fifth place with a 2-3 record. They did not play three games on the opening weekend of Big Eight play because of inclement weather, and the Big Eight does not make up rain-outs.
CARDS &
GIFTS
... for all occasions
BARUTHINSOT
Southeast Plaza 29th & 30th
841-2900 10-Mon.Fri. 10-Sat.
S.O.B.
The school of business is sponsoring a program informing anyone interested in business career of business school requirements and opportunities.
Thursday, April 22
7 p.m. 3139 & 3140 Wescoe.
$ALPHA DELTA PI$
$ALPHA DELTA PI$
Black Diamond
APRIL THE SIXTEENTH
nineteentheseightytwo
TRAVEL CENTER
A SPECIAL YOU DON'T WANT TO MISS
TO MIAMI, TAMPA, OR ORLANDO
TRAVEL CENTER
PAN AM
AIRLINES
& THE TRAVEL CENTER
From Kansas City To...
MIAMI, TAMPA
or ORLANDO
You can fly to sunny Florida
for Only $59.00 (one way
flight price). Travel must be
made between April 25 and
May 25, 1982.
$59.00
—Please Do Not Phone in Your Reservations—Stop By Our Office.
But Hurry! While Space is Available.
Southern Hills Center) 9-5:30 Mon.-Fri. 9:30-2 Sat.
Estelle Parsons on "Miss Margarida's Way"
Written & Directed by
Robert Athayde
8:00 pm, Friday April 16, 1982
University Theatre, Murphy Hall, University of Kansas
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office
All seats reserved. Public $9 $8 $7 Student
and senior citizen discounts available
For reservations, call 913-864-3982
This program is partially funded by
the Kansas Arts Commission.
For mature audiences
Some material may not be suitable for children.
Comets win, 6-3
Nehemiah, 49ers near pact
SAN FRANCISCO—The Super Bowl champion San Francisco 49ers also announced today the signing of Remi Mangavec to the world record holder in the high hurdles.
Nehemiah and his agent, Ron Stanko,
met with Bill Wailah, 40ers coach and
general manager yesterday amid
reactions from his team he was
reached on a multi-year contract.
contract at our news conference Friday. We presented Nebenniah and his agent with a contract proposal, and they asked for time to study it."
"Nothing has been signed as yet," said a 49ers spokesman, "but we hope to announce Nehemiah had agreed to a
Nehiemh, who last played football as a wishbone quarterback for Fanwood High School in Scotch Plains, N.J., in 1977, has been sought by seven colleges. Washington, New England, Dallas, Oakland, San Diego and Pittsburgh.
In his workout for the 48ers, Nehemiah clocked 4.1 seconds for 40 yards, which would make him the fifth-best in the NFL, should he make the grade.
By United Press International
KANSAS CITY, Mo.-Yilmaz Orhan scored a goal with 38 seconds left in the game last night to cap a three-goal fourth period that enabled the Kansas City Comets to beat the Memphis Americans. 6-3.
The win, the second in a row for the Comets, allowed them to stay within striking distance of the Denver Avalanche for the final spot in the MISL playoffs. The Comets have three games left.
APPLICATIONS
for Business Manager and Producer of Rock Chalk Revue are being accepted at the KU-Y Office.
Applications are due by Wed. April 21st.
The Kansas Relays a K.U. tradition since 1925.
The Town Shop... a K.U. tradition since 1950
For thirty-two years, we've been specializing in providing the men of K.U. and Lawrence with the finest of clothing, sportswear, and accessories. As with all those who have gone before you, we're very interested in your business. Stop in.
Whitenight's Town Shop
Shop
Shop
the men's shop
839 Massachusetts
Downtown
The University Daily
KANSAN WANT ADS
Call 864-4358
CLASSIFIED RATES
one three two three four five six seven eight nine ten
10 words of power one dollar two dollars three dollars four dollars five dollars six dollars seven dollars eight dollars
10 words additional word
AD DEADLINES
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.
Monday ... Thursday 2 p.m.
Tuesday ... Friday 2 p.m.
Wednesday ... Monday 2 p.m.
Thursday ... Friday 2 p.m.
Friday ... Wednesday 2 p.m.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
ERRORS
If items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days, these ads can be placed in newspapers or simply displayed.
KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 986-4258
ANNOUNCEMENTS
PLAN TO ATTEND DISABILITY AWARENESS WEEK EVENTS, SEE THE ONCAMPUS COLUMN FOR TODAYS EVENTS.
4.16
Gem and Mineral School, April 17, 10:30 a.m.
Laboratory Building, 4-16 Falthar Ground Building, 21 Deming
PSST. Have you seen the Phyllis Phyllis Saffaly Delfy? No! Weil you can do anything you want to with it and you know what she—it asks for it to! 4-20
FOR RENT
Must see to believe. Furnished rooms with utilities paid near university & downtown.
No pets. Phone 861-3500. tf
Established *STUDENT* COOPERATIVE close to campus and downtown. Own bedroom/studio. Six bedrooms each week. $75-$125 a month, utilizing SUNFLOWER HOUSE. 83-941-61.
For rent to mature male student. Quiet,
confined office refinement apartment. Private
kitchen. Close to the Union. Heated area.
price $85-415.
HANOVEN PLACE. Completely furnished,
with a central kitchen, and 16th &
18th & 19th on Mass. Only 8 blocks from
KU. DON'T DELAY. Reserve your spat-
tle. Room size: 80 x 50 feet.
841-121-122 or 843-445-3.
Jayhawker Towers Apartments
Now taking applications for fall and sum mer leaves. KU students only.
2 Bedroom apartments on
- utilities paid
- swimming pool
- laundry *
* furnished or unfurnished *
* Office Hours:
Mon.-Fri. 8 a.m.-5 p.m.
Sat. 8 a.m.-12 p.m.
Sun. 12 p.m.-4 p.m.
1603 W. 15th
- cablevision
- laundry facilities
843-4993
Sublease at last years price 2 br. spt. complete for an appointment. Bake-dry drawing for an appointment. Call 416-798-0232.
PRINCETON PLACE PATIO APAREMENTS,
for roommate, and features wood burning fireplace,
washers/rayer, kitchen sink, fully-equipped
kitchen, 32-30 daily at 2588 Princeton Blvd. or
32-26 daily at 2588 Princeton Blvd. or
32-21 daily at 2588 Princeton Blvd. or
Available now. Two bedrooms spacious apts,
available on campus. Kitchen, heat and water included.
to campus; and on bus route 53 per month.
Campus room at 10th floor 15th & 16th
483-300. 483-306.
Live in the CHESTNAM CAMPUS HOUSE
This summer & fall. Bake a part of a
growing campus ministry. Call Alan Ro-
nek, camp minister 845-692-693.
SOUTHERN PARKWAY TOWNHOUSES,
Mith & Kaslok. If your tired of apartments
in the city, don't miss the feature 2 brs. 1½ baths, all appliances, at-
tached or unfurnished, private. We have openings now, and in the
summer and fall. Call Craig Lewra in
the office at 842-9211 to meet us about our modularly priced townhouses.
TRY COOPERATIVE LIVING. Sunflower
house. 842-9211
MED CENTER BOUND? Newly refurbished
BR Duplexes available. Call (031) 854-2511
Appliances, parking. Call (031) 854-2511
TRAILRAGE. Leasing for all -Filsh-studios,
garage spaces, houses and farmhouses.
Houses all have harvest gold appliances,
Laundry facilities on the premises, Swimming
tennis, beach & reception. On K.U. bus.
and shuttle services.
Wanted outgoing Christians and concientious students to share 5 bedroom house at Kentucky next fall & spring $150 & $180 Utilities. Utilities included. Call [davis@johnsburg.edu] 841-782-6931.
THE SUMMER PLACE!
NAISMITH HALL
1800 Nakshim Dr.
"Just Across the Drive From
the Library"
Campus
843-8559
- Private Bams
- Private Sleeping Study Areas
- Carpeting
- Portable Wash Per Week
- Air Conditioning
- Carpeting
- Fourteen Meals Per Week
- P lease Owner
• A Lease Agreement for your
- Summer Plans
- Versatility in Payment Plans
- High Rise Living With A
SAMMING PARK
And An Active Social Calendar
☐
---
For Nest 2 br. bcr. apt. convenience to shopping c/ heat. carpet & drapes, complete kitchen, garages available. Call 841-8686 for an appointment. 6-19
University Daily Kansan, April 16, 1982
Sublease Meadowbrook studio apt, Furnished. Heat & water paid. Balcony. Access from pool. May 1-July 30. Call 843-482-5820 at 6:00 p.m.
Furnished one bedroom apt. for sublease.
Excellent location to campus and downtown.
Central air heat. Available May 15. Call
440-6856.
440-3921
New orchards duplex 2 bc -Large living area Garage W/D Wookups too. $375 Available June 1. 841-8459. 4-21
Sublusea Meadowbrook Townhouse. Now thru July 31, 3 bedroom, 1½ baths,卫生房. $400/mo. + bills + $400. deposit. Cuit 841-8539 After 5:30. 4-20
Now Leasing
Avalon and Harvard Square
Apartments
1 & 2 BR*s-Furnished or
1 & 2 BR's-Furnished or Unfurnished-on Bus Route
Avaton Office-905 Avon Rd.
Open Sat. 10:4 AM - 2 PM
OR Call 841-6008
For Showings.
---
SUBLEASE - 2 bedroom, 2 bath, fully carpeted, air conditioned apt. Available June 10 (depositable with option for new lease). Book within 3 months. Call 555-850-5100. 555 after 5:00 p.m. 4-16
SUMMER SUBLEASE. May rent free, walk to campus or downtown, June & July rent negotiable 2 bedrooms, utilities reasonable Quiet. Call 817-485-360, comfortable, quiet.
WANTED FOR SUMMER and/or fall semester; two rooms to live in a mite fjord-bedroom duplex $75/month & availability. Call Me at 740-7653. Available Mornings 1-4, Call Me at 740-7653.
SUBLEASE IN STYLE for SUMMER. NEW:
Cabinette (easily made in second bedroom);
lounge (easily made in second bedroom);
study area, laundry and storage in same
room;
shelving unit; desk or table;
Lynn or Lepra at #82-6218. Sundance appraisal.
**Subliseau – May-15 Au-15, Spaciel 2 bedroom apt. Fully furnished, appliance piano, campus, Mature couple prefired. Required required. 260-395, 1055. After 5. **4-21**
Summer stuber-1 one female to share 3 bedroom townhouse, 2 bath. central a/C; 4 furnished. great location. Fall option. Sharon. #644-1401. 9:00-M. F-19. 4-19
1* Female—for June 1st-Aug. 1st, $137.50,
pey okay, garage, great duplex, 2 bedroom.
Call Barb or Linda. 841-7901. 4-16
SUMMER SULEASE-1 br. apt. three
blocks from campus. Purchased and A.C.
Only $190. 843-7237, or call collect (316)
1-49
1-190
**SUBLEASE ME. I am a two bedroom apartment, in the Malta Oak England kitchen located on the 1st floor, with large green and decorated greeties and pizza. I am a dishwasher, dryer and refrigerator. I also have water and cable TV. In included in rent. If you would like to live in my plush apartment, call 841-5833 or 843-5826 G74.
---
Kaw Valley Management Inc.
Now Leasing
Kaw Valley Management Inc.
901 KY, Suite 205
"Professional Real
Estate Management."
Furnished or Unfurnished Studios 2, 3 & 4 Excellent Location Throughout Lawrence Area
Summer sublease, large 2 bdmr. apt., 2 baths, full appliances on front door, free cable, C/A, $280 + util. 749-2419—
Koen trying. 4-20
Summer sublease. 2 BR Apt. Close to
campus. 10th Mississippi. A.C., dishwashers.
Available finals, $290. 842-2655. 4-22
Fuph 2 bdm. apt. seeks 2-3 summer sub-
lakers. A/C, dishwasher, new carpeting.
$250. mnt. 824-714-71
4-19
Submerb sublease May 15-August 15, May
right free. Furnished studio, tennis courts,
pdal. 749-2083. 4-19
Summer sublease. Fem. only. Clean, close to-kampus. Low util. 841-7086. 4-30
2 Bedroom apt. May 1, sublease with extension option in 4th floor; only靠电梯上楼。Pool. On bus line- across the street from grocery store. Call evenings. (住宿 4-20) 814-7548
1-bedroom duplex. Covered balcony. OT street parking. Walking distance to KU and downtown. Phone after 6 p.m. 843-3303.
Unfurnished two bedroom apt. for summer sublease. One block north of Kansas Union.
Cab 843-4525. 4-21
**NEXPENSIVE** MODERN I couldn't believe it. only $410, 3 bedroom, spacious. Unit or room. At least call. 749-2811 or 421-2116.
Summer sublease or June to June lease.
Large 2 bedroom apartment, d.w. a,c., pool,
heat paid, etc. near Hillcrest, walk, bike
or bus to campus. 740-0286. 4-23
Wanting to sublease bilver 2, bldm. apt., for summer. New, AC dishwasher, carpet, electric garage opener, 11 bath. Within 40 minutes of campus and dorms. 4-28 749. 134-194.
Affinative 2 bedroom apartment, unfurnished near campus $320.1 m. deposit required. Parking available. Space 3 bedroom 1st floor of house. 928 New Hampshire. 4-21
Spacious 3 bedroom 1st floor of house. 936
New Hampshire. 4-21
QUETF Meadowbrook studio to subdue, June and July, tuition to rent. $215/month, water supply. lease. ground level, lce of grass and trees, groundwater. A/C; cable. C/B. evenings, before 9 4-28
We'll pay you $20! Just substitute our two
bars from our restaurant for an optional fall renewal. It's one year old, but we're not sure what the current vision paid it. It has a dainawler, is on the bus route, and has a laundry. In the building we work.
Wanted. Female non-smoker to share 3 bedroom fully furnished, air conditioned for summer sublease. 4 blocks from the Union. Call 781-3035. 4-21
Mant rent free, Summer subsale/fall option:
Trainride 3 bedroom, 1½ bath townhouse on KU Uas route, 3 pools, tennis etc,
832-762-6
GREAT LOCATION. Sublease mod 1 bed room apartment. Summer/superfall fail 1 block from campus, walk down走廊. Rent & utilities: 749-848, after 3 & 4 week-4-20
June-July sublease 8th & Miss. 2 bdm.
duplex, air cond, furnished. $225/month.
643-5230 (eve.) 4-28
Furnished one bedroom apartment. Bills
paid. No pets. 813 Louisiana. 4-23
Available June 1, 2 bedroom furnished upstairs.
New kitchen, a/c-4 blocks from campus.
$32 per month + 1) Elec. Deposit required.
Phone 842-6707.
4-23
Summer sublease. Furnished studio apartment with A/C, pool, tennis courts. Great location. $230 + electricity. 794-656-4-30
2nd semester. #10; part. Partn. Hart.
FURNISHED STUDIO 12 month or summer leases. $225. 841-7575. HOUGHTON
2400 Alabama. tt
Apt1. sublease. 2 bdmh. Part. furn. Cheap
uill. $270/mo. 749-1984. 4-20
**LNG—1** BR. house. Full finished basement.
1½ bath. A/C Gas heat & water. Available in May. 842-3020. 4-27
1 BLOCK FROM KANSAS UNIS. Furnished apartment for two, grad. or serious upper class students, employees only. 600 hours. Dep. Lease. Expire May 4, 2018. 841-352-2551 after 5 p.m. 4-22
For sublease in May, 1 BR Apt. Close to campground 841-8252 weekdays in pm. weekdays in pm.
4 btrm. house 2 blocks N.E. of stadium.
8 btrm. house 1 blocks Apt. avt.
June 1, 749-6166
4-21
Furnished 1 bdrm, central air, summer subu-
lease. $125 mo. Married student only. 841.
6485 by May first. 4-21
MASTER BEDROOM AVAILABLE starting
with free utilities. Call 841-1644 for detai
Sleeping rooms 1-3 bedroom apartments.
Bedroom 4. Call 842-8971. Leave
until room or full year.
SUBLEASE with option to renew one bed room, fireplace, private fenced patio with wall and deck, two bathrooms, 2 pools, 4 tennis courts, beautiful outdoor landscaping. Call 8-158 after 8 p.m.
2 bedroom furnished mobile homes $153
and $215 per month. Available May 1st.
Clean, quiet location. No pets. Jayhawk
842-7877 or 842-0812
4-30
Sublease large 2 BR apartment near stadium. Water, gas paid, central air. $200
841-8235. 4-29
Roommate for May 1. $110/mo, plus utilities.
Serious students preferred. Come take a look. 842-0038. 4-22
Summer sublease: 1 BR apt, in 4-plus,
2-free suite. $145/month. 740-696-400
utilities free. $145/month. 740-696-400
Sublauze, QUAIL, CREKE 3 BDMR, speacialized apartment. Unfurnished carpet & drapery. Fitness center. Swimming, tennis, golf, and clubhouse. All rooms equipped with electric椅. A15163 5163 4-22
FOR SALE
**Western Civilization Notes.** On sale on Sale make sense out of Western Civilization notes. 2) As study guide. 3) For class preparation. 4) For exam preparation. 5) For class preparation. 6) For Criticism. 7) Criticism. 8) The lookbook, and Great Books. 9)
Alternator, starter and generator specialist.
Parts, service, and exchange units. BELL
AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-9069, 3890
W. 6th.
Beautiful bald evergreens reasonably priced
Hummel's Rand Tree Farm--Eudora--Phone
542-3139 or 542-3349 4-20
Stereo-Telivisions-Video Recorders. Name brands only. Factory sealed cartons. Lowest prices in the K.C. area. Use your best price. Call Total Sound Distributors 812-697-0300. 4-30
BOKONOM IMPORTS Large selection Ha-
dak 841-3065. The original source. 12 B-20
841-3065
1579 MAZDA RX7-GS PURRFECT 843-825-40
843-825-40
MAZDA RX7-GS PURRFECT 843-825-40
p77 Vega Bravo Moved 2200 miles Ex-
piration condition 844.102 4-25
1967 Blue Merc. Cressi, 289 el., auto. A/C/-
Cassette/cassette, runs good* Call Jack
A/C/
Stereo, very loud, 200 watt inch speakers hooked up to a two-month-old OV4 amp only $450. Call 864-692-4068 or clipped. Dual 222 resonant duals 4-16
1981 Suzuki GSA450T Black, beautiful,fulgur-
gage rack, backrest, crash bars, must-sell-
getting married. 482-4864, after 4:00 p.m.
4-19
Sale—Government Surplus Property. Electric
typewriters, 15 to choose from IBM, Royal,
Olivetti, 1st come 1st serve. 841-4144. 4-19
Woman's wedding and engagement bands,
appraised at $950, will sell for $800. Call
*I*nda evenings. 864-2207. 4-16
19781; Honda CX500, fairing, trunk, crash-
bar. Well-cared for. $1695. Call Charlie at
842-4400. 4-20
1981 GN400X Suzuki. NEW $1895. Asking
$1200. Only 37 miles. Call 842-7679 at 6
p.m.
4-27
MICROSCOPES FOR SALE—One Nikon
($500). One Swift ($250). Both are perfect for med school. Contact Jeb Brown. (913)-
432-610-891.
4-16
SPRING LAMBS. Organically grown. Ready.
Brown, RS. Beef also; 119-736-628-07
McLouth, RS. Beef also; 119-736-628-07
1980 Dataun 200SX PS, PB, AT, AM/FM
stereo. 37,000 miles. 843-8910. After 6 p.m.
4.10
1980 HONDA CX400 DELUXE shaft drive,
luggage rack, 2,600 MILES, 835-483-7250,
2,600 MILES, 835-483-7250
1976 GT 750 Suniaki, Loeks & rune grea! great!
1976 GT 750 Suniaki, Loeks & rune grea! great!
Seating, touring and seal training, back bars,
back seat upholstery, rear bench seat
80 Honda 750K 8000 miles - many extra-
charges 842-731-763, eagerness 4-19
good condition 76 ACM Hornet hatchback
unused under $1,000. Under $1,000
8211 or 841-211-6
4-21
8211 or 841-211-6
Bookcases, low as $2.00, I also build stereo
bookshelves. (I'll put a photo of the
machine. Michael Stough 9 W 31b) W 31b - 843-892-9
843-892-9
TENNIS RACKETTS - Head, Wilson, Danley.
BOWS but you hit it in good condition.
Wilson buys it. In good condition.
1077 Pontiac Stinger Gold with 4 new
cars in good shape $550 Call Kent at
212-366-8740
Convertible 71. Olds 442. Must see to appreciate. Taking offers. 845-350, days. 842-7726, after 5:30 weekends. 4-21
1978 Honda 450-4K, 8.000 miles, excellent
condition, Black, 1200.00 with crash bar.
842-7485. 4-19
For Sale: 1979 RM125N, Great shape, Super fast! Fphone: 841-8447
4-21
Kitchen table with 4 chairs. Good condition.
Call 841-4871 after 5 p.m. 4-20
Dahlquist DQ-10 speakers—Need to sell.
Contact Tiff 843-5770. . . . .
Air conditioner, 5,800 BTU G.E. Almost
air $150.00 Call anytime 842-0388 842-0388
1982 HONDA XL500R, Street and Trail.
Must sell, best offer, 884-6062. 4-21
Marantur stereo, BSR turntable, speakers
manual refrigerator for Wicklow
rocking chair cks
1967 Mustang, 6-cylinder, a.c. good,
1987 Mustang, 6-cylinder, manifold, a.c.
1990 $190 - 842-135-061, weekend
*A+* 4-50
*B+* 4-50
Trek bike, blue, Reynolds frame, campanole
gears and brakes. Contact Tiff, 843-570-7
372.
90 a. farm; 600 a. school; 35 a. waiver
675 a. Clinton; 418 a. Clinton; 875 a. $175 - 913-233-8033 / events/vee-
nments
FOUND
Found, puped. In front of Lippincott Hall on Friday. 841-8072 or 843-7641-4-16
One umbrella, Call to identify. Suzy, 841-
3095 4-16
3 master loader in Computer Center parking lot on 4/14/82-Ball 841-0477. 4-20
On Friday, 8:48 to 10:02 in front of Marvin
One roll exposed film in front of Marvin
HELP WANTED
Houli Hall Tuesday. Call 864-5842. 4-19
Found. Man's watch — In Wescos, Identity
Found: Man's watch—In Wescoe. Identity to claim- 864-306 4-19
Found. ladies watch—on Naismith Drive.
Near Robinson. 864-6835. 4-19
Found: Man's watch—In Wescoe. Identify
to claim: 864-3061. 4-19
First Christian Church (Disciples of Christ)
First Christian Church (Disciples of Christ)
For the first-time position of college minor
co-ordinator. The position will be appo-
nied by the Faculty Chair for $2,500-$3,000 per year salary beginning in
the summer of Christian belief including a
timen of recommendation, should be mailed
to 1000 Kentucky, Lawrence, KS 60044
April 23, 1992 Inquiries must be
4-16
Programmers. Local Company needs part-time programmers for microcomputers. We can supply equipment. Send resume to P.O. Box 389, Lawrence. Attention: 4-30
New Wave/Progressive dance hand sewing
Workshop on progressive dancer's
Bronx Call 842-795-2468, 842-795-4199
Lead Guitarist needed for established pro-
fessional counterpoint group. Group S.
842-795-4199
Are you commuting to/kampus Kansas City?
If so, I can help pay part of your expenses.
Please contact me at Mid Center. For information contact
Mid Center.
For special requests call 320-8456, 320th and Olatte, KC, KS, 66105,
Fax 424-8458.
We offer professional services on all paint and SUNDRIES to anyone who wants to paint houses for a summer job. We use state-of-the-art procedures and techniques and carry materials directly from the manufacturer, please come in person to the Davis paint店, 918 Massachusetts 4-19
Position Available. 5 Graduate Teaching Grounding in women's studies scholarship with teaching experience in Women's Studies job description and application procedures contact Diane McCermott, 4-0411-Dilea for submission; April 19, 1828. An equal opportunity employer.
Summer Jobs National Park Co.'s. 21 Parks,
500 Openings. Complete Information $5.00.
Park Report. Mission Mtn. Co., 651 2nd Ave.
W.N. Kallin. MT 59901. 4-19
European, personable, waitresses wanted
for training, hospitality, consultation,
tip, compensation and incentive奖金. Apply
to the following job positions:
1. **Coffee Shop Worker** (NY, NY)
2. **Hotel Manager** (NY, NY)
SUMMER CAMP JOBS in the Northeast,
Snd. camp addressed, stamped envelope to
Midwest Camp Consultants, 1785 Red Cott,
Maryland Hills, MO 60432.
4-22
WANTED EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR for student enrollment, responsible for student association. Responsible include coordination of activities on several unit-related topics; research and fiscal affairs of the association, research, tutoring and lobbying on issues related to the association; full-time position; send resume. No experience in education or higher education. Topека, Kansas 66231. Attn: Chris Graves. #4-82-8 Equal Opportunity Employer. #1-46-16
LOST
"Iimo the eei" recognizeb by purple helmet and live longitudinally running even slowly unaware meaning near 1255 West Kansas immediately near 9615 ask for P.J. urantz .. 4-16
Lost—Lady Seiko watch, white face, black roman numerals. Sentimental value—reward. 842-3281. Tracy. 4-20
ost, large key ring, Friday afternoon, near
bobinson gym. Reward if found—call 749-
278, evening.
4-16
Lost Wednesday—glasses in black carrying case. If found, please phone 749-2484. 4-21
PERSONAL
Instant passport, visa, ID, & resume photographs. Customized visas, b/w color. Phone: 791-4911. 791-6411.
Say it on a sweatshirt with custom silk-screening 1 to 1000 shirt art by Swells 749-1611. tt
Skillie's liquor store serving U-Daly since 1949. Come in and compare. Willford Skillet教材 1906. Mass. 843-8186. **tf**
The University Daily Kanasa is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Opportuity institutions are sought from all qualified people regardless of race, religion, color, sex, disability, national origin, age, or ancestry.
Paid Staff Positions Business Manager, Editor
The Kansai is now accepting applications for the Summer and Fall Semester Business Manager positions. Students need paid positions and require some newspaper experience. Application forms are available in the Student Senate Office, 105 B. Flint Hall; or the Student Organizations and Activities, 220 Strong Hall; and in Room 200 Flint Hall. Completed applications are in 200 Fliatt by 5:00 p.m., Monday, April 19
HEADACH, BACKACHE, CORREKT NEEK,
LEG PAIN? Find and correct the CAUSE
of the problem. Dr. Maj. McRuith 389-7425.
Accepting Blue Cross and Lone Star insurance.
The Kegger—Weekly Specials on Kegs!!
Call 841-9450-1610 W. 23rd.
For your party clothes, formal or casual,
10.5-3.5 M; 10.5-3.5 F; 10.5-3.5 Sat. Open UH.
Fall/Winter M-F; 10.5-3.5 Sat. Open UH.
MARY KAY COSMETICS—Full-time beauty consultant. 842-6641.
Remember . . . mother loves you, show her how you feel this Mother's Day. Swell's Studio for portraits of fine quality, satisfaction guaranteed, 789-611. 4-30
COMPRESIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES
PREFEMINISTE pregnancy testing; early and advanced out patient abortion; gynecology contrast, contraceptive & Roe, Overland Tank, 913) 642-3000
(913) 642-3000
Remember, O munt gracious Virgin Mary; that never was it known that anyone who said, "I will die," uninformed imbalanced the intercession was left unadmitted. Inherited by this confidence, I few to thee, that I may not have been wrong, and I stand afraid and sorrowful. O Lady of the Word Intermediate, does not my petition Amen.
Stereo-Televisions-Video-Recorders. Name brands only. Factory sold carded cartons. Lowest prices in the K.C.A. Get your best offer. Tall Sound Test Console 913-854-0300. 4-30
Wanting to talk with someone? Gay & Leabin Peer counselors available through headquarters (811-2345) or information center (864-3068) just call.
Coors 16 gal $38
8 gal $25.50
Busch 16 gal $38
8 gal $24.50
Budweiser 16 gol $39
Coors Lite 16 gal $38
Established hand looking, for male/female lead singers and lead guitar players. Drummer, guitar and Keyboards. Immediate Need. Contact info 845-748-1068, then leave name & phone.
Michelob 16 gal $44.50
8 gal $29.95
Old Milwaukee 16 gal $29.95
Pabst 16 gal $33.95
(prices include complete CO $ ^{2} $ tapping equipment)
Exciting jobs at Lake Tahoe. Send 500 to
Tahoe Jobs, P.O. Box 7244, Katsua City, MO
64113.
4-22
808 W. 23rd 841-4420
Spring formula. Baird's Second Hand Rose.
515 Indiana. Open till 5 p.m. 842-7460. - 4-30
Vegetarian Lunch, 11:30-1:30. Mon.-Fri,
749-1517.
1
Personal problems? Concerns? Confidential Professional Counseling. Specializing in life changing skills. Free initial consultation.
841-4144. 4-26
Wanted single female who enjoy a good time. Someone not hung-up on having a meaningful relationship so you can answer her questions. You should we should get to know each other better. I are a real doll and waiting for you. Performance classes in Boca Raton 25& iowa. Aik for Big John. 4-16
PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH-
RIGHT, 843-4821. tf
West Coast Saloon
You get more for less,
for longer at the Coast.
25' Draws
NOON-6 p.m.
EVERY FRIDAY
2222 IOWA 841-BREW
Get ready for the lazy, GATOR date of friends (Nike, Bost, Sportstown, Calvin Klein) at Ripley's Amphitheatre in April at Avamar (things!) are waiting during April at Avamar and are a bang. ALL MERCHANDISE IS 15% OFF Club or Golf Club, *mile west of Kascal* Club or Golf Club, *8:00 a.m., to 8:00 p.m., 7 days a week.*
Have the best seat at K.U. sporting events—Sirit Square tryouts, April 25th Sirt Square tryout information meeting, Thursday, 15:50 15:50 Jayhawke Room, Kroom, Union 4-20
Join the Christian Alliance for Obfuscation!
Don't just stand on a corner and scream
ancient myths. Watch ads. 4-16
SPECTRUM OPTICAL. Bring in your Dr's prescription or耳鼻喉专家, fixing knoxes. Free adjustment and lower frames available. Com-mputerized. Open 10-30, M-F. 1113 4 B. Th.
$6.95 Per Day SPECIAL
LEASE-A-LEMON
Rentany car (Mon, Tues, W
$6.95 Per Day.
$60 Per Week
$25 Per Month
Rent any car (Mon., Tues., Wed.)
Cannot be combined with any other special Airs are mechanically sound, state inspected clean & ready to rent. We accept cash, checks via mastercard, 749-4252
MASSAGE The Human Body has 640 important pressure points. Massage the body's muscles for people to maintain excellent muscle condition & relaxation. 423-842-1588 4-20
Applications at the KLV office for Business Manager and Producer of Rock Chalk Review. Interviews on April 23. For more information, 844-361-761. 4-16
Rick Springfield Concert Tickets for sale.
1-299-8324. Mike.
4-19
praclay, April 25; 8:30-9:30, Council Room, 864. Register for the event. "The Student Assistance Center, 864."
Pl Beta Phi
Car Wash
Sunday April 18,
11-5 at Kroger
$1.25 Cars
$1.75 Trucks
Helmut Harry, you chuck, haven't seen you in a week, where is Elmo L. Elson? Just remember. Buckets count to 80 and the numbers (59-10) represent longitudinally, P.J. & T.Q. 4-16
Looking for someone to take a coast to bicycle trip this summer. Phone 811-256-4093.
Blessings on the Oread, bringer of good cheer. Surely the stars smile upon her. 4-20
good condition, 842-6212 or 842-8519. 4-21
The maken called the Starchild watch the stars; and now she shall listen at sunrise. Our paths shall跟随 Dawnwalker. 4-16
Leave your a mark at KU: Vote IMPRES-
SION: April 21, 22. 4-22
THE ETC. SHOP 10 W. 9th. has a aislement of mini-blanks, wrap blanks, and Lauren Petry pants. For guys we also have dinner jackets & tuxes.
Drafting (charts, maps, etc.) 6 years experience, competitively priced. Also script lettering for certificates. 841-7944. 4-21
Schneider Wine & Keg Shop—The finest selection of wines in Lawrence—largest supplier of strong kegs. 1610 W. 23rd. 843-3212.
Sun-sun. Congratulations on the big 20. No more
kids to hang out with! Take the kids for a better roommate (roommates). This is one of the best rooms in town that it will be even greater. Happy Birthday to my beloved sister. I'm grateful women's love to make a man." †Thum Thum
*You are so funny.*
**STUDENT NURSING HOME AIDES:** Share your experience in nursing home readiness. Our occupational organizer will provide training and organizational support. **NURSING HOMES:** need you input on conditions and quality of care. All staff members must be certified to Work or call us at KINI, 92715 St. Mackenzie Rd., KOHLE, 66444 (953) 844-3028 or 4-16-843-7107
SERVICES OFFERED
Party Warrior—a year ago, I was stepping on your电位 A-GD. trees. We've made some good times since. St. Louis, we'll be coming. Love Hollywood. 4-16
Another Encore exclusive:
Professional Stringing Tennis and Racquetball
Best Prices in town. Bike 842-5521 or
*4-30*
*62-5521*
WRITING A RESUME? What to say? How to say? I7 to say! Stop By the House of Uber and up our *F* house on resume for our *F* house in Massachusetts, 8-4 M-F 9-3 Sat, NOON-Sun 3
Omaha RIDERS needed Leaving evening
Aug 14 - May 9 Maple Shade 4-19
841-0706 fax
ENLARGEMENTS
Graceful Life
Vineyard & Ranch
Thanks ROCKY and KEV THE REV for
performing on the WALMERS and associated
formations. Thanks all the WALMERS and
associated for showing up. 1m Off!
woodly-the wood will do me 4-16
DTR
Encore Copy Corps
25th & Iowa
842-2001
GRADUATE STUDENTS THERIS COPERS
qualify quality based on total volume of
work completed. The ship that can offer variabl e reduction in the word |恩来 Copy Corp. 8th & 9th edn.
GINA AND SHELLY will to clear up any confusion they may have created. The party is TONGHT. For all practical purposes, the players provided shorts of 4-16 attempted.
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, 25th & Iowa. 4-30
WOMEN'S GROUP STARTING THE WEEK
Of April 19th. 1) Women's Support and
Assistance Group; 2) Training Group 3) Wellness Walking Call;
3) Training Group 4) Jury or Drug Case
2517 ICT Program 8-16
RESUMES - Professional; students' renames a speciality 841-254 4-30
LEARN TENNIS from experienced instructor in small groups with other K.U. students or private lessons 842-6713 after 6:00 p.m. **tf**
MOPED RIDERS’ It’s time to get your bike tuned up for the season. Experienced cycle mechanic will do tune-ups or repairs at reasonable rates. Call Jerry 681-3425. - 4:22
JOBS! Get the one you really want. Learn 5 steps to a better resume. Include sample resumes. $10. P.O. Box 731, Shawne Mission, KS. KG201. 4-19
Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms,
graphics, editing, *M*-correct. Selectric.
Call Ellen or Jean Ann 841-2722. tt
TYPING
It's a Fact, Fast, Affordable, Clean, Typing,
843-5820.
Experienced typist. Term papers, throw, all macalluselle. IMC. Correcting Tablet. Elite or Pica, and will correct spelling. Phone 843-9526 Mrs. Wright. **tf**
Experienced typetist. Theses, term papers,
etc. IBM Correcting Selective. Call Sandy
after 5 p.m. 748-8818. tf
*TYPIING PLUS*. Theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications, resume. Assistance with composition, grammar, spelling, punctuation, and sentence formation. Foreign students or Americans. 814-8254.
Experimenter tynist will type letters, letters, hats and capitals to correct corrections as selected. Call Dona at 845-724-6744.
TIP-TGP TYPING—experienced typist—IBM Correcting Soleastic II; Royal Correcting SE 3000 CD. 843-5675. **tf**
Experienced typic -Desis, dissertations,
term papers, mime. IBM correcting selecible.
Barb, after 5 p.m. 842-2310. **tf**
For PROFESSIONAL. TYPING Call Myra.
841-4990. ff
IRON FENCE TYPEP SERVICE. Evenings
842-2507. ff
Experienced typist will type term papers, thesis, dissertations, books, etc. Have IBM self-correcting Selecitic II. Call Terry 842-7541 anytime or 843-2671.
MAGIC FINGERS TYPING SERVICE. 843-
6129. 4-30
Fast, accurate and experienced typist will type your papers. Reasonable. Call 842-8091. 4-30
AFPENDABLE QUALITY for all your typing needs: themes, dissertations, resumes, charts, mailings, misc. Call Judy 842-7945 after 6:00 p.m.
professional typing. Differences in the
professional typing of English and
Selective Selective. Deb 943-9029.
4-56
Fast, accurate, professional typing. Theses.
Fresh, dynamic, professional typing.
grammar. 943-0288 after 5.
4-22
Quality typing and word processing avail-
able. Knox Copy Corp 2952 and Sow
848-2901.
Shakespeare could write, Elvis could wiggle,
my talent, typing. Call 842-0043 after 5:00
and weekends.
For a good type call Debby for dissertations,
thesis, term papers, letters etc. at 749-4736.
4-30
Graduate students tired of typing, retyping or editing a document and want to save time and money by word processing it. Call 843-2501 for more information.
Would you like them to teach you the basics, etc. Call 843-2501.
Formal medical research secretary will type term papers, themes, books, mixe. Call Nancy, 811-5802.
Experienced typist. Will correct punctuation and spelling. Call events and weekends: 4-26
*****7620.
Word, Processing and Typing. Straight
matter, forms, graphs. Reasonable rates.
Urd.= 30 pgs. overnight service. Melanie.
482-837-554, evening service. 4-23
WANTED
India cotton dresses, skirts and blouses
Just arrived. Discount prices. At the IN-
TREATMENT & E-7. Bunch on Thursday.
1:20 MONTH through 8 FRI. and until
4:06 on Thursdays.
Roommate for May 1, $110/mo. plus utilities.
842-0038.
4-21
**WANTED:** B. NON-SMOKING Rooms to be
occupied. Room numbers: 942-956-4-35
or suburbials 942-956-4-250.
Female roommate needed to share 2 bdms
utilities. $100 per month.
utilities 864-1902
Wanted outgoing Christians and concientious students to share 5 bedroom house at 14th & Kentucky next fall & spring $180-$240. Utilities. Units included. Cf Darryl Darry 814-7692.
SUMMER ROOMMATE. Furnished apartment very close to campus. May move in after Graduation. Rent + 1/2 utilities 842- 0177 anytime.
Responsible Female roommate—2 bdrm. Apt.
for fall and spring semester. Call Liz, at
749-3619.
4-16
Female housemate for 3 bedroom house 1 block N. of stadium. Serious students, pre-4-28
841-6545.
Responsible female to share 3 bd. room, on bus or buste. $116 monthly + 1/3 utilities.
June 8 to May 8 or this summer only.
822-5200
4-20
Female roommate May 15-July 31. Owner
room with private $2, bath and study loft.
Wafer Dryer included. $133 + 1/3 lift
4-21
841-4178
Roommates(m) to walk Trralltire apartment for summer. On bus route, pool. A/C/at. Free May rent; no gas or water bills. To inquire please for Steve or Bob. 843-849-894.
Dependable roommate wanted to
share large furnished 2 bdm. apartment
on bus route. Call Linda, 749-1407. 4-19
bus route. Call Linda, 749-1407. 4-19
2 female roommates for apartment 2 blocks
from KU Med. Center, summer and or next
year. Call Jan. 841-8933. 4-26
Two semi-private females looking for roommate
on 3rd floor, 210 West 45th St,
May-Aug '19 - May '20 **89 month** + 1/3 utility
charge.
Person to rent master bedroom of a large 3 bedroom mobile home starting with the summer session $10.90/month with free utilities CALL 411-1434 for more info. 4-30
BUY. SELL, or FIND your pot of gold with a KANSAN CLASSIFIED
Classified Headin Write Ad Here.
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 sales power!
15 words or less $2.25$ 2 times 3 times 4 times 5 times
Abbreviated words .02 .03 .04 .05 .06
Classified Display:
1 col. x 1 inch—$4.00
Page 14 University Daily Kansan, April 16, 1982
Scoreboard
Basketball
NBA STANDINGS
Eastern Conference
Atlantic Division
Team W L Pct. GB
158 64 3.01 -
Philadelphia 42 74 790 -
Washington 42 32 535 20
New Jersey 42 32 535 20
Illinois 33 47 413 20
33 47 413 -
Western Conference Midwest Division
Milwaukee...54 18 675
Atlanta...51 39 512
Detroit...30 47 13
Boston...32 45 428
Chicago...39 65 19
Houston...32 65 628
San Antonio 47 33 588 ---
Houston 45 33 588 ---
Dallas 45 35 263 ---
Kansas City 28 52 350 19
Dallas 28 52 350 19
Dallas 28 52 350 19
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Los Angeles 55 25 688
Seattle 51 35 408
San Francisco 51 45 10
Golden State 45 35 563
Portland 45 35 103
Detroit 17 64 20 38%
*BEST OF BOWL*
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Indiana 108, Atlanta 102
Detroit 120, Cleveland 110
San Diego 129, Portland 123
Hockey
TROCKEY
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Divisional Finals
Best of Seven
patrick Division New York Rangers 5, New York Islanders 4
Adams Division
Boston 4, Quebec 3 (Boston leads series 1-4)
Norris Division
Chicago 5, St. Louis (C Chicago leads series 1-4)
Smythe Division
Vancouver 3, Los Angeles 2 (Vancouver leads series 1.3)
MISL STANDINGS Eastern Division
Team W L Pct. GB
New York 33 17 .625
Lilienthal 12 17
Ballimore 24 17 .385
Buffalo 23 18 .361
New Jersey 14 18 .300
Dallas 16 14 .300
Philadelphia 10 28 .344
St. Louis 27 13 575
Minnesota 24 18 690
Memphis 18 21 37
Denver 13 25 379
Kansas City 13 25 379
Kansas City 14 27 391 12 %
Kansas City 14 27 391 12 %
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Kansas City 6, Memphis 3
Baltimore 8, Cleveland 3
Baseball
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Eastern Division
| Team | W | 2 | Pct. | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Cleveland | 3 | 2 | 650 | 0 |
| Milwaukee | 3 | 2 | 600 | 1 |
| Detroit | 3 | 4 | 429 | 1 |
| Toronto | 3 | 4 | 429 | 1 |
| New York | 2 | 3 | 400 | 1 |
| Baltimore | 2 | 4 | 333 | 1½ |
| Washington | 2 | 4 | 333 | 1½ |
Chicago 5 0 0 1,000
Kansas City 6 0 0 167
Kansas City 6 2 681
Minnesota 5 4 356
Nebraska 5 4 360
Texas 2 3 202
Texas 2 3 202
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Minnesota 11, Oakland 2
Detroit 4, Toronto 2
Chicago 8, Boston
Miami 10, Miami 1
California 5, Seattle 2
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Eastern Division
Team W W L Pet. GB
New York 6 1 852
Newark 9 2 852
Milwaukee 3 2 600
Pittsburgh 3 2 600
Chicago 3 2 383
Philadelphia 3 2 383
Atlanta 8 0 0 1,000
Los Angeles 8 0 5 300
Los Angeles 4 3 449 4%
San Francisco 3 4 429 4½%
San Diego 3 4 429 4½%
San Diego 3 4 250 4½%
RIG EIGHT STANDINGS
VESTERDAY 12 & HOURS
Philadelphia 8, New York 4, 13 innings
Pittsburgh 4, Montreal 3
St. Louis 6, Chicago 1
San Diego 2, Los Angeles 9
Team W 8 4 4 Pet. GB -
Nebraska 8 4 4 867 -
Oklahoma State 5 3 5 675 -
Kansas 5 3 529 1%
Okahanna 5 3 454 1½%
Missouri 2 4 400 2¼%
Iowa state 2 8 433 2%
Kansas 2 8 250 2
Our Springtime Collection is in at MODE O'DAY 749-520-836
For details, contact Nunemaker Center,
864-4223 or the College Office, 864-3661.
EARLY-ADVISEMENT this semester will enable you to skip some of the enrollment maze next fall.
The 80's A New Era of Discovery What Does It Hold For You?
AN INVITATION TO ALL LA & S UNDERGRADUATE STUDENTS
You are cordially invited to make an appointment for an EARLY-ADVISING session with your academic adviser before the semester ends. You may contact either your adviser or your adviser's departmental office to schedule an appointment.
IN THE Jim Bauch decathlon, sophomore Gary Kinder of Mississippi scored 7,565 points to win the event, and junior Derek Krause of Southern Illinois' John Sayre, who scored 7,511. Kinder and Sayre, with third place finisher John Harrel of
A. D. C.
And that's exactly what she did. Mortimer, the only member of the KU women's track team competing in the heptathlon, swept the last four events, including all three times to win by a score of 81-76 against Blessing Gillespie with a scant 10 points. —5,149 to 1,393.
- Armageddon! Are We Living In The Last Days?
A.
Mortimer comes back to win heptathlon
By DAVE McQUEEN Sports Writer
"I thought she had a good chance," Coffey said. "Bev was just determined and she did a real好 job. She knew she would well to catch the leader and she did."
Mormon won't have much of a chance to celebrate her victory. This morning, she's scheduled to run in the two-mile relay.
After the first day of competition Wednesday in the heptathlon at the Kansas Relays, Mortimer was in third place, 240 points behind Kathy Gillespie
For Jim Boushka, however,
yesterday was a long day. He did win
the discus, but he finished last in every
other event.
"I knew I had to beat her in the last events, but I didn't know how many points she had," she said. "I really
"I knew that I would have to come in here relaxed and ready to do the best that I could," she said.
Bev Mortimer certainly had her work cut out for her yesterday afternoon.
"It's different," he said. "I don't think I did very well. I'm just going to write it off to experience. I just had a bad day."
FOR KINDER, whose final point total was 15, she first hit the ground on an annual experience.
"She certainly did really well today," Coffey said. "You couldn't ask for anything more—but we will because she can improve her times in some of the events. But that should come along as the year progresses.
"I was surprised I had the lead after she wilted," she said. "I usually wanna down the list." Kitten
In the decathlon, Kinder was in the lead after the second event and never looked back. After winning the shot put and the high jump and taking third in the 100-meter dash Wednesday, he won the javelin with an impressive 215-6 throw and placed third in the 110-meter high hurdles and the discus.
- Creation Or Evolution?
ALTHOUGH SHE was down considerably after the first day, Mortimer still thought she had a chance at winning.
Carla Coffey, KU women's track
champion and Mortimer's
performance yesterday.
Don't Miss Nick Pappis
Sat. Kansas Union Forum Room 7:00 p.m.
Sun. Kansas Union Forum Room 11:00 a.m.
Mon. Kansas Union Parlor A 7:00 p.m.
Tues. Kansas Union Pine Room 7:00 p.m.
At last year's KU Relays, Kinder was low on the list of competitors. In 12th place after the first day, he managed to finish fourth.
LIKE MORTIMER, Coffey wasn't discouraged by her first-day standing.
"I'll probably just go out and get an ice cream cone," she said.
It was in the last two events that Mortimer set her personal records. In the javelin, she had a throw of 117-11, seven feet better than Gillespie's. Then she ran a 2:16.9 in the 800-meters to win that event.
But while she did win the meet, her second heptathlon victory ever, she misused qualifying for the NCAA indoor championships by only 51 points.
KU's one entrant in the decathon, Jim Bousha, finished last in the eightman field with 5,816 points.
Colorado State, qualified for the NCAA championships with their marks.
Mortinie's charge at the time sheWednesday, the day the day, the 200-meter dash. She started out yesterday by winningthe long jump. Her 17-11 mark in that event was her best leap in two years andher second in an inch fromperusal best.
didn't think about winning the meet, I just wanted to qualify for nationals."
Maranatha Ministries
Wichita State hammers men's tennis team
By GARY GRIGGS Sports Writer
"They are definitely the toughest year," Head Coach Brad McGrath said.
Wichita State's men's tennis is ranked 19th in the latest college tennis poll. The Kansas Jayhawks found out Wednesday afternoon that the ranking was no fluke and they did it the hard way, losing 9-0 at Wichita State.
Senior Ed Bolen said it was simply a
case of the Jayhawks being outclassed by the Shockers.
"Their whole team is made up of all foreigners, guys who are 25 and 26 years old." Bolen said. "Some of them even have international experience. There is just no way we can compete with that kind of experience."
The Jayhawks, now 4-9, will return to conference action today when they play Iowa State in a 2 p.m. match at KU. Tomorrow, they will play Kansas State
In other action this weekend, Iowa
State and Missouri meet at 10 a.m. State and Kansas State will play tomorrow.
Last year, the Jayhawks defeated K-State, 6-3, and lost to Iowa State, 7-2. However, the Wildcats defeated KU last fall, 7-2.
"I really don't know that much about Iowa State," McGrath said, "but I do know that they have beaten KSU, 8-1, this spring.
The Jayhawks are trying to snap a five-match losing streak. Last weekend, they dropped conference encounters to Oklahoma State, Missouri and Colorado. They lost to Northwest Missouri State on April 3.
"I'm looking forward to a real competitive and close match with them."
"It's not that we've been playing that poorly, because we haven't," Bolen said. "We've just been outclassed this past week.
Drinking Myth of the Week
"I DON'T KNOW ANY ALCOHOLICS."
"I DON'T KNOW ANY ALCOHOLICS." Maybe you just don't know you know any alcoholics. Some of your best friends may have drank problems. They don't seem "different." And they usually try to hide their illness, even from themselves. About 1 of every 10 executives has a drinking problem.
The Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong, 864-4064
MISS. STREET DELI
041 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., Apr. 14
thru
Apr. 18
No coupons
accepted with
this offer
Nada.
If you're a senior and have the promise of a $10,000 career-oriented job, do you know what's stopping you from getting the American Express Card?
You guessed
Nothing.
Because American Express believes in your future. But more than that. We believe in you now. And we've proving it.
A $10,000 job promise. That's it. No strings. No gimmicks. And this offer is even good for 12 months after you graduate.
in good for 12 months or you guessed
But why should you get the American Express Card now?
Because the Card is great for shopping.
Whether it's a new suit for the job or a new stereo for home, the American Express Card is welcomed at the finest stores all over the country. And even if you need furniture for your place, you can do it with the Card.
Of course, it's also great for restaurants, hotels, and travel. It also begins to establish your credit history-for any really big things you might need.
So call 800-528-8000 for a Special Student Application or look for one at your college bookstore or on campus bulletin boards
The American Express Card. Don't leave school without it. $ ^{am} $
AMERICAN EXPRESS
3112 5006
LEE BURY
Look for an application on campus.
American Express Company, 1982
1
1
The University Daily
KANSAN
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
Monday, April 19, 1982 Vol. 92, No. 135 USPS 650-640
Adkins wants fee hike to benefit student needs
By ANNE CALOVICH
Staff Reporter
MANHATTAN-KU student body president David Adkins wants half of the revenue from a proposed tuition increase to be funneled back to the students.
The students
Student tuition will be raised by $88 beginning in the fall of 1983 if the Kansas Board of Regents gives its final approval next month.
The Regents gave preliminary approval to the increase, which will affect all Regents schools, last Friday at its April meeting at Kansas State University. The fee increase is part of the increase of how often tuition is increased and what constitutes educational expenses for students.
The Regents expect to raise $10 million system-wide from increased tuition.
Adkins, who is on the ad hoc committee on tuition appointed by the Regents, said Friday that because increased fees might make it harder for students to attend college while financial aid was being cut back, revenue from the fee hike should be used to beef up student employment opportunities and other forms of financial aid.
Tuition was last raised, by 22 percent, in the fall of 1981. Tuition will now be raised again, from $42 to $410 a semester for in-state tuition, from $65 to $70 a semester, added to students' final costs during enrollment.
Regents usually consider tuition costs every three to four years.
BUT THE SYSTEM of making rather substantial increases every few years is giving way to making smaller increases every year by the Regents.
The ad hoc committee, which also includes Chancellor Gene A. Budig, suggested that increases be considered every year by a committee of Regents, presidents and students.
Adkins said that if tuition were increased every year increases would be smaller than if it were increased every few years. He said the state was the necessary, especially as state funds dwindle.
Tuition for out-of-state students will be increased
$200, from $1,000 to $1,200.
Tuition for the KU School of Medicine-
Wichita will be increased $732, from $6,860 to
$7,592.
The committee also recommended that utility costs no longer be considered part of the students' educational expenses, but that special departmental and laboratory fees should be.
Definition of educational fees is important as the Regents start to move students closer to a point where they pay 25 percent of the total cost of their education. Now students pay 18.2 percent of their educational costs, but under the new increase, they will pay 23.1 percent.
THE COMMITTEE noted that the Kansas Legislature did not consider utilities as part of its jurisdiction.
A point of contention between the committee and the board arose over whether or not to include academic building fees in the fee/cost ratio. The committee did not favor the inclusion.
Kansas Relays volunteers release balloons from the back of a pick-up truck during the opening ceremonies of the 1982 Kansas Relays at Memorial Stadium Saturday afternoon. See related stories and photos pages 6 and 10.
BEN BIGLERIKansan Staff
Winn faces student questions on loan cutbacks
By ANN LOWRY
Staff Reporter
Although President Reagan has proposed cutting large amounts of federal aid to college students, U.S. Rep. Larry Winn, R-Kan., has other ideas to help the programs.
"The national default rate is 10 percent. If all that money was paid back," Winn said, "think of the money we's have for students in the future."
*The requirements for procurement of loans are the largest, most expensive to much we've been too easy to get.
Winn spoke to about 70 people at an informal reception sponsored by the Student Senate in the Kansas Union Friday evening; being part of the congressional Easter easter.
The cuts would reduce Pell Grants 40 percent, Guaranteed Student Loans 60 percent and College Work Study 27 percent. Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grants, National Direct Student Loans and student incentive grants would be eliminated.
you're acting as if he's cutting the hell out of your overgarge. "Winn said.
your program! With both
"He is" "some students responded.
"I'm not trying to defend the president, but
Winn said that more money would be available if all student loans were paid back and that there was money available through a local bank. The bank did not know about, called ALAS and PLUS.
He also said graduate students would still be eligible for loans, but at 14 percent rate.
"He didn't say anything," said Tom Berger, KU graduate student council director and Student Senate's finance and auditing committee member. "He wasn't confident in his responsibility to answer the questions."
But some of the students said that they were not satisfied with Winn's responses to their
When Berger asked Winn whether he supported Reagan's cuts, Winn answered, "After I see something in writing, I will support the programs I will support and which I won't."
One student, Keith Runey, Kansas City,
Mo. junior, said he thought Winn had evaded
Raney asked Winn what the government would do about the effects of budget cuts on minority students. He said that 75 percent of his students were "displeased upon some kind of financial assistance."
"A large percentage of them won't be back next year." Ranvee said.
Winn responded by saying that Congress considered students as a whole, not as black
Winn had prefaced the session by telling the group he did not serve on the committees dealing with the financial aid cuts, so he didn't know some of the details. He is a member of the Science and Technology Committee.
Bill Kostar, a Democratic candidate for the 3rd District, and Tom Keele, a member of his campaign staff, also visited with students at the reception.
"I think it is very brave of Mr. Winn to come before a relatively hostile crowd."
Kostar said he thought the proposed financial aid cuts were short-sighted.
Raney said he thought cuts in financial aid were "a scapegoat to balance the budget."
"I don't think the proposals the administration has put forth are practical," he
Before Winn's address, Kostar circulated among students, making statements demonstrating the two men agreed on the financial aid issue.
Kostar said he thought the government needed to work harder to collect payments on student loans, and eligibility requirements should be tightened.
"What we have to do is attempt to continually match student needs."
Kostar said he thought students would be concerned that the government was moving away from programs such as energy conservation and environmental protection.
He was in Lawrence on his way home to Heaven from Topeka and stopped at in the reception.
David Adkins, student body president, said the reception was not meant to be a debate but a forum for Winn as the district's chief executive. He said he was planning debates later in the campaign.
"Right now we're focusing on federal policies of people in office," Adkins said.
Uncle Ed Muscarte leaves his late-night sidekick Caffeina, during a segment of A&N Live! Night Live on Channel 41. The station hopes that his unique and relaxed style will help its ratings.
JOHN EISELE/Kansan Steh
M. M. H. H.
Offbeat is key to uncle Ed
By ANN WYLIE
Staff Reporter
Ed Muscarie was looking for a song to open a Friday segment of "All Night Live." He leaped through his 'songbooks,' spiral notebooks with lyrics and chords written in his own handwriting.
If he played a spring song, that would be something people would expect. "We don't want
Meanwhile, Aaron Sway, an All Night Live camaraderie, tucked a blue-and-bink floral cover in the corner of his bed.
He found the right song, sat at the piano and out of the chords "Dashing through the snow," in a spot where he would
folded the straightened the newspapers and boiled them in the tea table to prepare for the contoh show.
Monday Morning
... O'er the fields we go, laughing all the way
...
Muscle taught himself to play the piano by plucking out chords on a guitar and finding the notes.
"It's really easy, and it doesn't hurt your fingers," he said.
Muscare, as All Night Live host, knits his talents into his television personality, Uncle Ed, as easily as he knits "Twilight Zone" rumors and uses it to KSHB-7TV seven hours, late-night program.
Although "All Night Live" has gained some rating points for the Kansas City, Mo., independent station, Channel 41, by appealing to its producer says is mostly a college and institutional audience, it is still fourth in its time slot.
For inmates of prisons and ivy-covered walls, as well as those who watch the show for late-night companionship, "All Night Live" is aired from 11 p.m. to 6 a.m. But for Muscare and the crew, it only lasts until 2:30 a.m., when the last line segment is shot and segments that have been played are televised. Since the show's schedule of Uncle Ed. 28 premiums, such has been the schedule of Uncle Ed.
At 11 p.m., the voice of Dana Roseberry, Allen MacNeil's came over an intermission in the studio where MUSIC CARE operated.
"Five...four...three...two..."
Uncle Ed came out of his dressing room, gave the "All Night Live" gesture (right hand raised with palm facing in) to the camera, nodded and asked for a sheriff, hearing, and recited the "All Night Live" creed.
"I promise every night at 11,
"I'll tune in to All Night Live.
"A faithful viewer I'll always be."
"I'll tune in to All Night Live.
"I'm not handing you no live."
The All Night Live creed, Muscare's own in-
version or the show's popularity aro
nce students.
"We turned All Night Live on one night, and
we had to play it every night at 11",
Clayton Hunter, Merton said.
"Even if we had tests, we'd tune in and at least do the creed."
Hunter is one of nine students who call themselves Uncle Ed's nieces and nephews from
Muscare has visited his nieces and nephews, too, making his mark on Lawrence at the MU-room.
"At the game, somebody screamed, 'Uncle Ed!'" Hunter said. "He stood up for a long time and gestured to everybody. A whole section rested back."
"About half of the requests to be guests on 'All
about me' come from college students,
Raspberry said.
Students from William Jewell, UMKC Medical Center, Kansas State University and Central Missouri State University are among those who have visited the All Night Live set in recent months.
"Maybe it's because college students kind of like making fun of pompousness," he said.
word as pampasity? — *pompousness*14
Several students said they liked the show because of the music.
Muscare said he thought the reason for the show's popularity among college students was
Groups urge KU students to vote May 11
See LIVE page 5
"It's really a matter of manpower more than anything," he said.
Volunteers in the effort to recall Lawrence City Commissioner Tom Gleason will court KU students in organized living groups, Richard Robertson and the directors of the recall group, said yesterday.
Students who register to vote by today will be eligible to apply for an absentee ballot.
Hernandez said students were interested when he carried a petition to put the recall on the bill.
However, Hernandez said he was concerned that many students in the school for this semester might be Day 1 of the election.
"I did go through a couple of scholarship balls," he said.
"When I went to these places, there seemed to be a serious concern. I hit the fraternites and sororites up in the back."
Members of the Lawrence Committee, the group sponsoring the recall, were not sure whether they would advertise on campus, he said.
A large part of the campaign, which includes door-to-door and telephone contacts, involves research into Gleason's performance on the commission, he said.
Hernandez said he was sure the group would be able to recall Gleason.
The NO Recall Coalition, the group supporting Gleason's effort to stay on the commission, has not yet discussed whether to campaign among Gleason's supporters, volunteer coordinator for the group, said.
Another item on the ballot in the May 11 election is a referendum on whether to finance a study of storm water run-off by collecting a 50-cent monthly fee on the water bill.
Members of a group that organized the petition drive to put the issue on the ballot have volunteers in KU securities, fraternities and residence halls, Jeff Freeman, a spokesman for the group.
"It's not a major issue on their minds," he said. "But it still adds up your total bill."
Weather
DIADY
Today will be partly cloudy and cooler with a 20 percent chance of light rain, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka.
The high will be near 60, with winds from the northwest at 10 to 20 mph.
The low yang will be cloudy to partly cloudy and unseasonably cool. There will be a chance of light rain, and the bighs will be in the mid-40s.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, April 19, 1982
News Briefs From United Press International
Galtieri says surrender out, negotiated solution possible
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina—President Leopoldo Galetti said yesterday Argentina would never leave the Falkland Islands but acknowledged that a new international treaty is in progress.
Galleri later yesterday entered a third day of talks with Secretary of State Alexander Haig, but there was no sign of a solution to the dispute.
The talks have reportedly been stalled by the refusal of both sides to budge on their claims of sovereignty over the islands, which were seized by the United States in 1984.
A British news program said Haig had offered a five-point interim peace plan proposing that the Falklands be governed for five years by a nineation peacekeeping administration. The United States would be a participant.
The plan also called for Argentina and Britain to withhold official positions on Falklands sovereignty during the interim period while negotiations were ongoing.
Half refused to say whether Washington or London would be the next step on his shuttle diplomacy. He also declined to comment on whether any action would be taken.
Meanwhile, the British naval fleet, dispatched to reclaim the crown colony, is still steaming toward the islands. It is only days away from its arrival.
Baker said President Reagan would not necessarily agree with the compromise plan, which was geared toward holding down the $10.9 billion loan.
Sidestep specifics on what a compromise might include, Baker said that if the failed tasks, Congress would be a "jungle of conflict," with the sensitive issues of budget cuts and tax hikes be debated in the House and Senate in an atmosphere of increasing acrimony.
Baker made his comments on CBS "Face the Nation" as budget negotiations were being held at the White House. Reagan did not meet with
Baker, who was not a participant in yesterday's talks, said the compromise was aimed at holding the deficit to $95 billion.
Lebanese factions honor cease-fire
BEIRUT, Lebanon—Rival Moslem and militiamen yesterday honored a Syrian-mediated cease-fire that ended Lebanon's worst factional
But all sides acknowledged more had to be done to resolve the political conflict that has pitched Lebanon's pro-Iran Shiite Moslems against the Palestinian-backed "national movement" alliance of leftist and communist groups.
Police said 45 people were killed and 60 others were wounded in six days of fighting before the cease-fire went into effect late Saturday.
The clash, the latest in Shiite-left battles, started in south Lebanon Monday and spread to Beirut Wednesday. heavy artillery, rockets and mortars were used indiscriminately against rival neighborhoods in Beirut and south Lebanon.
NATO facing crisis, report says
WASHINGTON—A decision to pull U.S. troops out of Europe could destroy the NATO alliance and eventually lead to Soviet domination of the entire continent.
A report, prepared for the committee by the Library of Congress, said NATO was facing its "most severe crisis" in years.
NATO was tacing its "most severe crisis" in years. The report, released yesterday, sharply contrasted with a report released
Yesterday's report was released by Sen. Joseph Biden Jr., D-Del., and was prepared at his request.
The new report did not make specific recommendations on the withdrawal of troops but sought to evaluate the possible results of options that Congress
Among the options are a rapid withdrawal of American troops, a gradual withdrawal or maintenance of current troops.
The report said the outcome of any option would largely depend on subsequent actions of the Soviets and the U.S. allies.
Victims of helicopter crash found
PAGE, Ariz. — Divers yesterday found the bodies of three television movie crew members who died in a helicopter crash in the frigid Colorado River.
crew members who died in a helicopter crash in the tribrid Colorado River. The victims were identified as pilot Glen Miller, Diane Dougherty, 28.
The victims were identified as pilot Glen Miller, Diane Dougherty, 27,
Tuson, Ariz., and Frank Novak, 49, Los Angeles.
Miller was employed by Coral Sea Expeditions, LTD., Santa Barbara, Calif.
The only survivor was Lori Lee Gere, 25, Tarzana, Calif.
The crew was in Page to a two-hour CBS TV movie called "American Eagle," starring Larry Hagman and Susan Anspach. The helicopter had a small, low-powered airplane.
Officials said the white Hughes helicopter crashed when its main rotor struck a low-straw cable stretched over the river.
Salvadorans to appoint president
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador—Newly elected assemblymen prepared yesterday for the first meeting of their *Congress*, which will appoint an
*Congressman*.
Party officials said the 60-member constituent assembly, elected March 24, will convene today to set the stage for appointing a president to replace the then-commissioner.
Sources said the president would be appointed by Friday, and the moderate Christian Democrats would be given posts as Foreign Minister and Foreign Minister.
Squatters protest Israeli Sinai move
The Christian Democrats, who have ruled El Salvador for two years in the junta, received stamina backing from U.S. officials who consider them a threat to democracy.
JERUSALEM–Iraeli troops poured into the Sinai town of Yamit yesterday to evict 3,000 squatters protecting the scheduled withdrawal from ISIS.
Most of the squatters, members of a movement to stop the withdrawal, have said they will oppose the army with passive resistance, but a dozen fanatics have barricaded themselves inside a bomb shelter and vowed to commit suicide rather than surrender.
But four rightist parties jointly garnered 36 seats in the assembly, giving them power to appoint the interim president who will rule the country until a new leader is elected.
The Sinai withdrawal is expected to be complete by April 25. Israelii Ambassador Mohs Mosen said yesterday the withdrawal would take place without complications despite the fact that Egypt is presumed to have too many troops in the area.
Kansan applications due today
The University Daily Kanan is now accepting applications for the summer and fall editor and business manager positions. The positions are paid weekly. Applicants must be a graduate degree or equivalent.
Application forms are available in the Student Senate office, 105 B Kansas Union; in the office of student organizations and activities, 228 Hall St; or at www.kcs.edu/institute.
Selection of the editor and business manager will be announced later this month after interviews with the Kansan Board. Applicants will be notified of the time and place of their interviews.
Applications are due at 5 p.m. today in Flint Hall.
Festival crowd diverse
The 30th annual International Festival of Nations drew more than 6000 people from all over the world to the Kansas Union yesterday.
By JIM LEHNER Staff Reporter
Krupa Billa, Bharathgut Guntor,
India, graduate student and
coordinator of the event, said the response
he received from different foreign
student groups who wanted to
participate was overwhelming.
The event, which was sponsored by the KU International Club, featured exhibits on various countries, an in- and outside cuisine banquet, and a cultural show.
He said he had to turn down some because of time restraints. He said the International Club and participating members had been rehearsing for the show since the beginning of the semester.
More than 400 people waited in line for the banquet which included food from 11 countries. For many, the food was a new experience. For others, it was a chance to indulge in their favorite delicacies.
The students presented artifacts, as well as films of their nations to educate the public.
rine show included music, belly dancing, a Malaysian wedding ceremony and a fashion show of costumes from different cultures.
Twenty national groups presented the cultural show to a full house in Woodruff Auditorium.
"We like to serve as many people as possible because it's not often that Americans or foreign people in general example another culture's food," he said.
Billa said that the number of people who have been infected with about 400 because of space limitations.
Students working at the Silanko Island exhibit said they were pleased with the attention given to their presentation. They said not many people knew of their ancient country, and that it was important in B.C., located on the southern tip of India.
Billa added that more than 200 international students participated in the preparation of food and the cultural show.
Edwin Acoba, an assistant co-ordinator or the warden, said the event should not be awaired.
The foreign students are so misunderstood that we hope our show will provide the little bit of friendship understanding that will go a long way.
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'82 - '83 ALL-SPORTS SEASON TICKET SALE
MON., APRIL 19-
WED., APRIL 21
9:00 a.m.-4:00 p.m.
in front of WESCOE HALL —K.U. I.D.s REQUIRED—
FREE T-SHIRT
TO FIRST 1,000 TICKET PURCHASERS.
TICKET PRICE—$45.00
FOOTBALL-ALL 6 GAMES*
Includes These K.U. Home Events:
BASKETBALL-ALL 14 GAMES*
TRACK-KANSAS RELAYS
(REGULAR SEASON GAMES ONLY—DOES NOT INCLUDE PRE OR POST-SEASON GAMES)
HOW IT WORKS:
— Receipts will be issued to purchasers. The ticket office will have copies if you lose your receipt over the summer.
Tickets may be picked up next fall according to the SR., JR., Soph. Fresh, schedule.
BLOCK SEATING in Football will be available by turning your receipts in together next fall.
Football-Only Student Season Tickets go on sale next fall.
Allen Field House Student Seating is limited to 7,000. Therefore, Basketball-Only Student Season Tickets will be available only if less than 7,000 All-Sports Tickets are sold.
—For more information—contact
ATHLETIC TICKET OFFICE
ALLEN FIELD HOUSE
864-3141
University Daily Kansan, April 19, 1962
Page 3
Marvin re-dedicated after $2.8 million renovation
The recently renovated Marvin Hall was re-dedicated Saturday in a ceremony in front of Marvin, and Friday the architectural reading room in Marvin was dedicated to Donald E. and Mary Bole Hatch.
Speakers who appeared at Marvin's re-dedication ceremony were Joanne Hurst, Gov. Carlin's constituent aide; Warren Corman, architect for the Kansas board of Regents; KU Chancellor Gene A. Reed; Max Lucas, dean of the School of Architecture and Urban Design.
The Marvin Hall dedication marked the end of the $2.8 million
renovation project, which began in August 1980.
Until the renovation, Marvin had been the oldest unrenovated building on campus. It was built in 1915.
About 40,000 square feet of space has been remodeled and the building has been made accessible to the handicapped.
The remodeled reading room in Marvin was made possible through a $400,000 bequest from Donald Hatch, an architectural engineering graduate.
"This reading room is the result of an alumnus who cared for his alma
mater," Lucas said during the room's dedication Friday.
He said the full extent of the Hatch bequest could not be overdressed. It not only made the room possible, but it also provided funds for the room's furnishings and upkeep and it established a charmed professorship, Lucas said.
He said the Mary Bole Hatch Distinguished Professorship in architecture, which was a memorial to Hatch's late wife, "would expose students to some of the very best experiences in the field of architecture."
The art works and furniture,
which Hatch also gave to the architecture school, Lucas said, would also expose students "to quality and art on a day 14-day basis".
Ruth Hatch, who also spoke at the dedication ceremony, said her husband would have been extremely pleased of the new reading room.
"He was as fiercely proud of this institution as anything," she said.
During his more than 40 years of professional practice, Hatch designed and executed projects in Hawaii, Texas, and well as in Haiti, Bermuda,
Venezuela and Peru. The projects included office buildings, government and industrial facilities, shopping and commercial centers, medical facilities, hotels, apartments, houses and churches.
In 1853 be founded the Galera Don Hatch in Caracas, Venezuela. It was the first art center of its kind in Venezuela exhibiting contemporary art works by well-known foreign and native artists.
Hatch was the 1976 recipient of the School of Architecture and Urban Design's Distinguished alumni board. He died in 1977 at the age of 63.
on campus
TODAY
THE STUDENTS CONCERNED WITH DISABILITYS will sponsor a discussion group at 4 p.m. in 7-D Lippincott Hall.
THE UNIVERSITY FILM SOCIETY will present "The Magnificent Ambersons" at 7 p.m. in 300 Strong Hall.
TOMORROW
THE INTRAVARSITY CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP will sponsor the lecture, The Essentials of Christian Growth," p.m. in the Park and p.m. in Parlor c of the Kansas Union.
Norm Forer, associate professor of social welfare, will speak at the HILLEL LUNCH at 12:15 p.m. in the Union Cafeteria.
PUBLIC INFORMATION FORUM
7:30 P.M. Thursday April 22
LAWRENCE PUBLIC LIBRARY AUDITORIUM
SHAWNEE COUNTRY DAY SCHOOL
SCHOOL #1 KANSAS
MARCELA BLANCO
HEAR AN INFORMATIVE PANEL DISCUSSION ON THE PHILOSOPHY, CURRICULUM AND ADMINIS-
SOR PROCEDURES FOR AN INDEPENDENT COLLEGE PREPARATORY SCHOOL GRADE K-12
The Shawnee Country Day School students attend all of race, color, national and ethnic origin to the rights, programs, and activities generally accorded or made available to students of the school. It does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national and ethnic origin in administration of its educational policies, admissions policies, scholarship and lean programs and athletic also school-administered programs.
The JAYHAWKER Yearbook is now accepting applications for the positions of Editor and Business Manager. Students interested in either position may pick up their application form in the Yearbook office,121 B Kansas Union.
Application deadline is April 30.
BROADWAY'S BIGGEST HIT
THE MADAGASCAR DIRECTOR OF FILM, JEAN-VALENTINE BLAU, AND THE DIRECTOR OF PHOTOGRAPHY, LOUIS HEYMAN, EXECUTIVE PRODUCER, ANTHONY TAYLOR, EDITOR, ROBERT M. HALL, AND DAVID SMITH, ALL AT MADAGASCAR MUSIC COMPANY.
ACHORUS LINE
SATURDAY, APRIL 24,8 p.m.
HOCH AUDITORIUM University of Kansas
Students Save $3 with I.D.
Regular Price: $12 & $10 Students: $9 & $7
Purchase Tickets At The SUA Box Office or Call 864-3477
Presented by Theater League and Student Union Activities
VISION
Remember to check vision on April 21-22
Eye
paid for by the vision coalition
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SUA Presents
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Tues. April 20, 8:00 p.m.
Kansas Union Ballroom
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DO WE WANT A GENDER-FREE SOCIETY?
---
Opinion
University Daily Kansan, April 19, 1982
20 percent surprise
Students who haven't read the newspapers closely will have a little surprise in fall 1984, when they sign their tuition checks—they'll be paying 20 percent more.
That means that on the Lawrence campus, students from Kansas will pay $68 more a semester.
And out-of-state students will pay $732 more than they did this semester.
Of course, this year's surprise tuition increase wasn't made as abruptly as last spring's 22 percent increase. Students had more time to react. But strangely, they didn't.
Some relieved officials speculated that this year's students were simply more reasonable than last year's. But it could just be that students were less informed.
Of course, students were represented on the Regents Committee by David Adkins, KU student body president. But it seems impossible for any student—even a student
body president—to voice the opinions of all Kapas students.
The tuition increase itself is not unreasonable. After it is implemented, students would again be paying the 25 percent of their education costs that was originally planned.
Last Friday, for example, one Regents official made this statement:
But attitudes of some who approved the increase are disturbing.
"It is hard to predict just how many students we would lose . . . but one thing we do know. There will be an additional $10 million in revenue from the increase."
It probably wouldn't have mattered much if more students had been consulted about the increase—it would have passed anyway.
But it is disheartening that, yet again, students were treated as a mass of mindless revenue-generators.
That much was no surprise at all.
Letters to the Editor
Man's charity revives faith
To the Editor:
After reading the article, "Low interest loans for housing lifetime goal of man in poverty" by Susan Brosseau in the April 7 Kansan, I felt a deep desire to correspond with Mr. Puckett. My reply extends an appreciation for a man who hove every student at KU can also appreciate
Dear Harry Puckett.
Learn:
I learn a KU student. I read the article written by
Susan Brosseau about you in the school
newspaper. I am so pleased to hear the story of
your life. I think it is wonderful that you loved
my mother so much that you kept a house for
her to live in. You must have made your mother
very happy and proud to have had such a considerate son.
From the sounds of the article, you have made many people who were in need of a place to live very happy by providing them low-interest loans for housing.
I want you to know that even though I have never met you, I have the greatest respect for a person of your high character. I hope that by hearing about your life and the way you have used your life to truly help others, I can do the same.
In a time when so many people seem to have lost sight of the most important things—taking care of their families, being thrifty, helping others—they restore my faith in the human spirit. P.S. Keep reading science fiction to keep your imagination fertile.
Kathy Doughty,
LaGrange, Ill. sophomore
Is a fetus a 'person'?
Concerning Jeff Thomas' editorial on abortion. It is amusing that Mr. Thomas thinks to settle the controversy over abortion by defining abortion as merely the removal of "living human tissue." His calm and logical reasoning seems flawless . . . or does it?
Mr. Thomas claims that appendices, livers and lungs are living organisms much like a fetus and cannot be removed without removing another. Somehow, though, Mr. Thomas, in his expert medical opinion on the fetus, failed to mention a few facts. Only a fetus, not an appendix, a liver or a lung, will grow into the fetus.
Ah, but is this fetish a "person"? Mr. Thomas goes on to ask, as he shifts easily from medical to legal expert. He contends that in order for him to be granted permission nationally, the fetish must be proven to be a "person."
At this point, to my dismay, Mr. Thomas departed from calm logic and became quite vague and nebulous. He also chose at this time to give emotional, though not at all typical, reasons as to why a woman should have the option of having an abortion. The story was, in fact, very sad, but surely Mr. Thomas doesn't expect anyone to believe that it was at all representative of the majority of abortions done in this country.
I was happy when Mr. Thomas again took up the guise of a calm, clear thinker and constitutional interpreter. He points out that the child in his example, Francine Speck, was a French girl. The same person who later named Francine was not a person and was not the same as the child. The child, Mr.
Let's turn Mr. Thomas' own logic back on himself, as cruel as that might seem. Prodding him to follow his own line of thought a few extra minutes later, he says, "Francine gain her interest in science or music? Did she reach for a harp soon after birth or refuse to sleep unless she was holding a physics text? It seems unlikely. In fact, at birth, she, Francine, would have had little sense of self, of past or of future."
Thomas says, has a mind that took an early heart that never gave up on music until she began creating music at an early age.
Nor would she have shown some of the other signs of being a person, as Mr. Thomas defined a person. It is doubtful that she exhibited much intellect or pondered any great hopes or dreams. On the whole, Francine was no more a "person" at her birth had she been only a hour before as a fetus, or a piece of living human tissue, as Mr. Thomas would have referred to her.
At this point, I'd like to insert my own emotional example . . . Some weeks ago, I read an article about a young woman living in a college dorm. She gave birth in her room. Not wanting the baby, she put it in a brown paper sack and dropped it out of a bathroom window. The child fell something like four stories, but lived.
Tell me, Mr. Thomas, was that child a person? By your own words, it was not, and so, the woman did nothing wrong. Then why does the girl want to cry? Why does the ground wrap your heart—or doesn't it?
Perhaps, Mr. Thomas, it would have been better if the woman had had an abortion a week earlier or a month earlier. But it didn't really matter? It? After all, the child wasn't a person yet.
I've heard that a fetus that is only a few months old will react to its mother's different emotions and I've heard that the same fetus, when aborted, will often fight to breathe and to
When is it a person, Mr. Thomas? At what
time will you be able to live? Will you
decide Can anyone decide?
David R. Eland,
Hoxie senior
Mavbe it deserves the benefit of the doubt.
To pose or not to pose
To the Editor:
I was glad to see Diane Olmsted's letter in the April 13 Kansan responding to Lisa Bolson's March 29 article. I agree wholeheartedly with Diane, but I think there is a major question that has not been raised: What if Playgirl were on campus, looking for "Men of the Big Eight"? There are those men who wound jump at that Chicago and I am sure there are also those who would not.
At least to me, it is clear that not "every man" would secretly desire to be in Playgirl, nor would any man be looked down upon for not having this knowledge didn't men and women be treated the same?
Let those who want to pose for either magazine do so. Let those who wish to contain their secret desire without action do so. And let those of us who wish neither alone.
Roy Leban, Lawrence senior
The University Daily
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Schlafly talks smoothly, slants truth
Tomorrow night, America's queen of anti-feminism will rise in the Kansas Union to deliver her doctrine, and the chances are that many in her court won't be reverently
As soon as the news broke several weeks ago that Phyllis Schlafly, chairman of STOP ERA, would speak on the KU campus, murmuring that she will pass without demonstrations by local feminists.
Schlafly believes that every woman in this country already has the opportunity for full liberation: "The right to care for her own baby is a fundamental need, being financially supported by her husband."
Expect picketers outside the Kansas Union.
do with the money. Of all places, they gasp, the unthinking Schaffy speaking on a university
Expect picketers outside the kansas union. After all, the queen probably expects no less. Phyllis has worked against the Equal Rights Amendment and demonstrations against her have become routine. Just as routinely, she dismisses them as the noise of "emotionsally distraught" people, "sharp tongued, high-pitched whining complaints by unmarried women."
In fact, it seems to be Schaffly's impenetrability, her supreme confidence that she's "fulfilling God's mission" for her life, that is most maddening to those of us on the other side of the fence. Some of the frustrated have even been arguing that Schaffly shouldn't be paid to speak on the Hill. They say that Schaffly will only channel the fee into her Eagle Forum, a clearing-house for conservative funds and ideas. Others don't care what she'll
If she performs as her reputation promises, Schiflafy will be unfloppable. Meticulously rehearsed and insulated within her convictions, she'll only smile graciously and perhaps chuckle at leeches and hostile questions. She may glide hindrance and fear to risk for the world, but she's about as likely to lose her composure as she is to disclaim her husband and six children.
But if not on a campus, where? Educational institutions should be the first forum for irritating, divergent counts, and Schaffler certainly qualifies on those counts. As for why students should not have the income to any cause. There no reason here to single out Schaffler. Let's give Phyllis,
1980
JEFF THOMAS
a Phi Bhi Kappa, her podium and an unin-
terrupted chair. We ask her as possible,
let's give her views to test our own.
You see, Schlaffy's greatest wrongdoing tomorrow night won't be the target most people would go to the Kansas Union aiming for. Her uncle, a former Army nurse and narrow sexual roles isn't her Achilles heel. Instead, if she speaks in her usual lexicon, her crime will be to repay our attention with twisted rhetoric, to taunt us for respecting her own speaker with misleading tricks of the tongue.
When a reporter tracked down Dr. Emerson, she found an angry Thomas I. Emerson, a professor at Yale Law School. "No, I didn't chance to hear Emerson's correction, and would do a great deal to improve opportunities for women workers."
For example, in 1974, Schalfay opened fire on the ERA on William F. Buckley's talk show, "Firing Line." "When Dr. Emerson came to estify at the Missouri hearing, he conceded that ERA will do nothing for women in the field of employment," she told viewers.
Unfortunately, viewers didn't have the ability to watch on a screen as the tablet or Smartphone turned on, so the face of the faces
Later, Schlafly wrote that a Prof. Freund said the ERA would prohibit "rest rooms segregated by sex." The girls room and the boys room would become "The Room," she began writing.
Paul Freund, a Harvard Law School professor, was surprised to hear Schlafly's claim attached to his name. "I have not stated, in my words, that I would require the sharing of rest rooms," he said.
Of course, all speakers make mistakes over the years. But Schlafly calls the line from carelessness to dishonesty, to intentionally misleading her audiences. One attorney, Gail Falk, twice within one month caught Schlafy changing the meaning of her article on the ERA—even after she personally corrected Schlafy.
Missatlements, half-truths, and butchered quotations have become the tools of an apparently sincere conservative. Phyllis Schlafly is using progananda in the place of rationality.
As recently as January of this year, Schaffly told readers that "the real reasons" for passing the ERA were "to give funding for abortion, to give homosexual privileges, to give massive federal child care and to force us into a gender-free society." She borrows the claims of feminists that have nothing to do with the ERA and hooks them to the proposed amendment.
And so she continues her twist-and-frigate campaign. When Phyllis can't find the weakness in her opposition or the authoritative backing for her own position, she simply becomes a foe. And she is in Lawrence as a mercenary in her fight against feminism, but we should keep in mind that she'll be giving us only the Truth According to Schiffy, hardly the full story.
Murphv's laws affect consumers, too
Everyone has heard of Murphy's Laws, those little gems such as "If anything can go wrong, it will," and "Nothing is as easy as it looks." But now, we can add a corollary to the list: The exact number of whatever you need to buy does not exist.
In any other combination, yes. But not the combination you need.
Usually, U.S. consumers are perfectionists.
We're always asking for safer cars or colas that don't make us fat or keep us awake. But don't you think that a society that can produce the Smurf could package things so you don't have to buy extras?
The problem became apparent last week, when I tried to buy shoalcles. Shoalcles should
P. K. S. K. M. M. M. M
DAN TORCHIA
be easy to buy. But the manufacturers are tricky. First, they have more color variations
The packaging is misleading. They wrap both the sets tightly, so it looks as if you're getting two separate laces, rather than two complete sets.
white face, rather than my face.
The first set I use. The second set I lose.
Sheoacles usually hold up for a long time. So what do you do with the second set, beside throw it in the sock drawer? Hang it around your car's rearview mirror like a high school graduation cap.
An afternoon's wandering through Gibson's convinced me that there are a lot of things that are包装错了.
Batteries are a good example. Only nine-volt batteries are sold singly. The rest are sold in pairs. That's fine, except that most products that feed batteries require odd numbers.
I once had a cassette record that took five C-sized batteries. I would buy six–three packages of two—and leave the extra. Or I would save it to use next time, and it would be as dead as the bathtub. I told Robert Conrad, that macho duke who dares us to knock the battery off his shoulder, explain this?
There are some things that come in pairs that should be sold alone. Shoes and socks are a good example. Have you ever driven down the road and seen one shoe lying by the side? Did someone lose both or just one? Hopefully, the person lost both because one shoe is useless.
In a democracy such as ours, a person should be able to walk into a store and purchase an extra shoe, just as someone can go to an auto parts store and buy a replacement part.
"Brown Bass loafer with a low heel, with an optional penny," one could say, or, "I need a white Nike with a blue stripe, and in a set of three肩饰 with the alligator on 'on'."
One could, of course, buy a set without having to worry about extras.
Socks are another problem. Socks should be sold in three instead of pairs. When you've lost your wallet, a cashier will probably
There should at least be a store where you could buy another, just like a lost shoe. One store
But where are you when you need them? And where do the staples go when you finish your homework?
A variation to Murphy's law is: Whatever you can buy in the right quantity is never around when you need it. Thumbtacks, for example, are always sold in the right quantity—a lot.
Bic Value-Pac, which was supposed to last the semester, when you are about leave for that semester.
There is a further variation to Murphy's law that is particularly relevant this time of the year. The exact numerical requirements for assignments can never be met.
That means a required eight-page paper peters out to five-and-a-half pages or seven-and-a-fourth if you triple-space and use a 5-space line. Or an oral presentation will fall several minutes short of the required time, especially when several people are involved.
But the beautiful thing about Murphy's laws is that they have another side. Whatever you can't find when you need it can usually be borrowed from your roommate. Failure to meet requirements can usually be blamed on someone else. And even though you may not be able to buy something, you can tear the package and get a discount for damaged merchandise.
Which is something to think about the next time you break a sheolace.
Letters Policy
The University Daily Kansan welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten, double-spaced and should not exceed 500 characters. 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 staff position. The Kansan reserve the right to edit or reject letters.
University Daily Kansan, April 19, 1982
Page 5
Live
From page 1
"I don't think people call it 'Al Night Live.' Hunt said. "They sav. 'Tune in to Uncle Ed.'"
"FIVE...four...three...two..."
"NINETY-FOUR...FOUR...FIVE."
"Night Live," Uncle Ed said, pushing his speaker phone "on" button.
"We wead we'd call and tell you we really like your show."
"Thank you very much. This is a recording." "All Night Live" may well be the Uncle Ed's
Dale Dale, executive producer, said, "The
man in the middle of the same way he
moused around the property."
At 49, Muscare spent most of his professional life before "All Night Live" as a radio personality and a host on programs for Kansas City television stations.
was a horror-movie host on Channel 50's "Mr. Mummy Show," where he made himself up as "the Creeper" and led his audience in the Halloween costume, which was similar to the Al Nirk Night creed.
He talked to puppets as the host of Channel 41's "41 Treehouse Lane," a "children's show.
He also hosted "Dialing for Dollars" and "Jackpot Movie" for 41.
"He's never done a normal show in his life," Dale said.
DELBERT CALLS with sports scores and a description of the sandwich he's eating; Mrs. Walker gives Uncle Ed a thought for the day;
and Lee Cucarachi tries to stump Uncle Ed with a riddle.
"FIVE... four... three... two..."
"Hello, Uncle Ed? This is Lee Cucarachi. What did the jack say to the car?"
did the jack say to the cat ?
" 'Can I give you a lift?' "
Muscure uses the three phone calls, the creed, songs at the piano, letters and just about anything else he can be come up with to fill 30- to six-minute spots between movie segments.
"Initially, the show was thought of as a video D. Dale said. "They spin records we play movies."
Like radio, 41's program is live.
"I think the thing that makes the show last is it's live and it changes with the day." Dale said.
"Whatever is going on—whatever is occurring—were able to bring it forth at that."
But producing a live show can be a problem as well as a pleasure. Dale said.
For one thing, Dale, who works during regular office hours, cannot usually be at the studio because of work.
"There's not the control that we'd like to have," he said.
also, nobody does live show anymore, Dale said, except now, which is scripted. Muscarella was able to give the show a new look.
It presents a whole different aspect for people to do. Daile said, "We don't cover up our smile."
For Roseberry, that is the most exciting part of directing a live show.
"The thing I like best about live TV is that the viewers see the mistakes. If Ed mumps up or doesn't know he's on the air, they see it. It makes them feel comfortable at home."
"It's not supposed to be a slick production," she said.
Not all aspects of live television make Roseberry comfortable, though.
She remembers the time Muscae decided to add some spark to "Fire in My Heart," a song he wrote.
"All of a sudden, there's this big flame by the piano and I started screaming. Oh my God! The
Muscare had the fire under control and nothing was damaged.
"It ended up being really cute. He's done some really cute things," she said.
Muscare's surprises contribute to make "All Night Live" the show that Roseberry wants it to
"I What I want the show to be is people tune in and say, 'I wonder what's going to happen today.'"
Dale said that unlike prime-time television, the DVD was not designed to razzle and dazzle the viewer.
"We designed it to be informal, relaxed, interesting, entertaining and part of the family."
The program has fewer viewers than its network and Barnley Miller's "Bawaii man and" "Tonight."
"The majority of our audience is not measured," Dale said. "They don't give out diaries to college students or to jails and prisons and things."
"We have a captive audience there."
Besides college students and prisoners, Dale said, the show appears to night people and lonely
"The audience that watches late at night does it for encouragement but mainly for com-
fortance," he said.
"It's dark outside and they need that companionship."
"FIVE. four."
"Sing in angelic tones," Muscare instructed his guests, seven self-proclaimed "crazies" from the University of Missouri at Columbia.
"Three . . . two . . ."
“Oh, come, all ye faithful, joyful and trumpet,
Oh come,ove me, oh come,ove me, to Bethlehem.”
"There is a three-week wait to get on "All Night
Fridays are booked until the last week in May."
"it's almost the ultimate," Perkins said. "It's one of those things you'll tell your kids and grandkids about: the crazy final week when you went on 'All Night Live.'"
Being an All Night Live guest is quite an experience, said some who went through it.
Roseberry books the guests after they send her a letter describing why they want to be on the show, what they can add to the show, how many members are in their group and what the group's name is.
"If you can physically get in the door, that's the first requirement." Dale said.
Past guests have included actress Marilyn
Gates and the 10 agile bartenders in Kansas City.
"We run the gamut." Dale said. "They're all unique and they're all different. But they're all the same."
"I know what Chuck Barris went through somewhat in the 'Gone Show.'"
Guests will have to have a gimmick to be booked from now on, Rosebear said, although Muscare can find his own gimmick for any group.
"They don't even have any kind of gimmick or anything," she said, nodding toward the MU crazies, "but I'm sure he'll find something wild to do with them.
"Ed can handle it."
"FIVE... four... three... two..."
... ... ... ... ...
"FIVE... four ... three ... two ..."
"Night Live."
"Hello, Uncle Ed? I saw you at a stop light today. Do you remember me?"
Part of Muscare's magic is that he seems to be Uncle Ed where he is in danger or off.
He was surprised in Dale's office when she was introduced to Muscare.
Instead of shaking her hand, Uncle Ed threw his arms around her and began to weep.
"Oh, it been so long," he pleaded.
Dave's confused guest looked to the producer for an answer.
He is no different on the show than he is in
"Hello, Uncle Ed? I saw you at a stop light today. Do you remember me?"
Part of Musecra's magic is that he seems to be Udde Old wherever he is, onstage or off.
she was introduced to Muscare. Instead of shaking her hand, Uncle Ed threw her.
Dale's confused guest looked to the producer for an explanation.
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"He is no different on the show than he is in person," Dale said.
"That is not an act. That is Ed."
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Page 6 University Daily Kansan, April 19, 1982
SOUTH ILLINOIS
Runners must clear the water jump six times during the Larry Winn 3000-meter steeplechase.
Fans, weather boost Relays tradition
As it does almost every year, rain fell on the Kansas Relays.
But this year, the rain didn't last for long. Unlike last year's deluge that forced the field events indoors and turned the Jim Hersberger track at Memorial Stadium into a lake, the annual Relays downpour lasted for only about an hour on Friday morning, long before most of the major events were scheduled.
And the 10,688 fans and athletes who turned out for the grand finale of the 57th annual Kansas Relays on Saturday were treated to a beautiful April day and some of the finest track and field action to be found in the country.
The fanfare, sunshine and pleasant temperatures brought out a lot of people, track fans and otherwise. For some, coming to the Relays was a tradition.
"We graduated from KU in 1925, and we've been coming back ever since," Ralph King, 79, of Stuttgart, Ark, said.
King, who was accompanied by his wife, said that he had attended every Relays since the first one back in 1923.
The first of four generations to attend KU, King said he liked the individual competition and excitement of a track meet.
Gary Barber, Topeka sophomore, said he was down to watch some of the star athletes expected to compete.
"I wanted to see Tyke (Peacock) jump, and I wanted to see that spriter from Nebraska (Merlene Ottey)," Barber said.
An enthusiastic track fan, Barber said he had been going to the Relays for the past four or five years.
"I wish they had more home meets here," he said. Not only did the fans enjoy themselves, but the athletes seemed to have a good time, too.
"It was the best meet I've ever been to," John Edwards, a middle distance runner from Brigham Young, said.
Edwards said he enjoyed the meet because of the facilities, the friendly people and the good competition.
But Robin Small of Nebraska, who took first place in the women's discus, had probably the best reason of any athlete to enjoy the Relays.
"I won," she said.
YAKEES
JON HARDREY-BOTTOMBERG
KU's Kim Jones flies through the air during the jump competition.
Jones placed fifth with a jump of 20-1.
S
MARK McDONALDI/Kansan Stat
Anders Hoff, Southern Methodist University, strains as he spins to throw the hammer, a metal ball and cable, during the hammer throw finals.
HEAT SHEETS
MARK McQONALDjKansan Staff
Debbie Chmielewski, Oakville, Mo., senior, takes shelter from the cold winds Friday.
Story by Dave McQueen
ALCOA
JON HARDESTY/Kansan Stadi
JOHN CHURCHILL-VINCE BARN
The vaulting pole flexes as KU's Jeff Buckingham tries to make it over the upright. Buckingham placed
fourth with a vault of 18-6.
University Daily Kansan, April 19, 1982
Page 7
On the record
Two 61-year-old Lawrence women were killed early Friday afternoon when the car they were driving was struck from behind by a tractor-trailer truck at the intersection of Clinton Parkway and Kasad Drive, police said.
Bessie Johnson and Hazel Williams, both of Route 1., Lawrence, were killed when they were trapped in their burning car.
The driver of the truck, Blane A. Smith, 23, escaped the fire with minor injuries.
The truck, loaded with nonflammable liquid nitrogen, struck the rear of the Ford LTD and pushed it through the intersection, police said. Both vehicles stopped on the road of the intersection in a Kansas Power and Light utility pole.
The gas tank of the car ruptured, and the car's passenger section and the cab of the truck burst into flames, police said.
Rescue workers removed the women's bodies and took them to Lawrence Memorial Hospital
Smith was also taken to the hospital and treated for minor burns on his arms and released, police said.
According to police reports, the truck driver saw the car, which appeared to be moving about 5 mph.
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As the driver approached the intersection, he attempted to stop but told police that "the load was just too heavy," the reports said.
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Studer Truck Lines, Inc. of Beattie, Kan., owned the truck. Further investigations are continuing on the accident, police said.
Mainey apparently set the mattress on fire and then ran down the street, carrying it about 100 feet, KU police said. She dropped the mattress when the clothes she was wearing caught fire.
PATRICIA SERPA
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A 23-YEAR-OLD student suffered second-degree burns after she apparently set fire to a foam mattress and entered the apartment Saturday morning, police said.
Tammy L. Mainey, Emporia special student, allegedly pulled a foam mattress outside and used charcoal to heat the room, the mattress and some clothes, police said.
Police and fire officials were able to
catch Mainey and put out the fire. They restrained her until the Douglas County Ambulance Service arrived, police said.
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THE TAU Kappa Epilonia fraternity
is a fire to polio Sunday
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Bronson Webb, Wichita junior, said he noticed the house sign on fire. When he got outside, KU police were already called the fire department he said.
Someone allegedly set a trail of
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BURGLARST STOLE a car worth $13,000 and its contents worth more than $2,250 sometime between 8:30 p.m. and 9:00 p.m. Friday from 901
There are no suspects, police said.
Burglar's broke into the 1977 Porsche with unknown tools and drove it away, police said.
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Burglaries broke a glass panel on the north side of the store, crawled through and ransacked and burglarized the store, police said.
There are no suspects.
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SPECIAL, SPECIAL PRICES
GOOD APRIL 19-23
"4"
1/4 lb. BUCKAROOS ONLY $399
Ice Cream
PLUS ANY SMALL Dairy Bar Cone
Vanilla, Chocolate or Twist
ONLY
19¢
EACH
Bucky's
come as you are ... hungry
2120 WEST NINTH
Join Jayhawk West
Join Jayhawk West
Be part of the
"1st Annual Happening"
coming in May.
"You'll like the changes!"
Now accepting 100 retainer-
deposits on 1-2 B.P. Apts. for Fall.
*Indoor Pool*
*Free shuttle bus*
*Two laundries*
*24 hr. Maintenance*
Call daily and
compare our rates!
842-4444
7 days a week.
524 Frontier Road
TRAVEL CENTER
AIRFARE
SPECIAL
$59
84
Fly Pam Am from Kansas City to TAMPA, ORIAM, or MIAMI one way or $118 round trip. Must travel between April 25-May 25. But buy now while still is still
841-7117
1601 West 23rd St.
SOUTHERN HILLS CENTER
SOUTHERN CITY CENTER
9-5-30 Mon.-Fri. * 9-30-2 Set.
KOH-I-NOOR Rapidgraph Pens
$1.00 OFF any reg. priced
HOME OF THE NEON PALM TREE 1601 West 23rd St.
$7.00 OFF any reg. priced 6 or 8 Pen Set
KOH--NOOR Rapidograph Pen
coupon
(expires 5-1-82)
COMMONWEALTH THEATRES
GRANADA SOMETOWN
WESTERN STREET
QUEST FOR FIRE
A Science Fantasy Adventure
EYE: 7:30 & 9:30 Mat. Sat. Sun: 7:00
VARSITY
DOWNTOWN
112886 482-1055
PORKYS
You'll be glad you came! R
EVE. 7:15 & 9:15 Mat. Sat. Sun. 2:15
HILLCREST
JULIE ANDREWS • JAMES GARNER
VICTOR Victoria
PR12
WEST 37TH ST. 40TH AVE.
HILLCREST 2
NASTAISK KINSK
No. 295
Mail Box
219
PHONE 643-890-0521
HILLCREST 3
9TH AND JOWA
TELPHONE 822-6200
HILLCREST 3
Richard Poyd
Some Kind of Hero
CINEMA 1
THE AMANDA
HILTON PRODUCTIONS
BEST PICTURE
CHARIOTS
OF FIRE
PG
EVERY 7:25 & 8:30
Weekend M&L 2:00
CINEMA 2
EVE: 7:30 & 8:10
Weekend Mar. 2 & 9:00
WALT DIDNEY PHOTOGRAPHY
ROBIN HOOD
FESTIVAL COLOR
Page 8
University Daily Kansan, April 19, 1962
Tribe beats Royals
By United Press International
CLEVELAND—Alan Bannister doubled home two runs and Toby Harrah belted his fourth horner of the season yesterday, pacing the Cleveland Indians to an 8-2 victory over the Kansas City Royals.
Cleveland starter John Denny went seven innings in picking up his second victory against no losses. The veteran hit two home runs, six, walked one and gave up five hits.
Kansas City rookie player Bud Black, whose father played three seasons with the Chicago Black Hawks in the NHL, was treated roughly in the first ingram by Cleveland as he made his first major-league start.
The Indians pushed across four runs with one out in the first when Harrah ran his hit streak to eight games on Mike Hargrove's single and Andre Thornton delivered a run-scoring double. Hargrove was out at the plate trying to score from their Thornton's hit, but Joe Charbonese walked and Bannister followed with his double to Mike Hargrove's home bank with a double to right.
Hargrove opened the Cleveland third
with a double and scored on a pair of balks by the 24-year-old Black. Black was on short sleeves in 1930, then in timing in the American League set by Milburn Shoffner in 1930.
KANAS CITY
Poquette if
Wilton ib
Bratt ib
Akens lb
Olc cf
McEdidh
Martin rf
White 2b
Washington es
Towns
AB R H B1
4 0 0 0
3 0 1 1
3 0 1 1
0 0 0 0
3 0 1 0
3 0 1 0
3 0 1 0
32 2 5 5
Kansas City 000 002 900-2
Cleveland 401 003 10X-8
CLEVELAND
Dilone 4
Harrah 8
Hargrove 1b
Thurston 2b
Charlesworth rf
Bannister 2b
Randice
Dybbinkski 1s
Taylor 3
AB R H B
4 0 0 0
4 1 0 0
4 1 2 0
4 1 2 0
1 1 1 0
1 1 1 0
3 0 0 0
3 0 0 0
1 1 1 0
E-Watham, DF- Kansas City 1, Cleveland 1
LOB-Kansas City 3, Cleveland 4. 2-Blton-Thornton,
Bannister Manning, Hargrove, White, Brett. HR-Harrah (4).
Kansas City
IP H R ER BB SO
Black (L-0.4)
5% 9 1 6 4
Cleveland
2% 1 1 1 1
Denny (W 2-6)
7 5 2 1 1
Whitson
2 0 0 0 0
Tennessee Rails - Black 2 | Black 2 | A-11, 13.71
WP—Denny. Bank—Black 2, 1—10, 8—...
Are You Prepared for Your Finals?
Study Skills Workshop Emphasis on taking final exams.
Wednesday, April 21
7:00-8:30 p.m.
Council Room Kansas Union
No Registration/Free
The Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong 864-4064
Taco Sale.
2/99c
1 coupon per couse
tome, 8 hard-shell
tacos per coupon.
TACO JOHN'S
1101 W. 6th
1626 W. 23rd
Kings defeat Rockets
By United Press International
KANSAS CITY, Mo.-Eddie Johnson scored 21 points to pace six Kansas City players in double figures and lead the Kings to a 106-104 season-end victory over the Houston Rockets yesterday.
It was a costly loss for the Rockets who now must travel to Seattle for the opening round of the playoffs against the Supersonics. Had the Rockets won, they would have hosted Phoenix.
Johnson scored 15 of his points in the third quarter to help the Kings rally from a three-point deficit and take an 85-76 lift. But Elvin Hayes and Mike Duncleay combined for 21 fourth-quarter points to pull the
Rockets back to winthin two, 104-102,
with 66 seconds left.
Mike Woodson sank a one-banded jumper in the lane with 56 seconds remaining to restore the four-point Kansas City lead, but Allen Leavell answered for the Rockets 12 seconds later to cut the lead back to two.
Malone scored 23 and Hayes 20 to pace the Rockets.
Hayes 7-6 20, Redd 9-12 6-12, Malone 8-7 20-13,
Henderson 7-0 6, Leavell 8-14 6-12, Paillits 5-12,
Dunlury 5-6 16, Willoughby 2-0 4-3, Murphy 0-6
0. Totals 72-28 15-10
HOUSTON (104)
King 3-0 King 14, E. Johnson 3-22 11, S. Johnson 3-9
3-9, Drew 8, E. Johnson 3-12, S. Johnson 3-7
3-7, Drew 10, E. Johnson 3-12, S. Johnson 3-7
2-6, Totals 5-10 19-10
Kansas City 24 25 27 29-
Kansas City 24 25 27 29-
*point goals-E. Johnson out-2,
*point goals-Houston 18, Kansas City
22. A.-4.847
MIDNIGHT
SNACKS
MIDNIGHT SNACKS
¼ lb. Buckaroo
(lettuce, tomato, pickle,
onion, & cheese)
$1.69
10 to close
Bucky's
come as you are . . . hungry
2120 WEST NINTH
Bucky's
Alexander hurt in scrimmage
2120 WEST NINTH
The Kansas Jayhawks football team concluded its second week of spring drills with a scrimmage Saturday afternoon.
The injury came late in the hour-and-a-half scrimfare when defensive end Carky Alexander suffered a dislocated shoulder.
Head Coach Don Fambrough said he was pleased with the efforts of both the offensive and the defensive units but was disappointed in a costly injury.
Alexander, who was the starting right defensive end, finished his sophomore season with 11 tackles. He will miss the rest of spring practice.
"The bad news is that Caryk suffered the injury, but the good news is that he'll be ready to go next fall," Fambrough said.
the aggressive play on both sides of the football," Fambridge said. "For the first time since I've been here, during this season, I saw something different in our formwear."
Except for the injury, the Jayhawks went through a good workout, he said. "We got our back out."
"We are going good against good from the first unit throughout the squad. It's paying off because we are teamed with this hard-hitting, touch football.
Several individuals received praise from Fambridge, including linebacker Mike Arbanas and defensive back Rod Demerritt, who had two interceptions.
"When your No. 1 offense moves against the No. 1 defense, it means something, and the same is true when your No. 1 defense It just makes you a better football team."
The Jayhawks will conclude their spring practice with the Varsity-Alumun at 1:30 p.m. on May 1 in Memorial Stadium.
Secretaries Week is April 18-24.
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When you want to tell your secretary how much you appreciate her, send a beautiful bouquet of fresh flowers in our exclusive FTD Desk Caddy.
For the Secretaries' Week gift that will keep on giving... call or visit us today. We have a bouquet just right for her.
A love to you
for all you do
Se
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today.
Owens FLOWER SHOP
Lawrence, Kansas
Lewann, Kansas
FTDA
helping you say it right.
Openings for summer and fall
Naismith Hall
1800 Naismith
843-8559
- Your choice of 14 and 19 meal plans
smi Hall
- Private baths
- Weekly maid service
- Comfortable carpeted rooms
- Heated swimming pool
- Good food with unlimited seconds
- Lighted parking
- Color TV
- Close to campus
- Many other features
The University Daily
KANSAN WANT ADS
Call 864-4358
AD DEADLINES
two three four five six eight nine ten one
$0.35 $0.40 $0.75 $1.25 $2.50 $4.50 $6.50 $8.50
$1.25 $2.50 $4.50 $6.50 $8.50
CLASSIFIED RATES
15 words or fewer ... Each additional word.
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 nd.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
to run
Tuesday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Friday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
ERRORS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be in intention or non-intention by mail to the Yannick Bureau office at 414-3928.
KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Plint Hall 804-3258
ANNOUNCEMENTS
FOR RENT
PSST. . . Have you seen the new Phyllis Schafft Dalfy? . . . Not We well you can do anything you want to with it and you know what else it—may take it for it! 4-20
Must see to believe. Furnished rooms with utilities paid near university & downtown.
No pets. Phone 841-5500. tf
Established **STUDENT COOPERATIVE** close to campus and downtown. Own bedroom; skie. Bkving meals each week. $BW-HOUSE. Utilities. SNOWFLAW HOUSE. 842-841-31.
BANOVER PLACE. Completely furnished.
14th & 16th on Mass. Only 3 blocks from K.U. DONT DYNT. Reserve your apt.
841-121 or 843-1455.
841-1218 or 843-1458.
For rent to mature male student. Quiet,
comfortable efficiency apartment. Private
kitchen. Close to the Union. Reasonable
price. 842-4135. tf
Sublease at last years prices 2 br. apt. complete kitchen c/s/e heat. Carpet and draperies. Call for an appointment 841-683-469-1
TRY COOPERATIVE LIVING. Sunflower House, 845-9211. tf
Available now. Two bedroom spacious apt
unfurnished,
bathroom, and water included. Close to
campus, and on bus route. $36 per month.
No pets. HEADWBOOK 10K & Greatview.
CALL 718-455-2948
Jayhawker Towers Apartments
Now taking applications for fall and sum mer leaves. KU students only.
2 Bedroom apartments on
- utilities paid
- air conditioned
- on bus line
- swimming pool *
- laundry facilities
* furnished or unfurnished
Mon.-Fri. 8 a.m.-5 p.m.
Sat. 8 a.m.-12 p.m.
Sun. 12 p.m.-4 p.m.
1800 M/ 1500
- on bus line
- subtraction
- laundry facilities
843-4993
Lives in the CRISTIAN CAMPUS HOUSE
growing campus ministries. Also Honors
with awards and scholarships.
MID CENTER BOUND? Newly refurbished
2 BB DupLEXes available now. Carrier, A/C
Appliances, parking. Call (913) 850-2878.
SOUTHEAST PARKWAY TOWNHOUSES,
& dorma you'll like on our. Our employees
feature 8' br., 15'h chairs, all appliance.住,
and baths, and have private privacy. We have openings now, and in the summer and fall. Call Craig Leva in
about our modest pre-owned townhouse,
for more details.
TRAILBAGLE Leasing for Studi-Studios,
houses. All have harvest gold appliances.
Houses. All have harvest gold appliances.
Laundry facility on the premises. Swim-
ing pool. On the premises. On K-40.
2500 W. 6th - 843 - 7333.
K-2500 Road.
Wanted outgoing Christians and con-
scienous students to share 5 bedroom house at
d & Kentuckia fall & spring & Fall
Dariage; 841-7892. Utilities Included
Call Dariy
Dariage; 841-7892.
PRINCETON PLACE PATIO APARTMENTS.
for roomkites, feature wood burning fireplaces
for roomkites, feature wood burning fireplaces
washers/rayer cabinets hookups fully-equipped
workstations daily at 9:30 am and 12:30 pm,
daily at 10:30 am and 12:30 pm. Prinneton II, or
Prinneton I, are located at 56th Street, Princeton, NJ.
For Rent 2 br, apt. convenient to shopping
garages & dining, drapes, complete kitchen,
garages acquired. Call 841-8688 for an ap-
pointment. 4-19
New orchards duplex 2b -Large living area Garege W/D Hookups too. $75 Available June 1. $41-859. 4-21
Sublease. Meadowbrook studio. apt. Furnished. Heat & water paid. Balcony. Access from pool. May 1 - July 30. Call 843-625-4200 at 6:59 p.m.
Thinking of Next Year?
Nalsmith Hall is the Place to Live
- Private Sleeping-Study areas
* Carception
*Private Baths & Showers
*Choice of Meal Plates
*Choice of Meal Plans
*Parties
*Pool
- Maid Service
* Great Location
Check Us Out This Spring or Summer
We Think You Will Like Us!
Applications are now available.
Applications are now available
Call 843-8559 or Stop By
1000 Numalmath Drive
1800 Nalsmith Drive
SUMMER SUBLARE May rent free, walk to campus or downtown, June & July rent negotiable. 2 bedroom, utilities reasonable. Call 841-7526, comfortable, quiet.
University Daily Kansan, April 19, 1982
Page 9
Purnished one bedroom apt. for sublease.
Excellent location to campus and downtown.
Central air/heat. Available May 15. Call
842-6586. 4-30
Sublease Meadowbrook Townhouse. Now thru July 31, 3 bedroom, 1½ baths, infurnished. $400/mo. + bills & $400. deposit. Call 814-5392 After 5:30. 4-20
**Sublease - May-15 Aug. 15.** Spacius 2 bedroom apt. Fully furnished, appliances, piano, T.V., else. Near campus. Mature couple pre-requisites. required, 205). After 1035. After 4. 421
Rooms available for summer $100-$140 per month utilities included. Close to campus and quiet atmosphere. Call Darryl 811-7692.
Summer albeit- One female to share 3 bedroom, townhouse, 2 bedrooms, central a/c, C/F, furnished. great location. Fall option. Sharon.
864-4601. 9:30-F. M-F. 4-19
SUBLEASE ME. I am a two bedroom apt.
with two bedrooms, walk-in closet,
bus route and within, walking distance
of groceries and pizza. I have a didwash,
air condition, fireplace, spa and pool. Ola
will keep you connected to the internet
you would like to live within my plush
room. Call 814-532-8492 or 848-532-8492.
G-7-4
Summer sublease May 15-August 15, May rent free. Furnished studio, tennis courts.
池449-2083.
4-19
SUMMER SUBLASEL-1 br apt, three blocks from campus. Furnished and A.C. Only $199. 843-7237, or call collect (316) 833-6301. 4-19
Summer sublease, 2. BR Apt. Close to campus, 10th Mississippi, CA, d.a.tweatroom,
'Available after finals,' $290, $842-2655, 4-22
Fun 2 bdmr, apt, seeks 2-3 summer sub-leasers. A/C, dishwasher, new carpeting. $285/mo. 872-714-71. 4-19
Summer nublease. Fem. only. Clean, close
to campus. Low util. 841-7086. 4-30
2 bedroom apt. May 1 sublease with ex-
tenuation. Carpeted, carved exteri-
ndoor dweller, dishwasher, refrigerator,
line bus—along the street from grocery
store 750-750. Call evens (hours)
4:34-15:48 4:20-4:20
Unfurnished two bedroom apt. for summer sublease. One block north of Kansas Union.
Call 843-4525. 4-21
NEXTEXPENSIVE MODERN! I couldn't believe it! only $410. 3 bedroom, spacious. Unit or room. At least call. 769-2811 or 4-211-216.
Summer sublease or June to June lease,
Large 2 bedroom room, d.w., a.c. pool,
heat paid, etc. Near Hillcrest, walk, bike
or to campus, 749-0286, 4-23
Spacious 3 bedroom 1st floor of house. 936 New Hampshire. 4-21
*Wanting to sublease bilvel, 2 bldm. apm. for summer. New, AC贮箱, carpet, electric garage opener, 1½ bath. Within Campus of campus and campus 409, *f-194*, 749 - 1248 - 4-28
Attractive 2 bedroom apartment, unfur-
nished, near campus. $210 - 1 mo. deposit.
Available May 1. 842-3946, after 6. 4-23
QUIET Meadowbrook school to subdue, June and July, option to rent. $215/month, water supply, tennis courts, gymnasium, ground level, lots of grass and trees, swimming, tents, A/C, cable TV. 84-854-6300.
Wanted: Female non-smoker to share 3 bedroom fully furnished, air conditioned apt. for garden sublease. 4 blocks from the Union. Call 749-3403. 4-21
We'll pay you $20! Just substitute our two
rooms in your room for a full秋筛. Its one year old, has reason to wear water and soap, has reason to eat. It has paid us $20. It's on the bus route, and has laundry in the building.
Maint rent free; Summer subway/fall option:
Maytrail 2 bed room, 1½ bath on house on KU bus route, 3 pools, tennis, etc.
843-762-360
4-23
June-July sublease. 8th & Mise. 2 bdrm.
duplex, air cond. furnished. $225/month.
643-5230 (eve.) 4-28
GREAT LOCATION. Sublease mod. 1 bed,
room apartment. Summer/sunfall fall. 1
block from campus, walk down town.
& utilities. 748-8482, after 5 &
4-20s
FURNISHED STUDIO 12 month or summer leases. 8225, 841-3755. HOUGHTON PLACE.
240 Alabama. ff
Furnished one bedroom apartment. Bills paid. No pets. 813 Louisiana. 4-23
Summer sublease. Furnished studio apartment with A/C pool, tennis courts. Great location. $230 + electricity. 749-4526. 4-30
SUMMER SUBLEASE. Trailridge/Studio
Apt. Modern, pool view, Price negotiable.
841-2396, anytime.
4-23
1 BR. house. Full finished basement,
1/2 bath. A/C. Gas heat & water. Available
in May. 842-302. 4-27
Available June 1, 2 bedroom furnished upd
New kitchen, a/6 - 4 blocks from campus,
$35 per month + $1. Elec. Deposit required.
Phone 842-6707.
4-25
Sublease, choice 2 br. apt., furnished, between campus & downtown, $280 mo., 749-
955. 4-29
For sublease in May. 1 BR Apt. Close to campus and downtown. 841-825 weekends, after 6 p.m. weekdays. 4-21
4 bdrm. house 2 blocks N.E. of stadium.
Available May 15, 1 bdrm. apt. available
June 1, 749-0166.
4-21
Furnished 1 bdm., central air, summer sublease. $125/mo. Married student only. 841-0465 by May First. 4-21
MASTER BEDROOM AVAILABLE starting with this summer session. $160.00 month with free utilities. Call 841-1624 for details. 4-30
Sleeping rooms 1-3 bedroom apartments.
Diapexes. No pets. Call 342-8971. Lease
for summer or full year. 4-30
SUBLEASE with option to renew one bedroom, fireplace, private space, pool, spa, large gardens, 2 pools, 4 tennis courts, beautiful grounds and landscaping. Call 844-719-3900.
3-bedroom furnished mobile homes. $185
and $215 per month. Available May ist.
Clean, quiet location. No pets. Jayhawk
642-8707 or 842-8282. 4-30
Roommate for May 1, $110/mo. plus utilities.
Serious students preferred. Come take a look. 842-0038 4-22
Sublease large 2 BR, apartment near sta-
tion, gas paid, gasd central air,
4-491-8235
4-491-8235
Summer sublease. 1 BR bur. in 4-plex,
furnished, carpeted. AC. 14th & NJ.
utilities free. $145/mo. 749-4606. 4-22
Sublime, QUAIL CHECK 3 BDMR, spacious
apartment. Unfurnished carpet & drayage
room. Laundry room, swimming,
tennis, golf, and clubhouse. All
1363
$163
exc electric
Avisha & Harvard Square Apartments - 1 & 2 bedroom apartments room to campus June 1 or Aug 1. occupancy. Call 841-6080 Kawai Management, Inc. 4-30
Now leaving new 2 & 3床 duplexes.
Available for Aug. 1 occupancy. Fireplaces,
garages & much more. 841-608-700.
Valley Management, Inc.
Apartment for sublease: 2 bedroom-furnished June-August, Summit House. 1105 Louisiana. Call 841-6809. 4-23
SUMMER SURLEASE. New furnished townhouses. 13th & Ohio. 3-4 people. Price negotiable. 749-1243 or 749-2456. 4-30
Summer sublease--Nice 2 bedroom house.
Close to everything. Call 841-610 anytime.
Sublease. May 18-Aug. 1, May rent free.
Made to order.
large, large. 843-0833. 4-23
Summer Sainferia. Possible fall option. 3 bedroom. Walking distance to campus, park office, & grocery. Laundry, carport, large back yard. 749-1275. 4-23
Summer sublease with option for fall, furnished 3 bedroom. Malls Alpaurs pool, golf course. Monthly charge. June 1, rent negotiable. Call 749-1476 or contact manager. 4-23
SUMMER SURGEASE with fall option.
Modern two bedroom apartment in 4-plex.
Central c/ n. New appliances. Seven minute
central. Available. May visit A183.
834-317.
Sublease with rent option 3 or 4 bedroom house with garage. 21st & Naismith. Call 841-5297.
Second floor 2-bedroom furnished apart-
ment. August 1 or earlier. Within walking
lights and water. $200 deposit, required
for appointment. If no answer,
keep trying.
Summer sublease-Premale $wanted-$1200 per month + 1/5 utilities. Bed 4-bedroom house between campus & downtown. 798-349-423
4-23
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Notes. On sale on Sale! Makes sense to use them-1) As study guide, makes sense to use them-2) As study guide, narration. "New Analysis of Western Civilization Notes." Or bookmark, and Oread Bookmark, or if not,
Alternator, starter and generator specialists,
Parts, service, and exchange units. BELL
AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-9069, 3900
W. fth.
Beautiful bald evergreens reasonably priced. Himmel's Rand Tree Farm—Eudora—Phone 542-3139 or 542-3349. 4-20
Stereo-Television-Videos Recorders. Name brands only. Factory sealed cartons. Lowest prices in the K.C. area. Get your best price. Call Total Selling Amount 4-300 4-30
BOKONON IMPORTS Large selection Hawaiian shirts. The original source. 12 E.8th. 841-3600. 4-20
1979 MAZDA RXT-GS PURRFECT. 843-825
or 842-6353.
4-83-105
1979 Vespa Bravo Moped, 2200 niles. Ex-
cellent condition. 864-1092. 4-23
1967 Blue Merc. Cougar, 289 ct., auto, A/C,
AM/FM cassette, runs good! Call Jack-
749-250. 4-23
1981 Suzuki GS507T Black, beautiful, luggage rack, back, crash brake, must sell-getting jewelry. 842-8646, after 4:00 p.m.
4-19
Sale—Government Surplus Property Electric typewriters, 15 to choose from IBM, Royal Olivetti, lst come lst serve. 841-4144. 4-19
1978!: Honda CX500, fairing, trunk, crash-
belt, all-bearered for $1,695 Call 4-231
800-256-8828
1981. GN400X, Suzuki. NEW $1495. Asking
$1200. Only 37 miles. Call 842-7679 after 6
:33.
1800 Datum 200SX PS, PS, AT, AM/FM
stereo, 37,000 miles 843-8910. 6 a.m.
p.
SPRING LAMBS. Organically grown. Ready before May. Beef also! 913-796-6279-
McLouth, KS. 4-20
1980 HONDA CX500 DELUXE shaft drive, water cooled, windshield, backrest, luggage rack, 2.600 MILES, 843-1484. 4-23
Bookcases, low as $0.50. I also build stereo
speakers for the same price (the other one).
Mia Stichou, 302 W 13 H, 843-882-9
www.mia-stichou.com
80. Honda 750K, 800 miles—many extra-
excellent condition -842-7316, eighteen- 4/19
Good condition 76 AMC Hornet hatchback.
I don't want it anymore! Under $1000. 749-
2811 or 841-2116. 4-21
For Sale: 1979 RM125N, Great shape, Super fast! Phone: 814-8447. 4-21
Convertible 71 Olds 442. Must see to appreciate. Taking offers. 843-550, days. 862-
7726, after 5:00 weekends. 4-21
188 HONDA XL500R. Street and Trail.
Must sell, best offer. 864-6028 4-21
1978 Honda 550-4K, 8.300 miles, excellent condition, Black, 1200.00 with crash bar.
842-7486. 4-19
TENNIS RACKETS—Head, Wilson, Dunlop,
Prince, Yonke—Good selection, new.juset.
Will buy yours if in good condition. 842-
6713 for 0.80 n.m. tt
Air conditioner, 5.800 BTU G.E Almost
1498, 6458
Trek bike, Reynolds frame, Campagnolo gears and brakes. Contact Tiff, 843-570-370
Dahiquit DQ-10 speakers—Need to tell contact Tiff 843-5770. 4-22
Marantz stereo, BSR turntable, speakers
$150. Compact refrigerator $50. Wicker
rocking chair $24. 841-258. 4-22
90 a farm, 60 a past, 17 a Till 3a woods,
80 a farm, 75 a past, 15 a Till 2a woods,
80 a farm, 91-123-8333/weekends/evenings,
80 a farm, 91-123-8333/weekends/evenings
Dorm room sized carpet restaurant. Rust, gold
decor for small room. Fits under airplane
carrier for small hotel. Fits under airplane
Houda 125 XL = 240 km, only ridden by
Joe Cusack $958, Peter Casper
814-4405, 843-8020
1978 Mustang, 6-cylinder, a.i.e. good condition $1900 842-1386, weekend. After 5 years.
Stamps—liquidating at cost. Hundreds of dollars worth. Very fine to super, never hinged—buy as many or as few as you want. 3019 $ . All inquiries welcome. 749-423 8029
Yanuma CH-620 receiver, Pioneer CT-P7713
Bell 481 - 0417-713
Kilpax 1, Heroes PC-421
4-21
Rare acoustic guitar has to be sold immediately.
Call Mike, 749-4278. 4-23
Kitchen table. Call 841-4871 with a 5-pm.
Good condition. Table has charcoal burner.
SURPLUS JEEPS, CARS, Trucks, CAN-
value, $243.12, sold for $106.
For information on purchasing similar bargains call
926-985-8757 Ext. 6383. Call Refurbish 4-119
3 master lodge in馆 Center parking on
4/17 82-82 Call 841-0477. 4-20
FOUND
A key chain case with four keys (2 car keys and 2 door keys) found at baseball field #4 behind Robinson on Wednesday, April 14. Call 4-4600 or leave and leave a call: **4600**.
One roll exposed film in front of Marvin Hall Tuesday. Call 864-5842. 4-19
Found, ladies watch—on Naismith Drive.
Neoh Rohrman 863-8435 4-19
Watch in Flint Hlst reporting lab. Call 864-4100 and Identify. 4-21
KEYS found Thurs. morning on abandoned
drive, frule. Call 749-4676. 4-21
Found, a complete set of keys. Call 864-
3881, ask for Rebecca.
4-21
Found, set of residence hall keys outside of Mallott. Call 642-565 to identify. 4-21
HELP WANTED
New Wave/Progressive dance band seeking energetic, enthusiastic, refined drummer, Serious?叫 842-7955, after 2/843-8955, 4-19
Programmer. Local Company needs part-time programmers for microcomputers. We can supply equipment. Send resume to P.O. Box 359, Lawrence. Attention: 4:30
Lead Guitarist needed for established professional contemporary rock group. Serious players only, 811-9797. 4-22
Are you commuting to/kampas Kansas City?
I need someone to drop off at my home.
I need someone to drop off at MED Center. For information contact Dr. Jenkins.
UIC 360th, 201 and Olathe, KC, 650-1018.
UIC 360th, 201 and Olathe, KC, 650-1018.
We offer professional services on all paint jobs. We will paint a house for a summer job. We will paint a house for an engineer, we can configure and techniques and carry materials for your projects. Please come in person to the facility at 800-269-5471 or call (800) 269-5471. Our priority, p
SUMMER CAMP JOBES in the Northeast. Send self-addressed, stamped envelope to Midwest Camp Consultants, 1785 Red Cott, Maryland Hills, MO. 80349. 4-22
Energetic, personable waitresses wanted.
Must be willing to work. Hourly wage plus
tips, commission and incentive bonus. Apply
at GAMMONS on 5:09 p.m.
4-22
Summer Job National Park Co. k-21 Parks.
509 Openings. Complete Information $5.00.
Park Report, Mission Mt. Co., 61st 2nd Ave.
W. N. Kallman, MT 59901. 4-19
PART-TIME in the early evening, 5 nights per week performing general cleaning for local building cleaning service. Allow minimum wage. Call 824-5430. 4-19
The Mathematics Department is accepting applications for graduate teaching assistants in the Math department. Students with a strong background in mathematics. Foreign applicants will be required to demonstrate competency. Assistants will be responsible for all math assignments and/or calculus. Applicants should submit a letter indicating interest and background to the Mathematics Department of Mathematics, 217 Strong. In addition a letter of recommendation will need to be submitted. Salary: Tennies, $35.20 for academic year. The Department of Mathematics offers an opportunity Alternative Action employer opportunities are from all four persons.
The Department of Mathematics is now accepting applications undergraduate or graduate students for Fall 1982. Tutors will work approximately 10-15 hours per week on the course. The Tutor Assistant, Applicants must have successfully completed MATHEMATY 117, 112, 103 and 104. Students obtained from the Department of Mathematics will be contacted for interviews. For further information, see Professor Philip B. Campbell, Ph.D., the Department is an Affirmative Action:Equal Opportunity Department. Applicants should sound from all qualified persons. 4-20
The Mathematics Department is accepting candidates to take a core course and to assist. Applicants must have a Bachelor's degree in mathematics or a related field and must wish to assist in the 113-114 chairmanship office. Applications are available in the office of the Office of the Chief Justice. The applications must be turned in at this office. Contact Professor Philip Montgomery, 282 W. 10th Street, Philadelphia, PA 19106. Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Act applies. Applications are sought from qualified applicants.
Earn up to $200 or more each year beginning in 1-3 years. Sell your own hours. Monthly payment for lending of the funds, which are subject to prices awarded as well. 809-526-4838, 4-23
LOST
Lost—Lady Seiko watch, white face, black roman numerals. Sentimental value—reward. 812-5281. Tactile. 4-20
Lost Wednesday—glasses in black carrying case. If found, please phone 749-2484. 4-21
Tan velcro wallet and Capitol Federal checkbook inside an Omega raquet cover. Reward: 749-0466. 4-23
PERSONAL
Instant passport, visa, ID, & resume photographs. Custom made portraits b/w, color. Swells Studio, 749-1611. tt
Skillie's liquor store serving U-Daly since 1949. Come in and compare. Willfred Skillie Eudaly. 1906 Mass. 843-8186. tf
The Kegger—Weekly Specials on Kega!!
Call 841-7945-1610 M. 23rd.
Say it on a sweatshirt with custom silk-screen printing 1 to 1000 shirt art by Swells 749-1611.
DESIGN-A-SHIRT CONTEST
HEADACHIE, BACKACHIE, STIFF NECK,
LEG PAIN, JUNGLE and correct the cause.
Stiffness is a common problem in
modern chiropractic care. 84-936-3260.
Accepting Blue Cross and Jones life insurance.
Enter now at:
kansas
union bookstores
Main Union Satellite
Community Auction 700 N.H.
For your party clothes, formal or costume,
check out the Inflation Fighter, E. 8. Th.
10-5-30 M-F 10-5-30 Sat. Open tl
@ On Thursday.
1st Prize
Entry Deadline April 23rd
$100
Every Wed. 6:30 p.m.
Consignments Access...
Wed. 10 a.m. till sale
Sat. 10-5
Consignments Accepted
MARY KAY COSMETICS—Full-time beauty consultant. 842-6641. tf
Remember, O most gracious Virgin Mary, that never was it that known anyone who held the help, sought thy protection, implored the Lord with confidence. I drew to them, Inspired by this confidence, I drew to them, I stand faithful and sorrowful. O Lady of the earth, in the mercy, hear and answer me. Amen.
841-2212
Remember... mother loves you, show her how you feel this Mother's Day. Be a leader and fight the factuation 749-611-4-30
COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES
PROVIDE MOTHER AND FOOTWEAR for out patient abortion; gynecology; contraception; & Ror. Overland Park, PA (843) 642-8300
$6.95 Per Day SPECIAL
Stereo-Televisions Video, Recorders. Name brands only. Factory sealed cartons. Lowest prices in the K.C.A. Get your best offer to call Total Sound Distributio 912-384-0900
LEASE-A-LEMON
Exciting jobs at Lake Tahoe. Send $5.00 to Tahoe Jobs, P.O. Box 7244, Kansas City, MO 64113.
4-22
Wanting to talk with someone? Gay & Lebian Peer counselors available through headquarters (811-2543) or information center (864-356) just call.
Spring formals, Barb's Second Hand Rose.
15 Indiana. Open till 5 p.m. 842-4760. 4-36
Rent any Mon (Tues, Wed)
$6.95 Per Day.
$60 Per Week.
$225 Per Month
Cannot be combined with any other specials. All cars are mechanically sound, state inspected, clean & ready to rent. We accept checks, cash, visa-mastercard 749-4225
Katie's Cellar Shop
Buying & Selling
Vegetarian Lunch. 11:30-1:30 Mon.-Fri.
*49*-1517, 4-20
Spring Into Spring
buying a clothing next to new women's clothing
Contemporary Styles
745 New Hampshire
(inside the Market Place.)
842-7456
842-7456
Mon.-Sat 10:00:4:30
Personal problem? Concern? Confidential Professional Counseling. Specializing in life changing skills. Free initial consultation. 841-4144. 4-26
PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH-
RIGHT, 843-4821.
tf
Get ready for the lazy, GATOR daze of April. Visit Nike, Bloody Boost, Nordstrom, Calvin Klein, NIKE, Boat, Nortstrom, Calvin Klein thing! I are waiting during April at Alhawarra and I am attending a bank. ALL MERCHANDISE IS 15% OFF Club or Golf Club, is mile west of Kauai Club or Golf Club, is 800 meters to 8:00 p.m. 7 days a week.
Crocodile
Gay Services
Spring Fling
The
Izod Ball
This Monday
4-19
LaCoste: $2.50
OFF the Wall Hal
8:00-12:00 p.m.
Crocodile
Have the best seat at K.U. sporting event-
Squad Spirt (tryouts, April 25th.
Squad tryout information meeting,
K.U., April 25th. Jawower, Room
4-20
Rick Springfield Concert Tickets for sale.
1-999-8324. Mike. 4-19
Preparing For Finals-Workshop on Wednesday, April 21, 7:00-8:30. Room Council, Kanau Union, FREE. No registration required. The Student Assistance Center. 4-20
Green's Spring Keg Prices
Budweiser 16 gal $39
Bosch 18 gal $80
8 gal $24.50
Coors 16 gal $38
Coors Lite 16 gal $38
Old Milwaukee 16 gal $29.95
Pabst 16 gal $33.95
Miller 16 gal $38.00
808 W, 23rd 841-4420
(prices include complete CO $ ^{2+} $ tapping equipment
Omaha RIDERS resed. Leaving evening
May 6, returning May 9. Share expenses.
841-0076 evenings. 4-19
Hillel
"Antl-Semitism & You"
cheer. Surely the star will upon her 4-20
leave your a mark at KU vote IMPRESS!
KU vote IMPRESS!
Anti-Semitism c.
Norm Forer
Assoc. Prof. In school of
Social Welfare
כפל
GREEN'S CASE SALE, COOFS $8.79, PABST
LONG NECKS $7.19, BUSCH $7.69, GREEN'S
90% WEST 23RD.
4-23
Established band look for male/female lead singers and lead guitar players. Drums, guitar, and keyboards, immediate need! Leave a message or call, there, leave name & phone. 4-23
WANT TO BUY: Innerframe backpack in good condition. 842-6712 or 842-9519 4-21
Looking for someone to take a coast to coast bicycle trip this summer. Phone 841-6663. 4-23
Cork 1, Kansas Union Cafeteria
**MASSAGE.** The Human Body has 640 muscles. Most of those muscles. Space is used in the Equipment. Space for people to maintain excellent muscle tone. Space for water. Leave your weight. 842-1250. 4-30
Have you appreciated your favorite secretary this week? Let her know she is special and unique with a special and unique gift. Send her a balloon-a-gram. 8418-5-43
2107-2021 CNA Inc. All Rights Reserved.
THE JYHAWZHAN is now accepting applications for the positions of Editor and Staff in the other position may pick up their application. The Kannan Union Application deadline is April 28.
FOR YOUR
CLASS OFFICERS
THE EFC, SMOOP 10 W. 9th wk. have a alimentary dish for our girls or for you we also have dinner Jackets to wear.
GEORGE'S USED FURNITURE & Antiques
OPEN 6-9 p.m. 1035 MASS. BUY-SELL-
TRAD. 4-30
Homeowners, earn big profits! Distribute
security products. Details, send stamped,
addressed envelope. Coffman P.O. Box 154
Lawrence, Keno 66044 1-424
1982, and all 'it'. Don't agree? Welcome to the club. Read "Living Simpler" (and better) in *Complex World*. $1. Green! Book in *Box 322*, Amazon. *KS 66201*. 4-23
Interested stranger, 52', brown hair and brown eyes. How can we ever meet 117 in person? Call the Preeman, 2157 Morningside Drive, Lawrence, KS5 60444
4-19
Melinda-I can answer yes to your questions so write again. Larry Freeman. 2017 Morningside Drive, Lawrence. Kansu. 6044.
SERVICES OFFERED
Schneider Wine & keg Shop—The finest selection of wines in Lawrence—largest supplier of lawrens. 1610 W. 23rd. 843-3212.
WRITING A RESUME? What to say? How to say it?拜住 The Stop Of Uber and pick up our free brochure on resume for our internships in museums, 8-Mon-3-Sat, NOON-SUN
Drafting (charts, maps, etc.) 6 years experience, competitively priced. Also script lettering for certificates. 841-7944. 4-21
CENTRAL INSTITUTE OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
31/2¢ self service copies
ENCORE COPY
CORPS
25th and Iowa 842-2001
Professional Stringing Tennis and Racquetball. Best Prices in town. Call 842-5521 or 842-6528. 4-30
GRADUATE STUDENTS THEMIS COPIES
quality discounts based on total volume of
the product purchased in the shop that can offer variable reduction
offers. These are available in the world (in
the world) 1 Remember Copy Company 22th & 48th
Put your best foot forward with a professionally printed resume from Encore. We can write it, print it, and印它 for you. Call Encore 422-2001, Difft & Iowa. 4-30
LEARN TENNIS from experienced
instrutor in small groups with other K.U.
students or private sessions 845-0713 after
9:00 p.m.
MOPED RIDERS—It is time to get your bike up tuned for the season. Experienced cycle instructor, Jerry Dellis, will provide reasonable rates. Call Jerry 841-5213. 4-23 JOBS! Get the one you really want. Learn 18 steps to a better resume. Includes sample resume headings. O Box 731, Shawnee WI 65020. KS 62001
TUTORING MATH. STATISTICS. PHYSICS.
Call 841-216 or 864-4176 (ask for Robert).
TYPING
It's a Fact, Fast, Affordable, Clean, Typing
843-5520.
Experienced typist. Term papers, these, all micellaneous. IMB Correcting METC or Elite Or Pica, and will correct spellings. Phone 843-8544 Mrs. Wright. **If**
Experienced typist. Thesis, term papers,
e.g. IBM Correcting Selective. Call Sandy
after 5 p.m. 748-9818. tf
Reports, dissertations, renames, legal forms, graphics, editing, self-correct Selective Cell or Jean Anne 841-2172.
TYPNING PLUS. These, dissertation papers, letters, applications, resumes. Assistance with composition, grammar, spelling, punctuation. Foreign students or Americans: 814-4254.
Experienced typist will type letters, thesis,
and dissertations IBM correcting electric
Call Donna at 842-2744. if
TIP-TOP TYPING--experienced typist-IBM Correcting Seificia II; Royal Correcting SE 5000 CD. 863-5675. **ft**
AFFORDABLE QUALITY for all your typing
needs: theres, disorientations, resumes,
mailings, mails, music. Call Judy 842-7945
after 8:00 p.m.
Experienced typist—thesis, dissertations,
term papers, mise. IBM correcting selebrate.
Barb, after 5 p.m. 823-210. tf
MAGIC FINGERS TYPING SERVICE. 843-
6129 4-30
For PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myra.
841-4980. ff
PENCE TYPING SERVICE. Eveuven
842-2507
Experienced typist will type term papers, thesis, dissertations, books, etc. Have IBM self-correcting Selectile I. Call Terry 842-4754 anytime or 843-2671.
Graduate students tired of typing, retyping and retyping their thesis or dissertation? Save time and money by word processing it at Encore! Call 642-2001 for more info. 4-30
Shakespeare could write, Elvis could wiggle,
my talent, typing. Call 842-0043 after 5:00
and weekends.
4-19
Quality typing and word processing available at Encree Copy Corps. 25th and Iowa.
845-2001. 4-30
Would like to type dissertations, thesis, term papers, etc. Call 842-3203. 4-30
Professional typing. Dissertation, theses,
term papers, resumes, legal, etc. IBM Correcting
Selectric. Deb 843-5692. 4-26
Fast, accurate and experienced typist will
type your papers. Reasonable. Call 842-
8091. 4-30
Fast, accurate, professional typing. Theses,
term papers, resume. Will correct spelling,
grammar. 843-0288 after 5. 4-22
For a good type call Debby for dissertations,
theses, term papers, letters etc. at 749-4736.
Experienced typist. Will correct punctuation and spelling. Call evenings and weekends.
841-7630 4-26
Former medical research secretary will type term papers, themes, books, misc. Call Nance, 811-5802. 4-27
Word. Processing and Typing, Straight
matter, forms, grapha, Reasonable rates.
Under 50 pgs, overriden service. Melanie,
4-23
834-237, evening.
Roommate for May 1. $110/mo. plus utilities.
842-0038. 4-21
WANTED
Wanted outgoing Christians and conciene-
tious students to share 5 bedroom house at
14 & Kentucky next fall & spring $180-
00. Students Unlimited. Utilities included.
Darry 841-7892.
SUMMER ROOMMATE. Furnished apartment very close to campus. May move in after Graduation. Rent + 1/2; rooms 842-6177 anytime.
WANTED: 1 NON-SMOKING roommate to share 2-Bdrm. MOV Aep start. Aug. and or sublease form. 842-9965. 4-22
Female roommate needed to share 2 bdrm
apt during the summer. $100 a month + ½
utilities. 864-1092.
Female housemate for 3 bedroom house 1 block N. of stadium. Serious students, pre-4-28 871.430.1654.810
Responsible female to share 3 bdm. house on bus tie, e-116 monthly +/- 1/2 utilities.
June 8 to May 31 or this summer only:
4-50
842-5230
Roommate* to rent. Trailzlure apartment for summer. On bus route, pool, A/C pool. Free May rent, no gas or water bills To inquire ask for Sieve or Bob. 843-689-8901
Female roommate May 15-July 31. Owner room with private 'i' bath and study day left Waher Drymer Overrid. $133 + 1/3 food 4-21 841-4178
Dependable female roommate wanted to share large furnished 2 bdmr. apartment on bus route. Call Linda. 749-168-4-19
2 female roommates for apartment 2 blocks from KU Med Center, summer and or next year. Call Kan, 841-8913. 4-26
Two senior females look for roommate to share 2 bedrooms apt. Birchwood Gardens Aug. 82-May 92 $30 money + 1/3 utilities.
Call 841-8208.
Person to rent master bedroom of a large 3 bedroom mobile home starting at $259/month with free utilities. Call 841-1434 for more information. 4-30
We want you! Female roommate for summer 2 bedroom, 1½ bath apartment $122.00
+ 1/3 electric 864-1911 Call now! 4-23
Roommate wanted. Summer only. Extra
rice, 4 bedroom, 4 bath house. West Law-
erque, quiet, no smokers. Wagner/dr.
music. CAB A 173 = 4-183 = 4-22
3649, 469
Roommate wanted. 1 extra, i.v. 4 bedroom 4 bath house. West Lavenham. Quilet. no smokers. Wafer dryer, microwave. A/C: $200 + /1 utilities. 749-384-680.
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. Use rates below to figure costs.
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1
Page 10 University Daily Kansan, April 19, 1982
RANEI
Southern Illinois wins Relays
Kansas' Tudie McKnight soars through the air on her way to a jump of 21-feet 10% inches in the long jump. The jump was too big for the jumper and it was not allowed because of high winds.
Ottev steals women's show
By DAVE McQUEEN Sports Writer
For all intents and purposes, the 57th annual Kansas Relays appeared to be over Saturday night. Most of the competitors had already left for home, and the smattering of fans left in Memorial Stadium applauded warmly as KU head track coach Bob Timmons team first-ever team championship trophy.
After some inaccuracies were found in the final point totals, the team trophy was taken from KU and given to the apparent runner-up. Southern Illinois.
But hold everything. Things are not as they seem.
ORIGINALLY, the final standings in the men's division had KU the winner, 101-91. However, an error was found in the pole vault scoring, and later that night, Southern Illinois was no longer a winner, scoring 100 points to KU's 99.
But the story doesn't stop there. Late last night, Timmons and a group of meet officials reviewed the results in front of the judge. The outcome, he said, was still undecided.
What caused all the trouble was this: The officials erroneously had KU's kiff Buckingham and Southern Illinois' John Sayre tied for third in the pole vault at last year's NCAA tournament, 164, but Sayre should've been placed third on the basis of fewer misses.
Also, it was revealed that SU's Steve Wray did not tie for second in the high jump, but took second outright.
At the time, Timmons said he had no idea that there were problems with the scoring.
"I just feel bad that it happened," he said. "When mistakes like that are made, it's my responsibility to correct them.
"I don't blame it on the scorers. It's my fault for not giving them the help they needed."
ALL OF THIS confusion aside, more
things were certain than uncertain at last weekend's Kansas Relays. In the women's division, Nebraska literally sprinted to the title, beating KU, 79 to 72. And Tyke Peacock, competing in his first game, won against Merte Otley, of Nebraska, were named the meet's outstanding male and female performers.
Yet even Peacock's success was uncertain. Competing in his first meet in two months, Peacock missed his first two attempts at 7-2, far below his personal best of 7-5%. He finally made it the third time and then went on to leap 7-3 and eliminated the rest of the high jumpers.
Then Peacock cleared 7-4/1 on his second attempt. The mark set a new Kansas Rales record, and a KU team best, previously held by Keith Gunn in 1975. He then tried to clear 7-6, which not only would have been a personal victory but best jumps in the country this year. However, he misses all three attempts.
ALTHOUGH HAPPY with his performance, Peacock had trouble with his approach.
"I had trouble getting started," he said. "I had worked all week on my approach, and when I got out there, somebody moved my starting mark."
Otley, by comparison, had no trouble getting started. She was the class of the field, winning the 100- and 200-meter dashes. In the 100, she edged teammate Timmy Johnson in the time of 11 seconds, and she won the 200 going away in a time of 22.62
"I was pleased with my performance even though the competition was not that great," Ottey said.
Although pleased with being named outstanding female athlete, Ottey wasn't as pleased with the field.
In the hammer throw, Robert Weir of Southern Methodist set a new meet record with a 222-8 throw.
IN A DAY full of excitement,
probably one of the highlights belonged
to a high school student. Kym Carter, a
senior at Wichita East, set a National Federation of High Schools record in the high jump, clearing 6-2 in her first attempt.
While it is a federation record, it only ties the all-time high school best, set last year by Mary Moore of Issaqhua, Wash. The federation only recognizes ten colleges and a bicameral bicameral nonetheless, she is one of only six women ever to clear six feet.
To Carter, her mark was something she thought was about due.
"I was physically ready for it, but I just had to prepare myself mentally," she said. "I have been clearing 5-10 hours and wanted to get over the six-foot mark."
BESIDES PEACOCK, several other Jayhawks turned in fine performances. In the women's long jump, Tudie McKnight took first with a leap of 21-10%. Although it was one of the best marks in the country this year, it won't count as a record because it was wind-aided.
Also, Stine Lerdahl did the shot put Friday with a 49-10 heavie, her personal
"You couldn't help but be satisfied with McKnight's jump," *Coffey* said. "Those guys are really pushful through the hulls." He added a close to Nebraska, especially at home.
Despite the narrow loss to Nebraska, KU women's track coach Carla Coffey seemed pleased about the outcome of the team's performance.
THE MEN started to rack up the points early. In the marathon, KU swept the three top places in the collegiate division, with Dan Owen placing first overall in a time of 2 hours, 27 minutes and 32 seconds. Ken Daily took second and placed fifth overall and Hank Crawford took third and sixth.
"We're very pleased," Timmons said. "We're proud of the team and pleased we did well."
No matter what the outcome, Timmons said he was happy with his team's
MCCOLL
Merlene Ottey, right, pulls out in front in the 200-meter dash and on to an easy victory. Ottey, who was named the meet's outstanding female performer, won the 100, 200 and a member of Nebraska's winning mile relay team.
JON HARDESTY/Kansan Staff
Scoreboard
Basketball
NBASTANDINGS
Eastern Conference
Milwaukee 55 42 87 671
Atlanta 52 47 87 513
Detroit 38 43 87 16
Baltimore 35 47 427 40
Chicago 34 47 427 40
Minnesota 15 47 87 30
15 47 87 30
Team W W L Pct. GH
Boston 83 53 197 68
Philadelphia 58 124 797 10
New Jersey 44 38 357 19
Washington 48 134 638 11
Wichita 33 49 191 31
Indiana 33 49 191 31
Western Conference Midwest Division
San Antonio 48 34 585
Denver 46 38 651
Cambridge 46 38 21
Kansas City 30 52 396
Dallas 38 52 314
Oakland 30 52 30
Los Angeles
Seattle
Tampa Bay
Golden State
Portland
Houston
St. Louis
57 25 30 699
57 25 30 634
57 25 30 611
45 37 40 159
45 37 549 12
45 37 549 15
61 27 607
**YESTERDAY** RELAIT
Portland 119, New York 89
Boston 119, Michigan 90
Chicago 116, Houston 104
Kansas City 104, Houston 104
Ulah 102, San Antonio 120
Los Angeles 120, NYC 115, OT
Best of Seven Patrick Division
Hockey
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Divisional Finals
Best of Seven
New York Islanders 4, New York Rangers 3, OT
(Islanders beat naval 2:1)
Athens Division
2. OT (Boston)
Quebec 3, Boston 2, OT (Boston leads series 2-1)
Chicago 6, St. Louis 5 (Chicago leads series 2-1)
Sarah Bridges
Vancouver 4, Los Angeles 3, OT (Vancouver
leads series %1)
Soccer
MISL STANDINGS
Eastern Division
Team New York W 35 L 7 H 833 Pct. GB
Newburgh B 29 L 17 H 600 Pct.
Ballina B 28 L 19 H 640 Pct.
Buffalo F 23 L 19 H 640 Pct.
New Jersey J 16 L 26 H 361 Pct.
Philadelphia D 11 36 32 366 19/4%
Philadelphia I 16 32 32 366 19/4%
St. Louis 28 14 1667
Boston 25 17 614 B
Michigan 16 14 614 %-
Denver 17 15 400 12 12%
New York 17 15 380 13 12%
Kansas City 17 15 380 13 12%
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
New York 6, Philadelphia 2
Denver 9, Memphis 6
Baseball AMERICAN LEAGUE Eastern Division
Team Baltimore 5 5 120 Pel. GB -
Detroit 5 5 130 360 %
Boston 4 5 164 444 %
Toronto 4 5 400 1
New York 3 5 373 232 %
Chicago 3 5 372 131 %
Baltimore 7 2 222 12%
where did WL go?
Chicago 6 1 1,000 1
Cincinnati 7 2 178 1
Kansas City 6 3 667 1
Texas 6 3 325 1
Nashville 6 3 302 1
Minnesota 6 7 411 1
Washington 6 4 315 1
YESTERDAY RESULTS
Dorceton, 21
Boston, 4
Towanda 3
Cleveland, Kansas City 2
Chicago, Baltimore 4
Detroit, Oakland 6
California, Minnesota 5
Seattle, 4
Oakland 3
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Eastern Division
| Team | W | 2 | Pct. | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| St. Louis | 5 | 3 | 62% | 1 |
| Miami | 5 | 3 | 62% | 1 |
| New York | 6 | 3 | 545 | 2% |
| Pittsburgh | 6 | 3 | 545 | 2% |
| Pittsburgh | 6 | 3 | 570 | 4% |
| Philadelphia | 6 | 3 | 570 | 4% |
Atlanta 6 5 4 1,000 %
San Diego 6 5 4 500 %
Los Angeles 4 7 364 %
Houston 4 8 332 %
Boston 4 8 716 %
Team
Oklahoma State 12
Boston 4 | 4 | .750 | Pel. GB —
Nebraska 11 | 5 | 5 | 688 —
Colorado 9 | 5 | 4 | 508 %|
Kansas 6 | 6 | 6 | 434 %
Oklahoma 4 | 5 | 4 | 454 %
Iowa State 4 | 5 | 11 | 384 %
Illinois 5 | 3 | 10 | 172 %
Montreal 1, New York 6
Chicago 5, Philadelphia 9
Philadelphia 5, 11 innings
Atlanta 8, Houston 5
San Francisco 7
Oakland 4, Annapolis 3
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Kansas 10-2, Missouri 6-5
Okahanna State 15-10, Kansas State 2-8
PRESENTS
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SVA FILMS
THE UNHOLY 3
TOD BROWNING'S MASTERPIECE
FREAKS
Baseball team loses series to Missouri
WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM
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--in the series when he pitched his four
complete game of the year in defeating
the Tigers 104- yesterday. Phillips
won the series with a victory
and is 2-1 in Bie Eight games.
By MIKE ARDIS
The Kansas baseball team did just what they didn't want to do, losing three out of four to the Missouri Tigers this weekend. They lost both games Saturday, 11-8 and 10-6, but split Sunday's game, winning 10-6 and losing 5-4.
Sports Writer
The three losses dropped KU to 17-17 overall and 6-6 in the Big Eight. Missouri is 28-8 and 5-4 in the Big Eight. "I felt we gave away three games, can you explain that said." When you give away three games like that, you can't be happy."
Jayhawk pitchers gave up 32 runs in the four-game series, which Pattin was wagging in a bowl.
"Our pitching wasn't exactly . . . I can't find the words for it," he said. "Our pitchers were throwing it right down the middle. They're going to hit
"I MUST not it all be pleased."
Jim Phillips got the only KU victory
Phillips who has 20 career victories at the age of 80 have become victories to tie the record for career victories.
"I'M JUST not at all pleased."
Heeney also led off the eighth-inning rally for the Jayhawks, which put them ahead. With the 'Hawks behind 63, Heeney opened the inning with a triple. Long walked and Keith Hoskison got his first home run at KU to tie the game.
Missouri scored six runs off of Phillips, but only two were earned. Missouri only needed one hit in getting their first four runs.
Missouri jumped out with two runs in the first inning against Phillips on a walk, an error, a missed pick-off play and a passed ball.
KU got its only run on the game on Dick Lewallen's two-run home run. It was Lewallen's fifth home run of the year, which leads the Jayhawks.
Hokisken is in the game for Kent Shelley, who was hit by a pitch in the sixth inning and had to leave the game. The Nebraska team may be ready for the Nebraska series.
Saturday was not a good day for the
"It was a fastball inside," Hoskison said. "Coach James told me to take until I got a strike."
JAYHAWK NOTES: Sunday was Floyd Temple Day as the Jayhawks retired Temple's jersey. Temple, who wore number 13 for 28 years as coach of the Jayhawks, became assistant athletic director last summer.
"We fought all the way. Baseball's a funny game. You never know what's going to happen."
IN THE FOURTH, Joe Heeney led off the inning with a single and went to third when Shane Fairbanks missed Long's fly ball. Haskins came up with men on first and third with no outs. He hit a shot toward first base and Fred Ambs was right there for the out and caught Long off first for a double play.
Pattin would agree. In yesterday's second game, KU had men on third base three times, but couldn't bring them home.
The only reason KU got to the tenth was Joe Heeney's two-out, two-run home run in the ninth with KU behind 8-6.
Missouri came right back with their own two-run home run in the tenth. They also added one more run for the final score, 11-8.
Jayhawks as they dropped both ends of the double-header. KU came close in the first game as they came from behind three times, but were finally put away in the tent by three Missouri runs.
In the second game, KU went up 3-0 in the first inning on three singles and a double. The Tigers came back with five runs in the third and one in the sixth, ending with two runs in the seventh, before Lewallen's three-run home run made the final close, 10-6.
By GARY GRIGGS
Javhawks beat Wildcats, fall to Cyclones
Sports Writer
"I have to feel pretty good about our performance this weekend," Randy McGrath, head coach, said.
The Kansas men's tennis team picked up its first big Eleight conference win of the season by defeating Kansas State, 6-4. The state's men's tennis team also won Iowa State on Friday, however, 6-3.
KU COULDN'T have asked for any
"I was really happy about beating K-State," he said. "We were up 6-0 after singles, and that is a first for us this season. They beat us 8-1 in the fall, so we improved a great deal since then."
better weather on Saturday, but
Friday's weather was a different story.
"It was unbelievable, it was so windy and cold," senior Tom Hall said. "That's got to be the worst conditions we've played in." He concentrated on the opponent, but you had to battle the weather as well. It really made it tough to play in."
The Jayhawks, now 5-10, play their final two conference matches this weekend in Columbia, Mo. They will face the Cincinnati Friars and Oklahoma on Saturday.
Last year, the Jayhawks lost to
the Browns and 8-4, and they fell to
Oklahoma 9-0.
'Nebraska has a solid team this year,
and Oklahoma is Oklahoma—they are always tough." Hall said.
The Big Eight Championships are right around the corner for the Jayhawks. This year, the championships are scheduled for April 29-30, in Kansas City, Kan., at Woodside Racquet Club.
ACCORDING TO HALL, the key to being successful at the conference office is to be punctual.
"That's really what it all boils down to," he said. "If you don't draw a good seed, you are pretty much up against the wall."
Seedings for the championships are determined by win-loss percentage in conference play. The top four seeds go to the four players with the best win-
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The University Daily
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
KANSAN
Tuesday, April 20, 1982 Vol.92, No.136 USPS 650-640
Med Center missing funds
By TOM HUTTON Staff Reporter
KANSAS CITY, Kan.—The Kansas Bureau of Investigation and the Kansas Attorney General's Office are investigating a possible misappropriation of funds at the University of Kansas Medical Center, Keith Nichter, KU director of business affairs, said last night.
A Kansas City, Mp., television station reported last night that the missing funds totaled nearly $300,000. Med Center officials, though never on a mountain, said the $300,000 figure was exaggerated.
Nitcher said only, "I'm not privileged to disclose that information at this time."
"It's way high," Tom Gleason, associate director of business affairs at the Med Center, said. "I don't know where that figure came from."
The shortage of funds was discovered in the management business office during a routine audit. Nitteja said.
The auditing staff found several irregularities, and the Board awarded the funding to KU policies at the Med Center.
"This was a routine audit of certain activities," Jack Pearson, director of police, said last night. "Coarse irregularities in deposits were found and security was not notified."
David Waxman, executive vice chancellor at the Med Center, and Charles Hartmann, vice chancellor for clinical affairs, both held positions but deferred comment to business officials.
Pearson said that forwarding the findings of his force's investigation to the KBI was standard procedure. "We don't want them to be
Chancellor Gene A. Budig and Attorney General Robert Stephan were unavailable for comment last night. Richard von Ende, executive secretary of the University, refused
It is not known how long the investigation will continue.
Weather
Sunny day
Today will be cloudy and cool with a high in the mid-40s. The winds will be from the northwest at 15 to 20 mph. Tonight's temperature will be in the low to the
Tomorrow will be sunny and not quite as cold with a high in the low to mid-
4076-4056 4001-4017
Students hurry in class in Weese Hall mass these familiar arrows on the fourth floor each day. Many students also stop in the ball for a study break.
Wescoe's old controversy, debts fade
By ANNE CALOVICH
Staff Reporter
They call it it the catacombs, those who live by day in the city. You know they use unplanned care to get youallowed up down the street.
Some students never see the inside of it,
because they so busy soaking up the sun on
the beach and freezing.
Those in the Wescote classrooms interrupt their teachers with laughter as a preacher's wailing or a radio's blaring disrupts the class from outside the windows that do not open.
Wecoce can be paid off formally Sept. 1 of each year. Keith Nitcher, director of business affairs,
Wescow, home of all those prerequisites, is about to be paid for quietly, not with any of the furry that accompanied it in 1970, when students objected to having their fees pay for it.
Richard von Ende, executive secretary of the University remembers 1970, when he was a graduate student at KU, and vice chairman of the University Senate executive committee.
AT THAT TIME, Wescoe Hall was going to be 25 stories high, with two five-story wings. It was supposed to be the main classroom and faculty office building on campus, in the center of campus, housing not only the humanities, but all facilities of core education.
The construction was estimated at $13 million.
"Unfortunately, the money appropriated by the legislature was only about $6 million," von Ende said. "So the architect卸掉了 ten stories, with a little redesigning, and it came out to
be about $ million, which was still more than the Legislature had allowed."
Two years, then three years, passed as Wescoe Holt sat waiting for a decision where either he or her would be named.
"The Legislature got to the point where they said, take the money or leave it," von Ende said. "At this time inflation was really increasing—by about 3 percent, and everything else about 9 percent."
"The architects were told to kill all over again. It was then another year, and inflation had taken its toll—the final estimate was $8 million. We said, "We lost all that space, and we haven't reduced the cost at all. We have to come up with funds some place or scrap it."
BUT THE Vietnam War was on, and students were not in love with the government.
"Lots of students felt negatively toward the government because of Vietnam and some of them were in Student Senate roles," he said. "It was very important for us to govern the government as well as this specific issue."
After a long debate, the Student Senate voted 36-31 to approve the use of student fees to pay for the part of Wescoe the state government could not
David Miller, then a candidate for student body president and now a state representative, opposed it, and circulated petitions to get the question on a referendum ballot for students to consider at the same time they voted in the student body vote. But Wescoe saw the need for Wescoe Hall. The petitions had been circulated too late to make the referendum ballot.
"I remember it finally came down to the student exercise council to uphold it, and they wrote it." — Edgar F. Enderle
Then-Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers sent it to the Board of Regens, who颁发了 $1.8 million in compensation.
WESCOE ENDED up costing $7,680,519.
Federal funds paid for $1,919,149 of it,
and $1,469,470 came from the state. KU students have
the cost of the cost, at a rate of $4.30 each
a semester.
Payment on the bonds began March 1, 1975,
and the side bond was scheduled to be paid
until October 31, 1986.
But the debt will be paid off essentially 10 years ahead of schedule, due to unforeseen enrollment increases, and interest collected on bonds bought with extra revenue from student fees which were required as security along with regular payments on revenue bonds.
KU STUDENTS also are paying for $1 million in revenue bonds on the University of Kansas Medical Center library. They also pay for the university's medical services, filling its additions and the health services facilities.
The bonds on Walkins Hospital are to be relied this year as well.
Other students at Kansas universities want to nav for buildings.
**Fort Hays State University students are paying approximately a $2 fee for a college that is being built at their request. Students at Fort Hays State University own their own initiative for a student recreation center.**
A bill was introduced into the Legislature in
1981 that would have prohibited the payment of buildings by student fees, but it died.
THE ISSUE came up again Friday at the Kansas Board of Regents meeting. A committee including Chancellor Gene A. Budig and Student Body President David Adkins asked that students not be expected to pay for buildings as part of their educational expenses.
The Regents will discuss it again in May, and the Legislature is studying a bill that would require non-binding referendums from students on any such issues.
Adkins said he thought the possibility of students paying for buildings became more real because they were moving to a suburban area.
But von Ende said he did not see a trend of students paying for many projects in the future.
"It could occur, but I think it's something people don't expect to occur—unless it's in some isolated instance or students provide the initiative for it."
BUDIG SAID under ordinary conditions, he would not favor levying student fees to pay for building projects.
"I fact, I'pleased that we have been able off the bonds on Westcott Hall and cancel that study at Westcott Hall."
"However, if it were a question of the academic quality of a program and the state were unable to fund needed facilities, I would be willing to consider a package that included a package if that were the only way to provide a facility needed for the education of our students."
Legal questions kill mind-control bill
By COLLEEN CACY
Staff Reporter
A bill that would legalize deprogramming of religious cult members, after sailing through the Kansas House and causing a rift with the governor, finally agreed, at least for this legislative session.
Lawmakers decided the bill involved too many tricky constitutional questions for them to deal with, and probably would not have been workable in its present form, according to members of the Senate Judiciary Committee.
The bill would allow a judge to grant 30-day temporary guardianships to parents of religious cult members shown to be under "mind control." Although the bill never specifically mentions the word "cult," it says that to be considered under mind control, a person must be a capable of marking out the boundaries and be affected by "a system of coercive persuasion" by a group that uses misrepresentation or fraud to lure new members.
THE COMMITTEE took no action on the bill, but recommended that the Judicial Council, a panel of judges, legislators and business owners, hold the legislation and the problems it involves.
Parents whose children have joined religious cults supported the bill as a way to legalize the deprogramming of members. Now, if parents want to take their child from a religious group, they risk charges of kidnapping and lawsuits.
"Anyone who hears the testimony of those "parent" hat to we sympathetic." Sen. Jane Lane wrote on Wednesday.
But she said the committee questioned whether the bill violated constitutional guarantees of freedom of religion.
Eldredge is vice chairman of the Judiciary Committee.
SEN. RON HEIN, R-Topeka, also a member of the committee, said the Legislature did not have the time or the ability to give the issue the full consideration
"The bill had serious constitutional problems, involving freedom of religion and the extent to which a person has control of his own mind," he said yesterday. "We're not equipped to deal with that in the Legislature. The Judicial Council has access to law clerks and judges. They can get at the kind of indent study it needs."
Eidridge said the committee also hesitated to take action on the bill because it would cost taxpayers.
The Judicial Council is planning to reexamine those laws soon, and the committee asked that it look at the mind-control bill in conjunction with that study.
"In any case, it's been a long time since there's been a look at the guardianship and conservatorship laws," Elidrige said. "We'd like to wait with before we start changing those laws."
KANAS SUPREME Justice Dr. David Prager, the head of the Judicial Council, said it had recently appointed a committee to begin studying those laws, but it had not met yet.
He said the committee would study the mind-control bill along with other related issues and make a recommendation to a legislative interim committee.
"By the next Legislature, they ought to have a report to make," he said.
Hein said he had no doubt that if the bill had passed the Legislature, it would have been
"It's an emotional issue. People had their minds waved by what they wanted to see done," he said. "That's the nice thing about having two houses in the Legislature. When one acts a little too hardy, the other can stop and say, 'Wait a time.'"
When the bill was first introduced, Rep. Nina Strahm, R-Sabethe, asked attorney
Rahm, R-Sabeth, asked Attorney
See CULTS page 5
Commission says water plant did not hide bacteria findings
By STEPHEN BLAIR
Staff Reporter
Lawrence city commissioners said last night that they were satisfied city water plant officials did not attempt to cover up a 1979 finding of bacteria in two city water samples.
Commissioners also said they were satisfied discrepancies between the original versions of some city ordinances and the final city code had not resulted from intentional changes.
Both of these issues were raised in the City Commission's evaluation of City Manager Burford Watson in February and were discussed at a commission study session yesterday in City
The commission yesterday listened to two superiors of former water department lab
And N. Jack Burris, director of the Bureau of Water Supply in Topeka, said recently that the
She also alleged harassment by plant officials, who she said blamed her for contaminating the
However, state records showed that K.T. Joseph, city chemist, took further samples at the two Lawrence laundries where the contaminated samples were found.
FROST HAD alleged that her superiors did not adequately investigate a possibility that the city's water could be contaminated even though both two samples in 1979 that contained land.
coliform bacteria in the samples did not cause disease and that the bacteria level was within the range.
All five commissioners said that they were satisfied the city's water was safe.
Concerning Frost's charges of harassment, Mayor Marci Marco Francisco said Frost should have filed a complaint as part of the city's employee grievance procedure.
CITY COMMISSIONER Barkley Clark agreed.
"It was clear from the statements she made that she'd found another job," he said. "The sense that I got was that the job she preferred."
In February the commission directed Watson to investigate the matter.
But Watson was investigating water quality,
not the basement cheese. Ergenooss said.
Frost said yesterday that no one from the city staff had contacted her.
Concerning the city code, the corrected version will have to be repassed by the commission.
Jim Kaup, lawyer for the League of Kansas Municipalities, which prepared the code, said only a few minor corrections remained to be made.
However, Kaup said he would write a letter to the commission reconstructing how the errors occurred, what the differences were between the two groups of data and prevent such errors from happening in the future.
See INVESTIGATIONS page 5
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, April 20, 1982
News Briefs From United Press International
Britain expresses discontent with Haig peace proposals
LONDON-Britain, stopping short of an outright rejection, said it was extremely disappointed with the decision. Once placed in Buenos Aires, Argentina by secretary of State Han Hou-Hong.
Halg, who negotiated the latest plan in five days of talks with Argentine leaders, transmitted an outline of the proposed settlement to London upon
the complex, difficult contents of the Haigh message do not at first sight meet the requirements strongly expressed by Parliament," said a statement released by Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, following an urgent, two-hour meeting with key cabinet members early today.
The statement said Britain was particularly concerned that the proposals did not address "the paramount need for considering the wishes of the people." The statement also noted that
Parliament demanded that Argentina pull out all of its troops from the Falklands, restore British administration as a precondition to negotiations on sovereignty and said the wishes of the islanders must be considered paramount.
(part of) developments in the Falklands dispute, the Organization of American States convention on an urgent foreign ministers conference
The OAS said it would consider Argentina's charges that Great Britain was "endangering hemispheric peace and security" as a result of the
Salazar smashes marathon record
BOSTON–Alberto Salazar outkicked Dick Beardsey, a relatively unknown, over the final mile yesterday to win the 86th Boston Marathon with a time of 2:57.1.
West Germany's Charlotte Tesk, 32, pulled the upset of the day by winning the women's division with a time of 2:29:33.
Salzar, 23, a world record holder running in his first Boston Marathon,
easily broke last year's record of 2:09:26.
Teske's time was off the Boston women's record of 2:25:28 set last year by New Zealand's Allison Roe. Teske won the Orange Bowl Marathon in Miami
Former Boston Marathon winner, Jacqueline Gareau of Canada, was second in the women's division.
First woman, black to ride shuttle
SPACE CENTER, HOUSTON—If all goes according to plan, America's first female and first black astronauts will fly into space aboard the shuttle
Sally Ride, a capsule communication on the latest space shuttle flight, will be the first woman; Guten Bluford Jr., Air Force lieutenant colonel, will be
Ride is scheduled for the seventh space shuttle mission and Bluford for the eighth. Both will be mission specialists and part of four-member crews.
But Ride made it clear in her conversations with astronauts Jack Lousa and Gordon Fullerton on their flight aboard Columbia last month that she
Chile's president dismisses cabinet
SANTIAGO, Chile—President Augusto Pinochet, whose 9-year-old military junta faces greater unemployment and insecurity than he can resign yesterday.
The government offered no immediate explanation for the action. But a government spokesman said the possible shake-up would not be followed by an turnabout in Pinochet's plan to build an open market economy.
Brig. Gen. Julio Bravo, a government secretary, said Chile had a "climate of unpeaseness" because of "certain recent acts."
He cited a lack of coordination among state security organs, "crimes that have repercussions beyond their nature" and a conflictive international
The statement did not specify the crimes, but several terrorist raids on an Andean jail freed hundreds of jailed political prisoners last month.
Israelis and Poles mourn holocaust
JERUSALEM-Blue and white Israel flagsipped to half-staff on Holocaust Day yesterday in remembrance of 6 million Jews who perished in the Holocaust.
The mourful remembrance of the holocaust put off, at least for a day, the final eviction of Jewish squatters in the Sinai.
Yesterday marked the 39th anniversary of the Warsaw Ghetto uprising in which almost 60,000 Jews were killed or captured by Nazi Germany's armed
About 800 Poles gathered yesterday in Warsaw to observe the anniversary as well.
Applications to public colleges low
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. – Fewer high school seniors than expected are applying for admission to big public universities, despite federal backcouts in admissions.
Although students were expected to flock to less expensive public universities instead of private schools because of dwindling financial aid, the survey showed only a 2.6 percent increase in freshman applications for next year at 40 large public universities.
"This small average increase does not support the past prediction of huge increases in applications to public sector universities due to federal financial aid cuts," Donald Dickason, the Penn State dean of admissions who compiled the survey, said recently.
"Each segment of the country appears to have public universities in both the plus and minus categories, suggesting that regional economic and educational factors are probably as great an influence on applications as federal financial aid factors are."
Rallies launch Ground Zero week
WASHINGTON—Americans took to the streets across the country yesterday—reading anti-nuclear poetry in San Francisco, singing folk songs in Louisville, Ky., and distributing leaflets at the Boston Marathon—all part of Zero demonstrations to educate people about the horrors of nuclear war.
Organizers addressed a lunch-hour crowd across the street from the White House in Washington and announced plans for a huge rally in New York City.
About 350 colleges and universities planned Ground Zero activities this week.
Ground Zero is a non-partisan group trying to develop a grass-roots push to prevent nuclear war. Its name is taken from a military term for the point
Organizers said the peace march and rally in New York City against nuclear arms, planned for June 12, would try to attract 500,000 demonstrators.
Correction
Because of a typographical error, yesterday's Kanan misreported the attendance at the International Festival. The actual attendance was 600.
A Kansan editorial yesterday misreported the amount that tuition would be after a proposed 20 percent increase.
If the Board of Regents approves the increase, tuition for fall 1983 for out-of-state KU students would be $200 higher.
Committee OKs minority groups' budgets
By ANN LOWRY Staff Reporter
The Black Student Union and the Student Council for Recruiting, Motivation and Educating Minority Engineers got their budgets approved with cuts by the Student Finance and auditing Committee last night.
The recommendations for funding,
which the committee will send to the
east Senate to consider April 28, was
the BSU and $1,213 for SCQMEBE.
Approval came after much debate over the two budgets by the Senate's budget subcommittee, the Finance and Auditing Committee and the Senate
THE SENATE had accepted the subcommittee's recommendation to delay giving the two groups any money for fiscal year 1983 until the F'ance committee would meet with the groups' representatives and clarify their budgets.
The Senate approved earlier this month almost all other groups' budgets as the subcommittee had recommended.
$3,650 request to zero and tabling KU-Y's $1,878 request until it be considered by the Finance and Auditing Committee.
The only other changes that the Senate made were cutting JKJHK's.
The Senate will reconsider the entire budget April 28 because David Adkins, student body president, vetoed the budget last week.
The subcommittee budgeted $7,000, $20,000 more than the Senate had to spend according to expected revenue from student activity fees.
TOM BERGER, finance and auditing co-chairman, said the specific recommendation concerning SCoRMEE stipulated that it had to present a new, "complete, accurate and adequate audit program," Auditing Committee, and also prove the eligibility of the group to receive Senate funds.
"Every year this comes up—the use of student funds in line with the purposes and functions of the group and the group uses funds." Berger said.
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Robert Lee, SORCMEBE member, said there were two parts of SORCMEBE. The student-sponsored part is a club; the engineering industry sponsors the other part, which exists mainly to allow scholarships to minority students.
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The Senate's funding philosophy for the program for recruiting or granting scholarship
This information was not supplied to the Senate on the budget request form in the blank, "Does the group receive outside funding?"
"You all need to clean up the bookkeeping between the two organizations," Becky Pyles, finance manager, said. "If there is overlap, let it be known."
"I suggest you bring how much money you have received from the corporate side and simply record it as outside funds."
About $2,700 was cut from the
CORmMEB budget, including some fo
postage, printing and a symposium
Crown Center in Kansas City, Mo. The
group originally had requested aobp
More than $4,700 was cut from the BSU budget. It was the third budge request the BSU had presented.
PREVIOUSLY, the BSU had presented a first budget for about $10,000, and a second request for about $12,000, third budget request was for about $8,300.
John Coleman, BSU president, explained he was the third president of the BSU had had this year and the changes that caused had some problems.
The Finance and Auditing Committee reached the new figure by cutting some postage, advertising and duplicating from the budget.
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Page 3
Commissioners to look at day care rules
By SUSAN AHERN MARUSCO Staff Reporter
KU students whose children stay in private day care homes will be affected by possible changes in a city zoning ordinance and the uniform building code. Both changes would increase the number of children allowed in such homes.
At tonight's city commission meeting, the Uniform Building Code Board of Appeals will ask that the city amend the building code to allow daycare more than children if their facilities meet the state's Life Safety Code.
According to Janis Fisher, who represents the Douglas County Family Day Care Association, the board will recommend that the city conform to state laws, which allow up to 12 youngsters in day care homes before forcing owners to make expensive renovations.
FISHER SAID the Douglas County Family Day Care Association also would ask the commission to change a city zoning ordinance to allow up to 12 children in day care homes instead of the six currently allowed.
The commission will meet at 7 p.m. in the City Hall Commission Chambers.
'If the city doesn't amend the building code, many day care homes in
Lawrence will have to reduce their number of children or close," Fisher said. "Many day care owners can't afford to pay for expensive remodeling that would keep their home in compliance with building code regulations."
Fisher said the Uniform Building Code Board of Appeals, was recommending that private day care homes be exempt from having to implement handicap access to restrooms and separate facilities for each sex.
Even if day care home owners were exempted from these requirements, Fisher said they still would have to be more stringent State Life Safety Code.
"This code has not been enforced in the past, but fire officials say it will be in the future," Fisher said.
Diane Pope, nurse for the Lawrence Health Department, said the Life Safety Code now classified all day care homes attended by more than six percent of the public. These homes have to have the same safety features as elementary schools.
ONE OF THE safety features Fisher objected to was the requirement that heavy metal fire doors be erected at the top and bottom of all stairways.
"Day care homes already live up to much of the state's Life Safety Code." Fisher said. "Many homeowners have installed fire detection equipment and
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Camerer said the Douglas County Family Day Care Association would ask the commission to help convince the state to set up a new definition of day care homes that is not as restrictive as the current definition.
"Day care homes don't make that much money." she said.
Fisher said if the state's Life Safety Code was not changed, many day care homes would close before remodeling to meet State regulations.
In other business, the city commission has the opportunity tonight to settle a two-year controversy surrounding the development of the Bluffs area, near Fifth and California streets.
The controversy involves three parties: the city, the Vanguard Corporation, a local development firm, and the neighborhood who live near the Bluffs.
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THE DISPUTE began when Pinkney Neighborhood residents sued the city commission after it uplaced the Bluffs from single-family to multi-family designation almost two years ago.
However, when the residents failed to post a $112,000 bond to allow the restraining order to remain in effect, it was invalidated automatically.
Although the city agreed in early April to reissue the building permits, it could not because a judge had restrained the city from issuing the permits as a result of the residents' suit.
The Vanguard Corporation, which plans to build 20 townhouses on the Blufs, accused the city for rescinding a permit issued by the permits had been issued illegally.
The residents said the Bluff's development would cause drainage, noise, traffic problems and lower the property values of their single-family neighborhood. However, the Douglas County Court found the residents' fraud, and the residents appealed their case to the Kansas Court of Appeals.
ACCORDING TO City Commissioner Nancy Shontz, the city will attempt to parties tonight with a compromise development plan for the Bluffs area.
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Japan retains culture
The Japanese national character has not changed much since World War II, despite pressures to modernize, Japanese culture said here recently.
"The Japanese have a traditional obedience to rules and controls," he said.
SOFU'ELECTURE was part of a seminar presented by Japanese traveling scholars who are sponsored by the Japan Foundation and the Japan-United States Friendship Commission.
The Japanese still place a strong emphasis on a hierarchy, Sofue said. The Japanese also have a strong tendency to be submissive toward authority.
However, there have been significant changes in Japanese opinions toward heterosexual relationships, the role of women and other social issues, according to Takao Sofu, a professor at the Japanese National Museum of Ethnology.
A respect for the group and a
"After World War II, heterosexual relationships were much different," he said. "Marriages were love stories." He loved the traditional married marriages.
However, there have been some important changes in the Japanese character, despite a strong respect for tradition, Sofue said. One of the areas where change has been most evident is it in heterosexual relationships.
"Iapan was able to modernize because every effort was made to learn from the dominant group, the Western powers."
SOFUE SAID that a poll of more than 3,000 Japanese conducted every five years had shown that being dutiful to one's parents was as important now as it was in the early 1960s.
The Japanese also feel a strong obligation to family ties, a trait that has changed little since the war.
better way of doing things allowed the Japanese to modernize after the war, he said.
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ASSERTIVE BEHAVIOR WORKSHOP
Wednesday, April 21,1982
7:00-9:00p.m.
Regionalist Room
Kansas Union
PRE-REGISTER: 864-3552
This workshop is being organized by members of The Assertiveness Training Task Force who are people in the Offices of The Dean of Student Life, The Student Assistance Center, The Office of Student Organizations and Activities, The Office of Residential Programs, and The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center.
For further information, call: 864-3552
You Can't Afford Not To Care...
The Reagan administration has proposed extensive reductions in federal funding for many student aid programs for federal Fiscal Year 1983 (academic year 1983-84). The American Council on Education has estimated that under the Reagan proposals approximately $17,695,788 less federal student assistance funding would be available to Kansas students in academic year 1983-84 than was available in academic year 1980-81. This would mean that only 54% of the money available to assist Kansas students last year will be available in the 1983-84 school year. At the same time, the cost of attending a Kansas college or university is expected to increase by 20 to 25 percent.
In addition, the American Council on Education estimated that phasing out of Social Security educational benefits means that 5,155 Kansas college students will lose $14,952,000 in financial assistance. The Reagan administration has also proposed the elimination of the $850,000 of federal State Student Incentive Grant (SSIG) funds that Kansas receives annually. These federal funds
have become an integral part of the $4,175,000 General Use appropriation for the Tuition Grant and State Scholarship Programs in Kansas.
Finally, the administration proposes to eliminate graduate and professional student eligibility under the Guaranteed Student Loan Program. This change could seriously disrupt graduate enrollment in all Kansas universities.
Final Congressional action on these proposed cuts is not expected for several weeks. You have several options: You can ignore the proposed cuts and hope that someone else will speak up for you; you can hope that the state legislature will pick up the difference in the cuts; you can allow aid programs to be discontinued . . . OR, you can write or call your representatives in Washington. Let them know how you feel about the proposed reductions and the effect such cuts will have on your ability to complete your education. You will join thousands of other students from throughout the nation who have joined together to fight the cuts. You can make a difference!
What's the Outlook?
The University of Kansas Student Senate is sponsoring a Forum on Financial Aid. This is your chance to have your question about financial aid answered by representatives from the Department of Education, the State Legislature, the Kansas University Office of Financial Aid, and the Associated Students of Kansas. All students, faculty, and staff are encouraged to attend.
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Big Eight Room in the Kansas Union
Let them know you care . . .
The Associated Students of Kansas is holding a Post Card Drive so that you can share your concerns about financial aid cuts with your Congressman. Tables will be set up in front of Wescoe this Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday from 9-4. Or, you can write your representative a letter on your own at the following addresses.
Senator Nancy Kassebaum
304 Russell Senate Office Bldg.
Washington, D.C. 20510
FIRST DISTRICT KANSAS
SECOND DISTRICT KANSAS
Ren. Pat Roberts
Rep. Pat Roberts
City House Office Bldg.
Washington, D.C. 20515
Rep. Jim Jefferies
128 Cannon House Office Bldg.
Washington, D.C. 20515
THIRD DISTRICT KANSAS
Rep. Larry Winn
2416 Rayburn House Office Bldg.
Washington, D.C. 20515
FOURTH DISTRICT KANSAS
Senator Bob Dole
2214 Dirksen Senate Office Bldg.
Washington, D.C. 20510
Rep. Dan Glickman
1507 Longworth House Office Bldg
Washington, D.C. 20515
FIFTH DISTRICT KANSAS
Rep. Bob Wittaker
516 Cannon House Office Bldg.
Washington, D.C. 20515
How Many Of Your Friends Won't Be Back Next Year?
pd. for by student act. fee
Opinion
Page 4 University Daily Kansan, April 20, 1982
Sentencing of players raises many questions
As a Kansan columnist, some people tend to think I have an inside scoop on everything that happens around campus. I laugh and shake my hands. You'll still ask me about all the current campus issues.
102
The questions I have been hearing recently, however, have been the most disturbing of the semester. Again and again, students have been asking me about the KU football players could possibly be on a team that played the game day since the three players were sentenced two weeks ago someone has asked: "Is that all that is"
CHRIS COBLER
go to happen to them? Why hasn't the Kansas
written nouns about it?"
The answer to the first question is, unfortunately, yes. The players, Broderick Thompson, Renwick Atkins and Cedric Alexander, were convicted March 11 and sentenced to extended periods of probation April 5. Head football coach Don Fambough announced the players would be allowed to remain on the team and would be eligible to play in the fall.
College athletics have been beset by so many scandals in recent times that many people reacted indifferently to this local scandal. Like these people, the Kansan's initial reaction was one of mild outrage followed by resigned acceptance.
However, not everyone took the news so complacently. The students I talked to expected some type of retribution. Fambrouch's explanation for letting the three remain on the team seemed like a clear case of double standards.
in his prepared statement the day of the sentencing. Farnham said, "I have given you three hours" and then he continued.
three young men deserve a second chance to complete their education at the University of Texas.
How benevolently generous, we are supposed to think. Coach is willing to forgive these poor, misguided athletes who made one paltry indiscretion.
Perhaps Fambrough was thinking of the best interests of the players, but the result is still hard to swallow for the non-athlete students who don't hold such a privileged position within the University. These students can't help but think that if they had been convicted of stealing more than $8000 worth or property, they would have received more than a slap on the wrist.
But even more insulting to these students, struggling to afford college, is that the University may still be paying the room, board, tuition and books for these athletes. It is not so difficult to believe that average students would have suffered more for such actions.
Indeed, the punishment for these athletes should be even more severe because they are representatives of the University and, as such, their actions have brought dishonor to the University. Apparently, the thinking is that by being allowed to play, the athletes will bring more honor to the University by helping to take the team to another bowl game.
Which brings us to the question of just how important an athletic program is to a University. Are standards thrown out the window when it comes to athletes who can help produce a winning team? When you also consider the previous question, what kind of recruiting, it makes you wonder whether the football program has lost sight of its standards.
It may be time the University administration took steps to ensure that the football coaches are thinking of more than victories on the field. Their decisions off the field already have lost the support of many students, who, hard as it is to remember, are still the heart of any athletic program.
Loquacious ape may make talking to animals a reality
Koko is learning sign language, although she is not daff. She's a gorilla.
To put it in her own words, she is a "fine animal gorilla."
Stanford University doctoral candidate Francine Patterson is teaching Koko language in a study of animal intelligence and awareness. In studies of language using chimpanzees, researchers have successfully taught them signs for objects such as a carrot ("cup"), but linguists have debated whether the animals were really using language.
A conclusion to that debate would be dif- ficient in linguists do not agree on what language is.
So far, though, Koko has learned 375 signs,
enough words to be able to score in the low
JoLYNNE WALZ
Besides simply naming things, Koko expresses abstract ideas such as “bad,” “worried.”
normal range for a young child on a standard intelligence test. She could have scored higher, but certain answers that were right for a gorilla were wrong for a child. For instance, when asked which was better shelter in a house or a tree, Koko sighed "Tree."
One time when she saw a horse with a bit in its mouth, Koko signed "Horse aid." When she took the photo, she said,
At other times she cussed the researchers out when she was upset, using the word "damn" liberally. She also bites when she doesn'tzet her way.
While she was being difficult, she also armed that manipulating words alters truth. In the course of the game,
the first of the first occasions Patterson caught her lying was when Koko, who was left alone with research assistant Kate Mann, jumped onto a kitchen sink and broke it.
When Patterson returned, Koko tried to lay the blame elsewhere, signing, "Kate there but me."
Using abstract expressions and lying are two possible elements of true language. Another is the ability to discuss future and past events. Supposedly, animals have only dim recollections of the past, and no thoughts of the future.
However, Koko remembers the past and discusses it with Fatterson, who Koko calls
"Bite." Koko said.
Koko bit Patterson once, although at the time she refused to admit the bite was anything more than a scratch. Several days later, she then asked Koko, "What did you do to Penny?"
Bite, Koko said.
"You admit it." Patterson said.
"Sorry bite scratch. Wrong bite."
Letters Policy
"Because mad."
"Don't know."
Like other children, Koko had a hard time remembering why she had thrown the temprantrum, although she remembered lying about it.
Besides the past, Koko also anticipates things that will happen in the future.
Properly trained, the possessors of those profitable paws might have learned to sign like Koko when Patterson asked her “Where do gorillas go when they die?”
One day Patterson told her they could go for a walk outside later if the weather was still fine. Hours later, when Patterson returned, she found that the sun was shining and gathered her toys to go out.
Early experiments with teaching language to animals such as horses and pigs were later found to be hoaxes. Often, the animals were able to answer simple questions by responsible to answer simple questions by responding to minute subconscious cues from their perform when their masters were not present.
Hans the Wonder Horse supposedly knew how to count. As it pawed its hoof in answer to mathematical questions—one, two, three—the owner would tense slightly until the horse reached the correct number. Hans stopped stomping when its owner relaxed.
"Comfortable hole, Quiet. Goodby," Koko answered.
It would be interesting to see if other gorillas could be taught as much language as Koko has learned, to verify whether Kokie is a fluke or really a "Pine animal gorilla."
While searching for more and more agricultural land and living space, people have been destroying the gorilla's range land, reducing their numbers. Despite their diminishing population, though, they are hunted extensively by poachers, largely because there is a profitable black market in stuffed and mounted souvenir gorilla paws.
Koko's responses, however, are too complex to dismiss as simple subconscious cues by
But bollias are difficult to obtain for research because they are an endangered species.
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.
FILL WALIE
UPPER CLASS
Letters to the Editor
Schlafly's defenders prompt
To the Editor:
This is one of, undoubtedly, many responses to the remarks from David Whalen and Robert Heschmeyer in their April 14 endorsement, and miscellaneous comments related to, Phyllis Schlaffly's scheduled appearance at the University of Kansas.
Unfortunately for the authors, their call for common sense and good taste is a mockery in the face of their own brand of "paranoid McCarthyism," demonstrated by their labeling of the women's movement as "merely a handful of leftists, Marxists and other misfits."
Considering the above-mentioned display of rationality and intelligence, I would be interested to learn Whalen's and Hessmerye's views on some other subordinate and (probably humane) arguments; society: hippies, homosexuals, Hispanics, liberals and advocates of gun control, to name a few.
By the way, if their observations have inspired anyone to consider joining the John Birchers (or any other serious organization devoted to saving all civilization and culture from destruction at the hands of militants and misfits), they will surely be able to provide you with the necessary application forms.
In my opinion, Schiflay is a mency and a shrew (yes, Dave and Bob, it difficult to resist
Becky Domermuth Lawrence graduate student
Becky Domermuth,
Rational consideration
To the Editor:
In response to the letters in the April 14 Kansan, we can see that David Whalen and Robert Huschmeier can easily be identified as part of the "calm and rational people, not given all support of the women's rights, since they classify all supporters of the women's rights as 'lefthists, Marxists and misfeit.'
We don't mind that student funds are being used to bring Phyllis Schlarly here. Her presence will cause a lot of people to examine the issues with which she is concerned and to form opinions about her. If we give her certain arguments which will no doubt, be made for and against the ERA as a result of her visit.
We have no wish to restrict Schlafly's freedom of speech—we hope she has no wish to restrict the freedoms we would like to enjoy, such as equal pay for equal work, we have faith that the people who hear her speak will form opinions and be taught not on the scare tactics used by some people.
Julie Arenes,
Topeka graduate student
Kasey Ward,
Norwich senior
Societv in sad state
In response to a letter written by David Whalen and Robert Heschmeyer, I would like to say that it's a sad state of society, when in a country supposedly founded upon the principles of freedom and equality for all (I say supposedly, because we only give lip service to those ideals), women who demand equal rights under the law are labeled "Marist" and "radical."
To the Editor:
as art as "rights," including the "right" to be right drafted, Congress has always had the right to draft women, if it so deemed it necessary to the best interests of the United States. So why do the authors of the letter think that the ERA would suddenly make women eligible to be drafted? This is just another misconception about the ERA, which Phyllis Schlafly is hoping the
"Equality of rights under the law shall not be
or injured by the United States or by any state
account of it."
I demand equal rights under the law, and so do many other women, and the men who care about them, and I do not consider myself a Marxist, or a radical—mere a human being.
The Equal Rights Amendment reads as follows:
American public will believe, in order to undermine its ratification.
To speak of the "rights" American women have today, in comparison with the rights given to American males, is to speak of: making less money in the same job, even while doing the same work. To say that men are harassed at work; abusive relationships with males (which, fortunately, the public is finally becoming aware of, and speaking out against, but not nearly enough); and the barrier of night (how many of you males look outside, see that you have to leave your room because you would have to walk and be alone?).
Get the point? Luckily for the authors of that letter, all Americans are given the right of free speech, even if they don't know what they are talking about
Just remember folklies: "A man of fidelity is not intimidated by a woman of equality."
Sandra ward, secretary in the department of Slavic languages and literature
To the Editor:
Blatantly sexist
On April 14, a letter was published that not only condemned the ERA but also the entire mass of people who support it. The authors of this letter were David Whalen and Robert Hessmeyer. In my five years at the University of Kansas, I have rarely seen a letter so blatantly sexist, let alone expressing such a lack of tolerance for another view.
in speaking of paranoid McCarthyism in reference to the ERA type of mentality. Whalen and Heschmeyer do an excellent job of exposing their paranodia and irrational fear. Categorizing ERA supporters into "a handful of leftists, Marxists and non-Marxists," the author describes civilization and culture" is not only a prime example of sensationalism but also a gross and unfounded generalization.
The supporters of the ERA are trying to create a better world, and although everyone doesn't agree with the methods employed to achieve this, we can hardly doubt their sincerity. As far as the type of person who is attracted to ERA views, I am willing to bet that the diversity is staggering, the total sum of whom definitely comprise more than a handful.
As for using the draft as an emotional stair, just let me state that military service is not necessarily a right but a social responsibility of all citizens, male or female. The exclusion of women from drafts (during draft times) is one of the most sexist acts our country has ever held responsible for.
Women, of course, do not even register now, a fact the ARA would probably change. I fail to see what is so fragile about a woman that makes her incapable of military service.
What is so inherent a quality in women that it makes equality among the sexes impossible? What deserves special protection (exclusion from legal obligations or denial of rights)?
I refuse to accept this motherhood sentimentality, chivalrous garbage, etc. Women are people first and sex is not necessarily a matter of wants to go to war, but for men, it is not a choice.
Aside from the emotional ploys and the sensationalism of this flimsy plea for "sanity," I must recognize that the anti-ERA stand is probably the most popular. We cannot let the popular view persuade us without questioning that view.
Slavery was once such a view, steeped in tradition and social acceptance, yet few would agree that such limitations placed on people are humane. Let us view each change (or attempt to change) as something separate from mom and apple pie. Even they can improve.
Christopher Budd Lawrence senior
To the Editor:
Money-making scheme
Now, however, that the policy has established that profit is the sole objective of Endowment Association investments and morality is of primary importance. We seek some ways to take advantage of this policy.
A couple of years ago, I was active in the efforts to convince the Kansas University Endowment Association that it shouldn't be investing our money in corporations that deal with the racist South African regime. In checking up on the issue currently, I'm surprised and am amazed at the Endowment Association's yet adamantly defending its indispensable
One good way for the Endowment Association to make money is to invest in an airplane, which would be used to fly marijuana from Mexico. There is, of course, a very good market for marijuana in Lawrence, and the profits to be made are enormous.
I am actually much more serious than it might seem. The fraternity and sorority residents commonly drink beer, with the proceeds from the sale of beer going to a philanthropic cause.
Analogously, the fraternity and sorority residents, along with the other students, can get high on marijuana, with the proceeds from the college going to the benefit of the University of Kansas.
Many people will express concern for the legal problems that might arise, but these problems can be taken care of easily. All we need to do is to get a lawyer attorney himself with plenty of free marijuana.
Mark Cline, 1140 Louisiana
The University Daily KANSAN
USS 6458 (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 or by B&M or by a year outside the county. Student subscription is a B&M semester, paid to the student activity fee. Postmatter. Send addresses of address to the University Daily Kansan, Fint Hall. The University of Kansas
Editor Business Manager
Vanessa Hieron Nateela Judge
Managing Editor Treese Hamilton
Editorial Editor Karan Schlueter
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Associate Campus Editor Jason George
Annotator Campus Editors Jae Hebein, Rebecca Channey
Assistant Editor Tiankun Han
Sports Editor Rugger Higgitt
Assess Sports Editor Rugger Higgitt
Entertainment Editor Cronish Ben
Makeup Editor Lia Maantho, Lilia Dairk, Sharon Appelbaum
Photo Editor Elaine Nurmey, Teresa Herdan, Lauren Maantho
Photo Editor Ben Bigler
Retail Sales Manager Ann Hornerblush
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University Daily Kansan, April 20, 1982
Page 5
Cults
From page 1
General Robert Stephan to issue an opinion on the constitutionality of the bill.
ALDERSON SAID the case involved a former Kansas judge who had granted a temporary guardianship.
But Robert Alderson, first deputy attorney general said the office did not issue an opinion because the State office was involved in legislation now in a federal court case in Arizona.
"It's the duty of the attorney general to defend judges. We didn't feel we could defend a judge and issue an opinion on it at the same time."
The bill passed the House with very little opposition, but by the time hearings were scheduled in the Senate committee, the bill's votes were down and came out in full force to testify against it.
Those who spoke against it included religious scholars, lawyers, members of several religious organizations—including cults and culted members—and even parents of cult members.
Most of them said the bill took away an individual's right to practice freedom of religion.
They also said it would require a judge to determine the difference between "mind control" and a genuine religious conversion, which is not really possible to make for anyone but the person involved.
Some opponents said the legislation could be used by any parent who did not like the
religious group his child joined. But because the bill does not specify religious groups, some said it could refer to any organization that caused a dramatic change in a person's personality or lifestyle and could be shown to employ methods of coercion and misrepresentation.
Some of these who testified agreed cults were a problem, but not one that should be dealt with by the government. They suggested that churches organize meetings between members of religious groups and their parents who disagreed with their choice.
Lowell Mitcham, Kansas director of Rev. Sun Myung Moon's Ufficial Church, said that when there was a disagreement between them and their problems in a "non-hostile environment."
"It would be better if different mainline meetings were held," neutral meeting place." said Mitchum, 1543.
The program calls for parents who make complaints against their adult children who are members of the Unification Church to participate in investigators for an interview with their children.
But he said a program begin in January by the police was "at least one step" in the right direction.
Police officers are instructed to remain neutral in the investigation, which is designed to determine whether the member is the victim of any criminal activity, and to keep themselves and the member to meet alone without the threat of kidnapping by deprogrammers.
One of the reasons for the errors was that in addition to the copies of the original city ordinances, the copies of the working copies of some of the ordinances, which led to confusion, Kaup said.
THE LETTER to the commission will be mailed this week. he said.
Investigations
From page 1
Out of 45 errors, five can be considered substantive, Kaup said.
"Several of those occurred because the League
rulled upon the document put together by the
deputy."
That document, the working paper, consisted of two chapters produced by the planning department that dealt with flood plan ordinances.
Francisco said that in the future a number of tests will be done differently in the codification process.
'One of them is using the ordinances themselves rather than documents that have been produced in the planning department,' she said.
COMMISSIONERS agreed that in the future they must have an opportunity to see the final version of the code before they are asked to approve it.
Clark emphasized that errors appearing in city codes were not unique to Lawrence.
Commissioners also raised the question of whether Watson had given the city staff adequate personnel to prepare the original version of the ordinance.
Commissioner Nancy Shontz said, "The problem is that the staff did not have adequate help and that's what the city manager has got to work on."
But Watson said, "I had no indication that they needed help."
Clark said that city staff might have needed a warrant to order ordinances, but that this was not Wilson's fault.
Kaup said that some of the errors were also leaked in the Leaguer. If these mistakes would be deleted in the Leaguer,
It is too early to estimate the cost to the city from the mistakes, because the commission will have to decide which parts of the code need reprinting, he said.
Prof dates farming spread genetically
By tracing human genetic traits, evidence supports the spread of agriculture from the Middle East to northwestern Europe in the period 8,000 to 5,000 B.C., a professor of genetics from Stanford University told about 80 people at the Kansas Union yesterday.
Agriculture fulfilled an important need among the early inhabitants of Europe, who until about 9,000 B.C. had subsisted on hunting and the fruits of nature. Cavalioli-Sorza said.
lecture at 2 p.m. today in the Forum Room of the Union.
Luigi Luca Cavalli-Sforza, who has written four books on human population genetics, used slides to illustrate how migrations of the early inhabitants of Europe—coupled with a cultural limitation spread by word of mouth—brought the increased usage of farming methods in blood.
THE LECTURE was the first of two sponsored by a fund established to enhance teaching programs at the KU division of biological sciences. Cavali-Sforza will give a different
"The reason that it revolutionized our lives completely is that it made possible the advent of cities, villages, countries and civilizations," he said.
agriculture included herds of sheep, goats, cattle and cereal grains such as barley.
"Migrants left their genetic fingerprints upon the peoples of Europe," he said.
THE MIDDLE EAST contributions to
Today's lecture will concentrate on methods for studying cultural traits and their transmission, Cavali-Storva said, by using as examples the California students and an ethnic group of students.
Are You Prepared for Your Finals?
Study Skills Workshop Emphasis on taking final exams.
Wednesday, April 21
Council Room Kansas Union No Registration/Free
Wednesday, April 21
7:00-8:30 p.m.
The Student Assistance Center,121 Strong 864-4064
Tonight is Miller Night at
Mr.Bill's
O
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50c Bottles from 8-12
Prizes to be given away!
LEAVE YOUR MARK AT KU... ELECT IMPRESSION
Mary C. Moore, Lois D. Miller, John M. O'Neill, Michael J. Reilly, Barbara P. McDonough, Eileen R. Hickey, Katherine A. Scott
Scott Kirdendall Steve Wells Bryan Benson Bruce Harris Angela Young Patty Kelley Grace Willing Katheigh Hull
Board of Class Officers Vote "Impression" April 21 & 22 Paid for by "Impression" for class officers
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'82
INDULGE YOURSELF
'82
The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center Invites You To Join Us In Viewing The Film
CHOOSING LOVE AS A STRATEGY
A Wedding in the Family,
sister's decision to direct her
to choose marriage in contract to sister's decision to direct her
A sensitive portrayal of one daughter's decision
to choose marriage in contrast to her
major energy towards a career. An informal discussion will follow.
DATE: Thursday, April 22, 1982
TIME: 7:00-9:00 p.m.
PLACE: Pine Room, Kansas Union
For further information call the
Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, 864-3552.
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McCalls
Page 6 University Daily Kansan, April 20, 1902
Spare time
Catherine and Fredson contain many antiques.
Marion and Caude Holeman, Topeka, show off their wares ai Quantrill's Flea Market, 811 New Hampshire. Quantrill's, which is open on Saturdays and Sundays, contains many antiques and collectibles.
Collectors, peddlers blend at Quantrill's
You must watch your step as you walk through the doors of Quantrell's Flea Market, 811 New Hampshire.
Not only does a sign caution you to do so, but the diversity found within is enough to pull the unsuspecting eye, and body, in several directions at once.
It is eclectic.
It's eclectic.
Like a basement full of things the owner just can draw on, the flea market is a showcase of one man's junk—and another man's treasures.
"People walk in with an expression like they've just fallen into heaven," said Marian Holeman, one-half of a husband-wife selling team from Topeka.
It was Saturday morning, the first day of a working weekend for the Bolemans and the other staff members.
For the first-timer, the flea market can be a magician's bag of merchandise.
Dr. Pepper clocks, refugees from drug-troubles to hang near one ventures area, some tikking here.
Baby dolls with shiny, roxy cheeks share a shell with a painted lady dressed in red and white.
Kerosee lamps, curtain tails-backs circa 1910 and issues of the Ladies Home Journal from 1935 share flea market space with used stained glass windows.
Much of the merchandise is recognizable even to the new flea market-goer.
"In here you hear a lot of 'My grandmother bad one of those'," Claude Holeman said.
Holeman said he could categorize customers by variations of the grandmother comment.
"You can put them in age groups by what they say," he grinned. "They'll either say my great-grandmother, my grandmother or my mother had one of those."
Many of the customers are young.
"They collect very different things," said Jerry Jones, a Quantrill's seller from Shawnee, Ks.
She pointed to her 8-year-old granddaughter as an example of how young collectors can be.
"She goes around to the booths looking at purses and jewelry," Jones said of Kathy Pleekowski, Overland Park.
QUANTRILL'S
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80 NEW HAMPSHIRE
TELEPHONE 9426-616
Humprey has in his possession 10,000 comic books and numerous baseball cards.
Children frequent Max Humphrey's stall also,
but the attention there is a hit more obvious.
"Most of my business, especially in comics, are University of Kansas students," the ten-year
"A lot of local kids come in for the baseball cards."
Boxes of Conan, Titans, Incredible Hulk, Fantastic Four, and Captain America comics hold 6,000 of Humphreys comics alone.
Some of the younger customers are married couples looking for inexpensive, yet decorative furniture.
"It's fascinating." Leota Thompson, Quantrill manager, said.
"We get people from students, to young marriages, to the older generation."
Many of the market perusers are repeat customers, Thompson, said.
"They come back primarily because they are collectors," Claude Holeman said. "You ask them if they need help and they say, 'No, it hasn't hit me yet.'"
"They know what they're after."
Jules Hannon, Lawrence sophomore and Chris Gatts, Lawrence freshman, knew what they were doing.
"I'm looking for a little table," said Gates. He said he was in the process of furnishing an apartment.
Hanson said that neither one of them collected specific items, but said she had noticed that the same people frequented the flea market every weekend.
"I like the antiques, but have a lack of funds to collect," she said.
But even for those who have the funds to collect tea leaf ironstone, old campaign buttons, vintage license plates and other small issues, the end of the road isn't really the end of flea marketing.
They just change places—from in front of the display cases to behind them.
"An old collector never dies," Claude Holerman said.
"They just become peddlers."
SCHOLARSHIP
Susanna Puckett, Lawrence graduate student, examines an old copy of Esquire magazine at Max Humphrey's booth at Quantrill's Flea Market.
Beverage Tray
Tidbits of trinkets and treasures are displayed at one of the many booths at Quantrill's.
Jerry Jones, Shawnee, travels weekly to Quantrill's to peddle her memorabelin.
Victoria
Story by: Lisa Gutierrez
Photos by: Scott Hooker
Universitv Dallv Kansan, April 20, 1982
Page 7
Voting forced, speaker savs
By JANET MURPHY Staff Reporter
Even though scores of people voted in El Salvador's much-publicized elections last month, they did so only because they were forced to a spokesman for the Association of Salvadoran Women said last night.
Patricia Serpa, speaking to a_small group at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries building, said that all persons in El Salvador were identified with identification cards. These cards were marked when the people voted.
Workers had to show their marked cards to receive their pay, Serpa said. People were stopped by police on the streets and if they had not voted they were taken away and maybe never seen again, she said.
Serpa's speech was sponsored by Latin American Solidarity. She is on a speaking tour to organize Latin American women in this country and to teach American women about the situation in El Salvador.
SHE SAID the struggle in El Salvador for equal rights for women was much the same as that in the United States.
They want the same things, politically and economically, she said.
The majority of people in El Salvador are poor, she said. Most of the people live in the countryside and is no running water or electricity.
Women are forced to go outside their homes to work. But, she said, women made only half the wages men did for the same job.
"Women are treated as machines, as animals," she said.
She said McDonald's, one of 50 U.S. corporations in El Salvador, paid women $3 a day for work, yet she didn't believe the same as in the United States.
Women are very involved in the liberation struggle in El Salvador, Serra said. Eighty-five percent of the people belong to the opposition forces and 40 percent of those people are women, she said.
OF THE 14 states in El Salvador, seven are controlled by the opposition forces, Serpa. These
areas are mostly in the central and northern regions of the country.
Serpa said the tortue and killings go on daily in El Salvador. The army will come into an area, she said, and move in, but say they are killing guerrillas.
"That's a reality we live with every day."
She said it would be a big responsibility of the U.S. women to stop the war in El Salvador because it would be their husbands, sons and brothers who would go to fight, just as in Vietnam.
Serpa said the opposition forces were fighting to overthrow the oligarchy and the military, for they stood as the enemies of the people.
She said the people did not really want to fight, but "it's much harder to see our children die or adults put in jail than to kill," she said.
Serpa, 26, now lives in San Francisco, working for the Association for Salvadron Women. She came to the United States a few years ago as a student at UCLA and became of her work in organizing opposition forces to the junta government, she cannot return to her country.
"There is no way we can be open (in El Salvador)," she said. "We have to work outside El Salvador."
But she does travel to Central America, she said, mostly to Costa Rica, to organize support in those countries.
JACQUELINE RICO
BOB GREENSPAN/Kansan Staff
Patricia Serpa, spokesman for the Association for Salvadoran Women, described last night the life women lead in El Salvador and their role in the Salvadoran revolution.
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Regents cut Med Center funds
By TOMHUTTON Staff Reporter
KANSAS CITY, Kan.—Recent budget difficulties at the University of Kansas Medical Center led the Kansas Board of Regents last week to implement more bipartisan budget cuts, Kaithe Nitcher, KU director of business affairs, said yesterday.
The Regents, at a regular board meeting in Manhattan, voted to revise the Med Center's financial operations after sagging occupancy rates threw the hospital off budget. The low occupancy rates, which were blamed on inflation, high insurance premiums and the expansion of other Kansas City area hospitals, caused early projected deficits of an estimated $6 million.
THE MED CENTER will take the steps implemented by the Regents when fiscal year 1983 begins in July, Nitcher said.
The first step at the Med Center will
be to reduce the number of beds in the hospital from 640 to 540.
The second step will be to reduce staff positions throughout the Med Center. There will be 33 positions cut from building personnel, 241 from staff attendants, 52 from support services and 140 from physician corporations. Physician corporations are groups of physicians who rent space at the Med Center and are under contract for services.
In addition to the reductions, the Med Center will attempt to cut its operating budget from $113 million to $110 million. The $113 million was allocated to the Med Center by the Legislature for the 1983 budget.
"Since the revenue has continuously been less than the amount budgeted," Nitcher said, "the Med Center's budget had to be reduced in order to more
These cuts were necessary, Nichter said, because the Med Center could not continue to spend more money than had been budgeted.
accurately reflect what's going on there."
While attempting to meet budgeted finances, the Med Center froze all hiring, except for nurses, last March. The company chose of new materials also were set.
THE MED CENTER'S budget is partially funded by the Kansas Legislature and partially by patient revenues from the hospital.
These early reductions, combined with a reserve fund of $3.5 million left from faxal 1981, should reduce the Med Debt deficit to about $800,000. Niners say.
Instead of giving the Med Center more money, the Legislature advanced $1.2 million from the fiscal year 1983 to 1984. The Med Center could continue operation.
At the start of the Med Center's budget problems in early January, officials said they would not use the fund unless absolutely necessary.
Bover, top educator, to speak at KU
Scannell said he expected Boyer to talk about some of the changes and
Ernest L. Boyer, president of the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, will be the guest speaker for the UWI School of Education in joint biocare meeting at 10 a.m. May 13 in the Kansas Room of the Kansas Union
One of the top educators in the nation, as listed by U.S. News and World Report, spoke at speaking at the University of Kansas during commencement weekend.
"He's obviously one of the leading figures in education in the country," Dale Scannell, dean of the School of Education, said yesterday.
Boyer has been a strong advocate for improving education, Scannell said, and the education alumni society members thought it would be appropriate for him to address them and the general public.
Boyer holds honorary degrees from 42 U.S. colleges and universities. In 1971 he received the President's Medal from Tel-Aviv University.
issues teachers would face during the next few years.
He received his master's degree in 1960 from Greenville College, Ill., and his doctorate in 1955 from the University of Southern California.
From 1970 to 1977 Boyer was chancellor of the State University of New York, the largest university in the United States. There, he directed 64 institutions and more than 350,000 students.
BEFORE GOING to Carnegie, Boyer served as U.S. Commissioner of Education during the Carter administration. While he was commissioner, the federal budget for education increased 40 percent.
BOYER ALSO initiated a five-year review of college presidents at SUNY,
launched a non-campus institution called Empire State College and negotiated the first undergraduate exchange program with the Soviet
After Boyer speaks, the School of Education will present a slide show on its new five-year study program for the Department of Computer Science faculty members who will be retiring.
He has been a member of the President's Advisory Council on Women's Educational Programs and Works, and served as Director of Language and International Education.
The retiring faculty members are Millo Skuhr, professor of educational policy and administration; Loda Newcomb, assistant professor of curriculum and instruction; Genevieve Hargiss, professor of music education; and Alvin Schild, professor of curriculum and instruction.
The Outstanding Educator Award will also be presented at the meeting.
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan, April 20, 1982
Author reads works to classes
By SUSAN BROSSEAU Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
The author read the final words quietly and with power. She removed her glasses and her red eyes verified the emotion that was in her voice. The audience sat deathly still—only hushed sobs broke the silence.
Irsen Olsen had concluded the reading of "Tell Me a Riddle," a story she wrote that won an O. Henry Award, as part of her activities as writer-in residence for the English department last week.
During her three-day visit, Olsen visited creative writing and literature classes, read from her works, spoke on the causes of creative silences in writers and led a discussion that caused how to prevent those creative silences.
OLSEN, ALTHOUGH highly acclaimed, is the author of relatively few published works. Her literary works are "Tell Me a Riddle," a book of short stories; "Yonnondo," an unfinished novel; "Silences," an epic in literature; and contributions to Ms. Harper's, College English and Trellis.
During her time on campus, Olsen
decried the waste of human potential. It was an important theme in her fiction as well as her speeches and discussions while visiting classrooms.
Olsen said she regretted the silenced creativity in humanity due to discipline, color and class, and the time-consuming work needed to maintain human life.
CREATIVITY IS born in every child, she said, and is almost unlimited in children and almost gone in adults. She creativity was not expressive only in art.
"Creativity goes on all the time. During my silence I was using my creativity, but it wasn't in the written word," she said.
She suggested finding new ways of recording creative thoughts.
"Maybe you need not think of a perfect story. There are many good thoughts. Why let them go because you don't have the time?" Olsen said.
But her major fear, Olsen said, was not the creative work that was lost, but the danger to humanity that the nuclear arms race had brought.
"What does any of it matter if we don't do something about these 50,000 atomic war heads?" she said.
what they could to change people's
money from a policy of nuclear
referent
"You have to reach the people who really believe that we have to have more bombs to keep the Russians from bombing us," Olsen said.
With increased knowledge, she said, those people could change.
SHE IMPLORED her audiences to do
"You must respect other people's
name. They said, 'You must
believe in them.'"
A college education, however, is not necessarily the way to increase knowledge that would lead to change, she said.
Olsen used Phyllis Schifley and her upcoming visit to the KU campus as an example. Olsen said that Schifley's observation did not show her how women lived.
"Her education was one of privilege, given by those in power to perpetuate that power," Olsen said. "I hate women like her, who take all the privilege about their lives and make a career out of women's tragedy."
But even Schlafly could change, she said.
"You must have faith in humankind," Olsen said. "I am a believer. I believe that people will act for what is right."
KU students will have a chance to make a commitment to music this week.
Music society seeks new members
Senate holding drive
INCREASING ARTIST'S fees and a growing concern that prominent artists would no longer come to Lawrence caused a number of music enthusiasts to respond to the need for contributions.
The Student Senate's cultural affairs committee is holding a membership drive for the Swarthock. The drive will run through Friday.
The Swarthout Society was formed two years ago to help support the KU Concert and Chamber Music Series.
More than 300 students, staff,
"The society consists of people who are interested in insuring the quality of performance in this area," according to Jackie Davis, director of the Concert and Chamber Music Series for the University and executive director of the Swarthout Society.
faculty and friends of the University have contributed more than $10,000 to help meet artists' fees and expenses, Davis said recently.
But the Society is seeking more student and senior citizen memberships, she said, and one purpose of these groups is to let these groups know they can join.
During the week, members of the cultural affairs committee will speak at many living organizations.
Mollie Mitchell, cultural affairs committee chairman and newly appointed Swarthout board member said, "We've also sent out letters to many of these organizations to help build awareness before we talk to them as a group.
"We want to encourage many of these living organizations to join the Society as a group. Then, hopefully, we can help them become interested students in those groups."
THERE ALSO will be a table in front of Wescoe Hall, where committee members will pass out Swarthout Society literature.
A student membership to the Society costs between $5 to $24. Members will receive invitations to special post-performance receptions, opportunities for special pre-performance discussion groups and a copy of the semiannual Society newsletter.
"I want students to be more aware of these benefits," Mitchell said. "That is why we are holding this membership drive. We want to build a better community in the arts available to them at the University and in the community."
The schedule for the 1982-83 KU Concert and Chamber Music Series includes the Ohio Ballet, the Kansas City Lyric Opera, the Beaux Arts Trio and the American String Quartet.
"I was pleased with this year's "schedule," Davis said, "and was delighted with the sold out performances. I am extremely pleased with this coming season and I hope even more people will attend."
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KANSAS UNIVERSITY
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KELLY KNIGHT
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DEON HOGAN KANSAS
'82 - '83 ALL-SPORTS SEASON TICKET SALE
MON., APRIL 19-
WED., APRIL 21
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TICKET PRICE—$45.00
FOOTBALL-ALL 6 GAMES*
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Receipts will be issued to purchasers. The ticket office will have copies if you lose your receipt over the summer.
—Tickets may be picked up next fall according to the SR., JR., Soph., Fresh. schedule.
BLOCK SEATING in Football will be available by turning your receipts in together next fall.
Football-Only Student Season Tickets go on sale next fall.
Allen Field House Student Seating is limited to 7,000. Therefore, Basketball-Only Student Season Tickets will be available only if less than 7,000 All-Sports Tickets are sold.
—For more information—contact
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ALLEN FIELD HOUSE
1
864-3141
University Daily Kansan, April 20, 1982
Page 9
KU libraries to receive salary shrinkage money
By ANN WYLIE Staff Reporter
KU's libraries will receive $100,000 from shrinkage for their acquisitions budget next year. Robert Cobb, vice chancellor, said yesterday.
just now.
"Having made the commitment (last fall) to do this, we're going to do it," he said.
Cobb met yesterday with administrators from the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and the office of affairs to finish the allocations.
"The money will come from a variety of sources," Cobb said, "wherever we can lay our hands on it this semester." The administrators were unable to determine yesterday where they could find the $100,000.
"It's not a matter of opening up a box and finding $100,000 lying there," Cobb said.
Shrinkage is the percentage of the total KU salary budget that is withheld by the Legislature due to anticipated faculty turnover. If the reduction in KU costs is expected, the University receives the money back and may put it to use.
"The inflation rate is larger than the increase," Jim Ranz, deal of libraries, said.
The shrinkage money will supplement a six percent, University-wide increase in the other operating expenses that the Legislature allocated this year.
"This money (from shrinkage) will go a long way toward not making us buy fewer books and not making us cancel magazine subscriptions."
John said the University had to supply additional, non-legislative funds to the libraries because the University had more library needs to the legislators.
regardless "It's a case of putting out money where our mouth is," he said.
The JAYHAWKER Yearbook is now accepting applications for the positions of Editor and Business Manager. Students interested in either position may pick up their application form in the Yearbook office, 121 B Kansas Union.
Application deadline is April 30.
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On the record
Craig R. Paul, 1310 Tennessee St., was arrested after he allegedly stole food from a Marvin vending machine and allegedly took some tools from an office after cleaning it, KU police said.
A 29-year-old Lawrence man was arrested at Marvin Hall on charges of possession of marijuana about 8 p.m. Friday, Lawrence police said.
A witness said he saw Paul taking food out of the vending machine and called the police. The food was worth about $10, police said.
Paul entered the building after he
NO WE WANT A GENDER-FREE SOCIETY?
on campus
checked out the keys to Marvin, KU police said.
Although the Lawrence police recorded a possession of marjuana charge, KU police reports did not identify him. Denney, director of KU police, said.
A KU police officer arrested Paul and took him to the Douglas County Court. Paul was released on a $1,000 bond.
BURGLARS STOLE a computer terminal worth more than $1,500 sometime between 11 a.m. and 1 p.m. Saturday from the Sum-
Police said burglaries pried a lock and cable off the terminal and took the computer. There are no suspects.
merfield Hall computer center, KU police said.
THEVEWS STOLE a motorcycle worth about $500 sometime between 11:30 p.m. on Saturday and 7:30 p.m. on Sunday at 131 W. Ninth St., police said.
Thieves took the 1980 motorcycle out of the driveway and pushed it away, police said. There are no suspects.
TODAY
NORMAN FORER, ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR OF SOCIAL WELFARE, speak at the HILLEL LUNCH at 12:18 a.m. in the Kansas Union Cafeteria.
THE UNDERGRADUATE PSYCHOLOGY CLUB will meet at 4 p.m. in 11 Fraser Hall.
THE TAU SIGMA DANCE CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in 242 Robinson Center
THE CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR CHRIST will meet at 7 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room of the Union.
Deana Lovejoy, Diana Matthews & Jayni Noah formerly of the Upstairs are proud to announce the grand opening of The Blue Parrot Salon
Bring this ad in for a complimentary bleached styling with a hairstcut or $5.00 off a perm, with a cut.
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Please call us for your next appointment.
The Blue Parrot Salon
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749-2583
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THE OCTOBER 1980
VOTE "INPUT" APRIL 21 & 22
DAN LOWE SCOTT SAYLER MARTIN PRYOR KEN PRENDERGAST
JULIE FLYNN JENNY BLACKSHREW LUNDEY WELCH DEANN JOHNSON
ANN CROMWELL DAVE KLESE IZ DeSTEPHIS
TITLE
BOARD OF CLASS OFFICER ELECTIONS
Elections for Sophomore, Junior, and Senior class officers will be held April 21 & 22.
Voting is from 9 a.m.-5 p.m.
Polling Places
Fraser Hall Summerfield Hall Learned Hall
Kansas Union Wescoe Hall
Learned Hall
Fraser Hall
Ice Cream
Summerfield Hall
$
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Tonight thru Saturday, 1st Set Starts at 9:30
Tuesday is Preview Night at Gammons—no cover charge for the hand
Wednesday Ladies Night - the ladies get two free drinks after 9:00 pm, 256 drways 10-11 pm.
Thursday—15¢ Draws 75c Bar Drinks 8-10:30 P.M.
Friday and Saturday come alive at eleven! $1.25 drinks. 756 draws 11 p.m. - 12 a.m.
2 for 1's & Free hot Hors de oeuvres from 5-7 pm every Friday.
1
Page 10 University Daily Kansan, April 20, 1982
Softball team goes 1-4
By TOM COOK Sports Writer
When things go well, they really go well. But when they go badly, they really go badly—just ask the KU women's softball team.
The Jayhawks had won 17 of their last 20 games when they ventured down to New Mexico for a tournament last weekend.
However, Kansas met up with the likes of Oklahoma State and Arizona State and the Jayhawks proceeded to drop two straight double-headers.
The Jayhawks managed to salvage one game in the tournament as they downed host New Mexico, 6-0. Sunday afternoon.
KANSAS RETURNS to action today as they host Cloud County in a double-header at the Holcom Sports Complex. The first game has been scheduled for 3 p.m. with the nightcap to follow at about 5 p.m.
The Jayhawks, 26-13, returned to their old form against New Mexico after losing their first four games of the tournament.
Rhonda Clarke, who was the losing pitcher in those four games, scattered four hits against New York and shut out her 18th shutout of the season.
Clarke gave up just one walk, striking out 10 batters, as she raised her pitching record to 22-11.
Tammy Hoffman and Shelly Fox had perfect performances at the plate. They each went 3-for-3. Candi Bover added two hits for Kansas.
In Friday's games, Oklahoma State took a 1-0 decision from Kansas in the opener and won the second game, 4-1.
ARIZONA STATE then took two from the Jayhawks on Saturday. The Sun Devil pounded out 23 hits and they defeated Kansas 6-5 and 5-2.
Clarke gave up 12 hits in the first game and 11 in the second. Meanwhile, the Jayhawks managed just one opener and five hits in the nightcap.
"Rhonda's stamina was down and she was not sharp at all," said KU Head Coach Bob Stancilf. "This was the only time this season when there weren't any facets of our game pulling us through."
JIAYHAWK NOTES: KU Head Coach Bob Stanklift has announced the signing of two more players to national letters-of-intent. An Am Bren, Chris Doyle and Traud Bartlesville, Okla. signed with the Jiayhaws.
Golf team takes seventh at Wichita State
By BILL HORNER Sports Writer
Same song, different instrumentation.
The Kansas men's golf team once again faced adverse weather at a tournament, this time at the Shocker Classic in Wichita last week.
The Jayhawks fought the elements in WSU's annual invitational event, and when play concluded last Friday, had to play an OLB game against tournament winner Oklahoma State.
"I don't think they've played in one day of decent weather yet in a tournament," said Head Coach Ross Randall, referring to the lousy weather that has seemed to follow KU's golf team this spring.
Rob Wilkin, who placed 13th individually for the Jayhawks, said, "the wind made it a whole new ballgame altogether."
THE SONG was the same for all 20 competing teams. Winds gusting up to 50 miles per hour the first day made play slow, stranding several golfers out on the course as darkness fell, and scores rose.
Sparked by Wilkin's 73, the Jayhawks finished the first 18 holes of play with a 309 total, pitting the team for a second-round Brad Deroed added 77s, while Tad Fugate came in with an in
1982-1983 SPIRIT SQUAD (Pom Pon/Yell Leader) TRYOUTS
INFORMATION MEETING:
Thurs. 15 5:00 p.m.
Jayhawk Rm. Kansas Union
PRELIM TRYOUTS:
Fri. 23 5:30 p.m.
Allen Field House
CLINICS:
Mon. 19 Thurs.22 5:30 p.m.
Allen Field House
FINAL TRYOUTS:
Sun. 25 8:00 p.m.
Allen Field House
Minority Students Encouraged To Participate
The final day of the tournament,
Friday, brought sunshine for a while,
and then a cold front. The front brought
with it high winds and low temperatures, and more ballooning scorecard totals.
GET A JUMP ON THE OTHERS
The Jayhawks' seventh place finished improved on last year's nineteenth place finish in the same event.
In this day and age of increased competition in the job market, an early graduation is an advantage! When you decide to take in summer school, check into Naismith Hall for that Special Summertime style of life. Summers at Naismith Hall are relaxed and friendly, with a full calendar of scheduled outings, picnics and such. Summers at Naismith Hall have frozen rates, free utilities, including A/C, and fully carpeted rooms with private baths.
Compared to last year, when weather conditions were a bit more suited for golf, Oklahoma State golfer Tommy Moore's winning medal total of 20 strokes was seventen strokes higher than the winning individual total.
So, while you are attending Summer School to "Get a Jump on the Crowd," live it up in style at Naismith Hall. Student Services at Student Prices.
"That indicates our progress," said Randall. "We beat 2/3 of the field, and we beat some teams that we couldn't beat a year and a half ago."
82, which included chipping in for an
eagle on a hole played in total darkness.
"The winds blew so hard, the course was almost unplayable," said Randall. He wasn't the only lamenting coach in the group of teams, which included last year's NCAA runners-up, Oral Roberts, NAIA Champion Texas Wesleyan, and perennial NCAA powerhouse Oklahoma State and Oklahoma.
Leases for Next Fall—Spring also available
"I THINK the guys were fairly pleased with the finish," Randall said. At some points, it was just a survival game out there. We could learn more to be closer to see how we could fare in good weather, though, to see what we could really do."
Among the finishers below KU were Big Eight schools Nebraska, Missouri, Iowa State, and Kansas State. Schools included West Virginia but finished behind the Jayhawks included host Wichita State and always tough Tulsa.
Call 843-8559 or drop by 1800 Naismith Dr.
Save $$$ on practically everything in the store
at KING Jeans STEVIS Moonlight Madness Sale Tuesday nite 7-10 p.m.
Levis
Boot Cut Jeans
reg. $20
$15.99
Levis
Brittania, Jordache, Levis Moving-on Jeans
All
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$10.99
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reg. price
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Dee Cee
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denim $14.99
Recycled Cords all colors- st. leg, boot cut
Levis
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reg. $17
$12.99
Remember-these values good only for 3 hours!
at
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levi's
Special-All Guy's Short Sleeve Shirts $9.99-$13.99!
The University Daily
KANSAN WANT ADS
Call 864-4358
one two three four five six seven eight nine ten eleven twelve十三十四十五十六十七十八十九十九十九十九十九
15 words or fewer . . .
Each additional word.
CLASSIFIED RATES
to run
Monday ... Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday ... Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday ... Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday ... Tuesday 5 p.m.
Friday ... Wednesday 5 p.m.
The Kannan 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
ERRORS
AD DEADLINES
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be
KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
PSST . Have you seen the new Phyllis Scholliy Doll? . No! Well you can do anything you want to with it and you know what else-it can for it to it!) 4-20
FOR RENT
Live in the CHRISTIAN CAMPUS HOUSE
This summer & fall. Become a part of a growing campus ministry. Call Alan Rosef.
nak, campus minister 845-692-1f7
Must see to believe. Furnished rooms with utilities paid near university & downtown.
No pets. Phone 841-5500. **tf**
For rent to mature male student. Quiet,
comfortable efficiency apartment. Private
kitchen. Close to the Union. Reasonable
price. 842-4185.
HANOVER FLACE. completely furnished.
HANOVER FLACE, 14th & 15th on Mass. Only $ blockes from KU. DON'T BREATHE. Reserve your apt.
room. 841-721 or 842-4655.
Unfurnished two bedroom apt, for summer
sublease. One block north of Kanawa Union.
Call 843-4525. 4-21
TRY COOPERATIVE LIVING. Sunflower
House, 842-9421. **1F**
Established STUDENT COOPERATIVE close to campus and downtown. Own bedroom/studio. Six evening meals each week. Utilities. SUNFLOWER HOUSE. 842-942-1. ff
THE MAID SERVICE
—THE FOOD—
★THE SOCIAL LIFE★
Are Just Three Of
The Many Reasons
People Come To Neismith Hall
Summer Or Fall/Spring
Individual Leases
NAISMITH HALL
1800 Naismith Drive 843-8559
MED CENTER BOUNDY Newly refurbished
Boynton, FL, 341-850-6972
Appliance, parking. (913) 321-8972
Wanted outgoing Christians and conscientious students to share 5 bedroom house at 416 Kentucky Ave. in Philadelphia. Utilities included. Call Darryl 841-792-6802. Utilities included. Call Darryl 841-792-6802.
Available now. Two bedroom garages apt.
Unfurnished, carpeted and draped; electric al-
pine heat and air conditioning;
atlantic heat and air conditioning.
Measures 23 feet $35 per month.
MEADOWBROOK road 18 & Crestline
Road. MEADOWBROOK
TRAILRIDGE. Leasing for film-Studios,
BRAIRDGE. All equipment is donated.
All have harvest gold appliances.
Laundry facilities on the avenues Swim-
ming pool. Equipment in stock. 4-20
parking. 2500 W. 6th-floor. 7333.
SUMMER SUBLEASE May rent free, walk to campus or downtown. June & July rent negotiate. 2 bedroom, utility required. Call, 841-716-1940, comfortable. 4-arm room.
SOUTHERN PARKWAY TOUCHHOUSES,
9th and Kakao. If your tired of apartments
furnished by the house, go to 18 baths, all appliances,
fees charged, a garage, storage space.
We have overnight rooms, and in the
summer and fall Call Craig Lark in Iowa
about our modest prized townhouses. If
you need them, please contact us.
Sublease. Meadowbrook studio, apt. Furnished. Heat & water paid. Balcony. Across from pool. May 1- July 30. Call 843-652 at 6:30 p.m.
New orchards duplex 2 bt—Large living area Garage W/D JHookups too. $275 Avid June 1. 641-8459. 4-21
Now Leasing
Apts..Duplexes-Houses
Furnished or Unfurnished
Studios, 1, 2, 3 & 4 R
Student Area
Throughout Lawrence Area
Kaw Valley Management Inc.
901 KY, Suite 205
"Professional Real
Estate Management."
Sublease Meadowbrook Townhouse. Now thru July 31, 3 bedroom, 1½ baths, unfinished. $400/mo. + bills + $400 deposit. Call 641-8538. After 5:30. 4-20
Purified one bedroom ant. ant. for suburbia.
Excellent location to campus and downtown.
Central air/heat. Available May 15. Call
415-856-656.
Summer sublease. 2 BR Apt. Close to campus. 10th Mastissippi. A.C. dishwasher. Available after finals. $290.842-6,425
University Daily Kansan, April 20, 1982
Page 11
locations available for summer $100-$140 per
month, utilities included. Close to campus
and quiet atmosphere. Call Darryl 841-
1022.
Sublease - May 15-Aug. 15. Spacious 2 bedroom apt. Fully furnished, appian piano, TV. T.V. near campus. New furnishings required. 256+ unit. 842-1035. After 5.
SUBLEASE ME. I am a two bedroom apartment on bus route and within walking distance to groves and pizza. I have a dishwasher, an electric refrigerator and table IV included in rent. If you would like to live within my quiet quaintness, call 841-5333 or 843-5326.
4-23
Summer subbase, large, 7 bdm, bwm
Summer subbase, large, 12 bdm, bwm
free table, CAA, $280, util. tuf 79-44349-
695 free table, CAA, $280, util. tuf 79-44349-
695
Supplier sublease Fem. only, Clean. close to campus. Low until 841-708-68. 4-30
[INDEFINIVE] MODERN: 1 couldn't.
[INDEFINIVE] MODERN: 2 couldn't.
[INDEFINIVE] COOM: At least call cw: 49-2811, by
cw: 49-2811.
Summer sublease or June to June lease.
Available for $30/month. No paid,
hazard付, etc. New Hillebrand, walk, bike or
carrier fee.
2 bedroom apt. May 1. sublease with extension option in room. Fully equipped electric store. Pool. On bus line... across the street from grocery 841-7548. Call evening. Calories 4-20
Waiting to sublease billever 2. bdrm. apt. summer, New. AC, dishwasher, carpet, electric garage opener, 1½ bath. Within campus of campus and university 4-28 769-134-134 4-28
Attractive 2 bedroom apartment, unfur-
nished, near campus, $210 + 1 mo deposit.
Available May 1, 842-2946, after 6. 4-23
Spacious 3 bedroom 1st floor of house. 936
New Hampshire. 4-21
**QUIPE** Meadowbrook studio to subdue, June
and August. room to rent $15/month, water
gardens, landscaping, stage, ground level, lawns of grass and trees, A/C, cable TV, 48-96
elevations, before 9.
Pay you $20! Just substitute our two additional gift cards for the optional full renewal. His one year old has, on his birthday, a new dress to wear when he paid it. It has a dishwasher. is on the kitchen cabinet. It was lauded in the banquet. Call us 841-834-1911.
Washed: Female non-smoker to share 3 bedrooms, fully furnished, air conditioned for summer sublease. 4 blocks from the Union. Call 749-3403. 4-21
May rent free. Trainride subway/fall option.
Trailrunner 3 bedroom, 1) bath on house on KU bus route, 3 pools, tennis etc.
843-7626
June-July, sublease. 8th & Miss. 2 bdm.
duplex. air cond. furnished. $225/month.
843-3230 (eve.) . 4-28
**June 1, 2 bedroom furnished am**
New kitchen, a c-4 blocks from campus.
$325 per month + ½ Ele. Deposit required.
Phone 824-6707.
4-23
Furnished one bedroom apartment Bills paid. No pets. 813 Louisiana. 4-23
1 BLOCK FROM KANASS UNION. Furnished apartment for grade or gradier upper adults with Refs, Dep. Leave. Leave. 422-811-3832 after 5 p.m. $422
Summer sublease. Furnished studio apartment, with A/C, pool, tennis courts. Great price $230 + electricity. 769-4526 4-30
SUMMER SUBLEASE. Trailridge/ Studio
Apt. Modern, pool view, Price negotiate
841-2396, antrye, 4-23
LRG-4 BR. house. Full finished basement.
1½ bath. A/C. Gas heat & water. Available in May. 842-3020. 4-27
FURNISHED STUDIO 12 month or summer lease $225. 841-3775. HOUGHTON PLACE.
2499, Alabama. tf
4 bdrm. house 2 blocks N.E. of stadium.
Available May 15. 1 bdrm. apt. available.
Juege 1. J-791-066.
4-21
For sublease in May, 1 BR Apt. Close to campus and downtown. 841-8252 weekends, after 6 p.m. weekdays. 4-21
Sublease, choice 2 br. apt., furnished, between campus & downtown, $280 mo., 749-
9855$ 4-20
Sleeping rooms 1-3 bedroom apartments.
Duplexes. No pets. Call 842-8971. Lease
for summer or full year.
Furnished 1 bbm, central air, summer sublime. $125/mo. Married student only. 841-
0465 by May frm.
4-21
MASTER BEDROOM AVAILABLE starting,
with this summer session. $160.00
with free utilities. Call 841-1434 for details.
4-30
2 bedroom furnished mobile homes. $185
& $215 per month. Available May lst.
Cliet quiet location. No pets. Jayhawk
Condit. 842-847 or 802-478. 4-30
Sublease large 2 BR apartment near stadium. Water, gas paid, central air, $320,
841-8235.
4-29
Roommate for May 1. $110/mo. plus utilities.
Sebiahs students preferred. Come take a look.
842-0038
4-22
Sumbler sublease. 1 BR ant. in 4-plex,
furnished, carpeted. AC 14th & NJ. All
utility free. $145/mo. 749-4606. 4-22
Sublease. QUAIL SCREEN 140 ft.² carpeted space & draps BCA, GIA, and all appliances. Laundry, swimming, tennis, golf, and elevators. Paid except electric. A30-420 4-121 4-22
1 & 2 Bedroom apartment closets to campuse. June 10-Aug. 1 occupancy. Call 841-6080. Kawai, Management. Inc. 4-50
Available new 2 & 4 bed room duplexes.
Available for Aug. 1 occupancy. Fireplaces,
garages & much more. 841-608-700.
Valley Management, Inc. 4-30
Apartment for sublease: 2 bedroom- furnished June-August. Summit House. 1105 Louisiana. Call 841-6360. 4-23
SUMMER SUBLEASE. New furnished town-
house. 13th & Ohio. 3-4 people. Price
negotibled. 749-1243 or 749-2436. 4-30
Summer sublease—Nice 2 bedroom house.
Close to everything. Call 841-4610 anytime.
4-30
Sublease. May 18-Aug. 1. May rent free, bus or walk to campus. 1 bedroom apartment, large. 843-0985. 4-23
Summer aublesle with option for fall, full-
3 bedroom 8 bedroom Malla Apartment (pool,
2 bath), mid-May. Max. Room size June 1, rent negotiable. Call 749-146-4
or contact manager
Summer Sardine: Possible fall option. 3
room, Walking distance to campus, port,
office & grocery. Laundry, carport, large
back yard. 190-1275. 4-23
SUMMER SULEASE with fall option.
Modern two bedroom apartment in 4-bay.
Central c.3' new appliances. Save $7.
Central c.3' new appliances. Available May 17.
845-317
845-317
Shimmer nubile - One female to be 3 bedroom townhouse, 2 bath, central A/C; furnished, great location. Fall option. Sharon. 864-1601. 9:00 - M-F. 4-23
Second floor 2-bedroom furnished apart-
ment with office and laundry room. Augu-
tai 1, or earlier. Within walking
distance to KU and downstairs. Required.
C85 848-7960 for appointment. If not requred,
848-7960. No. 822
Summer sublease-Female工资-$120.00 per month + 1/5 utility. Budget 4-bedroom house between campus and downtown. 799-623 4-23
Sublease with rent option 3 or 4 bedroom house with garage. 21st & Nalsmith. Call 841-5297. 4-23
Summer Sublime, 1 bedroom Cedarwood
Apartment, furnished. Terms negotiable.
Call 843-6094. 4-26
Sublease for summer. 1 bedroom apartment at Sundance. Call Tom, 749-0847. 4-26
PERFECT FOR ONE. Sublease spacious one bedroom, partly furnished, 5 minutes from campus. $200, utilities paid. 843-2720 at 2:39; 749-4414, anytime.
Share beautiful two bedroom house - mature non-monkey need� later May 19. Carpets, hardwood flooring, office, off-street parking, furnished except bedrooms. Utilities: B4-874-0784. Keep ready: 4-26.
Summer sublease. Real close to campus.
Call 842-4346 for more information. 4-26
Snailacus 2 broom/1,5% bath, full kitchen,
kitchen table, stove top, liquor, supermarket Malls has pool,
caffees, hot water station, hot water free, carports, cable TV and extension available. Rest 80 minutes.
Snowmobile trail.
1 bedroom apartment with left. Furnished.
AC. Next to the Sanctuary on 7th. Great
condition Call 842-8700. 4-30
Sublease, summer and/or beyond. Luxury 1
b-droom, a/c, w/w carpet, very clean,
sunny $245.00 - 749.233
4-23
Sublace 2 bedroom apartment at Meadow-
brook. Anytime May to August 15. Call
843-3052. 4-30
Summer sublease: Beautiful 4-bedroom
house with 2 baths. A/C, D/W, fireplace,
in new residential area. Accommodates
8 persons. Fiat. Rest. Rent. Call 811-6739
4-22
SUMMER SUBLEASE. Available May 15,
walk to campus or downtown. Modern 2-bay
apartment utilities reasonable in cost.
Comfortable amenities required.
required Call 842-717-3968.
4-30
Female= to share spacious 3 bedroom 2 bath
furnished apartment. $125 plus 1/3 utilities.
841-3727 4-22
RENT NEGOTIABLE—must sublease modern
2 bedroom apartment AC; convenient,
clean. 842-519-6000 4-26
For May, very nice summer school rooms in large house one block from Union and at 239 of age 159 Ohio. Beautiful views from room with large windows and bath. Also nice single apartment. 4-30
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale!
Sale ends December 31. Makes sense to use them-1) As study guide,
2) For an introduction, 3) For a discussion.
"New Analysis of Western Civilization"
Includes notes and additional bookstore.
If
Alternator, starter and generator speculators.
Parts, service, and exchange units. BELL
AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-9069, 3500
W. 6th.
Beautiful bald evergreens reasonably prized
Himmel's Rand Tree Farm—Eudora—Phone
542-3139 or 542-3549.
4-20
Television-Videos. Recorders. Name brands only. Factory sealed cartons. Low prices in the K.C. area. Get your best price.价价 then call Total Sound Distribution 4-306 4-308
BOKONON IMPORTS Large selection Hawaiian shirts. The original source. 12 EARNS. $39.95
1979 MAZDA RX7-GS PURRFECT. 843-825-4
or 842-634-35
1979 Vespa Bravo Moped. 2200 miles. Exc-
plaintary. 864-1092. 4-23
1967 Blue Merc. Cougar, 289 cl., auto. A/C,
AM/FM/cassette, runs good! Call Jack-
749-2501.
4-23
1978½ Honda CX500, fairing, trunk, crankbar. Well-cared for. for $1695. Call Charlie at 842-480. 4-20
1981 GN400X Suzuki. NEW $1485. Asking
$1200. Only 37 miles. Call 842-7679 after 6
o.m. 4-27
SPRING LAMBS. Organically grown. Ready before May. Beef also! 1-93-766-6279—McLouth, KS. 4-20
1980 HONDA CX500 DELUXE shaft drive,
water cooled, windshield, backrest, luggage rack. 2,600 MILES 843-1844. 4-23
Good condition 76 AMC Hornet hatchback.
I don't want it anymore! Under $1000. 749-
2811 or 841-2116. 4-21
CIT 790 TK Suzuki. Looks & runs great!
12,600 km. New tires up. Time up.
Windshield, touring seat and handle bars, back
& saddle bags. Must sell! 8143-741-423
For Sale: 1979 RM125M, Great shape, Super fast! Phone: 814-8447
4-21
Convertible 71 Olds 442. Must see to appreciate. Taking offers, 843-550, days, 842-7728, after 5:00 weekends 4-21
1982 HONDA XL500R. Street and Trail
must sell, best offer. 864-662-606.
4-21
TENNIS RACKETS—Head, Wilson, Dumip,
Prince, Yonex—Good condition, new/used.
Will buy yours if in good condition. 842-
6713 after 6:00 p.m. tf
Air. conditioner, 5,800 BTU G.E. Almost
new; $150.00. Call anytime. 842-0588. 4-22
Trek bike, Reynolds frame, Campanallo
Contact Tuf, 834-5370
Dahiquit DQ-10 speakers—Need to sell,
contact Tiff 843-5770 4-22
Maranta stereo, BSR tumbleback, speakers
$150. Compact refrigerator $20. Wicker
rocking chair $20. 841-2538. 4-22
Stamina—liquidating assets at cost. Hundreds of dollars worth. Very fine to superb, never hinged—buy as many or as few as you like. From $1 up. All liquors welcome. 4-23
Yamaha CR-420 receiver PC7-TF171
Z Kliph Heron speedy
CPU 814-0171
4-211
Dorm room sized carpet remnant, Rust, gold pattern, $0 or make offer. Also, wooden carrier for small cat. Fits under airplane seat, $10. 4-25
1967 Mustang, 6-cylinder, manual, a.c., good condition. $1900. 842-1305, weekend. After 5 weekdays. 4-20
80 a farm, 60 a past, 17 a Till. 3a. wood,
i a pond. so Side Clintion Res. 12 m.
Law. $675 a. 913-223-8033 evenings/wednes-
4-20
Honda 123 XL—2400 miles, only ridden by
Priest to Church. $658. Peter Casparin.
841-4405. 843-8202. 4-23
Rare acoustic guitar has to be sold immediately. Call Mike. 749-4278. 4-23
FOUND
Stereo receiver--Yamaha CH640, 45 watts.
Excellent condition. Call Mark 841-118-9632.
Sanyo personal portable stereo cassette
player with headphones. Carsil Russell.
4-23
4-23
g3 master bot in Computer Center parking
bot on 4/14/82-Call 841-0477. 4-20
A key chain case with four keys (2 key cars and 2 door keys) Found at baseboard height #4 behind Roblinum on Wednesday morning. Call 4-460 anytime and leave mms: 4-21
Must sell immediately: 76 Chevy Monza, 4-
speed, 37,600, excellent condition. Willing
to hangle on the price. 843-5134. 4-23
Watch in Flint Hall reporting lab. Call 864-4109 and identify.
Found, set of residence hall keys outside of Mallott. Call 884-2565 to identify 4-21
HELP WANTED
Lead Guitarist needed for established professional contemporary rock group. Serious players only, 841-9797. 4-22
Found, a complete set of keys, Call 864-
2831, ask for Rebecca.
KKEYs found Thurs, morning on abandoned
drive, call 749-4676. 4-21
Programmers. Local Company needs part-time programmers for microcomputers. We can supply equipment. Send resume to P.O. Box 3859, Lawrence; Attention: (430) 4-303
Are you commuting to from Kansas City? Yes, I need someone to drop of UDS at the KU. I need someone to drop off for information. Bob Bawes. Continuing Bob Bawes. 30 and Glint, KC, KS, 651-798-4588. 30 and Glint, KC, KS, 651-798-4588.
Energetic, personable waitresses wanted.
Must be willing to work. Hourly wage plus
tips, commission and incentive bonus. Apply
at GAMMONS on 5:00 p.m.
SUMMER. SEND JOB'S in the Northeast.
SEND self-addressed, stamped envelope to Midwest Camp Consultants, 1785 Red Coal, Maryland Heights, MO. 00434. 4-22
The Mathematics Department is accepting applications for graduate teaching assistants for 1982-83. Applicants must be graduated from a foreign country. Foreign applicants will be required to pass an oral exam denoted by "A." They will be responsible for teacher lower level classes in algebra and trigonometry.
study. In a strong background in mathematics, Foreign applicants will be required to demonstrate an aptitude for English competency. Assistants will be responsible for teaching lower level classes in biology, chemistry and physics, and will send letter indicating interest and background to Mathematics, 217 Strong. In addition a transcript and two letters of recommendation are required. $5200 for academic year. The Department of Mathematics offers an alternative Action employer Applications are sought from all qualified students.
The Mathematics Department is accepting applications for the position of Assistant. Applicants must have a complete job will assist in the 113-114 consulting rooms and the 114-115 training rooms. Applications are available in the applications may be turned in at this office or through the contact Professor Philly Montgomery, 29E St. Helena Drive, Santa Monica, CA 90278. Opportunity/Affirmative Action employer. Applications are sought from the following:
The Department of Mathematics is now accepting applications for MATH 802 tutors for Fall 1982. Tutors will work approximately 10-15 hours per week on assignments to assist the applicant. Applicants must have successfully completed MATH 111, 112, or 113, obtained from the Department of Mathematics department and be contacted for interviews. For further information, see Preferred Information. The Department of Mathematics Department is an Affirmative Action Equity Committee that sought from all qualified persons. 4-20
Lake of the Oars. Floating Restaurant now taking applications and holding interviews on a variety of food furnished, good tips must work in the zone. The Barge Box 142-1
4:21
Earn up to $200 or more each year beginning S-binder for 1-3 years. Set your own hours. Monthly. Bonus points based on results. Prizes awarded well. Bonus from 802-526-4833. 4-23
LOST
Lost-Lady Seiko watch, white face, black
chassis. 842-328-7991 4-20
842-328-7991
Led Wednesday—glasses in black carrying case. If found, please phone 728-448-2. 4-21
Tan velcro wallet and Capitol Federal checkbook inside an Omnira raquet court. 4-23
Ticketmaster.com
Say it on a swatshirt with custom silk-screen printing 1 to 1000 shirt art by Swells 749-1611. tf
PERSONAL
Instant passport, visa, ID, & resume photographs. Custom made portraits b/w, color. Sewls Studio. 749-1611. **tf**
Skillet's liquor store serving U-Daily since 1949. Come in and compare. Willfred Skillet Edum, Mass. 843-8186. **tf**
The University Daily Kansan is an Equal Opportunity Affirmative Action institution are sought from all qualified people regardless of race, religion, color, sex, disability, national origin, age, or ancestry.
The Kansan is now accepting applications for Summer and Fall Semester news and business staff positions at the Kansan campus available in the Student Senate Office, 105 B, Kansas Union; in the Office of Student Organization and Activity Room 200 Flient Hall. Completed applications are in due for 200 Flient Hall by 5:00 p.m., Friday, April 23.
The Keeger—Weekly Specials on Kegs!!
Call 841-9450—1610 W. 23rd.
News and Business Staff Positions
COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES:
Free pregnancy testing; early and advanced
out patient surgery; gynecology; care
of abortion and Born Overland Park, MN
(913) 642-2100.
HEADACHE, BACKACHE, STIFF NECK,
LEG PAIN? Find and correct
injuries. Join JAISon for
modern chiropractic care. 843-9336.
Accepting Blue Clove and Lone Star Insurance
Remember mother loves you, show her
the way she's loved you. Studio for portraits of fine quality, safe,
easy to use. Welcome!
Remember, O most gracious Virgin Mary, that never was I known that anyone who came to you should be impaled by thy intercession was left unaddressed. Inspired by this confidence, I flew to thine, and the angel sent forth me to stand sinful and sorrowful. O Lady of the Word locates in my heart, where I hear and answer我爱, Meen.
For your party clothes, formal or casual
10-8-30 M-F 10-30 S Open alt 11
10-8-30 M-F 10-30 S Open alt 11
MARY KAY COSMETICS—Full-time beauty consultant. 842-6641. If
Wanting to talk with someone? Gay & Leibian Peer counselors available through headquarters (814-2354) or information center (864-3506) just call.
Personal problem? Concerns? Confidential Professional Counseling. Free initialization in life changing skills. Free咨询 consultation. 811-414-146
Stereo-Televisions-Video Recorders. Name brands only. Factory sealed cartons. Lowest prices in the R.C. area. Get your host calls. Call Total Sound 913-284-0000. 4-30
Spring formations. *Barb's Second Hand Rose*
515 Indiana, Open lil 3 $p. 842-4764. - 4-30
Exciting Jobs at Lake Tabo. Send $5.00 to
Tabo jobs, P.O. Box 7244, Kanans City, MO
64113.
4-22
Vegaterian Lunch, 11:30-1:30 Mon.-Fri.
749-1517. 4-20
AVI
PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH-
tf.
843.4821.
DESIGN-A-SHIRT CONTEST
$100
1st Prize
Entry Deadline April 23rd
Get ready for the lazy, GATOR dare of spring (Nike, Boost, Sportstown, Calvin Klein). You're waiting during April at Alvmore to help you get ready. MICHELANDSE IS 125 OFF with Gold or Gold City. On a mile west of Konka on Cinch Parkway, sell Apple IPhone 4s.
Enter now at:
kansas
union bookstores
Have the best seat at K.U. sporting event-
Sirit Square tryout; 12th April. Sirit
Square tryout information. Thursday,
4/5. 10:30. Jayawheel Room. 4-20
Preparing For Finals - Workshop on Wednesday, April 21, 7-9:08. Room Council, Kansas Union, FREE. No registration required. The Student Assistance Center, A-206
Green's Spring Keg Prices
Budweiser 16 gal $39
Busch 16 gal $38
8 gal $24.50
Coors 16 gal $38
$25.00
Coors Lite 16 gal $38
Michelob 16 gal $44.50
Miller 16 gal $38.00
Old Milwaukee 16 gal $29.95
PADST 16 gal $33.95
(prices include complete CO2 tapping equipment)
808 W. 23rd 841-4420
- Call for special pricing on multiple keg orders.
MASSAGE. The Human Body has 640 important pressure points that need to be maintained for thousands of people to maintain excellent muscle strength and relaxation; better feel the Lodge, & relax 824 (635).
WANT TO BUY. Innerframe backpack in good condition. 842-612 or 842-9519 4-21
Looking for someone to take a coast to coast bicycle trip this summer. Phone 841-6068
4-23
THE ETC. SHOP in W 9th st has a dilapidated
furniture for girls we also have dinner ladders.
For girls we also have dinner ladders.
Reopened
Under the Wheel Under New Ownership
Pyramid Pizza
842-3232
(Under the Wheel)
$1.50 off any large Pizza (With Coupon) Expires 4/30/82
Try the fabulous
Ronzo
--have you appreciated your favorite secretary this week? Let her know she is special and unique with a special and unique, quick Send her a balloon-a-balloon. 841-5848. 4-23
Blessings on the Oread, bringer of good cheer. Surely the stars smile upon her. 4-20
Blessings on the Ortegal team cheer. Surely the stars smile upon her 4-20
Leave your mark at KU. Vote IMPRES-
April 21, 22. 4-22
Community Auction
ZOO N.H.
700 N.H
Every Wed. 6:30 p.m.
Consignments Accepted
Wed. 10 a.m. till sale
Sat. 10-5
841-2212
Established band looking for male/female lead singers and lead guitar players. Drums, guitar and keyboards. Inmediate need of an experienced band member. There, leave name & phone 4-23
GEORGE'S USED FURNITURE & Antiques
OPEN 9-4 p.m. 1035 MASS. BUY-SELL-
TRADE 9-4
4-20
THE JAYHAWKER is now accepting applications from students. Students interested in either position may contact the Office. 121B Kernan Union Office, Parkway Office,
GREEN'S CASE SALE. COOERS $7.90, PABST
LONG NEXES $7.18, BUSCH $7.69, GREEN'S
WEST 23RD.
Houseowners, earn big profit! Distribute security products. Details, stamped, addressed envelope. Coffman P.O. Box 1541 Lawrence, Kansas 60044 1-42-42
1982, and all's well. Don't agree? Welcome to
1982, and read *Living Simpler* (and
*The World Complete World* $G. Grendel-
d Publication*, Bob 2024; Shawman,
KS 6503). 4-35
S.O.B.—Business night Thursday, April 2nd,
7 p.m. at 3138 & 3140 Wescoe. Guaranteed to
are interested and interesting.
4-22
Youthful bassist destined by quirky pop band
ideas, and ideas, with a more than adequate
serving of talent. Contact Todd at 842-
6711.
I am just looking for some fun, not a commitment. Are you, Call Scott. 843-813-8537
T. Louise is 21 today. She nasty. The nasty glume in those eyes is quite scary. It's all so disguising;震 we know we can do it. We're not like babe but I lake Perry! Happy birthday, from the MLX
NATIONAL VOLUNTEER WEEK
APRIL 18-25
WE NEED YOU!
Call 841-5059
volunteer today!
Hey Shipley: does anyone realise how important a piggie bug can be? NDR. 4-20
I couldn't get it in. Orleans I'm sure.
You've heard the talk so help me find a girl
son or else we'll lose the Hawk. Contact
Richard at JPJ.
4-20
Attention ye students of l. K U - 4-20 marks
Tracy Huey's 21st year. Drop on by
tomorrow and call her at 734-856-4040.
say hello, 4th floor for today should be
lifted with excitement and love! 4-20
THEY'RE BACK! CRUSIN'N. Appearing
Thursday, Friday & Saturday, April 22, 23
& at 24 at the 40-48 club.
4-22
The committee for the preservation of Wildlife in Lawrence prepares MRA - KEKGARGAN Labors, Inc. to present its labors Enslering Bowl, Whitemouth, Berkshire and more. All this music, all the beer you can drink, all night long, all by yourself. The best place for map in Wed. April 28 U-4K
STUDENT NURSING HOME AIDES: Share your experiences with home aides. Our customer organization, KANSAS FOR IMPROVE, helps in input on conditions and quality of care. All staff are trained to write or call on KINH (971) Mass St. 21, 843-7107. 650 4143 8542-388 or 843-7107.
SPECTRUM OPTICAL fantasies saving uses the Lawrence Book or People Book coupons on our large selection of frames. 10e-16. M-S. M-113. 4 I. E7. 4-23
SERVICES OFFERED
Schneider Wine & Keg Shop—The finest selection of wines in lawrence—largest supplier of wine kegs. 1510 W. 23rd. 843-3212.
WRITING A RESUME? What to say. How to say it? Stop by The House of Ubrer and pick up our copy on resume or visit us at Resume, buccchia, 8-4 Mt Tref., SATN, 3-0 Sun.
Drafting (charts, maps, etc.) 6 years experience, competitively prized. Also script lettering for certificates 841-7841 - 424.
Professional Stringing Tennis and Racquetball. Best Prices in town. Call 842-5521 or 842-6582
4-30
copies
31/2¢ self service copies
now at
La empresa se propone a la venta de su producto.
ENCORE COPY
25th and Iowa 842-2001
GRADUATE STUDENTS THERIS COPERS
GRADEST STUDENTS HAVE quality discounts based on total volume of purchases that can offer variable reduction fees in the world. Encore Copy Corps, 23th & 4th St., New York City, NY 10001.
Put your best foot forward with a professionally printed resume from Encore. We can write it, type it, and print for you. Call Encore 825-2001, 825th & Iowa. 4-30
RESUMES - Professional; students' resumes
a speciality. 841-2654.
4-30
LEARN TENNIS from experienced instructor in small groups with other KU. Students or private lessons 842-6713 after 6:00 p.m.
MOPED RIDERS - it's time to get your bike tuned up for the season. Experienced cycle mechanic will do time-up or repairs at reasonable rates. Call Jerry 614-823-4122.
Experienced typist. Term papers, these, all macellaneous. IBM Correcting. Incorrect Erica or Pica, and will correct spelling. Phone 843-9543 Mrs. Wright. **tf**
TYPING
TUTORING MATH. STATISTICS PHYSICS
Call 841-3164 or 864-1474 (ask for Robert)
It's a Fact, Fast, Affordable, Clean, Typing
101
Experienced typist. Theses, term papers,
etc. IBM Correcting Selectric. Call Sandy
after 5 p.m. 748-9818. tf
TYPING PLUS. Thes., dissertations, papers, letter, applications, resumes. Assistance with composition, grammar, application. Mail to: U.S.A. Embassy or America, 814-6254. iff
TIP-TOP TYPING—experienced ttypist—IBM Correcting Séblectic II; Royal Correcting 500 CD 3000. 843-5675. **tf**
For PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myra.
841-4080. tf
IRON FENCE TYPING SERVICE Evenings
8422-2507
Experienced typist will type letters, thanks,
and dissertations. IBM correcting tele-
Call Danna at 842-2744. **if**
Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms,
graphics, editing, self-correct. Selectric.
Call Ellen or Jean Ann 841-2127. **tt**
Quality typing and word processing available at Encore Copy Corps. 25th and Iowa.
842-2001.
Fast, accurate and experienced typist will type your papers. Reasonable. Call 842-8091.
Experienced typist—thes, disartizations,
term papers, mails. IBM correcting selec-
tion.
Burb, after 5 p.m. 842-2310. tf
*
Experienced typist will type term papers, thesis, dissertations, books, etc. Have IBM disk-correcting Selectio II. Call Terry 842-7454 anytime or 842-2671.
Graduate students tired of typing, retyping and retyping your thesis or dissertation? Save time and money by word processing it at Encore! Call 642-2000 for more information. 4-30
Would like to type dissertations, thesis, term papers, etc. Call 842-3203 4-30
Professional typing. Dissertations, theses,
term papers, resumes, legal, etc. HC Correcting
Selective. Deb 843-8922 4-25
AFDORDABLE QUALITY for all your needs: themes, dissertations, resumes, maillings, mails. Call Jody 842-7945 after 6:00 p.m.
MAGIC FINGERS TYPING SERVICE, 643-
6129. 4-30
Fast, accurate, professional typing. Theses,
term papers, resumes. Will correct spelling.
grammar. 843-0288 after 5. 4-22
For a good type call Deby for dissertation
theses, term papers, letters etc. at 749-4736
Former medical research secretary will type
form papers, themes, books, misc. Call:
Nancy, 841-7025
4-27
Experienced typist. Will correct punctuation and spelling. Call evenings and weekends 841-7630. 4-24
Roommate for May 1. $110/mo. plus utilities
8425.0038.
4-21
Shakespeare could write. Elvis could wig,
gle; my talent, typing. Call 842-0043 for
5:00 and weekends. 4-38
Word Processing and Typing. Straight-
matter, forms, graphs. Reasonable rates.
Under 50 pgs. overnight service. Melanie.
4-23-2574, evening.
wanted outgoing Christians and concien-
tious students to share 5 bedroom house at
the next fall & spring $100-$150 per
per month. Utilities included (Darry
Darry 84-769-769)
WANTED
SUMMER BOOMMEAT. Furnished apartment very close to campus. May move after graduation. Rent + 1/2 utilities 842 0177 only 4-21
Female housemate for 3 bedroom house 1 block N. of stadium. Serious prefers prior $157.040. 841-6545. 4-28
WANTED: 1 NON-SMOKING Roommate to
2-Edmar. MOVF Avail. starting Aug.
and or sublease for summer. 842-9965. 4-22
Female roommate will need to share 2 bdm.
apt. during the summer. $100 a month + 1s.
utilities. 864-1092. 4-25
Responsible female to share 3 bdm. house on bus rte., $116 monthly + 1/3 utilities.
June 8 to May 8 or this summer only.
4-20
842-5230
Roommate(s) to rent Tralliance apartment for summer. On bus route, pool, A/C patio. Free May rent, no gas or water bills. Inquire ask for: Steve or Bob. 843-689-891
Female roommate May 15-July 31.
Must be with private *lg*, birth and study day.
Waher/Dryer included. $133 + 1/3 utilization.
841-4178.
2 female roommates for apartment 2 blocks from KU Med. Center, summer and/or next year. Call Jan. 841-8912. 4-26
Two junior females looking for roommate
for the fall of 2017.
Aug 32 - May 85 *$99 month* 79 utilities
21 hours a day. No pets.
Person to rent master bedroom of a large 3 bedroom home starting with the summer session. B$6,000/month with free utili Call 841-2434 for more 4-30
We want you! Female roommate for summer
2 bedrooms, 1/2 bath apartment $122.00
+ 1/3 electric 864-1911 Call now! 4-23
Roommates wanted. Summer only. Extra
rice; 4 bedroom, bath room. West House.
quiet, no smokers. Washer/dryer,
wheels. A/C; BETT 413 + 10. 4-22
3690
Roommate wanted. June 1, extra nice 4 bdroom 4 bath room Law, West Lawrence. No smokers. Wather/dryer.quiet. A/C $200 + 1/7 utilities 749-659-382
Female roommate for summer. Nice
air conditioned. Close to campus. 841-6543
Call for details. 4-26
Roommate wanted - Female, non-smoker. 3 bedroom townhouse at Traillridge apartments in Westchester. Utilities Call Stephanie 760-1779 4-26 Wanted: female roommate for want
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Page 12 University Daily Kansan, April 20, 1982
ALBERTO DEMANDEL DOE STREETS UNIVERSITY, NEW YORK
1970
KU's Laura Runnels returned this shot during a doubles match with Corey Nason at the Big Eight tournament this past week end. Rumnels and Nason lost the match, 7-5, 1-2 as the Jayhawks finished a disappointing sixth place.
Scoreboard
Hockev
Hockey
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Divisional Finals
Queen West
Patrick Division
New York Islanders 5, New York Rangers 3
(Islanders lead series 3)
Aramona 4, Toronto
Quebec 7, Boston 2 series tied 2-1
Norris Division
Chicago 7, St. Louis 4 (Chicago series 3-1)
Quebec 8, Vancouver 4
San Francisco 4 (Vancouver leads
basketball
TONICHE GAMES
First Round
Best of Three
Eastern Conference
Washington at Philadelphia
Atlanta at Philadelphia
Western Conference
Houston at Texas
Phoenix at Denver
Soccer
MISL STANDINGS
Eastern Division
Baseball
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Eastern Division
Team Athletic Team Pct. GB -
New York 35 7 833 - -
Washington 28 19 601 - -
Baltimore 25 17 614 - 10
Buffalo 23 19 548 12
New Jersey 16 16 361 12
Jersey City 16 16 361 12
Philadelphia 11 22 396 19%
Philadelphia 11 22 396 19%
Team W Pkt. GB
Detroit 6 5 454
Cleveland 4 6 382
Indio 4 6 485 1%
Boston 4 6 400 1%
New York 3 5 373 1½
Milwaukee 3 5 330 1½
Ottawa 7 2 222
Toronto 5, Boston 4
Detroit 3, Kansas City 2
Minnesota 5, Oakland 2
California 3, Seattle 1
NATIONAL LEAGUE
NATIONAL LEAGUE Eastern Division
Chicago 10 5 1,000 %
Carylerville 10 3 762 %
Kansas City 0 4 400 %
Minnesota 0 4 400 %
Milwaukee 0 7 362 %
WESTERN DIVISION
St. Louis 16 25 667 8
Wichita 17 17 614 —
Wichita 18 18 641 —
Denver 17 25 400 11
Denver 18 25 369 11
Phoenix 17 25 400 14
Phoenix 18 25 369 14
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS No games scheduled.
Team W L Pct. GB
New York 7 3 586 21%
Montreal 10 4 566 37%
New York 7 3 545 37%
Pittsburgh 6 7 414 21%
Philadelphia 6 7 373 21%
Atlanta 5 7 4 1,000 --
San Diego 5 7 4 636 --
San Francisco 5 8 445 --
Houston 5 8 383 7 -->
Los Angeles 8 8 383 7 -->
YEASTERDAY'S RESULTS
Philadelphia 2, Montreal 0
Houston 6, Los Angeles 4
San Diego 13, San Francisco 6
BILD DATA OF TEAMS
**Team** **Bldg. No.** **Pct.** **GB** ---
Okla State 12 12 4 .750 ---
Mississippi 13 13 4 .560 ---
Missoula 14 14 4 .556 3½
Kansas 15 6 6 .560 3½
Okla State 15 5 104 4⅔
Kansas State 16 11 193 7
Kansas State 17 10 117 8
Gibson's homer beats Royals
By United Press International
By United Press International
DETROIT --Kirk Gibson, in the midst of a 1-for-30 slump, smacked a two-run homer off of丹 Quisenberry in the eighth last night to give the Detroit Tigers a 3-2 victory over the Kansas City Royals.
Gibson's first home run of the season came after a single by Enos Cabell and went into the upper deck, just inside the foul line. It was only Gibson's fourth of the year, and three of them have come against Kansas City.
Quisenberry, 0-1, had saved a game in each of his four previous appearances.
The victory went to Kevin Saucier, 2-1, who pitched two innings of scoreless relief for Larry Pasknick. Elias Sosa got the last two outs to record the save.
Rookie Glenn Wilson hit a solo home run for Detroit off of Dave Frost with one out in the seventh for Detroit's first run.
Jerry Martin drove in both Kansas City runs against Pashnick, making his first major-league start. He hit his first homer of the season leading off the ball with a grounding a one out triple by Hail McKee in the seventh to give the Royals a 2-0 lead.
Pashnick allowed eight hits in seven innings and was helped by two outstanding defensive plays by Wilson in left field.
MOONLIGHT MADNESS SALE
tonight 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. only
Men's Department
Now $10.06
(select group only)
- Men's pullover innerlock knit shirts golf casual type—Values to $23.00
- Men's fashion, basic denim and cord jeans-Values to $30.00
Now $10.06 (select group only)
Men's long and short sleeve Western shirts Values to $22.50
Now $13.99 (sizes S-XL)
Come in and register for a free trip for two to Kansas City free gifts and Royals tickets given away
Women's Department
Now $10.06 (most sizes)
- Women's Designer Jeans—Values to $50.00 Jordache, Sergio Valente, Bill Blass
- Women's blouses and knit tops—Values to $25.00
Now $19.99 (most sizes)
- Women's denim skirts—Values to $33.00
Now $19.99 (most sizes)
LITWINS
831 MASSACHUSETTS
KU women's tennis team finishes sixth
By GARY GRIGGS Sports Writer
The Jayhawks finished sixth in the seventh annual event, which was played last Friday and Saturday in Las Vegas City, Ks., at Woodside Racquet Club.
Thanks to some unlucky drawing of seedlings, the Kansas women's tennis team's hopes for a first-division finish in the Big Eight championships were
Okahanna State won the title for the second consecutive year, edging out runner-up Colorado. 66-64. Last year, Oklahoma State Buffaloes, Buffalores, 67-64, for the championship.
COWBOY COACH Ice Groe said winning the title the second time around was just as satisfying as the first time.
"It's a great feeling every time you win it," he said. "These girls know what it takes to win. They really hung in there and just gave a super effort.
"I've got to give Colorado a lot of credit, though. They really played some super tennis."
KU Coach Kathy Merrion was upset about the seedlings.
Other team scores are Oklahoma,
54; Nebraska, 14; Missouri, 35; Kansas,
30; Iowa State, 19; and Kansas State,
14.
"We really drew some bad seeds," she said. "The girls deserved a lot better seeds than what they got."
SEEDING FOR the championship was determined by win-loss percentage in conference play. The two four seeds went to the four players with the best win-loss percentage at each position. The remaining four seeds
Of the Jayhawks' nine first-round matches on Friday, seven were against the top two seeds in the championship. The Jayhawks were 0-7 in those mat-
were then decided by drawing from a hat.
"Having to go up against OSU and CU is a sure way to start out." Merriion said. "If you win in the first round, the worst you can do is finish fourth. But if you lose in the first round, the best you can do is fifth."
SOPHOMORE MARN Jensen voiced similar displeasure over the outcome of the seedings.
"Getting the bad draws, then losing those first round matches, that really set us back, both morale and point-wise," she said.
worse. The Jayhawks, who finished fifth in last year's championships, didn't have anyone reach the championship round
The No. 2 doubles team of senior Corey Nason and freshman Laura Rumnels picked up the lone fourth-pace finish for the Jayhawks. In doing so, they upset one of the top-seeded teams in Oklahoma.
Freshman Steffanie Dicke, No. 3 singles, and senior Shawn Willson, No. 4 singles, finished in fifth place for the Javahawks.
GAINING SIXTH-PLACE finishes for the Jayhawks were junior Maureen Gulfill, No. 2 singles; freshman Liz Wright, No. 3 doubles; No. 3 doubles team of Jones and Dicke.
Rumnels, No. 1 singles, Nason, No. 5 singles, and the No. 1 doubles team of Guilfolil and Jensen ended up in seventh place for the Jawhaves.
"I'm a little disappointed," Merrion said. "Last year we didn't expect to do anything, but the people did."
higher hopes. We lost some crucial mat-
tries and we had planned on win-
nings."
NASON AGREED that this year's charismatisms were a disappointment.
"We just didn't play up to our
team. We did a lot better
better than a sixth-place team."
“This experience will help us next year,” Runnels said. “Now we know what to expect and there won't be as much pressure on us.”
"We shouldn't be too down on ourselves, we don't have anything to be ashamed of," Guilfoil said. "We gave it our best shot."
The No. 1 singles championship was won by Colorado's Katherine Cummings, who defeated Lori McNeal of Oklahoma State. 7-5, 6-4.
"It really feels great," Cummings said. "I think it's sweeter this time around, since this will probably be my last year at Colorado."
THIS MARKED the third year in a row that Cummings has won the title.
Curmings, a junior, and the Buffaloes No. 2 single player, Becky Callan, are transferring to Texas next year, because that is where present head coach, Jeff Moore, is headed to.
The No. 1 doubles championship was won by OUS McNeal's and Nancy Talley. They defeated Nebraska's Sundi Reiman and Ann Swanson, 6-2, 6-1.
This was the first time that the Big Eight Championships have ever been held in Kansas City, and Tarii Gannon, assistant to the Big Eight conference coach of the championships, said she was pleased with how everything went.
Kansas ties Southern Illinois for Relays title
Kansas and Southern Illinois scored 100 points each and were declared champions of the University men's division of last weekend's Kansas Relays, Relays director Bob Timmons said last night.
The announcement, which came after a thorough review of the scoring, ended two days of controversy surrounding the meet's outcome. Originally, KU was declared the winner, beating SIU 101-91.
But later that night, SIU coach Leon Hartzog discovered what he thought were errors in the pole vault scoring. The original results showed KU's Jeff Buckingham and SIU's John Sayre tied for third, with both their clearing 18-6. However, Hartzog said that Sayre had fewer misses than Hartzog had fewer misses. This error, along with one in the high jump gave SIU the title. 100-99.
Timmons, however, decided Sunday
Timmons said he had already contacted Hartzog, who agreed with the claim.
m m
"Apparently, what happened was that a number was transposed on the score card," Timmons said. "It was inaccurate."
night to check the results one more time. He talked to officials and coaches who had been present at the pole vault event, and informed that the first results were correct.
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KANSAN
The University Daily
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
Wednesday, April 21, 1982 Vol.92, No.137 USPS 650-640
KUAC budget projects rise in expenditure
By BARB EHLI Staff Reporter
The University of Kansas Athletics Corporation yesterday approved projected KUAC budget recommendations for 1982-43 that will offer a 7.5 percent increase in the total program. The budget now will be presented to Chancellor Gene A. Budig for final approval.
Wachter said that KUAC hoped to receive a $21, 000 increase in football revenues, a $83, 000 increase in basketball revenues and a $60, 000 increase in television and bowl contracts.
Specific items in the proposed budget allow for an expected increase in the income from the football program, the basketball program and the track and field team. The program has Wachter, business manager for athletics, said.
Del Brinkman, KUAC chairman, NCAA faculty representative and dean of the School of Journalism, said the Big Eight Conference assured him that a $60,000 projection for television and bowl contracts was not an unrealistic assumption.
Money earned at all of the Big Eight schools
television contracts and bowl games is divided
into two categories:
Brinkman said the projection for television revenue increased because of the contract signed with station WTRS in Atlanta, which will televised night games on Saturdays and a few on Sundays.
A PROBLEM with scheduling night games is having adenate lights in the stadium.
Although the University of Oklahoma is the only Big Eight school currently equipped with lights, other schools in the Big Eight, Atlantic Coast and Pacific Islands would have access to lights, Brinkman said.
Wachter said all the money from the Big Eight was not in yet, and with funds from the KU Endowment Association that were expected from the month of March, KUAC hoped to have a 3.5 to 4 percent additional money cushion available in the fall.
But as of March 31, the KUAC board was not talking in terms of revenue.
Wachter said she showed a $42,000 shortfall in income based on earlier projections of the football program income and a $8,000 shortfall in other projections of the basketball program income.
But, she said, the increase from this year over last year of $2,000 in contributions and the increase of $1,200 in revenue from the Big Eight would offset the shortfall.
THE RESULT will be a budget that breaks even, Wachter said.
Another item in the proposed budget allows for
WITKAGA page 5
JAMES C. FURKE
MARK McDONALDI/Kansan Staff
Above- Anti-ERA speaker Phyllis Schilfy addressed an overflowing audience of both supporters and hecklers at the Kansas Union last night.
Right- Steve Robinson, Wichita senior, symbolizing barefoot and pregnant, and Don Kunonen, Little Rock, Ark., graduate student, among the ERA supporters who heckled Schaffly.
NUTS
go Home
MARK McDONALD/Kansan Staff
Schlaflv labels ERA as destructive legislation
Gets booed, cheered
By JIM LEHNER Staff Reporter
Facing a crowd of vocal hecklers and supporters, Phyllis Schlafly, self-proclaimed anti-ERA speaker, told an overflow crowd of 1,200 in the Kansas Union Ballroom last night that the ERA was dangerous to the American family.
"I believe in a God's home country," she said. I think it is the most destructive of all sins. "We have been so used."
The crowd responded to most of Schaffly's comments with a mixture of boos, cheers and shouted comments. Schaffly's speech was sponsored by Student Union Activities.
only thing the ERA would give women is a gender-free society.
People in the crowd responded by demanding to know exactly what she meant.
Schlafy, dressed in a pink suit, said that the
"The ERA supporters want the women of this country to be drafted along with men," she said. "Women aren't 'capable of doing an equal job as a man is, when it comes to
Schlaffy said that women were physically inferior to men.
"The football player, Rocky Bler, said that while he was in Vietnam, he severely injured his leg," Schaffy said. "He was in desperate need of assistance because he couldn't walk. So a friend of his picked him up and carried him to safety.
"Now I ask you ladies—would you have
rather had a woman try to carry you off, or a
physical capabilities to perform such a fea
The audience immediately responded. Two women, in front shouted, "That a way, Phyllis, older members in the audience come," "Comfort, now, Phyllis, you can't get away that easy."
Throughout the evening, the majority pro-ERA crowd responded to Schlafly's comments by heckling her and displaying occluded members of cardboard signs attached to balloons.
However, anti-ERA supporters also were present. Members of a mostly male group, the National Educator, a California-based newspaper dedicated to supporting Schaffly's
opinions—cheered her on w' whenever they could.
Signs were prevalent all over the ballroom, some supporting the anti-ERA sentiment of Schafft, some denouncing her as incompetent and some telling her to go home to work.
Many people in the front rows of the ballroom wore circus-like attire. One man was dressed like a clown, another man as a pregnant woman and there were hosts of women resembling little girls. Many of Schaffly's supporters wore anti-ERA buttons.
Schlafly replied to her hecklers by saying
"You are not a slave."
EFA supporters are rude and inconsiderate.
'You can see why we've been winning for 10
see SCHLAFLY page 10
Victims of obscene calls dial police for protection
By LISA GUTIERREZ Staff Reporter
The phone rings.
Hello.
Silence.
Then, heavy breathing or may be an explicit sexual suggestion or comment. If maybe, a
Whatnow?
Forty-two people reported obscene phone calls to the KU Police Department during the fall and spring semesters of 1881, Mary Ann Cronk and her police department, said yesterday.
Approximately 10,268 Kansans reported naive phone calls in 1961, a Southwestern banker. In the 1970s,
"These included harassing, threatening, obscene and interference calls," Gene Regan, staff manager for regulatory information, said.
Robinson said, "Numberwise, it's fairly serious," referring to calls reported on
"The report it generally when it becomes a nuisance or it becomes so obscene, so flagrant, that they become apprehensive." The Lawrence Police Department.
But many people don't report one-time obscene calls.
BROTHERS differentiated between the obsolete and the harassing call.
"An obese phone call is the one that has sexual overtones in the conversation," he
PLEASANT
said. "A harassing call can be anything from prank calls to just pestering somebody."
Harassing calls include the heavy breathers and people who call others and hang up when the phone is answered, Brothers said.
"But they don't report these until they become a nuisance," he said.
anonymous phone calls are made by a variety of people for a variety of reasons.
"I don't think you can say there is any one reason for making them," Brothers said, "And there's really no character profile of the caller."
maine mates, Douglas County district attorney, said that 50 percent of those charged in Douglas County were juveniles. About 10 to 15 people are charged a year.
But Charles Neuringer, KU professor of psychiatry, often tends to be fairly individual individuals.
NEURINGER SAID the obese phone caller may have different motives than the person making a harassing or threatening message to the obese calls were also mingled with hostility.
"They are callers hiding behind the anonymity of phone calls," Neuringer said. "They feel safe making threats over the phone."
"They harbor a great deal of resentment or anger and can't express it directly to the person."
"I assume it's pretty much the same as the harassing call, in that there is some sexual
See OBSCENE page 5
Weather
It will be mostly sunny today, with temperatures in the upper 50s, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka.
Skies will be clear tonight, with temperatures dropping to the low to moderate. Snow will be sunny and warmer, with temperatures reaching the upper 80s.
Prisoners' wives endure guilt, abuse
By KEVIN HELLIKER
By KEVIN HER
Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
For better or for worse.
Watching her husband disappear behind the walls of a federal penitentiary, Martha recalled those words and shuddered. Ten to 20 years for bank robbery.
She never thought it would get this bad.
But it got worse. She lost her health and car insurance because she was a prisoner's wife. Because she was a prisoner's wife, she had trouble finding jobs and a home to rent.
"Other parents wouldn't let their kids play over at our house, but I thought I'd brought them another room," the other room said.
Her home became off limits to the friends of her children.
A prisoner's wife soon understands that in society's eyes, she is guilty, too.
During the fourth year of her husband's sentence, Martha moved to Lawrence from a smaller town in Kansas. She wanted to start a new life in a place not far from Leavenworth.
Now, nearly three years later, she is a part of the community. She holds what she considers a good job in Lawrence. Her two children attend Lawrence schools.
but when she needs someone to talk to about her husband, about her commitment to "serve time with him," she turns to two other Lawrence women who have made similar commitments.
Few people here realize her husband is a convict, she said.
ALL THREE SAY they have endured abuse because of their refusal to divorce a husband who is a prisoner. Their children have suffered, too.
Because of this, the three women—all middle-class college students—have to have a job that is identified in print.
But their meetings together reflect a national trend of prisoners' wives combine to fight isolation, financial problems and societal ignorance of the families involved in the penal system, said Sidney L. Hammel, founder of the families group for the families of Kansas prisoners.
Brinkel, who works for Catholic Churches in Kansas City, called prisoners' wives the party to force.
"Prisons aren't designed to keep families together." she said.
But through her four-year-old organization, prisoners' wives in Kansas have learned from each other how to keep their families intact, Brinkal said.
"The wives of prisoners don't know who to turn to for anything," she said. "Since Outside Connection was formed, I have had many wives tell me, 'It's so neat to be here. There's finally somebody who understands why I've chosen to wait for him.'"
Why do these women remain faithful to convicts?
Beth, a Lawrence woman whose husband last year entered the Kansas State Penitentiary on a drug conviction, said she had only one reason for awaiting him.
"Unconditional love," she said.
VISITING ROOM conditions at penitentiaries are hardy conductive to carrying on personal conversations, said Karen Mitchell, a graduate counselor with the Office of the former employee of Outside Connections.
Usually, guards and other visitors are within hearing distance of all conversations in the
'Although I hold my husband responsible for his actions, I can't tell him,"you're no longer a human being," or "I no longer love you."'
—Martha, wife of a prisoner
room, she said. And guards make sure the prangers and visitors don't touch each other.
Martha and Beth agree that visits are a hassle, but they say their weekly visits to their husbands are brief interludes that keep their relationships alive.
Although visiting privileges vary from prison to prison, most institutions afford visitors about 20 hours a month, with weekend hours counted double-time. Martha said.
Those visits can keep a marriage going, she said.
"One statistic that I find amazing is that the average married couple spends about 27 minutes a week talking about things that are substantial," she said.
Still, the visits can be painful.
'I am forced to spend more time than that every week talking with my husband about my life.'
Wait, the first word is 'I am'. The second word is 'forced'. The third word is 'spend'. The fourth word is 'more'. The fifth word is 'time'. The sixth word is 'than'. The seventh word is 'every'. The eighth word is 'week'. The ninth word is 'talking'. The tenth word is 'with'. The eleventh word is 'my'. The十二th word is 'husband'. The十三th word is 'about'. The十四th word is 'life'. The十五th word is 'time'. The十六th word is 'spend'. The十七th word is 'more'. The十八th word is 'time'. The十九th word is 'than'. The二十th word is 'every'. The二十一th word is 'week'. The二十二th word is 'talking'. The二十三th word is 'with'. The二十四th word is 'my'. The二十五th word is 'husband'. The二十六th word is 'about'. The二十七th word is 'life'. The二十八th word is 'time'. The二十九th word is 'than'. The三十th word is 'every'. The三十一th word is 'week'. The三十二th word is 'talking'. The三十三th word is 'with'. The三十四th word is 'my'. The三十五th word is 'husband'. The三十六th word is 'about'. The三十七th word is 'life'. The三十八th word is 'time'. The三十九th word is 'than'. The四十th word is 'every'. The四十一th word is 'week'. The四十二th word is 'talking'. The四十三th word is 'with'. The四十四th word is 'my'. The四十五th word is 'husband'. The四十六th word is 'about'. The四十七th word is 'life'. The四十八th word is 'time'. The四十九th word is 'than'. The五十th word is 'every'. The五十一th word is 'week'. The五十二th word is 'talking'. The五十三th word is 'with'. The五十四th word is 'my'. The五十五th word is 'husband'. The六十th word is 'about'. The六十一th word is 'life'. The六十二th word is 'time'. The六十三th word is 'than'. The六十th word is 'every'. The六十一th word is 'week'. The六十二th word is 'talking'. The六十三th word is 'with'. The六十四th word is 'my'. The六十五th word is 'husband'. The六十六th word is 'about'. The六十七th word is 'life'. The六十八th word is 'time'. The六十九th word is 'than'. The七十th word is 'every'. The七十一th word is 'week'. The七十二th word is 'talking'. The七十三th word is 'with'. The七十四th word is 'my'. The七十五th word is 'husband'. The七十六th word is 'about'. The七十七th word is 'life'. The七十八th word is 'time'. The七十九th word is 'than'. The八十th word is 'every'. The八十一th word is 'week'. The八十二th word is 'talking'. The八十三th word is 'with'. The八十四th word is 'my'. The八十五th word is 'husband'. The八十六th word is 'about'. The八十七th word is 'life'. The八十八th word is 'time'. The八
Beth said, "Your whole week is geared to the visit. Then, it's such a teddy. When you leave, you realize you have to start the routine over for another week.
"But you fight down the feeling of resentment and you fight down the feeling of bitterness and you paste a smile on your face because if you are not going to be able to good chance it will be taken out on your spouse."
Because their spouses are helpless against the prison authority, their frustrations often are out of hand.
"So you stand up and leave with as much dignity as possible. And you never cry until you release."
Many times, the atmosphere of the visiting room is a reflection of what's happening inside the prison, Ann said. If some prisoners recently received divorce papers, for instance, then other prisoners would start to question their wives' fidelity.
He can refuse to see his wife
One of the few choices a prisoner has is the option to receive visitors. For the otherwise helpless husband, this represents a string he can pull in his marriage, Beth said.
THIS EXPERIENCE is humiliating for the woman who drives to the prison, submits to searches by the guards and waits in a crowded visiting room, said Ann, a KU graduate student who waited six years while her husband served time.
"It's a horrible experience," said Ann. "You're left sitting there and sitting there in the waiting room. And pretty soon a guard comes up says your husband won't come out to see you.
Not all women who choose to stick by their imprisoned husbands include in that commitment the decision to abstain from sex with other men.
One problem is that many men, especially prisoners' friends, think the wives of prisoners are sexually available. Beth said. But the reality of that assumption varies from wife to wife.
"That's a touchy topic." Beth said. "It's a real individual commitment."
But Martha said she had remained sexually faithful to her husband.
"I have a hard time dealing with superficial relationships," she said, "or with woking up next
So, for intimacy, Martha depends on her visits to her husband, she said. In between times, she worries about his life behind bars at least as much as he worries about hers on the outside.
TO EASE IT Worry, Outside Connection
to an assistant woman with the life of a prisoner.
"It alleviate a lot of anxiety if the wife knows on it in going there," Mitchell said.
Still, there are times when prisoners do not run normally. A wife lives in fear of those times,
"You're always hearing something on the radio—somebody says and they're not somebody." WIVES men.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, April 21, 1982
---
News Briefs From United Press International
British reject Falkland plan; Argentina supports sanctions
LONDON-Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher rejected Argentina's latest proposals for a settlement of the Falkland Islands crisis yesterday and announced she was sending Britain's foreign secretary to Washington with a set of counterproposals.
Unconditional Argentine withdrawal from the islands remained Britain's main objective.
Thatcher said the proposals Argentina had made during talks with Secretary of State Alexander Haig had fallen short of British expectations. Unconditional Argentine withdrawal from the islands remained Britian's
In Washington, President Reagan called for Argentina and Britain to restrain from one and give Haiti more time to come up with a suitable solution.
According to Argentina, the proposals rejected by Thatcher were an attempt to adestipte the issue of sovereignty by temporarily turning it over to the European Union. This meant that the
But Argentine efforts to invoke a mutual defense treaty from the Organization of American States could derail Haigh's efforts. Over U.S. objections, OAS scheduled a foreign ministers meeting for Monday to consider collective security measures against Britain.
"The U.S. delegation is deeply disturbed by the implications of the proposed action," said U.S. Ambassador J. William Middendorf. However, Middendorf later said the U.S. delegation was surprised and pleased that Argentina had waited to convene the meeting until Monday.
Argentina had what? "This means that Argentina is very anxious to see the Haig mission succeed, as we all are," he said. "As long as they are talking, they ain't shooting."
Millionaire is held hostage, freed
EDMONTON. Alberta—Police freed millionaire sports magnate Peter Pocklington and shot the gunman who had held him for nearly 11 hours yesterday. Pocklington also was shot, but was reportedly not seriously injured.
A police spokesman said Pockington, 40, owner of the NHL's Edmonton Oilers and the Edmonton Drillers soccer team, was slightly injured when a police bullet that felled the taker-taken passed through the man's chest and struck Pockington in the left shoulder.
The gumman was reported in stable condition at the University of Alberta hospital, where Pocklinton also was taken.
The gunman had demanded a $1 million ransom and a safe getaway route, police said.
The ransom demand was announced almost seven hours after Pocklington, his housekeeper and live-in babysitter were seized. The other two were released after three hours.
Beagan wants tax hike, deficit cut
WASHINGTON—President Reagan tried yesterday to break the budget logjam, telling Congress that he would be a bipartisan consensus that possibly could allow for tax hike rules.
Many congressmen are now advocating a surtax on upper-income Americans, but conservative economists have argued against such an option, saying it would simply let the government spend more money and not really reduce the deficit.
While Reagan sent a signal supporting a bipartisan approach, negotiators for Congress and the administration were meeting in the White House in a last-ditch effort to fashion an acceptable fiscal blueprint. However, when meetings closed, no successful conclusions, had been reached.
In a conciliatory gesture earlier in the day, Reagan telephoned House Speaker Thomas O'Neill, D-Mass., to indicate a willingness to move the budget fight off dead center. Congressional leaders have said a Reagan-O'Neill meeting is the missing piece in solving the budget puzzle.
Female, black shuttle pilots named
HOUSTON—NASA yesterday announced the names of the first black and the first woman chosen for a U.S. space mission.
Dr. Sally Ride, 30, a graduate of Stanford University, will fly the seventh shuttle mission set for April 1983.
"I'm pleased and honored to be the first woman to have been assigned to a opportunity to justify the confidence that NASA has shown in my work as an opportunity to justify the confidence that NASA has shown in my work."
The first black to fly a shuttle mission will be 39-year-old Air Force Lc. Col.
Guion Bluford. Bluford is scheduled for the eighth shuttle mission, set for
Grain elevator explodes; 6 missing
COUNCIL BLIFFS, Iowa—a grain elevator exploded yesterday, touching off a line that hampered a search for as many as six people missing and
At least 18 people were injured in the blast that shattered windows in the vicinity. Among the injured were 10 members of a railroad gang working on the bridge.
None of the injuries were critical.
The fire continued to burn into the evening, and Calvin Peterson, fire inspector said authorities had searched all but the burning areas of the building.
Authorities said the five or six missing employees apparently were loading grain into a boxcar when the blast overturned the car. Two of the employees may have been on one side of the elevator, while two others may have been standing in or near the car, they said.
Reagan sympathizes with movement
WASHINGTON—President Reagan yesterday expressed sympathy with the Ground Zero movement, but repeated his rejection of a call for a nuclear weapons freeze, saying that only he had "all the facts" necessary to make the decision.
Reagan, speaking with reporters in the White House Rose Garden on the third day of nationwide anti-nuclear activities, also renewed his call for an informal June meeting with Soviet President Leonid Brezhnev to discuss arms controls. Brezhnev instead has suggested a full-fledged fall summit.
"I have to be heart and soul in sympathy with the people who are talking about the horrors of nuclear war and the fact that we should do everything we can to stop it."
Water for Siani holdouts shut off
TEL AVIV, Israel - Israeli soldiers yesterday cut off the water supply to the Sinai settlement of Yamit to put pressure on a handful of religious fanatics who are pledged to commit suicide one by one before they see the town turned over to Egypt.
Yamit reportedly is to be razed after the eviction of 4,000 squatters who are opposing the return of the desert region to Egypt, but the tiny group of settlers remains in the city.
In Jerusalem, U.S. Deputy Secretary of State Walter Stoessel said negotiations were going well as he shuttled between Egypt and Israel yesterday to resolve last-minute differences and ensure Israel's final withdrawal from the Sinai.
Correction
A letter to the editor by Sandra Ward was reprinted incorrectly in yesterday's Kansan. The letter should have read, "A man of quality is not intimidated by a woman of equality."
Two KU students find treasure hunt prize
Two KU students will collect $1,000 today for putting together more than 40 clues to locate the hidden treasure in a local radio station's treasure hunt.
Kent Westvoid, Prairie Village sophomore, Stacy Sharp, Overland Park sophomore found the treasure taped to a bush between Carruth-O'Leary Hall and Potter Lake yesterday afternoon.
She said they spent most of the day collecting the individual clues from Lawrence businesses and working with the treasure hunt map.
Westvold and Sharp will split the $1,000 treasure, which they started searching for Saturday, nearly one and a half weeks after the treasure hunt had started.
"When we first started, it was just something to kill Saturday with, 'Sharp
Treasure hunters worked with a map and used clues to draw lines, which, for Westvold, eventually crossed over the area where the treasure was found.
station but when he heard a clue about 2 a.m. Tuesday on the radio, the pieces started falling into place.
"The fun of it was when we were looking finer," he said, "kind of an antiquity." Westworth
Sharp said that at one point during the weekend, the clues had led them to the Kansas River, but they ran into a dead end.
Westvald told that after Saturday, they didn't work on the treasure hunt and they didn't have a plan.
Westvold said he couldn't sleep after that and around 4 a.m., threw his clothes on and headed for camus.
"I thought I knew where it was," Westwold said.
He didn't find it that morning, but decided that he was looking in the right manner.
Westold said he went to class and around 2:30 p.m., went with Sharp to the hill between Potter Lake and Carruth-O'Leary, where they searched for the treasure because of a clue that told the pair that the treasure was hidden by leaves.
Sharp and Westvoid found the treasure certificate in a 35mm film camnister hung with electrician's tape from a bush on the hill.
"I was about ready to throw it back into the woods." Westold said, "but it turned out to be the treasure. I couldn't believe it."
When they took the cannister to the radio station, the two-week-long annual treasure hunt ended.
"We're gonna have a big party, that's for sure," Sharp said.
Associateship applications are now being accepted
The couple said they hadn't made too many plans for the money they'll receive this afternoon.
By ANN WYLIE Staff Reporter
Fultime KU faculty and staff members will be able to get training in academic administration through the Administrative Associates Program.
"We don't have many women and minorities in the administration today," he said.
The executive vice chancellor's office is especially interested in women and minority applicants, William Hogan, the executive vice chancellor, said yesterday.
Hogan will be taking applications for the position which was started in 1977, until April 30.
"The program is designed to provide administrative experience for people who are interested and possibly pursue a career in education or a career," Hogan said.
Past associates said the program
The associateships are one-semester, part-time jobs.
broadened their views of the University and enhanced their administrative
"It it was observing the administration from the policy-making level." Suzanne Cupp, administrative assistant to the dean of education, said.
Cupp worked in Personnel Services last fall with Richard Mann, University director of Institute Research, Institute of Social Sciences. Personnel Services, as her supervisor.
She met with Mann weekly, attended conventions, helped write training workshops and helped with an orientation program for new employees.
Patricia Willer, clerk in the administrative office of the library, said the associateship helped give her direction for the future.
SHE SAID she might want to work in administration.
There are three positions available
there the next academic year, Hogan
said
One is for a tenured faculty member in either the office of academic affairs or in the office of research, graduate studies and public services.
Two positions are open to any faculty or staff member in other administrative offices.
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University Daily Kansan, April 21, 1982
e
Page 3
Wives
From page 1
releasing any names," she said. "You're thinking, 'This time, it's really him that got it.'"
"You're thinking, 'I've been waiting all this time for nothing.' "
But even if her husband never left prison, the last seven years of her life would not have been wasted, she said.
"I really feel like I've had a good marriage these past seven years," said Martha, whose husband is due for parole in about eight months.
However, she said her view of her marriage may be less than realistic.
Mitchell said she saw one of her functions in Outside Connection as helping prisoners' wives to overcome their relationship with their husbands, but about themselves.
"The visits aren't enough to carry you through," she said. "I mean, my husband and I have these fantasies about each other being perfect where we weren't perfect before. It's probably not very healthy."
Prisoners' wives tend to "show out of proportion" their involvement in their husbands' crimes, she said.
The Lawrence wives said once they had cleared themselves of this guilt, they could understand and forgive their husband, and even the wife, who did not condone it.
AND UNDERSTANDING their husbands made it easier to stick by them. Martha said.
"When you know a person and once you've decided to love him, his vulnerabilities and weaknesses are as part of the person as anything," she said.
"Although I hold my husband "Allough I hold my husband responsible for his actions, I can't tell him. 'You're no longer a human being,' or 'I won't love you.'
Ann, whose husband was found guilty of armed assault, agreed.
"These men may have something
about them that they can't keep themselves together," she said.
For this reason, and because society often judges wives by the severity of their husband's crimes, the women who have been convicted by their husbands' conythes, they said.
"I tell people that's his story," said Ann, "because they wouldn't understand. I mean, that murderer may be the big brother who carried you home six blocks after you skinned your knee.
"That big-time dope dealer may be the husband who pitched in and helped you with the dishes or surprised you with roses."
Yet, loving a husband who is in prison does not ensure the marriage will work upon once he is reareased.
Although divorced her husband two years after his release, the breakup was neither party's fault, she said. After six years in prison, her husband simply could not handle responsibility, she said.
"I still get very angry about it," she said. "I don't think our relationship failed. I think the prison beat us."
Ann said her husband now was
originally working his way back to
prison.
But Martha and Beth predicted their marriages would continue long after their husbands were released.
"By now, our sense of survival is so acute that somehow we're going to make it," Martha said.
The children of prisoners are likely to land in prison themselves, according to Sister Elaine McKenna, who works with the Kills Institute for Women in New York.
"The handwriting is on the wall," said McKenna, who, for 11 years, has worked with prisoners' families as well.
McKENNA IS also director of a nursery at the prison for women who arrive there pregnant.
"Role modeling is the only way children learn in life."
"We've had children here who later returned as prisoners themselves," she said. "The bottom line is that prison does not work."
Although Martha agrees prisons are ineffective, she denies and resents any theories that markark her children for prison.
"I don't know how many times I've heard from professionals who don't know their ass from their elbow that they have the higher risk for criminality," she said.
But she agreed with McKenna's cause the children of prisoners to suffer.
In fact, one reason Martha moved to Lawrence was to enroll her son in a school where his father's status was not known, she said.
in the small-town school he first attended, everyone knew the truth about his father, she said. Still, her sister tried to protect his pride by lying about (almost) everything.
But one day, he stood on a chair in the school cafeteria and shouted, "My father's a prisoner—so what about it?" Martha said.
"I can't believe a kid in the first kind that kind of compare," she said.
"THEERE ARE TIMES during the middle of the week when you want to talk to your husband about something really important to your marriage," she said. "Like when my kid didn't make it in Little League, you know. It was something that he should have dealt with the kid about."
But usually, the consequences of being in prison are less severe, she said.
Another belief of McKenna's that Martha endorses is that although
McKenna said, "Our visiting room is definitely not overrun with male visitors. New evenborn babies don't get many visits from their fathers."
women often stick by prisoner-
husbands, the reverse is seldom true.
If a man's wife lands in prison.
If a man's wife lands in prison, Martha said, he usually will leave her.
In their own best interest, prisons should strive to keep families together. Mitchell said. One way would be to allow prisoners to spend occasional night with their husbands.
...
in the long run, such a concession would ensure that fewer prisoners committed another crime after they were released, she said.
"It's been shown that family support for a prisoner helps him to stay clean when he eets out," she said.
Martha, whose husband should be free in less than a year, said she thought he would stay on the outside for her husband. Martha talked about his reunion with the family.
For seven years, she has managed the family alone.
"He doesn't know how to handle family finances anymore," she said, adding that she always showed him her financial bills during visits. With such matters, she will have to force herself to trust him, she said.
"I will have to make a conscious effort to allow him to discipline the children," she said.
A key factor in a prisoner's period of readjustment is whether he respects his wife's years of independence or feels threatened by them. Brinkel said.
During her visits inside the prison, Brinkel tries to remind prisoners that their families also are suffering, she said.
One such reminder involved a production at the Lansing prison of poems written by George Wedge, a
professor of English at the University of Kansas.
After talking with some wives of prisoners, Wedge wrote a series of poems that later were acted out before an audience of prisoners.
BEAUSE SEVERAL wires told Wedge they suffered most during their husband's day behind bars. Wedge wrote this poem about a woman's arrival at home after leaving her husband at prison:
When I got home today,
There was only me to pay the baby sitter.
The children were asleep.
I wanted to wake them, hug them, tell them
You are gone away a while
More than a little more.
And will come back again before they're grown
Instead, I picked up toys left lying around.
Finding not a thing of yours-
You must have looked ahead thoughtful of me,
thought of me!
To be as neat as that!—
And made myself some coffee, shaking in salt.
The way I only do for you.
Now, they're awake themselves and asking me
Where are you.
What are you坐?
But I just sit here, eibows on the table,
Reading the paper like I always do,
Sipping your salty coffee.
Where have we got to, you and I, so quick
That what I know is true seems meaningless.
meaningless, Your time in jail so final,
And this empty day a burden I cannot put down?
"The first day your husband goes to prison." Martha said, "you feel like you're going to die."
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Overseas programs discussed
Although the application deadline is Oct. 1, 1982, Herzfeld said students were encouraged to attend the meeting so they can get the necessary papers to begin work on their applications.
"Anybody who thinks he is good enough should apply," she said.
The meeting will be at 3:30 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
Herzfield that students did not need any particular qualifications to apply, but that applicants should have the necessary education and —illing to study hard.
there will be an informational meeting tomorrow for graduating seniors and graduate students interested in studying abroad during the fall semester. Herzfeld, director of the office of study abroad, said yesterday.
Information will be available on the Fulbright program, Direct Exchange Scholarships, International Telephone and Telegraph grants, foreign government grants and other awards.
More information about the programs may be obtained through the office of study abroad, 108 Strong Hall, or by calling 864-3742.
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SOPHOMORES
MARTIN PRYOR—PRES JENNY BLACKSHIRE V.P.
DAVE KELSEY—PRES.
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan, April 21, 1982
Opinion
Fight Phyllis with logic
Those who went to Phyllis Schlafly's speech last night hoping to hear rational arguments on which to base an opinion about the Equal Rights Amendment probably left feeling a little converted.
It wasn't that Schlaffy bowled the crowd over with the overwhelming logic behind the STOP ERA drive.
By citing the movie "Kramer vs. Kamer" as proof of the dangers of the women's liberation movement, and by saying that the end result of the movement is unhappy mothers, unhappy fathers and unhappy children, Schlafly let out more than enough verbal rope to hang herself.
But as ridiculous as some of Schalfy's statements were, they were no match for the approach taken by many of the ERA's vocal defenders who attended the speech.
Instead of arming themselves with costumes, balloons, signs and slogans, the protesters should have attended the speech armed with facts, figures and well-aimed questions.
Schlaffy deftly danced around the few sensible questions presented to her. But if she had been forced to dance more, she would have undoubtedly tripped up.
Schlaffly thrives on becklers. They make her look like a gracious pink angel as she scolds and invokes everything from
Mother to the American Way to support her position.
But in addition to scolding, Schlafly made at least two strong points that appeal to those who frown on the ERA.
Schlafly aruged that the ERA would require that women be drafted for military service if the draft were reinstated.
Rather than shouting "Stop the Draft!", Schlafly's opponents would have been better off to point out the logic behind military service for women, if, in fact, the amendment would require it.
Schlafly also argued that the ERA would not help working women because sex-neutral laws already govern employment.
There is no rational reason for women to be exempt from the sacrifice that is forced on men in wartime. We are all citizens and should all share in the country's defense.
True. The sex-neutral laws exist. But no one brought up that those laws are not founded on a strong constitutional base.
Judging by last night's speech, Schlaff is right when she says, "One reason we've been winning is the intolerance and discourtesy of our opponents."
Those who support the ERA by shouting slogans and insulting Schlafly are wasting what precious time is left. June 30 is almost here.
British sun rapidly setting on last remnants of empire
By JAN MORRIS
New York Times Special Features
FORT WORTH, Texas—The course of the empire never did run smooth, but the hardest part of the perennial old human adventure is bringing it to a conclusion.
The French endured two terrible wars, in Indochina and Algeria, before they could be rid of their imperial pretensions. The Portuguese had a revolution. The experience of the British, upon whose overseas territories the sun proverbially never set, has generally been more trying than they have been; but the people they have gotten themselves into over the Falkland Islands is a warning to any aspiring imperialist that in the long run, dominion is seldom worth it.
Consider the cost and the embarrassment of the imbroglio. To honor their commitment to 1,000 subjects of the crown, most of them several generations removed from their homeland, the British are spending more on the dispatch of their formidable task force than they have invested in Falkland Island development in several decades.
They stand to suffer applaudings if the mission fails. If it succeeds, they won't know what to do next. And it must be a moot point anyway, whether the unfortunate islanders, or the British navy, the British war of life, really want to find themselves caught in the crossfire of a liberation war.
The affair ridiculously engages a sizable proportion of the entire British navy at a time when Margaret that herself claims the Soviet sea threat is more omnious than ever.
The situation has brought out aspects of Britishness, from machismo to jingoism to plain pomposity, that we were mercifully beginning to forget. It has frighteningly demonstrated that it was not the lack of courage to it, will still fall back upon brute force to pursue what its perceptions be to its own interests.
Of course, there is a quikotic splendor to the operation—spending so much, taking such risks, for the sake of a principle and a loyalty (and a potential oil field). Lord Palmerston himself, the son of Robert Palmer, never sent out his gunboats with such punch or panache, or for that matter in such numbers.
The Argentines were clearly wrong to invade the islands; the Falklanders deserve better. The British were right, perhaps, for a call to honor after many long years of humnum. It probably won't become a shooting war, but it might. And if does not, there will be a historical rage of a sort that involves a punishment or grandolous excession of imperial pride and grandeur, a generation or two after its time.
if it or not, it is anomalous that in the 1900s falkland Islands should be British.
It really does not make much sense. The British themselves半分 recognize the fact or they would not have spent the past 14 years with the Argentines about the future of the islands.
But their premise has evidently been that whatever arrangements are reached, British sovereignty must be upheld. They should have the power to mitigate that British sovereignty was expendable.
Their true duty to the Falklanders was not to encourage them in their romantic but impracticable allegiance, but to prepare them gently, but firmly, for inevitable change. The British government had created a settlement in Britain, if they preferred it to Argentine rule or some sort of joint control.
The islanders certainly have been acclimatized to the idea that the Falklands could not remain attached forever to a European off-shore state 8,000 miles away, with no permanent rights or duties in the far-flung reaches of the South Atlantic.
The British have no such permanent rights or duties, indeed, anywhere away from home—for there are disturbing parallels still elsewhere in the old British Empire.
In Ulster, too, loyalists seek to resist history and geography, and there, too, the British accommodate the anachronism, partly out of duty, partly out of pride.
One day the fleet may have to rescue Gibraltar, the Falkland Island of Spain, or Hong Kong, the Port Stanley of China. There is even a faint ironic echo of the predicament in my own country, Wales, so close to London, where after 700 years of crown rule, English settlers increasingly find their holiday homes burned down by intransigent Welsh nationalists.
For the truth is that when an empire loses its power or its conviction, its remaining possessions generally become a burden and sometimes a danger. They may be useful for a time as currency earners, as naval bases, as prop to the national self-esteem, in but the end of which they become like those bare sheep run islands on the other side of the world, a perfect nuisance.
There is only one way to stop the crowds of an old empire coming home to roost: Make a clean break of it, forget about the gunboats and the distant fights, wipe away those tears of glory, and dress up and Queen Victoria, make it clear to every woman, friend or foet, that the sun really has set.
In the meantime, well, even we Welsh patrons are only human. Good luck to you, Broad Sword
Jan Morris is author of "Pax Britannica," a trilogy about the British Empire.
E.R.A.
Well-known lecturers often avoid KU
For playwright Edward Albee, school simply opens the door to a lifetime of learning.
School, Albe said at a lecture last week,
teaches you how to teach yourself after you get out
of school.
That door to life-long learning opens not just with the routine of university life, but also with lecturers like Albe, who bring their expertise in university and teach students new ways to learn.
But at KU, lecturers of Albee's caliber come few and far between.
At least they come fewer and farther between than, say, our neighbor up the river, KIKU.
This academic year, our Wildcat counterparts will have had the opportunity to hear Sir Harold Wilson, former British prime minister; John Block, secretary of agriculture; Sen. Mark Hatfield, R-Ore; Rahad Naler, deputy governor; and Dr. Richard Tagen papers fame; Aaron Copland, American composer; and Jonathan Miller, director of public television's Shakespeare series.
These are, of course, not all of the national officials. Instead, we chose K-State this year, but they are the most visible.
In contrast, KU students will have had the opportunity to hear Phyllis Schlafly, anti-feminist; Melvin Calvin, Nobel-Prize winning scholar; Paul Ehrlich, environmentalist; and
Of course these lists of lecturers don't reflect departmental lecturers for either school, but KU still seems lacking—especially in governmental and political speakers.
The difference in the number of nationally known speakers at these two Regents schools is difficult to understand, particularly because schools' speaker series budgets are close in size.
KU's lecture series' budgets are a bit more difficult to figure out, because the Endowment Association won't release figures for the two series it finances. But at the most conservative estimate, KU's main lecture series have a combined budget of about $33,000.
KU has five main lecture series: SUA
Forums, the University Lecture Series, the
KU Museum, and the KU Library.
KState's three main lecture series budgets come to about $37,500.
the J.A. Vickers Sr. Memorial Lecture Series and the Humanities Lecture Series.
Perhaps KU has trouble attracting nationally known lecturers because of its limited budget—Schalfay is costing SUA $3,000 plus expenses; Henry Kissinger would cost more than $10,000.
But given the speakers that K-State is attracting with a similar budget, it seems far more likely that the speaker programs are because of the way they are administered.
Three of these programs, the Spencer Series, the Vickers Series and the University Series,
MARINA MAYER
TERESA
RIORDAN
are administered by Jim Scaly, administrative assistant to the chancellor.
Scally was appointed chairman of the University Lecture Committee about five years ago.
Apparently no formal committee votes on the choice of lecturers. Scally chooses from suggestions that come unsolicited from faculty, alumni, students and the community.
Scaly's choices are then approved by the administration, presumably the chancellor.
Under this system, some years KU doesn't get speakers for the Spencer or Vickers series, or even the TPC.
For instance, KU has not had a Vickers speaker for the past two years. And the Spencer Series went for four years, from 1976-80, without a speaker.
Whether or not these series have speakers depends, it seems, on how actively Scry learns.
The Vickers Series and the Spencer Series both have "at least $5,000 annually." When the money isn't used it accrues to the next year's budget. Todd Seymour, president of the Endowment Association, declined to say how much was in either account.
If it seems strange that an administrator should be the whole of the University Lecture Hall, and that there are few lecturers.
Scott Dupree, Prairie Village sophomore,
be a oneman speaker selection committee.
Dupree, without the aid of a student committee or any committee, decided how to spend the Forum's $10,500 budget by himself this year. His decisions are subject to the approval of the SUA Board, but Dupree does the research and presents the options.
The only KU lecture series that seems to be drawing a consistently strong and varied group of speakers is the Humanities Lecture Series. Edward Williams, chairman of the faculty committee this year, says the committee has found the greatest benefit from a variety of disciplines in the humanities.
And the committee seems to attract at least one nationally known speaker every year—this
Perhaps this committee is doing well because it has a variety of members and therefore a variety of opinions and suggestions about possible speakers. A committee has a big advantage over an individual in both time and energy.
K-State's speakers are also selected by committee than by a single admission or student.
The K-State Alfred M. Landon Series on Public Issues has a selection committee comprised of the committee chairman, the University president, the Faculty Senate president, the student body president and several other faculty members.
It seems that more time and thought go into a speaker's selections than those at KU.
Selecting speakers, admittedly, is a difficult task. The deficiencies in the present KU speaker series are the fault of the system because of the fault of the people administrating them.
That's why groups like the Student Senate, which, admirably, has been kicking around the idea of financing a new speaker program with its $44,000 in excess funds, should first try to make existing speaker programs more effective.
Although KU can always use more money to attract more speakers, it should be concerned at this point with how it spends the money it has.
Letters to the Editor
Hawkstock intended to help disabled, not to promote bands
To the Editor:
I would like to express my disappointment at the cancellation of Hawkstock this spring. The Interfaternity Council should be reminded of the original purpose of Hawkstock—to raise funds for the disabled, not to promote big-name concert concerts.
It was admirable that they had two relatively successful bands tentatively scheduled, but just because those two bands backed out, does not mean IPC should have canceled the fund-raiser. In past, Hawkstock has raised more than $10,000 for a purchase a motorized van for the disabled.
Lawrence has an abundance of local bands that have contributed to profitable Hawkstocks for the past three years, and there was abatement of the effort should have been abandoned this year.
Awareness Week, IFC should be ashamed of its failure. And they should know that some people purchased Hawkstock tickets last year, not to bring bands, but to contribute to a worthy cause.
It's probably too late to do anything now, but,
especially because last week was Disabilities
Kathy Maag,
St. Joseph, Mo., senior
Unaffordable dream
To the Editor:
Money—the word alone plagues many in this time of Reaganism and budget cuts. The cost of an education plagues many KU students as they begin to plan for the following semester. As it stands now, tuition and fees at the University are $459 per semester, and $459 for Kansas residents each semester. It is a well-known fact that tuition and fees will soar in the future. How much higher can it go?
With federal cuts slashing the Guaranteed Student Loan program and all student grant money being cut to a bare minimum (if any at all), how can a student attend an education?
Is it still the American dream to live in a land of opportunity, attend a higher educational institution and try to make something out of the lives we were given? My answer is yes, but it is becoming next to impossible to afford this dream.
I realize that the Associated Students of Kansas have been promoting a postcard drive around campus encouraging students to write congressmen relaying opinions on Reaganomics and personal effects. I strongly note that idea and also encourage others to activity, participate.
Students around the country cannot accept the already high cost of an education and turn the college experience into a career.
This letter is not political propaganda, but fact. Students have a voice in governmental decisions that affect them. Students have a right to an education. People have a right in our society to choose. We have the right to make our lives into anything we choose to be.
I chose to attend the University of Kansas because of its high quality education. With the price of an education, I question the fairness of our government and its officials.
representative of the people. It is the decision maker for our country. Congress holds the power to decide our futures. It has the power to decide your educational future.
Maxine Ferman, St. Louis junior
How can we place such a high price on education when it is something so essential to our country? After all, how do you think Ronald Reagan set to be president?
KANSAN
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University Daily Kansan, April 21, 1980
Page 5
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KUAC
From page 1
a 7.5 percent salary increase for KUAC employees that would be paid for by the athletic department and equal to the 7.5 percent salary increase that was approved by the Kansas Legislature.
Richard von Ende, executive secretary to the University and KUAC board member, made a motion to table a suggestion to form a policy to restrict the profit KUAC may earn.
John Patterson, KU comptroller, the auditors had requested for several years that KU form a policy to restrict 25 percent of KUAC's net profit that was greater than $1,655,000. Because
of some other technicalities in the auditor's proposal, von Ende recommended that Patterson list the advantages and disadvantages of adopting it and formally submit it to the board.
Another item on the agenda explained the strategy. The teacher would use to sell more season tickets to both students.
Today will be the last day for current students to buy the all-sports ticket package for next year's athletic program. The all-sports package includes a team box and the season ticket and a Kansas Relays ticket.
THE CAMPAIGN includes employing three
football players to sell tickets in Wichita, Topeka, Lawrence and in the Kansas City area to KU alumni and businesses interested in giving the tickets away for their promotions.
Ray Evans, Shawnee Mission senior, will cover Kansas City; Jim Bouchka, Wichita senior, will cover Wichita; and E.J. Jones, junior, will cover Lawrence and Toneka.
Brinkman and Susanne Shaw, AIAW representative and associate dean of the School of Journalism, will alternate years as KUAC board chairman.
Because Brinkman has served as KUAC
The board discussed several ways of determining a chairman for the future because of the changing circumstances.
chairman this year, Shaw will serve as chairman beginning in the fall.
The ALAA announced it will not accept
memorandum applications for the
1982-83
American school
At this point, Shaw's status as the AIAW representative to the board is uncertain.
- recognizing no change in the present system until the AIAW status is more certain in the fall.*
* recognizing a change in the present system.*
- allowing the chancellor to continue to appoint the NCAA representative to fill the chairman's position, too.
After a motion made by Bren Abbott, Topeka senior and student representative to KUAC, the board decided to review the entire KUAC structure and the proportional amount of representation from students, alumni and faculty.
Other changes for the coming year will put new faces around the table. Clark Bricker, professor of chemistry, will be replaced by Terry Redwood, associate professor of business.
Obscene
From nage 1
interest that can't be expressed directly," he said.
"I think behind all of them there may be the desire to hurt the person on the other end of it."
Robinson said that the more frequent reports were from women receiving calls from men, but that times had changed that occurrence somewhat.
Men also make calls to men, she said.
Becky Waters, Olathe senior, said she remembered a woman making obscene calls to the women living on her wing in a residence hall two years ago.
"It was wired because the second she hung up, the next phone would ring," Waters said.
She said the woman would explicitly describe herself masturbating.
"It went on for a while." Waters said.
The identity of the mysterious caller went undiscovered.
"The identity of the caller is the number one problem," Malone said.
but it often out to be someone the receives if the obscene phone call is made.
"Normally, there is some type of revenge involved. Very few phone calls are random."
RANDOM OR NOT, obscene and harassing phone calls can be annoying, and Robinson offered suggestions for people who receive them.
"Just hang up as soon as you know what kind of a call it is," she said.
"Don't show emotion and don't slam the phone down."
Robinson cautioned against holding a conversation with the person.
"If they're obscene or a threat, we would ask the people to report them," she said.
She said that if the calls continued on a regular basis, people should log the time and date.
"Also, if something is said, look for background noises and voice charac-
teristics."
If the recipient of the call is a woman, Robinson said, having a male answer the phone would help curtail calls that are following a continual pattern.
In extreme cases, Regan said, Southwestern Bell can identify the call number
wisker bem beizuk
"But there are other effective measures to
be used when he has a child."
IF PREVENTATIVE measures are not
successful, however, and a person who is being harassed by obscene or threatening phone calls presses charges, the consequences for the caller can be unpleasant.
Kansas law spells out the conditions that remand a call obscene and punishable by a fine.
Malone said that under Kansas law, an obscene phone call is considered a Class A misdemeanor, the highest class of misdemeanor, and is punishable upon conviction with a year or less in jail and/or a fine of up to $2,500.
The Yello Sub *delivers*
841-3268
These punishments await everyone who, by means of telephone communication:
- makes any comment, request, suggestion, or proposal which is obscene, lewd, or insensitive
- makes a telephone call, whether or not
conversation ensues, with intent to abuse, or harass any person at the called number.
- makes or causes the telephone of another to ring repeatedly, with intent to harass any person involved
- makes repeated telephone calls during which conversation ensues solely to harass
The law also provides punishment for anyone convicted of playing any recording on a telephone to those dialing the number, except recordings such as weather and sports without the individual or grown identifying himself or itself and stating that it is a recording.
Someone who knowingly permits a telephone under his control to be used for such purposes also can be punished.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan, April 21, 1982
Med Center involved KBI confirms investigation
TOPEKA-A The KBI confirmed yesterday that it was investigating the university of Kansas Medical Center's business office.
The KBI, along with state auditors and KU police, have been investigating the business office for about five weeks. The investigation was called Kelly, KBI director, said yesterday.
"Right now, it looks like embezzlement in the office," Kelly said.
The investigation started when a routine audit of the business office found many "coarse irregularities", Tom Greenson, assistant director of business and fiscal affairs at the Med Center, said.
Exact figures on the amount of money missing from the office were not disclosed by either Med Center officials or the KBI.
KU police first investigated the results of the audit and forwarded the information to the attorney general. The attorney general turned the case over to the KBL.
The state usually audits ledgers in the business office every two years, Keith Nichter, director of business affairs, last year turned up no irregularities.
The Med Center's business office is responsible for billing all persons treated at the hospital. The Med Center has more than 50,000 patients yearly.
Last November, the Med Center began work on a new system of billing. The new system, which relies heavily on data, is being installed by a private firm.
Now, the bill for an inpatient stay must pass through several stations and be re-fitted at each one.
This system, which is scheduled for completion in June at an estimated cost of $1 million, is designed to eliminate the need for a large system now in use at the Med Center.
Separate billing for surgical fees, rooms and possible blood or drugs must be added to the patient's bill, increasing the chance for a miscalculation.
An employee of Hair Adventures, 1422 W. 23rd st., allegedly elicited almost $1,500 from the store sometime between March 12 and 31, Lawrence police said.
On the record
Police said an employee filled out a deposit slip and sent a copy to the main office, but never deposited the money in the bank. Police said the manager suspected an employee that had not reported for work since March 12.
There have been no arrests.
KU POLICE reported an aggravated
arson at 3 a.m. Sunday in the lobby of
Sotheby's New York office.
A PROFESSOR called police Monday
afternoon and alleged that a preacher's loud speech outside Wescoe Hall was disgruntling classes, police said.
Police answered the call, but did not arrest the preacher.
BURGLARS STOLE more than $350. worth of household goods sometimes between 4 p.m. Saturday and 8 a.m. at Barboursville residence at 94 W. 12th St. police said.
By SUSAN AHERN MARUSCO Staff Reporter
City accepts written proposal to help solve Bluffs' dispute
A two-year controversy, involving two lawsuits against the city, concerning development of the Bluffs, near Fifth and California streets, may soon
Commissioner Nancy Shontz said that because the three lawyers involved in the Bluffs case had worked together closely in creating the document, she thought "the agreement would be accepted by all parties very soon."
Last night, the city commission unanimously agreed to a written settlement on the Bluff's development. However, Mayor Marci Francisco said she would not sign the final agreement until the other parties in the controversy had agreed to three minor changes in the proposal.
The Bluffs dispute involves three parties: the city; Vanguard Corporation, a local developer; and residents near the Bluffs.
The Bluffs' dispute began about two years ago, when Pinckney neighborhood residents sued the city commission after it upzoned the Bluffs from single-family to multi-family use. The residents said the development would
cause drainage, noise and traffic
their single-family
neighborhood.
The Douglas County District Court found the suit invalid, and the residents appealed their case to the Kansas Court of Appeals.
The Vanguard Corporation, which plans to build 20 townhouses on the Bluffs, also sued the city for rescinding a deal that the commission had earlier issued.
According to Gerald Cooley, the city's attorney, the final version of the agreement will not be made public until 9 this morning. Cooley refused to reveal details from a proposed agreement the company considered a few weeks ago.
However, Shontz said that one of the changes in the proposal to be submitted for the residents' approval would place a time provision on building a road from the Bluffs to the Turnpike access road.
Shontz said that the undisputed elements of the agreement to be signed by the city, Vanguard and the residents contained provisions for the following:
- Physical barriers that would separate the Pinckney residents single-family neighborhood from the developed Bluffs area,
- Trees and shrubs to be planted
- Drainage problems.
In other business, the commission did not decide whether day care homeowners could offer care to 12 children instead of the six the city now allows. The city sent three text amendments concerning day care homeowners in the city code back to the planning commission for its recommendations.
Janis Fisher of the Douglas County Day Care Family Association said she hoped the city would decide on the requirements soon.
“Parents are already looking for a place to put their children during the summer. But we can't agree to take them to school,” she added, changes the city code," she said.
However, the commission directed the staffing plan to draw up an ordinance that would amend the building code to allow for up to 12 children in day care homes if the homes met the state's life safety code.
this code, among other requirements, mandates that a 14%-inch solid wood door be placed at the top of the floor in an area where children are supervised.
GET A JUMP ON THE OTHERS
In this day and age of increased competition in the job market, an early graduation is an advantage! When you decide to take in summer school, check into Naismith Hall for that Special Summertime style of life. Summers at Naismith Hall are relaxed and friendly, with a full calendar of scheduled outings, picnics and such. Summers at Naismith Hall have frozen rates, free utilities, including A/C, and fully carpeted rooms with private baths.
So, while you are attending Summer School to "Get a Jump on the Crowd," live it up in style at Naismith Hall. Student Services at Student Prices.
Leases for Next Fall—Spring also available
Call 843-8559 or drop by 1800 Naismith Dr.
---
KANU PRESENTS
CHICK COREA
and FRIENDS
with
Gayle Moran / Vocals • Dan Alias / Percussion • Tom Brechtlin / Drums
Steve Kingla / Flute / Reels • Carl Reussen / Bass • Allen Vazzari / Trumpet
APRIL 28 • 8:00 PM
HOCH AUDITORIUM • KU CAMPUS
Tickets: $6.50 / $7.00 / $6.00 • KL Students will receive a $7 discount
Tickets location: Lawrence • Kevin Records and Tapes / UA Box Office
Lennox cin — Poem Jim Recordable Layers — Moskito
Tupica — Paul's Records and Tapes • Muharam — The Sound Shop
Tickets will be available at Hoeh auditorium the day of the show
A Benefit Concert for KANU @ 9:14 AM
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University Daily Kansan, April 21, 1982
Page 7
on did care to 12 now text care back to its
ther inch op of area
Panel to discuss cuts in student financial aid
The Student Senate has organized a panel discussion to inform students about how President Reagan's proposed federal budget cuts would affect financial aid for higher education, David Adkins, student body president, said yesterday.
july 24th
The forum will be 7:30 tonight in the Big Eight room of the Kansas Union.
"We hope to discuss the implications of the new federalism," Adkins said.
The discussion will include the roles the private sector, the state and universities would play if Reagan approves Reagan's proposals.
Adkins said panelists would be Mark Tallman, Associated Students of Kansas executive director; Jerry Rogers, KU's director of financial aid; State Sen. Ron Hein, R-Topeka, member of the Senate Ways and Means Committee; and Tom Berger, chairman of the Student Senate Finance and Auditing Committee and delegate to a Washington, D.C., conference on the cuts.
Adkins said he had been impressed by the number of students who attended a reception for U.S. Rep. Larry Winn, R-Kan., on Friday and hoped the response would be the same tonight.
About 70 people attended Winn's speech.
"I think the response to Congressman Winn here showed there is a significant amount of student interest in the cuts." Adkins said. "Students areATE and knowledgeable. I'm glad we've been researching the issue."
He said he was especially impressed with minority students, graduate students and students with children who showed up to see Winn.
"We have a lot of special constituents who have specific questions about the cuts," he said.
The panel discussion is meant to be informal, Adkins said.
Adkins said some of the alternatives to programs that may be cut include auxiliary loans at a 14 percent rate, which he said will education loan program sponsored by private concerns and endowment associations' funds.
Budig optimistic for KU despite economyv
By KEVIN HELLIKER Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
Although a poor economy is pushing higher education further down this country's list of priorities, the University of Kansas is holding its own and even expanding its academic encyclopedia *Gene A*. Budig said last night.
Budiq led the Kansas chapter of the American Society for Public Administration that KU was able to inch forward academically during hard financial times only because of support from the Kansas Legislature, the Kansas University Endowment Association and private industry.
"While other universities are being ravaged by a poor economy, the University of Kansas is strengthening its position on vital fronts." Budd said.
Budig, who spoke to an audience of about 50 public administrators from across Kansas at the new Holdome, listed those vital front as student scholarships, campus building and library improvements and additional professorships to encourage excellence in teaching.
Budig gave the keynote address at a meeting of the state chapter of ASAP, a
"More than 10,000 people will receive some help from the association next year," he said. "We have underscored the importance of seeing that people are not pitched out of the workforce and that Our message has been heard."
THE CHANCELLOR attributed funds for library improvements and for student scholarships to the Endowment of the University of the oldest and largest in America."
For KU, the highlights of the Legislature thin session included appropriations of about $15 million for Haworth and Moore halls, Budig advises.
"We had a positive legislative session," said Budig, who has worked as state lawmakers for the last 5 years. "For them to do better in 1823 for higher education."
"Only a handful of states will pay higher faculty wages next year than Kansas," he said.
What is truth?
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• Thursday, 8:30 p. m.
Becoming Christians Only
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If the Haworth addition had not won approval, he said, the administration would have "stripped some programs in the biological sciences."
As for faculty wage increases, the University did not receive what it asked for, but it certainly could have been worse, Budig said.
national group for the improvement of public service at all levels of government.
Also hear Jimmy Jividen speak on these topics at the Southside Church of Christ, 29th & Missour
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Still, the poor national economy is beginning to spread its paralysis to Kansas, Budig said. He said that the state might receive more than 400
million less in revenues than was expected this year.
Given that possibility the Legislature's appropriations for KU are commendable. Budig said.
"The Legislature could have begged off higher education because of the worsening economy—but they didn't," he said.
Friday, April 23
Saturday, April 24
Sunday, April 25
Everyone is welcome to attend.
The chancellor reaffirmed his promise of a year ago to make KU one of the top 10 public universities in the country.
Budget pointed to a study by the New York Times that already included KU in that list of 10 elites, but said the university's potential was far from realized.
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University Daily Kansan, April 21, 1982
Five to get highest KU honor
By DEBBIE DOUGLASS Staff Reporter
Five Distinguished Service Citation awards will be given at the All-University Supper during commencement weekend.
The awards, which were established in 1941, are the highest honor given to KU graduates and honorary alumni by the University of Kansas and its alumni association. They recognize life careers of movement and service to mankind.
Award recipients are Lewis Coriell, Moorestow, N.J.; J Joe Engle, Houston; Takere Higuchi, Pierre C. Kermit Boudreau; Robert S. Stone "Stoney" Wall, Amarillo, Texas.
This year's recipients join a group of 255 people, 13 of whom are honorary alumni. Nearly 10 percent of the award presents have been women in past years.
Cortell is a physician recognized nationally for testing gamma globulin in prevention of poliomyelitis, a disease that in its acute forms attacks the central nervous system and causes paralysis. He has been director of the Institute for Medical Research of Camden, N.J., since 1953.
Coriell received his bachelor's degree from the University of Montana and his master's, doctorate and medical degrees from KU.
He now serves on the American Academy of Pediatrics advisory council to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and is a consultant with the American Medical Association council on drugs.
Engle was commander of the second flight of the space shuttle Columbia. The historic November flight came nearly 25 years into his Air Force career. He earned his official astronaut rating on June 13, 2007, when the astronaut-support crew for Apollo 10 and as a backup lunar module pilot for Apollo 14.
Engle was named the Air Force Association's Outstanding Young Officer in 1964 and received the Air Force Award for Flying Cross then, and again in 1978.
He received his engineering degree from KU and worked two years as an engineer with Cessna Aircraft Corp. in order to begin beginning his Air Force career.
Higuchi is the Regents Distinguished Professor of Chemistry and Pharmacy and is chairman of the KU department of pharmaceutical chemistry. He is also co-principal investigator at the Center for Drug Design.
The center on West Campus is the only such program developed by the National Institute of Health to pioneer development of new drugs and to improve existing ones through basic research.
Higuchi came to the University from the University of Wisconsin, where he was on the pharmaceutical chemistry faculty for 20 years. He received his bachelor's degree from the University of California-Berkeley and his doctorate from the University of Wisconsin.
Phelps was a clinical psychologist until he retired in 1978. For 26 years, he was chief of psychology services at the Veteran's Administration Hospital in
Kansas City, Mo., and he served as its associate chief of staff for education for three years before retiring.
He 'has tungt at the Lawrence campus and the KU Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan., at Avila College, the Kansas Vocational School.
Phelps was the first black to earn a doctorate in psychology and was also the first black professor of psychology at KU.
He received his bachelor's, master's and doctorate degrees from KU.
Wall is retired after a 55-year career with oil and gas companies. He began his career in 1927 with West Texas Gas Co. of Lubbock, Texas, which later was consolidated into Pioneer Natural Gas Co.
In 1976, he was recognized by his peers at the International Petroleum Exposition as the "Big Man of Oil." He when he redefined what he was chairman of Pioneer Natural Gas Co.
Wall received a bachelor's degree from KU and attended law school for a year before being chosen as a pitcher for a St. Louis Cardinals farm club. An injured shoulder kept him from a career in athletics.
Contemporaries remember Wall as the field goal kicker who broke the tie in the final seconds if the 1925 Kansas-Missouri football game in Lawrence.
The Distinguished Service Citation awards will be presented after the commencement supper at 6:30 p.m., May 15, in the Kansas Ballroom.
Nominations for the awards were solicited from alumni and faculty. Finai students were made by a tree of nine, alumni and three KU faculty members.
There are about 350,000 books in the University of Kansas libraries that students and faculty cannot easily find because those books are catalogued only by the author's name, Jim Ranz, the dean of libraries, said recently.
"They aren't immediately available and they aren't available unless the author's name is known." Ranz said.
THE LIBRARY has not been able to fulfil catalog those books because over a period of time, the growth of the library's finances for purchasing material has outstripped the library's stock of that material, according to Ranz.
Book treasures remain undiscovered
"Over a 20- to 30-year period, the cataloging staff was not large enough to
normally, the library catalogs books by author, title and subject, and sometimes by subtitles, joint authors, if these categories are applicable
"The faculty and students don't know what they're missing," he said.
the Kenneth Spencer Research Library and was first started in the 1960s.
**STUDENTS WHO** find out through the author's name that a certain book is in the collection can ask librarians to check it, or they can wait for hourly waiting period, Malinowsky said.
By DOUG CUNNINGHAM Staff Reporter
The library has about 2.1 million volumes, including the 350,000 books cataloged only by author. Because those 350,000 books can be found under the database in the card catalog, Ranz said, many people did not know they existed.
The library now receives about six to 15 requests a day for books in the collection, which has not been added to since 1976.
Clint Howard, acquisitions librarian,
said that although access to the books
was poor for KU students, it was almost
for people outside the University.
MANY OF KU'S books are available to other libraries because the books have been placed on a shared computer system and no other people to see what books KU has.
process all the books that were being received," Ranz said.
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The Reagan administration has proposed extensive reductions in federal funding for many student aid programs for federal Fiscal Year 1983 (academic year 1983-84). The American Council on Education has estimated that under the Reagan proposals approximately $17,695,708 less federal student assistance funding would be available to Kansas students in academic year 1983-84 than was available in academic year 1980-81. This would mean that only 54% of the money available to assist Kansas students last year will be available in the 1983-84 school year. At the same time, the cost of attending a Kansas college or university is expected to increase by 20 to 25 percent.
Final Congressional action on these proposed cuts is not expected for several weeks. You have several options: You can ignore the proposed cuts and hope that someone else will speak up for you; you can hope that the state legislature will pick up the difference in the cuts; you can allow aid programs to be discontinued . . . OR, you can write or call your representatives in Washington and ask them to pass the resolution. You may have on your ability to complete your education. You will join thousands of other students from throughout the nation who have joined together to fight the cuts. You can make a difference!
What's the Outlook?
The University of Kansas Student Senate is sponsoring a Forum on Financial Aid. This is your chance to have your question about financial aid answered by representatives from the Department of Education, the State Legislature, the Kansas University Office of Financial Aid, and the Associated Students of Kansas. All students, faculty, and staff are encouraged to attend.
Financial Aid Forum Wednesday, April 21, 1982, 7:30 p.m.
Big Eight Room in the Kansas Union
★★★★★★★★★★★
*******
If you have any questions, would like to have more information, or need help in contacting your legislators, please drop by the STUDENT SENATE OFFICE, 105B KANSAS UNION, or call 864-3710.
How Many Of Your Friends Won't Be Back Next Year?
pdL for his student art. lcm
University Dailv Kansan. April 21. 1982
Page 9
Professors debate data restrictions
By PAMELAGILFORD Staff Reporter
The KU Faculty Senate Research Committee held a public forum at Harrison to discuss making the KU policy on classified research more liberal.
Existing policy guidelines, established in 1969, discourage research projects that involve information that cannot be made public, and that would not national defense reasons or the proprietary interests of a private corporation.
Panel members were John O'Brien, associate professor of systematics and ecology. Earl Huyseur, professor of geography at the University of the Kansas Geological
For the most part, the speakers opposed loosening current restrictions on classified information on classified secondary classification" of one year on keeping secret information.
Survey; and Anthony Genova, professor of philosophy.
Also, students' theses or dissertations cannot contain any classified material.
companies getting the information before they have a chance to acquire leases or file patent applications," he said.
"The flow of information and communication is crucial to maintaining the freedom of inquiry and the vitality of the university system," O'Brien said. "However, the University could benefit from new equipment and increased funding that would accompany an increase in classified research."
BUT BUREAUCRATIC red tape that surrounds classified research can get just plain silly, Huyser said. He said that once he was not allowed to look at a report that he had written himself with his security clearance had expired.
Lebesty said that researchers in the earth sciences found it hard to get companies to let them use restricted data.
"They are concerned about rival
Part of learning to do research included discussing research and exchanging ideas with colleagues, he said, and when he was a graduate student, he had found discussing work only with his professor very restrictive.
research was misrepresented or itself classified.
Genova said that classified research had the potential of seriously compromising the investigator or his students if the true purpose of the
He said that increasing reliance on such research would make the University too subject to the Golden Rule. He who has the gold makes the rules."
A heated discussion followed the forum. Jan Roskam, professor of aerospace engineering, said he thought the restrictions on classified research impinged on his freedom to do both classified and unclassified research.
"The work I did on the X-29 fighter enables me to teach that particular aerospace design better than my colleague without the security of my crew."
John Davidson, professor and chairman of physics and astronomy, suggested keeping classified research
restricted to west campus to help maintain security.
"I was at Columbia when the H-bomb was being developed, and it didn't really work in the university environment. People at universities don't really believe in security, and it's almost too much information," the information won't flow." he said.
But lack of access to classified data in some fields prevents the University from staying at the top of those particular fields, Richard Moore, professor of electrical engineering and remote sensing, said.
The guidelines for classified research are set by the Faculty Senate and subject to the Board of Regents' approval. The Faculty Senate Research Committee is meeting in April 30 and is hoping for further opinions from faculty members.
BOARD OF CLASS OFFICER ELECTIONS
Elections for Sophomore, Junior, and Senior class officers will be held April 21 & 22.
Voting is from 9 a.m.-5 p.m.
Polling Places
Kansas Union
Wescoe Hall
Fraser Hall
Learned Hall
Summerfield Hall
PUBLIC INFORMATION FORUM
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The Shawnee Country Day School admits students of all race, color, national and ethnic origin to all the rights, privileges, programs, and activities generally accorded or made available to students of the school. It does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national and ethnic origin in administration of its educational policies, admissions policies, scholarship and loan programs and athletic and other school-admitted programs.
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Page 10 University Daily Kansan, April 21, 1982
on campus
TODAY
James Malloy, University Field Staff International, will address the UNIVERSITY FORUM at 11:45 a.m. at the UMCH学院 Ministries 204 Oral Aids.
THE KU GERMAN CLUB will sponsor the film "Typisch Deutsch" at 4 p.m. in 4067 Wescoth Hall.
THE KU YOUNG DEMOCRATS will sponsor a forum on "American Policy in El Salvador" at 7 p.m. in the Jaiyhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
THE KU SAILING CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in the Kansas Union Parlors.
TOMORROW
THE STUDENT SOCIETY FOR
CREATIVE ANACHRONISM will sponsor a demonstration of MEDIEVAL NEMAISHAREFACE AND SCIENCE INSTITUTE near MOOSE and Flint halls from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m.
THE WOMEN AND THE MEDIA FILM SERIES will present "Wilmar 8" at 7:30 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
years—because we behave with much more respect than the ERArs do," she
A woman in the audience told Schlafly that polls have shown most of the people in the country favored the passage of the ERA amendment. Schlafly said the wording of those polls' questions must have been misleading.
From page 1
She listed several states, where, she said, polls showed people favored ERA, but were proven wrong by actual elections. She said that in New York state in 1975, 450,000 people voted down the ERA.
Schlafly
The audience reacted with loud hisses and boos.
After the speech, members of the audition divided in their opinions about school
Group to tour city's historic buildings
Walt Mermsman, a staff worker for the KU housing department, said he attended the speech just to satisfy his curiosity about Schaffly.
But his wife, Martha, said, "I believe in what she has to say.
"A lot of people don't listen to what she has to say. She's not against equal rights, but she is against ERA. ERA and equal rights are two different things.Equal rights are guaranteed in the Constitution.I read a list, so I know the difference."
Lucy Smith, the coordinator for the
A group from the Nelson-Atkins Art Gallery in Kansas City, Mo., will tour historic buildings in Lawrence on Sunday, Katie Armitage, research assistant at the Kenneth Spencer Research Library, said yesterday.
Lawrence chapter of the National Organization of Women, said she thought the crowd reaction was encouraging.
KU's Beta Theta Pi fraternity house,
nurses Tennessee St., will be on the bus
tour route.
"The heckling of the audience was an intelligent reaction to what they knew to be untruths, distortions and lies," she said.
John Usher, Secretary of the Interior under President Lincoln, built the house of Vermont limestone in the 1800s. Armitage said.
"Whenever you get people who feel as strongly about an issue as pro-ERA people do, you're bound to get strong emotional reactions."
"Mrs. Usher had been afraid to come to Kansas because she had heard about cyclones, so they built the walls 17 inches thick," she said.
embodied reactions.
Smith said she thought some Schlafly supporters were planted in the audience and told to ask certain questions.
There are no more vacancies on the
"Some of the questions they asked her allowed her to avoid crucial issues," she said.
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Prescription drugs must be taken carefully and kept track of to avoid harmful effects. Among these potentially harmful effects is drug interaction. A study sponsored by the American Association for the Study reported that most patients could not identify 60% of the medications they were taking. Another 40% were taking prescriptions prescribed by two or more physicians. The most shocking statistic was that 85% of the studied were taking medication which was originally prescribed for someone else. Needless to say, this report points out the need to keep track of medications to a physician who did not ask to prescribe for you.
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University Daily Kansan. April 21, 1982
Page 11
national she was
Undergraduate improvements slow, deans say
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By ANNE CALOVICH Staff Reporter
KU administrators will be doing some homework on how to improve undergraduate education at the University of Kansas.
A committee probably will begin discussion next fall on developing a core curriculum, which would establish common requirements for KU fresh-
The core curriculum is one of the most important aspects of the Report of the Commission on the Improvement of Undergraduate Education. The report was adopted November.
"I wish it was going faster," David Katzman, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and commission member, said yesterday.
Robert Lineberry, dean of the College, said, "It's going as well as I hoped, but not as quickly as everyone else. It will be expected with such a large system."
The report makes suggestions on how to upgrade undergraduate education. It states undergraduate education is the only slight attention and needs to be improved.
Pre-enrollment, the University Scholars program, new professorships to award excellent teaching, changes in the academic atmosphere and the core curriculum are among improvements university is among improving or has enacted
But any work on core curriculum will wait at least until summer.
Deanell Tacha, vice掌委治 for academic affairs and chairman of the committee, will announce members of a faculty committee that will study
academic regulations and core curriculum at a faculty convocation she has called for May 4.
Tacha said she wanted those who served on the committee to be able to start work on it this summer because just reading the literature from other schools who have at a core curriculum would take at least two months.
"By fall, they should be fully prepared on what's occurring in other places and begin with KU recommendations." she said.
"That will really take one of the pieces—the hard pieces—out of the undergraduate commission report."
Chancellor Gene A. Budig said faculty members were concerned about undergraduate education.
He has visited almost all the College departments and all the professional school faculty.
"They want to play a more active role in helping KU attract able students." Budid said. "There is concern about the undergraduate experience. They generally favor more interaction between faculty and students. More and more faculty encourage enriching the honors programs."
Tacha agreed with Budig. She said
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The Endowment Association also will pay for three new professorships, one for each of the next three years.
"They do fear erosion in our position. They express concern about the University's ability to attract and retain outstanding young faculty."
The College is moving to improve undergraduate conditions. Student advising has begun this week for next semester's courses, if students wish to plan for them now, rather than wait immediately before enrolling.
Pre-enrollment is also in the enactment process. Students will begin preenrolling in fall 1983 for the spring 1984 semester.
A group of scholars to receive the money will be chosen each semester.
professional schools, which will provide advi-教 for students in the College who are interested in the professional schools, Lineberry said.
some changes. This spring, it introduced the University Scholars program, which is composed of outstanding sophomores who take a special course and work closely with faculty mentors.
most faculty favored a core curriculum and there was a consensus among faculty members about broad goals.
Budd said, "With very few exceptions, the faculty are proud of the University and its academic reputation.
Rooms, 103, 111 and 113 of Strong Hall will soon be cleared out to make room for the pre-enrollment center, which should be completed in late August or early September, according to William Hogan, associate executive vice president. It will house computer terminals and students will carol there.
Lineberry will announce this week or next the person who will fill the newly created position of associate dean of undergraduate studies. That person will be responsible for undergraduate curriculum and advising, he said.
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David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said he was working on improving the academic climate at KU in order to better retain students. He said study programs in residence halls, more student job opportunities and advising for students on probation would help.
Two weeks ago, the Kansas University Endowment Association decided to give the scholars a $500 stipend.
A committee will choose the professors, who will each receive a $5,000 bonus for excellence in teaching. The committee will be announced at Commencement.
MAKE IT YOUR CHOICE
"I have found among the faculty a remarkable understanding of the kinds of issues with which the University is faced," she said. "I have been quite impressed by the broad views the faculty takes of the goals of the University."
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postponed to the following Saturday, time remaining unchanged
All players, old and new, novice and professional are urged to contact one of the persons listed below. Plans will be made to select the team for the forthcoming matches with Kansas State, Kansas City, Iowa State, Topeka, etc.
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Page 12
University Daily Kansan, April 21, 1982
Crew team wins second straight Big Eight title
By BEN JONES Staff Writer
The KU crew team sliced through a stiff crosswind on Glen Cunningham Lake in Omaha Saturday to win six of eleven and second straight the Nighthawk championship.
The Kansas women's team retained the varsity eight championship plaque it captured at last year's championship. The men's varsity heavyweight eight brought home the Ben Stott Challenge Cup for the first time. The Big Eight has been holding crew championships since 1975.
THE KANASA CREWS compiled 40 points as they won the men's and women's novice and varsity eight races, the women's varsity and men's novice fours. Kansas State finished second with 25 points, and Nebraska picked up the remaining 14 points. The point system gave five, three and one points to the first three boats to finish the 2,000-meter course.
Only a boat-length or two determined most of the races, and only one or two seconds separated the contenders in two of the races.
"I saw some real determination and desire from our crews to pull out some tough races," Kansas Coach Cliff Browne said. "We were outstanding. performances were really outstanding."
In the closest race, a randomly picked Kansas eight, which had not rowed before, lost by a second to Kansas State in the men's varsity lightweight eights race. The two other teams were Oklahoma men's light- and heavyweight fours, in which the Kansas crew used one of Nebraska's boats.
"We'd borrowed a boat that was unfamiliar to us," Elliott said. "We had problems with those races."
Kansas' four-man shell, used for the other four races, was built in 1952.
"The biggest surprise," Elliott said, "was our second men's novice eight—a lightweight eight—finishing second in the heavyweight race."
Nebraska finished third in that race, one second before KU5's second boat. The defending champion was
They also won the day's final race against varsity competition from Kansas State and Nebraska. Elliott said, "it not really surprised—but pleased."
"From practice, I knew our novice eight could do well in a good wind," he said.
The day's early races were run in a strong wind, and waves sometimes broke over the gunwales of the racing shells, spraying the backs of crew members. The choppy shells. The choppy water made a consistent stroke difficult to maintain.
"Any time you have wind or rough water, it shows you down, even if it a tail wind," Elliott said. "And yesterday's was a quarter tail wind."
But Elliott said the Kansas crew had experiencerowing on rough water from previous meals. This spring, KU last's first meet, a dual with Purdue in West
Lateyette, Ind., but since then has won
duals with Washburn and Kansas State.
Elliott said the wind also gave coxswains and tournament officials troubles in lining up the boats at the start. The men's novice eights race was considerably shortened, he said, because the boats had drifted several lengths down the course by the time they got lined up.
Another problem occurred in the form of an aluminum fishing boat sitting in the path of their mans' heavyweight eights race. Camille Pulliam, the Kansas boat's coxswain, had to swerve sharply into Nebraska's lane to avoid the boat. Pulliam waited for the officials' boat to direct her to switch lanes so she wouldn't risk being caught. The boat would have disqualified her boat.
Elliott said the incident could have cost Kansas the race, had it not been handled alertly. The team met with Drake's "bick off the meet from motorbikes and sailboats."
"That points to a problem that rowing programs have had," Elliott said. He
said teams often had to rely on volunteer coaches to officiate meets.
"The organizers were pretty inexperienced," he said, but added that, nonetheless, the two of the officials had handled the meet well.
Elliott said that because KU had ranked K-State the weekend before, he would expect from them, although they are not improving in their men's vice eight.
Elliott said he had been surprised that Nebraska had not been stronger, because their crew had good equipment and a good lake to row on. Elliott said they would be able to swim in water may have kept Nebraska from getting much practice time on the water.
As Nebraska gets more water time, he said, their advantage in equipment would become more evident against the Kaw River for nearly two months.
"Right now, that's the main advantage we have over Nebraska," Elliott said. "Later in the year, as other crews improve and approach peak
potential, it will be harder for us to win."
Kansas will meet Nebraska again May 1 in the Midwest Regionals in Madison, Wis.
crews, schooners
Both schools' women's crews have to row the men's shells, which are heavier than women's shells.
"Kansas State and Kansas are both at a disadvantage when it comes to equipment, especially for the women's crews." Elliott said.
The two universities will face each other for the third time this spring Saturday in the state championships at Lake Shawnee in Topeka.
MIG EIGHT CHAMPIONSHIPS
Saturday at Omaha, Neb.
Bullets beat Nets
Team scouts, Kansas 40, Kansas State 25,
Oklahoma 16, Oklahoma State 13, Oklahoma
KSU 89, KSU 61, KU 41, KSU 60. Men's power
eight: 1. KU 27; 2. KU 19; 3. KU 18; 4. KU 17;
5. KU 15; 6. KU 14; 7. KU 13; 8. KU 12; 9. KU 11;
10. KU 10; 11. Women's men's eight: 1. KU 17;
2. KU 16; 3. KU 15; 4. KU 14; 5. KU 13; 6. KU
12; 7. KU 11; 8. KU 10; 9. KU 9; 10. KU 8; 11.
KU 7; 12. N.U. Women's men's eight: 1. KU 17;
2. KU 16; 3. KU 15; 4. KU 14; 5. KU 13; 6. KU
12; 7. KU 11; 8. KU 10; 9. KU 9; 10. KU 8; 11.
KU 7; 12. N.U. Women's wo
By United Press International
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J.-Rick Mahnold, held赫尔顿 in the first half, scored 16 second-half points to lead the Washington Bullets to a 98-43 victory last night over the New Jersey Nets in an NBA Eastern conference mini-series.
GAMMON
SNOWWHEE
LADIES NIGHT!
2 free drinks after 9 p.m.
Everyone. 15c Draws
10-11
MISS STREET DELI
at the Orchards Golf Course, 3000 W. 15th St Come on and out and get in the swing of things!
now featuring . . .
Soft-Serve Frozen
DESSERT YOGURT
So Nutritious . . So Lo Cal . . So Natural
So GOOD!
Try Some Now
Headmasters.
Many Fruit Flavors
To Choose From
Offer Expires 4/25/B2
No Coupons Accepted With This Offer
Bring in this AD
Buy One Yogurt Cone
get the second one
FREE.
intramural golf-4 p.m. TODAY
Recreation Services
Don't forget
---
You'll Love Our Style.
Are You Prepared for Your Finals?
Study Skills Workshop Emphasis on taking final exams.
809 Vermont Lawrence, Kansas 66044
843-8808
Wednesday, April 21
7:00-8:30 p.m.
Council Room Kansas Union
No Registration/Free
The Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong 864-4064
VISION
Remember to check visit on April 21-22
TOM MANGOLD—PRESIDENT
PAUL BAKER—VICE-PRESIDENT
DEBRIE DOHERTY—SECRETARY
TRACY WILGUS—TREASURER
E
paid for by the vision coalition
KANSAN WANT ADS
The University Daily
Call 864-4358
CLASSIFIED RATES
ERRORS
AD DEADLINES
one two three four five six seven eight nine ten
times or fewer $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00 $3.25 $3.45 $3.65 $3.85 $4.05 $4.25 $4.45
cents or fewer $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00 $3.25 $3.45 $3.65 $3.85 $4.05 $4.25 $4.45
Monday ... Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday ... Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday ... Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday ... Friday 5 p.m.
Friday ... Wednesday 5 p.m.
The Kanana will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or simply by calling the Kauai Business office at 848-4358.
KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
The Kansas is now accepting applications for Summer and Fall Semester news and business information. Other forms are available in the Student Senate Office, 105 B, Kansas Union; in the Office of Student Organizations and Activities; in Room 200 Flint Hall. Completed applications are in due to 200 Fint Hall by 5:00 p.m., Friday, April 23.
News and Business Staff Positions
The University Daily Kansan is anEqual Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer. Applicant should be fied people regardless of race,religion, color, sex, disability, origin,age, or ancestry.
ENTERTAINMENT
The John Mosehead band will appear at the Holly Hall this Friday and Saturday. The Lee Moseley will open the show and be表演 at the Mountaineer Band from 8 to 11 p.m. 4-33
Social climbers will start this Thursday night. Come out to see Hoboken's avant garage band. Free beer, 8 till 9. 4-22
FOR RENT
HANOVER PLACE completely furnished,
studios, & 2 bd. barns. Located between
Boston and Boston Bay.
K.U. DONT DELAY. Reserve your water
tank. Daily from $240 month—water
Every Tuesday is open interphone night at the
Rockwell Hotel. $21 per room. B2 pitchers, 75' tuxes, 4-12
weeks.
Unfurnished two bedroom apt. for summer sublease. One block north of Kansas Union.
Must see to believe. Furnished rooms with
utilities paid properly, security & downcity.
Phone: 814-305-9100. 814-305-9100.
For ten to mature male student. Quite
comfortable efficiency apartment. Private
kitchen. Close to the Union. Reasonable
price. 842-4185. t
TRY COOPERATIVE LIVING. Sunflower House. 842-9421. If
no pets. Phone 841-250-3492.
Live in the CHRISTIAN CAMPUS HOUSE
This summer or fall. Call me a part of a
team at The Campus House. Aiken Jesu-
nak, campus minister 841-622-8521.
Established STUDENT COOPERATIVE close to campus and downtown. Own bedroom/ study. Six evening meals each week. $75-80 per week utilities. SUNFLOWER HOUSE. 842-9421.
Available now. Two bedroom spacious apt.
living room, carpeted kitchen, draped fireplace,
kitchen, laundry, office. Close to campus,
and on bus route. $345 per month.
MEADOWBOOK 19th & Crestellin
842-300-2600
TRAILRIDE. Leasing for full-studios.
The building includes 3 bedrooms,
houses. All have harvest gold appliances,
toilet, bathrooms and laundry facilities on the upper swimming pool, toilets are accepted. On Kru rent is a balcony.
Contact us at kru@sunnybrook.com.
MED CENTER BOUND? Newly refurbished
2 BR Duplexes available now, Carpet, A/C/
Appliances, Calling. Call (101) 381-2873.
PRINCETON PLACE PATIO APPAREMENTS.
for roommate, features wood burning fireplace,
weather/day: **hot** housing, fully-equipped,
pool/spa: **spa** daily at 2400 Standard Blvd. or,
3000 South 25th St., Princeton, NJ 08679
SOUTHERN PARKWAY TOWNIEUSES, 60 & Kessler. If your tired of apartments featuring 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, all appliances at a discount and privacy. We have openings now and in the evening at 749-150 for more information. Wanted at 749-150 for more information. Wanted at 749-150 for more information. Wanted at 749-150 for more information.
Wanted at 749-150 for more information. Wanted at 749-150 for more information. Wanted at 749-150 for more information.
SUMMER SUBLEASE May rent free, walk to campus or downtown, June & July rent negotiable. 2 bedroom, utilities reasonable quiet. Call 847-7167, comfortable quiet. 4-30
New orchards duplex 2 br -Large living area Garage D W Jockups too. $275 Available June 1, 841-8499. 4-21
Furnished one bedroom apt. for sublease.
Excellent location to campus and downtown.
Air/air heat. Available May 15.
645-655
Summer sublease. 2 BR. Apt. Close to campus, 10th Mississippi. A.C. dishwasher. Available after finals, $290. 842-2655. 4-22
Sublease—May 15-Aug. 15. Spacios 2 bedroom apt. Fully furnished, appliances, piano, desk, carpenters. Mature couple pre-requisited. Resumes required. 250-6. 4-21 1035. After 5. Refunds.
--summer. Sublease. 3 bedroom townhouse at
Trailridge. $400/month. Call 749-161-428
Rooma available for summer $100-$140 per month utilities included. Close to campus and quiet atmosphere. Call Darryl 941-17692.
AT NAIAMH HALL
JUST SOUTH OF CAMPUS
* Private Batts
* Academic year lease
* Alas Summer leases
* Parties and Social Events
* Air Conditioning
* Free Lifetimes
* Color, Cable TV Lounges
* Maid Service
* Nineteen and Fourteen Meal Plans
* Swimming Pool
* We are privately owned and operated
* Much more for the Student
Visit or Call
1800 Naiamh Drive
Applications Now Available
SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE
AT MAIDMINT HALL
SUBLAGE MK. I am a two bedroom apt, in the Malia Old England Village located on Pleasant Street near greecies and pizza. I am a dishwasher, air condit, fixing maids and pool, Gas, laundry room, kitchen and you would like to live within my plush apartment, call 841-583 or 843-552 under G-74.
--summer. Sublease. 3 bedroom townhouse at
Trailridge. $400/month. Call 749-161-428
Summer sublease or June to June lease.
Large 2 bedroom apartment, d.w. a,c., pool,
heat垫, etc. Near Hillcrest, bike or
bus to campus. 748-0288. 4-23
EXPENSIIVE MODEM! I couldn't believe it! only 840.3 bedroom, spacious unit or room. At least call 749-2811 or 841-2116.
Waiting to sublease bleue, 2 bdm. apt.
for summer. New AC, dishwasher, carpet,
electric garage opener, 115 bath. Warehouse.
130-764-8065 for campus and campus.
$400, 789-1344, 4-28
Summer sublaze. Fem. only. Clean, close to campus. Low.util. 841-7086. 4-30
Attaché 2 bedroom apartment, uniformed
Attaché 2 bedroom apartment, uniformed
Attaché 1 May 84:39:36,肥军 6,关爱 12,
May 84:39:36,肥军 6,关爱 12,
Spacious 3 bedroom 1st floor of house. 936 New Hampshire. 4-21
QUITER Meadowbrook studio to subtle, June and July, option to return in October. Private entrance, private ground level, lots of grass and swimming pools, A/C, cable TV, 941-382-4288 before 9.
We'll pay you $20! Just sublease our two
room, two bath and one bedroom,
optional fall renoval. Our one old, has
remained in use since our last lease,
has rented on paid, it has a dining
area, it has a laundry & care on
paid route. It has a dishwasher in the
bus route, and has a humidity in the
building.
Wanted: Female non-smoker to share 3 bedrooms with a male; 4 blocks from a number of nummer rooms; 4 blocks from the same house.
May pre-paid $50 bummer, 3 aftershore,
bath baths, bath toilets, bath toilets,
KU bus Route 2, pools, termites,
4-12
June-July sublease. $8 & Miss. 2 bdrm.
duplex, air cond., furnished. $225/month.
485, $320 (eve).
4-28
Furnished one bedroom apartment,
paid $325 per month. 4-23
passed June 1. 2 bedroom furnished
n-w kitchen, a/e-4 blocks from campus.
$225 per month + $1. Elev. Deposit required.
Summer sublease. Furnished stair apart
unit located at 230 West 49th Street,
$220 + electricity, 749-458-4, 3-60
1. BLOCK FROM KANSAB UNION. Pur-
sley will take the class student or kus-
tle classroom students. EMPLOYMENTS,
No pets allowed. $25.00 per job.
Monthly, $41-$89 after 5 p.m.
4-22
LRG-4 BR. house. Full finished basement in May, 842-3020. Vestit-27.
SUMMER SUBLEASE Trailrider/Studio
841-5296, view; price negotiable
841-5296
4 bibs, B block 3 N.E. of stadium.
1 bib, B block 2 1 bib, 1 bib, June 1. 789-6166 4-21
For sublease in May, 1 BR Apt 41 close to campus in Burlington M-141-825 Weekly to call on w. m. wednesdays.
Sublease, choices 2 br. apt. furnished.
b-comm campus & downtown $2000. b-comm
campus $1500.
MASTER BEDROOM AVAILABLE starting
with free wifi. Call 841-1644 for details
Furnished 1 bedroom, central air, summer sub-
房; 2 balconies; student student on 4-
685 by May first
Sleeping rooms 1-3 bedroom apartments.
Bedrooms for summer or full year. 842-891-6055.
Lease only.
3 bedroom furnished mobile 186mc. $185
2 bedroom furnished mobile 184mc. $170
Clean, quiet location. Keys pave. Taxy feeder.
Clean, quiet location. Keys pave. Taxy feeder.
Roommate for May 1. $110/mo plus utilities.
Serious students preferred. Come take a
look. 842-0038. 4-22
Sublease large 2 BR apartment near mair-
gustion-81239, gas paid, central air-
conditioning-81239
4-29
Sublase, QUAIL CREKE 3 BDRM, spaceless apartments,完整装护 drapes & drapes swimming, tennis, golf, and swimming, tennis, golf, and club bills paid except electric. 843-300-8282.
Sublease for summer. 1 bedroom apartment at Sundance. Call Tom. 749-0847. 4-36
Summer+ sublease. 1 BR apt. in 4-plex,
furnished, carpeted. AC. 14th & NJ.
All utilities free. $145/mo. 749-4606. 4-22
Avian & Harvard Square Apartments 1 & 2 bed room apartments to campus. June 1 or Aug 1 occupancy. Call 841-6080. Kware Valley Management, Inc. 4-30
Apartment for sublease: 2 bedroom-furnished June-August. Summit House 1105 Louisiana. Call 841-6500. 4-23
Now leasing new 2 & 3 bedroom duplexes.
Available for Aug. 1 occupancy. Fireplaces,
garages & much more. 841-690-760.
Valley Management, Inc.
SUMMER SUBLEASE. New furnished town-
house. 13th & Ohio. 3-4 people. Price
neagotiable. 749-1243 or 749-4238. *4-30*
Now Leasing
Avalon and Harvard Square
Apartments
1 & 2 BR$^3$-Furnished or
Other
Avalon Office-805 Avon Rd.
Open Sat, 10 AM-2 PM
Sun, 1:4 PM
Or Call 610-6800
For Showings.
--summer. Sublease. 3 bedroom townhouse at
Trailridge. $400/month. Call 749-161-428
Summer sublease~Nice 2 bedroom
Close to everything~Call 841-4610 anytime.
Sublease. May 18-Aug. 1. May rent free,
bus or walk to campus. 1 bedroom apartment.
large. 843-0835. 4-23
Summer Sairen Room. Possible fall option. 3 bedroom. Walking distance to campus, port office, & grocery. Laundry, carport, large back yard. 749-1275. 4-23
Summer sublease with option for fall, furnished 3 bedroom. Malls Apartment(s), pool, patio, mid-May. First-ment June 1, rent negotiable. Call 748-423 or contact manager.
SUMMER SUBLAGE with fall option
Modern two bedroom apartment in 4-plex.
Central c. a. New appliances. Seven minute
cleaning. Available May 19th.
845-347-11
845-347-12
Second floor 3-bedroom furnished apartments. Room is large and spacious. August 1 or earlier. Within walking distance to office and downtown. $50 plus tip for room hire. Call 847-6910 for appointment. If no answer, contact the office.
Summer **sublease**=Female waited =$120.00
per month + 1/5 utilities. BEd -downtown
house, btwren campus & downtown. 794-
398. 4-23
Summer sublease. Real close to campus.
Call 842-4246 for more information. 4-26
Sublease with rent option 3 or 4 bedroom house with garage. 21st & Naimishm. Call 841-5297. 4-23
Squeatix 2 bedroom, 1½ bath, full kitchen,
Summer, 2-bedroom, en-suite. Mgmt w/ appliances,
aggregates. Mgmt has pool, gym room and quick maintenance.
Kitchen, laundry and rear extension available. Rent negotiated.
Home insurance.
1 bedroom apartment with loft. Furnished.
AC. Next to the Sanctuary on 7th. Great.
condition. Call 842-8709. 4-30
Share beautiful two bedroom house—mature non-smoker needed! Roommates welcome; guest west side bedroom, off-street parking, furnished (except 2+) utilities. 842-704-8967. Keeping 4-26
Summer Sublease. 1 bedroom Cedarwood
Apartment, furnished. Terms negotiable.
Call 843-6094. 4-28
Subbase 2 bedroom apartment at Meadowbrook. Anytime May to August 15. Call 843-3052. 4-30
SUMMER SURLEASE. Available May 15
walk to campus or downtown. Modern
bedrooms, comfortable bedding,
comfortable, clean, quiet, fall option,
dissipant required. Call 842-7176.
4-30
Formal to share spaces 3 bedrooms in
campus; $15 per week 1.2/week
841-3727
4-22
Summer sublease: Beautiful, new 4-bedroom house with 2 baths. A 8-floor, D-wire, in new residential area. Available May 26 to June 13 in fall. Call 841-67398. 4-22
RENT NEGOTIABLE—must sublease modern
2 bedroom apartment; AC; convenient
clean. 842-5139. 4-26
For May, very nice amuero school room
location. 10' x 8' with a private bath.
No clean shoes, call after 8:35-200-
or any call to Ohio. Beautiful views from
the Ohio River and beach. Also nice
hair and bath. Also nice apartment - 4
months.
Summer sublease: $650 per on porch
and deck. Very nice location. Fall option
furnished, excellent location. Fall option
not available.
3 quiet, responsible students seek place to live—house or apartment—starting in August. Call Nancy, Ellen, or Paige at 864-5884 or 864-5884.
Sublease—2 bedroom apartment, Oaks, June-
July. Rent negotiable. Gas, water paid
841-8911, evenings.
4-27
Apartmnt summer sublease. 2 bedroom/1
location, laundry facility. 4
641-383-8448
Furnished upstairs studio apartment, available May 15. On K.U. bus route, and close to downtown, C/A. tf
5 b-drom, 3½ bath; 2 car garage, fireplace,
all appliances $700 monthly 3 duplexes in
a dorm room, 1 car garage, all appliances
3 bedrooms, 1 bath; all appliances
close to campus 749-3838, 843-7625 4-36
Wanted: 4 or 2 females to share 8-bedroom house very close to campus. Summer only Rent $30 per month + minimal utilities 4-23 844-6259, 844-6259
big beautiful renovated house with washer, dryer and porch swing. Master bedroom bed is carpeted and has a utility closet. Close to campus and downtown. Available May 15. Call 748-3429 for details.
Carpeted, remodeled 2 bedroom house within,
walking distance of Medical Center.
$240.00/month. Appliances, furnished. 1-649-
0474. 4-27
A very sharp, small, two bedrooms; and very close to campus. Prefer non-smokers. 4-7 p.m., Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday, 4-8 p.m., Sunday, 1-3 p.m., Sunday, 10:48-12:34 Street.
SUMMER SUBLAGE WITH option for Balloon Modern 2 bedroom apartment, low utilities, short walking distance to campus and downtown. 841-175. 4-29
Sublease. no May rent. 1 bedroom. Fall option. Water, cable paid. Dishwasher, air conditioning, laundry. Will deal. 745-2417.
SUMMER SULEASE. Furnished 2 bdroom, pool, air conditioning, dishwasher, laundry, in Applieroft. 843-3618. 4-21
Neded: One person to fill one bedroom in 3 bedroom apartment. Nice place to live. Includes Bed of Centennial Park. Suite $160.00 monthly. Chr. or Bob, Ck. 841-2756. Ack. 4-26
Must sublease for summer. First month rent paid 1001 Indiana, Apt. D. Call 942-9756 after 9:00 p.m. p. 4-27
Nice. quiet furnished one bedroom apartment in Sundance apartments. $235, monthly water paid, on bus route. Call Sue. 842-4-27
2330.
Need a place to live this summer? Sublease beautiful 2 bedroom duplex, air conditioned 3 bedrooms. Perfect location—across street from food hall. Call 641-8584. Ask for Lekle or Judy.
University Daily Kansan, April 21, 1982 Page 13
2 bedroom apartment to sublease for summer, options for fall. Will negotiate price. One block from campus. Call 843-1476, 4-28
Summer Subleases, fall option—Studio $180,
utilities included. Close to campus and
downtown. 749-1088. 4-30
Nice 1 bedroom apartment, close to campus and downstairs. Air conditioner. $175 plus utilities. Call Linda. B41-7451. 4-23
Western Civilization Notes. New on Sale!
Makes sense to use them-1) As study guide.
Makes sense to use them-2) As study guide.
*New Analysis of Western Civilization*
*New Analysis of Western Civilization*
*Bookmark, and Oread Bookmark.*
FOR SALE
Television-Televiures-Video Recorders. Name brands only. Factory sealed cartons. Lowest price in the K.C. area. Get your best prices for Total Sound Distribution $199.00 4-300.
Alternator, starter and generator specialties.
Parts, service, and exchange units. BELL
AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC. 843-9069. 3800
W. 6in.
1979 Vespa Bravo Moped, 2200 miles. Ex-
pellition condition. 864-1092. 4-23
1967 Blue Merc. Cougar, 289 cl., auto., A/C,
AM/FM/cassette, runs good! Call Jack—
749-2501. 4-23
gain is in
1781 GN400X Suzuki. NEW $1495. Asking
$220. Only 37 miles. Call 842-7679 after 6
pm.
1980 HONDA CX500 DELUXE shaft drive, water cooled, windshield, backrest, luggage rack, 2,600 LBS. 843-1843-4-23
good condition 76 AMC Hornet hatchback.
I don't want it anymore! Under $1000, 790-
211 or 841-2116. 4-21
GT7 650 TSG Surzuki * Looks & runs great
12,600 km. New tires to up. Wind, uphol-
tage touring and handle bars, back
saddle & saddle bags. Must sell 11,643-411.
250 cm.
Rsal Sale: 1979 RM125N, Great shape. Super fast! Phone: 814-844-741
4-21
Convertible 71 Olds 442. Must see to appreciate. Taking offers, 843-5550, days, 842-
7726, after 5:00 weeks. 4-21
1982 HONDA XL100R, Street and Trail.
Must sell, best offer. 846-1062. 4-21
Must sell, best offer. 864-662- 4-21
TENNIS KRICKS—Head, Wilson, Dunlap.
Prince, Yonex–Good selection, new/used.
In good condition, 864-713 at 6:30 p.m.
864-713 after 6:30 p.m.
Air conditioner, 5,800 PTU G.E. Almost
now, $150.00. Call anytime. 842-0588-1048
Dahlquist DQ-10 speakers—Need to sell.
Contact Tiff 843-7570. 4-22
Trek bike, Reynolds frame, Campagnolo
gears and brakes. Contact Tiff. 843-5770.
4.22
Honda 125 XL—2400 miles, only ridden by
Priest to Church. 8695. Peter Casparian.
841-4405, 843-8202. 4-23
Marmant, stereo, BSR turntable, speakers
$150. Compact refrigerator $50. Wicker
rocking chair $20. 841-2558. 4-22
Rare acoustic guitar has to be sold immediately. Call Mike. 749-4278. 4-23
**Stamp-** dollars invested assets at cost. Hundreds of dollars worth. Very fine to superb, never buys as many or as few as you like. $15 - up. All inquiries: 4-23 $299
Must sell immediately; 76 Chevy Monza, 4
speed, 57,000, excellent condition. Wish to
bag on the price. 843-5134. 4-23
Stereo receiver—Yamaha CR640. 45 watts.
Excellent condition. Call Mark 841-1168.
4-23
Rock Chall 82" audio and video tapes still available. Video-$50/show or $125 combo DVD–$7/show or $15 combo DVD for Brian -141/167 morning or -843/474 afternoon
Dorm room sized carpet remnant. Rust, gold pattern, $50 or make offer. Cindy 842-4456.
4-23
Stereo very loud, very clean, buy it now
blowout your ear, extremely loud. 684-6626
www.davisheadphones.com
afternoons 4-23
rhodes 73-key electric piano with Fender
public phone portcase
player with headphones. Call Russell. 843-4
8153
Rhodes 73-key electric piano with Fender deluxe reverb amplifier. Call evenings. 749-
2899. 4-27
Honda 450, 1974. good condition. Aq-
$550. Call Pete or Jan at 843-8454. Aq-
23
Perfect sleeper mattress and boxspring with runners, head and footboards. $85. 842-1193. Keep trying! 4-27
1981 Stuart GS4507 black, beautiful, luggage rack, back rest, crash barm, must sell--getting barns, 842-4864, after 4:00 p.m.
4-27
FOUND
Found, set of residence hall ks keys outside
the building. Have your keys in a key chain.
A key chain case with four keys (2 car keys
and 4 door keys) Found at baseball field $2
Please call 4-4860 and leave a message.
Please call 4-4860 and leave a message.
Watch in Flint Hast reporting lab. Call 884- 4109 and identify.
Found, a complete set of keys. Call 864-
851, ask for Rebecca.
4-21
KEYS found *Thurs.* morning on abandoned
fat. drive. Call 749-4676. 4-21
Small puppy, looks like a German Shepherd.
Punched at TKE house on Wednesday, 14th.
No older than 8 weeks. Contact Scott
Hown, 833-3310. 4-23
Grey male kitten, about 8 weeks old. Found
male kitten, Call #842-9248 at 6:50
10AM.
One billfold Call 843-3610 after six o'clock
d.43
Red Thermos in Wescoe Call 842-9634
Pecan roll. 4-23
HELP WANTED
Attention: Business Students. Nationally known company interviewing students for summer work program. High profit and salary. For interview ask call, 749-6227. 4-27
Programmers. Local Company needs part-time programmers for microcomputers. We can supply equipment. Send resume to P.O. Box 3589, Lawrence. Attention: David.
Are you commuting to Kansas City?
Yes. I had a job in the medical field. I loved someones drop of UDS at the KU hospital. They sent me Bob Bawkes, Administrator of Continuing Education and Glacier, RK, CA, 645-738-9188.
RK, CA 645-738-9188.
Lake of the Oranges. Floating Restaurant new taking applications and holding interest in existing franchise. same food furnished, must job most work. New location. Large Box 107, MO 65049. 4-21 MO, MO 65049.
Earn up to $500 or more each year beginning up to 13 years for 1-3 years. Make your own hours. Monthly payment for placing an order. Savings applies. Awards prized at warehouses. 800-826-5836. 4-23
SUMMER JOB CARS IN the Northeast.
Send self-addressed, stamped envelope to Midwest Camp Consultants, 1785 Red Coast, Maryland Hills, MO. $6043. 4-22
Energetic, personable waitresses wanted.
Must be willing to work. Hourly wage plus tips, commission and incentive bonus. Apply at GAMMONS AT 5:00 p.m.
Lead Guitarist needed for established professional contemporary rock group. Serious players only, 841-9797. 4-22
Experienced bartender needed. Refrescerces
required. Must be able to work summer,
start immediately. Apply in person 18N
New Hampton, 10-2 p.m.
4-23
WANTED: Production workers for day shift, 7:45 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Apply between 1 and 4 p.m. Wednesday, Thursday, Friday only, every week. Employees must have an equal opportunity employer. 4-22
KU-Y is seeking a full-time coordinator for the summer semester of '82. The summer semester of '82 would be quarter time and the program coordinator would have to work with a minimum of 10 hours a week. During the summer, the coordinator will receive a minimum of 10 hours per week. The coordinator must be dedicated to alternatives to the needless suffering caused by the summer semester. Show on your resume both sexism and claustomy. Show on your resume which show that you fulfill this qualification. Resume should include a Community preferred. Send a resume to KU-Y 101 Kansas Union, Lawrence, Kan., kuy-101.ku.edu. Affirmative Action Employer. 4-30
GREAT PLAINS MONTESSORI
TEACHERS TRAINING/Academic phase—Summer 1982 in Kansas City area
College credit available /American Montessori Society Certification
Contact. Catherine Slatop
12504 Pacific Street
Omaha, Nebraska 68154
402-333-3451
We are looking for 25 independent, hard working students for full-time summer work. Must be willing to relocate. Offer valid until earn approximately $3,000. 749-7227 749-7227
The Eastern Civilizations Program anticliency vacancy for the academic year 1982-83. Contact the Department of East Asian Languages and Culture at West Virginia University 300. Deadline for applications is Friday, December 4th. Offer will be competitive. Opportunity Affirmative Action Employer. 4-23 Anticipated Graduate Assistants & Graduate of undergraduate hours in Research Technology Center-KAERP, U.S. Space Technology Center-KAERP, Program Graduate Research Assistant; Student Assistant (boring possibility of continuation); 20 to 40 hours/week Research Assistancehip stipends based on research assistance requirements. Cartography; digital data processing; field work; cataloging/organizational tasks. Required: Senior Student assigned tasks. Requirements: Junior Student assigned tasks. Required: Computerization of interpretation, c
LOST
Lost Wednesday—glasses in black carrycase. If失, please found. phone 749-248-4, 4-21 Ten tanvel wallet and Capitol Federal checkbook inside an Omaha raquet cover. Cover is $50.
LOST A 173. A pair of gold-trimmed glasses at
I773. Repaired, call martin at I773.
Reward 4-23
PERSONAL
Instant passport, vise, ID, & resume photographs. Custom made portraits b/w, color. Swells Studio 749-161. **tf**
Skillet's liquor store serving U-Daly since 1949. In come and compare, Willfred Skillet Eudaly. 1906 Mass. 843-8186. tf
Say it on a sweatshirt with custom silk-screen printing 1 to 1000 shirt art by Sweilla 749-1611. tf
The Kegger-Weekly Specials on Kegs! |
Call 841-9450-1610 W.23rd. tf
HEADACHE, BACKACHIE, STACHE, NEEK
LEG PAIN? Find and correct the CAUSE
of the headache. 64-53; modern
modern chiropractic care. 64-53;
Accepting Blue Crown and Lone Star insurance.
DESIGN-A-SHIRT CONTEST
Remember... . . . mother loves you, show her how you feel this Mother's Day. Brew! Studio for portraits of fine quality, satisfaction guaranteed. 749-161-11.
**PREPRESENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES.**
Free pregnancy testing; early and advanced out patient abortion; gynecology; cross-institute with Nox Overland Park, TN (912) 643-3000.
ttf
For your party clothes, formal or costume,
check out the Inflation Fighter, E. 8. Th.
10-5-30 M-F 10-5-30 Sat. Open tl off
8 on Thurs.
Entry Deadline April 23rd
Community Auction 700 N.H.
Every Wed. 6:30 p.m.
Main Union Satellite
Enter now at
kansas union bookstores
$100
1st Prize
MARY KAY COSMETICS—Full-time beauty consultant. 842-6641. ff
Exciting jobs at Lake Tahoe. Send $5.00 to
Tahoe Jobs, P.O. Box 7244, Kansas City, MO
64113.
4-22
841-2212
Consignments Accepted
Wed. 10 a.m.till sale
Sat. 10-5
Spring formals. Barb's 2nd Hand Rose.
515 Indiana. Open till 5 p.m. 842-746-4, 4-30
Wanting to talk with someone? Gay & Lesbian Peer counselors available through headquarters (814-2354) or information center (864-3508) just call.
Remember, O most gracious Virgin Mary, that never was I known that anyone who knew me would have been implored his intercession was left unaided. Inspired by this confidence, I few to three, asked me if I should stand drifit and sorrowful. O Lady of the City, I
ticernesco-Telikvassio-Veccharc. Naimwet
ticernesco-Viaculty-Veccharc. Naimwet
ticernesco-Viaculty-Veccharc. G你 yu
ticernesco-Carmichael the K. cau. Use you
ticernesco-Baird in the K. cau. Use you
ticernesco-Darwin in the K. cau.
38 x 18 x 20 cm Daiturian
Daiturian
$6.95 Per Day
SPECIAL
LEASE-A-LEMON
Rent a car (Mon, Tues, Wed)
$60 Per Day.
$60 Per Week
$225 Per Month
Personal problems? Concern? Confidential Professional Counseling. Specializing in life changing skills. Free initial consultation. 841-4144. 4-26
Cannot be combined with any other specials. All cars are mechanically sound, state inspected, clean & ready to rent We accept checks, vmasmastercard 749 4225
PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH-
HIT
843, 4821.
eee
MASSAGE. The Human Body has 640 important pressure points for massage that have important health benefits for people to maintain excellent muscle tone and strength. 82-130 Leave your address. 82-130 4-20
Get ready for the lazy GATOR daze of April 8th and 9th at the Knife Club. Friends (Nike, Boost, Sportstreet, Calvin Klein) are waiting during April at Alverness Park. More than 20 things! are waiting for you on a bark, *ALL MEMBERSHIP IS 15% OFF* or a bank, *ALL MEMBERSHIP IS 15% OFF* or a golf club or Golf Club, 's mile west of Kaskade Golf Club, 3 am to 6 pm, 8 to 5 pm, 7 a day, a week.
GENUINE JEANS
Branded by Lee. Strong, simple and absolutely authentic: American classics.
- Genuine Lee Riders are made of 100% 14 oz. cotton denim.
- **Genuine Lee Riders are cut to fit right and retain their fit, washing after washing.**
- Genuine Lee Riders
nobody makes a better western jean than Lee. Also available in corduroy and twill.
LITWINS
Established band looking for male/female lead singers and guitar players. Drums, keyboardists, drummer. Contact Gate at 842-0300 or 845-7506. If not there, leave name & phone. **4-23**
GREEN'S CASE SALE, COORS $8.79, PABST
LONG NECKS $7.19, GREEN'S 80% WEST
23RD.
4-23
Have you appreciated your favorite secretary have this week? Let her know she is special and unique with a special and unique gift. Send her a balloon-a-girl. b414-858. 4-23
WANT TO BUY: Insetframe backpack in good condition. B471-822 or G471-958 - 4-21
LEAVE your mark at KU. Vote IMPRES-2
Leave April 21, 2013
Green's Spring Keg Prices
831 Mass. Downtown Lawrence
Looking for someone to take a coast to coast bicycle trip this summer. Phone 841- 6688.
4-23
Budweiser 16 gal $39
Busch 16 gal $38
8 gal $24.50
Homeworkers, earn big profit! Distribution security products. Details, send stamped, addressed envelope. Coffman P.O. Box 1514 Lawrence, Kansas 60444 4-22
(prices include complete CO2 tapping equipment)
* Call for special pricing on multiple key orders.
Coors 16 gal $38
Coors Lite 16 gal $38
Michelob 16 gal $44.50
808 W.23rd
16 gal $44.50
8 gal $29.95
Miller 16 gal $38.00
Old Milwaukee 16 gal $29.95
stest 16 gal $32.05
GROEORG'S USED FURNITURE & Antiques
OPEN 9-6 p.m. 1035 MASS. BUY-SELL-
TRADE. 4-30
Pabst 16 gal $33.95
THE JAYHAWKER is now accepting applicants for the Business Manager. Students interested in this position may apply to OFF. OR visit the institution or visit OFF. OR click on KIPKU Union. Application deadline is 12:30 PM.
1982, and all's well. Don't agree? Welcome to the club Read "Living Simpler" and (better) in Complex Word 5. $G. Greenberg, Inc., Box 202, Sharpe, Boston, NS 66201. 4-23
I am just looking for some fun, not a commitment. Are you? Call Scott. 843-8153
Youthful basked desire by quirky pop band with ideas, ideales, and a more than adequate serving of talent. Contact Todd at 842-6711. 4-26
S.O.B.—Business night Thursday; April 22nd.
7 p.m. at 3139 & 3140 Wescro. Guaranteed to interest and interesting. 4-28
Use Kansan Classifieds
NATIONAL VOLUNTEER
APRIL 18-25
Dell 041 5259
WE NEED YOU!
THEY RE BACK! CRUISEIN'. Appearing
Thursday, Friday & Saturday. April 22, 23
& at 24 at the 40-40 club. 4-22
**SPECTRUM OPTICAL fantasy savings:** using the Lawrence Book or People Book coupons on our large selection of frames. 10-16, M- S- M- 1211-4, 1 E-7th. 4-23
PINAFORE 1982
Attention sophomore class to be. Elect Independent candidate JEFF LONG as your class treasurer this Wednesday and Thursday. 4-22
The Douglas County Democratic Central Committees invite you to meet Thomas R. Farnsworth on April 15, 7:00 p.m., at the Holidaygate Regency A $10 per donation fee.
Reopened
Pyramid Pizza
(Under the Wheel) Under New Ownership
842-3232
$1.50 off any large Pizza (With Coupon) Expires 4/30/82
Try the fabulous
Ronzo
Female roommate will share Meadowbrook 2 bedroom townhouse for summer, and will rent it for electricities per month. Call 749-1859. 4-27 Foul poul~ the Starched roc (nie) will not watch nor listen but He is responsible; and quiet flows the sun in an ice-pool. He paws at a pawn No doubt.
Financial Aid For Students
A new computerized service can help find the funds that will enable you to qualify. Five to 25 sources will be provided.
Financial Aid For Students P.O.Box 381
Lee's Summit, Mo. 64063
HEY UNITS! (Cindi and Kristy) How 'bout that massive jam at the MG Grand Challenge awesome, eh? Hope we stay dude-cuts "fun list," love Games. 4-21
NOTICE TO ALL STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS
**Registration materials for the** **1982-83 academic year, are now available in the Office of Student Organizations and Affairs, 220 South College Drive, Washington, DC 20006.** **1982 will be listed in the list 1982 Faculty/School/Staff Directory and will be included in the list.** The list will which will design KS's student organization.
Caroline. Can't stop loving you. Oahu, Dan.
Kenny, Champagne and ice cream. Love,
David. 4-21
WRITING A RESUME? What to say how to say 117. Stop by The House of Uber and visit the university校舍 on resumes of Uber, Uber M. Massachusetts, 8-M-F 9-3-Sat, N00-3-Sun
Effective: UVA Tan Beds
Cell 841-8323
Sina Group
Call 841-6232
Walmers. Sun Your Buns II has arrived!
Karen, Dana and Grace take any dives. Bring ball gloves, frisbees,
toys, cones and a baseball bat. Be at Poedishfield in Lawrences 12:00
shamp. Walk all party day and come back
Suzie, remember Colorado, Buffett, Rik,
Duffy, five Seama and everything in be-
lief. She is in a whole hood of ad-
venture of us. Let's think the best sum-
mer ever! S.B.S.C. 4-21
DONT MISS YOUR OWN WEDDING!
You can watch the film over again. On color screen videotape film $42 complete (includes reception) for dates from May 17 to June 8, 2013.
Of Kansas City (913) 851-3693 - 42
LOOK YOUR BRONZED &
BEAUTIFUL BEST
15% OFF
Spring White Sale
Schneider Wine & Keg Shop -The finest selection of wines in lawrence-largest supplier of lawrence kgs. 1610 W. 23rd. 843-3212.
Guaranteed Safe & Effective; UVA Tan Bed;
Iteahod, Andy. Wilfredo and Alfaro: You remember what today? We do! Let's try for another adventure—packed four years. Love & Kiss; Loves & Amy 4-21
SERVICES OFFERED
so they can be printed or copied.
TAN ME
Drafting (charts, maps, etc.), 6 years experience, competitively priced. Also script lettering for certificates. 841-7944. 4-21
For Appointment
Photoscreening
FREE session (new customers only)
Professional Stringing Tennis and Racketball. Best Prices in town. Call 842-5521 or 842-6582.
For 50 $ ^{+}$ we can screen photographs
Holiday Plaza
جامعة المدينة العاشرة
جامعة المدينة العاشرة
الجامعة المدنية العاشرة
الجامعة المدنية العاشرة
Encore Copy Corps 25th & Iowa 842-2001
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, 825th & Iowa. 4-30
GRADUATE STUDENTS THEISIS COPERS
QUALITY education based on total volume of
quality goods based on total volume of
ship that can offer variable reduction
rate in the world ) Enures Corp. Corp. 28th &
30th edn. Coyne Corp. Corp. 29th & 31st edn.
RESUMES - Professional; students' renames a specialty. 841-254-265 4-30
MOPED RIDERS - It's time to get your bike tuned up for the season. Experienced cycle mechanic will do tune-ups or repairs at your request. (800) 262-3514. mopeds.riders.com
LEARN TENNIS from experienced instructor in small groups with other K.U. students or private lessons 842-6713 after 9:00 a.m. ff
TUTORING MATH, STATISTICS, PHYSICS.
Call 841-3164 or 864-4176 (ask for Robert).
4-30
JOBS! Get the one you really want. Learn 15 steps to a better resume. Include sample resumes. $10. P.O. Box 721, Shawne Mission, KS. 66201. 4-21
TYING
Experienced typist. Term papers, these, all macellaneous. IB Correcting. IB Corrective. Elite or Pica, and will correct spelling. Phone 843-8545 Mrs. Wright. **tf**
It's a Fact, Fast, Affordable, Clean, Typing.
843-5820. **tt**
Experienced typist. Thesea term papers.
IBM Correcting Selective. Call Sandy
after 5 p.m. 748-898. 1f
TIP-TOP TYPING—experienced typa-IBM Correcting Selective II; Royal Correction 500 CD. 5000 LCD. tf
**TYPING PLUS:** These, dissertation, papers, letters, applications,润答. *Amnesiac composition*, grammar. *English as Second Language*. foreign education. **tf** or Americans. 814-6244.
Reports, disertations, resumes, legal forms,
graphics, editing, mis-correct Selectle.
Call Ellen or Jean Ann 841-2172. **ttc**
Experienced typist will type letters, thesis,
and dissertations IBM correcting electric.
Call Donna at 842-2744. tt
Experienced typist- theta, diathesis,
term papers, misc. IBM correcting selectite.
Barb, after 5 p.m. 842-2310.
**tf**
For PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myra.
841-4980. tf
IRON FENCE TYPING SERVICE. Evenings
842-2507. tf
Experienced typist will type term papers, thesis, dissertations, books, etc. Have IBM skin-correcting Selectle II. Call Terry 862-4754 anytime or 843-2871.
Fast, accurate and experienced typist will type your papers. Reasonable. Call 842-
MAGIC FINGERS TYPING SERVICE. 843-
6129. 4-50
AFPDABLE QUALITY for all your typing needs; themes, dissertations, resumes, cards, mailsings, mice. Call Judy 842-7945 after 5:00 pm.
Quality typing and word processing available at Encore Copy Corps, 25th and Iowa.
842-2001. 4-30
Graduate students tired of typing, retyping and retyping their thesis or dissertation? Save time and money by word processing it at Encore! Call M42-801 for more information. 4-30
Would like to type dissertations, thesis, term
papers, etc. Call 842-3203. 4-30
For a good type call Debby for dissertations, theses, term papers, letters etc. at 749-4736. 4-30
Experienced typist. Will correct punctuation and spelling. Call evenings and weekends. 841-7630. 4-26
Professional typing. Differences theory, theses.
Professional typesetting. Typesetting Selective. Deb 943-8096.
Fast, accurate, professional typing. Theses.
Fast, accurate, professional typing. Theses.
grammar. 943-8288 after 5. 4-25
*TYPNING-EDITING-GRAPHICS*. IBM *Correcting*, Selective, full-time tilt, spelling correction to composition assistance. Emergency service service. 841-290-4. 360
WANTED
Former medical research secretary will type term papers, theses, books, misc. Call Nancy, 841-5802. 4-27
Shakespeare could write. Elvis could wiggle:
my talent, typing. Call 842-0043 at
1:00 and weekends. 4-30
Roommate for May 1. $110/mo. plus utilities.
842-0038.
4-21
Word, Processing and Typing. Straight
word, forms, graphs. Reasonable rates.
Under 50 pgs, overnight service. Melanite,
48-237, evening.
SUMMER NOOMMAE. Furnished apartment very close to campus. Move may after Graduation. Rent + 1/2 utilities 842-42017 anytime.
Female roommate needed to share 2 bdm.
apt during the summer. $100 a month + ½
utilities. 864-1092. 4-23
WANTED: 1 NON-SMOKING Roommate to share 2-Bdm. MOVF Ai. StartAug. Aug for summer for Summer. B42-9955. 4-22
Roommate(s) to rent Trailing apartment for summer. On bus route, pool, A/C patio. Free May rent, no gas or water bills. To inquire ask Steve of Stev. B43-84919.
Female housemate for 3 bedroom house 1 block N. of stadium. Serious students, pre-
fer grad. $137.00, 841-654. 4-28
2 female roommates for apartment 2 blocks from KU Med. Center, summer and/or next year, Call Jan. 841-3891. 4-26
We want you! Female roommate for summer 2 bedroom, 1½ bath apartment! $122.00 + 1/3 electric. 864-1911. Call now! 4-23
Female roommate May 15-17 July 31
room with private i, 2 bath and study lnd.
Waher. Dryer included. $133 + 1/3 utilities
4-21
841-4178
Person to rent master bedroom of a large 3 bedroom home mobile home starting with the summer session. $10,000/month with free calls. Call 841-1438 for more information. 4-30
Roommate wanted. Summer only. Extra
nice. 4 bedroom. 4 bath house. West Law-
rence quiet, no smokers. Wash/drive,
3640. A4C. 4173 + 1295. 4-22
Roommate wanted. June 1, extra nite 4 bedroom 4 bath room. West Lawrence.
Quiel. no smokers. Wafter dryer. micro-wave. A/C: $200 / 12hrs. 745-386-3000.
---
Roommate wanted - Female, no smoker, 30
years old. May August 1, $145. 1/2
utilities. Call Siephane. 769-1799
Wanted: female roommate wanted for number
100. May August 1, $145. 1/2
utilities. Call Siephane. 769-1799
Wanted: female roommate wanted for number
100. May August 1, $145. 1/2
utilities. Call Siephane. 769-1799
Wanted: females interested in sub-living
in a dormitory. May August 1, $145.
goat) near campus, $118. kitbox 863-125. 4-27
roommate to share two bedrooms 4-27
Female roommate wanted for summer. Nice, air conditioned. Close to campus. 841-6543 Call for details. 4-30
Female roommate to share 2 bedroom apartment.
May 15-31 July. on bus route, A/C.
Rent + 1/2 utilities. Call 841-8188.
Keep trying
Roommate wanted for summer by easy-
going senior male. Share comfortable
apartment 8 minutes from the bus.
2 apartment plus utilities. Call 749-368-
Kep keep.
1-23
4-22
ROOMMATE WANTED/AVAILABLE for summer and next year. Move into my apartment or 1 can move into yours. Respond mature. Call Dave: 842-289-6007
---
BUY, SELL, or FIND your pot of gold with a KANSAN CLASSIFIED
Classified Heading
Write Ad Here:___
Just mail in this form with a check or money order payable to the Kansas to University Daily Kansan, 111 Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kansas 68045. Use rates below to figure cost. Now you've got selling power!
Name: ___
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Dates to Rur
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—$4.0
---
Page 14 University Daily Kansan, April 21, 1982
Scoreboard
Hockey
TONIGHT'S GAMES
Division Finals
Best of Seven
Division Division
New York Rangers at New York Islanders
(Islanders lead series, 3-1)
Adam Killen Division
Quebec at Boston (series tied, 3-2)
St. Louis at Chicago (Chicago lead series, 3-1)
Sydney the Divide
Los Angeles at Vancouver (Vancouver lead series, 3-1)
Basketball
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
First Round
Battle of Three
Eastern Conference
Washington68, New Jersey 83 (Washington leads
Western Conference
Denver 129, Phoenix 113 (Denver leads series,
TONIGHT'S GAMES
Western Conference
Houston at Seattle
Soccer
MISL STANDINGS
Eastern Division
Team W L Pct GB
New York 35 7 833
Baltimore 19 7 633
Baltimore 25 17 014
Buffalo 25 19 014
New Jersey 16 16 381
Cleveland 15 28 266
Cleveland 15 28 266
19% 19% 19%
WEST CHICAGO
St. Louis 26 17 567 —
Wichita 25 17 464 —
Wichita 25 17 464 —
Denver 17 25 308 11
Davenport 17 25 308 11
Kansas City 14 28 400 13
Kansas City 14 28 400 13
Team | W | L | Pct. GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Cleveland | 5 | 4 | 68% |
| Cleveland | 5 | 4 | 68% |
| Toronto | 5 | 6 | 643 | 1½% |
| Oakland | 5 | 6 | 434 | 1½% |
| Milwaukee | 5 | 6 | 209 | 1½% |
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
No games scheduled.
Baseball
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Eastern Division
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
W 10 L 20 H 30 C
Chicago 889
California 10 4 4 4%
Cincinnati 5 4 568 1 %
Kansas City 0 5 7 5 5%
Minnesota 0 5 560 3 %
Missouri 0 5 490 3 %
MILWAUKEE M.D. KYRUGEN 4
Toronto at Milwaukee, pds. rail.
Boston at Baltimore, pds. rail.
Detroit @ Kansas City 6
Cleveland @ Texas 4
Washington @ Portland 11
Oakland @ California 6
Oakland @ Minnesota 3, 18 innings
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Eastern Division
Team W 10 L 7 Pct GB
Lewis T 8 7 583
New York 7 9 583
Montreal 5 4 368
Milwaukee 5 4 368
Pittsburgh 5 4 368
Philadelphia 5 4 273
Atlanta 12 8 4 1.000
San Antonio 16 9 4 6.67
San Francisco 16 12 417
Los Angeles 16 9 385
Houston 16 9 385
Ocidental 16 9 250
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
By United Press International
Tigers clobber Royals
Vida Blue, 1-2, gave up a one-out single to John Woolenfuss and a bunt single to Tom Brookens before Wilson unloaded a double.
DETROIT - Milwilz Wilcox allowed only one hit-a one-out single by Jerry Martin past fallen shortstop Alan Trammell with one out in the second inning-last night, and rookie Glenn Wilson triggered a six-run second inning with a two-run double to lead the Detroit Tigers to an 8-4 victory over the Kansas City Royals for their fourth straight triumph.
Trammell walked, and Lou Whitaker tied a single over George Brett to his arm.
Wilcox, making his second start and his first since April 12, celebrated his 32nd birthday with a nine-strike, five-walk performance. He retired 12 straight batters from the third through fifth innings in squaring his record at 1-1.
Philadelphia at Montreal, ppd, rain:
Pittsburgh at St. Louis, ppd,
St. Louis 7, Pittsburgh 4
Alanta 6, Cincinnati 2
San Diego 8, San Francisco 4
Boston 10, Houston 9
two runs, and Enos Cabell greeted reliever Jim Wright with Detroit's 13th double in the last six games.
Trammell followed with the club's 14th double to score a run in the sixth. He scored when Lemon hit into a double play.
In Atlanta, Claudel Washington tripled home the go-ahead run and then scored on a wild pitch in the third inning, helping the unbeaten Atlanta Braves defeat the Cincinnati Reds, 4-2, and establish a modern major league record by extending their start-of-the-season winning streak to 12 games.
Elsewhere in the American League, Boston beat Baltimore, 83; New York trounced Chicago, 11-2; Cleveland defeated Texas, 94; Seattle stopped California, 6-4; and Oakland beat Minnesota, 43; in 16 innings.
In the National League, New York got by Chicago, 3-2; St. Louis beat Pittsburgh, 7-4; San Diego defeated San Jose, 10-2; Los Angeles clobbered Houston, 10-2.
Jayhawks win two
By TOM COOK
Some call them laughers, while others叫 them tuneups. Bob Stancill refers to them as "confidence builders."
Sports Writer
whatever the case, the KU women's softball team had little trouble handling Cloud County yesterday, whipping the Mets into a 1-0 score of 100 at Holcom Sports Complex.
Rhonda Clarke threw her fourth nohitter of the season in the first game, and Tammy Hoffman came in to shut down the visitors in the nightcap.
THE JAYHAWKS, now 28-13, will prepare for the Big Eight tournament this weekend at Norman, Okla. Kansas is seeded second in the tournament behind Oklahoma State and will face Iowa in a first-round game Friday.
"I didn't really know what to expect," Head Coach Stancliff said about Cloud County. "I felt as if we needed a coach and I did not. Slight. They were confidence builders."
Kansas originally had scheduled a double-header with Kansas State today, but Stancift said he called off the games.
"I didn't think it was a good idea to play a Big Eight team right before the tournament," he said.
Clarke was invincible in the openers as she faced only 15 batters in five innings, striking out 12 and walking none. The other nine were because of the 10-runs-in-five innings rule.
Clarke would have had her first perfect game as a Jayhawk, but KU catcher Kim Cibb dropped a third strike that would have ended the game.
However, the runner was promptly picked off to end the game.
"IT'S A SHAME to lose a perfect
It took only 50 minutes for the Jayhawks to dispose of Cloud County in the first game. Shelly Fox and Becky Johnson had back-to-back home runs in the first innning.
game that way." Stanclift said.
"Rhonda didn't have to pitch real hard, and that's even better."
Candi Boyer doubled to lead off the second inning and scored on Clarke's RBI single.
The Jayhawks put the game away with six runs in the third Inning and one in the fourth.
Hoffman and Fox each had two hits for Kansas, and Clarke set a KU record for most wins in a single season. She now stands at 23-11 and has 17 shutouts.
Hoffman was also effective on the mound for the Jayhawks in the second game. She gave up just two hits and three walks en route to her 3-2 record.
HOFFMAN, who has played every position at Kansas, including second base and shortstop in yesterday's first game, would should rather play in the field than pitch.
"I could do better pitching, but I get upight,occasionally, I'm not patient"
Kansas plated three runs in the first inning. Fox, Pam Cox, Hoffman, Fox and Ascendance.
They came back with six runs in the second inning. Gloria Garwark started things with a single, and Cox followed with her second base hit of the game.
Fox rapped her second score, another two-RBI-line drive, to score Garwood and Cox. Ascendio singled, and Beech scored Fox. The turnip score to score *A*
CRAFT SCORED on a wild pitch, and Commino crossed on a ground out by Rover.
The Jayhawks added their final run in the fourth, when Craft scored on a single by Boyer.
Jayhawks
Jayhawk shortstop Tammy Hoffman gets ready to apply the tag on a Cloud County player. The Jayhawks won both ends of the double-header by 10-6 scores.
MARK McDONALDRansan Staff
Jayhawks play Baker in double-header
By MIKE ARDIS Sports Writer
The Kansas baseball team will try to get above 500 today when they take on Baker at 1 p.m. in a double-header at Quizlet Field.
The Jayhawks, 17-17 overall, dropped three of four to Missouri over the weekend and are in four place in the Big Eight with a record of 6-6. Since evening their overall record at 8-4 on Friday, they had to get added two games over .500.
HEAD COACH Marty Pattin will pit two pitchers against Baker who have had little work this season. John Evans and Troy Grace will start today's
games. Wike Watt and Randy McIntosh also will see some action on the mound.
Grace was on last year's pitching staff, but did not get into a game.
Evans has appeared in two games this year, pitching 1% innings, giving up only two unearned runs. It will be Grace's first outing this year.
Watt and McIntosh defeated Iowa State on April 12, but lost to Missouri. Watt took a loss Saturday, and McIntosh involved in the decision of the game.
When KU takes on Baker, it will be without catcher Kent Shelley, who was hit in the elbow by a pitch during Sunday's double-header. Shelley is also doubtful for this weekend's series with Nebraska. Keith Hokison will replace
THE JAYHAWKS dayworked on their fielding, pitching and other fundamentals. During the Missouri game, the pitchers, and the pitchers gave up 32 runs.
Shelley, with Jon Francis backing him up.
"Marty said last weekend that there was no way we shouldn't have won three of four from Missourl", "baseball spokesman Mike Swanson said. "Right now, we've got to go out and destroy Baker."
KU will face a tough road trip this weekend, when they take on ninth-anked Nebraska. They will return to Northwest Missouri State on Monday.
Because of the six games in three days, makeup games with Creighton have been canceled. Those games were snowed out April 7, and the "Hawks" were going to try to make the game up tomorrow, but decided against it.
KU will leave for Nebraska on Friday to get some practice on the artificial turf. Kansas is no stranger to artificial turf, having practiced during the fall and spring in Memorial Stadium, but the Jayhawks want to get used to it.
"We won't be beat on a bad hop." Swanson said.
KU will go against one more Big Eight rival at home when Kansas State comes to Lawrence on May 1-2 for the last home games of the year.
WHO WILL BE NEXT? KU WOMEN'S HALL OF FAME
1970: Connie Coleman
Cora Downs
Maude Ellsworth
Margaret Hughes Fraley
Jeanne Stump
1971: Helen Gilles
Joan McCann
Emily Taylor
Beatrice Wright
1972: Martha Peterson
Marilyn Stokstad
Nita Sundbye
Deanell Reece Tacha
1973: Wealthy Babcock
Florence Black
Beth Schultz
Louise Wheeler
1974: Hazel Anderson
Frances Degen Horowitz
Irene Nunemaker
1975: Barbara C. Etzel
Mary Grant
Mary Morrill Litchfield
1982?
1976: Evelyn Hitchcock Aldin
Karen R. Keesling
Kala Mays Stroup
Mary Turkington
1977: Beverly Boyd
Kathleen C. Doering (posthumous)
Frances Ingemann
Bonnie Ritter
1978: Eleanor Meyers Burchill
Gisela A.M. Dreschoff
Miriam Stuart Green
Janice Kay Mendenhall
Caryl Kelley Smith
1979: Barbara M. Craig
Elizabeth Sherbon
Marian Washington
Leona Baumgartner
M. Evelyn Swartz
1980: Evelyn DeGraw
Alexandra Mason
Jean Pyfer
Katherine Giele
Vivian McCoy
1981: Judith M. Le
Bette Krenz
Irene Peabody
Judith M. LeBlanc
Bette Krenzer
Irene Peabody
Helen Foresman Spencer
Ann Victoria Thomas
Patricia Wolfe
WOMEN'S RECOGNITION 1982
April 26 8 p.m. Kansas Room, Union
Sponsored by Commission on the Status of Women
Paid for by Student Activity Fee
The University Daily
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
KANSAN
Thursday, April 22, 1982 Vol. 92, No. 138 USPS 650-640
Endowment Association urged to help students with scholarship money
By COLLEEN CACY Staff Reporter
In the face of proposed federal cuts in student financial aid, the Kansas University Endowment Association should consider helping KU students with more scholarship money, State Sen. Ron Johnson, said on Thursday.
Then was one of a panel at the Kansas Union that discussed the impact of President Reagan's budget cuts on higher education and possible alternative sources of money.
Other members of the panel, sponsored by the Student Senate, were Mark Tallman, executive director of the Associated Students of Kansas, and Torn Berger, chairman of the Student Senate Finance and Auditing Committee. David Adkins, body president, moderated the discussion.
"Perhaps it's time for the administration and the Endowment Association to turn to providing more money for scholarships," Hein said. "Over the years, I've been a part of a lot of monument building, if you will."
He said the state could provide money for new buildings at universities from the educational system, he said.
Jerry Rogers, KU director of financial aid, who was also on the panel, said most scholarships from the Endowment Association were funded through the U.S. Carnegie achievement, regardless of financial need.
"Maybe the University needs to direct some money into educational grants," he said. "I'm not sure if I can."
“It’s difficult to justify a grant going to a student with no experience of overage when a student with a higher grade is involved.”
ROGERS SAID KU's federal financial aid would probably be down by about $250,000 next
He said the National Direct Student Loan program would receive no new funds next year, but because of current loans being reimbursed, there would be no cuts in the program next year.
But he said the Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grant program would be cut, and students applying for Guaranteed Student Loans would first have to take a financial need analysis test, if their family income was more than $30,000 a year.
Rogers said the financial aid office also aftereft from administrative problems, because of its remote location.
"The government never seems to get its act together by the time school starts, he said.
As a result, he said, some students would be disappointed in the fall when their financial aid was cut.
Hein said he did not think Reagan's proposals, which call for cutting student aid from $3.5 billion in 1981 to $1.4 billion in 1984, would pass Congress intact.
"The truth lies somewhere between what the organized students want and what Reagan wants," he said. "Congress, I would hope, would be a little more responsible."
But he said students might have to get used to naving higher tuition.
"How much is a college education worth to you?" he asked the group of about 20 students.
you? he asked the group of about 25 students.
He used tuition paid to pay for about 25 percent of university costs, but in the past few years, it had dropped to about 18 percent.
But under a 20 percent tuition increase proposed by the Board of Regents this month, KU students would be paying close to the 25 percent cost of a diploma and pay about 22 percent of the University's costs.
The Regents will take final action on the increase in May.
Hein said the Legislature needed to work with the Regents and the universities to come up with a plan for education.
Tallman said that if students wanted to make an impact on the government's decision, there would have to be more leadership and organization than in the past.
"The big problem is that often, students show surprisingly little interest in this whole affair,"
KU affirmative action to use new tools to monitor hiring
Staff Reporter
By JANET MURPHY
KU's affirmative action program has a new tool to help it better oversee the hiring practices of the University of Kansas.
Affected classes are women, minorities, handicapped people and veterans.
The Workforce Analysis and the Goals and Timetables, completed in mid-February, will be excellent tools to measure the success of hiring professionals, directors of affirmative action, said recently.
This is the first time this report has been done at the University. Edwards said it was part of a compliance review that was being done by the U.S. Department of Labor Programs of the U.S. Department of Labor.
The compliance review is still in process with results due probably this summer.
The report, which took more than a year to compile, is based on employment figures for
fiscal year 1981, which ran from July 1980 to June 1981.
Edwards said the program was set up for yearly updates and those updates would reflect the changes. He said an update was already in progress, but the staff was as of November 1981, and should be out shortly.
Affirmative action is not involved in the actual hiring of an individual. Edwards said.
EDWARDS SAID the office could suggest new and special efforts to attract women and minorities, such as better places to advertise jobs.
"Affirmative action can't do anything as an office but monitor hiring and make sure the job is filled."
"In the final analysis, the departments make the hiring decisions," he said.
"Until recently, women and minorities have not been in the pools and have had not the op-
pose to swim."
Without creating new jobs, he said, they try to help find the best qualified person for the job.
See AFFIRMATIVE page 5
The World Of Strife, Shot Out
The World Of Love, Shot In
This plaque above the fireplace in the main hallway of the Sigma Nu fraternity marks the spot where 17-year-old Virginia Rackham-Stubbs supposedly was buried after she died of strangulation April 22, 1911. According to local legend, Rackham-Stubbs, the adopted step-daughter of then-Gov. Roscoe Stubbs, was hung in the house. At the time, the house was Stubbs' residence. Fraternity residents have reported mysterious events in the room on the anniversary of her death.
Ghost 'appears' at Sigma Nu house
Unsolved murder victim lingers
By ANN LOWRY Staff Reporter
Kansas Gov. Roscoe Stubbs returned home to Lawrence from three days in Topeka.
Whe he reached the third floor ballroom, he found his 17-year-old assistant, Virginia Rockham-Stubbs, hanging by a rope from the rafters.
He ventured through his silent house at a hill, searching for his wife and his young assistant, whom he had adopted as a step-daughter.
Or so the several members of the Sigma Nu fraternity, which bought the house in 1922.
The members also say her ghost comes back to visit this time every year.
He said her death certificate in her home Pittsburgh, showed that she died by strangulation.
Keith Sevede, a Kansas City, Kan., law student and Sigma Nu alumnus who has researched the hanging, said, "Virginia Ann Rackham died in that house on or near-Sevede-1219."
HOWEVER, DOUGLAS County authorities have no record of her burial, "a curious oversight by Douglas County records," Sevede said.
From these details, or circumstantial evidence, as Sevede calls it, Sigma Nus living in the house during the last 60 years have told stories of the ghost, Virginia.
Sigma Nu legend has it that she is buried within a large fireplace on the first floor of the house, upon which is a plaque, dated April 22, 1843, of strife shut out, the world of love shut in."
"I have 58 people who have related to me allegedly firsthand experiences," Sevedge told the newspaper.
if evaluated by their stations in life. We're talking big public and political figures."
He said the stories alumni had told him, dating back to 1929, concurred. All said they heard the voices of two women, one hysterical, and a cacophony of footsteps.
Sevegede said that two men living in the house during spring of 1977 were standing on the second floor landing and heard the voices of two women and footsteps coming down the street.
"It really spooked them. There was no one there."
The voice of the other woman, Sevédek said, would seem to be the governor's wife, who allegedly was found sitting on the roof of the house in a cataatite state the night of the attack.
Severede said Virginia must have been hung by someone else, because medical authorities told him that if a person hung himself, it would break his neck.
SEVEDGE SAID the governor's wife did spend time in a mental institution.
Other residents of the house have their own stories about the spirits.
Jim Hinkle, Prairie Village senior, said that about four or five years ago, a Sigma Nu and his date were in the Sigma Nu's room where the ballroom used to be and saw a ghost.
"She bit him real fast and said, with a white scared look on her face, 'Let's get out of here.'"
"She said she'd seen a figure of a lady just sitting there, and she'd never heard the story
Doug Holiday, Lake Quivira sophomore, said he was up late studying recently with all but one light off in his room and he got spooked.
"She was there. She was behind me," he said. "I kept hearing a clicking sound.
"I could have sworn someone was watching me."
While the presence of the spirits is not easy to substantiate, the presence of the body seems likely, according to facts Sevedge gathered.
"It was originally a Dutch fireplace open to
the staircase, but it would also open to what
was the first floor."
He said the masonry records were not specific, but that workers for the Bowersock family, owners of the Lawrence mill, did the job of closing one side.
The plaque on the fireplace is marked with the Bowersock symbol and the April 1911 date.
Sevidge's father, a casket manufacturer, saw the plaque while visiting his son.
He said that it was a monument used on cromatary utensils with wooden bases or family
Sevedge said an old Scottsman, a "monument affectioned," looked at the plaque and said it was unique, and he also was known that it was the type used on monuments.
Around the rim is a ridge of trim which is textured in an antiquing fashion, Sevedge
But at the bottom of the plaque is an insert of smooth brass through which there are
THEY ARE the type of screws, he said,
which would be used to engrave a separate
plate stating, "Here lies daughter Virginia,
born . . ."
"It itts together too well in that regard," Sevede said.
"It strikes me as putting a neon arrow up saying, 'She's here, come get her.' "Sevedge
"Society has a kind of ghoulish habit for wanting to know where the remains are."
Students make death runs, study at mortuary jobs
By ANNE CALOVICH Staff Represent
Staff Reporter
They are asleep upstairs in the darkened mortuary. The bright white lights that usually blind anyone outside of the big, white house are out. The old house creaks, but all else is silent.
Jerry Bever gets in the hearse. As he drives through Lawrence, people give him all the leeway they need. They may peer into the cab, but then they get away. He arrives at the deathbed
Until the phone claps: once they jump, twice—one on them pulls on a coat and tie as if she would be sweeping down.
Someone else has died. He must pick up the body.
the big cities no longer have live-in help at funeral homes, Larry McElwain, one of the owners of Warren-McElwain Mortuary, said. Lawrence funeral homes carry on the tradition of having not only live-in help, but live-in student help.
help
Beaver, Winfield freshman, Bill Wright, Scott City law student, and Andy Beeves, Topea senior, find living and working in a funeral home an economical way to go to college.
The three KU students each make about $300 a month working and living in an apartment at Rumsey Funeral Home, 601 Indiana St. One of them is on call every night for funerals during the weekends. They study between callers who come to pay their respects and between phone calls and death runs at night.
"That's what makes it an ideal job for us," Bever said recently. "We can make money and build our business."
THE TV in the backroom is turned down so it is barely audible. Music in the parlor plays softly—
funeral music, the kind that makes one feel like sleeping.
Bever opens the door and ushers mourners in politely, stiffly, "Right this way." He extends an arm, he is always at his shoulder, as though he was being over grief if they did not feel his presence.
The three students have their own coffins picked out; they play haunting chords on the organ when no one is around. Scared to live in a mortuary? Nah.
"There's no fear of ghosts roaming around," Reeves said.
Bever said, "You'll find that when people come in and pay their respects, they'll tell you a little bit about the person, and by the time they come from here, you kind of know part of his life."
"You realize what the reality of everything is." Reva said. "You just set used to it."
is," Bevera said. "Someone says I'm your son. Someone tells Bevera and says, 'I just want you back.' I have just a month ago."
He listens quietly, says nothing. There is nothing he can say when he does not know the answer to a question.
"Or of a dead person," Wright added.
It all begins with the death call, when one of them must go to pick up the body. It is not often done by a child.
There are calls from family members sometimes, and those kinds of calls, shaking them out of sleep are the most painful part of the job for Wright.
"People die 24 hours a day," Reeves said.
**back'in a moncher.**
"Then you call likes like that," he says. "Some
The phone rings at 11 p.m. Reeves jumps. He is back in a moment.
THOSE PEOPLE are the ones who do not
understand what it's like to live in a funeral home.
"You would not believe the pizza people," Bevera said. "We have a hard time getting people to deliver pizza. Gus comes from New York, and he is a sid, door, peek around the corner and make a quick getaway."
The pizza always gets there, but once, "a girl drove around the block six times," Bever said. She said, quote, she was 'looking for the door,' but I didn't know . . .
But the three men who live in the funeral home now are not nervous.
"It's part of the whole stigma people have with death," Wright said. "I don't know what they think. This is just a special-type service, a business."
And, of course, there are the friends who are a bit out off by the funeral home at first.
“And then there are the jokes.” Bever added. “Is everything pretty dead around there? Are you bored stuff? What kind of music do you play? Grateful Dead?”
But there is no blasting of the stereo here. And friends had better keep their language clean.
But apparently there are many who would like to be in the students' position. Warren-McElwain placed an ad in the University Daily Kansan 19 years ago, offering housing and a salary in exchange for part-time work. Ninety students applied, McElwain said.
Oscar Rumsey, a former owner who brought Rumsey's to Lawrence in 1920, has employed him as a consultant.
"We've seen a lot of doctors and lawyers come through here," he said. "It makes a wonderful part-time job for them."
AL YOST, one of the current owners of
Rumsey's, is still enthusiastic about student emmoveles.
"They're great," he said, "and we've got three of the best boys we've ever had."
If the fear of the dead was ever present, it was short-lived.
Two of them live in the funeral home; one does not. Beaver worked at a funeral home in Winfield for three years before coming to KU, Wright had been a volunteer nurse with the Rivers have worked at Rumsey's for 1½ years.
One surprise was walking into a roomful of open caskets.
"When you first start working here, you're kind of apprehensive because you don't know everything."
"It is funny, people's perceptions," he said.
"It's a de-mystifying experience."
But Reeves remembers the time the tornado sirens went off last summer while a body lay in state. He ushered the family and friends to the hospital, where he left his lesery of some downstairs in the funeral home.
"For some reason, I don't equate a dead body with the supernatural, or the spirit of somebody," Wright said. "I think when someone dies, their spirit leaves them and, if anything, working around the funeral home, it's made me realize that more."
Hever goes back to bed, if he can sleep. He will not be haunted by nightmares, but the phone
"It's funny, people's perceptions," he said.
But when it comes time to go to work, reality abides. Death calls have to be answered immediately.
"It's reassuring for people to know someone will be there right away," Wright said. Whoever takes the phone then calls the embalmer on duty, whoever lives nearby, where the embalmer prepares it—right away.
Weather
BEAUTIFUL!
it will be clear to partly cloudy today, warming to the mid-40s. Temperatures will continue to be warm today and Friday with the low Friday in the mid-40s and clear to partly cloudy.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, April 22, 1982
News Briefs From United Press International
Israeli jets bomb Lebanon, shoot down Syrian fighters
YAMIT, Israeli-occupied Sinai—Shattering a nine-month truce, Israel jets yesterday bombarded Palestinian coastal targets all the way up to suburban Beirut and shot down two Syrian MiGs in a dogfight. The Syrians said they downed one Israel jet, but Israel denied it.
A spokesman said five of the dead were guerrillas and the rest were civilians. It was now known how many civilians were killed.
Palestinian officials said more than 20 people were killed and 80 wounded in the two-hour bombardment of Palestinean bases and camps along the Mediterranean Coast from the suburbs near Beirut International Airport to Damour, 13 miles south.
The raid, which came as Israel's Cabinet voted unanimously to return the eastern Sinai Sunday, as scheduled, shattered a July 24 cease-fire for Lebanon negotiated by U.S. Envoy Philip Habb. Israel had accused the Islamic Liberation Organization of numerous smaller violations of the truce.
Lebanese police said the Israeli jets, described as U.S.-made F-15s and F-16s, destroyed a Syrian radar base in Doha, on the southern outskirts of Beirut, and several Palestinian baselines. Seven coastal villages and a Palestinian refugee carm in South Lebanon were damaged.
Lebanon requested urgent U.N. action, and the Security Council was to meet at 11 a.m. tomorrow.
MU chancellor facing budget battle
COLUMBIA, Mo.-University of Missouri Chancellor Barbara Uehling will a faculty vote calling for her to scrap projected program cuts or resign from the university.
The budget cuts could cost 200 faculty jobs. Under Uehning's plan, cuts over the next three years would include a reduction of $7 million in academic resources.
Faculty members voted 237-70 this week to ask the chancellor to either abandon the planned cuts or resign. The faculty resolution said the cuts were "unacceptable" and would not be made.
Uehling said Tuesday the resolution represented the sentiments of only a fraction of the university's 1,500-member faculty.
"It was a group comprised mainly of people from the affected programs and, in that light, the outcome was totally predictable," she said. "We have this data now."
British approach Falkland territory
LONDON - British warships were reported yesterday moving into position for a possible attack on the South Georgia Islands—a stepping stone to the north of the islands.
In a move seen as placing the country one step closer to a war economy, Argentina announced it was suspending cash payments to "interest," which is the government's tax.
In London, Foreign Secretary Francis Pym told Parliament that Britain would not rule out the use of force in the Falklands. He was due in Washington today to present a set of proposals in reply to Argentina's latest peace plan for the 149-year-old British colony.
The British defense ministry refused to disclose the location of the warships and declined comment on press reports that a spearhead force of destroyers, detached from the main task force, was speeding toward South Georgia, the Falklands' dependency 800 miles southeast of the islands.
Prize-winning poet, playwright dies
BOSTON - Archibald Macleish, Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright and one of the most accomplished and revered poets of the 20th century, has died.
MacLeish, who won the Pulitzer Prize three times for his verse, would have been 90 next month. He dealt Tuesday night after being brought to a hospital in New York City.
The first of MacLeish's three Piltters came in 1933 for the poem *Conquistador*, the second in 1952 for "Collected Poems 1924-1952" and the third in 1968 for "Chinese Poems."
MacLeish, a Yale- and Harvard-educated lawyer who was an assistant secretary of state during World War II, also was a founder of the U.N. Educational and Scientific and Cultural Organization and an English professor at Harvard University for 23 years.
Editor considers suing Air Force
KANSAS CITY, Mo.—The editor of the National Catholic Reporter said yesterday he would not decide for at least a week whether the paper would publish an article on the subject.
The editor, Tom Fox, said he was still consulting attorneys about filing suit against the Air Force for holding Penn Craintrite, a part-time reporter, at gunpoint for ten minutes and then making her stand spreadeagled against a fence for two hours.
Crabtree, 22, of Overland Park, was seized when watching James Sauder perform an anti-military protest ritual involving prayer and genuflectation at the church.
Although Crabtree said she was not trespassing, a Whitman public affairs officer, Helen Wright, said the reporter was on federal property when
Sigma Delta Chi, the society of professional journalists, and Sen. Thomas Eagleton, D-Mo, have both requested a federal investigation.
Deputy CIA Director Inman quits
WASHINGTON-Deputy CIA Director Bobby Ruy Imran resigned yesterday, saying he had done his part in rebuilding the agency and it was a big mistake.
Inman, 51, also informed President Reagan that he intended to retire from the Navy, where he holds the rank of four-star admiral.
in the navy, where he holds the rank of sailor of the amphibian.
Imman's letter of resignation was dated a month ago—March 22.
Reagan's acceptance, dated yesterday, told the admiral. "Your dedication and contributions to the United States over more than 30 years of
Inman said he would continue to serve as the top aide to CIA Director William Casey, 69, until his successor was confirmed by the Senate.
P&G loses $300,000 in Rely case
CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa—a Federal court jury yesterday found Procter and Gamble Co. liable in the toxic shock syndrome death of a woman who used a handgun on the couple.
Michael Kelman had sought more than $30 million from the company for the death of his wife, Patricia. 25. The jury awarded compensatory damages but not punitive damages.
White House sources said the resignation had been kept secret because the post had not been filled.
"roster gambled and lost," said Kahn's lawyer, Tom Riley, after the verdict was announced. Riley received one-third of the judgment as his fee.
He said the verdict meant trouble for Proctor & Gamble in future toxic shock cases. This was the first damage award in a case involving the death of a woman who had used Rely tampons. Mrs. Kehm died four days after she used the tampons
A Denver jury earlier found Proctor & Gamble negligent in the case of a woman who had recovered from toxic shock, but awarded no damages.
Correction
Because of a typographical error in Tuesday's Kansan, the name of Tom Greeson, associate university director of business affairs, was spelled incorrectly.
The Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women has decided to go into virtual hibernation for the coming year.
Slowdown may lead to AIAW death
Lawsuit against NCAA
Within the next three months, its office staff will cut back and its executive board will become dormant, with the exception of a three-woman executive committee that will continue to function.
The AIAW made the decision at an executive board meeting last week in Washington, D.C. The move is another step that indicates the AIAW may not
The future of the AIAW revolves around an anti-trust suit that the AIAW fights against the National College Athletic Association. The lawsuit said that the NCAA would become a monopoly if the AIAW did not survive.
The dispute between the two groups came to a head when the AIAW filed an injunction against the NCAA in U.S. District Court in Washington, D.C.
sponsored them instead, which added to the AIAW's financial problems.
When the injunction was denied, the ATAW suspended its recruiting rules effective March 1 and announced that it would begin membership applications for 1982-1983.
The AIAW wanted to sponsor women's championships, but the NCAA
A court date for the lawsuit had not been set yet, in hopes that the two groups can reach an out-of-court settlement.
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"We have sent a letter in response to the proposal," Bill Cramer, NCAA attorney, said yesterday. He said the NCAA had it delivered by a messenger, but would not comment further because the two sides were still in discussion.
MARLENE MASWON, AIAW Region Six president said she did not feel free to comment until after she had talked with the AIAW director this week.
"I could say that the AIAW proposal
For the next year, Mawson said, the AIAW has suspended the idea of sponsoring a championship program, which is under the court decision is in the AIAW's favor.
Either way, the AIAW will send all of the national championship records it has kept during its 10-year existence to the NCAA for consideration to join the season June 30, the end of the fiscal year.
Mawson said the ethics and eligibility records would be available, with each region keeping track of them.
"Thethey're vital to the onging of women's athletics." Mawson said. "Without them, it would be like starting from scratch."
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The records indicate which players are eligible to play, a fact that may become vital to the NCAA if it supports the women's programs.
But before the AIAW would decide to close, it would give its members a final chance to voice their opinions.
"There is a special delegate assembly June ? in Washington, D.C. Mawson said. "The national office will send out information about by May to determine whether he be a quorum at that Washington meeting."
If the quorum is not met, the national office will phone the AIAM members and have them vote by phone she said.
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Page 3
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Page 4 University Daily Hanson, April 22, 1982
Opinion
Routine procedure
Last Tuesday, soldiers apprehended a journalist who they said was trespassing on government property.
They forced the journalist to kneel 23 as an M-16 was pointed at her head, then forced her to stand spread-eagled facing the morning sun for two hours. The soldiers later released her.
Where did this happen—in Argentina, the U.S. S.R. or in North Korea?
No. According to the journalist, Penni Crabtree, it happened near Warrensburg, Mo.
Crabtree, 22, was graduated from the University of Kansas in December and now writes for the National Catholic Reporter. She said that last Tuesday, she was covering a one-man protest conducted by James Richard Sauder atop a nuclear missile silo. Then, the Air Force security police came.
But many journalists still protested the Air Force guard's actions.
After Crabtree told her story, the Air Force issued a terse statement that said the guards had followed routine procedures.
Officials from Sigma Delta Chi, the Society of Professional Journalists, issued a statement that accused the Air Force of putting itself above the U.S. Constitution and sent a protesting telegram to Secretary of Defense Casper Weberberg.
Edward Fox, editor of the Catholic Reporter, threatened to sue.
Since then, tempers have cooled. And
some have begun to question last Tuesday's events.
For example, Why were the reporter and the protester trespassing on government property? And why did they wait for the authorities to arrest them, even though they had ample time to leave the premises?
Could it be that the reporter had set out not to report the news—but to participate in it?
Those are hard questions. And they should be answered.
The protester may have been making a simple play for publicity, and Crabtree may have been taken in by it.
But the Air Force has some answering to do. too.
But if Crabtait's story is true—and we have no reason to believe that it is not—the actions of the security force were sadistic and unwarranted. Period.
the protester and the journalist probably were a nuisance, but their actions certainly were not punishable by death. And that, it seems, is what the guards were threatening Crabtree with.
Most people will soon forget the incident at the missile site. It involved only two small people on one small hill in Missouri.
But we should all remember the lesson that Penni Crabtree learned that morning: The very people who are called upon to defend our rights are those who are given the most freedom to disregard them.
Routine procedure.
Job description doesn't tell whole story for secretaries
BY JAYNE GAUNT
Guest Columnist
DYNASTY
It sounds like another day created by Hallmark to fill the shelves between Easter and Mother's day. For the person who sits behind the typewriter all day, April 21 means an afternoon off or a free lunch from the boss. If she's in the right company, it means a free buffet at the Petroleum Club—a two-hour affair after which no one feels like working, anyway.
The boss may forget his anniversary or Mother's Day, but if he's smart, he'll never forget Secretary's day. Every executive knows, above all else, that the secretary runs the company and is lucky, he'll realize it before the boss calls in sick and he doesn't know where to find anything.
That's the situation you usually walk into as a temporary secretary. If you can figure out how to work the coffee maker, you've got it made. And you enjoy the royal treatment every day that some secretaries only receive one day in April. Why? Maybe the company knows they have to treat temporary secretaries well or you'll walk out, and then you'll be as at home as you are when you you're usually a young change from the woman who's been behind the typewriter for the last 17 years. Maybe it's because they're paying your agency $8 an hour for you.
But I wonder if the agency would increase the price if they knew the responsibilities included not just typing, shorthand, copying and coffee making, but also polishing the furniture, fielding messages between the boss and his wife about the children's education, and meeting with three changes of titerary for tomorrow's business trip and making arrangements for the annual shrimp fry.
I'll never forget one office down in the warehouse district. The address was an abandoned antique store. A small sign directed me to the second story, up a long bannister watched over by a mannequin draped with a ball. One of his hats is oversized and the corporate president. Behind it blared a Beethoven overture. After persistent knocking brought no reply, another worker, undaunted by the music emanating from within, opened the door to reveal the junior executive of the firm smoozing soundly in a six-foot bean bag chair, clapped on his desk in true executive fashion.
Awakened more by our entrance than by that of the timpani, he calmly brushed aside his touled, boyish hair and proceeded to explain my duties for the day. Obviously, a bachelor.
Even more ludicrous was my experience as a temporary secretary to the vice chancellor for education.
His competent secretary, Eleanor, had been very thorough by providing a notebook with sample letters, forms, descriptions of daily routine and a file key. She even took an afternoon to write her notes, as well that I was competent. Obviously, she didn't want to leave me with a drawer full of "If you don't know what to do with it, just put it in here, and I'll take care of it when you return." Actually, the vice chancellor was always too thoughtful for me, but a thought of everyone, but her superior had not.
university. Also a bachelor, but in his thirties and soon to be wed, the atmosphere was strictly untroubled.
The schedule of the vice chancellor inevitably included daily lunch appointments. Someone in the chancellor's office had taken to the idea of more informal brown-bag lunch meetings, tired of the fare at the local restaurant and student union. The bachelor of financial affairs met this by taking advantage of a deli across from campus, which featured sandwiches-to-go at a fair price, neatly packaged in a brown bag, complete with knife and napkin for picnickers.
Eleanor had gone so far as to dictate to me the necessary contents, should the vice chancellor not have time to pick it up himself. But he wasn't as good at anticipating such occasions. He was too busy dealing with the budget proposal to think about turkey on rve.
Normally, I would welcome an opportunity to run an errand across campus, to get out of a basement office and into the sunshine. So why did I feel so silly walking up the steps of the Academic Affairs building, knocking at a door behind which the university's site were munching on the upcoming budget proposal and delivering a brown bag to the second in command?
At 11:25, I handed him the required folder for a committee meeting. In exchange, I was given an order for the sandwich and Diet Pepsi, to be delivered to him at the meeting in progress.
I wondered if Eleanor ever had to perform this function or was it engineered just for temporary secretaries in their early 20s? Later, as I handed him his change and receipt for his expense account, he told me of the chancellor's envy of the chancellor's personally hand-delivered lunch.
Fortunately, it was my last day of work. I wouldn't have wanted to find out if I had started a new trend. Secretaries all over campus and in all 21 floors of office skyscrapers everywhere would never forgive me. Hallmark had assured them a day to be taken by the boss. Had I not given him a hard copy to take home to the boss, "It's in my job description. For this I'm being paid?" (Jayne Gauk is a KU graduate student who has worked as a temporary secretary for Manpower Inc.)
KANSAN
The University Daily
USPS 600(440) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through Monday and Thursday and June and July each week. Student subscriptions are $1 for a semester, Kansas University, Kansas City, Missouri; $1 for a fee $2 a year in Douglas County and $1 for a fee outside the county. Student subscriptions are a $1 semester, student through the student activity fee. Postmaster: Send changes of address to the University Daily Kansas, Flint Hall, The University of Kansas
Editor Business Manager
Vernon Jerven Naturalist Judge
Managing Editor Traverse Handler
Editorial Editor Karen Schubter
Campan Editor Gene George
Assistant Campan Editor Jane Newfeld
Assistant Campan Editor Joe Reebin, Research Demystify
Assignment Editor Steve Rebhrau
Speller Editor Ron Haggstrom
Retail Sales Manager Ann Heverberger
National Sales Manager Howard Shalikman
Campan Sales Manager Perry Beai
Sales and Marketing Advisor John Ohrerman
General Manager and News Advisor John Ohrerman
THE COLUMBUS DAYPRIZH GROUP. IN THE TERROR COMPANY SHROWM
...SEE? WE HAD A NUCLEAR WAR, AND THE GOVERNMENT SURVIVED! RIGHT?
...RIGHT, CORPORAL...
I MEAN, MR. PRESIDENT.
Pain, beauty impossible to separate
Beauty and pain.
Wherever the two shall meet one can gain insight into this mysterious hurting rock we have been.
Take New York. On any day, you can open a book that reads 'a beauty-and-pain story that might read like a joke.'
"... a sixteen-year-old slashed her wrists and arms and then rushed to the steps of a Roman Catholic church, poking a razor to her head." Included is "screamed and screamed," "Do your mother, sister."
The blood sacrifice works as an aphrodisiac as the crowd surges around the girl. At last, she collapses, and after the tardy officials arrive and cart her away, people still murmur, bending toward the dark, bedeasted stone, until they are met with monolith, drained of their sudden and archaic lust.
The story would then make abstract com-
mon sense about urban depression and the inciidence of suicides.
The newspaper is a cultural repository for vignettes on the indifference and brutality of war.
purke's conventional sense of beauty often defends itself by creating an automatic recount for the numbers.
Aristotle offered in his "Poetics" a theory of tragedy in which pain and beauty achieve a subtle, necessary concoct. Through a catharsis of pity and fear, pain ultimately carries the spectator to a state of intellectual, emotional and aesthetic clarification.
What idea of beauty is it, though, that coincides with the image in a suicidal girl's eyes? Or does it represent the idea?
Eighteenth-century philosopher Edmund Burke had annexed pain to the sublime, leaving beauty to command the softer feelings and pain for Burke occupied different worlds.
The body's inner landscape, luxuriant with mystery and danger, is closed to all but the surgeon, whom Seizer represents as a kind of priestly naturalist:
Richard Selzer, a member of the Yale Medical school faculty, explores the buried connections between beauty and pain as a surgeon. He enters a region, in his "Rituals of Surgery, Mortal Lessons," that most readers have never viewed firsthand.
"A surgeon, who feels the slow wilde of intestines against the back of his hand and is no longer able to eat," she said.
A. K. BOLTLEY
W.J. ANDREWS
taking their comfort from such an indolent
human heart if it were some captivated bird."
In the damaged and perilous interior of the body, in the space abandoned by metaphysics and outlawed by tabeo, Selzer finds in fat, fluid, tissue and bone—in man as sheer mass and matter—a potential for beauty Burke would not have instructed us to discover.
To perceive the tragedy, says Selzer (Aristotelean in nature), is to wring from it bibbly.
Beauty, according to these aesthetics, cannot separate itself from the vision of "a bloodless woman." (Bruno Besset)
Selzer writes of the surgeon's knife as almost an extension of his body-survival as a pitiless act of love—and dispassion becomes the vehicle of an intimate and inaccessible knowledge. Knowledge that Burke could have never gained.
Pity and compassion may comfort both the
patient and the comforter, but they provide no
security. If you can see a void of patient
space which merely circle, endlessly.
As the British philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein asserted: "Pity, one may say, is a form of conviction that someone else is in pain."
Pain initiates us into a new—or forgotten knowledge. It beholds, at its most intense, an unknown world of its own construction. Yet, to possess it requires a different kind of national obsession: anesthesia has become, like television, a household god, and at the first sign of discomfort, we rush for our pills and doctors. What we ask for before the cure, is that our pain be relieved, understood mainly as something to be gored rid of.
The relation between beauty and pain may not offer comforting insights, but there is the notion that pain can lead us beyond its own dark privacies. It is as if only through pain can be appreciated. Through pain, may be able to reach an understanding that avails new beauty.
For pain, mysterious and elusive and compelling, is the current theme. Samuel Johnson elicits that pain is a one-word definition of life.
And if pain is entwined with beauty—and as Socrates said, "Man seeks to be near beauty, because the soul's wings grow at the sight of beauty,"—might we easier understand the cheering crowds encoaching the enriched environment of the suicidal girl?
The fervor rising, unable either to intervene or stop watching, the witnesses cheered the girl as she reached beyond the thresholds of her pain and beyond theirs: the primitive rite having been played out, the ancestral themes having surfaced and the catharsis completed.
But the crowd dispersed, the insights of the moment remaining only in their exhaustion, except for maybe a subtly recurrent thought of the beauty of the girl's painful struggle.
Letters to the Editor
Columnist's portraval of Middle East slanted
To the Editor:
As an international student concerned with the image the public has about Arabs, I feel obligated to respond to the column by W.J. Andrews and Midwest peace an illusion," he writes on April 15.
I don't intend to use the paper for propaganda, but I can't sit idle when I read science fiction if it is meant to be the truth, especially when it is directed against me. Andrews reminds me of the star of "Raiders of the Lost Ark," who, by the time he leaves Europe by Palestinian Liberation Organization. He also depicts the Israelis as the good guys and all Arabs as dirty terrorists.
He thinks that a 48-hour stay in Amman was sufficient to investigate all the evils of the Arabs. Ironically, he couldn't find one decent thing about them. Moreover, he glamourously emphasized the smiles on the heroic and sharp soldiers when he crossed the border to Israel.
In the past two weeks, however, I didn't see them smile when they killed a 7-year-old Palestinian child. It didn't look heroic when they shot a 50-year-old Palestinian woman "suspected for stealing weapons." And an Israeli soldier didn't look sharp when he tried his machine gun in a holy shrine, killing and injuring many Palestinians!
I don't mean to call Andrews a liar, but the fact is that there has been only one clash between PLO and the Israeli in which a bus was destroyed. I wonder how he comes up with two such incidents, which he claims happened in two days.
Secondly, the Israelis only suspect where the "hideouts" exist, and hence, are likely to be behind them.
He reminded him of "the Fourth of July" when he saw Ira's planes attack "suspected guerrilla units" at the battlefield.
"hideouts" are in Lebanon, and attacking them is attacking an innocent country.
Finally, I didn't wish to amplify the Israeli's crimes and demonstrate our perfection, but I hoped to expose to the public the other side of the issue: ours.
Thaer Laham,
Damascus, Syria, junior
Details block change
To the Editor:
I'm moved, particularly by the Phyllis Schiflay visit, to write to the University Daily Kansan, a forum for public-speak. And, for the sake of attention span, I will keep this brief.
It seems clear that because of the mere content of our opinions and positions, we, the selfmade cognoscence at the University of Kansas, shall be content to bicker and squabble over details, by and large at the expense of effective and constructive social improvement.
I believe, if I may use a metaphor, that actors should agree about the general context of a play first, rather than defining the drama in terms of the stage-props.
"Evil is that which makes for separateness; and that which makes for separateness is self-
I would like to see those people who feel their power and effectiveness in the world re-examine their positions, first individually, then together, and distill out the contextual similarities (like 'balance between the genders' or 'de- balancing' in two examples) for in Aldous Huxley's words:
destructive. self-destruction of evil may be sudden and violent, as when murderous hatred results in a conflict that leads to the death of the hater; it may be gradual, as when a degenerative process results in impotence or extinction; or it may be reformative, as when a long course of evil-doing results in all concerned becoming so sick of destruction and degeneration that they decide to change their wavs, thus transforming evil into good."
Tom Dougherty, Garnett graduate student
Where credit is due
To the Editor:
Concerning the article, "Frame coordinates for fourth year" in the University Daily Kansas special edition, April 16, 1982: If Jan Boutte had made the effort to interview Tim Harrison, Mike Waddell, and Peter McKenzie, she would have had an article worth printing.
It is these three men who are in charge of coordinating everything the student committed
Instead, she wrote a sensationalized article using the first person she interviewed, against that person's wishes. This oversight we should attribute to Boutte's inexperience. Hopefully, in the future, she will use this as a learning experience.
Ann Frame,
Kansas Relays
Student Committee member
University Dally Kansan, April 22, 1982
Page 5
Affirmative
From page 1
The report is divided into two divisions. The workforce analysis shows, by title or rank, the sex, race and salary level of current employees of The University.
The Goals and Timetables are a comparison of employment at KU to the outside job market.
Both of these reports are divided into two categories—staff personnel and instructional
In the Goals and Timetables, an analysis is made in each area to see whether women and men work together.
There are eight major groups in the staff division-executive, administrative, managerial, professional and clerical and secretarial, technical and paraprofessional, skilled crafts and trades, and service maintenance workers.
Instructional is divided into academic units of either a department, school, division or college.
These units are further broken down by rank:
professor, associate professor, assistant professor.
The Availability Data in Academic Programs and Related Occupations, often called the "Colorado Study," is the criterion used to determine the availability of women and men.
The study was first compiled in 1975 at the University of Colorado and later revised in 1978. The following factors were considered in putting the report together:
unemployed and employed people in specific academic disciplines.
people who could apply for a position, but.
- national statistics on people who have doctor's and master's degrees in specific disciplines, since the University typically recruits for faculty positions on a national basis.
who were currently working in a related occupation.
EDWARDS SAID the terminal requirements of each department or school also were considered. He said that a doctor's degree usually requires him in some areas a master's degree would do.
- people readily trainable for a given occupation.
"It depends on what is wanted," he said.
While the Workforce Analysis shows the number of people employed in a particular area, the Goals and Timetables show how many should be employed at each time period for a particular area and how many should be employed.
There is the "percent availability" which is
the amount of time available for a particular job who belongs to an affected class.
That number, multiplied by the total number employed in a particular area, gives the "equity number" for an affected class. The equity number should be employed in that particular category.
When the equity number is compared to the actual employment, the office can determine how many more members of an affected class should be hired.
If there are a number of people available for a job in a particular area and the job on campus is underrepresented, a goal is set to hire a person from the affected class.
SriLanka
JON HARDESTY/Kansan Staff
Sophia Shlau was a tired little girl this week at the KU International Club exhibit in the Kansas Union. International students shared arts and crafts from their home countries.
University of Kansas Spring Dance Festival
---
Friday, April 23, 8 pm
Saturday, April 24, 2 pm
Robinson Dancee Performing Lab (240)
$2.50 General Admission
$1.50 Students. Senior Citizens
University Dance Company with guest choreographer Joan Stone Chiahu East Indian Folk Dance Theatre KUF Dance Dancing Group
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A lecture by TARIK QURISHI, the famous Journalist
The lecture will be followed by a MOVIE about the Afghan struggle against THE RUSSIAN INVASION.
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University Daily Kansan, April 22, 1982
白
10
George Abrams, Overland Park sophomore, of the KU Horror Zontals Ultimate Frisbee team makes a difficult catch in a semi-final game against the Tulsa Nighthawks. The Horror Zontals won the game 11-4 and went on to win the Dallas Spring Fling.
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Frisbee's popularity soaring
KU club plays ultimate game
By JIM LEHNER Staff Reporter
Frisbee has taken off in recent years as a popular sport, and the same can be said of the KU Frisbee Club, which now holds a membership of more than 50 students.
Grady Boles, Liberal senior and president of the KU Frisbee Club, said recently that Frisbee at the University of Kansas had come a long way since its inception. And Ms. Boles said Frisbee activists Frank and Wayne Gauld decided to start the Frisbee club.
Ultimate Frisbee, the type of Frisbee competition that the KU Frisbee club participates in at tournaments, is a fast-moving, competitive, non-contact sport played by two, seven-person teams.
Boles said that Frisbee had branched out to become a competitive sport including Frisbee golf and ultimate basketball. The combination of soccer, basketball and football
He said that a normal Frisbee competition had two 24-minute halves accounting for a 90-minute game, with the penalties taken into consideration.
Boles said that the object of ultimate Frisbee was to gain points by scoring goals. The disc may only be passed, and a goal is scored when a player successfully passes the disc to a teammate in the end-zone which that team is attacking. The team with the most points of the game is declared the winner.
He said that the sport had a great amount of freedom and informality implicit in the rules. Primary among these is the spirit of sportsmanship that emphasizes the honor system. Highly competitive play is encouraged, but never at the expense of mutual respect between the players.
Boles said that the KU Frisbee Club perfected the rules to the best of its ability in capturing the Dallas Spring Fling last weekend in Dallas. He said that the wind was a factor in increasing the speed of the ball so he said that weather elements did not make a difference to a true Frisbee fanatic.
What makes ultimate Frisbee so exciting and healthy is all of the formations and runnin involved, he said.
"If you need to shed some pounds then ultimate Frisbee is the sport for you," Boiles said. "You are constantly looking for soccer when you talk about stamina."
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He said that members of the team car-pooled to wherever tournaments were held.
"We own the nail-biting game and took home with us a $300 prize, which made our driving down for the tournament worth it," Boles said.
TYPESETTING STATS/PMT
Boles said that the Dallas tournament was a competitive one with many close games. Teams from Texas, Arkansas and Oklahoma competed. Boles worried about the KU team throughout the Dallas tournament.
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Service Beyond Duplication
"It's like a fraternity with everyone chipping in to help one another," he said.
HOUSE OF USHE:
The club motto is, "Dedicated to having good times," and that is just what happened, he said.
"We have a lot of social functions," he said. "Frisbee clubs have a reputation for being first-class partners, and our club is no exception."
AFRICAN STUDENTS ASSOCIATION
Lots of other women felt the same way.
General Meeting
"I was flabbergasted that, in these times, someone would think of a person in that way," said Peg Murray. But who was infurished by the sion?
Saturday, April 24, 1982 6:00 PM
Level 4, Council Park, Kansas Union
"National Secretaries Week Take a heifer to lunch," said a sign set up in front of Borden's Tallahassee building. The sign was intended to recognize National Secretaries Week. April 18-24.
Legal secretary Pat Matthews was angry enough to cancel her Borden's home delivery service.
AGENDA
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. - Tallahassee women are furious over a sign referring to secretaries as hefers, and they let Dairy Borne Co. know it.
1. Opening—President's Speech; Annual/progress report
"I don't think the company needs my business if they think of women in way," she said. "Women have enough confidence without these types of attitudes."
2. Minutes of last meeting
3. Financial report
5. General Matters
7. General Matters
8. GENERAL ELECTIONS—PRESIDENT, V.P., GENERAL
3. Financial report
4. Last activity of the semester
Besides the guaranteed parties associated with belonging to the KU Frisbee Club, he said that if a student had any interest in Frisbee at all, then he would find some particular aspect of Frisbee appealing to him.
SECRETARY, ASSISTANT GEN, SECRETARY, TREASURER,
PARIAMENTARIAN, AUDITOR
7. President's remarks
8. First Transition Session with Incoming Executive Committee
PLEASE BE THERE—Sunday O. OMEKWE
9. Adjournment
Borden officials said they had no idea the sign would upset people. After getting several telephone calls from annoyed people, they changed the sign to: "National Secretaries Week. Take one to lunch."
Presents
TONIGHT
General Secretary
"There's a certain type of spirit that you acquire by being a Friese nut," Boles said. "Anywhere you go across the country that's all you have to do is guess the fact that you're a Friese nut, and you'll make tons of friends."
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University Daily Kansan, April 22, 1982
Page 7
on campus
TODAY
A THEOLOGICAL SEMINAR for discussing Latin American Liberation Theology will begin at 4:30 p.m. at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries
THE STUDENT SOCIETY FOR CREATIVE ANCHORISM will sponsor a display of MEDIEVAL AND RENAISSANCE ARTS AND SCIENCES on the lawn near Flint Hall between 11 a.m. and 1 p.m.
THE WOMEN AND THE MEDIA FILM SERIES will present the film "Wilmar B" at 7:30 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
TOMORROW
Blue phones on campus yield quick response
THE UNDERGRADUATE BIOLOGY CLUB will meet at 4 p.m. in the Sunflower Room of the Kansas Union.
The 82nd ANNUAL ENGINEERING
The 82nd ANNUAL ENGINEERING will open at 12:30 p.m. at
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Staff Reporter
By BECKY ROBERTS Staff Reporter
With the coming of spring, campus has come alive again with students who spent the winter hibernating.
As a result of students' increased spring activity-jogging, Frisbee and enjoying the weather-an im-mergent sport that requires alert system is being used more.
The KU police emergency phones, better known as the blue phones, are used more in the spring than they are in any other season, Jeanne Longaker, KU police lieutenant, said yesterday.
"In the spring, the phones are used the most because there are more people out, and they observe
more. There are also more joggers," Longaker said.
The blue phones are used an average of five times a day, Longaker said. Each month about 50 people live in situations. The rest are people who need help but are not in an emergency. Some are also pranks.
There are twelve blue phones on campus. The phones are connected directly to the dispatcher's office, Longaker said. They are located at Irving Hill Road, New Green Hall, Sunnyside and Sunflower streets, 13th and Oread streets, 14th Street and Alumni Place, Potter Lake, X zone parking lot, GSP-Corbin parking lot, Pearson Plaza location, between Malott and Wesco halls and at Watkins Hospital.
WHEN THE PHONES are picked up, a light on a panel showing the phone's location lights up. The person can talk with the dispatcher, but the phone is activated as soon as the receiver is picked up.
An officer is dispatched immediately to every call from a blue phone. The officer will reach the police within two minutes, Longaker said.
The phones can be used for a variety of reasons. They are there for any emergency such as an accident, medical emergency or an assault.
The phones are also to be used for other purposes, Longaker said.
They may be used if a person wants to report suspicious activity.
has a flat tire and cannot change it, runs out of gas or needs some information, she said.
"We've had the phones used for all of these situations," Longaker said.
"At the 13th and Oread phone we had a person who picked up the phone and didn't really say anything. The officer was dispatched and it turned out the person was experiencing a heart attack."
Eight of the phones were installed in 1976 after the University hired a consultant to make security recommendations. One of the recommendations was the introduction of the phones, Longaker said.
In 1980 four additional phones were installed.
Each of the 12 phones cost more
than $1,000. Longaker said. The first eight phones were paid for from the police budget, and the additional funds were paid to a special fund from the University.
The monthly cost to maintain the phones ranges from $15 to $25. This includes the cost of the lease line from Southwestern Bell Telephone Co. and maintenance of the phones and the poles they are mounted on.
Longaker said the police department paid for these monthly costs.
There are no immediate plans for additional phones on campus, Longaker said, but any future considerations would include the idea of putting phones in buildings that are frequently used at night such as Wescoe, Strong, Learned and Fraser.
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The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Presents
The Cordelia Brown Murphy Distinguished Professor of Piano
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Benefit Piano Concert
3:30 pm, Sunday April 29, 1989
Washington Recital Hall, Murphs Hall
Ticket go on sale April 9 in the Murphy Hall Box Office
All great general admission. Price $5. MIC students with ID $2.50
For observations, call 973-604-786
This recital is for KS piano students competing in
an international competition in Spain this summer.
Additional donations for this project may be made
through the GIC Endowment Association
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SKY DIVING Come Fly With Us Greene County Sport Parachute Center Weilsville, Kansas
Student Training Classes
10 a.m. Tues.-Sat.
First Jump Course $55.00. Groups of 5 or more only $45.00 per person. Price includes log book, lab coat, safety equipment. Students required to show proof of age. Located 4 miles west of Wellington. For further information call **883-4210** or **883-2535**
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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.
WHO WILL BE NEXT?
KU WOMEN'S HALL OF FAME
1970: Connie Coleman
Cora Downs
Maude Ellsworth
Margaret Hughes Fraley
Jeanne Stump
1971: Helen Gilles
Joan McCann
Emily Taylor
Beatrice Wright
1972: Martha Peterson
Marilyn Stokstad
Nita Sundbye
Deanell Reece Tacha
1973: Wealthy Babcock
Florence Black
Beth Schultz
Louise Wheeler
1974: Hazel Anderson
Frances Degen Horowitz
Irene Nunemaker
1975: Barbara C. Etzel
Mary Grant
Mary Morrill Litchfield
1982?
1976: Evelyn Hitchcock Aldin
Karen R. Keesling
Kala Mays Stroup
Mary Turkington
1977: Beverly Boyd
Kathleen C. Doering (posthumous)
Frances Ingemann
Bonnie Ritter
1978: Eleanor Meyers Burchill
Gisela A.M. Dreschoff
Miriam Stuart Green
Janice Kay Mendenhall
Caryl Kelley Smith
1979: Barbara M. Craig
Elizabeth Sherbon
Marian Washington
Leona Baumgartner
M. Evelyn Swartz
1980: Evelyn DeGraw
Alexandra Mason
Jean Pyfer
Katherine Giele
Vivian McCoy
1981: Judith M. LeBlanc
Bette Krenzer
Irene Peabody
Helen Foresman Spencer
Judith M. LeBlanc
Bette Krenzer
Irene Peabody
Helen Foresman Spencer
Ann Victoria Thomas
Patricia Wolfe
WOMEN'S RECOGNITION 1982
April 268 p.m. Kansas Room, Union
Sponsored by Commission on the Status of Women
Paid for by Student Activity Fee
1. In the graph below, what is the trend of the value of $y$ as $x$ increases from 0 to 4?
Page 8 University Daily Kansan, April 22, 1982
富
TV program to discuss recall issues
By RICK DULLEA Staff Reporter
Sunflower Cablevision will broadcast a viewer question-and-answer program May 6 featuring Tome Gleason, Lawrence city commissioner, and Richard Hernandez, a leader of the campaign, trying to recall Gleason from office.
The program, "Lawrence Calling",
will air on cable channel 6 from 9:20 to
10:20 p.m. and will be moderated by
the Nokia Cableflower Calibration
news coordinator.
"I think a discussion of the actual issues will help my campaign," Glenese said.
The Lawrence Committee organized and initiated the recall effort when it went against a Republican proposal.
letter to City Manager Buford Watson suggesting that Watson resign or face the possibility of being fired.
"This will be an opportunity for everybody in town to watch and get a good handle on the issues," said Hernandez, Lawrence Committee Chair.
Viewers will be able to call in questions, and both sides of the controversy will respond, according to Hernandez.
The 'Lawrence Calling' program will air five days before the special Lawrence election May 11, when its future on the commission is decided.
Lawrence residents also will vote on a referendum on whether to finance a study of storm water run-off by collectors and then have it tacked onto the residential water bills.
Only registered voters living in Lawrence are eligible to vote in the special election. Tuesday was the day for registering for the election Tuesday.
KU students and faculty who will be out of Douglas County Lawrence first recall election of a city in which he was elected an absentee ballot by noon, May 10.
Applications are available at the Douglas County Courthouse, 11th and Massachusetts streets, between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday.
Voters can apply for an absentee ballot by calling the courthouse and requesting it. The county will mail out the application, which should be filled out and returned, and then, the ballot will be sent to the voter.
DON'T MISS S.O.B. NIGHT TONIGHT 7 P.M.
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Juniors & Seniors 3140 Wescoe
Resume Preparation
Interviewing Tips & Experiences
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TICKETS ON SALE FOR BANQUET IN LEARNED HALL
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Funded by the student activity fee.
On the record
While the owner of the 1967 Camaro was inside the residence hall, thieves possibly hot-wired the car, police said.
Thieves stole a car worth about
$2,500 between 10:15 and
10:20 p.m. Tuesday from the parking
area of the Boulder Residence
house, KU,KI police
Police said burglars possibly used a key to the room and took the receiver. There are no suspects.
There are no suspects.
THEVIEWS STOLE camera equipment worth more than $400 sometime between 10:30 a.m. Friday and 10 a.m. Saturday from an apartment at Westhill Apartments, 1012 Emery Rd., police said.
During a party, theies entered a bedroom and took a 35mm camera, two lenses and a flash attachment, police said. There are no suspects.
BURGLARS STOLE a silver glute
worth about $500 sometime between
10:30 a.m. and 12:30 p.m. Friday
from a car at car at 1430 Haskell
Wellsfield
BURGLARS TOOK a stereo receiver worth more than $450 sometime between April 1-2 from the
There was no sign of forced entry, and there are no suspects, police said.
Phi Kappa Theta fraternity house, 1941 Stewart Ave., police said.
BURGLARS STOLE more than $300 worth of cash and equipment sometime between 9 p.m. Monday and 8 a.m. Tuesday from Mike's Wheel and Brake shop, 315 N.E. Industrial Ln., police said.
After prying open the front door, burglarly took a Crown Royal bag with about $10 cash inside and a phone call said he was there. There are no suspects.
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University Daily Kansan, April 22, 1982
Page 8
U.S. government documents has something for everyone
TRACEY THOMPSON/Kansan Staff
1
TRACE THEMATIC MARION Howey, supervisor of the government documents department at the Spencer Research Library, helps Jeff Flottman, Lawrence junior, trace recent congressional action through the Congressional Index.
By DOUG CUNNINGHAM Staff Reporter
Pick any topic, and the U.S. government probably publishes a document about it.
From a report on tornado deaths in Kansas to one on air leakage in refrigerated vans to census statistics from 1855, the KU libraries' government office provides students and faculty with information on almost any subject.
"A lot of things appear in government documents that can't be found elsewhere," George McCleary, Jr., associate professor of geography, said yesterday. McCleary is one of a number of professors who have their students enrolled in the department's business in the basement of the Kenneth Knennery Research Library.
Marion Howey, who supervises the department, said it was one of 18 regional depositories for government documents. History, economics and management were the 843,364 government documents and 225,384 pieces of microfilm deal with.
"We have such a wide scope that there should be something for almost any class." Howey said.
THE DEPARTMENT gets every document the Government Printing Office prints for the depository system, she said.
"We have a fine British collection," she said.
The most popular material is the U.S. Census Bureau data, she said. The department has census data from 1855 to the present, although it is missing the 1800 census, because that data burned before copies could be distributed.
KU's depository, started in 1869, is one of the oldest in the country, she said.
"Therefore, our collections is both historical and very current," she said.
Diplomatic records from the State Department go back to 1899, and congressional documents date back to 1789.
But not everything in the documents department is old. The latest issue of the Congressional Record is never more than a few days old. Howey said.
Tracing legislation through the congressional process, from introduction as a bill to bearings and passage, has grown in recent years. Howard said.
"I enjoy helping people trace legislation because of the current awareness," she said.
The world food problem and military
unrest are some of the things that have made people more aware, she said.
Translations of foreign newspaper articles and journals give students a different viewpoint on other countries, she said.
"It's their slant," Howey said.
THESE TRANSLATIONS, published by the Joint Publications Research Service, are quite popular, she said. The magazine Papers, are strangely neglected.
"They've never been asked for," she said.
The department also has more unusual documents.
"We have documents on infant care, we have recipes from the Department of Agriculture, we even have comic books written by our U.S. government, of course."
Except for duplicates and material later placed on microfilm, the department cannot throw anything away.
"We have to maintain one copy of everything that comes in here," she said.
The department stopped cataloging documents from the U.S. government, and it wasn't until 1986 that hein. Howey said. Instead of a standard library catalog, library patrons
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must use a special book index to find the U.S. material they need.
"I could measure the empty shelves, but that wouldn't do any good. There's no way to tell what the government's going to issue," she said.
But she said there was no way to predict what documents the federal government would issue, except for certain periodicals and journals. "We have to speculate on when the documents department will run out of space."
At the present rate material is coming in, the department should have enough room for five more years.
The documents department has been getting more use in recent years, she said.
With the end of the semester nearing, many students are working on term papers and doing other research in the field. I think it's time they've been there. Howey said.
"Every year I have students tell me, I wish I had known about this place last year," she said.
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By JIM LEHNER Staff Reporter
Analyst predicts change in Venezuela
Venezuela will join its neighbors in Latin America by becoming an authoritarian state after nearly 25 years of democracy, a Latin American analyst told a University of Miami audience of about 30 yesterday.
James Maloy, who has spent some time in Venezuela for the University Field Staff International, titled his speech "Venezuela in the '80s."
He said that Venezuela was able to remain a democracy during the '60s and '70s, while the other Latin American countries fell prey to dictatorships, because it had oil as a deterrent.
"The price boom of oil in the mid-70s kept Venezuela's capital accumulations above water," Maloy said. "The critical features of their system were their consumption rate versus their capital assets.
"They followed a state capitalism
model, and their gross national product grew 5.4 percent from 1958-79."
He said that the most dynamic growth rate occurred in the manufacturing and the service industry, which accounted for 18.5 percent of the gross product.
"The service sector had played a vital role," he said. However, the agricultural sector had not grown.
"The dominant influence on the economy was the export sector and the petroleum sector," he said. "The key to Venezuela's well-being was not the oil growth but the increase in prices it was getting for its oil."
"State capitalism is dependent on oil revenue and borrowing. There was a dramatic increase in per capita income. It now has been declining," he said.
Maloy said that in the '80s Venezuela would join the rest of the countries suffering the same kind of downward economic trends.
"Its government will become more authoritarian as a result of its
Main problems in the system are that the consumption rate had dramatically increased while the capital assets declined.
exhaustion of import substitute growth," he said.
A problem in the system was that the creation of income distribution had not been spread equally throughout the masses. He said that it had excluded the large rural population and the people who were marginally surviving in the urban areas.
He said that the large dropoff in the price of oil was hurting them immensely and that production in general had declined.
Maley saw troubled times for Venezuela over the next five years. He said that the outcome would be a strengthened executive branch, with the corporate structure getting stronger as well.
He said that the elites would be hard-pressed in trying to keep their policy with the likelihood of a military coup in the offing.
Students save with all-sports tickets
The athletic department staff is getting a head start selling next year's all-sports ticket package to KU students.
In the past three days, the athletic department has been able to sell 172 tickets, Richard Konzem, ticket manager, said yesterday.
Konzem he said he hoped to sell more tickets at Wescoe Hall today and tomorrow because he thought the cooler weather this week might be better for him, by the booth. However, Konzem said he was pleased with sales so far:
"I'm fairly pleased because this is the first time we've ever done something like this," he said. "If students continue to buy, we worth it."
to raise prices.
This summer, tickets will be sold in the ticket office at Allen Field House.
841.DIBT
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the air-sports package costs $45 and includes a student season football ticket, a student season basketball ticket, a student season golf ticket, the special package saves students $12.
Separately, the football ticket is $25.50, the basketball ticket is $28 and the Kansas Relays ticket is $3.50. The total price for all three would be $57.
Konzem said the lower ticket prices were designed to attract the students who "were on the fringe."
He said that some students were really interested in the sports and would go to the games regardless of the prices charged for tickets, but that
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other students were more cost-conscious.
But Konem said the athletic department had tried to use the incoming freshmen as their target group, whom they wanted the most sales.
"Freshmen buy every KUT shirt and mug they can get their hands on," Konzem said.
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WOMEN'S RECOGNITION 1982
APRIL 26 8:00 P.M. KANSAS ROOM, UNION
Speaker: Kayla Stroup, Vice President for Academic Affairs Emporia State University, former Dean of Women University of Kansas
Awards: Outstanding Woman Student Athletics
International Woman Student
Women's Rights/Women's Awareness
Non-Traditional Woman Student
Student Services
Community Services
Politics
Honorary Organizations Living Groups
Outstanding Woman Staff Member Outstanding Woman Teacher
HALL OF FAME
Reception: Watkins Room, Union
Sponsored by Commission on the Status of Women
Paid for by Student Activity Fee
University Daily Kansan, April 22, 1982
---
白
Handicap does not stop celebrity mimic
1974
JON HARDESTY/Kansan Staff
From Humphrey Rogart to Mac West, Bernie Lewis can do it all as an empersonator. Here he assumes a classical Rogert pose.
By KEVIN HELLIKER Staff Reporter
Despite the trench coat, gangster-style hat and seductive voice saying, "Here's looking at you, kid," the camera snaps a cigarette that is not Humphrey Bogart.
But the impersonation is gold-cupwinning close.
Stripped of disguise, the man is Bernie Lewis of Lawrence, a first-tier winner last month in the 1982 U.S. presidential race for retarded people in Kansas.
The 25-year-old Lewis wins well. He smiles, thrusts out his hand and heartily thanks people more quickly than they can say. "Congratulations."
But those manners are no hand-me-down from Bogart. When it comes to dealing with people, Lewis imitates his greatest hero—the Ranger Ranger.
"I like the Lone Ranger's moral values," said Lewis, an avid TV watcher in his apartment at 2801 W. 31st St. "I like the way he's never gone to school. He also person nationality or creed. He never mistreats his friends."
Although the Lone Ranger's voice is not distinct enough to impersonate his language always is retestable. Lewis said.
"He never curses," he said. "I'm one of those people who try to watch my language."
AMONG OTHER celebrities whose language Lewis watches and imitates are Paul Lynde, Mae West, John Wayne and C. W. Fields.
One of the first people to take notice of Lewis' knack for personalizing these people was Gary Condra, the executive director of Nestlé, an international organization and rehabilitative workshop for the mentally handicapped.
Condra described Lewis as
comfortable with his limitations, yet ambitious with his potential.
"He is certainly a very capable individual," Condra said of Lewis, who was mentally retarded from birth. "He has a high degree of educational skills, and his ability to learn celebrities' words and to get their voices down is certainly a talent."
Lewis said that he, like most actors, was nervous before a performance, but was not intimidated by his mental handicap.
"I'm a person just like everybody else." he said.
However, Lewis does have limitations unknown to the average person. He cannot drive, drink or play in the outside world of Cottonwood.
"If you go out in the world and you don't know how to handle it, then it gets a little mysterious," he said. "But if I get temperamental, the butt will break." You need to control my temper. They help just be nice to people."
BUT LEWIS said Cottonwood also had helped him gain independence.
When he came to Lawrence five years ago from his parents' farm near Louisburg, he lived in a house with several other mentally handicapped people. But now he lives in his own apartment in a complex where several other Cottonwood people live.
He cooks, cleans and works two jobs—one at Cottonwood, and another as a carpet cleaner at the Jayhawker Towers.
He is also a board member of the Douglas County Association for Retarded Citizens and a leader in Reach, a program for the elderly handicapped.
Lewis' religion is vital to him, he said.
"If I didn't have God in my life, it would be kind of a bad situation," he said.
BOARD OF CLASS OFFICER ELECTIONS
Elections for Sophomore, Junior, and Senior class officers will be held TODAY.
Polling Places
Kansas Union Wescoe Hall Fraser Hall Learned Hall
The expansion will allow the Med Center to almost double the space devoted to infant care and expand its capacity to at least 25 children, Rapoff
KANAS CITY, Kan.-Plans for a day care center for children of employees and students at the University of Kansas Medical Center are in the final stages. Mike Haroff, chairman of development department, said yesterday.
Voting is from 8 a.m.-4 p.m.
"We'll still be taking care of the younger children," Rapoff said. "But we'll be loosely coordinated with the older and they will have the older kids."
The Med Center, in connection with the Women's Auxiliary, will offer care for children ranging from six months to twelve years. The project is completed in August.
Care for the younger children will remain in the control of the Med Center, Rapoff said, even after the expansion project is completed.
Med Center expands child day care center
The day care program at the Med center now cares only for children from 3 to 16 years old.
Infant care for employees has existed for about five years, Rapoff said, under the infant development program.
By TOM HUTTON Staff Reporter
This program will expand from its present location in pediatrics to the children's rehabilitation unit in the main hospital in July, Rapoff said.
Originally funded by a federal grant to researchers for infant study, the program continued after the grant expired, Rappoff said. Children of Med were used in the original grant and in the present program, he said.
Summerfield Hall
"We hope to be open 24 hours a day, seven days a week," she said.
When completed and in full operation, Chapman said, about 60 children will be under their supervise. Children who were not站 at the end of the day.
To operate the center around the clock, the auxiliary will employ 22 people to care for the children, two cooks, two directors and a bookkeeper.
You've Survived The Semester
"There was a rush to give priority to
Funds from the gift shops, as well as donations from Kansas City merchants, will pay for most of the necessary items, Chapman said. The renovation alone, she said, would cost about $40,000.
now come celebrate, and relax before finals at
ELLENA HONDA
Clinton Park, 5th & Illinois, Lawrence (behind Pinckney school)
Bring family or a friend, food to share, and maybe a frisbee. Join in the fun with fellow Non-Trads. Election of 1982-83 NTSO Executive Committee.
FREDERICK S. DUBOIS
"We asked the Endowment Association for a $64,000 loan to renovate the house and to help us get a start," Chapman said.
Sunday—We'll Eat at 1 p.m.-April 25th
"It's good that the Med Center is getting a day care center," Rappoff said. "Businesses need to realize that if they're going to attract employees, they have to offer some benefits like this."
The Non-Trad Pot-Luck Picnic
Partially funded by Student Senate.
LAWRENCE AUTO PLAZA PROUDLY INTRODUCES GORDON WILLIAMS, OUR NEW SERVICE TECHNICIAN
Funded partially through a $64,000 loan from the Kansas University Endowment Association, the day care house about two blocks from the Med Center. The property, which is owned by the Endowment Association, will be leased by the auxiliary, Pat Chapman, chairman of the child care committee, said.
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The other end of the day care project involves the Women's Auxiliary and children older than 18 months.
KU employees," Rapoff said. "But if there is that rare open space we'll take another person's child."
The Med Center charges $220 a month for young infant care and is open from 6:30 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. weekdays.
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Come hear Jimmy Jividen 8:30
Thursday evening at Hashinger Hall
on how to discover truth.
*Hashinger Hall Auditorium
* Thursday, 8:30 p. m.
Friday, April 23
Saturday, April 24
Sunday, April 25
Living In Harmony
What is truth?
Also he衣 Jimmy Jividen speak on these topics
also the Lordship of Church of Christ, 25th & Missouri.
10:30 a.m. None
7.30 p.m.
7:30 p.m.
9.30 a.m.
10.30 a.m.
Old Fashioned Pot Luck Dinner
7:30 p.m.
Becoming Christians Only
Christ In You
Devoted To One Another
Following Christ
Nursery and children's program will be provided at each service.
Everyone is welcome to attend.
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LAWRENCE TOYOTA/MAZDA LAWI
TUNE-UP SPECIAL
ALL Language Imports
$29.95
TOYOTA
LAWRENCE
MAZDA
LAWRENCE AUTO PIAZA
842 2191
Coupons must be presented at time of write-up
Electronic Ignition
Electronic ignition (Included all parts and labor-6 cyl. models slightly higher.)
install new spark plugs
* set engine to recommended
manufacturer's specifications
* adjust carburetor
* adjust compression of choke
* install new fuel filter Mazda or
Toyota only
All Japanese Imports
- rotary engines not included
LAWRENCE AUTO PIAZA
842/191
Coupons must be presented
at time of write-up
TOYOTA LAWRENCE MAZDA
Standard Ignition
Standard ignition (included all parts and labor-6-cyl models slightly higher) Weil
- install new spark plugs
* replace points and cond
* set engine to recommended
* culture's specification
- adjust carburator
* inspec operation of choke
* install new fuel filter/Mazdaas
* and Toyotas only
$36.95
A. LAWRENCE TOYOTA/MAZDA LAWRENCE TOYOTA/MAZDA LAWRENCE TOYOTA/MAZDA LAWRENCE TOYOTA/MAZDA
University Daily Kansan, April 22, 1982
ENCETOYOTAMAZDA LAWRENCE TOYOTA/MAZDA LAWRENCE TOYOTA/MAZDA
Page 11
Expo features engineering projects
A biomic arm, a robot and a solar-powered satellite model are just some of the many displays to be seen at the conference. Exposition tomorrow and Saturday.
The theme for this year's exposition is "Science Fiction-Science Fact." Bob Zwerekw, associate director of the school of Engineering, said recently.
"There will be some very interesting things to look at." he said.
Karen Carlin, wife of Gov. John Carlin, will cut the ribbon at 12:30 p.m. tomorrow to open the 62nd learned exposition in Learned Hall.
The exposition, which will take place through Learned, will be open until 5 p.m. tomorrow and from 8 a.m. to 3 o'clock Saturday.
display, Zerwekh said. Most of the projects on display, he said, would be student projects, but there also would be some industrial displays.
"The project ideas are good ones and in the past years, they have developed into some pretty good efforts," Zerwekh said.
Each engineering department and some of the student engineering societies will have projects on
He said students in the various engineering departments started planning on the exposition projects early in the fall.
Guerrillas bomb Guatemalan capital
By United Press International
GUATELMALA CITY-A village military commissioner and an assistant mayor were beheaded yesterday by unknown assailants, and leftist guerrillas set off eight bombs in a raid on a provincial capital, authorities said.
Police in the village of Nimacaba], 75 miles north of the capital, said they
found the headless bodies of Jose Martinez. Suerez, town military commissioner, and Gegorio Martinez, assistant mayor.
The two decapitated bodies were dumped on different streets, but police said the same 'terrorists' undoubtedly were responsible for both killings.
Clashes around the country killed one rebel and wounded several. One person was killed.
An undetermined number of guerrillas attacked Santa Cruz Del Quiche, 32 miles northwest of Guatemala City, in a predawn attempt to capture the city of 75,000 mostly Indian residents, police said.
Authorities said that they had no casualty figures but added that the rebels exploded eight bombs before government security forces repulsed the invaders from the city, the capital of Quiche Province.
KU administrator to lecture in China
By ANN WYLIE Staff Reporter
China is importing a new product this year, which is aimed at around the psychology of infant behavior.
Frances Horowitz, vice chancellor for research, graduate studies and public service and professor of education at Spelman College in infant behavior in Peking this summer.
She will arrive June 6 to give a series of lectures, demonstrations and workshops for 10 Chinese scholars at the Institute of Psychology at the Academia Sinica as part of the 1982 Distinguished Scholar Exchange Program with the People's Republic of China.
When I taught in China before," she said yesterday, "I realized that they were a minority."
Horowitz taught psychology in China two years ago.
On this trip Horowitz will discuss KU and U.S. research, including recent developments in research technology, infant attention and cognitive development, measurement of newborn behavior, and observational strategies.
She said she would focus her lectures on development of this research in China.
"They may very well want to start their own research project in infant behavior." she said.
Faculty members from the Chinese Institute of Psychology visited the University of Kansas in April 1983 and returned to return the hospital, Horowitz said.
After she finished teaching, Horowitz will visit two other Chinese cities and talk with other scholars and learn more about the country.
"Psychology has just been allowed to emerge in China in the last few years since the cultural revolution," Horowitz said.
"During that time they were really cut off from the development in the
"The United States has been a primary setting for this kind of work,"
Horowitz' trip will be sponsored by the Committee on Schoolary Communication with the People's Republic of China, and the National Academy of Sciences.
The committee was formed in 1973 when the United States opened diplomatic relations with China. Its mission is to provide scholarly communications between the countries.
Horowitz applied for the exchange program more than a year ago, she said. Her application was a proposal to teach infant behavior and development.
Chinese scholars will visit the United States, too, but none will come to KU.
ASK leaders evaluate session
By COLLEEN CACY Staff Reporter
The Associated Students of Kansas can increase its effectiveness in the Kansas Legislature next year by getting more students to vote and by keeping them informed on the issues, ASK leaders said recently.
Representatives from the student lobbying group expressed some disappointment with the results of their efforts this session, but said they thought they had gained the respect of lawmakers.
"We're recognized as a legitimate voice. We have the respect of legislators." Mark Tallman, ASK executive director, said. "Now we need to work on getting some real strength behind that.
"We must dramatically increase the number of students that vote."
TALLMAN SAID that because the group's priority issues this year all involved money, the results were not entirely satisfactory.
ASK pushed for a 13 percent faculty- salary increase, an 11 percent increase in operating expenses and a 100 percent graduation-tuition fee waiver. Its requests echewed those of the Board of Congress this year.
"We were pleased with our effectiveness given the limits we were working within," Tallman said. "But the problems of higher education cannot be resolved until the state's revenue problems are solved.
"I think higher education came out as well as could be expected."
TALLMAN SAID that a $900,000 faculty-salary enrichment fund approved by the Legislature was evidence that marketers realized faculty needed extra help.
Bicycles Car Stereo Equipment
Don't Take Everything Home
Store It For The Summer
Fort Knox Mini Warehouse
U-Store it. U-lock it.
U-keep the key
1717 W. 31st Street 841-4244
Records Bicycles Records Bicycles
Tallman said the most important thing needed to increase the effectiveness of ASK was getting more involved in the political process.
But she said she enjoyed representing the students in Topeka.
AURH 1982 SUMMER INTERN PROGRAM
Patty Gersenberger, a KU representative of AK, agreed that too many students were apathetic toward the legislature. Mr. Gersenberger KU got its funds from the Legislature.
Applications are available at Residence Hall desks, Office of Residential Programs, and the AURH Office, 210 McCollum Hall (864-4041).
Return completed application to the AURH Office,
210 McCollum Hall no later than 5:00 pm, Friday,
April 30, 1982. This may be done through the
McCollum Hall main desk.
"We need to make students aware of the issues and how candidates stand on the issues," he said.
- Returning Hall Resident
ONE BLL that ASK successfully helped push through the Legislature requires Regents universities to hold a student referendum before they use student fees for new construction on campus.
- Interns continue AURH work, planning and services during the summer. Duties include assisting with Freshmen Orientation, AURH Program Development for 1982-83 and programming work for 1982-83.
"It seems that the Legislature depends on lobbyists a lot for their information—if we aren't there, they won't know."
- Interns will be provided with room and board for the summer and a stipend (to be determined).
But he said they would begin working this summer on a plan of action for fall and the 1983 session, beginning with a voter registration drive.
- May attend summer school (4 hours maximum).
"One of the problems with the Legislature is that it is very isolated. Legislators tend to forget about the issues they are trying to ease up to get caught up in the power thing."
QUALIFICATIONS:
JOB DESCRIPTION:
- Returning Hall Resident
• Work the equivalent of 40 hours/week from
6-6-82 to 7-31-82.
• Live in Summer Residence Hall
Want to be known by your name at the University of Kansas? Then you'd better choose Naismith Hall!
"I was new this year, and we had many new campus directors—we had to start from scratch." he said.
AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY/AFFIRMATIVE ACTION EMPLOYER
"I felt like I was listened to and people were honest," she said. "I don't know how much good it did. It's kind of hard, because the legislators don't realize what kind of wall we're up against in the universities."
John Keightley, KU campus director of ASK, said he thought more students were becoming aware of ASK and wondered how they could support the mission of the KU
SHE REFERRED to escalating costs of
SHE library acquisitions and supplies
included in the operating expenses
of the library.
The Regents' request from 11 to 6 percent.
Gerstenberger said she thought legislators were responsive to student lobbyists but sometimes did not realize the extent of the universities' problems.
For Application
And Color Brochure
Please Call or Drop by
NAISMITH HALL
1045 NASHVILLE
Lawrence, Kansas 60044
913-843-8559
Tallman said the postcard drive was a start, but that it came too late in the session to be really effective.
He said they delivered about 400 postcards from KU students to Topeka.
A privately owned residence hall.
The results of the student vote must be made known to the Board of Regents, but an amendment to the bill makes the referendum non-binding—the Regents are not required to follow the wishes of students.
- private sleeping study areas
* wall to wall carpeting
* home cooked meals
* and all you can eat
* winter swimming pool
* private telephone service available
* maid service
* cable tv lounges
* air conditioning
* on-air bills
* an active social program
(parties, contests ... )
"We got some really nice responses. We gave the Legislature a chance to hear directly from students—it opened the door." Keighley said.
Take
HOME OF THE DOLLAR SCHOONER
10.610.62
ASK also sponsored a postcard drive
give students direct input to legislators
1
TIME OUT
WILL BE 40° THE REST OF THE NIGHT.
KEIGHTLEY SAID KU representatives traveled to the Statehouse two or three times a week to follow student issues.
PLAN TONIGHT AROUND TIME OUTS
COORS GLASS NIGHT. COME EARLY TONIGHT.
BUY YOUR FIRST DRAW FOR $1.50 AND TAKE HOME
A NEW 12 OZ. COORS GLASS COMPLIEMENTS OF TIME OUT.
THAT'S NOT ALL. THE DRAWS OF COLD COORS
WILL BE IN THE BEST OF THE WRIGHT
The bill is expected to receive final approval when legislators return from a two-week recess April 27. "It's a chance for us to get back in." Child from there, "Gerbertsonberger said.
TONIGHT IS COORS GLASS NIGHT AT TIME OUT
branch of the group improved this year because it involved campus leaders from several different organizations.
"They help us make the policy, then they go back and communicate to their groups," he said.
Taco Sale. 2/99c
He said organization of the KU
2/99c
Good through April 25,1982
TACO JOHNS.
1101 W. 6th
1626 W. 23rd
The Day After Trinity: J. Robert Oppenheimer and the Atomic Bomb (1981) 90 min.
Ingenuously fashioned of rare footage from a past that was hidden at the time, this film is a penetrating commentary on scientific inquiry, Oppenheimer's fall from grace, and the tragedy of continuing nuclear proliferation.
7:30 & 9:30 p.m.
Thursday, April 22
308 Dyche
7.50 & 9.50 p.m.
Admission: $1.50 (at the door)
NOW LEASING FOR SUMMER AND FALL
Sponsored by Western Civilization Program
[ HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APARTMENTS ]
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY EXTRAS:
- Individually controlled high efficiency heating and air conditioning.
- One of the newest and most energy efficient complexes in Lawrence.
- Free covered parking with 1 & 2 BDRM units.
- Two and three bedroom units from $315 to $395 per month.
- Quiet southwest location off 22nd and Kasold.
2040 Heatherwood Dr. No. 203
913-843-4754
Take the groys out of Spring!
---
We have more than your basic greys ... we have many new colors in sweat pants to choose from Also an assortment of swimwear available. Danskin Speedo Offshore Irod
LITWINS
1
Page 12 University Daily Kansan, April 22, 1982
JOHN HANKAMMER/Kansan Staff
100%
Diane Miller, Shawnee junior, demonstrates the warm-up station at the 14-station obstacle course. The warm-up station is both the start and finish of the course.
Neighbors build workout area
Fitness course more than playground
By JAN BOUTTE Staff Reporter
To the trained eye, it appears to be just another neighborhood playground, but the toys on the corner of 13th and Louisiana streets are for grown-ups who are seriously concerned with physical conditioning.
The Oread Neighborhood Association completed construction of a physical conditioning course on the last week that includes 14 exercise stations inside a thorough workout, AI Wheeler, designer of the course, said recently.
"we noticed a lot of joggers going by here, and there wasn't a place to work out outside in Lawrence," Wheeler said.
At the end of last summer, the neighborhood association began planning the fitness course, which Wheeler said he modelled after courses he had run in Washington, D.C., and in the Kansas City area.
Each of the 14 stations is marked by a post with instructions sealed in
plexiglass showing how to do each exercise.
Wheeler said they decided to use pictures because many similar courses did not show the runner exactly how to do the exercise and some did not do them right—negating any benefit the exercise would have given.
Near the instruction posts are the simple pieces of equipment needed to do the exercise. Most are made of wood x4x5.
Wheeler said the neighborhood association received much community help with building the course.
He said that welding students at Lawrence High School had done the work on the parallel bars, and that the man dug the holes to anchor the posts.
Wheeler said the volunteer work had made it possible to build the course on a shoestring budget of $300, which the students loved. "We get from community improvement funds."
include the complete workout on the space provided.
Wheeler has included an optional mile's worth of jogging in the course by suggesting that the jogger run to 14th street and back four times during the race.
While other courses are more spread out and include running from station to station, Wheeler has devised a way to
Wheeler stressed that the course was for people at any stage of physical conditioning.
Leasees advised to be wary
By JAN BOUTTE Staff Reporter
The time of the big move is approaching. En masse, the student body will pack up and move out. And along with the big move and finals, students have begun the big search. Everyone is going to find the perfect place to live next year.
Whether moving out or contracting for next year's housing, students need to be聪慧-smart, Clyde Chapman, of Consumer Affairs, said recently.
Chapman said that a lease signed at the beginning of the landlord-tenant relationship dictated what happened at the end of the lease period, and that tenants should get that lease out now and check their side of the contract to avoid losing any money when moving out.
"It pays to look over your lease to be sure you've met all your obligations before the absolute end." Chapman said.
A BIG CONCERN for tenants moving out is the return of the security deposit. Many factors can block the prompt return of the full deposit.
The landlord has the right to expect the tenant to leave the apartment in the same condition as it was when rented, allowances for normal wear and tear.
Chapman recommended that the tenant make an appointment with the landlord to go through the apartment before moving out, to evaluate the condition of their place and agree on which charges could be fairly levied against the security deposit.
Chapman said that this appointment could give the tenant the opportunity to fix any problems before moving out, to avoid charges.
The evaluation should use the checklist made at the beginning of the lease by the tenant and landlord.
MIDNIGHT SHOW FRIDAY & SATURDAY
THE ROCKY
HORROR
PICTURE SHOW
Varsity ADM. $3.00 OPEN AT 11:30
Once the damages are assessed, the landlord is required to return the safety deposit within 14 days. He can be taken out with a fee. The landlord does not return the deposit within 30 days.
THE LANDLORD is required by state law to make such a checklist within five days after the tenant moves in, and it can be used to compare the condition of the apartment at the end of lease to its condition at the beginning.
Chapman said this was one reason why he recommended that tenants meet with their landlord before moving out, so that the expectations of both parties could be discussed and understood.
Chapman said that an increasingly prevalent problem was the condition of carpet in apartments. He said many landlords held tenants responsible for cleaning of the carpets, contending they were clean when the tenants moved in.
Subleasing also becomes important at this time of year, as students who signed 12-month leases may want to participate by the apartment for the summer months.
CHAPMAN SAID that it was important to work out arrangements with the landlord before subleasing an apartment. He said that, ideally, the tenant should have a written agreement with the leasee that clearly defined the terms of their lease. He said that the original tenant was not released from responsibility for the lease.
"In all cases of subleasing, the original lesee is ultimately liable," he said.
Before permanently moving out, it is
important to contact the utility companies and arrange to stop service, so that billing will not go beyond the moving date. Chappman said.
In order to avoid problems getting utilities hooked up again in the fall, it is also important to arrange for the final hill to be naid proximity.
Many students are turning their attention toward housing for next year, and Chapman emphasized that the most important thing a tenant could do was have a thorough knowledge of the lease before signing it.
Varsity
Downtown 843-1065
"Unfortunately, students don't pay any attention when they sign their leases," he said, but often do not. The contractual agreement they are entering
"Never take an apartment sight unseen," Chapman said. "Check everything—flush the toilets, run the faucets, if the water is hot or cold, turn the faucets and the windows—those are things you'll end up being charged for later."
An important consideration in deciding where to live is utility payments. Rent can look inexpensive until utility costs are included. Chapman suggested that prospective tenants should ask utility companies to estimate the monthly cost for the apartment or house to get a good idea of what costs to expect.
Chapman said that when renting older houses in Lawrence that have been divided into apartments it was particularly important to find out how the utilities for each apartment were computed, because many times there was one meter for the entire house, and the cost was divided equally.
STADIUM CAMP
KU Cricket Club will open its season this Saturday, April 24 at 3:00 p.m. on the grounds near 23rd & Iowa (Rugby Grounds). In case of rain or unusually cold weather, the game will be
postponed to the following Saturday, time remaining unchanged.
All players. old and new, novice and professional are urged to contact one of the persons listed below. Plans will be made to select the team for the forthcoming matches with Kansas State, Kansas City, Iowa State, Topeka, etc.
Anil Gulati 864-6351
Abhav 749-0750
Venkatesh Narayanan 749-1756
Funded from the Student Activity Fee
Call 864-4358
The University Daily KANSAN WANT ADS
CLASSIFIED RATES
two three four five six seven eight nine ten
two three four five six seven eight nine ten
2 words each word
eight eleven twenty三十四五十六七十八九十
each additional word
AD DEADLINES
ERRORS
to run
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 8 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 8 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 10 p.m.
The Kanana will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE 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 844-538.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
News and Business Staff Positions
The Kansan is now accepting applications for Summer and Fall Semester news and business information, application forms are available at dent Senate Office, 105, B KANSAN union; in the Office of Student Organization and Activities, Strong Hall and in Room 200 at Dearborn University applications are in due for 200 Fint Hail by 5:00 p.m., Friday. April 23.
To the best secretaries on the hill; Dare,
Mary Baird; Linda Ruiz; Ruth, Susan, Sharon,
Janiece, Mary Barb, Terry, Bill, Nancy,
Deb, Deb, and Susan (see brom in Hill
Square).
The Johnny Mosehead band will appear at Off the Wall Hall this Friday and Saturday. The audience Lee Mosehead will open the show and jingle by Mosehead. Music from b8 19.9. 4-23
The University Daily Kanase is an Equal OpportunityAffirmative Action institution are sought from all qualified people regardless of race, religion, color, sex, disability, national origin, age, or ancestry.
FOR RENT
Social climbers will start this Thursday night. Come out to see Hoboken's avant garde band. Free beer, 8 ill 9. 4-22
ENTERTAINMENT
Wanted outgoing Christians and conso-
cious students to share a 3-bedroom house at
Kentucky next fall & fall $100-$250
Darry $141-7802, included with
Darry $141-7802.
Every Tuesday is open microphone night on the Off Wall Hall hosted by the Ebeling Bros. $2 pitcher, 75x bottles, 4-12. No cover. 4-30
HANOVER PLACE. Completely furnished,
with stainless steel appliances between
14th and 16th floor, K.U. DON'T DELAY. Reserve your apt
K.U. DON'T DELAY. Reserve your apt
on a month's rent or 825-3485 or 825-3485.
Live in the CHRISTIAN CAMPS HOUSE
This summer & fall' All become a part of
a growing campus ministry. Call Alan Nasir,
campus minister 842-652-11.
If
For rent to mature mack student. Quiet,
comfortable efficiency apartment. Private
kitchen. Close to the Union. Reasonable
price. 842-4155. t
Established **STUDENT COOPERATIVE** close to campus and downtown. Own bedroom; study. Six sleeping rooms each week. $75-$100 utilities all times. SUNFLOWER HOUSE. 842-8421.
TRY COOPERATIVE LIVING. Sunflower
house, 842-9212. ff
Available now. Two bedroom spacious apt
utilized, carpeted & drapered all electric
furniture, wi-fi Internet, campus,
and on bus route. $34 per month.
BROOKLAND BACKWARD 10th & Crestline
845-4800.
TRADIAGE. Leasing for full-studios, 1.3 & 3 bedrms, with town/town tenancy. Cash for loan, gold bank沃特金 bank. Laundry facilities on the premises. Swimming pool. Security on K-1. K-12 routes. Water security
MID CENTER BOUND? Newly refurbished
2 BR Duplexes available now. Carrier, A/C-
Appliances, parking. Call (913)-381-2870.
Must see to believe. Furnished rooms with utilities paid near university & downtown.
No pets. Phone 841-5500. tf
PRINCETON PLACE PATIO APARTMENTS.
Now available, 2 bedroom, 2 bath, perfect for roommates, features wood burning fireplace, dishwasher/water hookup, fully-equipped bathroom, 30-39 bedrooms. Open house March 18-30. Prior booking 896-753-4255 phone #896-753-4255 for additional information. If
SOUTHERN PARKWAY TOWNHOUSES,
26 & Kashaul. If your tired of apartments
that don't have balcony or duplexes,
feature 3 br., 1/2 bath, all appliances
adjusted, garage swimming pool, lots of
backyard, patio, pool, summer and fall. Call Craig Levr in evening at 749-156 for more information.
SUMMER SUBLEASE. May rent free, walk to campus or downtown, June & July rentable. 2 bedroom, utilizes reasonable in summer. Call 843-7176, comfortable, clean.
Purnished one bedroom apt. for sublease.
Excellent location to campus and downtown.
Central air heat. Available May 15. Call
842-6856.
4-30
SULBLEASE ME 1: AM a two bedroom apartment in the Mala邹 English Village located on bus routes and within walking distance of city centers, fireplace, spa and pool. Gas air cond. fireplace, spa and pool. Your would like to live within my plush apartment. Call 841-5352 or 843-5352 G-74
Summer sublease, 2 BR Ap, Close to campus, 10th Mississippi, A.C. dishwasher Available after finals, $290, 842-2655, 4-22
Summer sublease or June to June lease.
Large 2 bedroom droom, d.w. a.c., pool,
hair pal, ed. & near Fillcrest, walk, bike
bus to campus. 748-0288. 4-23
Rooms available for summer $109-$140 per month included utilities. Close to campus and quiet atmosphere. Call Darryl 841-7692.
"THE SUMMER PLACE!" NAISMITH HALL
1800 Naismith Dr.
"Just Across The Drive From
Campus"
943-8559
• Private Baths
• Private Sleeping Study Areas
• Camping
• Fourteen Meals Per Week
• Air Conditioning
• Fitness Center
• A Lease Agreement for your
Summer Plans
• Caravan or Payment Plans
• High Rise Living With A
Swimming Pool
and An Active Social Calendar
--house on KU bus route 5, tennis etc.
June-July sublease. 2 bids & 2 bdm,
duplex, air cond., furnished $225/month
843-5230 (vee.) . . . . .
Wanting to sublease bilease, 2 bdm., apt for summer. New, AC, dailwasher, water closet, walk-in closet, walking distance of campus and downtown. Summer sublease. Furn. only, Clean close to campus. Low until. B41-7080. 4-30 Attractive 2 room apartment, unfurnished. Water closet, available May 1. B42-9046, after 6. 4-23 Meadowqueback sublet to studio. June and July, option to rent $15/month, water closet, ground level, lots of grass and trees, ground, level, lots of grass and trees, evenings, before 9. 4-28 Furnished one bedroom apartment. Bills included. Accommodate TV, BBQ, evening, before 9.
May rent free! Summer sublease/fall option:
Trailrider 3 bedroom, 1½ bath on
house on KU bus route. 3 pools, tennis
etc.
843-7426 4-23
Second floor 2-bedroom furnished apartmen-
t with living room, dining room, August 19 and/or earlier. Within walking distance to KU and downtown. RK00 plus RK10. Call 643-8700 for appointment. If no answer
Summer Sublease. 1 bedroom Cedarwood
Apartments furnished. Terma negotiable.
848-909-6000
848-909-6000
SUMMER SULLEASE with fall option. Modern two bedroom apartment in 4-plex. Central c/2. New appliances. Seven rooms. C/2. Available. May Visit 836-5417. 4-23
Sublease with rent option 3 or 4 bedroom house with garage. 21st & Natalmith Cottage. £200/month.
Summer sublease-Female wanted—$120.00
per month + 1/5 utilities. Bed 4.2-
room house between campus & downtown.
789-342
4-23
Now Leasing
Apts. Duplexes-Houses
Furnished or Unfurnished
Studios, 1, 2, 3 & 4 B R
Excellent Location
Thursday Real Estate Area
Kaw Valley Management Inc.
901 KY, Suite 205
"Professional Real
Estate Management."
2.
Share beautiful two bedrooms house—mature non-smoker needed after May 30. Carpets, road-off street parking, furnished (except 2 + 1 utilities); 842-7084. Keeping 4-26 Summer sublease. Real close to campus Call 842-4346 for more information. 4-26 Spacious 2 bedrooms, 1½ bath, full kitchen, pizza placer, supermarkets. Mall has pool, Heating, hot water free, carpets, cable TV 749-4570 or 673-007. 4-30 749-4570 or 673-007. 4-30
1 bedroom apartment with loft. Furnished.
AC. Next to the Sanctuary on 7th. Great
condition. Call 842-8709. 4-30
Summer Sublease 3 bedroom townhouse at
Trailridge $400 monthly. Call 749-168, 4-28
Subbase 2 bedroom apartment at Meadow-
brook. Anytime May to August 15. Call
843-3052 4-30
Summer sublease: Beautiful, new 4-bedroom
home with 2 baths: A/H, D/W, Fireplace,
in new residential area. Available May 20
through June 15 in fall. Rent $875.
Call 841-7879.
SUMMER SUBLEASE Available May 15
walk to campus or downtown. Modern 2 bedroom, bedrooms 1 and 2 less reasonable in summer; clean, cheerful apartment with deposit required. Call 648-717-160
Female to share space 3 bedroom 2 bath furnished apartment. $25 plus 1/3 utility space.
Summer sublease $65.00 off per month. Located at Hanover Place Apartments. New, furnished, excellent location. Fall option. 81-282-2003. 4-29
For May, very nice summer school rooms in large quiet house one block from Union. In May and August we see at 1289 Ohio. Beautiful views from our kitchen and bathroom. Coop the kitchen on the second floor.
BENT NEGOTIABLE—must sublease modern 2 bedroom apartment; AC; convenient, clan. 842-5199. 4-26
3 quiet, reep.table home work place to live-house or apartment-starting in August. Call Nancy, Ellen, or Paige at 864-5841-427
or 864-5844.
Sublease—2 bedroom apartment, Oak, June-July. Rent negotiable. Gas, water paid. 841-8911, evenings. 4-27
HOUCHTEN PLACE. Summer leases. 841-1772, 2409 Alabama. If
Apartment, summer sublease. 2 bedroom/2 bath, good location, pool, laundry facilities. Call 841-3584. 4-23
Furnished upstairs studio apartment, available May 15. On K.U. bus route, and close to downtown. C/A' If
5 bedroom, 3½ bath. 2 car garage, fireplace,
griddle, oven, 1 bathroom, 1 bath. 1 car garage, all appliances.
3 bedrooms, all appliances, all appliances.
49-38238 - 69-38238
Wanted: 2 or 2 females to share 8-bedroom house very close to campus. Summer only;
Room sizes: max + minimal 4-8 beds.
49-38238 - 69-38238 - 4-23
big beautiful renovated house with washer, dryer and porch aspen wishing to have a new bathroom that houses $10,500 in utilities each. Close to campus and downtown. Available May 14. Call 789-4260-3287.
Carpeted, remodeled 2 bedroom house with in walking distance of Medical Center $240.00/month. Appliances, furnished. 1-699 0474 4-21
A very small, small two bedroom; and very close to campus. Prefer non-smokers. 4-1/2 p.m. Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Sat. 3-1/2 p.m. 1-5 p.m. Street. 4-23
SUMMER SUBLEASE with option for fall.
Modern 2 bedroom apartment. low utilities,
short walking distance to campus and down-
4-90
841-1175
Sublease, no May rent. 1 bedroom. Fall option. Water, cable rent. Dairywater, air conditioning. laundry. Will deal. 749-2471
SUMMER SUBLEASE: Furnished 2 bed-
room, pool, air conditioning, dishwash-
er, in Applicroft. 843-363-108.
4-27
Needed: One person to fill one bedroom in
3 bedroom apartment. Nice place to stay.
Room rental $10,400 monthly. Ask for Dave,
Chris, or Bob. 841-2756. 4-28
Must nublease for summer. First month rent paid. 1061 Indiana, Apt. D. Call 842-9766 after 9:00 p.m. 4-27
Nice, quiet furnished one bedroom apartment in Sundance apartments. 823$/month, water paid, on bus route. Call Sue, 842- 2330. 4-27
Ned a place to live this summer? Subtle beautiful 2 bed - door-moop. air conditioning, fully furnished. Perfect location—across the street. Call 4-877-323-1000 Ask for Leftover or Judy.
2 bedroom apartment to sublease for sum-
mage rent. One block from campus. Call 843-1476.
Summer Sublease, fall option - Studio $180;
Winter Sublease - Close to campus
downsown, 749-1088.
Nice 1 bedroom apartment close to campus and downtown. Air conditioner, $175 plus utilities. Call Linda, 841-7451. 4-23
Summer sublease with extension option in:
1. 3 bedroom apartments with central air,
fully carpeted, dwilight, pool and venetian
fence.
2. Make an offer. 841-890-8678.
3. 4-30
2 bedroom apartment 5 R. central air, stove and refrigerator, no grids. Preferred availability. June $240 924 New Hampshire; 833-850. 4-30
Summer submenu with option in fall. New
3 bedroom duplex on Orchards golf course,
3015 University Dr. $465.00 per month. 841-
8225.
4:30
4-50
Summer and fall rental, houses and apart-
ments. Erikson, 843-1691 or 843-2582; Lynch, 843-1691 or 843-2582;
Summer sublease. Reduced rate. Walk to
campus. Furnished. Air conditioned. 843-
2582.
PERFECT FOR ONE LINE. Space partition,
bedroom, partly furnished, 5 minutes from
campus. $250, usufried paid. 843-7270 after
payment.
University Daily Kansan, April 22, 1982
Page 13
2 bedroom townhouse 3 blocks from campus,
14th & Kentucky, A/C full kitchen, garage,
formatted 1'5' bath, pried to sublease.
842-295. 4-30
www.duckduck.edu
Summer suit—mid-May to mid-Aug. Right next to campa. Two buildings. All air conditions, including air conditioning. Swimming pool. Call 843-4099 before 11 p.m. 4-28
Summer sublease on spacious apartment for two. Rent is negotiable. More information? Call Amy D. at 843-6283 or Lila K. at 843-4715.
- 40-25
-
Two bedroom apartment in residential area
northeast of campus. Available June 1,
summer and/or fall. Call Steve after 5:00
p.m. 841-3833. 4-30
Sublease: One bedroom apartment, furnished,
$150 per month, no utilities. 842-
2836. 4-26
Sphaeuclus provided 4 bedroom room, 708# Stafford Road. Family room, pool table, all beds. 3 guest rooms. 2 private rooms. 4 graduate students or 2 couples. $215 apiece. utilities. 207-615. Refferences required.
**SubLEASE - Meadowbrook Studio UU228 II**
*Place, $230/month, water and gas included*, furnished, private swimming, family room, TV, 842-820-daytime 7:45-
*evenings* 4:26
For rent, 2 bedroom apartment, furnished,
air conditioned, close to shopping and
campus, on bus route, $250/month.
842-372-222 between 7-5 p.m. WKL WEEKEND
4-28
SUMMER SUBLAGE. Possible fall. May rent free. Infurnished 1 bedroom apartment. Wet, clean. Low rent & uffitiles. CA/heat. Natey 749-500 2 weeks & Vanocks or Vans
Sublease, TRAILRAGE 1 bedroom apartment, May 11- July 31 with extension option in the fall. May rent free. Call 842-8285 after 5.
Sublease. 2 bedroom, apartment, 1% block from stadium. Air conditioned. 2 years old. Available May 19-July 31. 841-0073 for 4-68 p.m.
BULLEASE WITH OPTION TO RENEW
one bedroom, fireplace, private rear encosed
bedroom with walk-in closet and pond
garden, 2 pools, 4 tennis courts. Beautiful
landscape and landing. Call 811-342-6542.
FABULOUS DUPLEX! Live in style! 3 bedrooms, 1½ baths, fully carpeted, Central air and heat. Call 842-8851 now! 4-30
Sublease with option to renew for $100
Female only 3 bedroom apartment $140.00
month + 1/3 electricities. On bus route:
841-7634 4-26
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Makes sense to use them-1) As study guide, makes sense to use them-2) As study guide, makes sense to use them-3) As study guide, makes sense to use them-4) New Analysis of Western Civilization inviting you to town Center, Town Crier, University of Washington.
Alternator, starter and generator specialist,
Parts, service, and exchange units. BELL
AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-9069, 3800
W. 6th.
1979 Vespa Bravo Moped, 2200 miles. Excellent condition. 864-1092. 4-23
Stereo-Telesiphone-Video Recorders. Names only factory. Factory装载 cartons. Lowest prices in the K.C. area. Get your best price. Call Total Sound Distribution 0200-6300. 4-30
1979 MAZDA RX7-GS PURFREC. 843-825
842-6233. 4-30
1967 Blue Merc. Cougar, 289 el., auto. A/C/AM/FM cassette, runs good. Call Jack 430-655-4452
1981 GN400X Suzuki. NEW $1495. Asking
$1200. Only 37 miles. Call 842-7679 after 6
pm.
Trek gear, Reynolds frame, Campagne
gear and brakes. Contact Tiff. 843-7570
1980 HONDA CX500 DELUXE shaft drive,
water cooled, windshield, backrest, luggage rack,
2.600 KILIPS 843-1484.
4-23
Rare acoustic guitar has to be sold immediately. Call Mike. 749-4278. 4-23
TENNIS RACKETS—Head, Wilson, Dunlop,
Princess, Yinez-Goody-Selection, new.used.
Will buy yours if in good condition. 842-
6713 after 6:00 p.m. tf
Dorm room sized carpet remnant. Rust, gold pattern, $5 or make offer. Cindy 842-445-688
Stereo receiver—Yamaha CR640. 45 watts.
Excellent condition. Call Mark 841-1168.
4-23
*Must sell immediately: 76 Chavy Monza, 42*
*Can supply 1000 excellent condition*
*to handle inquiries:* 4-23
memoriale can musi 1942-1943.
Housen IDS x 125 - 460 miles, only ridden by
Priest to Church. $695. Peter Casparian.
814-465-843. 814-832-803.
4-23
*Sanyo personal portable stereo cassette
player with headphones. Cai Russell.
4-23
4-25
Stereo very loud, very clear, buy it now,
blowout your ear, extremely loud 844-6624
Heek Chalk 72.8 audio and video tapes still available. Video—$50/show or $125 com-
pared to $/show or $15 complete. For Brian 49-1167 morning or 45-1234 afternoons
or 49-1167 morning or 45-1234 afternoons
Rhodes 73-key electric piano with Fender
keybo rexer amplifier Callights. 280-
450MHz
Perfect sleeper mattress and boxsprings with
runners, head and footboards. $85. 842-1193.
Keep trying! 4-27
1981 Suzuki GS450T black, beautiful, luggage rack, back rest, crash bars, must sell-getting books 842-4884, 4:00 p.m.
4-27
Honda 450, 1974, good condition Aking-
8450 Call Pete or Jan at 843-8454. 4-23
For Sale: Hewlett Packard 34 C calculator,
used 3 months. $85.00. Call 843-0733 for
details. 4-22
ATTENTION Eosteric Audio. Hafer DI-
110A PREAMP. Hafier DI-120A Companier.
Mitsubishi L-4-20, turntable. NAD 40294,
AM-TECH Power Meters. Audio Control
Power Meters. Audio Control Richter
Staale Bass EQ. & Crossover Kit.
M & K Walnut Subwoofer. Portable rack
with fan. host rack walnut D-6". Disk kit,
original papers and books, call机
4-48 114-113
1972 BMW 2002 tii. fuel injected with 5
speed. Very good running condition. $2500.00
firm. Call 483-1583. 4-28
10 speed, mime 24" frame Jeanne French
wheels, tire wreath, Mazer carousel pull brakes,
Suntour derailer, like new. $175.00, 843-
2069.
Harmonum B-5 in, sharp black vinyl); and
Groovy Groove (B-1 in, shiny black vinyl);
group includes Jake speake '1898; Cull
Rock '64; 2013; Jake Speake '88; 2013;
Boat's Kemenuh 1.9 cable ft. refrigerator 8
Boat's Kemenuh 1.9 candle flame 8
Must sell by May 15. Mail 644-8390
2 Rattan /wood nightstands. O'Sullivan stereo
speakers. Flat screen TV. Bike rack. bike rack. C4-828-8955. 3-4-30
10 watt Onkyo receiver. Pioneer turntable.
Kenwood 3-way speakers. $650. 841-6148.
1977 Mercury Monarch Ghia, a/c, eruise,
am/fm cassette, runs great! $1900. 841-6148.
4-26
1975 Rabbit, 2 door, hatchback $1600, or best offer before May 5th. 841-0672. Keepying
4-30
Speakers: Kilisch Herenny's, very efficient speakers for the discreet discernance Great for lazies. Retail $740 must buy, $500. 841- 1117. 4-28
King size bed-mattress and box springs,
excellent condition, $150, 843-947, Curt.
FOUND
Small puppy, looks like a German Shepherd. Found at KTE house on Wednesday, 14th. No older than 8 weeks. Contact Scott Brown, 843-3310. 4-23
Grey male kitten, about 8 weeks old. Found near 19th & Maple. Call 842-9248 after 6:00.
One billfold. Call 843-3610 after six o'clock.
4-23
Red Thermos in Wescoe. Call 842-9634
Pecan roll. 4-23
School ring found at Oliver Hall. Call 864-
6904 and identify. 4-26
A green jacket found at Ruekbielkinde,
wegun夕夜; stage call. N814-8150, 4-26
HELP WANTED
Attention: Business Students, Nationally known company interviewing students for summer work program. High profit and excellent results. Call, 748-5227. 4-27
Programmers. Local Company needs part-time programmers for microcomputers. We can supply equipment. Send resume to P.O. Box 3859, Lawrence; Attention David.
Are you committing to running Kansas City Bay? No, but if you're willing to drop off UDK's at the KU Bank Center. For information contact Linda Cohen at 39th and Olache, KS, 65110 393-8488 or www.kubank.com.
Earn up to $60 or more each year beginning September for 1-3 years. Set your own hours. Monthly payment for placement on posters at the Muster House. Phone: 800-258-4082, 4-23
SUMMER CAMP JOBS in the Northeast.
Send self-addressed, stamped envelope to Midwest Camp Consultants, 1785 Red Coast,
Marvel Hills, MD. $6043. 4-22
Energetic, permanent waitresses wanted.
Must be willing to work. Hourly wage plus tips, commission and incentive bonus. Apply at GAMMONS at 3:00 p.m. **4-22**
Lead Guitarist needed for established professional contemporary rock group. Serious players only, 841-9797. 4-22
Experienced bartender needed; References required. Must be able to work summer, start immediately. Apply in person. 185 New Hampshire. 10-2 p.m. 4-28
WANTED: Production workers for day shift, 7:45 a.m. - 4:30 p.m. Apply by email only at E & E Specialties, 910 E. 2nd. We are only an opportunity employer. 4-22
KU-Y is seeking a full-time coordinator for a 3 semester period at the University of Missouri, Kansas. You will be quarter time and the program coordinator must
We are looking for 25 independent, hard work students for full-time summer work. Must be willing to release. Opportu-
nities can earn approximately $1,800. 4-279-749-3227
The Eastern Civilizations Program anticlerical accreditation will recognize the vacancy for the academic year 1983-84. Conduct a master's degree in History, Culture & Sciences at 2118 Womens Hall 664-745 and May 14-19, 1983. An Equal Opportunity Program is offered.
Anticipated Graduate Assistance • Graduate or Undergraduate hourly job in UCSpace Technology Center-KAISR Program, Nicholas School of Design, UCSpace Technology Research Assistant (hourly) Length of employment (daily) 20 to 40 hours; $23.5r regularly, hourly. Graduate or Undergraduate hourly job in graphic qualifications. Duties: Photo and image interpretation, cartography. Graduate or Undergraduate hourly job in organizing files: literature searchers drafting, other application forms and further information. Graduate status: course work in photo interpretation, information systems or equivalent. Application forms and further information. Applications accepted now through May 5. Equal Opportunity Affirmation 4-10.
JUNIOR & $NORI History, Meteorology,
and Astronomy. Please participate in a reading study for $45 for
10.50 to 3:30 on the hour and April 23 at 10.50 to
3:30 on the hour. Come to S36 Fraser Hall or call 844-4137.
AIRLINE JOBS EMPLOYMENT SERVICE-
serving domestic & international carriers
Computer Programmers & Operators
Accountants, Auditors, Drifters, Aeronautics
Engineers, Nurse's, Sales Rep Summer jobs
Educators, Nurses, Send resume with check or
money to MODERN EMPLOYMENT
JOBS 848 219-7680, Box 848 219-7680
4-22
Positions Available. Fulltime summer position available. Earn $103.50 per month. Must be willing to relocate. Write Summer work P.O. Box 296 Lawrence. K6644. 4-103.
ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT - The Center for Easiest Study seeks an administrative B.A. and experience in office-related activities, including requirements for research administration, and editorial experience preferred. Annual salary $80,000 plus benefits including a medical insurance, qualifications and experience. Applications will be considered starting at the position offered or recommendation to Professor C.J. Lee 106 Strong Hall University (3849). Contact Professor Lee for further information. An Equity Opportunity Award of $25,000 is available. Applications are sought from all qualified people regardless of educational background. Applicants are drawn from all qualified people regardless of educational background.
LOST
Tan velcro wallet and Capitol Federal checkbook inside an Omega raquet cover. Reward: 749-0406. 4-23
Month at-a-Glance pocket organizer near
14th and Kentucky. Reward. 4-23
LOST—A pair of gold-rimmed glasses in the Union. If found, call Martin at 843-1773. Reward 4-23
Lost-failure in black case. Friday morning
4-16. Reward. Call—841-0528.
4-28
Skillet's liquor store serving U-Daly since 1949. Come in and compare. Willfried Skillet Ridley. 1906 Mass. 843-8188. tf
instant passport, via, ID, & resume photographs. Custom made portraits b/w, color. Swels Studio. 749-1611. tf
PERSONAL
Say it on a sweatshirt with custom silk-
smocking in 1 to 1000 shirt by swisswear.
789-161
The Kegger—Weekly Specials on Kegel
Call 841-9450-1610. W. 23rd. tt
fax 841-9450-1750.
HEADACIE, BACKACHE, STEFK NEEP,
LEG PAIN? Find and care for
these conditions. Join Dr. Johnson
for modern chiropractic care. 843-936.
Accepted Blue Clover and Lone Star
Insurance.
DESIGN-A-SHIRT
CONTEST
$100
1st Prize
C
Entry Deadline April 23rd
For your party clothes, formal or costume,
check out the Inflation Fighter 8. E. Thr.
10-5-30 M-F 10-5-30 Sat. Open tl 8
on Thurs.
Enter now at:
kansas
union bookstores
COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES
Free pregnancy testing; early and advanced
cut patient abortion; gynecology; contra-
tions; Roe v. Wade; Overland Park, TN.
(912) 631-2000
Remember . . . mother loves you, show her how you feel this Mother's Day. Sweel's Studio for portraits of fine quality, satisfaction guaranteed. 749-1611. 4-30
Main Union Satellite
kansas union bookstores
MARY KAY COSMFITICS—Full-time beauty consultant. 842-6641. **tf**
Community Auction 700 N.H.
Every Wed. 6:30 p.m.
Consignments Accepted
Wed. 10 a.m. till sale
Sat. 10-5
841-2212
Exciting jobs at Lake Tahoe. Send $5.00 to TaheoJobs, P.O. Box 7244, Kansas City, MO 64113.
4-22
Spring Jormals. Barb's Second Hand Rose.
515 Indiana. Open till 5 p.m. 842-4746. 4-30
Wanting to talk with someone? Gay & Leabian Peer counselors available through headquarters (811-2343) or information center (864-3506) just call.
Remember, O most gracious Virgin Mary, that never was I knew, I knew thought the protection, implied her intercession was left unadded. Inspired by this confidence, I flew to thee, and I stood in her presence. I stand sinful and sorrowful. O Lady of the Word, Internate chant, and answer me, Amen.
Green's Spring Keg Prices
Busch 16 gal $38
8 gal $24.50
Budweiser 16 gal $39
Coors 16 gal $38
9 gal $25.50
Coors Lite 16 gal $38
Michelob 16 gal $44.50
Pabst 16 gal $33.95
(prices include complete CO$^2 $ tapping equipment)
Stereo-Televisions-Video Recorders. Name brand only. Factory sealed cartons. Lowest prices in the K.C. area. Get your call Total Sound Distrib. 113-284-6030 4-30
Miller 16 gal $38.00
Personal problems? Concerns? Confidential Professional Counseling. Specializing in life changing skills. Free initial consultation. 841-4144. 4-26
- Call for special pricing on multiple key orders.
808 W. 23rd 841-4420
Have you appreciated your favorite secretary this week? Let her know she is a special and unique with a special and unique gift. Send her a balloon-a-giam. 841-5688 4-25
MASSAGE. The Human Body has 640 important pressure spots. Massage is designed to help people to maintain excellent muscle condition & relaxation for better health.
Get ready for the GATOR date of June 13, 2016. Friends (Nike, Boost, Sparrow), Calvin Klein (Jimmy Jinney) are waiting during April at Alvarkan Golf Club in Boulder, a hall, ALL-MECHANDISE IS UP FOR Club or Golf Club, a mile west of Kandahar Golf Club, 8 a.m. to 9 o.m. 7 days a week.
PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTHI-
RIGHT, 843-4821.
tf
Leave your mark at KU: Vote IMPRESION. April 21, 22. 4-22
Looking for someone to take a coast to coast bicycle trip this summer. Phone 4-23
GREEN'S CASE SALE. COORS $8.79, PABST
LONG NECKS $7.19. GREEN'S $88 WEST
23RD. 4-23
Established band looking for male/female lead singers and lead guitar players. Drums, guitar and keyboard intermediate need! Drums - 841-728-1068 Drums, leave name & phone
GEORGE'S USED FURNITURE & Antiques
OPEN 9-6 p.m. 1035 MASS. BUY-SELL-
TRADE 4-30
The Douglass County Democratic Central Committee invites you to meet Thomas R. DeVries, Chairman of the Holocaust Friday, April 23, 7:00 p.m. at the Holdson Region Regency A $10 donation per person.
THE JAYHAWKER is now accepting applications for the position of Business Manager. Students interested in either position may pick up their application by sending an email to the Kansas Union. Application deadline is April 19.
S.O.B.—Business night Thursday, April 22nd.
7 p.m. at 3139 & 3140 Wescoe. Guarantee to be informative and interesting.
4-22
Lee
GENUINE
JEANS
For those confident few
who have acquired
a taste for simplicity
LTWINS
homeworkers, earn big profit! Distribute security products. Details, send stamped, addressed envelope, Coiffon P.O. Box 1541 Lawrence, Kansas 60044 4-22
NATIONAL VOLUNTEER
WEEK
APRIL 18-25
WE NEED YOU!
Call 841-5059
volunteer today!
Youthful bassist desired by quirky pop band with ideas, idols, and a more than adequate serving of talent. Contact Todd at 842-6711.
I am just looking for some fun, not a commitment. I are looking. Call Scott. 843-8153.
Financial Aid For Students
A new computerized service can help find the funds that will enable you to qualify. Five 10% sources will be provided.
Financial Aid For Students P.O.Box 381
For free and complete information:
SPECTRUM OPTICAL fantastic savings using the Lawrence Book or People Book coupons on our large selection of frames. 10:4, 10:6, M-5, M-111-13, E-7. 4th: 23-28.
Lee's Summit, Mo. 64063
Dr. John B. Ojben, Prof. of Mathematics and Ecology, on the Potential Effects and Social Effects of a Thermonuclear War Friday 4:00 p.m. Sundowner Room KS Union Dewal
BIOLOGY CLUB
Attention sophomore class to be. Executive candidate JEFF LONG as your class treasurer this Wednesday and Thursday. 4-22
Fouloul · the Starchild (ic) never watches not lansit but He is responsible; and quiet flushes the sunrise. Bent to hell in an icecube, a mound marbles? No doubt. 42
TAN ME
LOOK YOUR BRONZED BEAUTIFUL BEST
15% OFF
Spring Wide Sale
FREE session (new customers only
Spring White Sale
Guaranteed Safe & Effective: UVA Tan Beds
JVA Tan Beds
Guaranteed Safe &
Catch Some Wind
Call 841-6232
DON'T MISS YOUR OWN WEDNESDAY! Let us enjoy over and over again. On color/white cards, **84** complete (includes reception) for dates of summer. For more information, go to **Kansas City** (913) 818-3899. - 4-25
Call your certified boardselling
For Appointment
Walmers. Sun Your Bums II has arrived!
Balloons, beaded wigs, take any dye, bring ball gloves, frisbees,
beak caps, and more. Be at Poodsheim's in Lawnerville 12.00
sharp. Wear all party air and come back.
Miss you!
Graduating seniors; take advantage of our
ninor portraitrait special. For information,
call Swells Studio: 749-1611. 4-30
Holiday Plaza
Debbie—To the best Sig Kap daughter a mom could have. Get paided for Saturday! Barb. 4-22
SAILRIDER
Waterhed, Woman--You're the best roommate a person could have. If you do live in a junkyard. A little double meaning there-ha ha. 4-22
center for lessons and rentals 8420264
842-2366
Happy 22nd birthday to Dianne Van Bebor
Tequila shots at the Hatter tonight. Love.
Mamie. 4-21
*STUDENT NURSING HOME AIDES:* Share your experiences with us, as a public service organization of NURSING ROMANCE and IMPROVEMENT in conditions of NURSING ROMANCE and input on conditions and quality of care. All staff members are required to write or call us: KINN, 827). Mass St. S1, 21. KINN, 65044 (914) 305-8385 or 843-7107.
Todd Wedd.–End of classes bash–Friday,
April 30, 9 p.m. Kansas Union Ballroom
presented by Academic Freedom Action
Coalition.
4-27
Ned—We'll show D and B the meaning of t. talks. Saturday will be a blast! 4-22
SERVICES OFFERED
WRITING A RESUME? What to ask? How to say it? Stops by The House of Uber and pick up our FREE brochure on resume writing workshops, Sunshades, 8-9 Mast-3-9, NOON-SUN.
Schneider Wine & Kit Shop—the Most select of wines in lounge—Lawrence largest supplier of strong kegs. 1610 W. 23rd. 843-3212.
Professional Stringing Tennis and Racquetball. Best Prices in town. Call 842-5521 or 842-6582. 4-30
Photoscreening
Photoshop
For 50* we can screen photographs so they can be printed or copie
علم العلوم والعلوم الاجتماعية
Encore Copy Corps
25th & Iowa
842-2001
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 824-2001. 52nd & Ithw. 4-30
GRADUATE STUDENTS THEISI COPPERS
quality discounts based on total volume of
quality discounts based on total volume of
ship that can offer (variable terms)
gross shipment volume in the world) End Copy Corp.
RESUMES - Professional; studenta' remames a speciality. 841-2654. 4-30
MOPED RIDERS - It's time to get your bike tuned up for the season. Experienced cycle riders will be able to handle reasonable calls. Call Jerry 811-5123 - 4-53 TUTORING MATH SCIENCE PHYSICS
LEARN TENNIS from experienced instructor in small groups with other KU. students or private lessons 842-6713 after 6:00 p.m. **tf**
TUTORING MATH, SATISTICS, TKC
Call 841-3164 or 864-4176 (ask for Robert).
4-30
SPECTRUM OPTICAL. Come in and choose from over 300 frames and sunlamps in stock. One day service in most cases. Open 10-6, M-S. B-1413, *K-71*. 4-23
TYPING
it's a Fact, Fast, Affordable, Clean, Typing
843-5820. tf
Experienced typist. Term papers, theses, all macallaneous. IB Correcting Detective Elite or Pica, and will correct spelling. Phone 843-6545 Mrs. Wright. tf
Experienced typist. Theses, term papers,
ete. IBM Correcting Selective. Call Sandy,
after 5 p.m. 748-8918. tr
TYPNING PLUS: Theses, dissertations, papers, letter, applications,续著, treatises with composition, grammar, research, foreign students or Americans. 814-6254.
TIP-TOP TYING=experienced typist-IBM Correcting Selective II; Royal Correcting SE 5000 CD. 843-5675. **u**
Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms, graphics, editing, self-correct. Electricite. Call Eilen or Jean Ann 841-2172. tf
Experimented cylist will type term paper documents
experimented cylist will type term paper documents
non-converting document II. Curl Terry fails to
converting document II. Curl Terry fails to
converting document II. Curl Terry fails to
Experienced typist will type letters, thesas,
and dissertations. IBM correcting selective.
Call Donna @ 842-2744. tf
Experienced typist—thesis, dissertations,
term papers, mine. IBM correcting selective.
Barb, after 5 p.m. #82-230. **tf**
For PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myra.
841-4980. tt
IRON FENCE TYPING SERVICE. Evenings 842-2507. tf
MAGIC FINGERS TYPEG SERVICE. 843-
6129 4-30
Fast, accurate and experienced typist will type your papers. Reasonable. Call 842-8091.
Quality typing and word processing avail-
bility. Encrypt Copyr. Corp. Seps. 842-2001.
4-60
Graduate students hire of typing, retyping and retyping your text or dissertation?
Save time and money by word processing it:
Call 842-2601 for more info. 4-30
Would like to type dissertations, thesis, term papers, etc. Call 842-3203. 4-30
Fast, accurate, professional typing. Theses.
Accurate typing of complex grammar. 943-0288 after 5. 4-22
Professional typing. Dissertations, theses.
Instructor: Dennis Larson. 4-26
researching Sectice. Deb. 843-859-6981
IMM 4-26
Word Processing and Typing Straight
Line of Writing Straight-line
Uptown, open, overnight service Melanoma
Melanoma
For a good type call Deby for disertations
theses, term papers, letters etc at 749-
4-30 6-20
Former medical secretary will type
term papers, themes, books, misc. Call
Nancy, 841-5802 4-27
Shakespeare could write Eless would wig-
tie him up. Call 482-0443 5:00 and weekends
Experience typlist. Will correct punctuation
Call enquiries. Call events.
841-792-3600 4-26-2
OVERNIGHT EXPRESS Typing, Editing,
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WANTED: 1. NON-SMOKING Roommate to
have a roommate with a phone or
or subliminal device. 842-956-4322,
4-222
Female roommate must to share 2 bdrm.
Roommate will cost $100 a month at 4%
activities. 864-1092.
Female housemate for 3 bedroom house 1
block, 825 sq. ft., students, 2
students, $175.00, $175.00, $84.54
Roommate(s) to Trailrille Apartments
patio. Tree May rent, no gas or water bills.
Roommates must be 18 and over.
May not rent in any other building.
We want you! Female roommate for sam-
ple. Call 1-800-234-6759;
1/3 electric; 841-1911. Call now:
4-235
2 female roommates for apartment 2 blocks north of the library and/or 4-8 miles away. Call ANI, 841-8931. 4-26
Roommate wanted Summer only. Extra
nice, 4 bedroom, 4 bath house. West Law-
rence, wet no smokers. Washers/
waters, A/C, /A C/ $175 + 1/3 utility 749-
3649.
Roommate wanted, jane 1, extra nice 4 bedroom 4 bath house, West Lawrence Quitet, no smokers. Washer/dryer, microwave, A/C / $200 + 1/2 cents. 745-649-381
Person to rent master bedroom of a large
apartment. $1800/month with free
summer vacation. $1600/month with free
breakfast.
Female roommate will for summer. Nice.
Roommate Close to campus 414-350
Call for details.
Wanted: female roommate wanted for summer (at fat lady). Nice 2 bedroom duplex, $2600 per month. Call: 518-493-6125.
Wanted: Master interested in sub-leasing
business to a client, including:
give new campus, $118; call am,
365-427; fax 365-428.
Farmate poolhouse to share a bedroom apart-
ment. Rent is $450/month. Pool rent. Rent is $150/month. Utilities. Call 841-743-6920.
Roommate wanted for summer by eaying-
g senior male. Share comfortable 2-
bedroom apartment 8 minutes from Stirrup
& plus utilities. Call 483- 429.
Keeptry.
ROOMMATE WANTED/AVAILABLE for summer and next year. Move into my apartment or I can move into yours. Responsible, mature. Call Dave: 845-246-2000
Female communist wanted to want Macedonian
military bit, non-smoker and need $18750.
Must be able to travel abroad.
Babytalkers wanted for occasional care of
Support Group 843-6215 or 843-5255 4-26
Roommate to share nice 2-bedroom apartment with 2 upperclassmen. $15/month/+ 1/2 utilities. Close to campus and stores. Call Wie on 843-6872. 4-23
WANTED: 2 roommates with 2 bedrooms
apartment to share, for fall. Call Ninam
864-2321 weekday evenings. Will pay rent up
to $160.
Responsible female nounkiller to share a
Furniture, wash/ dryer, provided Cail
P furniture, wadder/dryer, provided Cail
P furniture.
Roommate for summer. House is one block south of campau. Quilt.静夜. A/C washer. dryer. dishwasher. No smoking. 841-6053 4-30
Female roommate will负责 fall/spring
room assignments. Resume:
campus Quiet, furnished, A/C, washer-
dryer, toilet, shower, pool.
Email: john.mcgrath@uc.edu
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Page 14 University Daily Kansan, April 22, 1982
Scoreboard
Basketball
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Divisional Finals
Best of Seven
New York Rangers 4, New Islanders 2 (Islanders
Quebec 4, Boston 3 (Qubble flats series 5-2)
Nerola Division
Vancouver 5, Los Angeles 2 (Vancouver wins series 4)
31. Louis 3, Chicago 2, OT (Chicago leads series
3-4)
Hockey
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
First Round
Eastern Conference Philadelphia 111. Atlanta 78
Seattle 102, Houston $7
TOMORROW'S GAMES
New Jersey at Washington (Washington leads series 14)
Philadelphia at Atlanta (Philadelphia leads series 14)
Western Conference
Denver at Phoenix (Denver leads series 1-4)
Seattle at Houston (Seattle leads series 1-4)
Soccer
MISL STANDINGS
Eastern Division
Team W L Pct GB
New York 35 7 143
Washington 17 13
Baltimore 26 17 614
Buffalo 23 19 548
Buffalo 17 13 548
New Jersey 16 16 381
Vancouver 12 16 381
Philadelphia 16 26 194
Pittsburgh 12 26 194
St. Louis 28 14 697
Wichita 28 14 697
Wichita 27 13 645 3/8*
Denver 17 14 409
Detroit 17 14 409
Kansas City 13 28 396 12/4*
Kansas City 13 28 396
Team W L Pct GB
Detroit 8 5 5 .613
Boston 8 5 5 .500
New York 5 5 5 .500
Boston 5 5 5 .500
Toronto 5 7 417
Philadelphia 7 4 690
Baltimore 4 6 182
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
No games scheduled.
Baseba11
Baseball AMERICAN LEAGUE Eastern Division
Chicago 0 2 2.800
Cleveland 0 1 5.600
Texas 0 4 6.000
Oakland 0 7 5.533
Omaha City 0 9 6.000
Minnesota 0 9 6.000
Detroit 4, Kannas Gly 1
Oakland 6, Minneapolis 2
Baltimore 8, Milwaukee 3, Toronto 1
Denver 2, Toronto 1
New York 1, Chicago 5
Cleveland 7
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Eastern Division
Team W 12 Pct. GB
New York 6 4 815
N.Y. State 6 4 815
New York 6 4 688
Milwaukee 6 4 300
Pittsburgh 6 4 360
Dallas 6 3 290
Atlanta 13 1 0 1,000
Texas 12 6 4 659
Los Angeles 12 8 4 659
San Francisco 5 8 385
Houston 5 8 385
Oklahoma 2 10 8
MEMORIALS
Montreal 3, Philadelphia 4,
New York 2, Chicago 4
Atlanta 6, Cleveland 7,
Alabama 4, Chennai 5,
San Diego 6, San Francisco 6
Team W L P Fct GB
Team W L P Fct GB
Nebraska 11 5 680
Nebraska 11 5 680
Alabama 12 6 568
Kansas 6 6 540
Kansas 6 6 540
Illinois 6 6 494
Illinois 6 6 494
Iowa state 11 5 113
Iowa state 11 5 113
By United Press International
Tigers beat Royals, 4-1
DETROIT - Kirk Gibson hit a two-run home in the first inning and left-hander Pat Underwood took it from there, checking Kansas City on four hits yesterday to give the Detroit Tigers a 4-1 victory, their fifth win in a row.
With Detroit nursing a 2-1 lead, rookie Glen Wilson singed with two out in the eighth inning and went to third on a double by Alan Trammeil. Both scored
Losing pitcher Larry Gura, 1-1, the sixth left-handed starter in a row to face Detroit, walked leadoff man Chet Lemon, and one out later Gibson rocketed his second homer of the season. He had beaten Kansas City Monday night with a two-run homer in the eighth inning.
to make it 4-1 when Lou Whitaker doubled.
Underwood, in squaring his record at 1-1, did not walk a batter and struck out three. The only run he allowed came from third-base, with his first homer of the season.
Underwood kept the Royals off second base except for the first, third and sixth innings, and the only real difference aside from the homer, came in the first.
John Wathan, who beat an infield single with one out, wound up on third base when he stole second and catcher John Wockenfuss threw the ball into center field, but George Brett could not hit it far too short, and Arnos Ots rounded out.
Balloon a Daytime
"Race to the Coast"
SENA BALLON A GRANIA
P.O. Box 3112
St. Louis, MO 63104
Larimer County
Larimer, KS 68044
Balloon-a-Gram
'Hawks split double-header with Baker
By MIKE ARDIS Sports Writer
Sports Writer
The Kansas baseball team continued its fascination with splitting double-headers when it lost yester-years' 5-4, after winning the opening win. 15-6.
By spitting the double-header, their seventh of the year, the Jayhawks kept their record at .500. The team has won four for a four-year series this weekend.
The second game was close because of a procession of pinch hitters that scored three runs in the seventh inning.
It almost worked. The Jayhawks got three runs and had men on second and third when the game ended.
COACH MARTY Pattin gave his regulars a rest until the seventh inning when he put them to bat in hoops of salvaging the game.
"The kids didn't lose it," Pattin said. "I made the mistake of not playing my regulars. We play the regulars and we beat them.
"I don't have a lot to say. It's a low point with me."
Mark Gile got his second home run of the year in the seventh, scoring Bill Yelton who walked.
Still behind by two runs, the 'Hawks continued their rally when Jeff Nuezil had a two-out single and went to third on two wild pitches. Dick Lewalen walked, and Phil Doherty doubled home Neuiz. Keith Hoskison ended the game, taking a called third strike.
Troy Grace made his KU pitching debut in the game, giving up five runs on eight hits. Grace was on the last inch but did not play a game.
"I HAD TO prove myself," Grace said. "I felt pretty good through four innings. I gave up two runs in the game, and then I hit home runs. I should have taken my own out."
Gibson came in to shut out the final 3½ innings, getting the win to raise his record to 4-2.
With the regulars starting in the first game, the Jayhawks won off 15-6. The Hawks got 12 wins on their way to the playoff aided by 12 walks and four errors.
Joe Heeney set a stolen base record in the first game with five stolen bases. Twice Heeney got on base and stole both second and third. Heeney has stolen 21 bases in a row and has scored 6 bases, with 13 of those this year.
Heeney's five stolen bases and the
baker made the game close with five runs in the fourth before Matt
team's total of 10 broke Steve Jetts' record of four and the team's eight set against William Jewell in 1980.
After four games with Nebraska, KU will return to face Northwest Missouri State on Monday and then play the team below out its non-conference schedule.
BAILEY
hawks
Jayhawk third baseman Joe Heeney steals second base against Baker while the throw goes into center field. Heeney set a club record with 5 stolen bases, and the team also record a record with 10 steals in the game.
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Presents:
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Mr. Melvin Williams Director of Affirmative Action University of Kansas Medical Center Guest Speaker
Date: Saturday, April 24, 1982
Time: Registration at 9:30 a.m.-10:00 a.m.
Workshops beginning at 10:00 a.m.
Rap-up Program at 11:30 a.m.
Place: Registration—Council Room,
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Workshop Rooms: Oread and
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For more information, please contact the Office of Minority Affairs----864-4351
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The University Daily
KANSAN
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
Friday, April 23, 1982
Vol. 92 No. 139 USPS 650-640
Vol. 92, No. 139 USPS 650-640
Local legislators give mixed reviews to budget
By COLLEEN CACY Staff Reporter
The $750 million Board of Regents budget bill now awaiting Gov. John Carlin's approval does not satisfy local state legislators, who had pushed for more money for the University of Georgia in light of the state's current financial problems, they said, the Regents came out fairly well.
Mike Swenson, Carlin's assistant press secretary, said the governor would sign the bill this morning. It allocates a total of $153 million to KU.
"I think the universities were treated fairly in light of the economic problems of the state," said State Rep. John Sohbue, D-Lawrence, yesterdays. "We are now forward-looking as we might have been."
But Solbach said he was especially pleased with the approval of a $900,000 faculty salary enrichment fund for faculty in the high-demand
disciplines of engineering, computer science and business.
business.
It provides about $270,000 for KU faculty.
THE FUND is in addition to a 7.5 percent faculty salary increase, or $3.4 million for KU. The Regents had asked for a 13 percent increase. The budget also includes a 6 percent increase in operating expenses, cut from the Regents request of 11 percent; an 8.75 percent increase in student salaries; and 60 percent tuition waivers for graduate teachers.
The Regents had requested a 10 percent increase in student salaries and a 100 percent raise for all employees.
"It's a little bit of progress over last session, considering the severe constraints on the overall budget," Slate Rep. Jess Branson, D-Connecticut said. "I am pleased, I am pleased we came out as well as we did."
Last year, faculty received a salary increase of 7 percent.
"It could have been a lot worse, particularly since we didn't get a severance tax passed," Branson said.
A MINERALS severance tax on state production of oil and gas was defeated in the Senate this year, and further efforts to pass a bill to allow the government to convene next week are not expected to succeed.
State Rep. Betty Jo Charlton, D-Lawrence, said severance tax opponents were trying to cut money from every area of the state budget to meet the growing deficit, estimated $103 million in revenues from the tax.
She said she was not satisfied with the Regents budget passed by the Legislature.
"I suppose it's about what I expected, but I'm not real happy with it," she said.
"The representatives in the House from Wichita, Emporia, Manhattan and Lawrence divided up the work and tried to amend it. I think that was an indication that we thought it wasn't
Both Chariton and Branson made several amendments on the House floor to add more money to the budget, but they all failed.
STATE SEN. Jane Eldredge, R-Lawrence,
say money that the state poured into Washburn
"Given those factors, we did better than last year," she said. "It's about what I expected—the Legislature approved the same dollars as the governor recommended."
University and community colleges could have been used to improve the Regents system.
The fund is estimated to add about 0.5 percent to salaries of faculty in the designated areas.
But Eldredge said she was pleasantly surprised at the enrichment fund's approval, although it probably wouldn't go very far toward keeping money in the sector for higher paying jobs in the private sector.
But KU faculty and some legislators criticized the decision, made by the House-Senate conference committee, to specify only faculty in engineering, computer science and business for
"I think that the fund be earnarmed for the three disciplines is a serious mistake," Eldridge said. "Next year, the medical schools and the lawyers can come in and request more money for their faculty who are leaving. It sets a terrible precedent."
SHE FAVORED allowing each university to distribute its enrichment money however it wished.
Branson also said she preferred giving each school the flexibility to suit its own criteria for the standard.
"I have quallies about it. It's going to cause problems," she said. "Perhaps there will be some adjustment next year—it could be changed."
"I think it's going to be very tight next year," Eldridge said. "We're going to have to dip into our ending balances. Next year is when we'll really feel the impact of federal budget cuts."
Faculty flight will increase morale will dip, Regents say
“If we don’t get a severance tax, it’s going to cost us a bit of a daunting dangerously low into our reserves now.”
Branson, said university faculty might not receive any enrichment money next year if state revenues continued to go down.
By ANNE CALOVICH Staff Reporter
In the past few years, groups employed by the University of Kansas have complained about
brief萨拉斯的.
KU has fought the Kansas Legislature for the past few years over the amount faculty members at KU should make.
Some argue that faculty members are underpaid. Some argue that administrators are
And for years, the Legislature has been content to give KU faculty salary increases below the inflation rate and below the increases other public employees of the state receive.
A list of salaries begins on page 5
KU has not accepted it well. Neither has the Kansas Board of Regents.
In 1891, the Regents requested a 10 percent increase, and the Legislature gave 7 percent.
THE FIGHT to raise faculty salaries has heated up in the last two years, with the Regents requesting much higher raises than the Leisulature has considered giving.
This year, the Regents requested a 13 percent increase and the Legislature approved a 7.5 percent increase April 18. Governor John Carlin is expected to sign the 1983 budget into law today
The current year's budget was approved in April 1981. This is a snapshot of KU's latest budget, which was posted in May 2013.
figures may not seem up-to-date. Some em-
ployees may move to other positions,
may some give bad news.
And most of the salaries listed are only base figures. Some employees may make more than is listed here by teaching in the summer or winning grants or fellowships. Some of the salaries are based on nine months, and some are for 12 months, such as administrators' salaries.
INCLUDED TODAY are the salaries of the unclassified employees of the University of Kansas from June 1981 to June 1982. These are the administrator's and faculty salaries.
Monday, the Kansan will publish the salaries of classified employees.
The Regents are about to send to the Legislature their annual issue paper that outlines the current status of faculty salaries and fringe benefits for Regents schools' faculty.
The paper says the University will deteriorate unless faculty members are paid what their付酬.
The best will leave the University, it says, and those who stay might have low morale. The paper says that even if KU professors receive comparable merit salary increases for the next quarter, they may have to be raised an extra 4.2 percent in the years 1984-86 to meet those of peer institutions.
THE PEER institutions used by the Regents include those that are similar to Regents schools in the academic programs they offer and those in states comparable to Kansas in terms of state population, per capita personal income and economic resources.
See BUDGET page 7
A
JON HARDESTY/Kansan Staff
Larry Brow (right), Lawrence special student, prepares to strike a blow to Richard Borton of Lawrence during a demonstration of medieval culture yesterday in front of Flint Hall. The event was sponsored by the Society for Creative Anchronism Inc.
Makeshift GSL forms now available
Because of proposed federal budget cuts in student financial aid for next year, students have not been able to apply for Guaranteed Student Loans.
However, KU's office of financial aid has created a special form so students will be able to complete applications for the GLSs for the 1982-83 school year, financial aid officials said yesterday. Jeff Weinberg, associate director of financial aid, said students had not been able to complete applications yet for the GLSs because the federal budget has not yet been decided.
"We have been telling thousands of students to come back later," he said.
He said the form would be adaptable to recognize the new federal regulations would be
WEINBERG SAID the financial aid office designed the form for on-campus use only, so students would be able to apply before the end of the semester.
"To delay any further is not fair to the students," he said.
The option, he said, is to sit and wait, which would be hard on both the students and the faculty.
With the preliminary applications, Weinberg will be able to handle 90 percent of the paperwork.
After the student and his parents have completed the application, a personal interview with the employer will be scheduled.
applications and schedule interviews as long as students were in Lawrence.
"By accepting applications, we will process them up to the point of approving them," he said. When the new regulations arrive from Washington, D.C., Weinberg said, the office immediately will be able to sign and post the loans and send them to the lending institutions.
Weinberg said that during the interview, the counselor should be able to give the student "an educated guess" of the student's chances of receiving the loan.
President Reagan's proposed budget would cut student financial aid by 50 percent.
HESAID that the office would continue to take
Weinberg said that students who had applied for on-campus aid-such as National Direct Student Loans, College Work-Study, Support for Students and University Scholarships and Health Profession Loans-should wait until they received their award letters in May before applying for GLSs.
Application forms are available today
Enrichment fund bypasses administration, council says
By ANN WYLIE Staff Reporter
University Council yesterday passed a resolution opposing the Kansas Legislature's recent allocations of salary enrichment funds to university computer science, engineering and business.
"The thing that disturbs me about it is that it's a direct bypass of the administration," said Ernest Angino, council member and professor of geology and civil engineering.
The resolution stated, "The Legislature has recognized the need for salary enrichment funds, but in concentrating on three particular disciplines, it does not follow its tradition of leaving allocation decisions to the Regents and institutions concerned."
"That precedent, I think, is a very, very dangerous one."
ON APRIL 8, the Legislature designated $270,000 in faculty salary enrichment to disciplines where KU's faculty were leaving for higher-paying jobs in private industry.
In other business, the council passed the Academic Policies and Procedures Committee's
One charge was to suggest regulations for the fairness and appropriateness of take-home final examinations and papers, but the committee would be unfair to faculty members.
"We felt it was infringing on professors' academic freedom to tell them what kind of exam to give," said Joseph Wyrick, committee chair, and associate professor of occupational therapy.
The report reviewed the committee's charges and responses.
DURING DISCUSSIONS on the fairness of take-home exams, the students on the committee suggested that students may not really like to take them.
After further studying this issue, the committee will send its findings about students' attitudes on take-home exams to faculty members, Wyrick said.
But the committee made another discovery about take-home exams.
"Our task may be an informational task," she said.
The council also passed an annual report from the Committee on Organization and Admissions.
Weather
See COUNCIL page 7
BEAUTIFUL!
Today will be sunny and warmer, access
the National Weather Service in Tampa
The high will be in the upper 60s, with winds from the south at 10 to 15 mph. Tonight will be fair, with the low in the mid-40s.
Tomorrow will be fair and warm, with the high expected to be in the mid- 70s.
Kansan fills two positions
The Kansan Board yesterday chose the business manager for the summer session
The board also extended the deadline for summer session editor and fall business manager.
Application forms are available in the
Senate Student Senate, 105B Kansas Union; in
Sharon, Bodin, Lawrence freshman, was selected for summer business manager.
the office of student organizations and activities. 220 Strong Hall; and in 250 Finl Hall.
Senior George, El Dorado junior, was selected fall editor.
Applications for fall news staff positions
in 200 Flint today. They are
at a 5 p.m. Tuesday.
Beauty of campus landscape result of nature, human work
By LISA GUTIERREZ Staff Reporter
Mother Nature's obvious contributions aside, the scenic landscape at the University of Kansas is a prime example.
"The campus would look like a terrible jungle and weed patch if caring people didn't maintain it," Alton Thomas, campus landscape architect and site planer, said recently.
"The facilities operations people take pride in their work."
A crew of 30 maintains KU's grounds
Jim Mathes, assistant director of landscape maintenance, said the spring was normally the busiest time of the year for his crew.
*'We have Commencement to get ready for.*
*'If we had a rough winter, we have a lot of cleaning up on it.*
Winter revisited the KU campus earlier this week and frosted some of the foliage.
Translated into monetary terms, Mathes said, one ton of fertilizer costs from $150 to $180.
"From what we could tell, there was a little bit of damage to the foliage, but the lilacs and flowers like that appear to be OK," he said.
Maintaining the campus landscape also included the not-too-small task of spreading from 10 to 30 tons of fertilizer a year on campus lawns, Mathes said.
The spring planting continued despite winter's respearance. Mathes said his crew had seven workers in the garden.
"The money for landscape maintenance comes from a general operating expense for
facilities operations to use for all the buildings," he said.
Mathes said the amount of the entire operating fund was about $1 million, but he could not say exactly how much was used for landscape maintenance.
Thomas said the landscaping of the KU campus was the result of cooperation between Mother Nature and the people who financially support beautification efforts—the administration, alumni and the Kansas University Endowment Association.
"We have had a high-ranking school academically, as well as a beautiful campus. It springs from the power source, administration and the Board of Regents," Thomas said.
Thomas said the administrations he had worked under in the past had demonstrated varying degrees of disobedience.
"When I came here, I was inspired by the interest Chancellor Malest had in the beautification."
THOMAS SAID Chancellor Deane Mallet was responsible for the planting of the crabbable plants.
Seventy-five percent of the crabapple trees on campus were financed by Malot, he said.
Other chancellors, such as Franklin Murphy,
were interested in other aspects of the campus.
"Chancellor Murphy was interested in fountains and he financed some of them, including the one in the Murphy Hall courtyard." Thomas said.
Alumni also support campus beautification.
I have been supportive because as See LANDSCAPE page 7
University Daily Kansan, April 23, 1981
□
News Briefs From United Press International
Argentine chief sees islands; British meet again with Haig
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina - In a defiant gesture, Argentine President Leopoldo Gattieri went to the Falkland Islands yesterday and with tears in his eyes declared "The Argentine flag will continue to fly" over the British colony seized three weeks ago.
Galtieri, the first Argentine president ever to set foot on the Falklands, arrived in the capital of Port Dunley, newly renamed Port Argentina, at
British foreign Secretary Francis Pym reported progress yesterday in more than four hours of talks with Secretary of State Alexander Haig on British and U.S. ideas for solving the "very difficult problem" of the Falkland Islands.
Members of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee assured Pym that when "push comes to shore," Congress and the American people would continue to work on issues.
Pym, who arrived in Washington from London by supersonic Concorde jet met for about two hours alone with Haig and for another two hours with aides to discuss a three-step British proposal to avert war with Argentina over the islands.
"The United States, at the moment, is making a major contribution in trying to find a peaceful settlement," Pym said after an hour-long meeting with the committee.
Paris bomb kills one, wounds 64
France retaliated for the morning rush-hour blast by expelling two Syrian diplomats and recalling its ambassador to Damascus. Syria responded in retaliation, calling on all French forces to leave.
**FALSE.** A powerful bomb yesterday killed one woman, wounded 64 other people and destroyed a Lebanese magazine office in a mighty explosion set off near the Champs Elysees by pro-Syrian "professionals" linked to the terrorist Carlos.
The explosion on the Rue Marbeuf demolished several shops and restaurants, turned cars of cars into burnt-out hulks, rained hundreds of window panes onto the streets of the elegant neighborhood and set off panic among the Elysees. One shopkeeper said the entire street shook for nearly a minute.
1.500 residents flee Anaheim fire
ANAHEM, Calif. —Sparks from a wind-whipped power line lined a palm tree here, touching off a firestorm that raged through a section of densely packed apartments near Disneyland and sent 1,500 residents fleeing the $50 million holocaust.
Flames stoked by howling 55-mph winds and fed by wood-shingled roofs jumped from rooftop to rooftop in a three-hour inferno that gutted an entire neighborhood Wednesday morning just one mile west of the famous amusement park, which was never threatened.
Although 50 buildings housing 1,000 people were destroyed in the fallout, nine deaths were reported in the two-square-mile swab of bleached soil.
"I was God's own miracle," said Bob Simpson. Orange County fire chief.
Israeli soldiers throw out squatters
YAMIT, Israeli-Occupied Sinai - Israeli troops, some of them weeping, swarmed onto roofs from ladders yesterday and evicted nearly 3,000 Jewish squatters from Yamit, the Sinai town being plowed to the ground before its return to Evot.
"The whole of Zionism is going up in flames," one squatter cried as helicopters giggled zig-zagged through pails of black smoke and diesel fires that
The Yamit resisters, sworn to fight the return of the desert region to Egypt, made their last stand on roof tops, throwing fistfuls of sand at
Some of the soldiers paused as they reached the roofs, looked up at the skull-capped civilians they were expected to fight and wept.
Subcommittee OKs job training bill
WASHINGTON - Over strong criticism by the Reagan administration, a Senate Labor subcommittee yesterday unanimously approved a bipartisan resolution to allow private companies to pay salaries.
Co-authority by Sens. Dan Quayle, R-Ind., and Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., the legislation now goes to the full committee, where the administration is expected to renew its fight for stronger language against federal payment of wages or allowances to traines.
The current Comprehensive Employment and Training Act, which expires Sept. 30, has come under repeated attack as a make-work program, with opponents saying it is designed more to create jobs than to prepare individuals for employment in the private sector.
Labor Secretary Raymond Donovan denounced the Quayle-Kennedy bill Tuesday, saying it "is not acceptable to the administration" because of differences over wages, allowances, stipends and the system of delivering federal funds for job training.
Brezhnev reappears after absence
MOSCOW—President Eleid Brezhnev attended a Lenin's birthday celebration yesterday, appearing in public for the first time in a month and a year.
Five thousand spectators at the Kremlin Palace of Congresses greeted the 75-year-old leader with lengthy applause as he carefully made his way to his
He was flanked by his chief aide, Konstantin Chernenko, who is believed to be a leading candidate to succeed him as chairman of the Politburo.
Brezhnev looked thinner than when he was last seen in Tashkent, in central Asia, on March 25. His absence since then had set off reports of a fire at his home in the capital.
First women climb Himalayan peak
The victorious mountaineers climbed the last stretch to the 22,493-foot peak without ropes or oxygen tanks and without assistance of Sherpa bearers to reach the summit Tuesday. They returned to a high-altitude camp the same day.
KATHMANDU, Nepal—Four American women have scaled Mount Ama Dablam in the first female ascent of the Himalayan peak, the Ministry of
Forestry.
The women who reached the peak were identified as: Susan Havens, 33, a physical therapist from Anchorage, Alaska; Stacy Allison, 24, a climbing instructor from Portland, Ore.; Lucy Smith, 31, an outdoor instructor from Lander, Wyo.; and Shari Kearney, 30, a climbing instructor from Lander, Wyo.
Brett will play ball in TV series
KANSAS CITY, Mo—George Brett, already a star on the baseball field, is going to try to make it an in actor on crime-time national television.
Brett, the all-star third baseman of the Kansas City Royals, said yesterday he would star in a television series. The pilot script for the series closely follows his life. The show is tentatively scheduled to be a weekly half-hour series, he said.
"The setting will be in Kansas City," Brett said, "and the film will be shot here.
"All I know is it is going to be a comedy-drama about a kid growing up in New York Yankees, like every other kid in the United States."
Driver denies guilt in deaths
The driver, Blane A. Smith, of Beatle, Kann, turned himself in to Douglas County District Court for his assault on a police officer in Douglas County District Court tudge.
A 23-year-old truck driver pleaded not guilty to charges of vehicular homicide yesterday in connection with a fatal crash that a 20-year-old Lawrence were killed.
A warrant for the man's arrest was issued, and the charges were filed against him Tuesday, Mike Malone, of County district attorney, said yesterday.
Smith was driving a 76,000-pound tanker truck that smashed into the back of the Ford LTD at the intersection of Clinton Parkway and Kasold Drive on April 16. The car was stopped at the stop sign.
ELWELL READ the charges to Smith and set the bond at $1,000. He permitted Smith to sign his own contract and set the Trial date for May 12.
The two women, Bessie Johnson and Hazel Williams, were trapped inside the car when it caught fire. The cab of the car caught fire, but Smith was able to escape.
After hitting the car, the truck pushed it through the intersection, and the car's gas tank exploded.
Malone said the charge, a class A misdemeanor, was filed based on the investigation and eyewitness reports of that person. That is what no alcohol or drugs were involved.
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- Many other features
Now that's something to call home about.
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.
ALERT
Southwestern Bell
- Discount applies to calls dialed One-Plus without operator assistance
University Daily Kansan, April 23, 1981
Page 3
KU EXPLORATION DAY '82 WELCOME!
From KU Faculty, Students and Staff
Atchison Jr. High School
Hickman Mills High School
McLouth High School
Seaman High School
Atchison High School
Highland Park High School
Neodesha High School
Shawnee Heights High School
Basehor Middle School
Holton High School
Notre Dame de Sion
Shawnee Mission South High School
Basehor High School
Horton High School
O'Hara High School
South Jr. High School
Bonner Springs High School
Immaculata High School
Olathe South High School
Spring Hill High School
Clifton-Clyde High School
Iola High School
Onaga High School
Tonganoxie Middle School
Coffeyville Com. College
Jefferson Co. North High School
Parsons High School
Tonganoxie High School
Curtis Jr. High School
Lafayette High School
Paseo High School
Topeka High School
Derby Jr. & Sr. High School
Langley High School (Virginia)
Patton Jr. High School
Topeka West High School
Desoto High School
Lansing High School
Piper High School
Tri-County Ed. Co-op
Dodge City High School
Lawrence High School
Pomona High School
Troy High School
Eudora High School
Leavenworth High School
Powhattan-Kickapoo Nation School
Truman High School
Fredonia High School
Lebo High School
Riley County High School
Turner High School
Goddard High School
Madison High School
Robinson Middle School
Valley Falls High School
Hartford High School
Manhattan High School
St. Mary's High School
Wathena High School
Haven High School
Marmaton Valley High School
Santa Fe Trail High School
Westmoreland High School
William Chrisman High School
We're glad you could join us on the Lawrence campus. We hope you enjoy KU Exploration Day '82
Opinion
Page 4 University Daily Kansan, April 23, 1981
Salaries make news
Today, starting on page 5, the Kansas is publishing the salaries of all unclassified state employees at the University of Kansas. And On Monday, the Kansas will publish the salaries of all classified employees.
These salaries take up a lot of room in the newspaper. They were a lot of trouble to retype, proofread and typeset—and most important, the salaries could cause a lot of trouble among KU employees.
So why publish it?
On a cold afternoon more than a month ago, the editor, managing editor and the four campus editors of the Kansan met to think out their reasons for wanting to publish the salaries.
The salaries are, of course, a matter of public record. It is legal for the Kanan to publish them. But the editors and the general manager agreed that no newspaper should publish sensitive information simply because it can.
that kind of follow-the-leader decision-
making can lead to dark places.
But the editors did not decide to publish the salaries simply because other newspapers had.
We begin with the knowledge that even though the publication of government salaries is unprecedented at KU, it is a tradition at newspapers such as the Des Moines Register and the Junction City Daily Union.
Put simply, the Kansan is publishing the salaries to stimulate discussion of a problem—that of chronically low salaries. And hopefully, that discussion will lead to an improvement.
Over the years, the subject of salaries is something like the weather—everybody talks about it, but no one knows much about it.
And this semester, legislators, Regents, administrators and professors have spoken of percentages, indexes, peer institution means and competitive salary increases in describing the salary problem that is forcing many faculty members from the University.
But one good way to get a clear picture of the salary problem is to publish the salaries themselves.
salaries themselves. The mechanical side of publishing the salaries was as sticky as the philosophical side.
The salaries are included in KU's 1981-82 budget. It was the managing editor's job to retype them—all 373 pages. After that, teams of reporters and editors proofread the list, then sent it to KU Printing Services, where it was typeset and proofread twice more.
The amount of time involved was compounded by staff members working from five to 12 hours a day simply producing the newspaper. They worked on the salaries list late at night and on weekends.
This helps explain why the salaries appear in the last days of the semester—much later than editors originally intended.
The salaries list certainly will cause turmoil in some departments at KU. Some Kansan staff members already are comparing their salaries (unfavorably) with those of other Kansan staff members.
We apologize in advance for causing any disturbances. But we also maintain that some of the most important functions of a newspaper are to supply information, to stimulate discussion and to stimulate changes for the better.
We are confident that after the shouting is over, the result of publication of salaries will be positive.
Recognizing society's limits strengthens male feminism
Without invitation, a man came into my apartment this week and taught me a small lesson on what it might feel like to be a woman. Afterwards, I was more glad than ever that I'd learned.
I was alone in the middle of the afternoon on Tuesday, the only weekday I can leave campus before 5 p.m., in my weekly pose: slouching on the couch with iceed tea in hand, feet propped on the coffee table, skimming my hometown newspaper.
Just as I began reading the latest on the county's government-as-soap-opera, the telephone rang. Of course, no peace for the student. Between this and the fact good woods never being able to close the door and hide under the bed again. We evidently grow up in college.
"Is Jeff there," a young man's low voice asked. The man sounded like someone about my
FATHOORA
JEFF THOMAS
age, but I didn't recognize him. Probably someone to fill me in on another side of a column I'd written, I thought. Fine, of course.
"This is Jeff," I answered.
"Jeff, you're a dead S.O.B. you communist fagot." Pause, click and buzz.
Seconds passed as my hand and the receiver drifted down from my ears, while I stared at the
My mind replayed the voice; his words had been quick and clear, almost chopped-off as they shot out the receiver, hot and callous against my ears.
My thoughts and emotions tumbled over each other, every set air jacquion in confusion. The man had just invaded my home, insulted me, threatened me—and then skipped back into his daily routine, all without showing even a shadow of his face. Looking at the receiver, I knew I could never catch him unless he wanted to call me.
Apparently the man expected the call to make him feel better.
I didn't. I felt cheated, violated and open to another call. My hands rushed forward, hung-up the receiver and jerked the unit off the wall, having it on the floor.
Back on the couch, I sat stone-headed, trying to figure out what I could have told to Mr. Noa also forget to go to work this afternoon and people simply do not "forgot" to go to
Name that would ride him enough to hurt his cruelest accusations. But, of course, that wasn't my question to ask. I hadn't done anything to ask for trouble.
"I didn't ask for it," I thought again. They were words I'd heard once from a woman talking about another kind of male intrusion. So maybe this was close to how she had felt, something near the feelings of vulnerability, helplessness and anger female feminists feel.
But after a few days of cooling down, my idea began to look like an awfully strong parallel to pull from one prank phone call. Sitting in my living room around soap opera time is a long, three-story throw away. Within an hour after the call, I'd remounted the phone; yet every night women move on campus according to sometimes unconscious combat strategies, planning where they can park under a street lamp and plotting their location for attack. All this eventually. Some people's habit of carrying a key chain in the right hand with a key or two extended between each finger is a woman's ready response.
My experiences and my body are the belongings of, not a generic person, but a specific man, and that circumstance will never change. If I would have been given a life in a woman's body in this society, my passions against male domination would be flaring more intensely now; if you could threaten me with our culture's sexist wrights as personal affronts, I'd probably erupt with the female feminist's fury, the lifelong kind only a woman can feel.
None of this should be taken as an excuse for men to quit working toward equal relations with women. Men should still lend the movement the best of their minds, hearts and actions. At the same time, men need to admit the limitations that our society and their bodies have placed on their passions, and women need to understand that though men may be giving their best, men's efforts are going to be of a different temperament than those of women.
KANSAN
To say that my anger against a sexually unequal society could be equally heartfelt with a woman's would be saying that I could shed 22 years of life—an insincere fantasy. And my future, only decades more in a male body, will only be able to perform for sympathizing equally with the female position.
No, when the closest experience I have to a woman's vulnerability is a crank call behind my locked door, I can't say that my feminism is as strong in my heart as it is in my mind. Curiously, a person's sex makes a difference in defining the feminist.
**USPS 60546** (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 60446. Subscriptions by mail are $1 for six months or $27 a year in Douglas County and $18 for six months or $24 a year in Karnataka. Postmails may be sent to the address University Daily Kansas, 2147 South Holliday Road, Joliet, Illinois. The University of Kansas
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OPEN SEASON
BARLING
Pot Shots
How many seniors have jobs? And how many don't care that they don't?
Such is the April paradox. The economy is bad, and we should be terrified at the prospect of working at McDonald's after four years of college. But there are only five days of classes left, and all those senior parties. Who has time?
According to a recent, unscientific Pot Shot
Dan Torchia
Survey, graduating seniors have the same attitude. Job or no job, seniors will wait to
Then there is my friend who is in advertisting. A professional drummer on weekends, he says, "I need a job" at the start of the situation Goodbye," a big number on the prom circuit.
My roommate landed a job in March. His attitude was bad to begin with, but now its worse. "I don't care about school, I have a laptop and I'm down to watch" Joanne Loves Chachi."
I turned this pot shot in late because I forgot
I had to write it.
Last week I got my first job offer. The personnel director of a paper called and said the paper had no writing jobs, but they had one in the circulation department.
There was plenty of opportunity, he said,
and I could set my own hours and be my own
I hung up when he told me I would be a paper boy.
No excuse. No reasons. I simply forgot.
This is the time of year for forgetting.
The sun is shining. A south wind blowing.
Birds are haggy gathering worms and all that
Johnnie Waltz
prosia spring stuff. Girls are sunbathing on porches and in the graveyard of Daisy Hill. Boys are playing baseball and Frisbee in the field beside the graves.
And finals approach. Hear that ominous music in the background? It's just like a film and I'm not the only one wandering to the campus and forgetting everything important
The agony is, of course, aggravated by the prospect of what lies beyond the seemingly
The end of spring semester is worse than the end of fall semester. Forbidding early winter weather is stern enough to put students in the mood to study.
Ah, now it begins—the mad rush to final exams. Time to study. Time to figure out a way to get a hold of the notes you weren't in class to take down. Time to clear the dust off your workbooks that lay unmolested the rest in the宴. And—Egad! time to think.
Spring weather tempts students from studying, housecleaning, grocery shopping, doing laundry, cooking and all the work they should be doing.
I plead guilty by reason of mental absence for not showing up to work and turning this pot shot in late. My body craved a quiet walk, sunshine and a slow sip of sun tea, so it put my mind and obligations on hold until my boss and editor called me back to reality.
Tom Bontanger
insumurbound summit at semester's paradise, nirvana, the single, glittering jewel in the tawdry setting of college existence—in a word, summer.
These last weeks may be a metaphor in miniature for life itself. For what worthwhile rewards are not earned at great expense? What dependents are dependent upon the labors which breed them?
Indeed, can we ever separate work from rest, anxiety from peace, happiness from torment, the good from the bad, insumac as each stands in relation to its opposite?
Perhaps, when we all've left this place,
we'll come to realize that school never ended,
that everything we do forms a succession of
classes; but there's always the ease, of
final exams and summer vacations.
Then, maybe we'll be ready to graduate
Letters to the Editor
Student worried about McCollum's future
To the Editor:
I am writing to protest the article "McColm leader wants change", which appeared in the April 5 University Daily Kanran. The things Jim Lehmere wrote just are not true!
the most glaring discrepancy concerns the vote in the election for McColburn Hall president--432 votes voted in the elections. Nice Oropaela received 176 votes, approximately 40 percent of the total. This is a far cry from Lehner's claim that "more than 600 candidates voted for one of the six candidates, and that each was the presidency" by a margin of almost 2 to 1.11.
Llehner has one long quote from Oropeza that I just can't believe is real.
"McColum has the reputation as the worst dorm on campus. Many people classify it as the International House because of its large influx of foreign students . . . This dorm has the most outdated material and worst facilities anywhere on campus."
It is common belief at McCollum that the words "reputation," "classify," "influx," "outdated" and "facilities" are not even part of Oropea's vocabulary. I trust that Lehner was paraphrasing—but one does not put paraphrased material inside quotes.
Lehner also interviewed Randle Messner for his article. He quotes Messner as saying that Oropeza has "been a hell-raiser in the past and the future—he'd done a lot to improve the dorm."
Messner is probably Oropeza's candidate for next year's hall justice. Recently, when Oropeza was brought to the hall court on charges of stealing kegs from McCallum's Valentine's Day Party and was later acquitted of the charges by the hall court—Messner was his defense attorney. Messner also lives on the same wing as Oropeza. Judging from Messner's ties to Oropeza, he doesn't sound like a very impartial source for quotes.
Well, Measner, I and about 600 other people would like to know just what improvements I made in my work.
Messner also states that this year's election was the most interesting in three years. With this I wholeheartedly agree. One never knew whose campaign posters would be torn down next.
Oropeza has had more security write-ups this year than anyone else in McColum. I can certainly understand how being president will make up for all the trouble he has caused in the past, but I don't understand why so many of the people who did not vote for him plan to live elsewhere next year.
Our only hope is that both the current and the in-coming Executive Board will stand up to him. Considering the fact that Orophea wants to take over the residence hall—get rid of the Executive Board and have a dictatorship—and has been heard to say that he will not work with the current board or some of the members of the new board, this could be quite a challenge.
Sabrina Bull,
Olathe junior
When so many people have so much confidence in Oropeza, I can certainly see that he will accomplish great things! Let's face facts! Nick Oropeza has a horrible record and, unless he changes drastically next year, McColum will just go to hell.
Insult unintentional
In a story April 5, a statement was reported that in its written text appeared to insinuate that foreign students caused the reputation that McColum Hall is the worst residence hall on campus. You see, the intent of this statement was to say that our poor reputation came from a
To the Editor:
I am pleased to find an active concerned university that takes an interest in the affairs that occur daily. (And particularly, I am pleased that when a statement, in written text, implies an insulting remark, you will point this out so that unnecessary and needless friction that can hurt others can be avoided.) Such is the case today.
weaker social activity structure. In fact, the large number of foreign students presents a unique possibility to expand our cultural knowledge so that all residents can benefit.
Secondly, some of McColm Hall's special rooms, such as the computer room, are under par, and need improvement. However, nothing is ever 100 percent perfect. As I have made clear, I will not cease in my efforts until I reach 99.9 percent, and even then I will try for 100 percent.
McCollum Hall has the potential to become known as the greatest residence hall at the University of Kansas. I am working toward that goal.
I thank everyone for their understanding and concern.
Nick Oropeza, McCollum Hall presiden
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.
白
University Daily Kansan, April 23, 1981
Page 5
Editor's note: The following is a list of salaries of unclassified employees, taken from KU'S FY 1981-82 budget.
At times, the list may not seem to accurately present names and salaries of employees. But this is because the Kansan made every effort to reprint the information just as it was recorded.
Since then, however, some employees may have retired, found new jobs or died. And some may earn more than the amounts shown because they have received grants or fellowships. Most salaries are simply base amounts.
CHANCELLOR'S OFFICE
CHANCELLER'S OFFICE
Gene A. Budig, chancellor
educ. policy & admin. 75,500
wacunatmil 0
15,500
Richard L. von Ende,
secretary executive . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41,100
Jane A. Johnson, personal secretary . . . . . . . . 18,300
Gay A. Kearney, at the chanceler 25,900
Jose S. Calle, administrative assistant . . . . . 25,900
Robert K. Marcum, athletic director . 52,400
Dean Nesmith, assistant coach .
HPER...
Thomas A. Hedrick,
sports network director 14,900
journalism 7,500
radio 7,116
Robert L. Timmons, trach coach 29,190
Patricia Collinson, administrative assistant 29,190
Gary A. Kemp, swimming coach 17,060
Horton H. Lockewed, voleball coach 17,060
HPRBQ
Bob Stancil, sohcall coach 15.920
M.E. Washington, basketball coach 28.000
Teddee McCormick 16.290
Cynthia L. Beath, trainer 17.940
equipment manager739 1000
UNIVERSITY COUNSEL
Barbara J. Watson
equipment manager/travel . . . . . . . . 7,600
Barbara J. Wilson.
UNIVERSITY SOURCE
Ann V. Thomas, attorney ... 38,500
Robert M. Fillmore, attorney ... 25,750
UNIVERSITY RELATIONS
Robin L. Evers, doctoral, director 25,190
Roberto L. Evers, doctoral / dls/ch. 25,130
Edward J. Loban, dir. maj. dls/ sch. 20,900
design. 2,250
design. 2,150
Thomas Yoe. ast. director maj.) dvs. 19,95
Joyce A. Evans, research asst. 13,000
Jacob B. Evans, research asst. 14,000
Jane Heskisson, research asst. 14,900
E.R. Manuf. research asst. 16,800
Karla C. Messages.
Walter D. Wesleyf., pub. 15,700
Dale W. Sweetler, research asst. 16,700
Lucie J. Seymour, art director 15,700
Vice President VICE CHANGELLORO
Robert P. Cebo.
executive vice chancellor 48,000
John B. English 18,950
Joseph G. English 18,950
assoc. executive vice chancellor 32,805
electrical engineering 17,195
the
s a ral
ialier
ig is
ig r
99,9
t.
ame
ame
ard
and
ent
Johannes Jankow, ...
asst. to exec. vice chancellor . . . 22,500
Lawrence E. Hoyle, research assit. . 15,741
Center for Public Affairs . . 3,935
10 676
Academic Computing Center
ACADEMIC COMPUTING
A. Wisman, executive 42,50
B. Larsen, assistant director, staff member 42,50
B. D. Mawell, assistant, director 42,50
D. David L. Marchand, assistant, director 32,00
J. K. Satz, assistant director 32,00
J. K. Satz, assistant service rep 32,00
Weibly R. Hubert 32,00
mgr. software acquisitions 27,20
software development 27,20
J. S. Brannon, research assistant 9,50
J. S. Brannon, research assistant 9,50
ecosis data scrub 9,30
Jeannette Johnson,
asst. to exec. vice chancellor
H. H. Narris, mprg., asthma testing. 25,200
R. Kerenbachhanen, research assist. 22,007
William P. Kale, research assist. 22,500
William E. Peters, research assist. 17,500
William G. Newkemp. 25,500
Robert B. Hammes, training. 25,500
Robert R. Baume, training. 26,400
nose M. Winters, research ast... 9,150
acc. software distributor ... 9,150
18,300
AFFIRMATIVE ACTION
Michael L. Edwards, director 26,900
Susan Groenbock-Tedesco,
ast. director 12,400
Susan Gronbeck-Fedeco,
ast. director 12,400
Juanita Wahle-Enhorn, ast. director 18,000
director/special prog. coor. 15,000
Gonibarle R. Jignamer, asst research 8,000
MINORITY AFFAIRS Minority Advance
Mary E. Townsend, dr.maj. dvl./sch. 25,500
psychology 25,500
32,000
14,208
director 14,208
Gerry C. Williams, astt. director.
ACADEMIC AFFAIRS
Barbara J. Michal,
Deaned Tacha, vice chancellor...53,100
law...5,900
fine arts...59,000
wusaid J. W. McKinnon
12,500
Jesus west,杰西. v. celebrant 25,000
Dorothy J. Glen. admin. instr. 9,300
Miriam C. Prentice. admin. instr. 17,500
Jerry E. Hutchison.
assoc. vice chancellor ... 42,533
educ. policy & admin ... 6,317
... 48,890
International Programs
George W. Woodbury:
assoc. vice chancellor . . . 19.200
res. grad. stud. & pub. . . 19.200
Spanish & Portuguese . . . 19.800
Ame. N.Y., NY.
assoc. director/maj. div. 29,370
Latin America studies 0
3,078
ZAL SCHRICH 44,585
M. Tekaban ass. direct.
Capitol Complex Programs
Capitol Complex Programs
Marvin A. Harder, director ... 44,585
political science ... 0
44,385
Anna M. T. Tabbaden, asst. to director 17,000
Gerald J. Miller, ast. professor 19,525
political science
Mary E. Gersh, ext. assoc. ... 16,175
education admin... 9,107
... 15,287
Patricia A. Fox, extension assist ... 15,370
Carol A. Tillis, extension assist ... 14,520
Trace M. Spellman, extension assist ... 12,300
Charles C. Eirdene, director of art
34,340
3,678
19,062
Douglas C. Tighman, asst. director of art
19,062
Mary Stakelan, senior curator of art
27,615
univ. professor
44,344
Elizabeth Brown, asst. curator of art
15,470
6,195
22,040
Douglas K. Hylton, asst. curator of art
13,700
6,660
18,589
Tomas W. Soothall, asst. curator of art
4,290
13,899
17,889
Ruth Lawn, research ast.
10,369
5,184
15,533
Mike R. Fewer, research ast.
17,112
Larry W. Schwarzenau, research ast.
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Minority Assembly of Students in Health University of Kansas Presents:
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Health Professionals on the Move
Date: Saturday, April 24, 1982
Date: Saturday, April 24, 1982
Time: Registration at 9:30 a.m.-10:00 a.m.
Workshops beginning at 10:00 a.m.
Rap-up Program at 11:30 a.m.
Place: Registration—Council Room,
Kansas Union (level four)
Workshop Rooms: Oread and
Regionalist Rooms (level five)
---
BE THERE!
We are anticipating local health care professionals to be in attendance. There will be workshops beginning at 10:00 a.m. exploring the fields and opportunities in the health profession.
For more information, please contact the Office of Minority Affairs-864-4351
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University Daily Kansan, April 23, 1981
Page 7
Budget
From page 1
Among all the issues the Regents are considering—such as other operating expenses, major repairs and how to help students afford college in the face of financial aid cutbacks—the Regents are prepared to make faculty salaries their top priority in 1983.
The average Regentia faculty member is paid
$25,000, compared to the average of his peers,
$14,000.
The Regents report says that compensation has been declining over the last 12 years and that if not brought up to acceptable levels, closer to normal, the parity will worsen to the point of irremarability.
The disparity has grown from $1,100 in 1971 to $2,300 this year.
THIS REPORT, and one issued by the Kansas Chapter of the American Association of University Professors in early spring, says that most faculty members at a university desirability of salaries within the University
reduce faculty morale and cause more faculty to leave KU.
When comparing KU faculty salaries to those at 14 other schools the University often measures itself against, KU ranks 11th consistently. These peers are the 14 members of the North Central Conference of the American Association of Universities, including such schools as the Universities of Oregon, Minnesota, Iowa and Colorado.
The AAUP has also fought administrators' salaries for years, saying that they are too high. Or as Dave Shuenberger, president of the KU chapter says, there might be too many administrators and too much of the budget going to pay their salaries.
However, Chancellor Gene A. Budig's salary is exactly the median salary for a president of the University.
a public university of 20,000 or more students. Badig said he was not concerned with ad-
minimal pay.
"As a group, administrators at the University
Council
of Kansas are not overpaid," he said. "As a group, faculty members are underpaid. I have devoted my time and effort to addressing myself to the issues of faculty compensation."
The report reviews the committee's actions during the 1981-82 year, which included assigning a subcommittee to revise mechanics of the language in the Faculty Senate Rules and Regulations dealing with destroying confidential student files.
Landscape
From page 1
The committee attended budget conferences with the executive vice chancellor and the vice chancellor for academic affairs this year and made a list of University needs, including a strengthened advising system and funds for computing.
From page 1
students, they weren't really concerned with the campus." Thomas said.
"But eventually, they have a nostalgic memory of the campus."
He handles KU's total landscape planning.
THEOMAS HAS been responsible for those nostalgic memories of lavender rubbed trees, white, yellow and blue crocus and the shrimp in rain trees of KU summers for the past 33 years.
I am responsible for development of land and planning sites for buildings, roads, parking lots
Thomas also oversees placement of gardens, fountains and terraces.
PART OF THOMAS' job relates to long-term
alleging for the campus.
process.
"Every year we go through a process of
staging." he said.
When setting priorities, Thomas often refers to a workbook established by the Regents for long-term learning.
"We set up priorities, recommend them to the chancellor and the chancellor recommends them to
"Every project is based this way on a long-term plan," he said. "But it's not an intelexible way of planning."
Some of the projects listed in the workbook included a remodeling of Snow Hall by fiscal year 1983 and renovation of Hoch Auditorium and planning for a varsity basketball with stadium capacity.
Regardless of the outcome of future projects, the campus was the theme for landscaping projects.
"We try to make it look nice and to maintain a peaceful atmosphere for the students." Mathes
And even though unidentified people sometimes steal Christmas trees from the campus in late November and early December, many of them have events appreciated the beauty of their surroundings.
"Oh, I know they do," he said
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Page 8 University Daily Kansan, April 23, 1981
白
On the record
A Lawrence city sanitation worker was arrested on charges of littering and battery at 6:30 a.m. yesterday morning, police said.
The worker, Craig Allen Worley, 436 Elm St., was arrested on a warrant because he allegedly dumped lumber April 17 near another person's property at the end of 10th Street. The area is not designated for dumping trash.
Mike Malone, Douglas County district attorney, said Worley also alleged hit a man who had told him it was illicit to dump trash there.
Worely was being held in Douglas County tail on $525 bond.
THE DOUGLAS COUNTY District Court on May 7 will set a trial date for
two KU students who have been charged with aggravated robbery, felony burglary and misdemeanor theft in connection with a March 12 robbery.
The students, Selwyn V. Square, 18 and Allan Williams, 19, appeared for their preliminary hearing yesterday at Douglas County District Court. At the hearing, the men pleaded not guilty to the charades filed against them.
Square, Williams and another student, Anthony Farris, 18, were charged in connection with the robbery of almost $8,000 worth of jewelry from a woman in the Ellsworth Hall parking lot.
LAWRENCE POLICE reported an aggravated assault about 3:50 p.m.
Wednesday at 15th and Iowa streets.
Police said three males began following the victim at the intersection of Ninth and Iowa streets. The suspects were throwing objects at the victim's car.
When the vehicles reached the traffic light at Ninth Street and Harvard Road, two passengers jumped out of the car and kicked the victim's car, police said.
After the vehicles drove on to the intersection at 15th and Iowa streets, the suspects and victim out of their cars, police said. The suspects were victim in with an eighth knife, hit him in the eye and left, police said.
THE BASH OF THE YEAR
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H.M.S.
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SATURDAY, APRIL 24
The winners and their vote totals were:
H.M.S.
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SATURDAY, APRIL 24
Deerfield, Ill., 90, treasurer; Ann Cromwell, Wichita, 88, secretary.
SENIOR CLASS: Martin Pryor;
Bartlesville, Okla., 138, president;
Jenny Blackshire, Lewood, 115, vice
president; Steve Wells, Tulsa, Okla.
Impression Coalition, treasurer;
Lindaea Welch, Hutchinson, 148,
secretary.
"I feel the elections went well," Brito said.
sophomore votes because only one coalition was running.
VIVARIN KEEPS YOU GOING
SOPHOMORE CLASS: Dan Love, Olathe, 224, president; Jule Flynn, Mission Hills, 182, vice president; Ken Prendergast, Roeland Park, 194, treasurer; Dee Ann Johnson, Wichita, 147, secretary.
JUNIOR CLASS: Dave Kelsay, Sioux City, Iowa, 84; president; Jeff Arensberg, Lawrence, 93; vice president; Elizabeth De Stefanis,
She said there were no problems with ballot boxes, as in past years, when election officials did not man their stations.
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Elena Brito, eleite chairman, said 424 freshmen, 105 sophomores and 219 juniors voted in the elections. The assoc. of voters was about the same as last year's.
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The Input Coalition won 11 seats in the Board of Class Officers elections yesterday.
The students voting in the BOCO election represent about 9 percent of the freshmen, 3 percent of theophilous and 6 percent of the juniors.
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Brito said there was a low turnout of
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University Daily Kansan, April 23, 1981
Page 9
Green brick search costs frat $500
The Kappa Sigma fraternity was fined $500 and placed on probation by the interfraternity Council yesterday following incidents occurred during a February rush party.
Green bricks are a traditional symbol of initiation rites for the Phi Psis.
The IFC judiciary council decided that the Kappa Sigs had been unfair to another fraternity when it sent rushes on a scavenger hunt along with house members and little sisters that included students. The Kappa Psi House to request green grants.
"Green bricks have no symbolic meaning to anybody but the Phi Psis," Palp Halper, IFC president said.
SOME OF THE scavenger hunt groups managed to get green bricks by asking house members for them, Craig McMickon, Kappa Sig president, said.
He said the bricks were returned by the next day.
The judiciary council decided last week that the action violated a rush rule that a house could not mention another fraternity to rushees. The sanctions of the probation were spared. Kappa Sigma members yesterday.
The Kappa Sigs were finned $500 and instructed to write a letter to all rushes who attended the Feb. 27 party explaining the occurrence and stating that the Kappa Sigs encouraged all housemates and consider other houses during rush.
rushees out on campus to see more than just their fraternity house.
"On our part, it was totally unintentional," he said. "We in no way meant it in a degrading way."
McMonigle said the purpose of the scavenger hunt had been to get the
The house also will be on probation with the IFC, which means they will be carefully watched for the next year for rule violations, Palmer said.
"It is not hard for a fraternity to keep their noses clean," he said. "I think that it was unintentional, but even though the reason of things can't be allowed happen."
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The Kappa Sigs have the option to appeal the decision to the six-member judiciary council, but McMonigle said the house had accepted the decision.
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The lecture will be followed by a MOVIE about the Afghan struggle against THE RUSSIAN INVASION.
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TIME-7:30 p.m., FRIDAY, APRIL 23,1982 PLACE-Forum Room, Kansas Union
Sponsored by the Muslim Student Association
PUBLIC AUCTION BAKE SALE
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University Daily Kansan
---
.
Page 10 University Daily Kansan, April 23, 1981
Police want force beefed up
By STEPHEN BLAIR Staff Reporter
Unless the city provides funds to increase police patrols, there will not be enough officers to adequately protect Lawrence citizens and other policemen, Gary Sampson, Lawrence police officer, said yesterday.
"We're getting to the point where we're 'short-handed'. Sampson said. "If someone calls in and he's in an accident of good chance he'll have to wait his turn."
As chairman of the Lawrence Police Officers Association, Sampson is asking the city to finance increased police patrols and to increase salaries.
purpose put in the city will respond by May 3, he said.
Jackie McLeane, personnel director for the city, said she could not comment on Sampson's requests until she had more time to review them.
"We're still looking into it," she said.
THE POLICE association is asking for a $17,500 annual salary for beginning pay. Beginning pay will be $14,500.
when the officers' current contract with the city expires at the end of the year.
The association requested more street officers, who ride in patrol cars, Sampson said, because they have inexperience with the job and investigate work than they once did.
"The street officer is the officer primarily responsible for a case," he
And although the city has grown in population, there are fewer street officers now than there were several years ago, he said.
"We're 13 men shorter now than what it was in 1975," he said.
THE CITY now has 43 street officers who work in rotating shifts, he said. They are among 76 officers who work in the Lawrence department.
Sampson said it was not unusual for a Lawrence policeman to feel that he might be endangered and that help was too far away.
"I think it happens quite frequently," he said. "We're to the point now when we know that."
Whether it is a police officer or a citizen who is in danger, a few minutes
could mean life or death, he said, especially in the case of a medical emergency.
"I think we've been pretty lucky in a
taste," he said. "We haven't had a
catastrose."
Another of the association's requests involves the promotion of street offenses.
BECAUSE HIGHER positions are office jobs, a street officer often has to choose between a promotion to an office job and having his job on patrol, Sampson said.
But some officers have particular skills for working on patrol and they should not have to miss a promotion or be selected for which they are best suited, he said.
"What is happening is that officers become disillusioned with the job and they start looking for jobs in other places," he said.
The association's goal is to reduce staff turnover so it can retain more skilled officers.
"It's not so much that we want more, we just want to be more competitive," Sampson said.
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Movimiento Estudiantil Chicano de Aztlan MECHA The University of Kansas Hispanic Forum On Post-Secondary Education Kansas Union—Saturday April 24th From 9:30 a.m. To 5:00 p.m.
Speakers: Robert Oppenhei
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Elias Garcia
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The University of Kansas University Lecture Series Presents
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✩
---
3:30 p.m. Friday, April 23, 1982 Big Eight Room, Kansas Union Lawrence Campus Co-sponsored by the KU Center for East Asian Studies
Drinking Myth of the Week
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IT'S IMPOLITE TO TELL A FRIEND HE'S DRINKING TOO MUCH.
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0
University Daily Kansan, April 23, 1981 Page 1
Page 5
Cantel J. Shanker, research asst. 7,057
Lenda I. Bailley, program associate 6,133
2,347
10,500
Saldy A. Waltemmer, prog. associate 15,833
Sandra R. Praeger, prog. associate 4,313
4,313
1,493
Janet K. Drailing, registrar 14,973
CONTINUING EDUCATION
Administration
Robert J. Sennelson, dean 44,000
Watson R. McCoy, dean associate speech and drama 3,565
cont. educ. conference 33,000
36,583
John P. Wolf, ask. dean
philosophy
cont. educ. admin. service 29,700
29,700
Drillvil L. Voth, ask. to the dean 32,540
Vilian R. McCoy, ask. to the Administration Services
Brock A. McCoy, education & instruction 4,959
curriculum & instruction 26,920
31, 879
Bruce R. Erickson, asst. director. 18, 070
Leslie T. Mauld, asst. director. 14, 965
Josephine A. Littz, extension assistant. 9, 790
13, 705
Independent Study
Nancy R. Covey, associate director 20, 480
Barbara L. Witkin,
extension associate. 16, 330
Judy G. Bannon,
extension course instructor. 6, 130
Daniel K. Banner,
extension course instructor. 6, 610
Conference &
Caterers Richard E. Meyer, asst. to the dean. 32, 115
John V. Banda, extension instructor. 20, 172
1, 473
D. W. Lawson, 21, 645
James D. Wasiano, 14, 92
Carole D. Grube, extension associate
Linda L, Troup, extension associate
Joletta Larson, extension asst. . .
14,291
Marilyn Long, extension asst. 16,305
5,500
16,500
Adult Life Resources
Sandra S. Moore, ast. dr./maj. div. 16,174
5,051
16,051
Beules T. Duncan, extension asst. 8,335
Danny L. Jones, counselor 8,000
Mary C. Ryan, counselor 9,295
Fire Service Training
Fire Service Training
M. M. Thornberg, director 21,250
Fred W. Red,
extension course instructor 17,825
Olbert A. Beughon,
extension course instructor 19,420
Ronald O. Clain,
extension course instructor 18,170
James F. Myers,
extension course instructor 17,940
Law Enforcement Training Center
Mayland L. Brazel, director 16,655
Glenn J. Browne, director 23,740
Larry E. Buithard,
extension course instructor 11,115
7,700
18,815
Earl L. Gilbert,
extension course instructor 19,000
Chester H. Heyes,
extension course instructor 24,845
Johan D. LaFond,
extension course instructor 20,680
Dammie L. Lehr,
extension course instructor 18,410
Odedal P. Mennon,
extension course instructor 23,945
Francis M. Stratton,
extension course instructor 20,625
Vincent M. Wicks,
extension course instructor 22,575
Kenneth W. Wicks,
extension course instructor 23,305
DIRECTED PROFESSORS
University Professors
Ralph N. Adams, professor
chemistry 6,825
41,570
48,395
David B. Board, professor 8,825
physics and astronomy 6,494
Andrew P. Dobeki, professor 8,825
Spanish and Portuguese 42,900
Richard T. DeBeaugrie, professor 8,625
philosophy 11,475
Paul W. Giles, professor 8,625
chemistry 40,300
47,125
Duad R. McCoy, professor
history 8,625
38,500
43,675
Melissa Mischler, professor
medicinal chemistry 38,700
drug design 8,625
45,575
Harold Owl, professor 8,625
English 40,910
49,170
David Pernetsky, professor 8,625
microbiology 50,430
57,255
Richard Schoebluch, professor 8,625
speech & drama 4,885
child research 45,500
37,255
Marjet Skaksted, professor 8,625
art museum 9,908
history of art 27,615
Named Professors
John O. Tolleson, Joyce C. Hallead, 7,000
business
Ukta Mgt. dev. program 8,310
6,310
Donald M. Bauer, Roy A. Roberts 5,850
KOPLF, psychiatry 9,881
4,525
Randall T. Benbarkh, Summerfield 8,000
colleges 10,295
drug design 0 328
Brenner, Brenner, Oscar S. Staehler
journalism 33,900
39,825
John S. Brushwood, Roy A. Roberts 6,550
Music & Portuguese 15,900
Joe C. Costa, Cordelia B. Murphy
music performance 11,000
71,300
Francie H. Helfer, Roy A. Roberts
political science 9,205
law 30,300
Takuro Kihocchi, Reimens 11,180
chemistry . . . . . . . . . 0
pharmaceutical chemistry . . 46.095
drug design . . . . . . . . . 1
Charles H. Levine, professor...7,000
political science...6,800
Chu-Tsing J., Judith M. Murphy...6,975
history of art...6,255
Kenneth D. Mac Kenzie,
Edmund P. Learned 6.150
business 36.998
42.998
Ross E. McKinney, N.T. Veatch
John S. McNown, Albert P. Learned . 6,94
civil engineer . 32,31
Russell B. Mesier, Warren S. Bellows.. 4,500 chemistry and petro engineering ..33,432
Boyds Coins-Antiques
Class Ring
Boyds Sale!
73
Gold-Silver-Coin
Hampstead Hills
London, Kensington
Kamloops, Canada
913-842-9773
univers D. Michener, Watkins 6.000
biological sciences 34.340
entomological museum 14.897
See SALARIES page 12
Place an ad
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genuine
birthstone pendants
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SUZUKI
1983 FA-50
FUN ABOUT TOWN
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Potential Ecological and Social Implications
TRAVEL CENTER
AIRFARE
SPECIAL
$59
Fly Pan Am from Kansas City to TAMPA, ORLANDO, or MIAMI one way or 118 round trip. Must travel between April 25-May 25. But buy now while space is still available.
841-7117
FREE PARKING
"HOME OF THE NORTH PAUL TREE"
1601 West 23rd St.
SOUTHERN HILLS CENTER
9:50-Mon. Fri • 9:30-2 pst
COMMONWEALTH THEATER
GRANADA
YEARBOOK 532-6780
DEATH WISH II
R
VARSITY TELEPHONE 843-1053
PORKY'S
You'll be glad you came!
PEX 7/14 9:15 Mon Sat Mar 21s
DEATH WISH II
EVE 7:30 & 9:30 MAT, SAT SUN 2:00
VARSITY
ILLEGALITY BROADWAY
EVE 7:30 & 9:30 MAT, SAT SUN 2:15
PORKY'S
You'll be glad you came!
EVE 7:15 & 9:30 MAT, Sat SUN 2:15
HILLCREST 1
JUUE ANDREWS JAMES GARNER
VICTOR Victoria
EVE 7:15 & 9:30 MAT, Sat SUN 2:15
HILLCREST 2
NASTASSIA KINSHI
EVE 7:15 & 9:25
MAT SUN 2:15
HILLCREST 3
QUEST FOR FIRE
EVE 7:40 & 9:20 MAT, SAT SUN 2:00
CINEMA 1
NEIL SOWNS
I Ought
To Be In Photos
PG
EVE 7:30 & 9:30 Weekend Mat 2:00
CINEMA 2
EVE 7:30 & 9:30 Weekend Mat 2:00
A wickedly funny who'll do-it.
DEATHTRAP
PG
SUNSET
This motion picture contains extremely
extraneous elements.
W/O ONLY
PLAY BY DENYING
DENYING
STARTS AT 7:30
STOPS FRIDAY
CINEMA
TELEPHONE 951-260-4800
NELSAM'S I Ought
To Be In Pictures
EVE 7:30 & 9:30 Weekend Mat 2:00
SUNSET DANCE TIME FREE
SUNSET
This motion picture capture
extended
video will be shown
9:10 ONLY
DEADY
KISSING
STARTS AT 7:30
STARTS FRIDAY
TELEPHONE FIREWIKI
A wickedly funny who-ll-do-it.
DEATHTRAP
PG
EVE. 7:25 & 8:30 Wednesda. Mt. 2:00
Call 864-4358
of a Thermonuclear War
843-7405
27th & Iowa
Lawrence
Friday April 30/Saturday May 1
Ken's Offers You More For Less
HILLCREST 1
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JULIE ANDEWS JAMES GARNER
VICTORIA
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EVE 7:15 TIME Sat M 21 Sun 7:15
PAC
HILLCREST 2
514-890-2600
NASTAESTIA KINSKI
EVEN 7:30
M & F 8:30
Monday Sat
Sun
2:15
$1.20 Refills on pitchers of soft drinks
30¢ Refills on any size soft drink
FREE
CUPON
Club coupon.
redeem at any Ken's Pizza location. When you buy one Ken's Pizza will receive the next size smaller of equal value FREE.
No other Gift or Out Orders.
Void With Other Promotions
Offer expires April 29, 1982
An everyday special drink offer good on dine-in only.
Dr Pepper
Talk and discussion with Dr. John O'Brien,
Professor of Syst. & Ecology
土
Fri, 4:00 p.m. April 23
Sunflower Room
Ks Union Deli
BIOLOGY CLUB
田出
ken's. BIZZZA
FREE PIZZA
JEANNE HARRIS
MASS. STREET DELL
614 MASSACHUSETTS
$4.00
all tickets at the door
RIDDIM BAND
LUE RIDDIM BAND
LUE RIDDIM BAN
$4,000 all tickets at the BLUE RIDDIM BLAUE RIDDIM BLUE RIDDIM No beer sold on the main floor. cocktails available to members & guests in the 7th Spirit balcony.
HOT OR MILD
SMOKED SAUSAGE SPECIAL
served with potato chips
& dill pickle spear
$1.50 reg. 2.35
HOT OR MILD
Doors open 8:30
Show at 9:30
Wed. thru Sun., April 21 to April 25
No coupons accepted with this offer.
Enjoy
Coke
THE OPERA HOUSE 642 Mass.842-9549
Save money by putting it in storage.
Don't haul your furniture all the way home this summer.
Compare the prices—
Prices will be double for round trip.
$ 6.00 Insurance
$ 4.00 Light Hook-up
$148.00
842-6262
$ 5.00 Hitch
U-Haul trailer for two days to Wichita
$59.00 Trailer
$74.00 Total
8'x10'—$28.00 month
5'x10'—$20.00 month
A-1 Rental Mini-Storage:
10'x10'—$32.00 month
8'x8'—$24.00 month
804 MASSACHUSETTS ST. DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE, KS 86044.
843-5000
Rent now for summer and pay no rent until May 15 and get your own padlock FREE. Some sizes in short supply.
10'x24'—$50.00 month
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A-1
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GORE TEX "LIGHTS"
SUNFLOWER
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by Danner $89.00
K.C. STORE: NATIONAL SURPLUS
1800 CHARLOTTE K.C. MO 64108
7 BLOCKS EAST OF MAIN ON 18th 842-4497
The durable, light weight 2 lbs. 10 oz., water proof boot that breathes.
300
Sunflower
ELLENA HONDA
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LAWRENCE AUTO PLAZA PROUDLY INTRODUCES GORDON WILLIAMS, OUR NEW SERVICE TECHNICIAN
GORDON BRINGS WITH HIM 15 YEARS OF IMPORT EXPERTISE SERVICING HONDA, TOYOTA AND DATSUN
LET GORDON SERVICE YOUR CAR WITH THESE SPECIALS
*AIR CONDITION CHECK AND CHARGE *
INCLUDES INSPECTION OF BELTS, HOSES, LEAK TEST, COMPRESSION TEST
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SPECIAL LOW PRICE $12.95
COUPON
*TUNE UP*
INCLUDES POINTS, PLUGS, CONDenser AS REQUIRED, ADJUST TIMING AND CARBURETION
4 CYL. $32.50
6 CYL. $41.50
CHECK ON OUR VALVE ADJUSTMENT SPECIAL
CHECK ON OUR VALVE ADJUSTMENT SPECIAL
CALL BRIAN SHERI (SERVICE MANAGER) FOR AN APPOINTMENT
ELLENA
ELLENA HONDA
843-0550
OPEN SATURDAY TIL NOON LOCATED AT THE END OF THE AUTO PLAZA
Page 12 University Daily Kansan, April 23, 1981
□
$
Richard K. Moore, Black V. Watch
7,102 M.S. engineer
Victor Pagana, J.L. Constant,
6,000 manpower
理查德 A. Robbins, Heeden
4,575 physics
paul T.olleiffe, Maine
4,634泵
Victor Papageno, J.L. Constant,
6,000 manpower
理查德 A. Robbins, Heeden
4,575 physics
paul T.olleiffe, Maine
4,634泵
Civilwork engineer
Dane E. Ackers,工程师
Ricespace engineer
Summerfield chemist
Schmidt chemistry
Smith, Dean E. Ackers,工程师
civil
Doc/Bontos 82
speech & drama.
Kenneth G. Dodge, professor
H.G. Fich,讲师
H. E. Food, professor
M. H. Hoffman, professor
O. M. Joy, professor
Armo K. Kapner, professor
V. P. Lesig, professor
business admin
Kenneth M. McKinzie, professor
named professors
Jess H. McHutchison, adjunct prof
W.S. Michel, professor
George E. Picchon, professor
Frank S. Piellet, professor
V. USTA mdt. dev. prog
Lawrence A. Shiner, professor
LAS admin
William L. Beedles, associate professor
Lauren A. Frieden, associate professor
R. G. Gebauer, associate professor
Michael J. Hussler, associate professor
Charles E. Kriden, associate professor
69.53 business admin
11.45 named professors
50.80 student
Douglas R. Grosso, professor 24,48
Larry Hawkson, professor 27,24
Robert L. Hohn, professor 25,28
David K. Meyer, professor of education admin. 35,60
E. P. Johnson, associate professor 53,60
J.C. Poggio, associate professor 23,27
Neil A. Sakhin, associate professor 22,65
Nana Tadaka, associate professor 27,85
John G. Harrington, astorist 18,11
Reva C. Jenkins, astorist 18,10
John E. Guemer, pro-chairman 26,20
Donate D. Guemer, bachelor 8,22
HOFL 9,22
Zikro 8,62
Leben R. Capps, professor 20,44
education administration 20,93
William S. Laherh, professor 26,79
Robert W. Higdow, professor 19,94
codeLAB university lab. 32,24
Alvin H. Scholz, professor 29,03
Sunday beads, professor 30,36
John H. Busham, associate professor 22,90
Cedar G. Gibbert, associate professor 16,83
English 9,44
George H. Hughes, instructor 22,22
Philip C. Knight, instructor 22,20
associntructr resources 12,20
campus audio vs ser. 34,24
Ruth M. Scholl, professor 23,24
Donald C. Richardson, associate professor 23,24
Thermokraft University professor 19,85
Thermokraft University professor 19,03
Walter S. Smith, associate professor 9,90
Philip j. Lab, instructor 9,91
unit 9,17
Robert L. Carvall, astorist 20,75
James F. Christie, instructor 19,50
Mary C. Carroll, astorist 11,51
unit 19,53
Richard W. Dewson, astorist 5,07
grant 4,00
cont. educ. conference. 23,19
Brecht A. Marshall, astorist 4,95
film service 29,03
cont. ed. instr. svc. 31,79
Loda Newbury, professor 4,60
university placement 18,45
Alfred Redigerson, astorist 20,26
Florin R. Wyatt, astorist 20,86
Special Education 20,00
Garden R. Allay, professor 30,00
Jerry J. Chandler, instructor 29,15
Patricia Galleguer, instructor 27,32
Phillip D.葛斯, astorist 26,73
Vance R. Hall, courtesy professor chld research 44,92
Rolleine Courtesy professor 14,00
Edward L. Knowlson, res. grad. student & pub. 23,94
José Miller, courtesy professor 38,54
John O. Therapy, professor 38,54
child research 35,10
Richard J. Whilen, professor 33,73
Dorel D. Deshiel, assistant professor 25,015
Floyd D. Hudson, instructor 26,89
Mary N.associate professor 21,67
Nancy L. McLean, instructor 26,70
Thermokraft University professor 23,10
Thermokraft University professor 10,13
curriculum & instr. 19,69
H. Khowat, astorist 20,75
Alfred C. Lawrence, astorist 18,57
Art Music Education & Music Therapy
George L. Duquesne, pro-chairman 40,08
Thermokraft University professor 23,18
Thermokraft University professor 10,13
CRAFT OF ENGINEERING ADMINISTration 55,05
cvdl engineering data 0,50
Robert P. Zerven, assoc. deas.-assoc.prof mechanical engineering 23,168
mechanical engineering 30,148
Juan M. Jalion, astorist to the death 19,144
Georgium T. Torres, astorist to the death 7,450
engineering app. fees 5,56
Earl Savage, admin. att. grant 9,750
engineering staff 13,100
Earthwave admin. att. grant 9,75
W. Jaitil, M.K., associate professor. 23.50
Tom R. Werner, associate professor. 21.85
Carlo Z. Jebas, associate professor. 21.41
J. Kobayashi, associate professor. 19.61
James G. Austen, associate professor. 16.92
Jean N. Bost, assist. professor. 18.00
J. D. Szymaski, assistant. 18.71
Robert H. Lockewell, instructor. 7.67
John's women in art. 9.14
Dean Nesbitt, instructor. 2.631
M同学 internal at. 23.70
Kweka A. Tanah, assistant. 14.90
G airport and urban design. 24.30
Chemical & Petroleum Engineer H. F. Nason, instructor. 36.38
Kenneth A. Babbop, instructor. 32.43
John C. Dovran, professor 0
geological graphical survey. 43.00
Don W. Greene, instructor 43.00
tertiary oil rec. program. 4.08
J. O. Massey, professor. 3.78
Russell B. Meister, professor. 3.42
named professors. 4.50
Fluyd W. Presion, professor. 37.92
Stanley W. Maull, professor. 27.56
G.P. Wilkhe, professor. 30.04
molar oil rec. program. 3.89
John D. Davenport, associate professor. 0
geology geological survey. 35.90
Kenneth Himmlestein, associate professor. 28.71
Cash S. Dawn, associate professor. 25.00
Civil Engineering Stanley T. Rolle, professor-chrm. 6.83
among others. 4.695
Ernest E. Angoo, professor. 3.475
geology among others. 4.395
Carl E. Burkehart, professor. 27.50
John T. Easley, professor. 25.00
David J. Minella, professor. 50.05
mineral res. resources. 0
Bogdan Kumarova, professor. 31.80
Joe Leu, professor. 28.00
transportation center. 7.07
Kenneth Lanzen, professor. 30.70
Ray J. Leurard, professor. 35.90
Rose E. McKinney, professor named professors. 38.37
John S. McKown, professor. 32.30
John S. McKown, professor. 6.92
Desmond E. Mettler, professor. 37.00
Ernest E. Poppe, professor. 21.85
water resources. 8.691
Robert L. Smith, professor. 14.92
named professors. 29.20
Nicholas Williams, professor. 35.90
Yun-Shen Yu, professor. 32.00
David Dawn, associate professor. 21.50
Geology associate professor. 26.00
Dennis D. Lane, associate professor. 28.00
Thomas E. Mumzaizi, professor. 28.00
Alfred P. Parr, professor. 28.00
Francis C. Thomas, professor. 26.00
Robert H. Dedd, assistant professor. 25.00
Safwain K. Mchest, assistant professor. 24.50
Mary F. McKee, assistant professor. 23.12
Adrian K. Fung, professor. 30.18
Gary L. Keye, professor. 28.00
Gary L. Keye, assistant professor. 21.05
named professors. 7.40
Daniel L. Runner, professor. 31.125
Wah-Shen Wu, professor. 8.60
biological sciences. 23.00
Harry Y. Tailley, teacher. 33.09
Fawzw T. Ullabo, professor named professors. 36.710
William M.睫, assistant professor. 17.195
vice chancellor. 25.00
A.J. Rupt, associate professor. 31.70
Kumarzya Shamugam, associate professor. 31.75
J. Vinden, assistant professor. 29.00
William D. Green, assistant professor. 15.00
George D. Brown, or-electron lab grant. 17.00
Mechanical Engineering John N. Cook, professor-chrm. 26.10
Charles G. Bush, assistant professor. 25.00
George W. Forman, professor. 32.030
Walter M. Fonseca, professor. 23.700
Kweka A. Tenah, assistant. 14.90
骨木 garden and urban design. 24.300
Chemical & Petroleum Engineer H. F. Nason, instructor. 36.38
Kenneth A. Babbop, instructor. 32.43
John C. Dovran, professor 0
geological graphical survey. 43.00
Don W. Greene, associate professor. 0
geology geological survey. 35.90
Kenneth Himmlestein, associate professor. 28.71
Cash S. Dawn, associate professor. 25.00
Civil Engineering Stanley T. Rolle, professor-chrm. 6.83
among others. 4.695
Ernest E. Angoo, professor. 3.475
geology among others. 4.395
Carl E. Burkehart, professor. 27.50
John T. Easley, professor. 25.00
David J. Minella, professor. 50.05
mineral res. resources. 0
Bogdan Kumarova, professor. 31.80
Joe Leu, professor. 28.00
transportation center. 7.07
Kenneth Lanzen, professor. 30.70
Ray J. Leurard, professor. 35.90
Rose E. McKinney, professor named professors. 38.37
John S. McKown, professor. 32.30
John S. McKown, professor. 6.92
Desmond E. Mettler, professor. 37.00
Ernest E. Poppe, professor. 21.85
water resources. 8.691
Robert L. Smith, professor. 14.92
named professors. 29.20
Nicholas Williams, professor. 35.90
Yun-Shen Yu, professor. 32.00
David Dawn, associate professor. 21.50
Geology associate professor. 26.00
Dennis D. Lane, associate professor. 28.00
Thomas E. Mumzaizi, professor. 28.00
Alfred P. Parr, professor. 28.00
Francis C. Thomas, professor. 26.00
Robert H. Dedd, assistant professor. 25.00
Safwain K. Mchest, assistant professor. 24.50
Mary F. McKee, assistant professor. 23.12
Adrian K. Fung, professor. 30.18
Gary L. Keye, professor. 28.00
Gary L. Keye, assistant professor. 21.05
named professors. 7.40
Daniel L. Runner, professor. 31.125
Wah
associte dean, ass. prof.
design 25,340
Stiglman J. Anderson,
asst. dean, ass. prof.
music performance 13,300
36,200
Carole Res. dir. gr. / st. assoc. of
music performance 16,310
23,300
Basic Studies
S.L. Meun, dir.-basic studies.
design 6,135
14,315
20,450
Design
J. McKay, mdc.-act. chrm. 17,380
Alexander L. Boehr, assoc. chrm. 22,320
Richard L. Braham, chmn. 28,250
George V. Nixon, assoc. chrm. 21,420
Frank M. Ruber, chmr. 27,490
Vernon L. Bregher, associate chrm. 19,720
Leo E. Greene, associate chrm. 18,500
Luc E.葛恩, associate chrm. 18,500
S. N. Mann, associate chrm. 14,315
basis studies/art 6,135
10,600
Jerry C. Moreo, assoc. chrm. 10,600
line art admin. 25,340
Elien A. Murphy, associate chrm. 20,500
Gyu P. Nemchuck, associate chrm. 20,500
I. Jeschowitz, assistant chrm. 11,500
J. W. Singer, associate chrm. 14,500
J. W. Seinfeld, assistant chrm. 14,500
Mama P. Golden, assistant chrm. 17,000
Joa R. Hawne, assistant chrm. 17,000
Joa R. Hawne, assistant chrm. 17,000
Educharne D. Shankeb, assistant chrm. 18,700
Art
Philip Bockherr, associate chrm. 20,100
Poll-Che Luszt, assoc. chrm. 20,100
Steven Skaggs, ass. prof. 17,700
Richard T. Vareyne, ass. prof. 17,825
David V. Jervetnick, ass. prof. 18,700
M. D. Slushek, ass. prof. 18,700
Art
Philip Bockherr, associate chrm. 20,100
Cim N. Katz, associate chrm. 18,500
Thiake Havenkov, associate chrm. 18,400
Gerdel E. Lubesky, associate chrm. 21,900
George E. Ollis, associate chrm. 21,100
Robert W. Price, associate chrm. 19,750
Robert S. Dishner, assoc. chrm. 18,500
Jennie L. McDonald, ass. prof. 18,500
Music Ensembles
George W. Schoenker, associate chrm. 30,430
Robert F. professor-dr. of bands
George Lawler, professor-orchstra
Thomas M. Schmidt, assoc. chrm. 21,400
James C. Barnes, instructor
Music theory 7,750
Music History
Edward V. Williams, professor-chrm. 27,500
J.B. Chun, profess. chrm. 28,500
Edward V. Williams, professor-chrm. 28,500
Edward F. Richard, professor-chrm. 18,700
Edward F. Richard, professor-chrm. 18,700
pouralism 6,250
Music Theory
John W. Podroz, prof. & hrm. 35,262
John W. Podroz, prof. & hrm. 35,262
Edward P. Carl-cannonell, profess. chrm. 28,500
Edward C. Mullitt, profess. chrm. 26,500
Stanley N. Swurray, assoc. chrm. 24,800
Ana R. Hewson, associate profes. chrm. 19,800
Mawl K. Hewson, associate profes. chrm. 19,800
James C. Barnes, instructor
Music onusions 7,750
Music Performance
Phyllis E. Brill, assoc. chrm. 15,500
Richard Angeltje, pro- piano 28,650
Richard R. Gereb, pro- percussion 28,650
James C. Messer, professor-c肋 49,800
Music art admin. 28,000
Knuth Smith, voice-talk 15,500
B.J. Boehne, assoc. pro- tribute 22,550
M. D. Bushue, assoc. pro- horn music & art camp 9,200
Music theory 9,200
Learn Hilmer, pro- coach acc 20,000
Edward L. Auft, pro- coelec 24,100
Richard Reut, pro- coelec 21,500
H.J. Hinewens, pro- coelec 20,000
Stephen C. Andersen, pro- coelec 13,300
lea arts admin. 28,000
Marieth Cawford, pro- vt. pro- voice 26,800
Aloe F. Greeness, assoc. chrm. 18,600
James M. Higgenon, ass. pro- tribute 22,550
Michael W. Kimberly, pro- tribute 22,550
Stephen D. Stainey, pro- tribute 22,550
Music & Art Camp
M.D. Bushue, assoc. pro- bass instruments 10,450
music performance 20,500
Concert Course
Jacqueline Davis, director. 45,000
SCHOOL OF JOURNALISM
John B. Brinkman, 33,900
named professors, 5,825
P.D. Brinkman, journalistic administration, 49,250
Apert D. Bart, assistant speech and drama, 31,190
speech and drama, 30,190
David A. Dary, professor, 26,000
John L. Day, professor, 26,000
James E. Gonn, professor, 0
English, 30,900
30,900
Paul Jass, professor, 17,400
Donald Jagehnmeier, professor, 28,800
Bruce L.inton, professor, 40,325
RTVF, 0
40,325
Caddel Pickett, professor, 17,400
Lee Y. Young, professor, 11,400
Mel Adams, associate professor, 21,500
Samuel L. Adams, associate professor, 27,300
Tennessee associate professor, 23,400
Dorothy B.odge, associate professor, 20,400
Dale A. Goad, associate professor, 23,400
speech & drama, 23,400
Gary马斯, associate professor, 22,000
GeorgeA.Rasmussen, associate professor, 22,000
SusanShaw, associate professor, 12,740
journalistic administration, 31,400
RichardW. Wright, associate professor, 6,250
music history, 20,900
WilliamW. Baker, ast. instructor, 10,000
WilliamC. Carr, ast. instructor, 16,900
WidowJ. Carson, ast. instructor, 16,900
DavidP. Johnson, ast. instructor, 17,500
MyronA. Kautsch, ast. instructor, 21,700
LiahL. Watts, ast. instructor, 18,700
JayM. Watts, ast. instructor, 18,700
MaryJ. Hawick, ast. instructor, 9,400
ThomasA. Hedrick, instructor, 7,500
kids interacultate athletics radio, 7,116
29,516
RenC. Beckham, lecturer, geological survey, 19,516
21,000
FranceA.Ehrhoff, university administration DanaA.Lebenegov, ast. dean University Daly Kansan JohnV. Oberbauer, university administration SCHOOL OF LAW Law Administration MichaelJ. Davis, dean and prot. law, 0
57,000
Fred.B. Lovich, assoc. dean, prof. law, 27,450
FredLaw, 27,450
SCHOOL OF LAW Administration MadgeaS. Cahill, dean and dean JSoilS. L. ast., to the dean Law
MarleyV. Ainsworth, professor, 34,700
RobertC. Cassid, professor, 50,500
BarkleyClark, professor, 49,300
C. Cooggin, professor, 45,800
MichaelJ. Davis, professor, 57,000
administration, 57,000
MartinB. Dickinson, professor, 46,900
RaymondGoetz, professor, 44,100
EdwinW. Hecker, professor, 36,800
FrancisK. Heder, professor, 9,205
named professors, 5,450
WilliamA. Kely, professor, 43,500
PhilipC. Kissan, professor, 37,500
FredB. Lovich, administration, 27,450
administration, 54,900
RobertB. McKay, visiting professor, 27,000
KathI.Meyer, professor, 43,100
LaurenceR. Rice, professor, 41,600
SidneyShapo, professor, 35,100
DeanedTacha, professor, 5,900
academic dictionaries, 59,000
WesterWastereka, professor, 35,700
PaulE. Wilson, professor, 20,310
23,100
CordovaCordova, professor, 30,900
SandraJ. Crall, associate professor, 31,200
PhilidE. Deellab, associate professor, 38,100
DavidJ. Helley, associate professor, 38,100
RobertH. Jerry, associate professor, 38,100
ElmerE. Schroeder, associate professor, 33,000
EmilA.Tenkovik, assistant e
Microbiology
James M. Akagi, professor-chrm 42,753
Cameron B., bachelor, university 27,000
James M. Akagi, professor-chrm 5,000
health service 0,000
Lawrence R. Rogers, professor-whm 50,000
David Pankytk, professor-univ 6,825
universities 6,825
Denali C. Robertsen, professor-whm 26,975
Debert M. Shanker, professor-biology 33,600
bioengineering 14,490
Henry C. Stone, assoc. professor-whm 30,330
John C. Brown, assoc. dentist-whm 22,477
William Hedeman, assoc. instructor-whm 20,670
Vieget E. Deder, instructor-health服务 22,200
Elizabeth A. Handey, instructor-whm 21,200
Deborah N. Faurer, director of laboratories 12,830
Günther S. Bahringer, biology sciences 47,935
Kenneth B. Armaglia, professor-schr 47,568
Arielle A. Dabschke, assistant-memorial museum 11,135
anthropological museum 13,059
William M. Bathurre, professor-treatment-behavior 35,055
Robert B. Bathurre, professor-behavior-kit 34,500
Robert E. Beer, professor-ENT-chnm 34,500
William J. Bathurre, professor-ENT-chnm 28,455
Ronald J. Bathurre, professor-behavior-kit 34,500
named professors 6,000
Red Bellcher, professor-pcb-whm 30,280
Eugene G. Bellcher, professor-pcb-whm 30,780
Bruce R. Burrell, professor-pcb-whm 30,340
Paul R. Burrell, professor-pcb-whm 30,460
Robert H. Schneider, professor-behavior-kit 28,038
entomological museum 18,303
William H. Colt, professor-schr 30,083
William H. Colt, professor-schr 17,770
William H.馆藏, professor-schr 17,476
William H.馆藏, professor-schr 18,591
museum of nat. hist 18,841
museum of nat. hist 18,841
Benjamin S. Hampton, professor-treatment-behavior 5,440
residency & safety 18,239
James H. Hamrick, professor-bot & schrn 17,510
Philip W. Hamrick, professor-bot & schrn 17,510
Robert H.锤子, professor-behavior-kit 34,600
Robert H.锤子, professor-behavior-kit 34,600
Robert S. Hoffmann, professor-schr 34,980
L.A. administrations museum of nat. hist 11,391
museum of nat. hist 11,391
museum of nat. hist 11,391
L. Llushue, bacterium-chemistry-pharmacy博物馆 of nat. hist 10,934
Phi G. Humphrey, professor-schr 9,930
museum of nat. hist 10,934
museum of nat. hist 10,934
Rudolf Jandeler, professor-ento-chnm 17,985
Richard F. Johnson, professor-schr 17,454
museum of natural history 17,347
Paul A. Kies, professor-lschwm 20,210
Robert W. Leachwil, professor-behavior-kit 25,240
bacterium-chemistry-pharmacy博物馆 of nat. hist 25,240
Roald A. Diediger, professor-behavior-натив
herbalism博物馆 of nat. hist 10,194
biological survey博物馆 of nat. hist 10,194
biological survey博物馆 of nat. hist 10,194
John B. Muider, professor-pcb-animatico 8,629
museum of nat. hist 17,545
museum of nat. hist 17,545
museum of nat. hist 17,545
David M. Daudougé, professor-pcb-邓尔顿M. Daudougé, professor-behavior-натив
biochemistry博物馆 of nat. hist 33,000
named professors博物馆 of nat. hist 33,000
John B. Muider, professor-pcb-animatico 8,629
museum of nat. hist 17,545
museum of nat. hist 17,545
Olivier D. Gaudet, professor-pcb-邓尔顿M. Gaudet, professor-behavior-натив
biochemistry博物馆 of nat. hist 33,000
named professors博物馆 of nat. hist 33,000
Norman A. Slade, professor-temperature博物馆 of nat. hist 19,390
museum of nat. hist 19,390
museum of nat. hist 19,390
Oriley R. Taylor, professor-temperature博物馆 of nat. hist 25,125
Andrew M. Tewell, professor-behavior-натив
Robert W. Weaver, professor-chrn-chemistry-pharmacy博物馆 of nat. hist 27,280
John A. Weber, professor-chrn-chemistry-pharmacy博物馆 of nat. hist 27,280
Philipp V. Weber, professor-chrn-chemistry-pharmacy博物馆 of nat. hist 28,780
Christoph W. Weber, professor-chrn-chemistry-pharmacy博物馆 of nat. hist 33,725
Jerome M. Yochin, professor-pcb-邓尔顿
白
University Daily Kansan, April 23, 1981
Page 13
From page 12
John M. Janzen, professor 29.915
Alfred D. Jahlson, professor 15.485
anthropology museum 37.185
Henry J. Lundgardje, professor 39.945
Fennie Moe, professor 60.915
East Asian languages 32.905
Robert J. Robert, professor 26.035
Joseph J. Quinn, professor 26.035
Douglas Wimpey, professor 27.135
David F. Frayer, associate professor 29.098
James H. Welsh, associate professor 29.098
for public affairs 40.131
Alek R. Yamamoto, associate professor 20.434
linguistics 22.957
Martin D. Harmony, associate professor 22.958
Ralph N. Adams, professor 41.570
univ professors 6.825
William J. Argenterig, professor 45.275
Clark K. Clark, professor 42.185
A.W. Burgstahler, professor 32.190
Gerald C. Gahan, professor 26.990
Paul W. Gilles, professor 40.305
univ professors 6.825
Richard S. Gives, professor 27.395
Miller H. Peter,教授 25.725
Takuro Higuchi, Regents professor 46.095
dog design 0.000
easily tutored 35.725
Earned士, professor 35.010
Yannole T. Iwamoto, professor 34.285
Larson C. Leonard, professor 45.355
Charles A. Reynolds, professor 35.500
Richard S. Schowen, named professor 39.900
Shi-Hi Chu, associate professor 29.880
Buyengkua L.ata, professor 25.310
Jason D. DeForest, assistant professor 26.995
Jason D. DeForest, assistant professor 26.995
Alfred L. Lata, lecturer 25.724
Rachel D. Sherwin, senior teacher 21.200
Leslie A. Hoek, director of economics 25.070
Thomas J. Hawke, professor 32.900
Dawid W. Diecff, professor 37.900
Methaneh A. Edmond, professor 34.000
Ronald R. Ollman, professor 34.000
Harry J. Shaffer, professor 32.900
Sovil B. Shaffer, professor 32.900
Karlas B. Sherwin, professor 32.900
Shearman, act. est. educator 40.670
English
Gehard H. Richardson, chr-lem 44.670
D.J. Akra, professor, chr-lem 47.950
Beverly M. Boyd, professor 39.985
Peter E. Caasgandre, professor 29.730
Michael R. McHonah, assistant professor 22.900
Theophilus Mitsoi, professor 26.990
Alexandra Kava-Kayama, assistant professor 22.900
Alexandra Kava-Kayama, assistant professor 22.900
Michael R. McHonah, assistant professor 22.900
Theophilus Mitsoi, professor 26.990
Alexandra Kava-Kayama, assistant professor 22.90
geological survey 43,900
Jain Diane, James, professor 14,900
Joe R. Eugemann, professor 31,146
Jose F. George, professor 36,746
Robert W. McCullough, professor 78,268
William C. Johnson, professor 22,344
George F. McKeary, associate professor 25,181
James H. Knirscher, professor 26,744
Curtilla S. Berennan, associate professor 25,488
T. Lewis Williams, professor 21,740
W. M. Wilson, associate professor 21,685
Alan C. Long, dir.委任教师 15,755
John G. long, dir.委任教师 15,755
Oedogy
Ernest M. Aging, professor at university 38,573
civil engineering 34,125
Richard H. Benson, professor 34,191
Louis T. Williams, professor 21,404
22.26
Elizabeth Gozz, associate professor.
23.30
Muriel H. Johnson, associate professor.
24.15
Edward K. Morris, associate professor.
24.55
Edward W. Korris, associate professor.
24.50
Alisa Y. Cooper, ast. professor.
20.37
Kevin S. Cormack, ast. professor.
19.78
Trudey D. Burrey, ast. instructor.
19.78
Carloy Thomson, ast. professor.
19.76
Jane S. Widgen, ast. professor.
20.14
Wilma M. Holt, ast. professor.
26.94
History of Art
Jeanne K. Hawkins, associate prof.-chmn.
26.24
Charles C. Erdge, professor.
3.67
3.67
3.43.01
3.80.18
Chu-Li Li, teacher
named professors
6.97.25
Marlin Stokstad, professor
7.24.01
univ. professors
6.98.25
Stephen A. Addies, associate professor
44.34.01
James L. Collins, associate professor
21.95.01
Edmund Egniski, associate professor
24.18.01
Eldinborah B. Gustaf, art museum
6.57.01
art museum
22.04.00
Kohan K. Hyland, ast. artist
museum
6.60.00
艺术 museum
12.74.00
Timothy M. Campbell, ast. professor
19.69.00
Thomas W. Southall, ast. professor
13.88.00
Linda A. Stone, ast. professor
17.30.00
Colgate R. Talphett, ast. professor
3.02.00
Ross E.aggard, lecturer
1.56.00
Fressa M. Fwissler, lecturer
1.56.00
Kar M. Rosen, associate professor-chmn.
22.75.00
linguistics
0
22.75.00
Ohver C. Phillips, professor
26.08.00
Sesto Prete, professor
21.27.00
Elizabeth C. Banks, assistant professor
22.84.00
Stanley F. Lombardo, associate professor
19.50.00
Marlene W. Lawen, associate professor
12.41.00
Linguistics
19.50.00
Franceau D. Neudecker, professor
36.44.00
David A. Nederson, professor
15.77.00
French & English
17.89.00
W.K. Perl, professor
23.68.00
Sally Y. Sedeow, professor
7.30.00
Lisage admin
12.53.00
computer science
40.03.00
Melissa F. Bowerman, associate professor
12.81.00
child research
26.12.00
Edward T. Erazamus, assistant professor
13.00.00
applied English center
13.02.00
James W. Hartman, associate professor
0
29.16.00
Michael M. Henderson, associate professor
24.25.00
Kimhoe Yu, associate professor
20.98.00
Robert L. Rankin, associate professor
21.13.00
Karl M. Rosen, associate professor
22.75.00
George F. Wedge, associate professor
0
24.47.00
Akra N. Yamamoto, associate professor
11.30.00
anthropology
11.64.00
Mathematics
Charles Himmelberg, associate professor-
chrmn.
39.38.00
James W. Brewer, professor
29.38.00
Water science
8.94.00
computer science
29.51.00
John W. Buncer, professor
27.35.00
Paul F. Coorad, professor
46.10.00
Tyremie E. Duncan, professor
28.92.00
Gregald R. Gilbert, professor
38.94.00
Paul S. Mostfelt, professor
44.60.00
Jack R. Porter, professor
27.35.00
T. P. Smishawky, professor
35.80.00
Pawel Szechwyck, professor
25.36.00
Fritz V. Vandek, professor
14.00.00
LA&S admin
12.65.00
Robert D. Brown, associate professor
27.35.00
Theodore C. Chang, associate professor
27.35.00
James D. Church, associate professor
27.44.00
Chloe C. Hobbs, associate professor
27.35.00
Thomas M. Hanma, associate professor
22.10.00
Martin S. Hanna, associate professor
14.00.00
LA&S admin
12.65.00
David E. Lerner, associate professor
23.56.00
Chancha Chua-Ling, associate professor
22.59.00
Jason J. Apple, associate professor
25.075
Robert D. Meyer, associate professor
27.35.00
Judot A. Meyer, associate professor
27.595
Jannat R. Meyer, assistant professor
25.051
Staul S. Staul, associate professor
15.010
Handol G. Lugo, assistant professor
15.500
Mary K. Corbitt, ast. instructor
17.85.00
Curtis & curriculum instructor
19.53.00
Charles H. Hamaker, ast. professor
20.39.00
Philip R. Montgomery, associate professor
21.96.00
Hickory A. Archchesson, instructor
15.500
Hienke K. Kaeki, instructor
15.500
Andrew R. Kulin, instructor
15.500
Gibran G. Lugo, instructor
15.500
William D. Weakley, instructor
15.500
George D. Weakley, instructor
15.500
Cameron G. Hurst, academic and linguogues & Culture
13.81.00
history
17.46.00
Chae J. Lee & pro- coh-membrane
17.57.00
police science
13.14.00
Wallace S. Sahnison, professor
27.10.00
Felix Moes,教研员
26.01.00
anthropology
26.01.00
Andrew T. Tsukiaki, professor
5.06.00
Speech & drama
10.10.00
Joseph M. Kuai, professor
25.270
Clarec S. Cain, associate professor
25.280
Interdisciplinary studies
20.810
Grand J. Wan, ast. professor
15.600
Jonathan M. Unger, ast. instructor
18.95.00
Fumyo X. Yamamoto, ast. instructor
18.95.00
Richard D. Delegere, professor
41.32.00
Catherine A. Hughes, ast. instructor
41.32.00
Anthony C. Geneva, ast. professor
39.93.00
John J. Brike, instructor
28.230
Richard C. Cole, professor
41.32
Dryden B. Beard, professor 42,650 university professor 42,650
Robert C. Bearer, professor 43,475 student & pub 28 res health & safety 0
J. W. Chuwell, professor 34,855
Robin E. Davis, professor 27,380
Robert J. Foulfe, professor 37,250
Robert K. Greene, professor 37,250
Ralph W. Krone, professor 33,505
Newman W. Kwane, professor 33,505
Hermann J. Munkke, professor 33,505
Richard E. Sapp, professor 31,790
Robert Stump, professor 36,090
Gordon D. Wisman, professor 34,850
Kaiwai Wong, professor 27,415
Eward J. Zeller, professor 32,500
oncology 15,495
Renald Bass, associate professor 18,670
Buchholz J. Schmidt, associate professor 23,275
Douglas McKay, associate professor 23,275
Stephen S. Shaw, associate professor 23,280
Robert T. Currey, political Science 16,800
Paul U. Schumaker 15,205
Buchholz J. Schmidt, professor 26,530
J. E. Fields, professor 32,295
Mavrin A. Harder, professor 44,585
Capital Complex program 44,585
Francis H. Helper, professor 42,65
associate professor . 12,350
Latin Amer. studies . 12,300
CFRD G. Foley, associate professor . 20,200
Amand Weiss, associate professor . 19,115
Cliford Lange, associate professor . 18,450
language lab . 27,560
Language Lab:
Ernst A. Ganger, professor . 24,805
Spanish and Portuguese . 27,560
Latin American Studies:
Charles L. Stanley, professor-chmri . 13,835
history . 17,307
Michael J. Dudourd, associate professor . 12,350
Spanish and Portuguese . 27,500
Anthert Hirschl, astor, instructor . 20,971
in international programs . 28,970
Sociology:
Scott G. McNall, professor-chmri . 40,615
T. Bae,师 . 20,185
G. Watt, professor-chmri . 27,880
Sakari Sarike, professor . 29,125
W.A. Seedow, professor . 19,151
computer science . 35,065
Charles K. Warmer, professor . 36,055
David E. Willer, professor . 29,125
Robert R. Antonell, professor . 28,910
Robert A. Antonell, professor . 28,940
William R. Arnold, associate professor . 27,135
Lawward M. Allen, professor . 29,115
Associate professor . 26,750
Jadaura L. Abachcik, professor . 17,475
Gary N. Wayne, astor, instructor . 19,500
David W. James, act, assistant professor . 17,600
Alan M. Sicil, astor, instructor . 19,215
Jack M. Welter, professor . 19,215
Gerald M. Mikkelson, associate professor-chmri . 28,650
Joseph G. Conrad, professor . 28,650
Staffard J. Parker, professor . 28,717
Jejwig Wauer, professor . 28,718
Heinrich A. Stammfer, professor . 28,518
Soviet & East Europe . 28,136
Tameroff T. Astor, assistant professor . 26,300
Speech & Grammar . 28,655
Bob R. Patton, professor-chmri . 45,000
Howard J. Bumann, professor-chmri . 8,025
business psychology . 38,123
Jon A. Bubaugh, professor . 38,141
Jon B. Fink, professor . 29,309
Margaret C. Boyne, professor . 38,140
Paul P. Campbell, professor . 30,306
William Conboy, professor . 30,306
William L. West, professor . 30,305
psychology . 19,825
Peter A. Derr, journalism . 31,100
Jed H. Dews, professor . 16,403
University theater . 32,808
Calvin W. Dowes, professor . 30,105
University theater . 14,903
Kenn Gill, professor . 33,108
Bill L. Kullke, professor . 15,204
Sewer & East Europe . 7,602
University theater . 15,204
Wilmer A. Linkgud, professor . 35,055
Bruce A. Linton, professor . 10,403
pursuit . 39,125
RVF lab . 0
John F. Michel, professor . 28,930
Richard Schuster,教授 . 18,455
university professors . 6,825
child research . 57,290
Andrew T. Tuukabai, professor . 10,105
East Asian Universities . 10,500
University theatre . 10,108
Renald A. Willis, professor . 20,708
University theatre . 10,108
Jack B. Wright, professor . 16,980
University theatre . 19,860
Nobela Asoncon-Lande, associate professor . 24,920
Thomas D. Beaver, professor . 35,335
Charles M. Berg, associate professor . 20,845
Paid G. Friedman, associate professor . 25,665
bain A. Gad, associate professor . 23,490
Ellen E.丹格, professor . 10,108
John Gobbech-Tedesco, astor , 9,985
University theatre . 19,700
Nobela Asoncon-Lande, associate professor . 24,920
Thomas D. Beaver, professor . 35,335
Charles M. Berg, associate professor . 20,845
Paid G. Friedman, associate professor . 25,665
bain A. Gad, associate professor . 23,490
Ellen E.丹格, professor . 10,108
John Gobbech-Tedesco, astor , 9,985
University theatre . 19,700
Nobela Asoncon-Lande, associate professor . 24,920
Thomas D. Beaver, professor . 35,335
Charles M. Berg, associate professor . 20,845
Paid G. Friedman, associate professor . 25,665
bain A. Gad, associate professor . 23,490
Ellen E.丹格, professor . 10,108
John Gobbech-Tedesco, astor , 9,985
University theatre . 19,700
Nobela Asoncon-Lande, associate professor . 24,920
Thomas D. Beaver, professor . 35,335
Charles M. Berg, associate professor . 20,845
Paid G. Friedman, associate professor . 25,665
bain A. Gad, associate professor . 23,490
Ellen E.丹格, professor . 10,108
John Gobbech-Tedesco, astor , 9,985
University theatre . 19,700
Nobeb
speech & drama . . . . .
Howard E. Mossberg, professor
pharmacy admin.
51,625
Martin Welmann, courtesy professor
health service.
57,000
Hugh A. Cotton, associate professor
pharmacy admin.
33,050
Allen Gohuly, associate professor
grant.
29,200
Jeremy A. Matchett, associate professor
pharmacy-cent. educ.
32,805
Thomas F. Patton, associate professor
pharm. chem.
25,750
Sarah J. White, associate professor
grant.
30,574
David Domena, ast. professor
grant.
20,664
Linda Hogan, ast. professor
grant.
21,120
Donald Letendre, ast. professor
grant.
21,720
David Henry, instructor
grant.
20,922
Douglas P. Johnson, instructor
grant.
1,655
Patrick Parker, instructor
grant.
19,456
Mary A. Tol, instructor
grant.
20,922
Benji K. Wyatt, instructor
5,750
James W. Miller, lecturer
health service
28,000
Kenneth Cheng, grad. teaching ast.
grant.
8,100
Ronald Dechant, grad. teaching ast.
grant.
8,100
Isabella S. Orks, grad. teaching ast.
grant.
8,100
Michelle Legr, grad. teaching ast.
21,120
Mickael Ruszewski, grad. teaching ast.
12
1. $a+b=3$ and $c+d=-2$. Find the value of $a+b+c+d$.
Page 14 University Daily Kansan, April 23, 1981
From page 13
Anthropology Museum
Alfred E. Johnson, director
anthropology
Renald L. M. Groger, director 30.154
biological sciences 30.188
chemical sciences 49.377
Ralph H. Brooks, research aust. 11.925
Ralph H. Brooks, research aust. 11.925
Philip S. Humphrey, director 43,283
biological sciences 8,950
52,223
SYSTEMATIC MUSEUMS Entomological Museum
| | |
| :--- | :--- |
| s | 34,544 |
| n | 55,000 |
| Peter D. Ashbock, senior curator of biological sciences | 11,524 |
| Peter D. Ashbock, senior curator of biological sciences | 11,524 |
| George W. Byers, senior curator of biological sciences | 18,302 |
| George W. Byers, senior curator of biological sciences | 20,768 |
| Museum of Inv. Pelaleontology | 39,083 |
| Roger L. Kaster, matr. maj./dsch. geology | 15,818 |
| A.J. Rowell, senior curator of geology | 20,370 |
| Geology | 20,370 |
| Anthropology Museum | 40,393 |
| Alfred E. Johnson, director anthropology | 16,730 |
| 15,455 | 32,185 |
| Herbarium Ronald L. McGregor, director biology | 20,154 |
| 9,080 | 10,800 |
|生物 survey | 20,153 |
| 6,975 | 10,800 |
| Ralph P. Brooks, research assist. biology | 6,275 |
| biological survey | 11,925 |
| 18,200 |生物 Survey |
| Museum of Natural History Philip S. Humpney, director biological sciences | 43,283 |
| 8,950 | 8,950 |
| Frank B. Cross, curator-fish | 17,470 |
| 17,470 | 17,460 |
| William E. Duffin, curator-hepteryx | 18,681 |
| 18,681 | 18,610 |
| William E. Duffin, curator-mammals LA&S camp | 11,914 |
| 11,914 | 11,910 |
| Richard F. Johann, curator-birds | 17,347 |
| 17,347 | 17,455 |
| Robert M. Mengel, curator-birds | 17,545 |
| 17,545 | 17,545 |
| Norman A. Sude, curator-mammals | 10,950 |
| 10,950 | 10,950 |
| Larry D. Martin, associate cur-foss. vert. | 14,651 |
| 14,651 | 15,080 |
| geology | 0 |
| 29,741 |Haunt Peter Schultze, associate curtis | 11,121 |
| 11,121 | 11,121 |
| Robert D. Holt, ast. curtis | 10,821 |
| 10,821 | 10,821 |
| Edward W.iley, ast. curtis-fish | 12,220 |
| 12,220 | 11,340 |
| Bureau OF CHILD RESEARCH Child Research Richard Schultze, director grant | 17,219 |
| speech & dancer | 4,855 |
| unw. professors | 32,508 |
| BUREAU OF CHILD RESEARCH Child Research Richard Schultze, director grant | 17,219 |
| speech & dancer | 4,855 |
| unw. professors | 32,508 |
| BUREAU OF CHILD RESEARCH Child Research Richard Schultze, director grant | 17,219 |
| speech & dancer | 4,855 |
| unw. professors | 32,508 |
Edward J. Zamarripa, associate director, grant 36,671
Vance R. Hall, senior scientist, grant 18,973
Vance R. Hall, senior scientist, grant 20,795
special education 13,469
James E. McLaan, senior scientist, grant 14,929
James E. McLaan, senior scientist, grant 14,929
Joseph E. Spradlin, senior scientist, grant 14,158
Joseph E. Spradlin, senior scientist, grant 14,158
John M. Throne, senior scientist, psychology 35,162
John M. Throne, senior scientist, psychology 35,162
James F. Budde, associate scientist, grant 14,144
James F. Budde, associate scientist, grant 14,144
Henry Heffner, associate scientist, grant 19,721
Henry Heffner, associate scientist, grant 19,721
Kenneth F. Ruder, associate scientist, 32,812
Rickey Hacek, astrologist, research associate, grant 11,354
Candace G. Kant, astrologer, grant 8,547
Melissa F. Powerman, research associate, linguistics 12,810
12,810
Cortis Braukman, research associate, 33,616
Christopher E. Dickman, research grant, 20,177
20,177
Betty Hart, research associate, 28,700
28,700
John Hella, research associate, 34,146
Charles R. Spadlin, research associate, 21,300
12,916
Sandra Stanley, research associate, 8,436
12,916
Ann P. Turnbull, research associate, 10,788
10,788
Ann P. Turnbull, research associate, 10,788
Conchata O. Aupell, research assistant, 4,986
4,986
Alembro A. Moore, research assistant, 18,800
18,800
Roy E. Creak, research assistant, 29,978
Roy E. Creak, research assistant, 29,978
Thomas L. Thula, research assistant, 17,775
David J. Lutz, research assistant, 8,802
8,802
Bedy A. Smith, research assistant, 16,312
16,312
John Spare, research assistant, 17,254
17,254
Barbara T.erry, research assistant, Child-Parens Research Associate, 15,505
15,505
Michael H. Dillon, research assistant, 14,504
14,504
Derrick A. Terry, research assistant, Child-Parens Research Associate, 15,505
15,505
Michael H. Dillon, research assistant, 14,504
14,504
Derrick A. Terry, research assistant, Child-Parens Research Associate, 15,505
15,505
Jacob U. Sharp, research associate, 13,248
13,248
African Studies Research Associate, 15,907
15,907
Donald D. Skutter, research associate, 19,470
19,470
Jacob U. Sharp, research associate, 13,248
13,248
African Studies Research Associate, 15,907
15,907
Donald D. Skutter, research associate, 19,470
19,470
Bev D. Bray, research assist, 17,919
17,919
Alembro A. Moore, research assist, 24,545
24,545
Thaima Helger, research assist, 6,460
6,460
Lewvene W. Eagle, research assistant, ACC/CPA staff pig soil, 15,741
15,741
Lewvene W. Eagle, research assistant, ACC/CPA staff pig soil, 15,741
15,741
Belle O. Mendel, research astst.
McKenna Shannon, research astst.
Schaefer 18, 748
Schane 17, 762
KANSAS BIOLOGICAL SURVEY
Biological Survey
Ronald L. McLeary, director t 20,153
biological sciences t 9,080
herbarium t 43,837
Donald Nuggins, associate scientist t 21,382
Donald Ferrington, assistant t 18,329
Danmy C. Renkke, assist scientist t 11,925
Rabbit research, assist art t 6,275
Paul M. Liechl, assistant, director t 16,200
KANSAS BIOLOGICAL SURVEY
William W. Hambellton,
diret. dv./sch.
geology t 51,084
mineral resources res t 51,084
Daean A. Leshay, assoc. dir./maj. d/iv t 36,600
Lila M. Wathkens, ass. dir./maj. d/iv t 21,500
Rex C. Xuchanan, research associate t 1,650
Marynard P. Baulke, senior scientist
engineering t 21,050
Marynard P. Baulke, senior scientist
engineering t 13,500
Curtis D. Coley, senior scientist
John C. Davis, senior scientist
geog & meteorology t 43,800
chem & petro engineering t 43,900
John D. Downey, senior scientist
geog & meteorology t 35,900
chem & petro engineering t 0
Lawrence R. Hathaway, senior scientist t 31,900
Howard O. Donner, senior scientist t 31,900
John C. Davis, senior scientist
geog & meteorology t 43,800
chem & petro engineering t 43,900
John D. Downey, senior scientist
geog & meteorology t 35,900
chem & petro engineering t 0
Lawrence R. Hathaway, senior scientist t 31,900
Howard O. Donner, senior scientist t 31,900
John C. Davis, senior scientist
geog & meteorology t 43,800
chem & petro engineering t 43,900
John D. Downey, senior scientist
geog & meteorology t 35,900
chem & petro engineering t 0
Lawrence R. Hathaway, senior scientist t 31,900
Howard O. Donner, senior scientist t 31,900
John C. Davis, senior scientist
geog & meteorology t 43,800
chem & petro engineering t 43,900
John D. Downey, senior scientist
geog & meteorology t 35,900
chem & petro engineering t 0
Lawrence R. Hathaway, senior scientist t 31,900
Howard O. Donner, senior scientist t 31,900
John C. Davis, senior scientist
geog & meteorology t 43,800
chem & petro engineering t 43,900
John D. Downey, senior scientist
geog & meteorology t 35,900
chem & petro engineering t 0
Lawrence R. Hathaway, senior scientist t 31,900
Howard O. Donner, senior scientist t 31,900
John C. Davis, senior scientist
geog & meteorology t 43,800
chem & petro engineering t 43,900
John D. Downey, senior scientist
geog & meteorology t 35,900
chem & petro engineering t 0
Lawrence R. Hathaway, senior scientist t 31,900
Howard O. Donner, senior scientist t 31,900
John C. Davis, senior scientist
geog & meteorology t 43,800
chem & petro engineering t 43,900
John D. Downey, senior scientist
geog & meteorology t 35,900
chem & petro engineering t 0
Lawrence R. Hathaway, senior scientist t 31,900
Howard O. Donner, senior scientist t 31,900
John C. Davis, senior scientist
geog & meteorology t 43,800
chem & petro engineering t 43,900
John D. Downey, senior scientist
geog & meteorology t 35,900
chem & petro engineering t 0
Lawrence R. Hathaway, senior scientist t 31,900
Howard O. Donner, senior scientist t 31,900
John C. Davis, senior science
geog & meteorology t 43,800
chem & petro engineering t 43,900
John D. Downey, senior science
geog & meteorology t 35,900
chem & petro engineering t 0
Lawrence R. Hathaway, senior science t 31,900
Howard O. Donner, senior science
RESEARCH LABORATORIES & SERVICES
ast. dir. incest & prog 22,200
Mary B. Meyers, research asst. 13,386
Lance A. Ness, research asst. 2,590
grant 1,798
lentr.
Resamane L. Thurman, dirwz, director **15.905**
Tauris L. Fauff, fath, assistant **15.835**
Thomas T. Burke, fath, assistant **15.835**
Arthur C. Haddy, admin, assist **16.207**
Mary M. Daxlande, admin, assist **16.170**
Mary M. Daxlande, admin, assist **16.170**
Howard T. H. director,
Alain J. Berman,专员 for dewr.
Anthony L. Berkowitz,专员 for Enginengo-
grant
4,880
Theodore A. Hammer
3,216
Thomas A. Heindler
7,116
man in research education agh
1,4,900
journalism
9,716
Albert G. Smith, director of lab ... Research Health and Safety
**rt C. Bauer, associate vice choreographer**
11,450
23,102
23,202
grad毕业 & stud pub &
Beaumont S. Finsen, health physicist
21,839
5,440
biological sciences
Matthas P. Martes, director medicinal chemistry 38,650
Drug Design
additional chemistry
Renald T. Borschall,
biological sciences 30,280
named professors 6,000
76,280
Takero Higuchi, assoc director... 40,695
pharmaceutical chem... 40,695
named professors... 11,180
Beth B. Armigale, professor-SAE
biological sciences ... 47,560
47,560
Dean Kurtz, senior of faculty ... 19,276
Lester A. Mitchler, assoc. director... 0
medicinal chemistry... 38,750
univ. professors... 6,825
45,575
Dean Kettle, super of faculty ... Minced Resources Research
samsung sony...
William W. Hammond...。
die maj / die schrifth...
geology...。
geological survey... S1 084
S1 084
David C. Kraft, engineering admin... 55,050
Joe Lee, director ... 7.703
civil engineer ... 23.680
... 30.753
Dimitri Dendrinos, research associate ... 12.000
Microbiology research assist
Lorraine E. Hammer, research assist ... 1,504
gen research grants ... 12,537
14,014
Electron Microscope Lat
B. G. Barr, director 4,213
mechanical engineering 32,944
res grad stud & pub 0
31.094
Donna E. Schafer, research associate . 8.675
grant ... 8.360
... 12.041
Richard A. Robien, professor . 0
named professors . 5,475
genology . 41,420
AN BOOK
Ernest C. Pogge, dir., maj. dv./sch ... 4,382
grant ... 4,309
civil engineer ... 21,158
lawyer ... 5,649
biological sciences ... 34,980
34,980
David A. Ambler, vice chancellor . . . . 51,500
Joan K. Sherwood, astst, vice chancellor 31,000
Enzyme Lab
Gibert K. Dyck, dean.
William L. Kelly, associate dean
William S. Johnson, associate dean
Linda O. Thompson, dir of admissions
Mary R. Jackson, assistant director
Carr R. Buch, assistant director
David C. Hale, assistant director
杨 P. Elliott, assist. registrar
James M. Slisson, assist. registrar
J. G. Lewis, assist. registrar
K. W. Thomas, assist. registrar
Jennifer Wagner, dir. mar. dvf. sch. 26.800
Jennifer Harvey, dir. mar. dvf. sch. 22.400
Jeffrey Gerson, ast. director 8.550
Evelyn Gershen, ast. director 8.450
0.450
0.450
Donald K. Alderson, dean 34,100
Vernon V. Guester, univ. placement d. 25.100
Terry Tayen, assn. director, d. 21.700
John F. Wagner, assn. director, d. 18.450
New Loewenr, adviser 18.450
curriculum & instruction 4.660
Loren A. Zimmner, director...24,850
Robert R. Tarver, associate director...20,850
D.R. Johnson, assist, director...11,800
4,830
4,850
16,150
Counseling Center
Dary E. Price, asst. dj-test & ess
counseling
15,800
14,931
counseling
12,600
12,337
James M. O'Neil, asst. dj-career-dow
counseling
12,400
12,337
Richard M. Runquist, director
20,900
21,825
42,935
John H. Wigington, research associate
13,500
17,946
Edward J. Neck, counselor
13,500
12,290
counseling
12,721
14,971
Diana S. McDermott, counselor
interdisciplinary st.
12,700
12,520
counseling
12,520
Robert D. michal, counselor
16,155
15,950
counseling
12,105
12,105
Richard E. Nelson, counselor
counseling
12,971
20,917
Arthur H. Thomas, counselor
-eling
15,701
Martin Woldman, dmv, dir, mvch. 57,000
James E. Bass, assoc, drv, mr/ dvch 27,000
Jeffrey L. Harris, dvc, msr/ dvch 18,000
Gary M. Garber, med staff professional 20,400
Significance Gmrd, med consultant 6,350
Margaret H. Hedman, med consultant 6,350
J.A. Schoenbeck, med assistant 1,110
J.M. Baghman.
K辛 S. Lee, med stf professional...9,600
Mary A. Sault, med stf professional...18,300
Sam B. Sault, med stf professional...48,500
Tamia B. Sault, med stf professional...48,500
W. James W. Campbell, sth hp fly...50,800
microbiology...
Dennil R. Dahl, sth hp fly...50,800
Owen A. Erdal, sth hp fly...48,800
Mary A. Heilfeld, sth hp fly...48,800
Mary A. Heilfeld, sth hp fly...48,800
Rensselaer W. McClurck, sth hp fly...48,800
Pa E. Ruth, sth hp fly...48,800
Sydney O. Schreder, sth hp fly...50,000
Raymond Schwender, sth hp fly...51,500
Fredricia E. Telton, stu hib phy 48,850
Bryan W. Batters, stu hib phy 48,850
Virginia E. Detler, lect/med, stl pro 22,200
Clark Coan, dr & assoc dean...28,800
Judith D. Woolfell, ast. assistant...15,600
E.T. Women's / Resource Career Center
Arthur M. McElenna, dir, maj, div /shc. 25,300
R. Erik M. Ketonacke, associate director
O ower rental
18,900
18,900
Jayce CIIH, assist, dir, maj, div
Cotton rental
7,600
7,600
GSP rental
15,200
HOUSING OFFICE
res. dorm dir
Mable A. Eversole, director 25,300
Karen Jeltz, assistant director 17,000
Rum E; mitkesson, associate director 18,800
residential programs 0
J. J. Wilson, dir, maf, dsch./
Lennon, E. Leonard, associate director,
29.000 Robert M. Cardenal, ast, director,
25.400 J. Wilson, ast, driver, housekeeping, 25.400
Thomas K. Pratt, project manager ... 15,560
HOUSING MAINTENANCE
Dean J. Milroy, asst. dir. housing facl.. 28,500
KANSAS UNION
Union Management
Frank R. Burge, dir, maj, div./sch. . . . 44,500
Cynthia L. Woeik, attorney ... 20,350
Keith L. Nitcher, univ. dir. of bus aff ... 57,400
L.M. M. associ. dir. of bus aff ... 45,500
business ... 0
Wear B. Zimmermann; director of budget
May E. Harsen; assist r. dir. mgwdb
Jonathan Z. Shohe, research associate 23.60
San W. Bacher, uvi supervision 23.60
Aina A. Fort, senior auditor 18.40
John K. Curtis, senior auditor 18.40
RV King, vlp导师 superior. 17.90
Dian S. Martin auditor 15.40
Candice K. Auditor 15.40
RV King, wav editor 16.00
SUMMER TROLLER
John D. Patterson, comprotilter ... 32,250
Howard L. Tiffany, asst. comprotilter ... 25,250
Edgar E. Puckett, purchasing director... 28,500
Other Business Affairs
Gene Hode, research asst. ... 15,300
Valeh J. Anderson, ret / w/o tattoos 2,508
Noble Barnet, ret / w/o tattoos 1,420
Henry Edward, ret / w/o tattoos 1,439
Erwin Grassie, ret / w/o tattoos 400
Francesc Greinstein, ret / w/o tattoos 400
J. O. Jones, ret / w/o tattoos 1,382
William Morrow, ret / w/o tattoos 1,472
William Morrow, ret / w/o tattoos 1,472
Donald D. Whipple, astst. dir./mjp. div. 26,500
Alain L. Wiederch, senior director
14. 32,000
James C. Canon, associate director
14. 32,000
James M. Eddy, axi. director
14. 32,000
Akira G. Thomas, landscape architect
14. 32,000
Akira G. Thomas, landscape architect
14. 32,000
Thomas F. Anderson, dir of phys plant 36,200
Dewey E. Alaune, assoc. dir./mai. dir. 29,250
Drewy Perkins, assoc. dir./mai. dir. 28,800
Steven Green, ast. dir./maj. div...22,000
James R. Denney, director of police 22,635
John M. Thomas, dir.maj. div./sch 29,500
*Remotebinding & renovation*
Robert E. Porter, assoc. dir./mail. div.
*28,625*
Richard C. Bivens, assoc. dir /maj) div. 28,600
Philip L. Endacott, assoc. div. 22,500
PARKING AND SECURITY
Parking & Traffic
John O. Saylor, director... 38,000
John M. Aurel, associate director... 27,800
Robert W. Jaeger, astor, director... 27,275
Lerry R, Lovell, assist. dvl /mj/ div. 25,000
Elaine M. Enoch, research assist. dvl 16,000
Sharon B. Brown, research assist. dvl 16,034
Jane G. Burt, research assist. dvl 19,068
James H. Burt, research assist. dvl 16,034
Lynne S. Faiman, research assist. dvl 20,758
David R. Gardner, research assist. dvl 20,718
Richard J. Hermes, research assist. dvl 20,983
Tress C. Hill, research assist. dvl 16,726
Robert A. Hughes, research assist. dvl 23,700
John P. Moore, research assist. dvl 17,000
Lia D. Mann, research assist. dvl 21,100
Eikabath Skrymskis, research assist. dvl 20,758
Stephen M. Welder, research assist. dvl 18,500
Paul M. Widder, research assist. dvl 22,470
Jeremy M. Ragnowson, dir. mvl /sch/ dv 40,000
Robert A. Clear, assist. dvl /mj/ div. 20,334
Doug Defleghner, research assist. dvl 20,730
Michael E. Harmon, research assist. dvl 16,200
Charles H. Nichols, research assist. dvl 16,200
Daniel B. Smith, research assist. dvl 20,983
Lennon J. Synder, research assist. dvl 23,540
Joe T. Taylor, research assist. dvl 20,983
Lynthe T. Suler, research assist. dvl 13,012
Alison A. Weaver, assist. dvl 16,200
INSTITUTE OF RESEARCH & PLANNING
Gregory W. Lehman, research assist. dvl 18,250
Grace A. Greer, research assist. dvl
John S. Schott, research asst.
R.K. Slotz, research asst. . .
John P. Wallace, research asst.
PERSONNEL SERVICES
The University Daily
Call 864-4358
David I. Lewin, dir./maj. div./sch. . 32,952
Philine P. Rankin, astst. dir./maj. div. 26,004
John Mendez, season. 24,948
one ten two three four five six seven eight nine十 one twenty two thirty four fifty sixty seven eight nine十 10 works of poem $2.35 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00 $3.25 $3.45 $3.65 $3.85 $4.05 $4.25 $4.45 $4.65 $4.85 Each additional poem $6.50
KANSAN WANT ADS
CLASSIFIED RATES
AD DEADLINES
ERRORS
to run
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
The Kanana will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be
Registration materials for the _1982-1983
year-end are now available in the Office of
Government and Acquisition at the University.
May 7, 1983 will be held in the tall 1982 Faculty/
Student Secretary and will be included in the
will be included in the student organizations.
To the heat secretaries on the hill: Darry, Blender, Marie, Judy, April Lott, Loria, Samantha, Nancy, Berry, Nance, Nancy, Mary, Barb, Terry, Bill, Nancy, and David, and Sean them in 4-H. Hall.
KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 964-4358
NOTICE TO ALL STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS
Every Tuesday is open microphone night at the Off Wall Hall hosted by the Ebbing Bros. 82 pitcher, 75 bottles, 14 No. Cover 4-30
The KU Folkdance Club will meet tonight 7:30 p.m. at St. John's School Gym 4-23
The Johnny Moosehead band will appear at Off the Wall Hall this Friday and Saturday. Lilly Lynch a Lee Meele will open the show on Monday. Moosehead Band will appear from 8 to 11. 4-23
Live in the CHRISTIAN CAMPUS HOUSE
This summer & fall! Become a part of a
growing campus ministry. Call Alan Raoe-
nk, campus minister 842-652-100.
tf
For rent to mature maze student. Quit,
comfortable efficiency apartment. Private
kitchen. Close to the Union. Reasonable
price. 842-4185. tf
ESTABLISHED STUDENT COOPERATIVE close to campus and downtown. Own bedroom/studio. Six evening meals each week. $75-$80. Room in SUNFLOW. HOUSE. 9-89-91.
ENTERTAINMENT
Wanted outgoing Christians and conse-
sionaries. Please apply to 14th &
Kentucky next fall & spring $290,
500, or $349. UNITIES included. ™
Must see belief. Furnished rooms with
decor. Applicants must have a CPA.
Darryl J. 841-7692.
HANOVER PLACE FILLER furnished. furlows.
14th & 16th in Mass. Only $ 8 blocks from K.U. DON'T DELAY. Reserve your apt.
waffles. 481-1212 or 835-4455.
481-1212 or 835-4455.
FOR RENT
TRAILBLEE. Leasing for full-Situation &
& TrailBlee 2. Leasing for gold township.
The team has the harvest gold township,
who was laying out the chapels furnished.
and then built the chapels furnished.
mining, tenniess & sequestration. On R.U. burl.
leasing for trailbblee.
TRY COOPERATIVE LIVING. Sunflower House. 842-9421. tf
MED CENTER BOUND? Newly refurbished
2 BR Duplexes available now. Carpet, A/C
Appliances, parking. Call (913)-381-2878.
Must see to believe. Furnished rooms with utilities paid near university & downtown.
No pets. Phone 841-3500. **if**
Wanting to sublease bhivel, 2 bdm. agr., for summer. New, AC bdhroom, carpet, electric garage opener, 1½ bath. Within 600 sq. ft. campus and campus downstairs. 600-743-1348. 600-743-1348.
SUMMER SUBLEASE May rent free, walk to campus or downtown, June & July rent negotiable, 2 bedrooms, Utilities required, Call & 714-578, comfortable, quiet. 4-30
PRINCETON PLACE PATIO APARTMENTS.
For rentals, features patio wood burning fireplaces for five apartments, bookups, fully-equipped washer/dryer or kitchen spaces 9:30-10:30 daily at 2000 Princeton Blvd. or phone 482-2575 for additional information. HOUGSHOP, 8 & Renaid. If your tired of apartments feature 3 bdr., 2 baths, all appliances at least four years old, and features a window. We have openings, and in the meantime, we are offering evening at 198-760 for more information about our moderately priced townhouses.
Furnished one BEDROOM apt. for sublease.
Central air/heat. Available May 15 Cali-
central air/heat.
Rooms available for summer $410-416 per room and quiet atmospheric Call Darryl
SUBLEASE ME : I am a two bedroom apt. in the MKM building, located on three levels, with within walls of greecies and plizza. I have a didwaler, water and cable T.V. included in rent. If you would like to live within my plush room, call 841-9533 or 841-6233 - G-74.
Summer sublease :: OR June to June lease.
Dividend payable at: 100% of bal. paid, stc.
Other fees: Filed, wklk or xkk
Fees on sublease are based on
QUETT Meadowbrook studio to subdue, June 12
*Meadowbrook Studio*, 307 W. 48th St., D.C.
and included. furnished, private entrance,
ground level. lots of grass and trees,
swimming, tennis A /C, cable TV. 81-653-5900
Summer sublease. Fem. only. Clean, close in campus. Low util. 841-7086. 4:30
Affective 2 bedroom apartment, unfurnished,
available May 1 84-324-966, after 6:32
June-July sublease 8th & Miss. 2 bdm.
furnished. 225/mm.
420-543 (vvc) 725-mm.
420-543 (vvc)
Thinking of Next Year?
Furnished one bedroom apartment Bills paid
No bills 813 Louisiana 4.29
*Private Sleeping Stuff*
*Carpeting*
*Private Baths & Showers*
*Chairs of Meal Plans*
*Parties*
*Pool*
*Maid Service*
May rent free! S Summer subsail /all app-
lications on KU bus rides 3 pool, 5 beach
for KU bus rides
Naismith Hall is the Place to
Live...
Call 843-8559 or Stop By 1800 Naismith Drive
Check Us Out This Spring or Summer
'Maid Service
'Great Location
Available June 2 % 30 Bedroom furnished adult
18 months or older % 30 $2,500. Deposit required.
$25 per month or older % 30 $2,500. Deposit required.
We Think You Will Like Us!
New kitchen, a/c / 312 Rise. Deposit required.
Phone 641-8707
4-23
Summer sublease. Furnished studio apart-
ment. Pool, tennis court, location.
749-4526
4-30
LRG-4 BR. house. Full finish basement.
In front of campus. Heat & water. Available in May. 842-3020
SUMMER SUBLEASE. Trailrue/studio
for campus pool view. Price negotio-
nal 841-2326, anytime
Sublease, choice 2 br. apt, furnished, between campus & downtown. 8280 mo. 749-
841-2326, anytime
Master BEDROOM AVAILABLE starting with this summer season. $160.00 month with free utilities. Call 841-1434 for details
Sleeping rooms 1 - 3 bedrooms
Steeping rooftops 2-3B bedroom apartments Duplexes. No Phone Call 843-8571. Lease Address Fax 843-8571
2 bedroom furnished mobile homes. $185 and $215 per month. Available May 1st. Clean, quiet location. No pets. Jayhawk Court. #872-847 or #872-018. 4-30
Sublease large 2 BR apartment near street 418-8235, gas paid, central air. 4-29
Sublease for summer. 1 bedroom apartment at Sundance. Call Tom. 794-0847. 4-26
Availor a Harvard Square Apartment! Juice bar! 3 bedrooms! 1 or 1 Aug. occupancy. Call 814-690-1000.
New leasing 2 & 2 bedroom duplexes. Available for Aug. 1 occupancy. Fireplaces, Valley Management, Inc. 4-30
Apartment for sublease: 2 bedroom-fitted June-August Summit House. 1105 Suite 238, Ohio. 814-6060. Valley Management, Inc. 33h, Ohio. 3-4 people. Price negotiable. 794-1243 or 794-2450.
Summer SUMMER BULEASE. New furnished house. 13th, Ohio. 3-4 people. Price negotiable. 794-1243 or 794-2450.
Summer subsale-Niece 2 bedroom house. Close to Availor a Harvard Square Apartment!
Summer Surrender. Possible fall option. 3 bedroom. Walking distance to campus, port yard. Availor a Harvard Square, carport. back yard. 794-1275. 4-23
Summer subsale with option for fall, furnished 2 bedroom. Mala Apartments (ponti). Walking distance to campus, leaflet. 1 mithought call. 794-1243.
SUMMER BULEASE with option for fall. Modern two bedroom apartment in 4-plex. Walking distance to campus, leaflet. 1 mithought call. 794-1243.
SUMMER BULEASE with option for fall. Modern two bedroom apartment in 4-plex. Walking distance to campus, leaflet. 1 mithought call. 794-1243.
Sublease with rent option 3 or 4 bedroom house with garage, 31st & 32ndalmat 4-678
Summer, sublease-Female warrant $120.00
per month + 1/5 utilities. Big 4-1200
house between campus & downtown.
799-342
+4-23
Summer Sublease. 1 bedroom Cedarwood Apartment furnished. Terms negotiable.
Share beautiful two bedroom house - mature pine pines, quelled west side location, bison bedroom Wunder/water lawn care $150 Bedroom Wunder/water room $120 Summer sublease. Real close to campus. Summer sublease. Real close to campus.
Summer Sublease. Real close to campus.
Call 842-4364 for more information. 4-26
Spacelab 2 bedroom, 1/2 bath, full kitchen, media center, kitchen appliances, plaza, pizza, supermarkets Mala has pool, sauna room and quiet outdoor TV area with cable TV. 649-670 or 859-730 Rent negotiable. 649-670 or 859-730
1 bedroom apartment with loft. Furnished.
AC. Next to the Sanctuary on 7th. Great condition. Call 842-8709 4-30
Summer Sublease. 3 bedroom townhouse at
Trailridge. $400/month. Call 749-1150. 4-28
Trailridge, 4600/month. Call 749-1167. 4-28
Sublease 2 bedroom apartment at Meadowbrook.
Anytime May to August at Meadowbrook.
435-3032. 4-30
SUMMER SUBLEASE Available May 15,
walk to campus or downtown. Modern 2
bedroom, $699; traditional, clean, quiet, fall option,
discount required. Call 847-731-767
4-35
RENT NEGOTIABLE—must sublease modern
2 bedroom apartment; AC; convenient,
clean. 942-5199. 4-26
For May, very nice summer school rooms in large quiet house one block from Union. For September, close by or see at 1209 Ohio. Beautiful views from the decks and porches. Cue the kitchen and dining room. I will be in GUICHUNT PLACE. Summer leases. 941-375-1200. Alabama. tf
Apartment, summer sublease. 2 bedroom/2 bath, good location, pool, laundry facilities.
Call 841-3584 4-23
Sublease—2 bedroom apartment, Oaks, June-July. Rent negotiable. Gas, water paid. 841-8911, evenings. 4-27
Summer sublease $65.00 off per month. Located at Hanover Place Apartments. New, furnished, excellent location. Fall option. 841-2802. 4-29
Now Leasing
Avalon and Harvard Square
Apartments
1 & 2 BR's-Furnished or
Unfurnished-on Bus Route
3 quiet, responsible students seek place to live—house or apartment starting in August. Call Nancy, Ellen, or Paige at 864-5881 or 864-5884.
Avalon Office-905 Availon Rd.
Open Sat. 10 AM-2 PM
OR Call 841-6080
For Showings.
Furnished upstairs studio apartment, available May 15. On C.A. bus route, and close to downtown. C/A. 841-3991. tf
room 1, $2 bath, 2 car garage, fre pleasure,
all appliances $700 monthly, 2 duplexes
2 bedroom, bath, 1 car garage, all appli-
ments, 2 bedrooms, toilets, toilets
car to cargos, 749-383, 843-753, 4-30
to carpets, to urinals.
Wanted: 2 or 1 females to share 8-bedroom house very close to campus. Summer only. Rent $9 per month + minimal utilities. 749-0617. 864-6205. 4-23
Carpeted, remodeled 2 bedroom house within a walking distance of Medical Center.
$240.00 month. Appliances, furnished. 1-693-4-27
big beautiful renovated house with washer, dryer and porch swing. Master bedroom suite with walk-in closet, utilities each. Close to campus and downtown. Available May 15. Call 704-349-8308
SUMMER SUBLEASE: Furnished 2 bedroom, pool, air conditioning, dishwasher, laundry, in Applecroft. 843-3618 4-27
SUMMER SUBLEASE with option for fall.
Modern 2 bedroom apartment. low utilities,
short distance to campus and down-
city. 841-1175.
A very sharp, small, two bedroom; and very close to campus. Prefer non-smokers. 4-7 p.m., Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday, and 1-5 p.m., Sunday. 184 Mature students.
Sublease, no May rent. 1 bedroom. Fall option. Water, cable paid. Dishwasher, air conditioning, laundry. Will deal. 745-2471.
Must sublease for summer. First month rent paid. 1001 Indiana, Apt. D. Call 842-9766 after 9:00 p.m.
4-27
Nice 1 bedroom apartment, close to campus and downtown. Air conditioner, $75 plus utilities. Call Linda, 841-7451. 4-23
Need a place to live this summer? Sublease beautiful two bedroom duplex, air conditioning, fully furnished. Perfect location—across the city. Call 518-793-4271 Ask for Lestie or Jake 4-27
2 bedroom apartment to sublease to summer
student. One block from campus. Call 813-479-1488.
Summer Sublease, fall option - Studio $180;
Winter Sublease, fall option - Studio $180;
downtown - 749-1088.
Summer sublease with extension option in fall: 3 bedroom apartment with central air, fully carpeted, dinky pool and eco-friendly appliances. Make an offer. 841-8800. 4-30
2 bedroom apartment 5 R, central air, heater and refrigerator, no pets. Grads preferred. Available. $43, $240, $924 New Hampshire. June-851.
For rent, 1 bedroom apartment with 40 foot furnished deck with walking distance - 28 - 749-0536 - 28
Summer sublease with option in Fall. New bedroom duplex on Old Orchard golf course - 600-0536 - 28
Bedroom suite on Old Orchard golf course - 600-0536 - 28
Summer sublease. Reduced rate. Walk to
campus. Furnished. Air conditioned. 841-
7955. Ask about #363. 4-28
Summer sublease with option in fall. New 3 bedroom duplex on Orchard's golf course, 3015 University Dr. $465.00 per month. 841-8225. 4-30
Summer and fall rentals, houses and apart-
ments 481-851 or 841-3925
Layton 4-20
842-1691 or 841-3925
PERFECT FOR ONE. Sublease spacious one b-droom, partly furnished 5 minutes from campus. $200, utility paid. 843-7270 4-28 2:30; 749-4414. anytime
2 brydge townhouse 3 blocks from campus,
14th & Kentucky. A C full kitchen, garage,
furnished 1½ bath, priced to sublease.
482-2905.
4-30
Summer abubist—mid-May to mid-Aug. Night
pardling, including air conditioning, swimming
paid, including air conditioning, swimming
summer abubist on spacious apartment for
summer abubist on spacious apartment for
Call Amy D at 843-6250 or Lisa K at 843-7155.
Sublease: One bedroom apartment, furnished, $150 per month, no utilities. 842
2836. 4-28
Two bedroom apartment in residential area northwest of campus. Available June 1, summer and or fall. Call Steve after 5:00 p.m. p81-3833.
For rent. 2 bedroom apartment, furnished,
air conditioned, close to shopping
and campus, on bus route. $250 monthly.
Call 483-5722 between 7-5 p.m. A WEEKEND.
Succasius furnished 4. bedroom home 2704
Stirford Road. Family room, pool table,
all appliances. 29 bth. Available Aquatort rent.
16 beds. 18 baths. Utilities 875-2012. Refrences required.
**Sublease—Meadowbrook Studio UU228**
*Place, $230/month, water and sea*
*included, furnished, private, swimming,*
*tennis, A. c. cable TV, 84-420-3900, daytime.* 781-548-6740
SUMMER SUBLEASE. Possible fall May rent free from room apartments. Room size up to Union. Room size down. Low rent & utilities. CA/heat. Natalie 7408-8481-6500 5 & 900 weeks or Vanessa 8481-6410
Sublease, TRAILHIGH 1 bedroom apartment, May 11-July 31 with extension option in the fall. May rent free. Call 542-8282 after 5.
Sublease 2 bedroom apartment, 1 bedroom from stadium. Air conditioned, 2 years old. Available May 19-July 31, 841-0073 after 6 p.m.
PABULOUS DUPLEX! Live in style! 3 bedrooms. 1½ baths. fully carpeted, Central air and heat. Call 842-8851 now! 4-30
Sublease with option to renew for fall.
Female only. 3 bedroom apartment. $10,600
month + 1/3 electricities. On bus run.
4-26
841-7634
INEXPENSIVE DUXLEY -4 bedroom 2 -4
AC/carpet $395/month. 843-938 2-48
17
University Daily Kansan, April 23, 1981 Page 15
38,000
vector 27,800
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13,017
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31,000
18,250
18,250
10,550
10,550
21,400
21,400
9,471
9,471
5,140
5,140
17,100
innovation
maj. div. 28,625
CURITY
affili
sch . . . . . 32,952
aj. div . . . 26,004
. . . . . . 24,948
phys plant .36,200
/maj div. .29,250
/maj div. .28,900
manit
dudetes 1,304
a 1,304
s 420
a 420
dudetes 2,008
a 400
dudetes 2,608
a 1,382
dudetes 1,458
a 1,458
bedroom apart-
ments $235/month,
Call Sue, 842-
4-27
director 44,30s
director 44,00s
director 32,00s
dor 22,00s
habit 23,00s
architect 12,00s
from campus,
kitchen, garage,
sublease. Call
4-30
spacious one minutes from *43-7270 after 4-28
artment, fur-
utilities. 842-
4-26
residential area
table June 1,
move after 5.00
4-30
ent, furnished.
shopping and
month. Call
L WEEKEND.
1.99
m, home 2704
pool table, all
de August 1st.
$225 affiche
ses required.
4-4m
o UU220 Brit-
r and gas in-
nning, tennis,
time. 749-1548
4-26
fall. May
room sale.
downtown.
Natalie 749-
or Vanessa
4:28
droom apart-
ension option
CALL 842-6301
4-30
1 foot, 'block
2 years old,
0-0723 after 6
months
RENEW one-
enereed, patio
te area, large
te area. Beautiful
841-5342 after
4-26
style! 3 bed-
d, Central air
4:30
new for fall.
n bus route.
4-26
droom 2 bath.
308.
4-26
Sublime, Meadowbrook, studio apartment.
Furnished. Heat, water, cable, paid, balcony, pool, tennis courts. May 1-July 30 Call 843-5882. 6:00 p.m. 4:30
Must ubilease 2 bedroom apartment for
mummer. $50 rent prepaid—no bills 2 pools,
laundry room, on bus route. 742-7486. 4-28
Roommate for May 1, summer and possibly fall. $110/month plus utilities. Serious students prefer. Come take a look. 842-6038 4-30
THESE BEDROOM HOUSE—across from Oliver Heights, central air, very clean bedding, bathroom, apartment. BASEMENT apartment across from Oliver Heights, fireplace, partly carpeted. BATHroom, double. $25 a month. Call 842-2128 after 6:00, be on weekends. Both availability. A11.
MEDAOBOOKWOW. Now available for carpet,
furnished studio, electric kitchens,June
furnished, 2 swimming pools, 3 tennis
courts, 2 swimming pools, 4-30m
842-4200, 150t & Crestline. 4-30m
4-200
Large older comfortable house next to
stadium. Suitable for 4 or maybe 5 people.
Mid-May, year's leave. No. 429
843-8633
Summer nubilee large beautiful 2 bedroom apartment. Furnished, free water and cable TV. Excellent location. 845-7104 4-30
Sublane June 1-Aug. 15, 3 bedroom, back yard, 2 car garage, close to campus, $315 + utilities, $41-$377, 4-29
Summer subunit 2 rooms available May 15-
Aug. 15. $125 per month utilities included.
Behind Watson. 843-6720. 4-29
Sublease May 15-Aug. 1. Fully furnished,
stocked kitchen, color TV, A. blocks
newer TVs, 2 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms for $289. May rent
negotiable. 749-9651.
Duplex, great location 811 Ohio. 2 bedroom,
stove, refrigerator, a/c, carpet available
now $260/mo. 1-796-6853. 4-29
Furnished apartments for rent near downtown and university. No pets. Reserve your apartment now. 841-5500. 4-30
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Scores make sense to use them—13. As study guide, makes sense to use them—14. As study guide, makes sense to use them—15. New Analysis of Western Civilization. New Analysis of Western Civilization. Cited the Bookman and Dread Bookman.
Alternator, starter and generator specialists.
Parts, service, and exchange units. BELL
AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-9058, 3900 W.
W. 6th.
1967 Blue Merc. Cougar, 289 el., auto, A/C,
AM/FM/cassette, runs good! Jack
-749-2501.
4-23
Stereo-Televisions-Video Recorders. Name brands only. Factory sealed cartons. Lowest prices in the K.C. area. Get your best price. Call total Sales Center 817-246-3500 4-20
1979 Vespia Bravo Moped. 2200 miles. Excellent condition. 864-1092. 4-23
1979 MAZDA RX7-GS PURRFECT. 843-8625
842-8323.
4-20
1980 HONDA CX500 DELUXE shaft drive, water cooled windshield, backrest, luggage rack. 2,600 MILES. 943-184-84. 4-23
1981 GN400X Suzuki. NEW $1495. Asking
$1200. Only 27 miles. Call 842-7679 after
p.m.
4-27
Honda 125 XL—2400 miles, only ridden by
Prist to Church. $695. Peter Casparian.
841-405-832. 843-820-92.
4-23
Rare acoustic guitar has to be sold immediately. Call Mike. 749-4278. 4-23
TENNIS HACKETS—Head, Wilton, Dunlap.
Prince, KYee-Good selection, new/used.
Will buy yours if in good condition. 842-
6713 after 6:00 p.m. tf
*stamp*-liquidating at cost at Hundreds of dollars worth. Very fine to superb, never buys as many or as few as you like. Price $291. Up all Inquiry! Books 4-23
$629.
Stereo receiver—Yamaha CB640 45 watts.
Excellent condition. Call Mark 841-1108.
4-23
Dorm room sized carpet remnant. Rust, gold pattern, $50 or make offer. Cindy 842-4456
4-23
Sanyo personal portable stereo cassette player with headphones. Call Russell. 843-8153.
Rhodes 73-key electric piano with Fender deluxe reverb amplifier. Call evenings. 749-
2899. 4-27
Rock Chalk '82 audio and video tapes still
Video~$50/show or $125 com-
mercial. 75~$7/show or $15 comps or
Bran, Brian ~161-197 nights. 48~274-
afternoon. 48~274-night.
1981 Suzuki GS450T black, beautiful, big-gate rack, back rest, crash bars, must sell—getting you 924-4864, after 4:09 p.m.
1972 Grand Prix Model J—Excellent condition all around. See to appreciate. Andy at 843-9048. 4-29
ATTENTION Eosiectic Audio. Hailer DH-1204A PREAMP, Hailer DH-208A AMP, Carver Sine Hologram, DBX-IBX Companier, Carver L1-50, Uniifiable AMP, 4020A2
104 PRAEMAP Haffer D10-280 AMP; Comp. Mitsubishi Ll-30 turbine; NAD 4020 Mitsubishi Ll-30 turbine; NAD 4020 Audio Tech Power Meter, Audio Control System Control D-11, D-15, 480 Satellite Suekers, with fan base rack walt flush '5', Disk kit, with fan base rack walt flush '6', Comp. Mitsubishi Ll-641-119
1972 BMW 2002 tii. fuel injected with 5 speed. Very good running condition. $2500.00 firm. Call 842-1583. 4-28
Hammond B-3 in sharp black vinyl and
chrome cabinet. Ideal for rock or combo
group. Includes Leslie speaker. $1895;
6841-858 or 1-381-2643. 4-26
10 ppeed, mene 24" frame Jenuet Jeunet,
new wheels, Mavac center pull brakes.
Suntour derrail, like new. $175.00. 843-
2069
Sea's Kenmore 1.7 cubic ft. refrigerator. 8 months old. Great for dorm or small apartment. Must sell by May 13. Call 864-3899 4-23
2 Battian; wood nightstands. O'Dullan stove cabinet, butcher block dining table; classical guitar, bike rack. Call 842-8285 after 5. 4-30
1977 Mercury Monarch Ghl. a/c cruise
am/fm cassette, runs great! $1900: 841-6148.
4-26
Speakers: Kilpach Heresay's, very efficient speakers for the discreet audiophile. Great for jazz to rock, bought 10-5/8 inch, $79. Shop; Retail $740 max. price, $801, 8-4-28
1975 Rabbit, 2 door hatchback $1600, or best offer before May 5th. 841-672. Keep trying. 4-30
King size bed-mattress and box springs,
excellent condition, $150, 843-9477, Curt.
4-27
WATERBED - Queen-size in, very good condition. Extra mattress & bedding included for $130. Call Marsha at 841-1390. 4-30
1978 Chevette, good condition, 4 radials,
new brakes, new starter; $850 Linda 749-
8082, 4-29
**tresser**, **teaser**, **Jeans**, name brands, *size*, $8 pair - $12.50 pair Friday - 4-23 and $7 pair - $11.1 pair Saturday - 4-24. Limited **279**; Mass. Room 216, 10.6; **4-23**
Living room set, 3-piece dineetie set, bedroom set, coffee table, two end tables, and more. Excellent condition. Call 843-3218 after 5.0 p.m.
4-30
1975 Flat 124. Sports Runs OK, $1450 or
transf for 791-84154 after 28.
4-28
Inflatable raft. Great for fishing' or river running. Has motor mount 843-7430 after six. 4:29
onda 450, 1974, good condition Asking
456. Call Pete or Jan at 834-8454. 4-23
Scientific American. 300-plus issues from mid 1952 thru 1980. $80, delivered locally.
1-796-6853. 4-29
2 speaker cabinets with mid-range horn and 15" woofer, 175 watts. RMS. Jeff Smith, 843-5366. 4-30
FOUND
Small puppy, looks like a German Shepherd. Found at TKE house on Wednesday. 14th. No older than 8 weeks. Contact Scott Brown, 813-330. 4-23
Grey male kitten, about 8 weeks old. Found near 19th & Maple. Call 842-9248 after 6:00.
One billfold. Call 843-3610 after six o'clock.
4-23
Red Thermos in Wescue. Call 842-6634
Pecan roll. 4-23
School ring found at Oliver Hall. Call 864- 6904 and identify. 4-26
HELP WANTED
A green jacket found at Buekbildekbendweg
weding Saturday night. 841-815-103, 4-26
Attention: Business Students. Nationally known company interviewing students for summer work program. High profit and high demand. Interview call, 749-5237. 4-27
Programmers. Local Company needs part-time programmers for microcomputers. We can supply equipment. Send resume to O. Box 3859, Lawrence; Attention: David.
Are you commuting to kansas City Kansas?
Yes, I'm going to drop off U&K's at the RU Med Center. For information contact Katie Kearns 312-848-9507 or Olinte, KC, 652-641-8848.
Earp up to $500 or more each year beginning-Sg September for 1-3 years. Buy your own hours. Monthly pay based on results. Payment based on results. Przesenie pai
Experienced bartender needed: References required. Must be able to work summer, start immediately. Apply in person. 815 New Hampshire, 10-2 p.m. 4-23
KU-Y is seeking a full-time coordinator for a 3 month instructor. June $25 to May $35. All instructors must complete quarter time and the program coordinator will receive a minimum of $250 a month for a minimum of 18 hours a week. During this time, the instructor, the coordinator will receive a minimum of $400 a month.
and assess the situation. The coordinator must be dedicated to exposing endings and offering workable alternatives, including providing by systematization and individual use of methane, experience in organizations or individually experienced individuals, and experience in organizations or individually experienced individuals.
Affiliation with the university has been a reason and 2 letters of reference by 4/30/82 to KUY 1808 Kunan University, Lawerence, Kanada. Affirmative Employer. Affective Agent. Employer.
We are looking for, 25 independent, hard working students for full-time summer work. Must be willing to relocate. Oppenheim will earn approximately $189,749-329,227 4-27
The Eastern Civilization Program antigen
collection. Provides a vacancy for the academic year 1983-84. Con-
tributes to Guilds, 2118 Wesley Hall, 684-
05 May 14, 1984. An equal Opportunity All-
way Employer.
Anticipated Graduate Assistancehips & Contingent in lieu of onboarding for office. Office UX Space Hall-Carpenter West 864-175. Title: Graduate Assistant, Length of employment: Summer 1982 to Fall 1983. Salary: $23.50/regular hourly;
JUNIOR & SENIOR HISTORY, Meteorology,
and Astronomy. Participate in a reading study $40 for 45
minutes at the library or by phone at 813-643-1234;
10:30 to 11:00 on the hour and April 23 at
10:30 to 11:00 on the hour to come to Cresher Hall or call 864-1433.
**Positions Available.** Fulltime summer position available. Pay $105.00 per month. Must be willing to relocate. Write Summer Work-Po Box 204, Lawnrs. K604, 6:40-8 p.m.
PHYSICAL THERAPY
Lawrence Hospital has a long history of treatment for in-patients and out-patient treatment in patients and out-patient settings. A S-M-F and some saliva mornings; information, call Nancy Hope, Employment Information; call 4-29-8405-1340; Qualified Handled umpers used to apply. 4-29
Person to care for 3 great kids approximately 20 hours per week. Schedule flexible. Must be able to drive, have own transportation. 423-728-825-364. 4-30
ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT - The Constitutional Assistant to assist start August 15, 1982 to implement requirements required. familiarity with East Asia experience preferred. Annual salary $200,000. Applications will include education, qualifications and experiences. Applications with letter of recommendation to Katherine Lawrence, RS K64003 of Kansas Lawrence, KS 64003 for information. An Equal Opportunity Affirmative Action (EOAP) Information.
Part-time help needed weekends and Mondays. A-1 Rental, 2900 Iowa. 4-30
information. An Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer. Applicants should have the right to race, religion, color, sex, disability, veteran status, national origin, age or ancestry.
Tan velcro wallet and Capitol Federal checkbook inside an Omega racket cover. Reward: 749-0406. 4-23
PERSONAL
LOST—A pair of gold-tinted glasses in the Union. If found, call Martin at 843-1773. Reward. 4-23
Month-at-a-Glance pocket organizer near 14th and Kentucky. Reward. 4-23
LOST
Instant photograph, vlaq, ID, & resume photographs.
Custom made portraits b/w, color.
Savels Studio. 749-1611. **tf**
Lost—flute in black case. Friday morning
4-16. Reward. Call--841-0528. 4-28
Remember . . . mother loves you, show her how you feel this Mother's Day. *Bring* the Studio for portraits of fine quality, satisfaction guaranteed. 749-1611. 4-30
Say it on a sweatsuit with custom alk-
screen printing 1 to 1000 shirt art by Swella
749-1611. tf
The Kegger—Weekly Specials on Kegls!
Call 841-9450-1610 W. 23rd. tf
Skillet's liquor store serving U-Daly since 1949. Come in and compare. Willfred Skillet since 1906. Mass 843-8186. if
For your party clothes, formal or costume,
check out the Inflation Fighter 8. E.Th.
10-5:30 M-F 10-5:30 Sat. Open off tf
On Thurs.
HEADACH, BACKACH, STIFF NECK
LEG PAIN? Find and correct one of
these. Use the following for
modern chiropractic care. 843-9338.
Accepting Blue Cross and Lone Star insurance
COMPRESIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES
preferred pregnancy testing; early and advanced out patient abortion; gynecology, contraception; BIC or Bore Overland Park, IA (912) 643-7000
(912) 643-7000
Paid Staff Positions Fall Business Manager Summer Editor
The Kansan is now accepting applications for the Summer Editor and Fall Semester Business Manager positions. These are offered in a variety of newspaper experience. Application forms are available in the Student Senate Office, 105 B, Hall Floor. Students in Student Organizations and Activities, 220 Strong Hall; and in Room 200 Flint Hall. Completed applications are due in 200 Fliin 5:00 p.m., Wednesday April 29.
The University Daily Kanan is an Equa OpportunityAffirmativeAffirmative institutions are sought from all qualified people regardless of race, religion, color, sex, disability, national origin, age, or ancestry.
MARY KAY COSMETICS--Full-time beauty consultant. 842-6641. tf
Spring formals Barb's Second Hand Rose.
515 Indiana. Open till 5 p.m. 842-748-4. 3-40
Remember, O most gracious Virgin Mary,
O most gracious Virgin Mary,
in to help you, sought the protection,
implied her intercession was left unadded.
O Virgin Mary, so in love, come before me,
O Virgin Mary, so in love, come before me,
I stand saint and sorrowful. O Lady of the
Cross, my Lord, I pray for you in thy mercy, hear and answer me. Amen.
Wanting to talk with someone? Gay & Leaian Peer counselors available through headquarters (841-2343) or information center (864-3068) just call.
West Coast Saloon
You get more for less,
for longer at the Coast.
25' Draws
NOON-6 p.m.
EVERY FRIDAY
2222 IOWA 841-995
Personal problems Concern? Confidential Professional Counseling. Specializing in life changing skills. Free initial consultation. 811-4144. 4-26
Get ready for the lazy GATOR DATE of friends (Nike, Hoover, Sporhampton, Calvin Bruntsel) who are waiting during April at Alwarm Bay or a local hall. ALL MECHANISED IS 150% OFF on a Golf Coiffure, on either of Kwade or Golf Coiffure. Sale ends April 16th.
Stereo-Televisions-Video Recorders. Name brand only. Factory sealed cartons. Lowest prices in the K.C. area. Get your best offer at Sound Fail. Phone 913-284-3600 4-30
PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH-
RIGHT, 843-4821.
Community Auction 700 N.H
MASSAGE. The Human Body has 640 important muscles in the lower body, and is trained in the Orient for thousand years for people to maintain excellent muscle strength. Learn your muscles: 843-1202. 4-30
Consignments Accepted
Every Wed. 6:30 p.m.
Looking for someone to take a coast to coast bicycle trip this summer. Phone 841-6668.
4-23
Rentany car(Mon, Tues, Wed,
$6.95 Per Day.
$60 Per Week.
$225 per Month.
$6.95 Per Day
841-2212
Consignments Accept
Wed. 10 a.m. till sale
Sat, 10:5
LEASE-A·LEMON
Cannot be combined with any other specials. All cars are mechanically sound, state inspected, clean & ready to rent. We accept cash, checks, visa-mastercard 749 4252
Have you appreciated your favorite secretary this week? Let her know she is special and unique with a special and gift-bend her a balloon-a-gram. 841-388-6428
Established band looking for male/female lead singers and lead guitar players. Drumma, guitar and keyboards. Immediate need of bassist. 4-23, there leave name & phone.
GEORGES' USED FURNITURE & Antiques.
OPEN 9-4 p.m. 1035 MASS. BUY-SELL-
TRADE.
4-36
The Douglas County Democratic Central Committee has announced its candidate for Docking, Candidate for Lieutenant Governor Friday. April 23, 7:00 p.m. at the Douglas County Regency A. Ruggeri donates $4,239 to the donation.
GREEN'S CASE SALE. COORS $ 8.79, PASTB
LONG NECKS $ 7.19. GREEN'S 808
23RD. 4-23
THE JAYWAKER is now accepting appl-
lation for the position of Business Man-
ager. Student interested in this
position may pick up their application
in person. Applicant deadline is April
Kansas Union. Application deadline is April
I am just looking for some fun, not a commitment. Are you? Call Scott. 843-8133.
4-23
1982, and all 'well. Don't agree? Welcome to the club. Read "Living Simpler" and learn a foreign world. Meet field Publications. Box 2022, Shawnee M-42, KS 62010.
Youthful hairstyle desired by quicky pop band with ideas. ida, and a more than adequate serving of talent. Todd atd in 842-6711.
Green's Spring Keg Prices
Budweiser 16 gal $39
6 gal $24.50
Coors 16 gall $38
Coors 16 gal $38
8 gal $25.50
Coors Lite 16 gal $38
Michelob 16 gal $44.50
Miller 16 gal $38.00
Old Milwaukee 16 gal $29.05
(prices include complete CO $ ^{2} $ tapping equipment
Call for special pricing on multiple key orders.
808 W. 23rd
SPECTRUM OPTICAL fantastic savings using the Lawrence Book or People Book coupons on our large selection of frames. Open 10:6, M- S- M11-14, 4 I E-7, 4-23
DON'T MISS YOUR WEDDING! Let me show you how to over again. On color sound video tape film, $58 complete (includes reception) for dates in the San Francisco Bay Area or of Kansas City (913) 851-3690. - 422
Walmers. Sun Your Buns II has arrived!
The Walmart store has a dress-up key to take dyes. Bring ball gloves, frisbee, and sneakers.
Be at Poodlehood in the Lawners 12:00 sharp. Will party all day and come in on Saturday.
Financial Aid For Students
A new computerized service can help find the funds that will enable you to qualify. Five to 25 sources will be provided.
For free and complete information:
Financial Aid For Students
P.O. Box 381
Lee's Summit, Mo. 64063
Graduating seniors: take advantage of our senior portrait special. For information, call Sweils Studio: 749-1611. 4-30
April 30, 9 p.m. Kansas Union Ballroom presented by Academic Freedom Action Coalition.
4-27
The men of Kappa Omicron Alpha invite you to their 8th annual party! Complete dress code; please arrive dressed and outfited bookings. Come party with KOA's at their favorite club! **4-23**
GREAT HOME for summer sublease. b-DROOMS in new residential area, 4th & 6th floor, all with private bath that's cheap for 6 people. Call 814-1300 and talk to anyone or George Waters at 814-2100.
BIOLOGY CLUB
O. John Brenn, Prof. of Mathematics and Ecology, on the Potential Ecological and Social Effects of a Thermonuclear War Friday 4:00 p.m. Suffronter Room KS Union Dept.
Dr. John D'Brien, Prof. of Systematics and
Dance classes at the Lawrence School of
Ballet will continue through May 13. Special
jazz and ballet intermission May 24–June
10. Performance starts on June 25.
For schedule, B4-42595
Howle Shoe Sigma Nu. Can't wait to meet the governor Saturday night. We'll have a ball! S.J. 4-22
Mary K. Meister Happy 21st Birthday. Stay away from randoms. Love your gut.
Michelle. 4-23
TAN ME
FREE session (new customers only)
Spring White Sale
Guaranteed Safe &
Effective; UVA Tan Beds
For Appointment
party tonight! Let's Rayle at the Hawk as fast as our cars will take up — Dagwood 4-23. If you like tasty Chinese restaurants, VWs and butterfly nets then you the woman
Babadhat at Night Belle Dance Performance
Centre of the Arts & Culture Centre
International Political 6-30
Performances at 8:00, April 24
4-23
Performances at 10:00, May 7
1-23
From me and you
4-23
From me and you
1 love making love with the squirrelly one
2 love.
4-23
To our sex, aquariums, moody, loving car, the stove with its flickering flame, the shunting plumbing, whipping-up esclatical, twisting roomis. It's time to cut the cake. We're going to be a family. Let's of Lazy-Land from your 4-Day lots of Lazy-Land from your 2-Day lots.
May Kay Meister. Happy 21st birthday
doll. Let's stay away from anyone random.
Love your guts. Michelle. 4-23
Janiece—I'm positive that you would love it here. It would be a great experience, and it would better your career. Not to mention, it would care for you here. LOVE 4,23 S.I. B
To the only person I know who can be a great friend, I will be a bien衣 to remember! I guess if we were all dressed up as Misty, hundrums, shopping carts, bank cards, and what else can we make it through anything else, then we should cry for her. And cry from Phi Fri 590 to ADG Form and after that—you-know he box—him in.
The committee for the Preservation of
the Cathedral is GAR-Sat. & Sun, May 8 & 9. Music by
his fabulous Ebbling Brothers, Whitewatt,
Bob Hounsell, Hopkins, Cooking.
Music by all the beer you can drink, all night long,
Watch for map in Wad, April 28 UHD 4-23
Hey sport! -Yeah you there with the gorgeous eyes and sparkling smile when you glance at her. She is wearing what you tripped and fell! (Hope the land was safe) I am not worried anymore because we have a good trip, she has buddies tonight and the rest of the week is off. I will be careful, take care and keep a smile on your face with my love in your heart. You are careful and Jasper P.J. 4-23 on fine!
SAILRIDER
Call your certified board sailing
Catch Some Wind
center for lessons and rentals
842-2366
Dear Poodlehead, So you're now 21, and I want you to be the best girl when they check your LD—and be longer. No longer "babe in the woods," with your women it is undervakred—do know 'dairs way? Come on, let's go to naked at Sun Your Funn! I'll Happy B-day, and I bring on the bubba!** F-4-25
Allaguar-garoo-garon-Wahoo-Yahon. If there wasn't a Hitch what would we do? We'd fork from Chicago can take a bike, who wouldn't take a car? Orn't it all true! When it comes to partying you can't be fooled the "Trash." So for a趴党 in partying come to our busta. Once you party with us your clow you will want to show off your sneeze-swee. Show this isn't an dion or fashion-show. Blow The Wheel is the place come to party. It's the place to stay out of sight! There no stopping the Walmers can't hold a candle to the "Frostiest Wheel," Monday, April 26, 1982. Be there.
Happy 22nd Birthday
Margaret Ann Cunningham
Love, Your Bear
Happy 22nd Birthday
MLX election time is drawing near, so here's a rhyme with a little lee. *Emergency*: "When the emergency, we'll all pitch some amh. Meghan is coming to, so say and the Wannies too, be announced next week, or stop by that we are announced next week, or make a sneak peek." **BWDGWADS:** 4-23
SERVICES OFFERED.
WRITING A RESUME? What to say? How to say it? 177. Stop by The House of Ulder and pick up our PIRF's brochure on resumes. 230. Visit the Bachuchus, 8-4 M-F 3-2 Sat, NQON-3 Sat.
Schneider Wine & Keg Shop -The finest selection of wines in laurens-Largest supplier of strong kgs. 1610 W. 23rd. 843-3212.
Professional Stringing Tennis and Racquet-
ball. Best Prices in town. Call 842-5521 or
842-6552
GRADUATE STUDENTS THEMES COPPERS
quality awards based on total volume of
shop that can offer variable reduction
offers in the word 'i know' Copy券 29¢ & 39¢
Put your best foot forward with a professionally printed resume from Encore. We can write it, it type, it and print it for you.
Encore Call 824-2821, 25th & Iowa. 4-30
RESUMES—Professional; students' renumer a specially. 841-2654. 4-20
LEARN TENNIS from experienced instructor in small groups with other KU. Students or private lessons 842-4713 after 6:00 p.m.
Another Encore exclusive;
ENLARGEMENTS
Encore Copy Corps
Experienced Tap Dance Teacher wants be-
eginning and intermediate students. Will
trach in my home Call Susan 749-0043
4:28
International Society of Hematology
SPECTRUM OPTICAL. Come in and choose from over 300 frames and sunglasses in stock. One day service in most cases. Open 10-6, M-S. 8:11:41, *I* 7:13. 4-23
842-2001
TYPING
Vid-otages of Academic Skill Enhancement Workshop. Time Management, Final Exams,掌握. Sued Free Friday, April 30, 2:30pm Center, 12 Sirgh冷宫 H4-8644. 4-30
TUTORING MATH. STATISTICS. PHYSICS.
Call 841-3164 or 864-4176 (ask for Robert).
4.50
MOPED RIDERS - It's time to get your bike tuned up for the season. Experienced cycle mechanic will do tune-ups or repairs at reasonable rates. Call Jerry 415-8128. 4128
It's a Fact, Fast, Affordable, Clean, Type,
843-5820.
Experienced typist. Term papers, theses, all miscellaneous. IB Correcting. MISCorrecting Elite or Pica, and will correct spelling. Phone 843-3544 Mrs. Wright.
Experienced typist. Thesis, term w...
etc. IBM Correcting Selective. Call Sand!
after 5 p.m. 748-3018.
TIP-TOP TYPING—experienced typist—IBM Correcting Selective II; Royal Correcting S 500 CD. 843-5675.
tf
TYPING PLUS: Thes, dissertations, papers, letters, applications, résumes. Assistance with composition, grammar, spelling, vocabulary. Foreign students, foreign interns, or Americans. 841-6254.
IRON FENCE TYPING SERVICE. Evenings
842-2507. If
Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms,
graphics, editing, m-correct Selectric.
Call Eilen or Jean Ann 841-2172. **tf**
Experienced typist will type term papers, thesis, dissertations, books, etc. Have IBM self-correcting Selectic II. Call Terry 842-1754 any time or 842-2671.
Experienced typist-thesis, dissertations,
term papers, mice. IBM correcting selectric.
Barb, after 5 p.m. 842-2310. tf
MAGIC FINGERS TYPING SERVICE. 843-
6129. 4-30
For PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myrna.
841-4980. **if**
Would like to type dissertations, thesis, term papers, etc. Call 842-3203. 4-30
Fast, accurate and experienced typist will type your papers. Reasonable. Call 842-8091. 4-30
Graduate students tired of typing, retyping and retyping their thesis or dissertation? Save time and money by word processing it > Encore! Call 442-2001 for more. into 430
Professional typing. Dissertations, thesis,
term papers, resume, legal, etc. IBM Cor-
recting Selective. Debt 843-9092. 4-26
AFPDONABLE QUALITY for all your typing needs: themes, dissertations, resumes, carts, mailing, mice. Call Judy 842-7945 after 8:00 pm.
Experienced typist. Will correct punctuation and spelling. Call events and weekends. 841-7830. 4-26
For a good type call Debby for dissertation,
thesis, term papers, letters etc. at 749-4736.
Quality typing and word processing available at Encore Copy Corps. 25th and Iowa. 842-2001. 4-30
Shakespeare could write. Elvis could wiggle; my talent, typing. Call 842-0043 after 5:00 and weekends. 4-30
Word Processing and Typing. Straight
matter, forms, graphs. Reasonable rates.
Univ. + 50 pgs, overnight service. Melanie.
4-23, 837-515, evening.
Former medical research secretary will type term papers, theses, books, mine. Call Nancy, 841-5802. 4-27
TYPING-EDITING-GRAPHICS. IBM Corp.
Selective, full-time typist, spelling
engineer, job openings for gov-
ner service available. 841-2907. 4-30
OVERNIGHT EXPRESS. Typing: Express-
Probing guaranteed next day. IBM Corp.
Selective, H. Victor Clark. 4-32
8240
WANTED
Female roommate to share 2 bdmr
apt. during the summer. $100 a month + 1%
utilities. 864-1092. 4-25
Female housemate for 3 bedroom room 1
block N. of stadium. Serious students, pre-
grad. grant $1370.00 - 814-6545.
4-28
Person to rent master bedding of a large 3-bedroom mobile home starting with the summer session. $10,000/month with free utilities. Call 641-1454 for more info. 4-20
Roommate(s) to rent Turtlelair apartment for summer. On bus route, pool, A/C patio. Fare May rent, no gas or water bucket. Inquire ask for梨 Bov. Bob. 8449.428
2 female roommates for apartment 2 blocks from KU Med. Center, summer and/or next year. Call Jan, 841-8913. 4-26
We want you! Female roommate for summer!
10.25 - 1/3 electric. Call 844-1911. Call now!
Female roommate wanted for summer. Nice,
roommate. Close to campus. 844-1911
- 1/3 electric. Call now!
Roommate wanted-Female, non-smoker, 3 bedroom bedroom at Trailrine apartment, May 1-August 1. $145 mos. + 1/2. utilities. Call Stephanie. 760-179-479
Wanted: female roommate wanted for summer (at least). Nine 2 bedroom duplex, $100 mo. + ½ utilities. Call 843-6436. 4-26
**Wanted:** Female interested in sub-lending a
bank account. Email: wwintz@cnb.edu;
near campus; call 1818-6300-427.
**FREE** Rooms to share 2 bedroom apartments
in New York City; 1 unit. **FREE**
Room rent: $1,000/unit. **CALL** 844-591-2677.
Roommate wanted for summer by easy-
giving senior male. Share comfortable
bedroom apartment 8 minutes from
downtown apartment plus utilities.
749-2039
Keep trying
ROOMMATE WANTED AVAILABLE for summer and next year. Move into my apartment or I can move into your office. Respectable, mute Call Dave: 845-206-3921
Female roommate wanted to share Meadowbrook 2 bedroom, townhouse for summer, must be non-smoker and 1937.50 ± electricities per month. Call 789-160-427
Roommate to搬入新 2-debtroom apartment with 2 upperclassman. $115/month + 3/1 utilities. Close to campus and stores.
Call Vie after 5 at 843-6472.
WANTED: 2 rooms with 2 bedroom
apartment to share, for fall. Call Nina
864-3231; weekday evenings. Will pay rent
up to $160.
Responsible female nonmonkey to share 1
bedroom apartment June 92 to May 83
Pursuit, washer/dryer provided. Call
749-1900 after 4. 4-28
Roommate for summer. House is one block south of campfire. Quiet, furnished, A/C water. dryer, dishwasher. No smoking. 411-6053. 4-30
Female roommate wanted for fall/spring semester. House is one block south of campus. Quiel, furnished. A/C,洗衣机, drywash. No smoking. 841-6035.
Roommates wanted to share 4-bedroom house near campus. Approximately $125 per person, utilities included. Call 842-7032 or 841-1230.
One female roommate (non-smoker pre-ferred) need to share 2 bedrooms BV Hospital Separation apartment at B3-85 school year. Please contact me at 612-8490 or Canon 842-8185 or Canon 842-8182. 4-30
Roommate would immediately $120/month,
it utilizes. Smoker ok: 748-253-196
2 female roommates for summer; 1 female
for next year. Completely furnished. Shau-
nish Roommate?
JAR NUTTON SAL 8150 96
Page 16 University Daily Kansan, April 23, 1981
白
Kansas, Oregon compete in dual
By DAVE McQUEEN Sports Writer
With the Kansas Relays finally out of the way, the KU men's track team jumps back into the season with a trip to Eugene, Ore., to face the powerful Oregon Ducks in a dual meet.
The meet will be KU's second dual of the outdoor season. They lost an 85-69 decision to Texas-El Paso last month.
According to KU track coach Bob Timmons, the Jayhawks will have to capitalize on their strength in the events to beat the talented Talented
"WE'LL NEED to sweep the long jump and the pole vault." Timmons said. " we're going to have to have a maximum effort to beat them."
Ranked as one of the top three dual teams in the nation last year, Oregon has a long history of excellence in track and field. Its distance corps is one of the strongest around, led by Olympian Bill McChesney. An All-American, McChesney has run the 5,000-meter in 13:17.77, the second fastest time ever recorded by an American.
In the strength events, the Ducks have one of the best disc throwers in the country, Dean Crouser. Also an All-American, Crouser took fourth in the National Collegiate Athletic Association outdoor disc last year and recorded a personal best of 213-0 in last year's dual with
"OVER THE YEARS, they've been one of the best track teams in the country," Timmons said.
The Jayhawks have looked strong this year, too. Last weekend, KU scored 100 points to the forge for Southern California division. Leading the way for KU was celebrated high jumper Tyke Peacock, who leaped 7-4 1/4 to take first and set a KU outdoor record in that event. Peacock, who was named outstanding male athlete during days, will be competing this weekend.
This weekend will also mark the return of long jumper Warren Wilhoite. Sidelined with tendinitis in his left foot since the UTEP dual, Wilhoite will not jump but will be entered in some sprint events.
Jayhawks travel to Nebraska
By MIKE ARD Sports Writer
By MIKE ARDIS
The KU baseball team has its work cut out for it this weekend as it travels to the University of Nebraska to play a game series with the ninth-ranked team.
"It's a tough situation," Coach Marty Pattin said yesterday, "We have got to ask the kids to put forth the effort. The defense will have to be better."
With half of the Big Eight season over, the Jayhawks face a tough road to make it into the conference playoffs. Eight of the remaining conference games for the 'Hawks are against the Chargers, 7-3, at University, which is ranked eighth in the nation. Only the top four teams advance into the playoffs.
"IJUST THINK everybody's going to have to play together to win," Patin said. "We haven't put it together this year."
Right fielder Jim Heeney will miss
the Nebraska series, and probably the rest of the year, as a result of a fractured left wrist from Wednesday's game against Baker University. Catcher Kent Shelley's status for the weekend series has improved from Pastor Patterson to Patty Shelley took batting practice yesterday and reported no pain.
The Jayhawks have not decided on Heeney's replacement. Mike Boel, Joel Gibson and Jeff Long were working in the outfield yesterday to see who would
Also undecided were the starting pitchers for the second game of both day's double-headers. Jim Phillips will start the opening of Saturday's double-header, and Randy McIntosh will start Sunday's opener.
THE JAYHAWKS will see the bigest crowds so far this season at Nebraska because it is "Spring Weekend." KU's spring football game will be tomorrow, and there is also a track meet there this weekend.
Assistant Coach Roger Riley, who
"The baseball stadium is close to the football stadium, and there are 30,000 people looking over from the stadium during timeout."
KU will also play on an artificial surface infield at Nebraska, and the team left today to get some practice on it. Yesterday, the infidifiers were in Memorial Stadium to practice on the turf.
was there two years ago as a KU player, said there were big crowds.
EARLIER IN THE year, the indefenders had problems with bad hops at home, but they have improved with recent work on the infield. Even with the work the fielders are cautious in the infield. Riley said.
"It's really hard to help the players with a field like this," he said. "You've just got to tell them to stay in front of you and go for it, but bad bads all day. You get gun-shy."
The 'Hawks will return home for an eight-game home stand, starting Monday.
Golfers travel to Iowa tournaments
Bv BILL HORNER
Sports Writer
The Kansas men's golf team began play yesterday in the Drake Ralegolf golf tournament in Des Moines, Iowa, and the women's team is making final this weekend for the big Eight Championship in Ames, Iowa, April 25-28.
"I'll hurt losing Demo," Coach Ross Randall said. "He's always going to shoot in the mid-70s. We get some depth, though, we we'll see what hap-
The men's team, in a 27-team field in the Drake tournament, is playing without the services of junior Brad Demo, one of the top golfers on the Jayhawk队. Demo injured tendons in his left thumb during the recent playoff in Wichita. The Jayhawks finished in sevent place in that event.
DEPTH IS being provided by junior Dan Mullen, who is making his debut as a Jayhawk in competitive play. Mullen is a former All-Conference pick at the University of Georgia and two-time winner of the Kansas City Kan., individual championship.
"He's pretty experienced, tournament-wise," Randall said of Mullen. "This is going to be a good opportunity for Dan to establish himself."
Diana Loreau, Diana Matthews & Jorge Mora formely of the Upperwest
Demo is expected to be ready for the Big Eight Championships in May.
The Jayhawks finished ninth among 20 teams in the Drake Rewards last year, and Randall said he was looking for an improvement this year.
Among the teams competing in the Drake Rewks are Nebraska, Missouri, Iowa State, Iowa, Kansas State, Minneapolis Illinois State and Southern Illinois.
A group more formally of the Appointed
are proud to announce the ground opening of
The Blue Parrot Salon
Bring like art in for a complimentary finely styling with
a hairstylish at $5.00 per session, with a hat.
Please call us for your next appointment.
The Blue Parrot Salon
707 Massachusetts 749-2533
WHILE THE men are coming off a tournament last week, the women's team hasn't competed for three weeks. Despite this, Randall said, the women should be ready for the Big Eight Championships.
Blue Parrot
Salon
After the Big Eight, the women will play in one more tournament this season, the Stephens Invitational in Columbia. Mo. May 1-2.
"The main thing is that most of the girls have been out working on their games, particularly their short games," Randall said. "We've had some good weather, too, so they've seen able to play a bit."
Depth has been a problem for the women in the past, but Randall said that problem had taken a big step toward being solved with the recruiting of two Minnesota golfers, Maureen Ulm and Brenda Sanders of Cottonwood.
"we are going to finish fifth or sixth—it's automatic," said Randall, who points to Oklahoma and Oklahoma in the rankings and finished sixth in the tournament last year.
RANDALL SAID that he had been preparing the team mentally for the possible cold weather.
Bev Boozer, Patty Coe, Dee Williams and Karen Gustafson to Ames.
"We think that they are going to help us quite a bit." Randall said.
Randall will be sending Lisa Howard,
Complete Block Hair Care also Available
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F.O. Box 3122
Lewisville, KS 60042
Masonville, KS 60042
ENTIRE STOCK EARLY SPRING FASHIONS
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821 Massachusetts
843-8806
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Headmasters.
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844 8828
Bass
BASS
BASS
Summer Classics
SKECHERS
"Jenny"
KASSEL
"Margie"
McCall's
We Have Many Other BASS Sandles to See!
Scoreboard
829 Mass. Downtown Lawrence
Hockey
TONIGHT'S GAMES
Dinah Plains
Boston Torino
New York Islanders
York Rangers
(Alanlands load series, 3-5)
Miami Division
Boston at Quebec; Quebec load series, 3-4)
St. Louis at Chicago (Chicago leads series, 3-2)
Basketball
Basketball
TONIGHT'S GAMES
First Round
Of Three
Enterance
For 2015
New Jersey at Washington (Washington leads series, 14)
Philadelphia at Atlanta (Philadelphia leads
series 1.0
Philadelphia at Atlanta (Philadelphia leads
series 1.0)
Denver at Phoenix (Denver leads series, 1-0)
Seattle at Houston (Seattle leads series, 1-0)
Soccer
MISL STANDINGS Eastern Division
Team W W L Pct. GH
Boston 30 12 74 Pittsburgh 29 13 694 Pittsburgh 29 13 694 Buffalo 24 15 381 Buffalo 24 15 381 Cleveland 16 16 277 Cleveland 16 16 277
St. Louis 20 18 651
Wichita 25 17 814 8
Wichita 27 17 845 8
Denver 17 16 605 10 %
Denver 17 25 401 10 %
Kansas City 16 20 333 1 %
Kansas City 16 20 333 1 %
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Buffalo 2, Cleveland 1
Phoenix 7, St. Louis 5
Baseball AMERICAN LEAGUE Eastern Division
Team W L P Pet. GB
Detroit 9 5 544
Cleveland 12 546
Randolph 8 500
New York 5 455
Milwaukee 5 455
Tennessee 5 385
Baltimore 5 385
Chicago 8 2 .807
Cincinnati 10 6 .597
Texas 10 5 .545
Oakland 8 2 .345
Oakland City 8 6 .500
Seattle 7 6 .500
Santa Cruz 8 6 .438
San Francisco 7 6 .375
U L
Milwaukee 7, Toronto 0
Detroit 3, New York 1
Cleveland 4, Texas 3
Seattle 6, Minnesota 4
NATIONAL LEAGUE Eastern Division
Team W 12 Pct. Pet. %
W 12 6 648
New York 6 3 615 2/4
Montreal 6 3 600 3
Detroit 6 3 397 5
Pittsburgh 6 3 360 6
St. Louis 6 3 260 6
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Cincinnati 2, Atlanta 1
Atlanta 10 9 929
San Diego 9 4 890
Los Angeles 9 4 890
Los Angeles 8 5 383
Houston 5 10 333
Houston 5 10 333
Team
Teamcity State W 12 L 5 Pct 》
The University Daily KANSAN
Phone No.
Wednesday, April 28
OFF THE WALL HALL
737 New Hampshire
$4.00 10:00 p.m.
Special Guests
Experimental Electronic Music Direct from Australia for he only Midwest performance
The Mortal Micronotz
Music by Montcalle Jr.
(Christopher) Lucas
car stereo doesn't have to be expensive
Page Alert 500 A
WHISTLER 2-70
Paging alarm $99
Auto-Protection Reg. 130
Radar Detector Reg. 130 $99
Radar Detector
All Bands Reg. 130 $99
Cassette Cleaning $6
Cartridge Reg. 12.00
Alarm system $99
Protect your car Reg. 130
Electronic Antenna
Improve FM reception $50
Reg. 100
Fox XK
Hirshman Electronic Antenna Hitronic Improve FM reception Reg.100 $50
River City Radio
506 E 23rd
842-4587
TUNERS
ALPINE 7125 AM FM Cassette Auto Reverse Reg. 200 $180
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Page 10 University Daily Kansan, April 26, 1982
ASK adopts lobbying position
By ANN LOWRY Staff Reporter
Delegates from the seven Associated Students of Kansas schools adopted three statements on student issues at their spring Legislative Assembly here, John Keighley, KU'S AK campus director, said yesterday.
The statements dealt with ASK's position on the proposed tuition increase for Kansas Board of Regents institutions, ASK members' par- ties and other issues in organizations and proposed reductions in financial federal aid programs.
Steve Linenberger, ASK's state lobbying director, said, "I think ASK this year has made steps in areas they never have before."
He said ASK's new staff had strengthened ties with government offices and helped move some members stranded in committees on to Congress.
Legislation passed this weekend by the group will become part of its lobbying efforts.
THE THREE statements on student issues were based on ASK's research.
The statement on the proposed tuition increase for Regents institutions said the ASK supported the Regents relation to students in the tuition planning process.
The statement also supported a plan for a fees calculation that excluded university utility costs and included special academic fees paid by students.
It also urged the Board of Regents to back ASK's opposition to further federal financial aid cuts and to encourage state-funded assistance. It also recommended that the percentage of university budgets paid for by tuition be increased to 20 percent and 20 percent for smaller universities.
The statement on participation in national student organizations said ASK would support any national organization that had at least two ASK members.
THE STATEMENT on the proposed reductions in federal financial aid included figures for aid programs that provided grants for student loan financing of Pell Grants, Supplemental Grants and State Student Incentive Grants, the National Direct and Guaranteed Student Loans, the College Work-Study Program and the TRIO
The assembly also elected next year's chairman of ASK's six statewide committees: finance, academic, social issues, special constituencies, national issues and the LACC, which writes rules for the assembly.
It asked for Congress' passage of $1.3 billion to continue the Guaranteed Student Loan program through the end of this fiscal year.
Two KU students won seats in the election. Lisa Asha, Mission sophomore, was elected chairman of the social issues committee, and Teri Nearther, Mission Hills junior, was elected chairman of special constitutions.
Ashner was also elected vice chairman of the assembly's executive committee.
ASK is searching for a replacement for who will resign to take a new job in duty.
THE ASK board voted to extend the contract for the state executive director, Mark Tallman, another year.
In addition, the students passed 10 delegate-sponsored resolutions and attended committee meetings during the two-day assembly Friday and Saturday in the Kansas Union and Smith Hall.
The 10 delegates' resolutions passed after short discussions on the floor.
Four resolutions established rules for assembly procedures. The rest established projects to research and write ASK's opinion on issues.
AREAS TO BE researched were needs for the 1984 fiscal year; health professions scholarships and education requirements; both sides of landlord/tenant legislation; needs of special constitencies, such as women, minorities, veterans, handicapped and non-traditional students; an expanded program of state-supported financial aid; and federal financial aid.
Several ASK members said the assemblies both this weekend and at the last meeting in February had been more successful than others in the past because legislation went through before it went to the entire assembly.
"It's a lot easier for smaller groups to come to a compromise," Tallman said. It is hard to think the discussion in committee is more productive than a lot on the floor."
Lineinberger said the brevity of this effectiveness of the system.
"The shorter the legislative assembly, the better they are," Linenberger said. "The longer, the more confrontations."
on campus
The disabilities discussion group, sponsored by the STUDENTS CONCERNED WITH DISABILITYS, will meet at 4 p.m. in 7-LIVINGcott Hall.
TODAY
A SENIOR RECYCLAT ON PIANO will be performed by Wendy Perman at 8 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall.
TOMORROW
THE NON-TRADITIONAL STUDENTS ORGANIZATION will sponsor a dutch lunch for members at 1 a.m. in Cork II of the Kansas Union.
Female athletes to get rings
One-third of the money Renate MaalDalton, associate professor of business, has collected for the Women's Athletic Fund will be used to buy rings for the 10 female athletes graduating from the University of Kansas this year.
The rest of the $1,350 collected so far will be reinvested.
Mai-Dalton established the fund earlier this month with the intention of providing gifts for outstanding female athletes and graduating athletes.
She said she was pleased with the response she received from students and faculty.
"What I am very much concerned about is that the businesses in the community are not responding as last year," Mal-Dalton said.
LAST SPRING, Mai-Dalton spent one
week collecting money and raised $800.
As a member and treasurer of Kansas Women's Sports Inc., she was able to contact people on its mailing list. This year, she hoped to make fund-raising a continuous effort.
"What I plan on doing to is wait until April 30 and write a letter to all who have contributed," she said. She said she plans to attract more business after classes ended.
She said the coaches would not give rings to the female athletes every year, but they would try to give them some type of recombination each year.
LUNCH SPECIAL
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YEARBOOKS ARE HERE!
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Tickets: $8.50/57.00/60.00 • KU Students will receive a $1 discount
Ticket location: Lawrences • Keith Records and Tapes N/A
Jamestown City — Poetry Jane Recordings / Jersery — Locustbush
Tippins — Paul's Records and Tapes • Mintahun — The Sound Shop
Tickets will be available at Hoch Auditorium on the day of the show
A Benefit Concert for KANU/2PM
a choreopoeam by ntozake shange presented by the university of kansas theatre
for colored girls who have considered suicide/when the rainbow is enuf
april 29,30 & may1,8:00 p.m. may 2,1982,2:30 p.m. university theatre/murphy hall tickets on sale in the murphy hall box office, all seats reserved, student & senior citizen discounts available for reservations call 913-864-3982
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University Daily Kansan, April 26, 1982
Page 11
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Tax credits help solar homes stav warm
By STEPHEN BLAIR Staff Reporter
The infant solar energy industry is booming because of rising energy costs and government tax credits, local solar equipment dealers said yesterday.
Solar equipment dealers displayed their wares yesterday and Saturday at the Private Property Energy Exhibition, Hills Shopping Center, 1601 W. 23rd St.
The exposition, sponsored by the Lawrence Board of Realtors as part of Private Property Week, also included fire safety and/wpainment burning stoves, fire safety and/wpainment
Interest in solar energy has increased recently. Of the firms displaying solar equipment, none had operated in Lawrence for more than two years.
ALL SEASONS SOLAR INC., 2321
Ponderosa Drive, has sold 16 solar
systems, including six to KU professors, since the Topka company opened a Lawrence branch last October, in energy consultant for the firm, said.
The average cost of such a system is about $10,000, and the circulation fan uses about 10 cents of electricity a day, he said.
The government pays for much of the equipment by allowing the homeowner to deduct 70 percent of the cost from his income taxes. The maximum tax credit the government allows is $7,000, Malin said.
"If you bought a $10,000 solar system, it would cost you about $3,000 out of your own pocket," he said. "Most homeowners do not realize what tax
credits are available. They're awesome."
BECAUSE THE tax credit is cumulative over the years, anyone can take advantage of it, even though he does not pay very much in taxes, Jack Turcotte, a representative of Sunburst Solar, said.
"You can carry the credits forward to succeed years until it's used up," he
A potential solar energy boom would radically change the appearance of Lawrence, John Ware, a representative of Solace Inc., N.219. Einth St., said.
Ware said he was concerned that during the next decade, Lawrence would have solar panels haplazhary pasted on roofs and walls in every building.
But Turcotte said he was not worried about that.
"In 1950, it was pretty weird for anyone to have a TV antenna on their
WARE SAID he preferred to work with clients to design a passive solar system that blended well with the house.
roof," he said. "Now, it seems normal.
We don't feel the panels are ugly."
Active systems depend on pumps or fans to distribute heat and tend to involve panels that are added onto existing buildings, Ware said.
Passive systems depend on physical laws by which heat circulates in order to heat a building without fans.
"The passive system is much more attractive than sticking a bank of panels up there," he said.
That is because passive systems depend on glass or plastic panes that are built into a wall or roof, rather than being an addition, he said.
Ware and Solace are designing and building a passive system for a house at 1000 Ohio St.
ANOTHER COMPANY that
remodelds houses for passive solar heating, in addition to selling solar panels, is Great Plains Solar Builders, 228 Beerfield Lane.
The two-year-old company has sold
a dozen solar units, TOM Bryant,
a retailer of the solar sector.
The company is now altering a house
battery collection porch into a passive
solar collector.
The house is owned by Thomas and Anne Moore. 1007 Alabama St.
The floor of the porch was removed and five tons of gravel covered by a sixinch slab of concrete was installed to store heat from the sun, Bryant said.
Now that the floor, which is the building's heat storage mass, is built, the porch will be walled in with glass, he said.
The floor will retain heat all day and the rising heat will flow throughout the house without the use of fans, he said.
Busy evolutionist to miss debate with creationist
Donald Johanson, well-known evolutionist, has dropped out of tomorrow's dual lecture with Duane Gish, a creation science advocate, Student Union Activities announced recently.
Scott DuPree, Forums director for SUA, said that Johansson would not attend because he would be would at Carnegie Hall in New York accepting an award for a book he had written.
"We just found out a couple of days ago about this, and it's sad news to many people who wanted to hear the two men speak." DuFre said.
DuPree has been looking for a replacement.
"We'll find someone. I'd hate to have Gish here and speak alone.
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The Men of Delta Psi Chapter of
Theta Chi Fraternity would like to express their sincere appreciation to the following groups and individuals for their support, help, and assistance in the reinstallation of our Chapter on April 24,1982.
Dean Caryl Smith
Ann Eversole
Art Farmer
Dave Svingen
KU Panhellenic
KU IFC
Alpha Chi Omega Sorority
Alpha Delta Pi Sorority
Alpha Gamma Delta Sorority
Alpha Omicron Pi Sorority
Alpha Phi Sorority
Chi Omega Sorority
Delta Delta Delta Sorority
Delta Gamma Sorority
Gamma Phi Beta Sorority
Kappa Alpha Theta Sorority
Kappa Kappa Gamma Sorority
Pi Beta Phi Sorority
Sigma Kappa Sorority
Acacia Fraternity
Alpha Kappa Lambda Fraternity
Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity
Alpha Tau Omega Fraternity
Beta Theta Pi Fraternity
Delta Chi Fraternity
Delta Tau Delta Fraternity
Delta Upsilon Fraternity
Evans Scholars
Kappa Sigma Fraternity
Lambda Chi Alpha Fraternity
Phi Beta Sigma Fraternity
Phi Delta Theta Fraternity
Phi Gamma Delta Fraternity
Phi Kappa Psi Fraternity
Phi Kappa Sigma Fraternity
Phi Kappa Theta Fraternity
Pi Kappa Alpha Fraternity
Pi Kappa Phi Colony
Sigma Alpha Epsilon Fraternity
Sigma Chi Fraternity
Sigma Nu Fraternity
Sigma Phi Epsilon Fraternity
Tau Kappa Epsilon Fraternity
Triangle Fraternity
1
Page 12 University Daily Kansan. April 26. 1982
MAPA ECONOMICO
DE LA
REPÚBLICA DE GRANMALA
1970
Lewis Dellwig, professor of geology, examines radar film of Guatemala that was shot from the space shuttle Columbia. The pictures can show soil moisture, vegetation and, perhaps, oil deposits.
Energy conference scheduled
Administrators, business officers and plant facilities managers from 20 Kansas and Missouri small colleges will study ways of meeting energy costs in a conference tomorrow at the KU Energy Research Center.
"Last winter was an awakening as to what energy is costing us." Shirley Domer, administrative assistant for the center, said recently.
"We received inquires from small colleges asking what to do."
Doner said the free conference, co-sponsored with the Kansas City Regional Council for Higher Education, was the first in this area.
THE CONFERENCE will feature a briefing on energy problems and information that should help the paratransit curtail energy spending, she said.
"The entire afternoon will be devoted to 'campus team' auditing," Domer said. "This concept basically holds that one person on campus should not be responsible for energy conservation efforts."
The conference will be at Baker
University, Baldwin, from 9 a.m. to 4
administration, and Ron Helms, KU director of architectural engineering, will be two of the seven featured speakers.
The keynote speaker will be Charles Bottinelli, president of Energy Information associates Inc. of Littleton, Colo.
Martine Hammond, KU assistant professor of educational policy and
Some of the colleges participating in the conference are Haskell Indian Junior College, Lawrence; St. Mary College, Leavenworth; Hutchinson college, Hutchinson; and Johnson County Community College, Overland Park.
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By NEAL McCHRISTY Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
Value of radar photos unsure
19985/6301-2
When Col. Jon Engle turned the space shuttle Columbia on its back and began taking radar photos of the Earth last November, he was sending information that will be analyzed by the remote sensing University of Kansas, his alma mater.
With only 4% of 30 spools of radar films analyzed, Louis Dellwig, KU professor of geology, said recently that the information would how valuable the information would be.
The value of the films, Dellwigs said, was to improve radar techniques so the space program could get a better idea of how to change the radar system.
The radar can see through cloud cover, does not need light and can map surface features. Vegetation can be mapped using the photos, as well as the moisture content of trees and shrubs, Dellwig said. In certain regions, the drier trails are less reflective than while trees near rivers reflect more radar waves and are brighter.
"If you've got a fracture there, the ground will be wetter there than anywhere else."
ALTHOUGH SOME people hope to find oil reserves using the radar photos, Dellwig said, he was doubtful about using the system for that.
"If the ground is dry, you get a lot more penetration," Delligw said, adding that these dry areas are dark on the radar photos.
"It will separate wet soil from dry soil, and wet snow from dry snow," he said.
Dellwig said the remote sensing lab compared radar photos from the shuttle with photographs taken by airplanes and satellites, as well as surface observations based on the moon, which he tweaked. The shuttle was finding anything new.
Comparing the radar photography
with other methods such as satellite photographs is "just about as different as smelling something and tasting it," Dellwil said.
"We've seen things in a lot of different ways," he said. "When we say we find things, I'm saying 'Are we really finding these things, or have we never looked for them before?' There's a big difference."
EXCEPT FOR satellite photos of the oceans, radar photos have previously only been taken by airplanes, Dellwig said.
The November 1981 flight of the Shuttle Imagery Radar was called SIR A, and a NASA official in Washington, D.C., said that plans were being discussed to modify the instruments for a second flight.
However, no plans using the shuttle radar are scheduled through 1983, Charles Redmond, NASA public information officer, the source, said.
"What we would expect, if things work out with the government and funding, is a SIR B that could be flown on a demand basis, that a country could use whenever they wanted to know about earth resources," Redmond said.
Many groups are waiting for Dellwig and his 29 colleagues to complete their analysis of the photos. Those groups, including students of the GEOSAT, a private group comprised of oil and other private companies; and north African nations, Redmond said. The African nations are interested in studying the radar to show moisture.
"In the Sahara, some of the radar photos are striking in that they show different levels of soil moisture in that region," he said.
A geological team was sent to work with the north African countries to see whether water could be found where it was shown on the radar photos.
THE JET PROPULSION Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., built the shuttle radar package. Don Harrison, manager
of the Radar Remote Sensing Data Team at JPL, said. KU was given $29,000 to help analyze the photos.
Oil companies, aerospace industries and mining interests are interested in the radar photos. Harrison said.
"their interest isn't casual," he said.
"They're usually associated with some research arm of some corporation or research group, they are heading up some research project."
Redmond said the Navy showed the most interest in the radar photos.
"The Navy was practically beating down our door for information the day after the flight," he said. Redmond said he would have believed that could be interested in the radar imagery.
But Dellwig pointed to a ship that showed up as a bright spot in the darkness of the ocean, and said, "My boat is that right there—that little boat."
THE RADAR imagery has its limitations, but if the radar is tailor-made to detect sub-surface water, minerals, oil or vegetation, then it might be used more effectively, Dellwi said.
"My interest is somewhat different than that of other people," he said. "I'm more concerned with How does this data compare with other radar?"
Dalwig pointed to an enlargement of one of the radars photo and said, "We feel we can do some pretty decent work in this kind of environment. We have nothing to compare it with."
Other areas have been mapped by airplanes with radar, and the shuttle photos are being compared with these other photos to see if the SIR can detect anything not found by other means, Dellwig said.
So far, however, although the shuttle can detect through cloud cover using no light, it has not shown anything that cannot be detected by other means.
"If anyone finds any big oil deposits or any big mineral deposits out of this, I really be surprised," Dellwil said.
GET A JUMP ON THE OTHERS
In this day and age of increased competition in the job market, an early graduation is an advantage! When you decide to take in summer school, check into Naismith Hall for that Special Summertime style of life. Summers at Naismith Hall are relaxed and friendly, with a full calendar of scheduled outings, picnics and such. Summers at Naismith Hall have frozen rates, free utilities, including A/C, and fully carpeted rooms with private baths.
So, while you are attending Summer School to "Get a Jump on the Crowd," live it up in style at Naismith Hall. Student Services at Student Prices.
Leases for Next Fall—Spring also available Call 843-8559 or drop by 1800 Naismith Dr.
The University Daily
KANSAN WANT ADS
Call 864-4358
CLASSIFIED RATES
one time two three four five six seven eight nine ten eleven
10 words or fewer two $2.50 three $2.75 four $3.25 five $3.50 six seventy eight nine ten
$6.50 one dollar two $2.50 three $2.75 four $3.25 five $3.50 six seventy eight nine ten
AD DEADLINES
ERRORS
The Kansan will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
to run
Monday Thursday p.m.
Tuesday Friday p.m.
Wednesday Monday p.m.
Thursday Tuesday p.m.
Friday Wednesday
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
ANNOUNCEMENTS
To the best secretaries on the hill: Dariy, Sherry, Marte, Judy, April, Lorna, Leanne, Nancy, Bary, Dan, Bill, Mary, Nancy, Mary, Barb, Terry, Bill, Nancy, Mary, and Susan, Sean at the hall. 1-4-28
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 844-1256.
KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE
111 ILLINOIS ST.
844-1256
ENTERTAINMENT
Every Tuesday is open microphone night at Off the Wall Hall hosted by the Ebbing Bros $2 pitchers 7s bottles, 4-12 No疼 4-30
Wanted outgoing Christians and concien-
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Christmas time. Send resumes by
$60 per month. Duties included:
Call Darryl, 841-7692. Utilize
For rent to mature maze student. Quiet,
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price. 842-4195. If
Live in the CHRISTIAN CAMPUS HOUSE
This summer & fall 'Bell become a part of a
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TRY COOPERATIVE LIVING. Sunflower House, 842-9421. ff
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TRAILBRAKE. Leading for sale in 1,2 & 3 bdm. apts, 2, 3 & 4 bdm. townhouses, have wavetrack appliances, get laundry appliances, laundry facilities on the premises, Swimming pool facilities on the premises. On K.U.W., room 2500 W, gth: 843-7333.
PRINCETON PLACE PATIO APARTMENTS. For roommates, features wood burning fireplace, 2 car garage with electric opener, kitchen, quiet surroundings. Open house phone 842-2576 for additional information. tf.
PRINCETON PLACE PATIO APARTMENTS. For roommates, features wood burning fireplace, 2 car garage with electric opener, kitchen, quiet surroundings. Open house phone 842-2576 for additional information. tf.
PRINCETON PLACE PATIO APARTMENTS. For roommates, features wood burning fireplace, 2 car garage with electric opener, kitchen, quiet surroundings. Open house phone 842-2576 for additional information. tf.
SUMMER SUBLEASE. If your tired of apartments, rent a room at 2 br., 1 bath, all amenities feature 3 br., 1 bath, all amenities, privacy. We have openings now, and in the evening at 794-1007 for more information about our modestly价钱 townhouses. tf
SUMMER SUBLEASE. If your tired of apartments, rent a room at 2 br., 1 bath, all amenities, privacy. We have openings now, and in the evening at 794-1007 for more information about our modestly价钱 townhouses. tf
Wanting to sublease bilevel, 2 bdr. apt. for summer. New AC, dishwasher, carpet cleaning, 2 bedroom, uses reasonable walking distance to campus and downtown. tf
Furnished one bedroom apt. for sublease. Excellent location to campus and downtown. tf
Furnished one bedroom apt. for sublease. Excellent location to campus and downtown. tf
Furnished one bedroom apt. for sublease. Excellent location to campus and downtown. tf
QUIET Meadowbrake studio to study in 1,2 & 3 bdm. apts, has gas included, furnished, private en-suite and gas included, furnished, private en-suite and gas included, furniture free. Fall Darryl 16-30. tf
Quiet Meadowbrake studio to study in 1,2 & 3 bdm. apts, has gas included, furnished, private en-suite and gas included, furnished, private en-suite and gas included, furniture free. Fall Darryl 16-30. tf
June-July brake studio to study in 1,2 & 3 bdm. apts, has gas included, furnished, private en-suite and gas included, furnished, private en-suite and gas included, furniture free. Fall Darryl 16-30. tf
Summer sublease. Furnished one bedroom apartment. tf
SUMMER subroutine. Furnished space apart-
ment, 22'x10'. PHONE NO TARGABLE #48-390
PRICE MEGO TARGABLE #48-390
LBG-I ABR. BOUSE. Filled finished basement.
In may. Heat & water. Avail in
May 14.
Sublease, choice 2 br. apt., furnished, between campus & downtown, $280 mo., 749-0555,
4-25
MASTER BEDROOM AVAILABLE starting with this summer session. $160.00 money with free utilities. Call 841-1454 for details.
Sleeping room 1-3 bedroom apartments.
842-891-2101 for summer or for full year
4-20
2 bedroom furnished mobile home. $185
3 bedroom furnished mobile home. $190
Clean guest location. No parties. Jacky
Taylor. Call 617-425-7777.
Sublease large 2 BR. apartment near stadium. Water, gas paid, central air. $320.
841-8235. 4-29
Sublease for summer. 1 bedroom apartment at Sundance. Call Tom, 749-0847. 4-26
Availon & Harvard Square Apartments. 4 &
2 bedroom apartments close to campus June
1 or Aug 1, occupancy. Call 841-608-980
Valley Management, Inc. 4-30
THE MAID SERVICE
—THE FOOD—
*THE SOCIAL LIFE★
Are Just Three Of
The Many Reasons
People Come To Nalismith Hall
Summer Or Fall//Spring
Individual Leases
NAISMITH HALL
1800 Nalismith Drive 843-8559
Now letting new move & 3 bedrooms duplexes.
Garage, master bath, much more. 811-606-4000. New
home in desirable location.
SUMMER SUSELAGE New furnished twin-
bed suite with 2 baths for a
negotiable. 740-1243 or 749-1245
- 4-30
Summer sublease--Nice 2 bedroom house.
Close to everything. Call 841-610 anytime.
Summer Sublease. 1 bedroom. Cedarwood
Furnished. Furnished. Torma
Call 843-694-8
+456
1 bedroom apartment with loft. Furnished.
2 bedrooms on fourth on 7th,
condition. Call 843-8769. . . . .
Share beautiful two bedroom house - mature non-smoker needed after May 14. Carpets, fireplace, out-of-street parking, furnished (except 2) utilities: 842-7084. Keep trying! 4-26
Summer sublease. Real close to campus. Call 842-4546 for more information. 4-26
Speaous 3 bedroom, 1/8 bath, kitchen, living room, 3 blocks from pizza restaurant, supermarket. Malls from nearby. Heating hot water free, carports, cable tie. 749-4570 or 843-3730. Rentable. 4-30
Summer Sublease. 3 bedroom townhouse at Trailridge 8400 month. Call 749-1187. 4-26
Sublease 3 bedroom apartment at Meadowbrook 843-3022. Call 843-3730. Rentable.
SUMMER SUBLEASE. Available March 2 to campus or downtown. Modern 2 bedroom apartment, AC, convenient to campus. $250; uses reasonable in summer rentals. Fall off call or deposit required. Call 842-7176. 4-30
RENT NEGTABLE. must substitute modern 2 bedroom apartment, AC, convenient to campus. Very nice school zoom room. $250; uses reasonable in summer rentals. Fall off call or deposit required. Call 842-7176. 4-30
HOUGHTON PLACE. Leaseasons. 841-5755, 2400 Alabama. New furnished, excellent location. Fall on property.
SUBLEASE. 8600 off per month. Located suburban. Place Apartments. New furnished, excellent location. Fall on property.
3 quiet, responsible students seek place to live-house or apartment-starting in South Carolina, Ellen, or Fayette at 842-6844. 4-27
Sublease 2 bedroom apartment, Oak, Kansas. 841-5911. Gas, water 841-9111. Furnished upstairs studio apartment, available to downtown CA. 841-3901. 4-27
5 bedrooms, 3/2 bath, 2 car garage, fireplace all appliances $700 monthly. 2 departments with amenities. 3 bedrooms, 1/8 bath, all appliances available to downtown CA. 841-3901. 4-27
5 bedrooms, 3/2 bath, 2 car garage, fireplace all appliances $700 monthly. 2 departments with amenities. 3 bedrooms, 1/8 bath, all appliances available to downtown CA. 841-3901. 4-27
Illegal upstairs residential house with washer dryer and porch swing. Master bedroom needs two people to pay $250 plus all utilities. Available May 15. Call 749-3420 as needed.
Needed: One person to fill one bedroom lift. 3 bedroom apartment. Nice place to live in the center of town. Available May 15. Call 749-3420 as needed.
SUMMER SUBLEASE with option for fall. Wetbed apartment with 3 bedrooms and downstreet. 841-1715. 4-29
Sublease, no May rent. 1 bedroom. Fall option. Water cable paid. Walk-in洗衣机. Will be located to campus and downtown. 841-1715. 4-29
SUBLEASE, no May rent. 1 bedroom. Fall option. Water cable paid. Walk-in洗衣机. Will be located to campus and downtown. 841-1715. 4-29
SUMMER SUBLEASE. Furnished 2 bedroom room, pool, air conditioning, dishwashers, laundry, in Applicsoft. 843-3618. 4-27
Carpeted, remodeled 2 bedroom house with three bedrooms. $240.00/month. Appliances, furnished. 1-699-0474 4-27
must subserve for summer. First morning of 1001 Indiana. Apt. D. 841-9876 after 9:00 p.m. 4-27
Need a place to live this summer? Sublease fully furnished. Perfect location—arosas fully furnished. Perfect location—arosas fully furnished. Call 841-9876 Ask for Leslie or Judy. 4-27
2 bedroom apartment to sublease for summer options for fall. Will need assistance. 4-27
Summer Sublease, fall option–Studio $780, paid on bus route. Call Suc. 843-2300 4-27
Nice, quiet furnished one bedroom apartment in Sundance apartments. $235/month, paid on bus route. Call Suc. 843-2300 4-27
Summer sublease with extension room in fully carpeted, walk-in laundry, pool at the University of Lawrence’s first suite. Inffer $89.00 4-27
2 bedroom apartment 5 R. central air, store and refrigerator. no pets. Grads stored on campus. $240.00 4-27
For rent. 1 bedroom apartment with water paid, walking distance campus. 843-8501. 4-27
Summer sublease with option in fall. New 3 bedroom duplex on Orchards golf course. 8225 University Dr. $450 per month. 4-20
Summer sublease on spacious apartment for next two months. Two bedrooms. All accommodations. More information: Call Amy D. at 843-6998 4-20
Summer sublet—mid-winter to mid-February. Next summer two rooms. All accommodations. More information: Call Amy D. at 843-6998 4-20
PERFECT FOR ONE. Sublease spacious one bedroom, partly furnished, 5 minutes from campus. Will be located to campus. Garage fitted 1½ bath, price to be charged. 280-749-6145, anytime. 4-20
2 bedroom townhouse 3 blocks from campus. Will be located to campus. Garage fitted 1½ bath, price to be charged. 280-749-6145, anytime. 4-20
2 bedroom lawnhouse 3 blocks from campa-
nion 14 & Kentucky. A/C; full kitchen, grap-
gured furnished 1½ bath, prized to sublease.
Call 842-2805.
University Daily Kansan, April 26, 1982
Page 13
Summer sublease. Reduced rate. Walk to campus. Furnished. Air conditioned. 841-7855. Ask about #303. 4-28
Summer and fall rentals, houses and apartments.
Near campus, no pets. Lynch Real Estate.
843-1601 or 841-3223.
4-30
Two bedroom apartment in residential area northwest of campus. Availability June 1, summer and/or fail. Call Steve after 5:00 p.m. b41-3933. 4-30
Sublease: One bedroom apartment, furnished,
$150 per month, no utilities. 842-
2838. 4-26
For rent, 2 bedroom apartment, furnished,
air conditioned, close to shopping and
campus, on bus route, $250/month. Call
842-372-22 for 7-8 p.m. A WEEKEND
HOTEL.
Spaulius provided 4 bedroom home home 2704 Stirrford Road. Family room, pool table, chair, bench, two bathrooms, 4 graduate students or 2 couples, $22 apiece utilities. 267-015. References required.
Sublease, TRAILHIGH 1 bedroom apartment,
May 11-July 31 with extension option
in the fall. May rent free. Call 842-8285
after 5.
SUMMER SUBLEASE. Possible fall May rent free. Unfurnished 1 bedroom apartment. 600 square feet. Low rent & utilities. CA/heat. Nataly 798-484-8100 50 & weekend租客 V-428-8484-8100
**Sublease — Meadowbrook Studio UU220**
*Place, Place* $230/month, water and gas in-
frastructure, private, swimming tents,
c. cab, bth. 842-624-8000 — evenings.
7-426
Sublease 2. bedroom apartment, 1/5 block from stadium. Air conditioned, 2 years old. Available May 19-July 31. 841-0673 from 4 p.m.
4-62
SUBLEASE WITH OPTION TO RENEW ONE bedroom, fireplace, private fenced patio space, large kitchen, bath and pantry, 2 pools, 4 tennis courts. Beautiful grounds and landscapes. Bid # 81-54348.
FABULOUS DUPLEX! Live in style! 3 bedrooms, 1½ baths, fully carpeted, Central air and heat. Call 842-8851 now! 4-30
Sublease with option to renew for fall.
Female only 3 bedroom apartment $10.00
month +1/3 electricities. On bus route.
841-7634. 4-26
INEXPENSIVE DUPLEX-4 bedroom 2
AC/carpet. $395/month. 843-908. 4-28
Subluse. Meadowbrook studio apartment.
Furnished. Heat, water, cable, paid.
Bainton pool, tennis courts. May - July 30.
Call 843-1582 at 6:00 p.m. 4-30
Roommate for May 1, summer and possibly fall. $110 monthly plus utilities. Serious students preferred. Come take a look. 842-0038. 4-30
THREE BEDROOM HOUSE—across from Olive Hall, central air conditioner, very clean.
MEADOWBROOK Now available for June
Must sublease 2 bedroom apartment for summer. $50 rent prepaid—no bills, 2 pools, laundry room, on bus route. $42-7486. 4-28
Oilfield Hall, central air, very clean.
Boeing Ballroom, Bloor street.
GLOBOM GLOBOM
APAEMPTAT. Basement apartment across some furniture, outside entrance, central air conditioning. $900 per week on weeks. Both available at 615-428-3700.
MEDAWORROW BLOOD. Now available for June.
Furnished studio, electric kitchen and draper, 2 wrenches, $20 per month, call MEDIA-8200, 15th & Crestline, 4-30
Large older comfortable house next to stadium. Suitable for 4 or maybe 5 people. Available mid-May, year's lease. No pets. A83-8263.
Summer sublease large beautiful 2 bedroom apartment. Furnished, free water and cable TV. Excellent location. 843-7104. 4-30
Summer sublet 2 rooms available May 15-
Aug. 15, $125 per month utilities included.
Behind Watson. 843-6720. 4-29
Sublease June 1-Aug. 15, 3 bedroom, back
room. Sublease close to campus, 4-29
utilities June 1- Aug. 15.
Sublease May 15-Aug. 1. Fully furnished,
stocked kitchen, color TV, CAR. A/2, blocks
due east of union. 2 bedroom, lease half for
300. Rentable for $289. Mint-4/2
negotiable. 749-6851. Mint-4/2
Duplex, great location 811 Ohio. Carpet. 2 bedroom.
Room size: 32'x50'. $699 to $685.
$260 now.
KING-SIZE WATERBED, SWIMMING POOL
furniture. KING-SIZE WATERBED, SWIMMING
furnishings come with this spacious 2 bed-
room suite, including 4 blacks from campus). Rent negotiable but must be sublease for 7 weeks to have 7 nights. 4-300
Furnished apartments for rent near downtown and university area 841-500-3950 4-30
For summer and fall of 1985 a 2 room
hotel in the suburbs has facilities
with hotel number 641-7247 after 5 or
843-5277.
To see believe -Excellent location, sublease
room. 4-7th floor. New kitchen. 4-30
central air. & carpet.
House for summer sublet. Very close to
the town and downtown. 949-2988.
949-2988. 4-30
Furnished one bedroom apartment. Bills
paid. No pets. #13 Louisiana. $195. -40
2 bedroom. 2 bath extra-large apartment
for summer sublet. Park 25. Call 749-2888.
4-30
Available. June 1, 2 bedroom furnished
apartment. New kitchen, a-4 blocks from
campus. $300 per room + 1½ electricities.
Deposit required. Phone: 844-767-400
4-30
Sublease for summer: Furnished studio apartement, available May 15. 2 blocks from campus. AC, option for fall leaves. Negotiable. Call 749-1886 to 3:00-4:38
SUMMER SUPLEASE, 1 bedroom apartment,
& New Kitchen. All utilities free! $250
& New Bathroom. All utilities free! $250
Will consider all offers. Summer and/or fall apartment. Wooder apartments on low acres from Capital Federal Bank in Atlanta, GA. pool for. Find details call Jim J. 643-200-9500.
Summer notation must be shared apart
from students. Call 864-3050 or Bent plus 7/13 utilitie
New duplex in Orchards 2 bedrooms-
Frietra area-Garage-No pets. On bus-
bord 4-30
Two b-droom apartment, on but leased.
Available after finals for summer/final year.
For lease only. Rent is $1250 per month and cable paid.
Rent: as low or lower than you're now paying. 841-3634. 4-30
Share a beautiful house near campus 885
1/ 1/5 summer Suffner/fall 841-1648 4-30
Summer sublease: 1 bedroom Cedarwood Apartment, furnished. Female only. Terms negotiable. Call 843-6094. 4-30
FOR SALE
Alternator, starter and generator specialists.
Parts, service, and exchange units. BELL
AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC. 843-9065. 3900
W. 4th. tf
Stereo-Televisions-Video Recorders. Name brands only. Factory制 cartons. Low prices in the K.C. area. Use your best price, then call Total Sound Distributors 4-30
1979 MAZDA RX7-GS PURRFECT. 843-8825
or 842-6335. 4-30
1981 GN400X Suzuki, NEW $1455. Asking
permanently. Only 37 miles. 4-27
4-27
TENNIS RACKETS—Head, Wilson, Dunlap,
Princess, Yonek-Good selection, new/used.
Will buy yours if in good condition. 842-6713
at 6:00 p.m. tf. tf
Rhodes 73-key electric piano with Fender
deluxe reverb amplifier. Call evenings. 749-
2899
4-27
Perfect sleeper mattress and boxsprings with runners, head and footboards: $85. 842-1193.
Keep trying! 4-27
1981 Sunuck GSM507 black, beautiful, luggage rack, back rest, crash horn, must sell—getting insurance 842-4864, after 4:00 p.m.
4.27
1972 Grand Prix Model J—Excellent condition all around. See to ap, recite. Andy at 843-9048. 4-29
ATTENTION E stereo Audio, Hafler DII-
101A PRAEM, Haffler DII-102A PRAEM,
DRIVER DIX-HXI Companier,
Mitsubishi L-20-turntable, NAD 6200A,
Audio Tech Power Meters, Audio Control
Richter Scaler Bass EQ & Crossover. Audio
K35-800A, K35-900A, K35-1000A, K &
M Walnut Subwoofer. Portable rack with
fam. home rack walnut $ 6". Disk 48.
Internal paper offices and boxes, cabinet G-
844-1198
972 BMW 2002 tii, fuel injected with 5
peed. Very good running condition $2500.00
trom. Call 842-1583. 4-28
Hammond B-3 in sharp black vinyl) and
chromebook card. ideal for rock or combo
room. Includes Leslie speaker, $1895.
844-5818 or 1-381-2603. 4-36
2 Battan wood nightstands, 0 Silloon stained cabinet, butcher block dining table, classical guitar, bike rack. Call 842-8285 after 5. 4-30
110 watt Onkyo receiver, Pioneer turntable,
Kenwood 3-way speakers, $650, B4-8164i
www.motorola.com
1977 Mercury Monarch Glia. a/c, cruise,
am/fm cassette; runs great! $1906. 841-6148
4-26
1975 Rabbit. 2 door hatchback $1600, or best offer before May 5th. 841-0672. Keep 4-30
Speakers, Klinch Heresy's, very efficient speakers for the distractive audiohole. Great for jazz to buy, bought 10/813 year warrants. Retail $70 each. 400-555-428-1117.
King size bed-mattress and box springs, excellent condition, $150, 843-9477, Curt. 4-27
WATERBED—Queen size. in very good con-
dition. Extra mattress & boding included for $130. Call Marsha at 841-1390. 4-30
1976 Chwette, good condition, 4 radials,
new brakes, new starter; $850. Linda. 749-
0802. 4-29
Living room set, 5-piece dinette set, bedroom set, coffee table, two end tables and more. Excellent condition. Call 843-3218 after 5.0 p.m.
4-30
1975 Flat 124 Sport. Runs OK, $1450 or
for trade for 781-1548 after 12. 4-28
Inflatable raft. Great for fishing or river running. Has motor mount. 843-7430 after six. 4-29
Scientific American, 300-plus issues from mid 1952 thru 1980. $80, delivered locally.
1-796-6853 4-29
2 sneaker cabinets with mid-range horn and 15" woofer, 175 watts. RMS. Jeff Smith. 843-3586 4-30
1974 Honda CB360 looks nice, runs great.
Extras with bike. Asking $550.00. Must sell
864-2809 4-30
Community Airlift. 700 New Hampshire
hospitals have two motorcycles, one dresser,
two fire extinguishers and two gas tanks
and lots of fun mice. Vince names
his bike at sale time, and it is sold for
13th sale time, and it is sold for $89.
4-28
8-28
8-29
Ford Fiesta Ghia 1980 Excellent condition.
a/c. stereo. 3-door. Silver metallic. 11,000
miles. 843-2324. 4-30
SURPLUS JEEP5, CARS, TRUCKS. Car-
value $2143 for $100. For infor-
BGW 410 570res power amp. 230 watts
Mint. 8475 firm. Call Bryan at 843-5817.
SUPPLUS JEPS, CARS, TRUCAS, CARS
value, $21.43; sold for $10.90.
For information on purchasing similar bananas
602-988-5787 Ext. 368. Call Refurbish
4.76
New Women's clothes - Jeans -Cabin Klein,
Levi, Eggert, Zena (Zea) - Polo shirts (10)
Blouses (10) - Sweaters and cords (5-10)
Call 842-3500
4:30
Marantz stereo, turntable, tableau $150,
Coye pine yarn $85, Antique dining table,
chairs $200, Full mattress, frame $100,
Guitar $25, 84-2358
4-30
73 gold Pinto, good school car, low miles,
gas saver. Call 841-3225. 4-29
n=w brown carpeting for sale. Size 8 x 11
feet. Call 864-1671. 4-27
Older organ. Cononette, with long pedal
connected to bench. $250. 841-2453 or 842-
3550.
4-30
Hospital bed with mattress--steel construction.
20 dollars, ask for Bob. 841-328. 4-30
I will use standard text. No special characters or symbols.
Let's re-read the instructions carefully.
"Preserve special characters and symbols exactly as they appear."
Wait, is there a space before "Preserve special characters and symbols exactly as they appear?"?
Yes, it's between "Preserve special characters and symbols exactly as they appear." and "Preserve special characters and symbols exactly as they appear."
Final check of the text:
Hospital bed with mattress--steel construction.
20 dollars, ask for Bob. 841-328. 4-30
I will output this as it is.
Hospital bed with mattress--steel construction.
20 dollars, ask for Bob. 841-328. 4-30
FOUND
School ring found at Oliver Hall. Call 864-
694 and identify
Are you commuting to/from Kaunas City? You can help pay part of your expenses. Send a message to the Kaunas Center. For information contact Dr. Jens Cohen. For information contact Dr. Joel Auerbach and Olathe, KC,KS. 65101 903-884-4885
Programmers. Local Company needs part-time programmers for microcomputers. We can supply equipment. Send resume to P.O. Box 589, Lawrence. Attention: 4-30
A green jacket found at Rockbilldebendbewegung Saturday night. B411-8510, 4-26
JUNION & SENIOR History, Meteorology,
& Geography
participate in a reading study 40 for 45
minutes at the library or in person from
10:30 to 12:00 on the hour and April 22 at
10:30 to 12:00 on the hour.
Come to $Fraer Hall or call 864-1433.
Attention: Business Students. Nationally known company interviewing students for summer work program. High profit and demand. Call, 749-5227. call, 749-5227. 4-27
We are looking for 25 independent, hard working students for full-time summer work. Must be willing to reallocate. Opportunities earn approximately $10,000-$39,237. 4-27
HELP WANTED
Positions Available. Fulltime summer position available. Earn $1035.00 per month. Must be willing to reallocate. Write Summer Work P. Box 208 Lawrence, Ks. 60044 - 64534
KU-Y is seeking a full-time coordinator for a 3 semester period, June to August. The KU-Y would be quarter time and the program coordinates with the HR department. KU-Y should provide for a minimum of 10 hours a week. During this period, the coordinator will receive a minimum of 8 hours of training per week. The coordinator must be dedicated to the needs suffered causing the need for a full-time position in alternative to the needs suffering caused by the current externation and classism. Show on your resume that show you that you fulfill this qualification, experience and commitment. Show on your resume that community preferred. Send a reservation to KU-Y 118 Kansas Union, Lawrence, Kan., 727-695-2400 or via email at kuy-y@ku-y.edu/AdmInvArbative Employer.
W. T.C.S. is needing women committed to helping other women and their children who may be at risk for life after other life changes. Next training session May 20. For more details call 4-305-6887.
Anticipated Graduate Assistance Assistant & Graduate or Undegraduate. Office of KU Space Technology Center-KAIBS Program, Nichols Hall-Casual Assistant; Office KU Space Technology Center-KAIBS Program, Nichols Hall-Casual Assistant; Office Student Assistant (hourly) Length of employment Summer 1892 - June 2014 $3.25/hour, regular hourly; Graduate Assistant $3.25/hour, regular hourly; Graduate Assistant qualifications. Duties: Photo and image interpretation, cataloging information and organizing files literature search, granting, other graduate status; course work in photo interpreter position; information systems or equivalent. Application forms and further information accepted now through May 5. Applications and Opportunity Affirmative Employer. 4-30
ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT—The Center for East Asian Studies will start August 15, 1982. B.A. and experience in office-related activities, including training, requirement, education, administration, and editorial experience preferred. Annual salary $8,000. Req. bachelor's degree in information and experience. Applications will be sent to Professor C.J. Lee 100 Strong Hall UUWF, 913-846-3849). Contact Professor C.J. Lee 100 Strong Hall UUWF, 913-846-3849). Contact Professor C.J. Lee 100 Strong Hall UUWF, 913-846-3849). Action Employer. Applications are sought from all qualified position applicants with disability, veteran status, national origin, age or ancestry.
PHYSICAL THERAPIST Lawrence Mehrotra a registered physical therapist. Our department treats in-patient and outpatient staff. Hours are 8:5 M-P and some Saturday mornings; information, call Nancy Huep, Employment Services, Qualified Handicapped urgently to 4-29
Part-time help needed weekends and Mondays.
A-1 Aerial, Renton Iowa. 4-30
COLLEGE STUDENT. If you live in K.C.
and need summer employment. Call
Charles Loewen collect (1913) 722-381-0
8:30 a.m.-10:30 a.m.
interview 4-30
Research Assistant, B.S. degree. One Spearman
July 30th, 1985 for SIMULTANFUS INTER-
MEDIATED CARE room and minimum. Contact us
at (312) 352-4611 or K. S.U. Opportune
312-532-4611
ASSISTANT MANAGERS JAYHAWKER TOwers, 4 positions Available. The Unit seeks a live-in, one half time, Assistant Manager for each of the four Jayhawker-d status preferred. Group work experience experience is desirable. Apartment furnished plus staircase. Twelve month apprentices. Job description available in 1982. Complete job description available in 1982. 5:00 p.m. Wednesday, May 12, 1982. Involved persons, submit an application for two references to the Dean of Student Life 216 Strong Hall or opportunity employer. 4-28
Person to care for 3 great kids approximately 20 hours per week. Schedule flexible. Must be able to drive. have own transportation. 842-2788, 842-5455. 4-30
LOST
Lost—flute in blk case. Friday morning
4-16. Reward. Call-841-0528.
4-28
Red wind breaker with lining in Wexcote on Tuesday night. If found, call 841-6833. 4-28
PERSONAL
Instant passport, visa, ID, & resume photographs.
Custom made portraits b/w, color.
Swells Studio. 749-1611. **f**
Remember . . . mother loves you, show her how you feel this Mother's Day. Swell's Studio for portraits of fine quality, salts-"ement guaranteed." 749-611. 4-30
The Kegger—Weekly Specials on Kegs!
Call 841-3450=1600. W 23rd. M
lay it on a sweatshirt with custom silk-
screen printing 1 to 1000 shirt art by Swella
49-1611. tf
Paid Staff Positions
Fall Business Manager
Summer Editor
HEADACH, BACKACH, STIFF NECK,
LEG PAIN? Find and correct the
problem! Call Dr Mark Johnson for
a free consultation. Call 714-832-
ceptic Blue Cross and Lone Star insurance.
The Kansan is now accepting applications for the Summer Editor and Fall. Semester Business Advisors will be paid positions and require some newspaper experience. Application forms are available in the Student Senate Office, 105 B. Ferry St., University of Florida Students Organization and Activities, 220 Strong Hall; and in Room 200 Flint Hall. Completed applications are due in 200 Flint Hall at 5:00 p.m., Wednesday April 28.
The University Daily Kanasan is an Equal OpportunityAffirmations are sought from all qualified people regardless of race, religion, color, sex, disability, national origin, or ancestry.
PREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES Free pregnancy testing; early and advanced out patient abortion; gynecology; contraception; & Bore Overland Park, PA 1613-620-3100 1613-620-3100
Skillie's liquor store serving U-Daily since
1949. Come in and compare. Willford Skillet
Eudaly. 1906 Mass. 943-8186. **tf**
MARY KAY COSMETICS--Full-time beauty
counsellor. 842-6641. tf
Community Auction 700 N.H.
Consignments Accepted $ ^{*} $
Sat. 10-5
Management Acceptor
Wed. 10 a.m. till sale
Sat. 10.6
841-2212
spring formals. Barber's Second Hand Rose-
Stilts Indiana. Open till 5 p.m. 4/4-10/4. -430
for consultations to senior beauty counselor
Leahland for seniors with beauty through
headquarters (811-2424) or information
contact us at info@barberschool.com
Every Wed. 6:30 p.m.
Consignments Accepted
PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH-
if, 843.4821.
Remember. O most gracious Virgin Mary, never was it known that anyone who fainted implored her, but as he implored his intercession was left unaided. Inspired by this confidence, I flew to these; I stood before her, and I stand fulfil and sorrowful. O Lady of the Misericordy in thy mercy, hear and answer me. Amen.
Stereo-Televisions-Video. Recorders. Name brands only. Factory sold cartons. Lowest price in the K.C.A. Get your test kit call: 813-434-0111 813-384-0360 4-30
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Get ready for the kaye, GATOR daze of June 16. Attend the Nike (Nike, Boot, Sportstown, Calvin Klein) biking! they are waiting during April at Alburnev's location on the beach. A hang, ALL MERCHANDISE IS 15% OFF Club or Golf Club, (6) mile from Sea Turtle Park, 8 am to 4 pm, 8 to $10 pm, 7 days a week. Open 8 am to 5 pm, $10 per day.
MASSAGE. The Human Body has 640 important muscle units. Massage has been developed for the benefit of people to maintain excellent muscle tone and function. Leave your number. 842-1820. 4-30
Cannot be combined with any other specials. All cars are mechanically sound, state inspected, clean & ready to rent. We accept checks, visa-mastercard, 749-4225
GEORGE'S USED FURNITURE & Antiques.
OPEN 6- p.m. 1035 MASS. BUY-SELL-
TRACE 4-30-
Financial Aid For Students
A new computerized service can help find the funds that will enable you to qualify. Five to 25 sources will be provided.
For free and complete information;
Financial Aid For Students
P.O. Box 381
Youthful basal desire by quirky pop band with ideas, talents, and a more than adequate serving of talent. Contact Todd at 842-6711.
Lee's Summit, Mo. 64063
Graduating seniors: take advantage of our senior portrait special. For information, call Sewells Studio: 749-1611. 4-30
Tolu Teddy—End of classes bash-Friday,
April 30, 9 p.m. kansas Union Balloon
presented by Academic Freedom Action
Coalition.
4-27
TAN ME
LOOK YOUR BONZED &
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For Appointment
Call 841-6232 North Side Court
Dance classes at the Lawrence School of Ballet will continue through May 15. Special jazz and ballet intermission session May 24-June 4. Regular session starts June 7.
GREAT HOUSE for summer sublease, 6 LEASE,
KING HOUSE for spring sublease, 4 LEASE,
HOUSE Vibration. On bus. route--8700
and that's cheap for 6 people. Call 814-1200 and
to GEORGE or George Waters at
3797.
Holiday Plaza
If you like tacky Chinese restaurants, V.W.s and butterfly nets then you're the woman for me. 4-27
לון
Hillel Lunch
"American Jews/Israel"
Tuesday, April 27, 13:15:1:00
Assoc. Dean of the College
Allegrago-garro-garro-Wahoo-Yahoo.
Don't give us no crap about St. Louis You folks from Chicago can take a kick in that game and you can't. Don't give us no crap about St. Louis You folks from Chicago can take a kick in that game and you can't. Don't give us no crap about St. Louis You folks from Chicago can take a kick in that game and you can't fool the "Trash." So for a lesson in partying come to all of our know. If you party with us you will choose you. If you party with us you will choose you. We scau. Cause this isn't no crap or fashion show. Cause this isn't no crap or fashion show. Cause this isn't no crap or fashion show. So be there to party or stay out of sight! There no stopping the Walmarters with a cake to the "Finest Wheel." Monday, April 26, 1832. Be there.
Cork 1, Kansas Union Cafeteria
Vegetarian Lunch, 11:30-1:30 Mon.-Fri.
749-1517. 4-26
Romp in the hay with T.J. Call 843-6244 4.29
Vintage clothing—just bought out an estate.
See cone. Inflation Fighter, S E 7th. M-Sat.
10-5-30. Thurs. Urs. 4-30
To pretty, tall blonde girl in light top and dark skirt at Kroger's Wednesday night at 10. Would like to meet you from The 100. Would like to check front line bookings 864-6397, anytime. 4-27
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Take a break-stop by Bark's Second Hand Rose. 515 Indiana TUE-SAT. 10-5. 842-
4746. 4-30
Julie Derham—Happy 22 to an almost college graduate!! Love-J & L. A.
SERVICES OFFERED
Schneider Wine & Keg Shop—The finest selection of wines in lawrence—largest supplier of strong kegs. 1610 W. 23rd. 843-3212.
Professional Stringing Tennis and Racquetball. Best Prices in town. Call 842-5521 or 842-6582. 4-30
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4-29
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TUTORING MATH. STATISTICS PHYSICS.
tutoring 841-3164 or 864-1456 (ask for Robert).
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TYPING
it's a Fact, Fast, Affordable, Clean, Typing,
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Experienced typist. Term paper, theses, all miscellaneous. IBM Correcting, Selective Elite or Pica, and will correct spelling. Phone 843-5045 Mrs. Wright.
Experienced typist. Theses, term paper,
etc. IBM Correcting Selectric. Call Sandy
2 p.m. 748-8818. tf
**TYPING PLUS:** These, dissertations, papers, letters, applications, reams. Amateur English tutor, grammar, spelling, English tutor, foreign student, or Americans. 841-6254.
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Experienced typist will type term papers,
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4574 anytime or 843-8671.
Experienced typet-duetsa, dissertations,
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4 n.m. 842-2510. tf
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841-4980. ff
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842-2507. ff
Fast, accurate and experienced typist will type your papers. Reasonable. Call 842-8091.
Experienced typist type letter, then
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Professional typing. Dissertations, theses.
*
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quantity typing and word processing available at Encore Copy Corps. 25th and Iowa.
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Professional typing. Dissertations, thesis,
term papers, resumes, legal, et al. HM Correcting
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For a good type call Debby for dissertations,
theses, term papers, letters etc. at 749-4736.
4-30
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4-27
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WANTED
Professional, accurate and fast typing. Dis-
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4-30
Allison, 842-7159, after 5:00
Female housemate for 3 bedroom house 1 block N. of stadium. Serious students, prefer grad B. $137.00. 841-6545. 4-28
Roommate(s) to travel Trestailage apartment for summer) on bus route, pool, A/C patio. Fare May rent, no gas or water bills. To inquire ask for Steve or Bob. 843-682-8901
2 female coommates for apartment 2 block
surroundings and/or families and/or
children. Call Jan. 813-891-320
4-26
Person to rent master bedroom of a large
farm summer session. $100/month with fr,
sweater & hoodie. Roommate required.
Female roommate wanted for summer. Nier-
air conditioned. Close to campus. 841-653-4211.
Email: nierair@csun.edu
Roommate wanted - Female, non-smoker, bedroom kitchenhouse at Traitridge apartment. May 1-August 1 $145 mo. + 1/2 utility. Call Stephanie 740-1799
Wanted: Female interested in sub-leasing a
place for summer months only) - (May-Augu!
t near campus. $118 call 864-1365. 4-27
Female roommate to bring 2 bedroom apartment.
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Wanted: female roommate wanted for summer (at least). Nice 2 bedroom duplex, $180 mo. + $12; utilities. Call 843-6436. 4-20
broom 2 bedroom townhouse for summer,
must be non-smoker and meet 18750-5
electricity per month. Call 749-8595 - 4-27
Babywalters wanted for careless oral
care of newborn babies.
Support Group, 843-6215 or 843-5525. 4-28
WANTED: 2 rooms.
ROOMMATE WANTED AVAILABLE for summer and next week. Move into my apartment or I can move into your宿舍. Responsible, mature. Call Dave: 842-246-206.
WANTED: 2 roommates with 2 bedroom apartment to share, for fall. Call Ninan 864-221 weekday evenings. Will pay rent up-to $160.
4-26
Respondible female nonmoker to share 3 bedroom apartment June 82 to May 83.
Furniture, washer/dryer provided. Call 740-1900 after 6. 4-28
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Female: roommate wanted for fall/spring ammetter. House is one block south of campus. Quit. furnished. A/C, washer. dry dishwasher. No smoking. 841-603-503
Roommates wanted to share 4-bedroom
house near campus. Approximately $125/
month per person, utilizes included. Call
842-7052 or 841-1203.
One female roommate (non-smoker preferred) needed to share 2 bedroom Village Square apartment with 142 beds. Call Judy K64-2185 or Caron K64-2182.
4-30
K64-2185 or Caron K64-2182
Roommate wanted immediately $100/month.
¹/2 utilities. Smoker ok. 749-2518. 4-28
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WANTED: NON-SMOKING Roommate to live 2 bedroom MOVF apartment starting August and/or mobile for summer. 842-
9965. 4-30
HOST-FAMILY for 17 year old German girl. Mid July to end August. Cost of living paid or exchange agreement. Call 864-6128.
--self time and money and when still receiving the satisfaction of placing your ad in the Kanan. Just mail this form with a check or money order payable to the Kanan to University Diah Kahun Hall. Law Enforcement, ks 6604a, the rates below to 'figure costs'.
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Take advantage of this form and save yourself time and money and when still receiving the satisfaction of placing your ad in the Kanan. Just mail this form with a check or money order payable to the Kanan to University Diah Kahun Hall. Law Enforcement, ks 6604a, the rates below to 'figure costs'.
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04
1
Page 14 University Daily Kansan, April 26, 1982
Sports
Baseball team loses four at Nebraska
By MIKE ARDIS
Sports Writer
The Kansas baseball team saw its chances for a Big Eight playoff post fade over the weekend as they dropped four games to Nebraska, 7-5 and 7-0. Saturday and 9-1 and 8-3 yesterday.
The Jayhawks, 18-23, and 6-10 in the Big Eight,
the Tampa Bay Bulldogs and Oklahoma. Only the top
four teams advance to the finals.
NEBRASK IS 39-10, 15- big in BIG Eight play,
and is tied for first with Oklahoma State, which
is at 12-4. Missouri is third at 9-4. Oklahoma is
fourth at 8-5.
In Saturday's first game, which the Jayhawks lost, 7-5, KU took an early 2-1 lead in the second, when Dick Lewalen singled. Joe Heinemey then scored on a third and followed when two pickoff plays by Nebraska backs.
Twice, Heeney was hit in the helmet by pickoff attempts and scored on the second one, when the ball landed inside the net.
Nebraska came back with three runs in the second to take the lead, 3-2. KU got a single run in the third and added two more in the fourth to go ahead, 5-3.
After the fourth inning, the Jayhawks would be held scoreless and hitless as Nebraska pitcher Todd Gakes allowed only two walks the rest of the game.
Behind 5-3 in the fifth, Nebraska went ahead on three runs. They added a single run in the eighth.
"I think it does," he said. "A lot of those we were ahead late. When you lose, you're down for it."
In the nightcap, Chris Krusn held the Jayhawks scoreless in picking up his fourth win of the season. Kevin Kroker started the game for the Jayhawks, but was taken out in the fifth imminent after surrendering four runs. Dake Lahore scored two runs, two runs. Dennis Colden gave up the final run.
"Kroker got a little wild in the fifth." Riley said.
Catcher Ben Amaya hurt the Jayhawks on Saturday as he went for 3 with a home run and was 5 for 9 in the double-header. It was his home run in the game that broke the game open against Corkerstrucks.
Twice in the second game, the Jayhawks had runners in scoring position, but couldn't get them home. In the third, they had men on second and third, and then the team loaded the bases in the sixth, but couldn't score.
"IT WAS A combination of everything," Riley said. "Usually, we have one of the aspects of the game down."
"It's just a concentration game. We're not getting concentration out of people. Against the smaller colleges, we get one good game and then let down. We've got to be more consistent."
The day's awakes 12 errors in the four-game series, including eight in yesterday's doubleheader. Randy McIntosh had a good pitching effort wasted by errors. McIntosh went 5% innings, giving up 7 runs, but only two were earned in the 9-1 loss.
in the "Errors" were the "Riley said. Moistnob patch was the reserved better. We moistnob patch has with errors.
"Today, we shouldn't have been out there. It wasn't the ground balls that hurt us. We couldn't handle it."
nevraksa got four runs in the third on three hits and two errors. Steve Stanicek his 13th home run of the year, which broke a Nebraska home run record he set two years ago.
KU GOT its run of the game in the fifth Dick Wailen singled to break up Anthony
"Today, we were a little wild," Riley said. "People got clinkers (hits). There were a lot of bleeders. Nebraska found the holes."
Kelly's no-hitter and went to third on Heeney's double. Joel Gibson scored Lewallen on a ground out.
"After that, we weren't heard from," Riley said. "Today, we hit the ball well, but right at people. There were six balls hit right at people."
KU also faced large crowds at Lincoln. This was “Spring Weekend” at Nebraska, with a spring football game, a track meet and the baseball game on go.
In yesterday's second game, the Jayhawks jumped out to a 5-1 lead with three runs in the first inning. Bill Yelton started things out with a two-out solo home run. The 'Hawks then loaded the bases, and Phil Doherty drove in two runs to end KU's scoring.
"The stands were packed," Riley said. "People lined up and down the fences. It was amazing. Their fans were loud and dressed in red."
ONE OF THE few bright spots for the Jayhawks was that catcher Kent Shelley was able to return to the lineup after being hit in the elbow against Missouri last week. Shelley started both opponents for the 'Hawks.
KU may also have found a replacement for Jim Heineman in right field. Heeney fractured his wrist against Baker last Wednesday. Todd Schwegert played in yesterday's second game, went 3 for 4 and played well. Riley said. Jeff Husbandson also started in right field over the weekend.
KU faces Washburn on Wednesday and closes out its home schedule this weekend with Kansas
The Jayhawks have only the top and bottom teams of the conference left. After facing Kansas State this weekend, they travel to Oklahoma and Florida, where they host a high-ranked Cowboys and close out their season.
Dalvin
JON HARDESTY/Kansan Staff
All is not smiles for high jumper Tyke Peacock these days. Peacock was suspended indefinitely from the KU track team by Coach Bob Timmons for failure to "comply with the policies of our squad."
Basketball
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Western Conference Seattle 104, Houston 83 (Seattle winters series, 2-1)
Westport 109. Washington 81. Boston leads series, 14)
Philadelphia 125. Milwaukee 122. Philadelphia leads series.
Hockey
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
WARRIORS
Best of Seven
Adams Division
Soccer
MISL STANDINGS
Basketball
Eastern Conference
Team W L L Pct. GB
New York 78 7 741 .77
Pittsburgh 86 14 841 -7
Baltimore 25 17 814 10
Baltimore 25 19 868 10
New Jersey 17 17 386 20
Cleveland 17 27 341 20
Chicago 19 28 334 26
St. Louis 28 16 16 636
Washington 27 17 17 614
Miami 20 24 16 85
Memphis 17 25 432 9
Denver 19 25 132 14
Phoenix 17 25 132 14
Raleigh City 14 30 138
Baseball BIG EIGHT STANDINGS
AMERICAN LEAGUE Eastern Division
Team L L Pct. TG GB -
Nebraska 15 14 750 -
Oklahoma State 12 9 760 -
Missouri 9 4 182 %-
Oklahoma 8 5 612 2%-
Kansas 6 10 375 7-
Iowa State 6 15 294 10-
Kansas 5 14 120 11
Team W W L Pct GB -
Detroit 11 11 6 547
Eckers 9 9 6 500
Milwaukee 6 8 6 371
Cleveland 6 8 6 429
New York 6 8 6 429
Toronto 5 11 11 328
Baltimore 4 10 10 319
California 9 3 5 722
Chicago 9 9 6 800 1%
Kansas City 9 9 6 800 1%
Seattle 9 9 10 474 1%
Oakland 9 9 10 474 1%
Texas 9 6 12 498 1%
Texas 6 7 12 388 1%
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
New York 2, Detroit 1
Boston 3, Atlanta 4
Boston 5, Boston 6, 12 jimms
Kansas City 6, Cleveland 3
Cincinnati 7
California 5, Oakland 1
a 4,11 innings
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Eastern Division
Team W 13 W L Pct GB
Milwaukee 8 5 517
Montreal 12 5 515 34
Nashville 9 5 363 30
Portland 9 8 363 30
Chicago 6 11 327 7
Cleveland 6 11 327 7
Indianaapolis 6 11 327 7
WEST DIVISION
Atlanta 11 4 381
San Diego 11 8 472 1½%
Los Angeles 6 11 473 1½%
San Pasqual 6 10 375 7¼%
Cincinnati 6 11 333 8¾
Chicago 6 10 383 8¾
Chicago, 5; Pittsburgh
Montreal, 1; New York 2
Philadelphia, S. Los
Cincinnati, 8; Houston, 10; Los Angeles 3
Netters fall to Nebraska, Oklahoma
The Kansas men's tennis team closed out the Big Eight Conference season on a sour note last weekend in Columbia, Mo. The Jayhawks lost a heartbreak and were down to Oklahoma on 8:24 Saturday.
The Jayhawks, now 5-12, play their final home match of the season this afternoon, when they play Cowley Community College in a 2 p.m. match. Last year, KU defeated Cowley, 9-4.
This will be the Jayhawks final regular season match before the Big Eight Championships, which are scheduled for this weekend in Kansas City, Kan., at Woodside Racquet Club. Friday, but I don't know what happened to us on Saturday if Brad McCrae said
The Jayhawks were down, 4-2, after singles
competition in their match with Nebraska, but
their victory by winning the first
two doubles matches.
Watts named offensive coordinator
Thus, the final outcome came down to the No. 3 doubles match. KU's team of junior Frankore Cacopiolino and junior Jim Syrell led Nebraska, 53, in the final set and served for match point. The Cornhuskers, however, held off four match points and went on to win.
The Kansas Jayhawks announced Friday that Morris Watts has been named football offensive guard.
"That loss was definitely hard to take because we all felt like we had it won." McGrath said.
Hadi left Kansas two weeks ago to join the Los Angeles tums as offensive coordinator and leader of the team.
Winners for the Jayhawks in the Nebraska meet were freshman Rick Aubin in No. 2 singles, freshman Scott Alexander in No. 3 singles, the No. 1 doubles team of freshman Craig Tidwell and senior Ed Bolen and the No. 2 doubles team of Aubin and Alexander.
Watts, who has been coaching for 21 years, comes to KU from Indiana. He was the offensive coordinator and quarterback coach for nine years under Hoosier Head Coach Lecorso.
staff," Coach Don Fambrough said. "I've known about him for many years and have always been impressed.
Rovals complete sweep of Indians
"He comes to us with outstanding recommendations from some of the top people in intercollegiate athletics. I know we have a high-quality person joining us."
Watts started his coaching career at Seneca High School and later coached at Joplin High School for three years. After leaving Joplin, he started his collegiate coaching career at Drake.
Before going to Indiana, Watta was under Corso at Louisville for a year and Drake for six years.
Watts, originally from Seneca, Mo., graduated in 1960 from Tulsa, where he was a two-year
"We're delighted to have a man of Morris"
"experience and reputation join our football
KANSAS CITY, Mo. -Lee May hit a two-run homer, and George Brett a solo shot yesterday to carry Larry Gura and the Kansas City Royals to completion in a game of their three-game series.
By United Press International
The Royals took a 4-2 lead off Bert Blyleen, 2,1 with an unearned run in the fourth. Frank White reached base on an error by third baseman Toby Harrah, stole second, took third
Harrail's second error of the game, in the following imminent on a ground ball by Amos Otis, enabled the Royals to put the game away with two more unearned runs on May's two-out home run.
on the play on a throwing error by catcher Ron
Pouget and on a sacrifice fly by Tom Pouget.
Gura scattered eight hits, walked two and struck out one in boosting his record to 2-1 with his third complete game in five starts.
Ducks crush 'Hawks; Peacock suspended
By DAVE McQUEEN Sports Writer
Needless to say, last weekend was not a very good one for the KU track team.
Not only was it overwhelmed by the powerful Oregon Ducks, 96½–52½, in a dual in Eugene, Ore, on Saturday, but it also lost the services of world-class high jumper Tyke Peacock, who was suspended indefinitely Friday by KU track coach Bob Timmons.
"Tyke has not met academic, practice nor meet responsibilities of our team," the release said. "Certainly, we are disappointed to lose an important role and we are unable to maintain high morale or team pride if rules are not applied to all the members of the squad in the same way."
IN A PREPARED statement issued after the team left for Eugene, Timmons said that Peacock, who just last week was named the outstanding male athlete at the Kansas Relays, was suspended because of a failure to "comply with the policies of our squad.
The bad news continued in Eugene. On paper, KU was supposed to give Oregon a good fight. Instead, the Jayhawks managed to win only three events.
Timmons was still on his way home from Eugene late last night and was unavailable for comment.
ONE OF THOSE winners was long jumper Wilhelm Wroite. Competing in his first meet
after coming down with tendonitis last month, Wilhoite won the event with a 25-2-1 effort. The other KU winners were spinner Rodney Bullock, who ran the 400 meters in 44,88, and Mark Kinder, who captured first in the triple jump with a 49-1-1 leap.
KU almost had another winner, though. The Jayhawk rule relay team had the fastest time, but was disqualified after it was ruled that the Oakland Oregon's Chris Wright on the third leg of the race.
The meet marked the third time the two schools have met in a dual. KU won the first meeting in 1980, 66-68, but lost last year, 97-56. It was also the Jawwah's 'lawnkid' dual of the season. Their next meet will be the Sunflower Invitational next Saturday in Manhattan.
KU women's track team takes second place
By DAVE McQUEEN
Sports Writer
The KU women's track team placed second out of 34 teams at the Eastern Kentucky Invitational track meet held in Richmond, Ky., last weekend. The Hawkeye's scored 67 points was only five
The Jayhawks' score of 67 points was only five
off. Osu State will meet the meet with 72.
East Coast had a third time in three games.
It had been the case most of the season, the brunt of KU's scoring came in the sprints and field events. In the long jump, Tudie McKnight took it to take first. Kim Jones went 18-4 to take third.
STINE LERDHAL, the freshman from Norway who has been the strong performer in the team's weight corps, again had a good weekend, placing first in the shot put and sixth in the discus. Becky McGranahan also placed in the discus, taking third.
The highest finish by KU in the track events was in the 400-meter relay, where the team of McKnight, Cherise Taylor, Connie McKernan and Loren Tucker placed second in a time of 47.3.
Tucker also ran the 400 meters in 55.4 to take third. She also took two in the 200-meter dash. Also taking second was the two-mile relay team of the U.S. Women's Craighad, Kelly Wood and Anne Johannessen.
Although her team did place second, KU track
carla Carla Claudi, and her main objective
was to go first.
"WE WEREEN'T GOING for the team title." Coffey said. "There were several other relays we didn't run in that we've stacked easily. We didn't get some good individual performances in."
Although several people turned in individual bests this week, including Heather Houchin in both the 5,000 and 10,000 meters, Coffey still concerned with her team's overall performance.
"I didn't think we ran up to our capabilities," she said. "A lot of people seemed to be let down after the KU Relays. But not every meet you are going to go to is KU. Relays-caliber. It's important to get our mental attitudes in the right direction."
Another thing bothering Coffey is the small number of athletes qualified for nationals. So far, only Lerdahl, McKnight, McGranahan and Mackenzie are in the national door, which will be held in Proto, Utah this June.
"We were looking for more people to be qualified by this time," she said.
BUT A more immediate challenge facing her team right now is the Big Eight Outdoor Championships, only two weeks away. Although Nebraska looms as a strong favorite to defend the title it won last year, Coffey said, anything can happen at that meet.
"You can't 'overlook' Nebraska, and Oklahoma's pretty tough, too," she said. "But it all bells out to who performs the best on the ground — that's a matter of getting the right people up for it."
Although she figures on being in the chase for the title, Coffey said, her team has its work cut out for it in the next couple of weeks.
"Overall, we've got a way to go before con-
clude," he said. "We've not negated the negative, but we need to work really hard," she said.
Javhawks exit Big Eight Tournament early
By TOM COOK Sports Writer
The KU women's softball team ran into an offensive stumbling block and finished seventh in the Big Eight Tournament last weekend at Norman, Okla.
The Jayhawks had been picked by league coaches as the favorite to capture the championship. They were the first team to be eliminated.
Oklahoma State, last year's conference champion, was seeded first. The Cowboys were second and third in the nation.
NEBRASKA was the surprise of the double elimination tournament. The Cornhuskers were the only unbeaten team when rain forced a postponement in yesterday's action.
Missouri and Oklahoma had played three innings when rain halted play. The loser will take third in the tournament, and the winner will advance to the championship against the Cor-
Oklahoma State and Iowa State tied for fifth, while Kansas State settled for fourth.
The conference champion will receive an automatic berth in the NCAA tournament, which will be announced later.
The Jayhawks will play double-headers at home this week against Emperor State, Wichita State and Oklahoma State.
In the meantime, KU Coach Bob Stancill is awaiting a possible at-large berth in the national
Jayhawks to do well, especially in the Creighton games.
STANCLIFT SAID it was important for the
Kansas, 28-15, had strong pitching from Rhonda Clarke, but the offense failed to provide support. The Jayhawks were shut out in both games as they collected just seven hits.
"Creigion is in our region, and these games mean the most," he said. "Of course, the other games are important, too, but we have to have a chance of winning." Creigion to be considered for an at-large berth.
Iowa State surprised the Jayhawks, 14, in 10 innings Friday night. Clarke allowed just four hits and struck out 20 batters, but the Jayhawks' offense responded with only three hits.
The Cyclones scored in the bottom of the tenth, when Peggy Gary led off the innings with a double. She was sacrificed to third and scored on a single by Linda Mosch.
"We HED several scoring opportunities, despite getting only three hits," said Stanciff. "We sent nine people to the plate in five different positions, and we scored a scoring position and could get the key hits."
Suzanne Wedemeier, an All-Big Eight pitcher last year, was the stopper for Iowa State. She walked two, struck out nine and gave up singles to Pam Cox. Beeck Ascendio and Candi Boyer.
"Clarke pitched a good game for us," Stanciflod said, " only two people reached second base, but the inexperience of our young kids really hurt us. They lack aggressiveness at the plate."
Oklahoma eliminated Kansas from the tournament Saturday, 3-0. Clarke took the loss in the first round, and Oklahoma lost.
Patty Graham picked up the victory for her and scattered four hits. She walked one and struck one.
1
THE JAYHAWKS had beaten Graham twice on the field, but the sterny stumped Kansas at the plate, said Stumfell.
"Graham pitched one of her better games this year against me," he said. "but she's not of the team."
Oklahoma scored all three runs in the third innings. With one, Outtie Dawdar drew a walk, and another, Shaun Lowery
Shaw scored on the play, and Cindy Godowski drove in the next two runs with a double.
Tarie Whitescarver hit a ball to Boyer at shortstop, but she couldn't handle it and inadvertently sent the ball back.
Ascencio, who entered the tournament with a .315 batting average, had two hits for Kansas in the game. Shawn Myrtle singled, and Boyer added a double.
THE JAYHAWKS will try to get back on the winning track tomorrow against Emporia State at Holcom Sports Complex. The first game will start at 3 p.m. The second will follow at 5.
Wednesday's double-header with Wichita State will have games at 5 and 7 p.m. The Jayhawks have beaten the Shockers five times this year—three times last fall and twice this spring.
Kansas will face Creighton at 6 and 8 p.m.
Friday before taking on Southwest Missouri
at 10 a.m. on Saturday. The SMS-Kansas
series will be at Broken Arrow Park, 31st
and Louisiana streets.
4
The University Daily
Tuesday, April 27, 1982
Vol. 92, No. 141 USPS 650-640
KANSAN
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
DONALD J. MCAULLEY
BEN BIGLER/Kansan Stait
Don Kaus, Lakewood, Colo., sophomore, and Kris Durbin, Tacoma, Wash., freshman, take advantage of daylight-savings time yesterday as they lounge on the dock of the West Campus reservoir.
Med Center nurses, officials differ on 'med' dispensing bill
By COLLEEN CACY Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
A bill now in the Kansas Legislature that would allow student nurses at the University of Kansas Medical Center to dispense medications has caused a controversy between licensed nurses and medical staff.
The Legislature reconvenes today after a two-week recess.
The third of four versions of such a bill may come up for a vote today on the Senate floor, after the first two bills were killed by the House Public Health and Welfare Committee.
The bill will allow senior nursing students at the Med Center, who do not have a state license, to practice nursing under the supervision of a registered nurse.
Register for the State Board of Nursing, the Kansas State Nurses Association and the State Association of Nursing Students have all opposed the bill on the
grounds that it allows unlicensed students to practice as licensed nurses.
"Hospitals are in dire straits financially. They see it as a way of keeping labor costs down," State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, said recently.
BRANSON, a registered nurse, opposed the bill on the House floor.
"I did not feel hiring nursing students was the answer," she said. "I felt the answer probably
See related story page 2
would be to increase registered nursing salaries so the Med Center would be more competitive.
The Med Center now has a shortage of 200
Patients. It was able to fill only 300
patient beds out of 644.
because the Med Center has continued to come up short of revenues and has requested接手 its operations.
Weather
See NURSE page 5
Z
COMFORTABLE
The high today will be around 60, with 5-15 mph winds from the northeast, according to the National Weather Service in Tooneka.
The skies will grow cloudy tonight, with a 20 percent chance of showers and a low of 40. Cloudy skies and a change in weather to tomorrow, when the high will be 60.
KU programs seek to aid elderly. . .
Staff Reporter
Bv ANN LOWRY
A cultural change is in the makings for today's students in the next few decades, and members of KU's faculty say educational programs are following the trend.
As the U.S. population steadily grows older and as yucca leaves the emphasis on geronimo the study of opinion grows more critical.
The National Council on Aging projected in April 1980 that between 2010 and 2030, the post-world War II jump in birth rates or, by "baby boom," could show up as a great increase in the population over 65.
in case in the population of society. Society will have to adjust to this, experts say.
STUDENTS INTERESTED in the changing effects of aging in people's lives have many opportunities for experience at the University of Kansas.
Society will have to adopt leaders. "The conception of older people is going to drastically change. People are going to realize older people can be healthy, productive members of society," Ron Harper, director of KU's Allied Health and Gerontology Center, said recently.
In 1976, the KU Gerontology Center was established on the Lawrence campus. Two years ago, a long-term care gerontology center was established by the University in Kansas City, Kan., to help community agencies assist the elderly.
Donna Schafer, administrative assistant of the Gerontology Center, said KU students and faculty studied the levels of older peoples' intellectual functions, environmental effects on older people, the informal support method by which friends and neighbors cared for the aging and practical programs to learn to work with the older patients in health care programs.
About 80 KU courses deal with some aspects of aging.
"What really characterizes genotology at the University is that it is multidisciplinary." Schafer said.
A GERONTOLOGY Center brochure states that university gerontology centers have been established in response to the trend of an older population and to encourage the development of geriatric health services, hospitals and departments. They also coordinate career training programs, stimulate research, provide
information to agencies and increase educational opportunities for the elderly.
"The interest has just been recent. I assume that it will grow because there will be more need for knowledge about aging because of the population shift," Nancy Demcy, KU professor of the psychology department said. If the exponential growth of good I think there will be jobs available in gerontology."
Denney said that as the baby boom generation became older and the ideal age was older, people would have to be able to move back.
"The general public could and should learn more about how to interact with older people." moneypamper
she said that about 20 of her students were working directly with older people in nursing homes as part of studies of intellectual change with age.
The social stimulation caused by regular interaction of the students and patients should make the patients more comfortable to work on studies with the voucher people, she said.
THESE STUDIES concern the detrimental effects of aging on intellectual ability and memory.
. . . as problems increase each year
See AGING page 5
As the young people of today become the elderly of tomorrow, the economic complexities of being old will be growing.
Staff Reporter
And just as the federal government and local agencies have increased programs to help ease the cultural adjustment for older citizens' well-being, so have increased programs dealing with adult affairs.
By ANN LOWRY
These programs include Medicare, Medicaid, Supplemental Security Income, veterans pensions, utility assistance and Food Stamps—all programs to help older Americans "live with the independence and dignity they deserve," according to a Jawhawk Legal Services brochure.
"Since 1935 when the Social Security Act passed, more than 100 programs for senior citizens have been established," Jim Sanders, an attorney at Jayshaw Legal Services, said.
THE SERVICES operate out of the Lawrence Senior Center, 745 Vermont St.
"A lot of work I do is because the complexity of life has increased a lot," Sanders said. "Most of the programs around now weren't around when today's senior citizens were working and earning
Sanders said the center helped older people who had difficulties dealing with the computer age.
Sanders said the elderly were vulnerable to unscrupulous businessmen and were overly reliant on them.
"It's hard to keep up with it and know what kind of health insurance you'll need." Sanders said, calling it a "very important plenumal policies to Medicare," it not clear who's going to pay what portion of the bill.
HE SAID people who had taken pride in paying their own bills on time while they were wage earners did not take retirement and dependency well, especially when they got sued.
The complexity just builds.
"Older people take it as more of an attack on their own integrity to have someone dispute a policy."
College-age people will realize what has
happened if they receive someone else's bill by mistake, but older people do not understand computer mistakes, he said.
When they do get the right bills, it is not easy to pay.
While some people are able to save some money for their retirement years, Sanders said no one could plan ahead for inflation. Fixed incomes, such as the mortgage and food funds, are barely enough to live on.
Sanders said Social Security was raising doubts among present wage earners.
"You're paying in money now that's paying out now with the hopes there will be money coming in." Sanders said. "It's not earning enough money," he paid out to people is being paid out to them, "but you put it into."
ONE OLDER MAN has decided to do something about the situation.
"I, as an elder person, am asking you college students to help the elderly while helping yourself and future generations." Joseph Dorrent. New York resident, recently wrote to his employer.
Falkland conflict British threaten new naval assault
WASHINGTON—With the Falkland Islands dependency of South Georgia recaptured, Britain threatened yesterday to unleash its war fleet in a new assault for control of the entire South Atlantic Archipelago and to force the military scouts to get the main Falkland Islands.
By United Press International
See POPULATION page 5
Several reports quoted British government sources saying that battle on the Falklands was either "imminent" or expected within a few weeks of the Ministry of Defense refused comment.
Argentina, in response, decreted Britain's "hateful aggression," and Foreign Minister Nicanor Costa Mendez threatened war unless Britain withdraws from the South Atlantic and ends "all acts of political and economic coercion."
"We demand this," he told an emergency meeting with the Organization of American States.
"But if our requests are not heeded, we are prepared to adopt the courses of action which might be necessary to take in line with the right of legitimate collective defense."
PRESIDENT REAGAN declared that time needed to settle the crisis peacefully was running out but pledged to do all he could to get Argentina and Britain to negotiate a settlement for sovereignty of the disputed territory, which lies miles east of the South American mainland.
In Buenos Aires, 50,000 people protested outside the National Palace and, for the first time since the islands were seized April 2,
denounced the military junta of President Leopez Gallieri.
2,098. He can address to a cheering parliament, Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher warned Argentina that time was short for talks to avail full-scale war.
with the war.
Thatatcher said Britain's 40-ship fleet was nearing the Falkands and would not sit idly in the South Atlantic.
"I have to consider the safety of our boys."
the Argentines have had three weeks to withdraw their forces and to negotiate," she told the British Broadcasting Corp.
THE TIMES newspaper, quoting informed sources, reported that a small force of British troops had landed on the Falklands to seek a landing site for the main British force.
The Royal Navy Task Force already has orders allowing the land on the Falklands at sea.
Early yesterday, the Argentine commander on South Georgia surrendered to British forces who took 180 soldiers prisoner and raised the Union Jack over the island.
About 10,000 Argentine troops, backed by tanks, armored personnel carriers, mortars and mirage fighter jets, are dug in on the main islands of the Falklands.
The junta conceded that the British Armada scored "an apparent triumph" on glacier-covered South Georgia, but said they were not themselves would be much tougher to take.
At the OAS meeting, Costa Mendez vehemently charged Great Britain "with aggression and attempting to revive Islam" by asserting its control over the Falklands.
Staff Reporter
Students react to homeland crisis
By KEVIN HELLIKER
Others, however, view any military construction over the Falkland Islands as resorts.
Although the Falkland Islands are thousands of miles and a hemisphere away from Lawrence, some British and Argentine coasts are also in Kansas are practicing armchair patriotism.
"But I hate any violent action. I believe this is a domestic affair between Argentina and Britain that is going to end in diplomacy."
"I support my country's movement. I believe the Falkland Islands are historically ours," Daniel Carullo, a Tacuman, Argentina, graduate student, said yesterday.
BUT SAMINA FARIDANAL, a London graduate student, said Britain's military capture Sunday of the South Georgia Island pleased her.
"I think we needed something like that," she said. "But I'm so involved in my exams I really don't know what's going on at the Falklands."
At KU, there are about 20 British students and five Arentines.
Most of those contacted yesterday said they felt patriotic support for their country, but hoped the Falklands crisis would be resolved without a large scale war.
However, an Argentine student said his
friend should have seized the
Falklands in the war.
"I don't agree with the politics of my
country right now," said Mario Niemrivsky,
A Buenos Aires, Argentina, graduate student.
"We don't need to be looking for problems outside of our country," he said, pointing out that the inflation rate within Argentina was more than 100 percent.
NEMIROVSKY SAID he hoped the Falklands crisis would not erupt into a war, but as long as Argentina has a military alliance it is likely within or without the country, he said.
"As to whether the Falklands rightfully belong to Argentina or not, this is not the right time to decide that," he said. "First, we have to look inside our country."
A graduate student from Belfast, Northern Ireland, William Tavernor, said the Falklands crisis was unbalanced because the islands meant much more to Argentina than
Great Britain should have released the islands when it gave independence to Argentina in 1968, he said. But because it did not can hardly walk away from the islands, he said.
ALTHOUGH NO Argentinees said they wished they were at home, several British expatriates desire to share in their country's recapture of the seas. Day's recapture of the South Georgia Island.
"The British response probably couldn't have been anything other than what they've done," he said. "But I don't have any feelings of patriotism at all."
"I just think it's a very awkward and delicate situation."
SURVIV
BEN SIGLER/Kansan Stift
Chi-Lin Young plants peppers yesterday in a garden plot behind her apartment at Stuffer Place. The 20-by-20 foot plots are plowed and fertilized by the Housing Department. Residents need only plant seed and fill the soil. See story page 7.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, April 27, 1982
白
News Briefs From United Press International
Reagan calls on Congress to find a budget compromise
WASHINGTON - President Reagan, turning the heat on Congress, urged budget negotiators yesterday to "get on with" their search for a compromise and said he was willing to look at new ways to raise revenues and cut the mounting deficit.
The sources also said negotiators had killed a proposal to reduce automatic Social Security increases and were working with a new set of numbers that produce a deficit up to $110 billion.
mOntario legislators for the White House and Congress arranged to meet again today, but congressional sources close to the talks asked the best that could be hoped for now was a general agreement, not a specific compromise budget plan.
Budget negotiations so far have gained little ground. The president's critics, pointing to the rising deficit that could reach $180 billion if nothing is done, argue that a tax increase, a military spending cut or both are needed to reduce the deficit.
reduce the deterr. Reagan said again he was willing to "go the extra mile" in the search for a compromise as long as it was true to his program of military build-up, tax relief and spending reductions.
The president's latest bow to economic and political realities came during a speech to the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, an audience of several thousand that cheered and whistled its approval of nearly every point made by the president.
Cody's interim replacement chosen
CHICAGO—Monsignor John Richard Keating, a personal assistant to the late Cardinal John P. Cody, was chosen to administer the nation's largest Roman Catholic archdiocese until a permanent replacement for Cody is selected.
"The law of the church," Keating said, "dicates the administrator is to look after day-to-day matters and not make any changes." He said his power was limited.
Keating said there had been no indication when Pope John Paul II would name Cody's permanent successor.
The selection of Keating was confidential—all the members of the committee that voted him took an oath of confidentiality.
The 13-member board of consultants also announced that Cody would lie in state in Holy Name Cathedral today. A funeral mass will be offered Thursday.
so he
Cody, 74, the embattled leader of the archdiocese, died of a heart attack
Sunday
U.S. resumes purchasing Iranian oil
WASHINGTON—The United States has bought Iranian oil for the first time since the hostage crisis, but the purchase should not be interpreted as "a signal of any kind" to Iran, U.S. officials said yesterday.
The purchase of Iranian light crude oil was arranged because of the good price—about $2 million for 1.5 million barrels—said spokesman for the U.S. energy agency.
It does not mean the United States plans to renew relations with the Avatollah Khomeini's government.
However, the United States will be willing to buy more Iranian crude in the future, according to Philip Kiel, Energy Department spokesman.
Mount Asama erupts near Tokyo
TOKYO—Mound Asama, a 7,685-foot volcano, shattered a nine-year silence yesterday with thunderous eruptions that spewed lead-gray volcanic ash 4,500 feet into the sky and blanketed most of the Japanese capital with grit.
Pope Paul Apostolic视察了农业合作社的农民了,种植农产品的农民 that the ash could cripple young tea plantation, said the ash was washed from the tender sucurs.
A thin layer of ash covered vehicles parked on Tokyo's streets, and pedestrians complained that the foul substance, which spread over a large area, caused current
some so far by the ice tremors, volcanic activity subsided around the snow-capped Mount Asama by midday. The National Earthquake Center said it was keeping close watch on the mountain's seismic movements.
Six injured in toxic chemical leak
AKRON, Ohio- Thousands of gallons of a toxic chemical leaked into the Little Cayuga River yesterday, forcing 1,700 rubber workers out of face
Officials said that the chemical leaked from a pipe in a pipe at a Goodwear Tire & Rubber Co. plant.
Acrylo-nitrile, a highly toxic and flammable chemical used in tire-making, leaked, drained into ditches and finally into the river. Akron fire officials
Authorities estimate that 8,000 to 12,000 gallons flowed into the river, which empties into the Cuyahoga River and then into Lake Erie.
Sirhan denies making death threats
SOLEDAD, Cal.-A convict yesterday accused Sirhan Sirhan of threatening to kill Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., if he were freed from prison.
Sirhan, who assassinated Kennedy's older brother, Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, learned of the accutation at his parole hearing and shot, for bad.
Sirhan, 38, was before a panel of three people that was weighing demands that the state cancel the September 1984 parole it had set for him.
L. ROBERT PHEM, the Los Angeles County deputy district attorney who presented the state's case, said the parole board erred in 1975 when it made
"This policy was misapplied to a situation to which it never was intended to apply." Twap said she should not be paroled now or in the future. He also said that the government had no control over the system.
Sunken oil rig was unsafe, feds say
BOSTON--The owners of the Ocean Ranger oil drilling rig were notified two years before it sank in a North Atlantic storm that it was not in total compliance with U.S. safety standards, federal investigators were told yesterday.
The giant rig was issued an inspection certificate despite some safety code violations when it was transferred to American Registry in 1979, but the owners were told they had to upgrade precautions before a new certificate was issued, a Coast Guard spokesman said.
The certificate expired seven weeks before the rig—the world's largest floating drilling platform—sank with all hands aboard.
U of I official convicted of theft
ROCKFORD, IL. — A juryney found a former University of Illinois official guilty of stealing more than $600,000 from the university's fund account.
The official, Robert Parker, showed no reaction as the jury was pooled by the court clerk.
Prosecutors had contended that Parker lavished much of the money on women he met at an X-rated club.
But Parker's lawyer argued that Parker, a former university vice president, was inauset and was used as a pawn by the women and their strip
Parker faces two to five years in prison and a $10,000 fine on each of 157 counts of felony theft. He admitted to writing checks from the university's account to numerous Chicago women and several strip clubs.
Legislature opens wrap-up session todav
TOPEKA—Kansas legislators, who in the past two weeks have been criticized for their inaction on certain key issues, return to the capitol today for what is scheduled as a two-day wrap-up session.
From Staff and Wire reports
The issue that has nearly monopolized the 1982 session, a severance tax on oil and natural gas production, remains unchanged since the first severance tax supporters, including State Sen. Jack Steinerer, D-Kansas City.
However, with more than a dozen major issues yet unresolved in the session's twilight hours, the House and Senate have taken no action at their desks past tomorrow's deadline.
Last week, Steineger asked his colleagues to accept a 3 percent tax on oil and gas, but he excluded natural gas liquids, hoping to win some additional
DURING THE Legislature's two-week break, Gov. John Carlin, a primary advocate of the severance tax, visited with three senators who were considered swing votes on the controversial issues, but who had voted against the tax earlier. All three told Carlin they remained opposed to the
votes. A severance tax measure that included gas liquids failed earlier this session in the Senate on a 21-19 vote.
Eldredge said that despite predictions that the session would last longer than the constitutional 90 days, she planned to finish all her business by Wednesday.
The House has passed two severance tax bills this session.
State Sen. Jane Eldridge, R-
Lawrence, said she assumed the
severance tax issue was dead this
week and that he had been unable to
gain any votes.
done in conference committees," she said.
She said the only major issues that remained undecided concerned classification and reappraisal of property.
"I think everything is really being
THERE IS a resolution pending now that would change the state constitution to allow different types of property to be assessed at different rates. Now, the constitution requires that most property be assessed at 30 percent of fair-market value, but counties generally stray from that principle.
Also high on the list of the Legislature's priorities is a redistricting of the state's five congressional districts.
Attorney General Robert Stephan said Sunday he would assist the Federal District Court of Kansas in redistricting. Bernard Berman of Lawrence filed a suit Friday in U.S. District Court to force the district change.
Carlin has so far vetoed two redistricting maps the Legislature passed.
A House-Senate conference committee still remains at an impasse on a public school finance bill establishing the cost of paying for public education.
THE SENATE has voted to remove all state-imposed budget controls on local school districts, while the House wants to continue budget limitations, but at a 7 to 14 percent increase for 1982-83.
If the Legislature fails to take action, school districts would face the same 5 to 15 percent increases they received under last year's bill.
The Senate approved a 7 percent salary increase, split between a 5.75 percent cost-of-living increase and a 1.25 average-merit increase.
A final decision on the salary increase for state employees, including classified employees at the University of Kansas, awaits action by the House.
Truck accidents cause area power shortages
By BECKY ROBERTS Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
Two different truck accidents yesterday caused confusion in Lawrence when parts of the city were left without electrical power.
Lights went out about 11:30 a.m. for about 500 residents when a semi-trailer truck hit a Kansas Power and Light utility pole at East Eight Street.
"When the truck hit the pole, it moved it enough to cause the wires to snap. Bob St. John, division manager of Light Power and Light Co., said yesterday.
The truck was attempting to make a U-turn into the Penney's Ready-Mixed Concrete, 730 Delaware St., when it hit the pole, St. John said.
ABOUT 450 residents, in an area east of Massachusetts Street and North of 12th Street to the river, were out of power until 11:35 a.m. while KPRL workers replaced the utility pole and splice the wire, St. John said. About 50 other residents did not have electricity until early afternoon.
Later in the afternoon, another truck
will be lower shortage for a different
part of town.
A dump truck at the Santa Fe industrial area in northwest Lawrence struck a guide wire causing it to flip and fly through high voltage transmitter, St. John said.
"This affected about 5,000 people in two different areas," St. John said.
The accident left the east and west sides of Lawrence without electricity for about one and a half hours.
THE FIRST area was west of Massachusetts Street to Iowa Street and south of Sixth Street to 13th Street. The other area was west of Kasold Drive and south of Sixth Street to 13th Street.
The business, Quaker Oats, 727 N. Iowa St., was still working with KP&L workmen to restore the electricity at 4:30 p.m. There was a possibility that some of the equipment had been damaged. St. John said.
St. John said the electricity was restored to all businesses and residences at about 3:45 p.m. There were no problems that did not have the power restored.
A security guard at the plant said they had not had to interrupt business because the plant was closed for two weeks for maintenance work.
In the city, Lawrence police said that although the traffic lights on Sixth and Ninth streets were not working, there had not been any accidents.
Police said there was only some confusion at a few intersections.
There were no injuries when the power lines broke because of safety systems that are designed to turn the fire off if the lines break. St. John said.
Beloved College Humorist Chris Miller Inz:
CHRIS MILLER'S STORY HOUR
Featureting John Behush in "Animal House" outtake!
7:30 p.m., Thursday, April 29
Pierson Hall, University Center, UMKC
50th & Holmes
FOR ILLUSTRATED LEATHER SALES
NATIONAL LABORATORIES and writer for STATEN and THE
Tickets: $4.00
UMKC Box Office 276-2704
UPB
Sponsored by the University Program Board.
Ancient surgeon's scalpels yield slices of medical lore
By TOM HUTTON Staff Reporter
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These instruments are part of the Med Center's medical museum, and although they will never again pierce skin or cure ailments, they stand as evidence to the progress of medicine.
"The oldest surgical instruments that we have date back to Pompeii and the first century A.D.", Hudson said.
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Many of the instruments on display are from the Civil War, Robert Hudson, chairman of the history of medicine department, said yesterday. But many other instruments in the museum's 15 displays are remnants from the 1800s or earlier.
ORIGINALLY STARTED in 1945 in conjunction with the rare book collection of the Clendening Library, the surgical instruments collection
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"These things are really very difficult to sell," Hudson said. "But we nearly always will take a look at any collection offered."
has grown rapidly. Individuals most of them doctors, donated the equipment from personal collections.
After the property was donated to the museum through the Kansas University Endowment Association, Hudson said, tax credits were issued and private collectors had an incentive to donate.
Elections for President and Vice-President will be held Tuesday, April 27.
Space limitations on the second floor of the Clendening Library restrict the number and size of the displays. Hudson said.
"We really need more space," he said. "We have to turn down items because there is not room—that problem is being worked on."
This library, which is north of the present hospital buildings, will nearly double the available space in the library. It is Barley, director of the library, said.
THE MUSEUM'S space problems, as well as those of the Clendening Library, may be solved next December when the $5 million Archie Dykes Library is scheduled for completion.
INTERNATIONAL CLUB OFFICERS ELECTIONS
AURH 1982 SUMMER INTERN PROGRAM
QUALIFICATIONS:
- Returning Hall Resident
* Work the equivalent of 40 hours/week from 6-6-82 to 7-31-82.
* Live in Summer Residence Hall.
JOB DESCRIPTION:
- Interns continue AURH work, planning and services during the summer. Duties include assisting with Freshmen Orientation, AURH Program Development for 1982-83 and programming work for 1982-83.
- Interns will be provided with room and board for the summer and a stipend (to be determined).
- May attend summer school (4 hours maximum).
Applications are available at Residence Hall desks, Office of Residential Programs, and the AURH Office. 210 McCollum Hall (864-4041).
Return completed application to the AURH Office, 210 McCollum Hall no later than 5:00 pm, Friday April 30, 1982. This may be done through the McCollum Hall main desk.
AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY/AFFIRMATIVE ACTION EMPLOYER
University Daily Kansan, April 27, 1982
Page 3
Recall advocates, opponents set plans
By STEPHEN BLAIR
Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
Lawrence City Commissioner Tom Gleason's campaign to survive the May 11 recall election has received about 350 donations, donations, campaign, all dark night.
The campaign group has printed fewer than 200 signs, Gleason said.
Some of the money will be used to buy lawn signs that say "No Recall," Antonio, who is also a KU associate professor of sociology, said.
"We're trying to get the message across without cluttering up the city," he said. "We're facing the problem of more varduas than we have signs."
The recall election was placed on the ballot after the Lawrence Committee, a local group, led a petition drive to recall Gleason in response to Gleason's letter in February to City Manager Buford Watson.
Gleason suggested in the letter that Watson resign or face the possibility of
being fired, but he did not move to fire Watson during the commission's evaluation Feb. 18 and 20 of Watson's job performance.
The Lawrence Committee will begin a door-to-door campaign May 6 advocating the recall. Richard Harvick, the committee's board of directors, said.
But opponents of the recall election also are preparing for the election. Gleason said the No Recall Coalition had received donations from two groups of people, those who supported the recall and those who were opposed to the recall Election.
One example of a group opposed to the recall election is the Building Trades Council, which has donated $100 to the No Recall campaign, Gleason said, although it opposed him when he ran for office last April.
The council, which has a Lawrence membership of about 500 families in 11 trade unions, is opposed to Gleason's plan. The council will recall the recall election, Jim DeHoff,
DEHOFF SAID he signed the Lawrence Committee's petition to recall Gleason because the petition bearer told him its purpose was to prevent Gleason from moving to fire Watson.
executive secretary of the Building Trades Council, said.
It is difficult to tell whether there is increased voter interest in the May 11 election, Patty Jaines, Douglas County Clerk, said.
"We don't want to see something like this get started," he said.
The council's executive committee discussed the recall election and its members thought that the election could set an unwelcome precedent for recalling commissioners between elections. DeRoff said.
There are so more voters in Lawrence today than there were in January, she said.
Lawrence now has 27,672 registered voters, compared to 27,392 on Jan. 1 of this year.
On the record
A 28-year-old Lawrence woman was raped about 1:50 a.m. Sunday in the parking lot of the Country Playhouse, 800 W. 24th N., police said.
The victim met the suspect in the bar and offered to give him a ride home, police said. When the two went out to his car, the suspect raped the woman.
Police said they have a description of the suspect, but there have been no arrests.
Another Lawrence woman was raped sometime between 9:30 and 11 a.m. Saturday at a residence in the 2200 block of Harper St., police said.
The suspect, who was related to the victim, was inside the house before the rage occurred, police said. Police would not say anything more about the
There have been no arrests.
A 22-YEAR-OLD Lawrence man was arrested in connection with an aggravated assault at 702 Maverick from 4:30 and 5 p.m. sunday, police said.
once said
Police arrested Michael Ray
Singleton, Route 3, after he allegedly threatened a resident of the house.
Police said Singleton allegedly was speeding through an area where children were playing. The victim velled at Singleton to slow down.
Singleton then allegedly jumped out of the car, called the victim names and took her phone.
The victim got a description of the car and the suspect and called police. Police recognize the car and investigate blocks from the residence, police said.
Singleton is being held on $10,000 bond in the Douglas County Jud. His bond was doubled from $4,000 because he is a convicted felon, police said.
Police officers recovered the purse Saturday morning.
Faculty to set teaching goals at convocation
Burglargs entered the parked car and removed the purse which contained three rings, earrings and a wallet, police said.
Deanell Tacha, vice chancellor for academic affairs, will hold a faculty convocation from 2 to 3:30 p.m. on Stop Street to the Forum Room of the Kanaas Union.
Tacha and Frances Horowitz, vice chancellor for research and graduate studies, will speak to faculty members and will answer questions.
BURGLARS STOLE a purse worth about $850 between 11:30 p.m. and midnight Friday from a parked car at New Hampshire streets, KU police said.
Tacha said they would talk about what happened this year and what next year's priorities would be.
She said the academic program would be discussed, "particularly as it relates to faculty members and their interests. We will be announcing several slightly new directions in the academic program."
Tacha also will announce the first of three new teaching professorships, meant to reward outstanding teaching. The winner will receive a $5,000 bonus. Two new professorships will be awarded, one in each of the next two years.
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The Lawrence City Commission will decide tonight whether to use $8,000 in federal revenue-sharing funds to seek preliminary plans for the construction of a new terminal building at Lawrence Municipal Airport.
discwasher
In a letter to the city, the railroad proposed to pay for half the cost of building the $200,000 overpass if the city pays the other half and all maintenance
DV
Mike Wilden, assistant city manager, said yesterday that the master plan for the airport called for the construction of a terminal on a new site at the airport to replace the old one "pretty old and poorly designed."
If the commission approves a motion to request preliminary proposals, area architects and planners will be invited to attend a new airport terminal, Wilgadson sailed.
The railroad had originally offered to pay the entire cost of the overpass if the city agreed to close Fourth and Eighth streets at their interactions with the railroad, but Lawrence citizens protested the closing of Eighth Street, and the commission decided to only close Fourth Street.
The commission will begin at 7 p.m. in the commission chambers at city hall, Sixth and Massachusetts streets.
By RICK DULLEA Staff Reporter
9. 95 Reg. 16.50
Also on tonight's agenda is a proposal from Union Pacific Railroad to build a pedestrian overpass at Fourth Street in North Lawrence.
said the remodeling would be finished sometime this summer.
KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREO
The estimated cost for construction is $250,000, according to Wilden. Ninety percent of it would be paid with "unused funds" from a $1.5 million Federal Aviation Administration grant the citizen received in 1986 for the construction at the airport. The remaining 10 percent would be paid with city funds.
The new 5,000-by-100-foot runway, which is now under construction and is expected to be complete by fall, is being for about $1.3 million, Wildgen
THE COMMISSION also will decide whether to authorize City Manager Buford Watson to sign an agreement with N.R. Hamm, a construction firm based in Perry, to build a taxiway and airplane parking apron at the airport.
"The new runway will be able to handle smalllets." Wilden said.
913. 842 1544 25TH & IOWA - HOLIDAY PLAZA 913.842 1544
DOUG HASSIG, co-owner of Johnny's, said yesterday that he and his partner, Rick Renfro, planned to remodel the upstairs of Johnny's, and open a private club with a maximum occupancy of about 70 people.
In other scheduled action, the commission will review a site plan for improvements at Johnny's Tavern, 401 N. Second St.
The current runway measures 75 feet by 3,800 feet and is "a little too short for small jets."
If the commission approves it, Hassig
--and KLZR present:
The construction of a new ambulance station in Lawrence would bring the total number of stations in the city to two. Douglas County ambulances are now stationed in headquarters at 1839 Massachusetts St.
Commissioners also will consider selling land near Lawrence Memorial Hospital to the county so that a new Douglas County ambulance station can be constructed at the site located along the border between Missouri and Maine streets.
'82
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BE THERE!
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In this day and age of increased competition In the job market, an early graduation is an advantage! When you decide to take in summer school, check into Naismith Hall for that Special Summertime style of life. Summers at Naismith Hall are relaxed and friendly, with a full calendar of scheduled outings, picnics and such. Summers at Naismith Hall have frozen rates, free utilities, including A/C, and fully carpeted rooms with private baths.
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Call 843-8559 or drop by 1800 Naismith Dr.
Opinion
Page 4 University Daily Kansan, April 27, 1982
Taking a critical look
Tomorrow night, when the Student Senate meets for the final time this semester, some Senate leader will undoubtedly stand up and thank everyone for a job well done.
Has the past few months really been a success for student government?
But along with a pat on the back, senators and Senate officials need to take a critical look at the semester.
As of today, the student body president has yet to present a student organization's budget for the coming fiscal year to the administration.
The Senate has not adopted, or even considered, a plan to spend the $74,000 that is collecting dust and losing real value in its unallocated account.
The Senate committees, freed from the hassle of budget hearings, met more often, but with the exception of the Culture Committee and its support for the Swar-bout Society, have nothing new to show for their meetings.
Perhaps it is asking too much to expect the student government to take a leading role in University affairs.
And even though this Senate avoided bickering over internal legislation—a curse for past Senates—it failed to come up with any innovative legislation to improve the quality of student life at KU.
But next year, just maybe, with some imagination and dedication, Senate can become more than a funnel for student activity fees.
History lessons incomplete without first-hand accounts
Auntie, my grandmother's aunt, will be 99 in July. She has written faithfully from her daughter's home in Massachusetts since moving from Kansas eight years ago.
I used to ask my aunt childish questions and later asked how growing up in turn-of-the-century small-town towns affected her.
My last letter asked college studentish questions. I wanted to know what she did and thought when she was my age. And as always, her letter came bearing memories.
Auntie also sent a booklet of inspirational scripture and verse compiled to comfort the reader after the death of a loved one. It was a gift to her from a friend, and now, she wants me to
"Keep it, my dear," she wrote. "Your answers, when you wonder, are in this book."
I suddenly saw the significance of such a gift coming from someone nearing her 100th birr
NAMIA MARVIN
LISA BOLTON
thday. Auntie won't be sending many more letters.
In contrast, our grandchildren will have no dearth of information about the '80s.
She is one of the oldest of a generation whose perishable memories are the best account of what life was like before our generation was born. Besides the memories in the heads of her children, she has only diaries, followed newspaper clippings, have only governmental and legal documents.
early years of the art, it is hard to guess what the somber-faced subjects were really like.
In the future, thanks to e-communication and computer technology, the present will become a well-recorded past. Instead of dog-eared books and flashcards, we can watch movies and video-taped television programs to provide, if not an accurate picture of our society, at least accurate pictures of us.
Our grandchildren will flip through volume after vinyl-bound volume of snapshots showing people at work and at play, plausibly, grimming wildly and making faces at the
In our enthusiasm for entering everything we know into a computer, we'll zap literally lots of printed paper —newspapers, magazines, catalogs, posters, fingernail-sized silicon chips. We are amazing.
put when our grandchildren punk the keyboards of their inevitable home computer with an old PC.
Certainly, television sit-coms, such as "Eight Is Enough," don't realistically portray the typical American family today any more than "Leave It to Beaver" did in the 1950s. But television does reflect the fads and issues of the times.
readly accessible information will not give them the whole story of our world today.
Newspapers and magazines sift through the daily activities of millions of people and pick out what seems to be important at the time. The resulting stories and pictures aren't the last word on the state of society, but they do keep a running account of its progress.
This incomprehensible volume of historical documentation will be at a kid's fingertips to be displayed in glowing green letters to be flashed on the home video screen when the child becomes to be society as a whole, this information will give our grandchildren only a stylized impression of life today.
Suppose a child of the future wanted to learn more about the Reaganomics era that he was studying in school. The computerized account would include copies of the federal budget at every stage of its development, accounts of its economic demographic effects and months of explanation and criticism from the press.
A videobook would include documentaries on the effects of welfare cuts on the single-parent family, and prime-time television programs would glorify the assembly-line worker who
The curious child could spend many Saturday afternoons in front of a computer display terribly messy.
But to hear about everyday life in those times, what would he do with his grandmother—or maybe with a teacher—to tell him?
And Grandmother, smiling fondly, would recount the anecdotes and trivia of her own lifetime, stories that wouldn't be stored in any computer and that would be meaningless if I told them.
In my grandmother's stories of her courtship in the early 1900s, her dates with my grandfather and her children have been lost.
Olin Church, a long-time friend of my grand-father's, recently published a small book of his memories of growing up in Lone Elm, Kan., a town his father helped found.
Church tells stories of helping to harvest wheat with the newly invented threshing machine, of bidding for a certain girl's box supper at a town picnic and carrying a buggy ride behind her. Good good goods.
Someday, our stories of driving gasoline-fueled cars may seem equally old-fashioned and quaint to our grandchildren. But how else will they know how it felt to drive one?
History is most vivid when told by someone who lived it. Ask anyone who grew up before you
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Women's achievements nothing new
Strange, but more than half the people who were women, and history accounts much the same.
That leads some people to conclude that women are second-rate. Even some feminists have problems dealing with their lack of role models. After all, how many women artists work as writers? How many writers never as great as male writers? Have they ever been any women philosophers at all?
I can still remember the disappointment I felt when one of my junior high school teachers informed me that there had been no female philosophers who had founded a school of feminism. I remember how bad any kind that women were doomed to exclusion from the sphere of higher thought forever.
It's time to put women into their proper place in history. They were there from the beginning, actually, but they somehow got out of the textbooks.
Prejudice is evident in a 1965 text, E.J. Lemonn's "Beginning Logic," in which one of
First, I would like to lay to rest the myth that there are no women philosophers worth mentioning. Name one? Adn狄思桑. And Alison Ajagger. Adn Sandra G. Harding. and Marilyn Fry. Adn Jane Moulton. I could on, but lists are boring. Works by these and other female philosophers are currently in print, for anybody interested in reading them.
Unfortunately, there is an unconscious assumption that female philosophers aren't worth reading because women are inherently illogical. So far, no philosopher has succeeded in proving that assumption, although philosophers have been among the worst of its enforcers.
*Exhibit the logical form of the following sentences by translating them into the notation
(a) Susan is featherbrained
(a) Susan is featherbrained.
(b) Janet is featherbrained.
(c) Some women are featherbrained.
(d) All women are featherbrained.
(e) None are featherbrained.
(f) No man is featherbrained."
Get the picture?
Besides trying to denigrate women's ability to think, people trying to prove the basic inferiority of women also point to the dearth of great women artists. Challenged to name two female artists, many people would answer, "Mary Cassat and . . ."
Major art texts also have problem naming two female artists. Janson's "History of Art" doesn't name one in its 500 pages. Hauser's "Art" pages are more.
The sociat History of Art" names one woman among the 450 artists it mentions. Also, references to Cassat usually include comedian and writer George Impressistic portraits of women and babies.
They don't mention that a major mural she painted. "Modern Woman," was penned by
NURSING
CHILDREN
critics and later destroyed because of its
passion for pursuit of fame,
knowledge and participation.
Other female artists have been written out of the history books, and their works attributed to male artists, which means their painting must have been worth viewing.
Following are some examples of great female artists who should be in the textbooks, but aren't. The list is not complete, although it should be enough to pique your interest.
- Maria Sibyla Merian left 17th century Amsterdam to paint exotic wildlife in South Africa.
*Artemisia Gentileschi, a Renaissance painter, was raped by the man who was hired to teach her perspective. Her family then married her off quickly to a much older man, whom she left to live on her own and paint in more freedom than any woman knew until the 20th century. Her subjects were often heroic women.
Levin Teirling, an Antwerp painter, came to England at the invitation of King Henry III.
He paid her more than he paid Holbein, who painted the famous portrait everyone identifies with Henry. After the king's death, Teirling was court painter to Queens Mary and Elizabeth.
- Catherineina van Hemessen was the court
lawyer of King Charles I. Hungary and
followed her into exile in Spain.
*Sofaena Anguissola, one of five famous wives of King Philip, once was courtier to the Spanish court at Toledo.
Besides painting, another area of the arts where women excel is writing, though their works are often classed as "women's" or "female," and they can be taken as seriously as the "great" classics.
A student teacher I was talking to the other day mentioned she was appalled when she learned that Emily Dickinson was the only woman writer whose works were required reading in the high school where she was teaching.
When she found that out, she compiled a list of female writers, such as Charlotte Bronte. George Elliot, Virginia Woolf, Doris Lessing, Sylvia Plath and Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley, telling her students they were required to read and comment on at least one of those women's works.
Some boys in the class objected to being forced to read books by women, but the teacher simply told them women had been forced to work as teachers for years, and it was time the tables were turned.
It is time to turn the tables. Before you graduate from college, you should at least have a familiarity with the scholarly and artistic contributions of half of humanity.
Read the works of a female philosopher with an open mind, especially their writings about the philosophy of the feminist movement. Learn about women's contributions to politics, science, astronomy, mathematics, chemistry, anthropology, architecture, must art and literature.
Get copies of books by female writers and read them.
You've made a good start. I'm a female writer, and you've just read my column.
Letters to the Editor
KU should avoid 'morally bankrupt position' on athletics
To the Editor:
The most disheartening aspect of the reports of a possible NCAA investigation into the KU football program has been the response of the officials, including one pair with the stonewalling tactics of Watergate.
1, for one, have no sympathy with the argument that a humiliation for Coach Don Fambrough is a humiliation for the University of Kansas. The University can distinguish itself in this situation by refusing to take the morally bankrupt position of asking the UCLA team to win the national ouratic success. Winning football games should be the very least of a good university's aims.
If Chancellor Gene A. Budig has a commitment to the reputation of the entire University, why doesn't he pursue a vigorous, internal investigation of the athletic department immediately, instead of making the standard "no comment" reply?
More than cooperation with the NCAA is required. The chancellor must make it clear publicly and privately that college athletics at KU will not be run as a fiefdom independent of the ethical restraints that are at the heart of a university's purpose.
Fingers and public humiliation of offenders—Coffees and alumni—are the only way to return college sports to at least a semblance of amateur status. The NCAA cannot take for obvious reasons.
that is why it is the task of the college administration to police the athletic department.
- the responsibility in this case lies with Budig and not with the NCAA, assuming that responsibility will ultimately benefit KU, if only because it will at least demonstrate that our University does not accept the status quo in college athletics.
The NCAA is powerless to bring about needed change when it is constantly obstructed by the unwillingness of universities themselves to take action against the excesses of athletic programs.
President or puppet?
Doug Greenwald,
Lawrence law studen
He certainly does not represent my opinion and probably does not represent the majority of students at KU in stating that he supports a 20 percent increase in faculty, but suggests that half the increase be funnelled back to the students for financial aid. Why increase the tuition by so much in the first place? A 20 percent increase in faculty burden, a 20 percent decrease in co-state students, and it will discourage many from attending KU.
This letter is to question whether David Adkins really is still the president of the KU student body or just a puppet for the Kansas Board of Regents.
To the Editor:
I am also dismayed that there has been little, if any, organized protests or campaigns against
the hike. Even the student newspaper has done little.
Why are KU students so apathetic as they watch the Kansas Legislature allow the University to deteriorate when, at the same time, they ask the students to pay a greater share?
Perhaps it is because academics cannot compete with the sports program, Greek houses and other "more important" things at KU. After all, what is a college education for?
Take a look at the periodical section at Watson Library and you will see how many magazines the library has had to cancel of a lack of funds. Compare KU faculty salaries to those of other universities and you will realize, for example, that business is losing a few of its top professors.
David Dingee,
Walkkill, N.Y., graduate student
Story inaccurate
To the Editor:
recently, we were very fortunate to have a Festival/Symphony on Latin American Theatre at the University of Kansas. As co-director of that event, I was very pleased with the enthusiasm of the University Daily Kansan paper and with the space the paper allotted for her story.
However, I must note that I was often misquoted in that article, especially regarding
This is a far cry from saying that the play has its original language (an ab-abbreviation of what it means).
the play "Miss Margarida's Way", by the Brazilian javelin player Wright Athieade.
I never stated that the play had no Portuguese version. I did say that at the festival, there would be no production in Portuguese, but rather, there would be ones in English and in Spanish by actresses who have made the play famous in their respective countries.
Also, I did not say that the play had never been produced in Brazil, but rather, that it had had censorship problems in that country. I said that I assumed that censors would have complained about the play's obscene language, although its political implications are not all that hard to see.
It has since come to my attention that Athyde revised the play and that it then had a very successful run in Brazil. I stand corrected on his statement, but the confusion surrounding my other statements.
Kirsten F. Nigro,
co-director of Latin American Theatre Today
Apologies already have been extended to Athaedy and to Estela Parsons. I would like also to apologize to the Brazilian community in Lawrence who might have taken offense at my seemingly outrageous statements. I would hope that you would not only only a very confused and ill-informed person could have made them. I consider myself to be neither.
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editor Business Manager,
Vanessa Herron Nataline Julie
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University Daily Kansan, April 27, 1982
Page 5
JB Q.
Population
From page 1
In a letter to David Adkins, KU student body president, Dorren explained that government mismanagement kept Social Security from keeping up with inflation.
Investments have been made in U.S. Treasury Bonds at a rate of 3 percent interest due in 1996, and other such low-return investments. Any individual with the least bit of money would could these bonds in return revest at a more profitable rate in return. Doren wrote.
His new plan for his own social security program would allow veterans to mortgage any stricty residential property valued at up to $50,000 from Social Security with a 5 percent down payment, at an interest rate substantially lower than that charged by banks.
The interest rate proceeds would be used to benefit the recipients of Social Security.
Aging
"Give us a chance to live without additional financial worry, a chance to have a few of the better things in life, a chance to have a chance to work with dignity and without having to be handouts," Doren said.
From page 1
"Using abilities makes a big difference in whether they're maintained." Denney said.
She said people would be able to retain some abilities if society would recognize older people.
Harper said that in the future, science would focus more on preventing the biological effects of age, rather than on attempting to cure them after they occurred.
At more people are living longer, they are infusing things to do with their lives after they retire.
RATHER THAN just following programs set up for them by the center, members of OURS
Naomi Mensch, president of Oldsters United for Responsible Service, said many members of the Lawrence group contributed to activities at the Lawrence Senior Center.
"We had some concern about things going on at the center and we decided we had some better ideas than they did," Mensch said. "If we don't know what they say, they should, our open our mouths and say so."
Mench said about 40 people, 60 to 80 years old, the organization since it started seven months ago.
"I know transportation and nutrition and information are important, but I'm convinced the craft program and recreation are essential to life, too," Mensch said.
"It gives them somewhere to go on Sunday. A
家 don’t have family, don’t have family, don't
have somewhere to go."
THE CENTER runs a full-time crafts program, a crafts store to sell people's products, and humanities sessions on topics such as aging Melissa Nolet, the recreational director, said.
She said the center also conducted dance and exercise classes, but that "people were real intimidated by the word yoga because they thought it was a religion."
Nolte said volunteers were eager to help out
The service delivers meals to about 14 people and prepares meals at five stationary meal sites
- lauro Klinket, nutrition director, said the center's hot lunch program also depends upon water.
because older people were good students and were enthusiastic about programs.
She said the program was ideal for students because they could volunteer only a few hours a week and it was a good way to get in practicums for health majors.
WHILE SOME older people cannot live on their own and participate in programs such as the center provides, they are taking action to help elderly retirement living arrangements for themselves.
Raymond Brewster, former KU professor of chemistry from 1919 to 1963, said he and his wife, Fay, were among the first organizers who helped establish Manor, a retirement home at 1421 Kakaside Drive.
"We were among the early promoters to get this manor built," the 90-year-old Brewster said.
"A committee in the local Presbyterian church was whoooping it up for building a manor in Lawrence because the Presbyterian Foundation of Kansas had built mansions in other Kansas
He said the only thing needed was potential residents.
The manor provides meals and maid service, plus has nursing staff available to residents who
BREWSTER, who has traveled as far as the University of Alexandria in Cairo, Egypt, to teach chemistry, said he now spent his time enjoying the activities the manor provided such as concerts by KU fine arts students, speakers, and the usual bingo games and sing-alongs.
In the hallway, a poster featuring a teddy bear poster said, "A bug a day keeps the lambs alive."
Brewster's efforts, and those of the others, are all to improve life, now and in the near future, for our children.
KU spirit squad selected following week-long tryouts
Spirit squad tryouts that originally involved 32 men and women left eight women and eight men still cheering.
They compose next year's spirit squad, chosen Sunday night after a full week of tryouts.
The men performed roundoffs, toe touches off the minitramp and cartwheels.
Sixteen of the 32 women returned for the preliminary tryouts at which they performed tumbling, a double stunt with a male partner and the "I'm a Jayhawk" routine.
In the final tryouts held on Sunday afternoon, the women again performed the "I'm a Jayhawk" with each one made up her own team. The mere performance in the Kansas spell-out cheer for their final tryout.
DURING THE football season, the spirit squad will cheer for all the Big Eight football games and two or more of the basketball games played away.
Cathy Queen, Pittsburgh State University graduate student, will become spirit squirt coach in the spring.
The women on next year's spirit squirt are:
Nicki Hoffman, Overland Park freshman; Kelli Jabara, Wichita sophomore; Nickie Osoba, Wichita freshman; Trisha Salma, Emporia freshman; Lori Schick, Overland Park sophomore; Bob Hardy, Overland Park sophomore; Nicole Hardy, Overland Park sophomore; Michon Lickleig, Wichita freshman who will transfer to KU next fall.
The men on the spirit squad are: Byron Hester, St. Louis freshman; Phil Park, Shawnee freshman; Dudley Hutcherson, Leawood Freshman; James Scott Hoffman, Leawood sophomore; James Sanders, Mission junior; Bob Wolcott, Sioux City, Iowa, freshman; and Pennavaria.
Nurse
From page 1
year, the Legislature recently approved a cut of 448 full-time hospital staff positions.
"The problem is, basically, that they're short of qualified, full-time staff," said Martlyn Chamberlin, president of the local nursing district. "The State nurse is a nurse at Lawrence Memorial Hospital and a nurse at Lawrence Memorial Hospital."
"They'll be relying heavily on student nurses to provide this care.
"They have not kept salaries competitive for nurses at the Med Center with other hospitals in the state. That's why they're having this shortage."
DORIS GETGEY, dean of the School of
Medical Used to comment on the Med Center's position
Neither the State Board of Nursing nor the United States Department of Education, a lobbying group, was notified of the legal action.
"It hit the floor of the House very suddenly." she said.
Branson said the first version of the bill had no committee hearing.
Chamberlin said she thought the bill was "more of a budgetary solution and not a long-term solution."
The legislation was initiated in response to an opinion by Attorney General Robert Stephan last year that the employment of student nurses was not authorized by current law.
BUT HE rued that if the dispensing of medicines was done as part of the students' clinical education it was permitted, as long as they were working under the direct supervision
"The AG blew the whistle because they were violating the law," Branson said. "Unlicensed people cannot practice nursing."
If approved, the bill would legalize what the Med Center had already been doing.
Terri Mosley, Mission nursing student, said the students were told that they would be in trouble with the State Board of Nursing if they were caught dispensing medications.
But she said most students would like to be able to get practical nursing experience in
"It's important to give 'meds' because it's something we don't get to do that often," she said. "We're as qualified as a lot of people up there to give meds, and we're at least as well educated."
She said senior nursing students had trained both on a length of time as licensed medical nurses.
"I think students know the responsibility they have and the risks. We're very aware of not making mistakes," she said. "The patients get excellent care."
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan, April 27, 1982
Spare time
By DAVID HENRY Staff Writer
An alternate space for artists opened in Lawrence recently, and the combined library offers two residential spaces of two families.
Scissors/Paper/Stone, $101.1$ massachusetts,
features artwork that is a little bit adventurous
and avant-garde, according to co-owner Christie
Mondell. "We're dealing with work that evokes a
response in people and not investment-type art,"
Mondell said.
Mondell, together with her partner, John Gimblet, began planning the gallery two years ago, shortly after they both moved to Lawrence. Although Gimblet was born and raised in Lawrence, his interest in art galleries began elsewhere.
"After I graduated from KU," Gimbel said, "I lived in Denver for three years, where I learned about a business."
mondell moved to Lawrence in 1979 as a freelance caterer and food consultant.
From the outset, Gimblet and Mondell decided Scissors/Paper/Stone should be a space-behind device.
"Although this is really a capitalistic venture," Mondell said, "we want to make the place accessible to the needs and desires of the Lawrence community."
THE GALLERY can be converted into a small performance space or be used for criticisms of student work, Glimblist said. However, the main purpose is to display works by local artists.
"People in Lawrence are doing fabulous work," Mondell said. "Most of the art is reasonably price, and some of it is really underpriced, compared to a big city market."
Gimblet and Mondell understandably consider their current show, "Women's Work I," a good example of their goals as gallery owners. The works of 10 local female artists featured in the show, which runs until May 19, are very diverse. Mondell explained. Different media are used for each work, including photography and painting—and each artist brings a different viewpoint to her work. Sylvia Stone's prints and Pat Gateley's pastel drawings are among the works featured in the current exhibit.
THUS FAR, the partners have been pleased with the public's response to Scissors/Paper/Stone. The gallery has generated a lot of enthusiasm, Mondell explained, because of its unique approach to art in Lawrence.
And, despite an uncertain economy and area competition, Gimblet and Mondell remain leaders in the market.
"We've invested a lot of time and energy into this project. It took us five months just to renovate the space," Mondell said while hanging paintings with her partner.
"A lot of people told us that it'a bad time to be opening a small business. Maybe so. But at a time when things are depressing, you have to create opportunities for yourself," Mondell explained. "Hopefully, with Scissors/Paper/Stone, creating opportunities for other people as well."
Scissors/Paper/Stone, above the Flower Shop at 11 a.m. and Massachusetts streets, is open Tuesday-Saturday, from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m., and by appointment.
ALEXANDER HUBERT
JOHN D. MORGAN
John Gimblet, left, and Christie Mondell, co-owners of Scissors/Paper/Stone Art Gallery, prepare to hang some of the pieces in their new showroom. The gallery, 1101% Mass. St., which opened Sunday night, specializes in adventures and avant garde art work.
Jazz pianist to play Hoch
'Corea and Friends' to benefit KANU
By CYNTHIA HRENCHIR Staff Writer
Chick Corea, renowned jazz pianist, will be
in attendance for the "Corea and
Friends" April 12 at 8pm. Audiotest:
The concert, beginning at 8 p.m., will feature Corea returning to a more lyrical style of contemporary jazz with a touch of Latin flavor. Alor, a treatment director at KAUAN radio, said recently.
"He had expressed interest in doing a concert here before," Berman said, "and we had a vocal commitment with him to do a homecoming concert.
"we know what we are doing this for. We were given this date over many other promoters," he
"But one of his band members had to cancel, so he had to cancel out on the tour."
BERMAN SAID THE PIANIST had set up a different tour with different players and had chosen to appear on the KU campus because he appreciated the importance of KANU.
"KANU is a public radio station and broadcasts all over northeast Kansas. It is one of the strongest signals in Kansas," he said. "With the cuts in funding, we are $35,000 low on funds."
THE STATION HAD a record-breaking funding
of $20,000 to equal last year's budget. Berman said.
"With this concert, as well as others, we hope you will fill in the gap," he said.
Corea, Berman said, will play only to miracial audiences where no segregation is allowed. He will be joined on stage by vocalist Gavin Moran and trumpeter Ali Vizuti.
"He is a fabulous trumpeter. Vizuti did a concert for those in the department while he was here," he said. "He is known as the 'musician's musician.'"
Vizuti was at the University two and a half weeks ago teaching graduate classes, Berman
Corea also bostes impressive credentials, not the least of which is that he began playing the piano at the age of four. His father was an Italian-American jazz trumpeter and bassist and wrote and arranged all the material for his own band during the '30s and '40s. Corea got a
grounding in classical piano music from his student's studio. Sullo, a well-known jazz pianist in Rioters
THROUGHOUT HIS COLORFUL career, Corea has recorded more than 30 albums. The 41-year-old musician recently recorded an album, "Acoustic World," which has expanded his range in contemporary jazz.
Tickets for the concert are $5.50 for main floor, $7 for main floor rear and first balcony, and $6 for second balcony. KU students with proper LD. receive a $1 discount. Tickets are now on sale at Kief's Discount Records and Stereo and at the SUA office in the Kansas Union. They will be available at Hoch Auditorium the night of the show.
[Image of a person with curly hair, wearing glasses and a dark shirt.]
Special to the Kansan
Chick Corea
"It just we played very well," McCurdy said. "I was played as well, we ever played. It's just a lot of fun."
Last year, the jazz band lost to Wichita State University's band by the narrowest of margins. Last week, McCurdy's band met the same fate. This time, however, it was EmporiaState University that took top honors among the 15 bands.
"I'm not going to let this festival spoil our whole year," he said. "I think this is the best jazz band we've ever had at KU. We have a lot of stuff there that it's more important than winning festivals."
McCURDY HAD SPECIAL PRAISE for saxaphonist Thomas Lipscomb, Baytown, Texas, senior, who arranged one of three songs the band played in Wichita. McCurdy said Lipscomb's arrangement of "The Song is over well with the judges and the audience."
"Some people from the Army Jazz Band were so impressed with it they asked us for a copy," McCurdy said. "Now they will be playing it all over the world."
THE WICHITA STATE JAZZ Festival was the last major event of the year for the Jazz Ensemble I. All that remains, McCury said, is to make some recordings for future festivals.
Despite the disappointment, McCurdy stressed he had only praise for his band.
"This has been a very good year for us," he said. "We made a lot of people happy."
Jazzers second in festival
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"I was very surprised with Emporia State," McCurdy said. "I did not think they would be a contender. It's a very subjective thing. The judges happened to be more impressed with Emporia than they were with us."
BEFORE THE FESTIVAL, McCurdy said a performance friday increased his confidence.
Included in the festivities will be medieval games, music, dancing and storytelling. Medieval food and drink will be served free of charge. There is no admission charge to the revel, and the SCA suggests participants wear costumes to enjoy the full effect of the celebration.
Last week, members of KU's chapter demonstrated medieval combat skills on the lawn in front of Flint Hall. Clad in homemade armor and using a variety of wooden weapons, the "knights" surprised the crowd with some forceful blows to each other's heads.
A dessert revel, devoted to the study of Medieval culture, will be sponsored by the Society for Creative Anachronism Inc. at 6:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Potter Pavilion.
FOUNDED IN Berkeley, Calif., in 1865, the school is an international non-profit education institution.
WEDNESDAY'S REVEL promises to be more peaceful, however. The evening's activities, expected to conclude about 10 p.m., will be related to the more aesthetic side of medieval culture.
For the second straight year, director Ron McCurdy and his KU Jazz Ensemble I had to settle for a second place in the Wichita State Jazz Festival.
arts and sciences of medieval Europe. There are almost 300 SCA chapters in the United States,
Medieval revelry at Potter Pavillion
THE NON-TRADITIONAL STUDENTS ORGANIZATION will sponsor a Dutch lunch for members at 11 a.m. in Cork II of the Kansas Union
on campus
TOMORROW
THE TAU SIGMA DANCE GROUP will meet at 7 p.m. in 242仁bonion Gymnasium.
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THE KU SAILING CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in the Kansas parlorors.
THE CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR CHRIST will meet at 7 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
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University Daily Kansan, April 27, 1982
Page 7
Dave Horn Monhtattan conhomore takes a din in the Chi Omega fountain.
Program honors KU women
By DOUG CUNNINGHAM
StaffReporter
Career choices for women are limited because many jobs are defined according to male and female characteristics, Kala Mays Stroup, vice president for academic affairs at the State University, said here last night.
"We still talk about appropriate occupations for women," Stroup told an audience of 150 people in the Kansas Union who attended the twelfth annual Women's Recognition program, a Commission on the Status of Women.
The commission recognized outstanding women in a number of areas at the program. A reception followed the program.
"Women were described in terms of
the particular jobs required," she said.
WOMEN WORKED in the textile mills because they were thought to be naturally good at spinning cloth, and they made bullets during war because they were thought to be more dexterous and careful, Stroup said.
By contrast, women in the 1800s were not limited by the way jobs were
"Women really were equal participants in settling the frontier," she said. "The entire 1800s were filled with women working."
MARILYN ANSWORTH, professor of law; Karlyn Campbell, professor of speech and drama; Anita Herzfeld, director of the Study Abroad Program; Rai Napier, associate professor of history; Katherine O'Brien, emerita and former chairman of the department of design, were inducted into the hall campel.
Heven Sze, assistant professor of botany and biochemistry and Ann Turnbull, associate professor of
Prospective transfers visit KU
Six KU students received awards that included a $200 stipend from the University women's scholarship fund.
Adrienne Christiansen, Cherokee senior in speech communications and women's studies, and Judith Galas, Lawrence graduate student in jouissance named, outstanding women students in women's rights and awareness.
education, were named outstanding women teacher at KU.
In a morning meeting, two staff members of the KU office of admissions explained which courses could be transferred for KU credit, how grade points were figured and what went on a student's permanent record.
LISA ASHNER, Mission junior in
outstanding woman in politics,
outstanding woman in politics.
Heidi Stein was named outstanding woman student in community services for her work with the Women's Transitional Care Services.
About 130 students from community colleges in Kansas and the greater Kansas City area visited the University of Kansas yesterday, which was Community College Transfer Awareness Day at the University.
Mollie Mitchell, Hutchinson junior in journalism, was selected outstanding woman student in student services for her work with student and University staff.
Later, there were four sessions that discussed available financial aid, University placement, housing and the student's education, and student organizations and activities.
Tudie McKnight, a three-year member of KU's track team, was named outstanding woman student in athletics.
Carla Rasch, KU assistant director of admissions and records, said the day provided an opportunity for these students to see what KU had to offer.
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Registration materials for the 1982-83 academic year are now available in the Office of Student Organizations and Attachies. 220 Showroom will be closed on January 6, 2002. **82** will be listed in the fall 1982 *Faculty/Student* Staff Directory and will be included in the list of exhibitors. **82** will describe which will include KU's student organization.
Jan Jess, Lawrence graduate student in social welfare, was named outstanding nontraditional women student.
NOTICE TO ALL STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS
Stouffer Place resuscitates and University housing office have devised a productive way to use the front and back rooms of apartment complex—vegetable gardens.
Verdie Wilkins, a housekeeper on the second floor of Wescoe Hall, was named outstanding woman staff member.
Lisa Chan, Honk Kong graduate student, was named outstanding international woman student.
During the weekend, Stouffer residents were busy planting, fertilizing and watering their 20-foot by 20-foot walls in the areas around the apartment building.
Stouffer tenants plant gardens
The gardening program is coordinated by the housing office, which has plowed the blocks of land and has furnished into individual plots for the tenants.
"It seemed like a good way to raise some food and a good way to use some land down there," J.J. Wilson, director of housing, said recently.
WILSON STARTED the gardening program in 1974, and it has grown to comprise 105 plots this year.
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"There have been some better crops and some years when the weather wasn't so good," he said.
The residents agreed with Wilson that the gardens made good use of the land and said they did not mind their yards to provide to provide space for gardens.
PIRCE SAID that the gardens had become a social meeting place, where neighbors met and compared crops or their turns with the watering hole.
the holes. Another youngster, Wendy, handled the watering can.
"Everybody appreciates the service," said Mira Pierce, a Lawrence graduate student who is planting her third garden at Stouffer Place.
Whole families were participating in Saturday's planting process. One child, Bobby, was allowed to drop seeds into
The housing department not only plows the land but also provides fertilizer at the beginning of the season, water; through the local hydrants and some hand tools. The residents just add seeds.
By TOM HUTTON Staff Reporter
West Virginian to fill Med Center vacancy
Most residents grow standard salad vegetables. Three or four types of lettuce were shown on packages on wooden pegs at the end of freshly planted rows, as were carrots, radishes, sweet corn and peas.
KANSAS CITY, Kan.-The hospital administrator position at the University of Kansas Medical Center, which had been vacant since 1978, was last week by the administrator from the University of West Virginia's hospital.
Eugene Staples, the head of the UW hospital for 22 years, replaces Sheldon Krizelman, who left the hospital to manage management company. Masahiro Chiga, vice chancellor of hospital administration, had been the temporary head. Chiga will continue to direct the hospital and the Med Center serve as an adviser.
There were four main qualifications set by the committee. Williams said.
Staples worked closely with Chancellor Gene B. Budig during Budig's term as president of UWV from 177 to 1981, according to Budig.
"The qualifications set up by the committee," Williams said, "were tough enough that many of the applicants got cut along the way."
set by the commission; and
the applicant must be willed that a master's degree in hospital administration. This requirement alone, Williams said,
"He (Staples) understands the complexities of running a large hospital," Budig said yesterday. "And we want the best choice of the selection committees."
THE SELECTION COMMITTEE, which was made up of eight department heads at the Med Center, began a nationwide search for a new hospital administrator last November, Melvin Williams, director of affirmative action, said. This committee received 62 applications for the position, but the field was narrowed to only five interviews.
eliminated the majority of the applicants.
The second requirement was that the applicant have a "good knowledge of JCAH regulations." The regulations of the Joint Committee on Accredited Hospitals are a series of rules member hospitals follow.
THE THIRD REQUIREMENT was that the applicant have at least five years experience in a hospital and two years in an administrative position.
The fourth requirement was that the applicant have at least two years marketing experience, Williams said.
*Stapley* 'job will be to control the business and administrative aspects of the Med Center's 540 bed hospital. He is also responsible for the start of the 1983 fiscal year in July.
The position was advertised in professional journals nationwide and responses were received. Williams said, in Chicago, the position also was advertised, he said, in several national minority magazines.
"We had two applicants from the Med Center," Williams said, "but neither were in the final group of candidates."
STAPLES FIRST task, he said, will be to relocate to the Kansas City area.
Staples said he viewed his move to the Med Center as a major advancement from his present position and one he felt lucky to have.
"This is the first time that I haven't had family obligations that have necessitated me staying here," he said.
Staples will take over a financially troubled hospital that in recent months has gone $6 million into debt and is suffering from low occupancy rates.
Recently, the Kansas Board of Regents told the Med Center to eliminate 100 beds and more than 400 beds in the city to meet next year's $110 million budget.
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The screenings will include height and weight measurements, a blood chemistry test, a dental exam and a foot exam by a podiatrist.
All screenings are free to guests 18 years old and older, except the blood test, which costs $8.
"For those planning to have blood drawn for the blood chemistry, it important to remember that a two-hour fast is required." Boyaian said.
"Depending on the size of the crowd at a give time, most people need to complete all the screenings in an hour or less," Boyajian said.
Lawrence Memorial Hospital will sponsor a health fair Saturday to promote personal health care and to increase awareness of health services. Campbell, coordinator of health agencies for the fair, said yesterday.
The fair, which will be held from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Community Center, includes screenings and computerprise health screenings educational exhibits, Campbell said.
"It's a very interesting collection of groups, and they offer a lot of very helpful information," June Boyajian, site coordinator and a staff nurse at Lawrence Memorial Hospital said.
GROUPS THAT will display educational exhibits include the American Cancer Society, the National Association for the Visiting Nurses Association, and the Visiting Nurses Association.
"We're in the business of promoting health, not just treating illness," said Campbell, who is also a professor of nursing at Lawrence Memorial Hospital.
JUNIOR & SENIOR
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan, April 27, 1982
0
Haitian people remain special to student
By JIM WILLIAMS Staff Writer
The people of Haiti hold a very special place in the heart of Eric Hausler.
'the people out there were so personable. And just to sit and be able to talk to them in their language, which is a rarity for most whites, was great,' Hauser, an Iowa City, Iowa, junior said recently.
Hausler, a political science and Latin American studies major, has spent 14 weeks in Haiti—seven weeks as a student and seven as an English tutor.
He said that most blacks in Haiti were used to whites being in a class above them. Talking to them in Haitian Creole, the language of Haiti, helped break down the social barriers both ways.
FOR HIS PART, Hauser said, he experienced the feeling of being one of the only white persons in a country where the majority of the population was black.
"The whole experience opened my eyes and made me look at a lot of things differently," he said. "Not many white Americans know what it's like to be a
Haussler was accepted in the spring of 1981 for a study-abroad program sponsored by Goshen College, a four-year liberal arts college in Goshen, Ind.
He was the only KU student accepted to the program. The 13 others accepted all attended Goshen.
After only one semester of Haitian Creole, Hausler spent seven weeks at
the Haitian American Institute in Portau-Prince. Haiti.
Although an advanced knowledge of the language was helpful, he said, it was not necessary.
"Most of the Goshen students that go don't have any Creole. One of the reasons to go to the country is to learn the language," he said.
AND LEARN he did. Hausler now speaks almost fluent Haitian Creole.
Besides the daily language exercises during the first seven weeks, various speakers from our Pu-ort-Prince business firm on its history, politics, economics and economics.
The island, La Gonave, suffers from a common problem in Haiti, Hausler said: it is nooor.
During the second seven weeks, Hauler taught English at a mission school on an island off the Haitian coast.
"Most everyone lived in grass huts. There was no electricity, no water and no plumbing," he said.
Despite this, he said, the students were eager to learn English, even though teaching supplies were limited. The students were more accustomed to the students in addition to English.
DURING HIS stay on La Gonave, Hauser met a Haitian woman who made a living selling peanuts. He said he saw them as children and he gave her a little extra money.
By the time he was ready to leave, he said, the woman had saved enough money to buy new thatch for her hut. Then, when he left the island, the woman gave him a whole bowl of peanuts.
"For people who don't live much to
live," said the pastor, so much and
they don't mind doing it.
He said that the Haitians were a simple people who smiled easily and often. They were also a people who were not afraid to help each other out.
Once, Hausler said, he was walking down a dirt road when he saw an old man drop a bag of corn meal.
Even though the corn meal fell in the dirt and was unfit for eating, the old man began to put it back in his bag.
AT THAT MOMENT, a peasant woman approached the old man and told him to leave the corn meal on the table. He found it on his enough money to buy another bag.
"I stood there frozen just looking at him," he said. "I didn't have any money at the time and felt helpless."
Hausler's interest in Haiti and its language began in the fall of 1980 while he was taking a French grammar course.
His teacher, Bryant C. Freeman, KU professor of French, also taught Haitian Creole.
HOWEVER, Hausler stressed that being different was not his main reason for sticking with the language.
Hausler has applied for a $1,000 Undergraduate Research Grant from the University of Kansas for a project in Florida this summer.
"In this day and age, you have to do something different to set you apart from everybody else," he said. "And Creole is definitely different."
INVEST AN EVENING CONSIDERING HOWS TO PREPARE FOR THAT IMPORTANT STEP INTO THE JOB WORLD
After an informal invitation to enroll, Hauser took the course and enjoyed it so much he applied for the exchange program at Goshen College.
"I really enjoy the language and I really enjoy the people of Haiti," he said.
From mid-May to mid-August, he hopes to work for World Relief, a Christian-based resettlement organization in Miami.
That perhaps is an understatement.
The only other university in the United States that offers Haitian Creole is the University of Indiana.
International Room. Kansas Union
LAWRENCE TOYOTA/MAZDA
A WORKSHOP DESIGNED TO IMPROVE AND ENHANCE INTERVIEWING SKILLS AND RESUME WRITING TECHNIQUES
Tuesday, April 27, 1982
7:00 - 8:30 p.m.
LAWRENCE TOYOTA/MAZDA
MARKETING YOURSELF
Brown, fine arts director of the Nebraska department of education, was invited by the KU School of Education's department of music to discuss the objectives and philosophy of the show.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION PLEASE CONTACT THE WOMEN'S CENTER: 864-3552.
THE SHOW, now being shown in Nebraska classrooms, will be available this fall throughout the United States and in the Agency for Instructional Television.
So went the television show, Strawberry Square, a music educational show for kindergarteners and first graders, presented by its creator, Sheila Brown, to KU students, faculty and to a group of Kansas grade school teachers yesterday in Bailey Hall.
Skipper, a beaming man clad in overalls, introduced himself to the gloomy postman, Mr. Jingle.
The multi-racial cast of Strawberry Square-Skipper is black; John Redfeather, American Indian and Carrilola, Mexican-American, are of different races can share, she said.
The show teaches musical skills, muscle coordination and self-expression leading children in singing, clapping and body motions, said Brown, who received her Ph.D. in music education from KU in 1975.
Brown, who wrote the first 18 episodes of the show, said Strawberry Square grew out of Nebraska teachers' desire for fine arts instruction in their schools. Many Nebraska schools do not have funds for fine arts schools, because Nebraska school districts are not consolidated, she said.
Jingle stood frowning while Skiper broke into a song. Skipper persuaded Jingle to sing, and the two became friends.
New show for children will teach music skills
Strawberry Square is useful to schools because it involves classroom participation, unlike past children's programs, such as Sesame Street, that have aimed at children watching at home.
LAWRENCE TOYOTA/MAZDA
LAWRENCE TOYOTA/MAZDA LAWR
KEEP THE TOYOTA FEELING.
WE KEEP YOUR TOYOTA
CHEAP 2:KEEP
PARENT AND SERVICE
SUMMER BREAK SPECIAL
Air Conditioner Service
$19.95
Check Bolts & Hoses
TOYOTA
LAWRENCE
MAZDA
Includes Parts and Labor
Partial Charge W/Froon (1 lb.)
VX4
DA LAWRENCE TOYOTA/MAZDA
Chock for Loaks
LAWRENCE AUTO PLAZA
842 2191
Coupons must be presented at time of write-up
$29.95
Electronic Ignition
TUNE-UP SPECIAL
All Japanese Imports
- install new spark plugs
* set engine to recommended
manufacturer's specifications
* adjust carburetor
* increase the pressure of choke
* install new fuel filter/Mazda and
Toyota only.
- Electronic Ignition (included all parts and labor 6 cyl.) models slightly higher )
- rotary engines not included
All Japanese Imports
Standard Ignition
TOYOTA LAWRENCE
Coupons must be presented at time of write-up
LAWRENCE AUTO PLAZA
842/7191
MAZDA
- install new spark plugs
* replace parts and cond.
* set engine to recommended
specifications.
Every Tuesday is open microphone night at
Off the Wall Hall hosted by the Ebeling
Bros. $2 pitchers, 75r bottles, 4-12
cover, 4-30
$36.95
Standard ignition
(Included all parts and labor-6-cy
models slightly higher,)
Well
- set engine to recommended manufacturer's specifications
- adjust carburetor
• inspect operation of choke
• install new fuel filterMazdas and Toyolas only
LAWRENCE TOYOTA/MAZDA
ENTERTAINMENT
- rotary engines not included
LAWRENCE TOYOTA/MAZDA
The University Daily
CLASSIFIED RATES
KANSAN WANT ADS
Call 864-4358
AD DEADLINES
one three two four five six seven eight nine ten eleven twelve thirteen十四十五十六十七十八十九十九二十二十二十二十二十
TRAILRIDE. Leasing for fall - Studios,
1.2 & 3 bedrooms, aps 2.9, Bodem town-
ship, 4 bdrm., w/ balcony, walk-in
wall to wall surfstair & draper furnished.
Bathroom. Kitchen. Tenant rooms.
tenants room &接待室 on K.U. was
opened in late 1970's.
to run
Monday Tuesday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
LAWRENCE TOYOTA/MAZDA
ERRORS
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
The Kannan will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
To the best secretaries on the hill: Dariy; Shawna, Marvee; Judy, April; Kate, Lance; Katherine; Jane; Jill; Nancy, Mickey; Nance, Mary, Bark, Terry, Bill, Nancy, Nancy
R U C H O N D A D W I L E N D
for an extended FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These add can be placed in person or simply by calling the Karan Bank office at 844-8368.
KANSAS BUSINESS OFFICE
118 Flint Hall 864-4358
PRINCETON PLACE PATIO APARTMENTS.
Now available, 2 bedrooms, 2 bath, perfect
room for your family. A place,
2 car garage with electric驴er-
house, rockery, hookups, fully-equipped
kitchen, laundry room, 9:30-5:30 daily at 2206 Princeton Blvd., or
phone 486-2072; additional information.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Purnished one bedroom apt. for sublease.
Excellent location to campus and downtown.
Central air/heat. Available May 15.
842-6556. 4-30
The Kaanen is now accepting applications for the Summer Editor and Fall Semester Business Admin. Students pay paid positions and require some newspaper experience. Application forms are available in the Student Senate Office, 105 B, Flint Hall; the Student Organizations and Activities, 220 Strong Hall; and in Room 200 Flint Hall. Completed applications are due in 200 Flint Hall at 6:00 p.m., Wednesday April 28.
The University Daily Kansan is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer. Applications are sought from all qualified people regardless of race, religion, color, sex, disability, veteran status, national origin, age, or ancestry.
Paid Staff Positions
Fall Business Manager
Summer Editor
Summer sublease. Fem. only. Clear, close to campus. Low until 841-756-980. 4-30 MED CENTER BOUND? Newly refurbished office space. Appliances. Call. (933) 821-387-8.
Established STUDENT COOPERATIVE close to campus and downtown. Owner/room/study. Six dining meals each week. $72-$80 per room, utilized. SUNFLOWE HOUSE. 943-9421.
FOR RENT
TRY COOPERATIVE LIVING. Sunflower House, 842-9421. tf
Wanted outgoing Christians and concious-
ent students to share 5 bedroom house at
14th & Kentucky next fall and spring $100-
$125. Utilized by:
Buried College - U.S.A.
Diluger, Inc.
HANOVER PLACE. completely furnished,
and 2 & 2 bdmm. apts. located between
North and South Kingston.
K.U. DONT DELAY. Reserve your
rental. Ticket from $240 month-water
Live in the CHRISTIAN CAMPUS HOUSE
This summer & fall. Become a part of a growing campus ministry. Call Alan Rose, campus minister 643-6892. tf
Must see to believe. Furnished rooms with utilities paid near university & downstreet.
No pets. Phone 841-5500. tf
For rent to mature maid student. Quiet,
comfortable efficiency apartment. Private
kitchen. Close to the Union. Reasonable
price. 842-4185. **tf**
SOUTHEAST PARKWAY TOWNHOUSES,
6th & 8th AVE. You'll find us in
the area we feature 3 brs. 1/3 bath, all appliances, at-
tached and fully furnished. Privacy. We have pu-
erty. We have swimming pool, and in the
summer and year-round, C. Craig Lewis in
490-1497 1497 mostly modernized townhouses.
about our modestly priced townhouses.
SUMMER SUBLEASE May rent free, walk to campus or downstreet. June & July rent negotiable 2 bedroom, utilities reasonable, quiet. Cuit #4-715-718, comfortable. 4-30
Wanting to sublease blever 2, berm apt., for summer. New, AC, laundry carpet, electric garage opener 1/2 bath. Within 800 sq ft of campus and dorm room. 4-28 490, 749-1344.
Rooms available for summer $109-$140 per month utilities included. Close to campus and quiet atmosphere. Call Darryl 841-7692.
QUIET Meadowbrook bedroom to submit, tuleen and July, option to rent. $215 monthly; water supply. 600 sq ft. landscape, ground level, lots of grass and trees, swimming, tents, A/C cable. TV: 84-8563.
June-July sublease. 8th & Miss. 2 bdrm.
duplex, air cond, furnished. $225/month.
843-5230 (eve.) 4-28
Summer sublease. Furnished studio apartment with WLG DRIVE PROTECTABLE M-320 M-450 LR-4 BH, house. Full finished basement, 15 bath, A/C; Gas heat, water. Available.
MASTER BEDROOM AVAILABLE starting with this summer session, $100.00 month with free utilities. Call 841-1434 for details
Sublease, choice 2 br. apt., furnished, between campus & downtown, $280 mo., 4-29
0955.
Sleeping rooms 1-3 bedroom apartments.
Duplexes. No pets. Call 842-8971. Leave
for summer or full year. 4-35
--big beautiful renovated house with washer, dryer and porch awning. Master bedroom suite has ensuite baths and utilities each. Close to campus and downtown. Available May 15. Call 849-320-6781.
AT NASIMITH HALL
JUST OUT OF CAMPUS
* Private Baths
* Summer year lease
* Also Summer leases
* Parties and Social Events
* Outdoor activities
* Free Utilities
* Color, Cable TV Lounge
* Makeup service
* Nineteen and Fourteen Meal Plans
* Swimming Pool
* Are privately owned and
operated
* Much more for the Student
Visit or Call
1800 Nasimith Drive
Applications Now Available
2 bedroom furnished mobile home. $185
3 bedroom furnished mobile home. $185
Clean, quiet location. No pets. Jawkah
Clean, quiet location. No pets. Jawkah
Sublease large 2 BB, apartment near stadium.
Water, gas paid, central air. $300
Now leaving new 2 & 3 Bed room duplexes.
Available for Aug 1 occupancy. Fireplaces,
garages & much more. 841-6000. Kaw
Valley Morningstar Homes
Avalon & Harvard Square Apartments. 1 &
2 bedroom apartments to campuse. June 1
or Aug 1. occupancy. Call 841-6980.
Valley Management, Inc.
4-30
Summer Sublease, 3 bedroom townhouse at
Trailridge. $400/month. Call 749-116-1 4-28
SUMMER SUBLASE. New furnished town-
house. 13th & Ohio. 3-4 people
negotiable. 749-1243 or 749-2436. 4-30
Summer sublease—Nice 2 bedroom house.
Close to everything. Call 841-6104 anytime.
1 bedroom apartment with loft. Furnished.
AC. Next to the Sanctuary on 7th. Great condition. Call 842-8709. 4-30
Spacious 2 bedroom, 1/2 bath, full kitchen,
bathroom. Less than blocks from pizza,
liquor store, pool, tennis court, maintenance.
Maintenance includes heating, hot water free, carpet cleaning, Rent negotiation. 745-630 or 843-937-8.
Sublease 2 bedroom apa-tment at Meadow-
brook. Anytime May to August 15. Call
843-3052. 4-30
SUMMER SUBLEASE Available May 15
walk to campus or downstreet. Modern
2 bedrooms. $350Utilities required.
Commercial. $450. fall option,
required. Call 842-717-911. 4-30
For May, very nice summer school room
with gymnasium. You can also see
no pet dogs care, call after 6:43
or see at 1290 Ohio. Beautiful views from
the pool, garden and hot tub, and
bath. Also nice apartment. 4-500
Summer sublease $65 off per month. Loc-
ated in Westchester, furnished, excellent location. Fall option. Call 212-430-8797.
HOUIGHTH PLACE. Summer leases. 841.
5775. 240 Alabama. tf
Sublease—2 bedroom apartment, Oaka, June-
July. Rent negotiable. Gaa, water paid.
841-8911, evenings.
4-27
3 quiet, responsible students seek place to live—house or apartment starting in August. Call Nancy, Ellen, or Algee at 864-5891 or 864-5884.
Furnished upstairs studio apartment, available May 15. On K.U. bus route, and close to downtown. C/A. 841-3991. tf
5 bedroom, 3½ bath; 2 car garage, fireplace,
all appliances $700; roommates, duplex,
bathroom $1,699; 4 bedrooms plus a
5 bedroom; 1½ bath; all appliances.
campus to college: 749-793, 843-725, 4-30
SUMMER SURCELEASE with option for fall.
Modern 2 bedroom apartment, low utilities,
short walking distance to campus and down-
town. 841-175.
Sublease, no May rent. 1 bedroom. Full option. Water, cable paid. Dishwasher, air conditioning, laundry Will deal 749-2471.
Carpeted, remodeled 2 bedroom house with
in walking distance of Medical Center.
$240.00/month. Appliances, furnished. 1-689-
0474. 4-27
SUMMER SUBLEASF. Furnished 2 bed-
room, pool, air conditioning, dishwasher,
laundry, in Appletover. 843-3618. 4-27
Must sublease for summer. First month rent.
paid. 1001 Indiana, Apt. D. Call 842-9766
after 9:00 p.m.
Need a place to live this summer? Subluate beautiful two bedroom duplex, air conditioned fully furnished. Perfect home. Call 841-752-3601. Ask for Leslie or Judy. 4-27
Nice, neat furnished one bedroom apartment in Sundance apartments. $325/month, water paid, on bus route. Call Sue. 842-2330
2330
2 bedroom apartment to sublease for summer, options for fall. Will negotiate price. One block from campus. Call 843-1476. 4:28
For rent, 1 bedroom apartment with left
furnished, water paid, walking distance to
campus. 749-0536 4-28
Summer Soblease, fall option—Studio $180,
utilities included. Close to campus and
downtown. 749-1088. 4-30
Summer sublease with option in fall. New
from duplex on Orchardta golf course,
315 University Dr. $465.00 per room.
841--
4-30
2 bedroom apartments B 5, central air, stove and refrigerator, no pets. Grads preferred.
Available. June 1. $240. 924 New Hampshire. 843-801. 4-30
Summer sublease on spacious apartment for two. Rent is negotiable. More information? Call Amy D. at 843-6283 or Lisa K. at 843-4715
Summer sublease with extension option in fall: 3 bedroom apartment with central air, carpet, pool and eco-national utilities. (One Bedroom. Lawrence 814). Make an offer. 841-880-7888.
Summer aids—mid-May to mid-Aug. All utilities next to campus. Two bedrooms. All utilities paid, including air conditioning. Swimming pool. Call 853-4099 by 11 p.m. 4-28
SUMMER SUBLEASE
Summit House Apt.
1105 Louisiana
Availability May 18 to Aug. 15
• 2 Bedroom (1 Loft)
• 1 Bath
• Completely Furnished
• All Conditioning
• All Electric
• Laundry Facilities
• Wheelchair
• $205./mo.
Call 749-5336
2 bedroom townhouse 3 blocks from campus,
14 & kentucky A/C, full kitchen, garage,
furnished 1½ bath, priced to sublease. Call
842-295.
PERFECT FOR ONE. Sublease spacious one
room apartment computer units paid 843-7570 for
computers up to 1600 sq ft.
Summer subway. Reduced rate. Walk to
air conditioned subway. Air conditioned.
55. Ask about #2303 4-28
56. Ask about #2303 4-28
Summer and fall rentals, houses and apartments. Near campus, no pets. Lynch Real Estate. 843-1601 or 841-3232. 4-30
Two bedroom apartment in residential area north of campus. Available June 1, summer and/or fall. Call Steve after 5:00 p.m. mql-2833. 4-30
rent, 2 bed, bedroom apartment, furnished
air conditioned, close to shopping and
campus on bus route, $250/month. Call
832-3722 between 5-7 p.m. ALL WEEKEND.
Sacouna houses 4 bedroom home 2704
Stratford Road Family room, pool table,
all appliances, 3, bake room, laundry
room, refrigerator, dishwasher, $225
untiler, 267-015. 2 references required.
Requires credit.
Sublease. TRAILRIDGE 1 bedroom apartment.
May 11- July 11 with extension option in the fall. May rent free. Call 842-8285 after 5.
SUMMER SUBLEASE Possible fall. May rent free. Unfurnished 1 room apartment, 5 minutes walk to campus. CA/heat. Natali 749-842, after 5:00 & weekends or Vannas 749-843, after 6:00
Roommates, for May 1, summer and possibly
spring. Roommates interested in students
preferred. Come take a look at the
482-764-3050 card.
Sublime 2. bedroom, apartment, 1 block from stadium. Air conditioned, 2 years old. Available May 19- July 31. 841-0072 after 6 p.m.
Stokkehouse Minstowbrook street apartment,
630 74th Ave, east of Lehigh Avenue courts. May 1-7 July 20. Admission $50.
FABULOUS DUPLEX! Live in style! 3 bedrooms. It's bathy, fully carpeted, Central air and heat. Call 842-8851 now!
INEXPENSIVE DUPLX-4 bedroom 2 AC/carpet. $395/month. 843-908. 4-2
Must. sublease 2 bedroom apartment for
summer. $50 rent prepaid—no bills. 2 pools
laundry room, on bus route. 842-7486. 4-2
THREE BEDROOM HOUSE—across from Oliver Hall, central air central air BEDROOM APARTMENT. Basement apartment across from Oliver Hall, outdoor furniture, outside entrance, central air £225 a month. Call 842-2128 at 6:30 for 9 on weekends. Both available.
MEDBOWROAD. Now available for June
Furnished studio, electric kitchen, and
drape; 2 swimming pools, 3 terrace
calm; 14 baths; 14 & Stainline. M-84-
420-1250, 14 & Stainline.
Summer sublease large beautiful 2 bedroom apartment. Furnished, free water and cable TV. Excellent location. 843-7194. 4-3K
Large older comfortable house next to stadium. Suitable for 4 or maybe 5 people Available mid-May, year's lease. No pets 843-853-86
Sublease June 1-Aug. 15, 3 bedroom, back yard, 2 car garage, close to campus, $315 + utilities, $41-3577, 4-25
Sublease May 15-Aug. 1. Fully furnished stocked kitchen, color TV, C/A. 2 blocks east of union e. bedroom, lease half for $49. Must pay for $29. May not negotiate. 748-0951.
Duplex, great location 811 Ohio. 2 bedroom,
stove, refrigerator, a/c, carpet available
now $260 mo. 1-796-858-425
4-25
Furnished apartments for rent near downtown and university. No pets. Reserve your apartment now. 841-5500. 4-30
For summer and fall of '82 a 2 room
apartment 9th and Kentucky. $130 a month
+ utilities. Call 841-7277 after 5 or 832-
3272.
KING-SIZE WATERBED *SWIMMING POOL*
King-size waterbed with a custom furnishing come with this special 2 bed pool. It also includes blocks from campus. Rent negotiable because of sublease for June 2018. Kevin 749-3018. 4-30
Sea to belleville--Excellent location, subluge 2 bedroom apartment New kitchen, bath, central air, & carpet. 4-30
House for summer submit. Very close to campus and downtown. Call 664-6785 or 749-2888. 4-30
2 bedroom, 2 bath extra—large apartment for summer suburb. Park 25 Call 749-288-986.
Furnished one bedroom apartment Billi-
paid. No pets. 813 Louisiana 1-495.
$35
paid. pet beds 1024 cu. ft. 4-30
parking. bed frames 1024 cu. ft. 4-30
available. June 1. 2 bedrooms
dwarf apartment. New kid children, a/c -4 blocks from park. Room upstairs. Deposit required. Phone: 862-7457-4000
Phone: 862-7457-4000
Sublase for summer: Furnished studio
apartment. available May 15, 2 blocks from
campus. AC, option for call late fee. $178
a.m., call 749-3650, call 749-1438,
4-p.m.
SUMMER SUBLAGE 1-bedroom apartment,
furnished, carpeted, air conditioning,
14th & New Jersey. All utilities free. $130/
780-4606. 4:30
Will accommodate all offers. Summer and/or fall
party. Wooden apartments on Iowa
season from Capital Federal Bank. X-bed,
full bath, pool. For details call 612-340-
6544
4:30-5:00
Summer room needed to share a room with 2 friendly, very compatible pants. Nxt plus 1/3 utilities. Call 864-1530. **418-151**
New duplex in Orchards—2 bedrooms—Pretty area—Garage—No pets. On bus route.
841-8454. 4-30
Summer sublease: 1 bedroom Cedarwood Apartment, furnished. Female only. Terms negotiable. Call 843-0994. 4-30
白
University Daily Kansan, April 27, 1982
Page 9
Share a beautiful house near campus $85
+ 1/5 utility. Summer/fall /841-467-308.
Two bedroom apartment, on bus route. Has laundry finishes for some rooms. Has dishwasher finished. Building, water and cable paid. Rent: as low/lower than you're now paying. 841-6534. 4-30
Spacious Meadowbrook studio apartment,
summer sublease. May and August free.
Will drill $200; monthly; normalized $32;
& water paid. Call 5-410-841-4768
or www.meadowbrook.com
Summer sublease with option for fall, furnished 3 bedroom 8 apartments (pool, a/c etc). Available in San Diego. Call: 764-176 or contact manager about H-88. 4-30
SUPER SUMMER SUPLENE-2 bedroom,
furnished, modern looking, split level. 1½
bath. Kitchen in Hanover Place.
2-bedroom kitchen. Rent negative. 4-
Kentucky. 4-30
Roommate needed summer: 3 bedroom. bath furnished apartment, a/c; close to campus. $125 + 1/3 utilities. 841-3727. 4-30
Sublet Hanover Place studio apartment. Five minutes from campus. Phone 842-6316. Keep trying. 4-30
Summer sublease with fall option, 1 bedroom, water & gas paid, air conditioning, pool, dishwasher, laundry. Traillon Call, 4-30
189-1899
1 BLOCK FROM KANSAS UNION Furnished apartment for grad or grader and upper class students or K.U. employees for graduation.月价 41.825 after 5 p.m. 4-30
月价 81.382 after 5 p.m. 4-30
Triplex available June 1, 2 bedroom plus
dah- family or 2 students, $325/month,
ac, w/d book-ups, no pets, near campus
749-
8085 nights
SHARE BEAUTIFUL TWO BEDROOM HOUSE. Mature non-smoker needed after 10 years. (except bedroom) washer/dryer, a lawn care center, fire station, street parking, $140. usages: 872-674-9535
Must sublease. One bedroom furnished
apartment with study loft and central air.
Sge to appreciate. 842-6611. 4-30
SUPER HOUSE FOR SUMMER SUBLEASE
One person will share NEW N Bedroom
and guest suite. A kitchen, big yard, park nearby with tennis
bed, pool, $140,租客福利: 841-307-keep trying! 4-30
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale
at Barnes & Noble.
Makes sense to use them-1) As study guide,
2) For the classroom, 3) for research
ation. "New Analysis of Western Civiliz-
lation," by Mark Koehler, Bookmark,
Oread Bookstore. "18"
(1975).
Alternator, starter and generator specialists.
Parts, service, and exchange units. BELL
AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-9669, 3000
W. 6th.
1979 MAZDA RX7-GS PURRFECT. 843-4825
or 842-6325.
Stereo-Television/Video. Recorders. Names brand only. Factory制裁 cartons. Lowest prices in the K.C. area. Get your best price for 600 Total Distribution Bars 81500.
1981 GN400X Suzuki NEW $1495. Asking
$1200. Only 37 miles. Call 842-7679 after 6
p.m.
4-27
Rhodes 73-key electric piano with Fender deluxe reverb amplifier. Call evenings: 740-2899. 4-27
TENNIS RACKETS-Head, Wilson, Dunlop,
Prince, Yorke-Good selection, new/used,
will buy yours if in good condition. 842-
6713 at 6:00 p.m. | tf
Perfect sleeper mattress and boxsprings with
runners, head and footboards. $85. 842-1193
Keep trying! 4-27
ATTENTION Esatric Audio. Hafter DH-110A PREAMP Hafter DH-380 PREAMP Hafter DH-520 PREAMP
1981 Suzuki GS450T black, beautiful luggage rack, back rest, crash brake, must sell-getting jewelry 842-4864, after 4:00 p.m.
4-27
1972 Grand Prix Model J-Excellent condition all around. See to appreciate. Andy at 843-8048. 4-29
ver Sonic Hologram, DBX-IBX MAD AFD AMF-MTuner, NAD 2140 Power AMP BATTERY Bank, NAD 2140 Power AMP BATTERY Bank EQ & Crossover, Audio Control D-11 ADS 480 Satellite Speakers, RTL-SDI with fan, home rack walnut $'W', Disk kit, fan, home rack walnut $'W', call kit, CSM-644 1139
644-1139
1975 Rabbit, 2 door hatchback. $1600, or best offer before May 5th. 841-672. Keep trying 4-30
2. Rattan; wood nightstands, O'Sullivan stereo cabinet, butcher block dining table, classical guitar, bike rack. Call 842-8285 after 5. 4-30
1972 BMW 2002 tii, fuel injected with 5 speed. Very good running condition. $2500.00 firm. Call 842-1833. 4-28
King size bed-matress and box mattress
excellent condition; $150, 843-9477, 4-627
Speakers. Klimp Herenay', very efficient speakers for the audio监听音佛. Great for jazz to rock took 10/5.14 year warrants. Jazz to rock $40 must, $40.88. 117.7. $48.88. 4.28
WATERBED -Queen size, in very good condition. Extra mattress & bedding included for $130. Call Mara at 84-1390. 4-30
1976 Chevette, good condition, 4 radials,
new brakes, new starter, $850. Linda. 749-
0802. 4-29
Living room set, 5-piece dinette set, bedroom set, coffee table, two end tables and more. Excellent condition. Call 843-3218 after 5:00 p.m.
1975 Flat 124 Sport. Runs OK, $1450 or
trade for 841-1548 after 2.
Scientific American. 300-plus issues from mid-1922 thru 1980. $80, delivered locally.
1-796-6853. 4-29
2. speaker cabinets with mid-range horn and
15" woofer, 175 watts. RMS. Jeff Smith.
834-5368 4-30
1974 Honda B306 looks nice. runs great.
Extras with .e. asking $500.00, Must sell!
864-2809
4-30
Community Auction. 709 New Hamptons
Hallway. For sale are two motorcycles, three dressers,
gains and lots of fun man-made items. Gains and lots of fun man-made items. All day sale, time and Thursdays in a
Ford Fiesta Chile 1980. Excellent condition.
a/c. steroe. 3-door. Silver metallic. 11,000
miles. 843-9234. 4-30
BGW 410 Stereo power amp. 230 watts.
Mint $475 firm. Call Bryan at #43-5817.
4-30
New Women's clutch, jeans -Cabin Klein,
Zena (20) $20, Polo shirt (18)
Ruessus ($10), Sweater and cords ($10-)
Call 892-1583
4-10
Marantz stereo, turntable, speakers, $150.
Coyne pine fiddle $85. Antique dining table,
$200. Full mattress, frame $100.
Guitar $25. 841-2558. 4-30
New brochure cataloging for sale Size 8 x 11
4-27
73 gold Pinto, good school car, low miles,
Call 841-3225
4-29
Older organ. Coneonetta, with long pedals
connected to bench. $250. 841-2433 or 842-
3550.
4-30
Crazy Ernie wants to offer you a slightly used 1980 air conditioning unit for $4 or less. Paint any bedroom with white paint. For $645 - $699 for Ernie, Steve or Bob.
Hospital b-d with mattress-steel construction.
20 dollars, ask for Bok. 841-2587. 4-36
*
1922 Toyota, automatic. a/c/m/fm/radio.
4 extra tires. Excellent condition. Owner
willing to work. Will give away for $850 only. Call 612-4129 after eight.
$845-2436 any time. Call 612-4129 after eight. 4-30
Fisher speaker. $250. 749-1965 4-30
Custom 4. V- valve studio amp. 212 Celesial speaker, $70 or make offer. 749-165. Also selling custom made guitar All brass. 4 phase switch. Aking $1000. 749-185. 4-30
Harmon and Karden turntable. Straight track, with new cartridge. Asking $300 or make offer. 749-1985. 4-30
Stereo speakers. Essex, four 100 watt cabinets. Sell all for $1000 or best offer. 749-1965. 4-30
1973 Pontiac Lemans station wagon for sale.
Equiped, fully needed, uses work. Take a look and make an offer. 843-3753 or 843-
2166 after 6 p.m. 4-20
For sale bed, sofa and chair recliner. Call
Immages. 749-3536. 4-30
76 Selirco, a speed, ac, am/fm radio. Must see to appreciate. $3,500 or compromise. 841-479. Call after 5:00 p.m. 4-30
12 speed ladies' bike $75 Call after 5:00
p.m. 841-4709 4-30
Camera system: Maniwa C-220 body. 80 mm
and 100 mm lenses. 4 finders. Good condition.
$450. 843-7922. John Kisele. 4-30
FOUND
1 pair keys at Pizza Shoppe. 6th & Kasol-
Call 842-600-60
4-29
Found: Key in SE corner of O Zone parking lot. Call 841-3640 to identify. 4-29
HELP WANTED
Attention: Business Students. Nationally known company interviewing students summer work program. High profile and reputable college call, 749-2227. 4-27
Programmers. Local Company needs part-time programmers for microcomputers. We can supply equipment. Send resume to P.O. Box 359, Lawrence. Attention: 4-20
Are you commuting to/from Kansas City?
Yes. I have a car and I need someone to drop off UWK at the KU Center. For information contact holding the KU Center.
930-814-7300, 930 and 931th Ave., Glacier, KS, 65010
930-814-7300
We are looking for 25 independent, hard working students for full-time summer work. Must be willing to release. Opportunity to earn approximately $3,000. Opportunities apply.
KU-LY is seeking a full-time coordinator for a 3 semester course in computer science, designed to consist of 82 would be quarter time and the program coordinate with KU-117 for a minimum of 10 hours a week. During the quarter time, the coordinator will receive a minimum of 4 hours of class time per week. The coordinator must be dedicated alternatives to the needless suffering caused by this position. The coordinator will show on your resume sexism and claustion. Show on your resume which show that you fulfill this qualification. Resume as a full-time student in your community preferred. Send a resume to KU-LY 117 Kansas University Lawrence, Kan.-U.S.A., at an Unqual Opportunity, Affirmative Action office.
JUNIOR & SENIOR History, Meteorology,
and Astronomy. Participate in a reading story for 45
to 60 minutes. Attend a workshop on 10:30 to
10:40 a.m. Please bring your ID. No appointment
required. Cards $3 Fraser Hall or call 864-1433;
Cards $5 Fraser Hall or call 864-1433;
Positions Available. Full-time summer positions available. Earn $1035.00 per month. Must be willing to reallocate. Write Summer P.O. Box 206 Lawrence, KG 6044. 4.834-7999
W. T.C.S. is needing women committed to helping other women and their children with life changes or other life changes. Next training session starts May 20. For more details click 4-30
Anticipated Graduate Assistancehips &
Graduate or Associate of Business on
offering. Office: KU SPSue Technology Center-KAIRS Program, Nicholas University. Job position: Graduate Research Assistant; Student Assistant (hourly) length of employment: Summer 1828 to Fall 1945; $32.50 - regular hourly; Graduate research assistant; graduate organizing files; literature searches; drafting; other applications; course work in photo interpretation, remote sensing; other application forms and further information; or equivalent. Application forms and further information Applications accepted now through May 5. Equal Opportunity Affirmation 4-30
ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT—The Center for East Asian Studies seeks an adminstrator in B.A. and experience in office-related activities required; familiarity with East Asian experience preferred; annual salary $80,000 plus benefits; education requirements and experience. Applications will be considered starting June 16. Applicants must be registered as a representative and recommendation to Professor C.J. Lee 106 Long Hall University, Stamford, CT 06903-3849). Contact Professor Lee for further information. Admitance is by email. Employer. Applications are sought from all qualified people regardless of gender, national origin, age or ancestry status, national origin, age or ancestry.
Energize, personable waitresses wanted.
Must be willing to work. Hourly wage plus
tax, commission and incentive bonus. Apply
at GAMMONS after 5:00 p.m.
4-30
PHYSICAL THERAPIST. Lawrence Memorial Hospital has a full-time therapist. Our department treats in-patients and out-patient and is 8-M-3-F and some Saturday mornings; 8-M-3-F and some Sunday information; call Nancy Huey, Employment Assistant, at 4-294-Handed Assistance urged to apply. 4-29
Research Assistant, B.S. degree. One Spearman's rho of 0.98 for SIMILARIZEO INTERVIEW July 30th, 1995 for SIMILARIZEO INTERVIEW plus room and minimum Contact Carr Hall number 71-5264. K.U. Squal Opportunity
ASSISTANT MANAGERS. JAYHAYWEER TOWERS (5 Positions Available) The University seeks a live-in, one half time, Assistant Manager in apartment buildings. Graduate student status preferred. Group work experience with a Bachelor's degree in apartment experience is desirable. Apartment furnished property starting no later than July 1, 1982. Complete job description available. May 3, 1982; 5:00 p.m., Wednesday; May 18, 1982; 5:00 p.m., Monday. May 18, 1982; resume, names and names of two references to the Dean of Student Life, 1645 Kedleston Ave., action equal opportunity employer. 4-28
COLLEGE STUDENTS. If you live in K.C.
area and need summer employment, call
Charles Looney collect (913) 722-398-
between 8 a.m. to 4 a.m. for assistance
interview. 4-30
Person to care for 3 great kids, approximately 20 hours per week. Schedule flexible. Must be able to drive, have own transportation. 842-2788-842-5454 4-30
College Students: If you live in K.C. area and need summer employment, call CHARLES LOONEY COLLECT 911-278-3030. a. arm to a. interview.
4-50
Summer business opportunity—sen continue
your summer training on time. Set own hours and earnings. **£30**
**£40**
**£50**
**£60**
Business student wanted, or po-
sitioned for, accounting and general booke-
king, including job requirements for each individual who is very familiar and experience requirements. Tonganoxie, Ks. 845-214-3
4-30
Teacher for summer program; elementary
program ($85/month); $925/month; Call 1-441-655-430-
4
Part-time help needed weekends and
Mondays. A-1 Rental, 2900 Iowa.
4-30
LOST
Red wind breaker with lining in Wescow on Tuesday night. If found, call 814-6833.
Lost-fate in black case. Friday morning
4-16. Reward Cell- 841-0528.
4-28
ountant passport, visit, ID, and recharge photo
Switzerland, ID, and w/b. colored
Switzerland, 749-1614
PERSONAL
A female grey and white Schnauzer, last
name Michael. She is on board 4-68-
Ship. Please call 483-240-8.
(Re)
Remember mother loves you. show your love to her with studio portraits of fine quality, suits and dresses for portraits of you
Say it on a sweathirt with custom silk-
mantaining to 1000 turtlh art by Swetw
740-161-1
Skillet's liquor store serving U-Day since 1965. Used in 1984, 1990. Make 848-8868. Skillet sold 1984.
BOACHIE, BACKACHE, STIFF NECK,
LEG PAINY. Find and correct
injuries on a patient Johnson for
modern chiropractic care. 843-9336.
Accepting Blue Cross and Lone Star insurance.
The Kegger - Weekly Specials on Keggs!
Call 841-9500 - 1610 W. 23rd.
COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES:
Free pregnancy testing; early and advanced
out patient abortion; gynecology centra-
tals (913) 642-3100, R. Overland Park, PA
(913) 642-3100.
Suring forms, Barb's Second Hand Rose.
515 Indiana. Open Ubl 3 p.m. 842-476-4. 300
Community Auction 700 N.H.
MARY KAY COSMETICS—Full-time beauty consultant. 842-6641
Every Wed. 6:30 p.m.
Consignments Accepted
Wed. 10 a.m. till sale
Sat. 10-5
841-2212
Wanted to talk with someone? Gay &
headache? (814)-2824 or information眼见
headache? 814-2824 or information
PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH-
RIGHT, 843-4821.
Remember, O most gracious Virgin Mary, that never was it known that anyone who prayed to her confidence implored thy intercession was left unaddressed. I know my confidence, I drew to the truth, My Virgin Mary. I stand sinful and sorrowful. O Lady of the Cloak, in the energy, hear and answer me, Amen.
TAN ME
LOOK YOUR BRENZE AND BEAUTIFUL BEST
15% OFF
Spring White Sale
FREE session (new customers only)
Guaranteed Safe &
Call 841-6232
For Appointment
Effective: UVA Tan Bees
set ready for the lazy. GATORDATE of
friends (Nike, Boat, Sportstown, Calvin
hurley) are waiting during April at Avawar or
bottle with BUILT MERCHANDISE 18% OFF
with KU JD. Come to either of Kadoka
on Clinton Parkway. Sale ends April 30th.
(574) 226-7944.
Starres-Televisions-Video Recorders. Name brands only. Factory sealed cartons. Low price. The K.C. area. Get your best价, then call Total Sound 913-384-3000. 4-30
North Side Court
MASSAGE. The Human Body has 640 important pressure massage. Massages have been used for over 20 years for people to maintain excellent muscle tone and health. Leave your number, 982-1620. 4-30
GORGEKS' USED FURNITURE Antiques-
TRADE 8-1 p.m. MISS MASS 850
4-30
Holiday Plaza
To 1 & 2 West:
You are the best!
Good luck with fun!
& have a great summer!
Love, Sally
Todd Kids-End of classes bash-Friday,
April 30, 9 p.m. Kansas National Ballroom
presented by Academic Freedom Action
College.
4-27
If you like tacky Chinese restaurants, W.V.s and butterfly nets then the woman for me.
4-27
4-28
Graduating seniors: take advantage of informa-
tion call Swells Studio: 749-101. 4-30
GREAT HOUSE for summer sublease. 6 bedrooms downstairs. On bus route -9750 and it's cheap for 6 people. Call 841-1380 or to anyone or George Waters at 4-30 5797.
Dance classes at the Lawrence School of
Ballet will continue through May 15. Special
jazz and ballet interim session May 24-June
14. Please contact Jessica for
For schedule. #824-4595. 4-30
Try us once, and you'll see New
Romp in the hay with T.J. Call 843-6254.
4.28
Pyramid Pizza Under New Ownership
842-3232
$1.00 off any large pizza +2 FREE Cokes.
(w/coupon)
Expires 5-2-82
Fry the fabulous Ronzo!
To pretty, tall blonde girl in light top and dark skirt at Kroger's Wednesday night at a cafe to like to meet you. From 2 two legs girls for fast checkin call: 684-6379. anytime.
--sponsors
Ronzo!
SPECTRUM OPTICAL. Bring in you Dr. prescription or we can duplicate, present and measure your own light justment and loner frames. Complete repair service. Open 10-30 M-F-M.
Hillel
לא...
Israel
j ≡
Day
Independence
Tues., April 27 5:30 p.m.
Alcove D-Kansas Union Cafe
Alcove D-Kansas Union Care
• Information on Israel programs
Wed., April 28 11:00 a.m.
2:00 p.m.
In front of The Kansas Union
* Information on Israel
- information on israel
- iosell music dancin
- Israeli music, dancing
Wed., April 28 8:00 p.m.
PARTY L.J.C.C. 917 Highland Dr
*Israell music
Take a break-stop by Barb's Second Hand
Rose. 515 Indiana TUE-SAT. 10-5 842
4746. 4-30
- Food
Looking for someone interested in taking a coast to coast bicycle trip this summer. Phone 841-6668. 4-30
PICK UP
YOUR
YEARBOOK
IN FRONT OF
HOCH
TODAY
*STUDENT NURSING HOME AIDES:* Your request for a public service home residence. *NURSING HOME AIDES* organization. *NURSING HOMES,* *NURSING HOMES* input on conditions and quality of care. All information received by your contact. Write or call us: KINH-8271; Mass St. SI. 11, Lawrence K 6504 1131; Mass St. 838-267 or 827-
Dateline: Friday April 30
AESTHETIC PRODUCTION
WITH CREATIVE PRODUCERS
toff trody
show starts at 9
$3
Kansas Union Ballroom
The committee for the Preservation of Wildlife has appointed the musicians for Saturday, May 8 & 9. Music by the fabulous Beeeling Broadway Orchestra at Allman Church. Sound Advice, and more! All this music, including our own, will be all by the light of the full moon. Only 4%. Watch for map in Wed. April 28 DUE #4-7. If you think a meal isn't satisfying with your eyes, watch the videos of TERIAN HALFY, weekdays, 11:30 to 13:00. ALL
The Kansas Relays Staff
would like to thank all student officials for their help in the 1982 Kansas Relays. We hope to have your help next year.
SERVICES OFFERED
Schneider Wine & Keg Shop-The finest selection of wines in Lawrence- the smallest supplier of strong kgs. 1610 W. 23rd. 643- 3212.
31/2
Professional Stringing Tennis and Racquetball. Best Prices in town. Call 842-5521 or 842-6582. 4-30
WRITING A RESUME? What to say? How to say it? Stay by The House of Uber and up our couch. Resume on resume for屋客 838 Mimosa, 8-17 9-3 Sat, NOON-Sun 3.
now at
ENCORE COPY
self service copies
CORPS
25th and Iowa 842-2001
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, 51st & Ithaca. 4-30
GRADUATE STUDENTS THEIS COFERS
qualify education based on total volume of
quality schools based on total volume of
shop that can offer variable reduction in
price. Includes Encore Copy Corp., 8th &
9th Eds. In Encore Copy Corp., 8th &
RESUMES - Professional: students' resumes a specialty. 841-2654. 4-30
Experienced Tap Dance Teacher wants begin-
ning and intermediate students. Will teach in my home. Call Susan. 749-0043-429
LEARN TENNIS from experienced instructor in small groups with other K.U. students or private lessons 842-6713 after 6:00 p.m. tt
TUTORING MATH. STATISTIC PHYSICS.
Call 814-3164 or 864-4176 (ask for Robert.
or Johnson).
Videotapes of Academic Skill Enhancement Workshop. Time Management, Final Exams, more on the course. 10am to 3:30, 2:40 to 5:00 at the Student Assessment Center, 121 Hilton Hall, 864-4064. 4-30
MOPED-CYCLE RIVERS. Experienced cycle mechanic will do time-ups or repairs at reasonable rates. CALL JERRY 841-5123-403
SPECTRUM OPTICAL- Do you have a wrench?
Broken! Broken! Broken! One day
service on lens in most cases. Open 10.
6-M. M-841-11. 4 E. 7 h
House sitter for summer, lawn maintenance etc. included. Call 841-4409, 12-8 or 843-
3359. After 8:00. 4-30
Tutoring—Math 002—Excellent references.
Cheap, call 842-2428. SUA ticket pass for sale.
4-30
TYPING
it's a Fact, Fast, Affordable, Clean, Typing,
843-5820. tf
Experienced typist. Term papers, theses, all miscellaneous. IBM Correcting Selective, Elite or Pice, and will correct spelling. Phone 843-9545 Mrs. Wright.
Experienced typist. Theses, term papers,
etc. IBM Correcting Selective. Call Sandy
after 5 p.m. 748-9818. tf
**TYPIING PLUS:** These, dissertation papers, letter, applications, renames. Anatance composition, grammar, spelling. American literature, foreign student. American 81-4234.
TIP-TOP TYPING—experienced typist—IBM Correcting Selectic II; Royal Correcting 3E 5000 CD, 843-5675. **tf**
AFPDORABLE QUALITY for all your typing needs: themes, dissertations, resume, carts, mailsings, mice. Call Judy 842-7945 after 6:00 p.m.
Experienced typist will type term papers, thesis, dissertation books, etc. Have IBM self-correcting Selectile II. Call Terry 842-7454 anytime or 843-281.
For PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myra.
841-4080. tt
Experienced typist-thesis, dissertations,
term papers, mice. IBM correcting electric.
Barb, after 5 p.m. 842-2310. tf
IRON FENCE TYPING SERVICE. Evenings
842-2507. tf
Fast, accurate and experienced typist will type your papers. Reasonable. Call 842-8091 4-30
Experienced typist will type letters, headings and dissertations, IBM correcting selective Call Domoa at 842-2744. **tf**
MAGIC FINGERS TYPING SERVICE. 843-
6129. 4-30
Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms,
graphics, editing, self-corrre. Selectic:
Cillen Ellen, jean A41-2172.
tr
Quality typing and word processing available at Encore Copy Corps. 25th and Iowa.
842-2001. 4-39
For a good type call Deby for dissertations,
thesis, term papers, letters etc. at 749-4736.
Would like to type dissertations, thesis, term
papers, etc. Call 842-3203. 4-30
Graduate students tired of typing, retyping and retiring your thesis or dissertation?
Save time and money by word processing it at Encore! Call 642-2001 for more info. 480-398-7580.
Former medical research secretary will typem
paper names, theses, books, mise. Call:
Nancy, 841-3802.
4-27
OVERNIGHT EXPRESS: typing-Editing
Proof guaranteed next day. IBM
Correcting Selective II. Victor Clark: 842-
8240 4-30
TYPING-EDITING-GRAPHICS. IBM Correction Syseline, full-time typos, spelling correction to composition assistances. Emergency service available. 841-296-4300.
Shakepzare could write. Evels could wiggle: my talent, typing Call 842-0043 after 5:00 and weekends.
4-20
I'm back! Call Mary 841-6873 for all your
friends, at the office. 4:30
FAST & CLEAR TYPING SERVICE. Reasonable trice. call J194-7699. 4-30
Professional, accurate and fast typing. Dis-
sertions, theses, term papers, etc. Call
Allison, 842-7159, after 5:00 4-20
WANTED
Female housemate for 3 bedroom house 1 block N. of stadium. Serious students, prefer $137.00, 841-6545. 4-28
Wanted outgoing Christians and conscious students to stair 5 bedroom house at 14th and Kentucky next fall & spring $100-$300 per month. Utilities included. All fees are non-refundable.
Broommate) to rent Trolleira apartment for summer. On bus route, pool, A/C patio. Foile rent. May gas, no water or water bills. To inquire ask for Sieve or Bob. B5-643-849
Wanted: Female interested in sub-leading a place for summer months only—May-Aug-Place near campus, $118, call 864-1355, 4-27
Person to rent master bedroom of 4 large
3 bedroom mobile home starting with the
summer session. $10,000/month with
freelances. Call 841-1454 for more info.
4-30
Female roommate wanted for summer. Nices.
Cold to close. Campus to hotel.
Call for details. 415-3050
Female porchmate wanted to share Moedwom-
brook 2 bedroom townhouse for summer,
must be non-smoker and neat. $517.50 +
electricities per month. Call 749-1638 157-20
Babysitters for occasional care of disabled children-contact Parent to Parent Support Group. 843-6215 or 843-5525. 4-28
Female roommate to share 2 bedroom apartment.
May 15-July 31. Bus on route, A/B.
Rent . Rent + ½ utilities. Call 841-8198
Keep trying.
ROOMMATE WANTED/AVAILABLE for summer and next week. Move into my apartment, or I can move into your的程度, responsible. Call Dave: 842-265-0801
Respondent female nonmonk to share 3 room apartment bedroom June 82 to May 83. Furniture, washer/dryer provided. Call 749-1900-128
Roommate for summer. House is one block south of campus. Quiet, clotheshare, A/C, washer, dryer, dishwasher. No smoking. 841-6033. 4-30
Female roommate wanted for fall/spring semester. House is one block south of campus. Quiet, furnished. A/C,洗衣机, dryer, dishwasher. No smoking. B41-8653.
Roommates want to share 4-bedroom
house pear campus. Approximately $125/
month per person, utilities included. Call
842-7052 or 841-1203.
One female roommate (non-smoker pre-ferred) needed to share 2 bedroom 8 Room Square apartments with 1 / 4 staffes. Call Judy Bauer or 841-6288 or 841-6288. 4-30
Roommate wanted immediately $100/month/
u. utilities. Smoker ok. 749-2518. 4-28
2 female roommates for summer; 1 female for next year. Completely furnished. Shannon. 842-5631. 4-30
WANTED! 1 NON-SMOKING Roommate to share 2-bedroom MOEV apartment starting August and/or sublease for summer. 842-9965, 4-30
HOST-FAMILY for 17 year old German girl. Mid July to end August. Cost of living paid or exchange agreement. Call 864-6178. 4-30
Roommate(s) to rent apartment for summer Rent negotiable. Free May rent, no gas or water charges. Two month rent is for Sweeie or Boehler. Air conditioning for $75.00 + 1/2 miles/hour. 1216 Ohio. Available June 1st for summer and fall. Call 842-8575. -
WANTED: 1 NON-SMOKING male roommate to share 2 bedrooms 8OEV apartment starting August and for sublease for summer. 843-9965. 4-30
Male roommate for summer and/or
next year by senior male to share nite
2 bedroom apartment c/a. w/after/driver.
Rent $140 plus % utilities. 841-6933.
Name:___
Address:___
Phone:___
Dates to Run:___
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 Kansas 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:___
Classified Display:
1 col. x 1 inch—$4.0
Page 10
University Daily Kansan, April 27, 1982
Scoreboard
Basketball
TONGKIN GAMES
Quarterfinal Round
Best of Seven
Western Conference
Phoenix at Los Anfor
San Antonio at Seattle
Hockey
TONIGHTS GAMES
Conference Finals
Best of Seven
Worcester Canterbury
Quebec at New York Islanders
Campbell Conference
Vancouver at Los Angeles
Soccer
Quarterfinals
Buffalo
Eastern Division
April 30-Buffalo at New York
April 30-Buffalo at New York
Western Division
April 29-Denver at St. Louis
April 29-Denver at St. Louis
Baseball
BIG EIGHT STANDINGS
Team W L Petz GR
Nebraska 12 15 768
Oklahoma State 12 4 739
Missouri 9 8 618
Kansas 6 10 375
Iowa state 6 15 239
Kansas State 6 14 120
Eastern Division
Team | Detroit | 1 | L | Pct. | GH |
Detroit | 11 | 8 | 647 | - | -
Detroit | 11 | 8 | 647 | - | -
Milwaukee | 8 | 6 | 371 | 1½ |%
Cleveland | 8 | 6 | 371 | 1½ |%
New York | 8 | 6 | 429 | 1½ |%
Baltimore | 5 | 11 | 313 | 5½ |%
AMERICAN LEAGUE
NATIONAL LEAGUE Eastern Division
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Boston 3, Chicago 2, first game
Boston 5, Chicago 0, second game
Team Earners Oversee
Team 12 15 5 Pct. GB
Morganstown 12 5 5 569
Mostard 12 5 5 569
Pittsburgh 6 11 489 363
Pittsburgh 6 11 489 363
Chicago 6 11 489 363
Boston Athletics 6 11 489 363
Atlanta 13 5 760
Boston 12 4 735
Los Angeles 8 4 471
San Francisco 6 10 378
San Diego 6 12 353
Cincinnati 7 11 380
Cleveland 6 11 380
California 13 5 722
Chicago 9 5 600 2%
Indiana 9 6 600 2%
Seattle 8 6 444 2%
Texas 8 10 444 3
Tennessee 8 10 42 3
Texas 7 12 368 6
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Pittsburgh 6, Atlanta 4
Houston 6, St. Louis 2
Netters whip Cowlev Countv
By GARY GRIGGS Sports Writer
Tuning up for this week's Big Eight Championships, the Kansas men's tennis team closed out its regular season with a win at the Iowa City County Community College 8-1.
In singles action, Ed Bolen, senior, won the No. 1 singles match with 6-2, 6-0. Rick Aubin, freshman, won at No. 2 singles with 5-7, 6-1. At No. 3 singles, Scott Alexander, freshman, won with 6-0, Craig Tidwell, junior. At No. 4 singles, Cameron Kach, in The No. 5 singles match, France Cacciopolli, junior, won with 7-5, 6-2 and Tom Hall, junior, won at No. 6 singles with 6-1, 6-1.
"I thought we played pretty well, however the competition wasn'all that great," Randy McGrath, head coach, said.
In doubles play, the No. 1 team of Bolen and Tidwell lost with 7-6, 7-4, 7-5. The No. 2 team of Aubin and Alexander won with 6-0, 1-6, and the No. 3 team of Cacoppiol and Hall won with 7-5, 4-6, 6-2.
The conference championships are set for this Thursday and Friday in Kansas City, Kan., at Woodside Racquet Club.
The Jayhawks, now 6-12, finished seventh in last year's championships.
Seedings for the championships will be determined at a coaches meeting on Wednesday night.
Seedlings are based upon win-loss percentage in conference play with the top four seeds going to the four players with the best win-loss percentage. Meanwhile, the rest of the seeds will be decided by simply drawing out of a hat.
McGrath said that he hoped his team had better luck at drawing seeds than the KU women did a couple of weeks ago.
In the women's championships, the Jayhawks had to play seven of their nine first-round matches against the top two seeds.
According to McGrath, the Jayhawks only chance for a top-four seeding is Alexander at No. 3 singles.
"I think if we can get some good draws and give a few breaks here and there, we could surprise some people," McCrath said.
Oklahoma State has won the past four championships, shared the title since 1972.
McGrath said he saw Oklahoma as being the favorite, followed closely by Oklahoma State, Missouri and Colorado. He saw the Jayhawks to Iowa State, Nebraska and Kansas State for the other positions.
McGrath, who has experimented with different line-ups the last couple of weeks, said he would use yesterday's line-up for the championships.
"I think everybody is pretty com-
place where they are playing now," he said.
Baseball team splits as Hoskison shines
By MIKE ARDIS
Sports Writer
Sports Writer
The Kansas baseball team continued to play inconsistently as they split a double-header with Northwest Missouri State yesterday.
The Jayhawks won the owerer, 12-5,
but lost the nightcap, 7-3.
"We just can't seem to get it together when we need it," Coach Marty Pattin said. "It's just one of those things. We are trying. We just can't get it killed."
The Jayhawks, 19-23, took the first game behind Chris Ackley's one-hit relief performance. Matt Gibson started the game for the Hawks, pitching three innings and giving up two runs. Ackley came on in the fourth and gave up two runs in picking up his second win of the season.
The Bearcats, 21-14-1, opened the scoring in the second inning with a single run. The Jayhawks back with four runs in the second to take the lead for good. The Bearcats added two more runs in fourth before the Jayhawks exploded for eight runs in the space of three innings.
KETTH HOSKISON had the best day
for four with a home run and five RB1.
He played for four
"I just happened to take a few good cuts." Hoskison said.
Leading 12-3 in the seven inning, the Bearcats came back with two runs on offense.
While the Jayhawks split the doubleheader, the players said they did not think the team was very far from being good.
"We're really close to putting it together." Ackley said. "I don't know
"Things just don't seem to go for us. You make the most of your breaks. We aren't getting them."
wnat the problem is. You can't put the blame in any one area.
Hoskison said splitting the games was frustrating.
"Very frustrating," he said. "The players aren't pleased with what we have been doing. The split was terrible. We should have won both games."
The Jayhawks started the second game by giving up six runs before coming up to bat. Pitcher Mike Watt gave up the six runs in the first inning, but only one of the runs was earned because of an error by Mark Gile.
"Lohr pitched a heck of a game," he said. "He earned a starting spot for this weekend."
The Bearcats limited KU to four hits in the second game, with two coming in the seventh when the Jayhawks tried for a late-inning rally. The Jayhawks got the first three men in the inning on base, and a single by the Hawks into a doubleplay and a飞 out ended the threat and the game for the 'Hawks.
"I don't know what the reason is," Hoskison said. "We got into a rut this year. It just seems to carry over when we play."
Pattin said inconsistency was part of the problem.
"When we get good pitching, there's
loosy pitchers, there's good hitting.
ourselves. Patience is the only thing I can say. They're going to make mistakes, it's part of the game. I can understand that they might mistake have no room in baseball."
JAYHAWK NOTES: Junior Garfield Taylor scored touchouts on runs of 4, 8 and 13 blue team to help the White team defeat the 5 yards team, 28-0, yesterday in the Kansas football team's final scrimmage of the spring.
The Jayhawks face Washburn
toward and Kansas State this
week.
Kansas will close out its spring workouts Saturday.
10
Kansas' jeff Nuezil goes high for a throw as Victor Clay slides into second base. The Jayhawks split yesterday's double-header with Northwest Missouri State, winning the opener 12-5, but losing the nightcap 7-3.
"The big thing is that we're beating
OBB GREENSPAN/Kansan Staff
'Hawks finish third in Drake golf tournev
Sports Writer
By BILL HORNER Sports Writer
Kansas men's golf team finally got what it's been waiting for—good weather to play in.
Under surprising, near-perfect conditions in Des Moines, Iowa, the men captured third place in the Drake Relays on Friday.
The team's high finish in the 27-team field, however, resulted without the services of Brad Demo, one of the team's top scorers this season.
Demo injured tendons in his left hand at the Shocker Invitational in Wichita almost two weeks ago and was forced to sit out the tournament.
"Playing without Brad definitely hurt," said Kent Weiser, assistant coach, who accompanied the team to the event. "Any time you lose one of your top three scorers, it's going to hurt."
HOWEVER, despite the Demo's absence, Weiser thought the team could have won the tournament.
As a team, the Jayhawks finished 54 holes with a total of 913 strokes, third to Nebraska's 899 total, while Iowa took second with a 907 total.
ROB WILKIN, who finished sixth overall, and Jeff Sheppard shot 75s.
second place individual honors with one-under-par 71s.
"The competition was really good," Weiser said. "There were lots of good teams and good players. But we really could have won. Any time you shoot a 325 (KU's second-round total, combined in the two other rounds), it'll kill you."
The tournament was played over two courses - a relatively easy Echo Valley layout, and a tight, difficult Wakonda team team played 27 holes on each course.
Playing Echo Valley the first day, Kansas played the opening round in 252 strokes, placing them in third place overall. The Jayhawks were led in scoring by Jim O'Shea, senior, and Dean Frankeckz, junior, who shared
The second day, playing Wakonda,
scores bellowed. Only one Jayhawk,
Wilkin, was able to break 80, as Ku
was able to break 79. Wesler said
cost them the tournament.
Eventual win Nebraska toured Wakonda's 18 holes in 307 strokes, the 18-stroke advantage over Kansas providing the margin of victory.
Wikin's 225 total, 75-79-17, placed him six strokes behind medalist Scott Skillwell of Illinois O. Shea's 228卒, 74-17, tuted him for ninth place overall.
"It was really happy with our finish," said Weiser. "It was really good to see O'Shea play well. He's had some swing problems lately, and Ross (Randall). You can tell from his stance that he would be to get him back into a tournament. He played well throughout."
WEISER ALSO complimented the play of Dan Mullen, junior, who played his first tournament for KU by filling in for Demo.
"He had a first-tournament jitters, but he really played well." Weiser said. "We've been saying all along that we hoped to have good weather so we could see what we could really do.
"We did that to a certain extent. We didn't really come out fast the first day, Rob and Sheppard were a little happier than we were. But the thing we did was stay close."
Weiser said that this tournament has kept the team fired up for the Big Eight Championships to be played at KU's home course, Alvamar Hills, May 10-11.
"A lot of the schools in the Big Eight don't think we’re as good as the scores we’re shooting," he said. A lot of them want to go out and open some eyes."
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Supportive Educational Services will observe its Fifth Annual Student Achievement Day Ceremony, Friday, April 30, at Potters Lake Picnic Area from noon to 3 p.m.
(In case of rain, Kansas Room, Kansas Union.)
Dr. Robert Cobb, Executive Vice Chancellor, University of Kansas, will be the Keynote speaker.
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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. 256 draws 10-11 p.m.
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2 for 1's & Free hot Hors de oeuvres from 5-7 pm every Friday.
KANSAN
The University Daily
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
Wednesday, April 28, 1982
Vol. 92, No. 142 USPS 650-640
Furley chemical waste site sparks controversy
By KEVIN HELLIKER
Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
Around Furley, the site of the only chemical waste dump in Kansas, KU geologist Frank Wilson is known as a straight-shooter, even a hero.
Residents of Furley, a town of about 100 people in northeast Sedgwick County, say Wilson uncovered a action of careless and possibly covert actions involving an Oklahoma engineer, the Kansas Department of Health and Environment Office, and the University Inc., the company that operates the waste site.
That trail stretches back to 1976, when construction on the waste site began.
The people around Furley, most of them farmers or commuters to Wichita which is 10 miles away, were uneasy about the waste site from the start.
Some life-long farmers of the area warned the Kansas Department of Health and Welfare that springs under the site would carry dangerous chemicals into larger creeks.
"they ignored us," said Bruce Bodecker, who lives about two miles from the dump. "They
thought we were just a bunch of dumb Polack farmers.
The atmosphere around Furley changed. Front porch conversations turned from small-town subjects to discussions of ecological and environmental personal libraries of literature on chemical waste.
Meanwhile, trucks loaded with barrels of toxic chemicals steadily kicked up dust along the roads in and out of Furley. In fact, so much waste began pouring in that the mercury of the cars had leaked into the Health and Environment for permission to expand the site from 80 acres to 160 acres.
ALONG WITH the expansion request, NIES, sent to Topeka an engineering study of the proposed 80 acres prepared by T. Allen a professor at Oklahoma State University.
Haliburton had found the 80 acres suitable for the storage of chemical waste.
Upon receiving Haliburton's report, Joseph Harkins, secretary of the Department of Health and Environment and a Lawrence resident, prepared to grant the expansion request.
But the residents of Furie, believing that Haliburton's study failed to report the presence
Stephan responded by ordering Harkins to step down as independent party to conduct a study of the proposal.
So Harkins turned to the Kansas Geological Survey, a KU agency on West Campus. The senior geologist at the Survey is Frank Wilson. He wanted no part of the Furley controversy.
"I could see that, no matter what happened, we were going to be losers when we got down 'They ignored us. They thought we were just a bunch of dumb Polack farmers.'
Bruce Bodecker, resident of Furley, Kansas
there," Wilson said. "I felt that the survey would be put in an untenable position between NIES, KDHE and the people."
But William Hambleton, director of the survey and Wilson's boss, agreed to take on the study and keep its findings quiet until Harkins said even though the survey operated on public funds.
"Again, I objected because were undertaking the study with public funds," Wilson said. "Dr. Hambleton agreed, however, with the stipulation that he was issued after one year from the date of conclusion."
"It was apparent from the start that they did not like our findings," he said.
So in late January of last year, Wilson led a team of geologists from the survey to the waste site at Furley. On June 4, 1981, Wilson delivered reports to the Department of Health and Environment.
WILSON found was underground water in areas reported dry by Haliburton. Wilson, at a legislative hearing on the waste site last month, said Haliburton either did not find—or did not report—the presence of water beneath the 80 acres, except in one corner of the site.
In that corner, Wilson said, a state geologist was present when Halliburton's crew struck the bridge.
In at least three other areas of the site, Haliburton drilled holes and reported finding no water. But when the survey team drilled holes near a spring, the team found immediately or within 24 hours, Wilson said.
"KGS investigators can think of no technica
When asked by a committee member what other explanation existed for Haliburton's findings, Wilson said, "He was either incompetent or a liar."
explanation for these apparent discrepancies," Wilson told a legislative committee.
Haliburton, contacted in Stillwater, Okla., said he would not respond to Wilson's accusation. But he would not respond to Wilson's accusation.
"I have the greatest respect for Frank Wilson's abilities as a geologist," he said.
Although few people have questioned Wilson's geological findings, his judgments about Haliburton and KDHE have been rebuked by several people, including his boss, Hambleton.
But one of Wilson's judgments—that underground water rendered the waste site unacceptable—began to appear warranted last January when state geologists found toxic chemicals in a stream near the existing waste site.
After the geologists found larger concentrations of waste moving off the site and toward the stream, Gov. john Carlin ordered the waste dump closed.
that was on Jan. 14, 1982, more than six months after Wilson delivered his report.
BEN SCHWARTZ
JON HARDESTY/Kansan Staff
After fifteen years of hard work, professor of art Elden Tefft sits with his completed sculpture of Moses to be erected in front of Smith Hall May 5.
Moses to wander no longer; promised land awaits statue
By JANET MURPHY
Staff Reporter
After 15 years, Moses is finally going to his promised land.
On May 5, a 18-foot, one-ton bronze sculpture of Moses, commissioned by the Kansas School of Religion, will move from a cavernous foundry in the Art and Design Building to a spot in front of the "Burning Bush" stained glass window in Smith Hall.
Lyn Taym, dean of the Kansas school of Religion, said that the statue would be hoisted on a flatbed truck, secured by guidewires and transferred to Smith. Upon arrival, a crane will lift it onto a four-foot square platform, which has been skimmed 20 feet into the ground.
Moses has had many different homes in the past 15 years. The project was originally started in the Bayley Anne, then was moved to the old engineering building, which was later destroyed and Learned Hall before moving in 1978 to its present location in the Art and Design Building.
"We will work with a master landscape to make the area look like a desert," he said.
Taylor said the area around the sculpture would be landscaped after the move.
There are actually two Moses. The first one was built as the model for the casting mold. Tefft first built a support system of steel rods and covered it with styrofoam.
TEFFT WAS chosen because of his work in redesigning the University seal, which shows the shield of an eagle.
The casting began a year ago and took two teams to keep a continual flow of bronze going, be said. The sculpture was poured in eight sections.
Elden Teftt, professor of art and creator of the sculpture, has worked on the project since its inception, but not always alone.
"Literally hundreds of students were able to work on it." he said.
He then covered the form with melted wax and the features were molded in.
In February 1891, the building of the molds for the casting began. They were made out of a flexible, synthetic rubber. The largest mold weighed five tons, Teff said.
It took a year to put the clay on and mold it just right, he said, because the form may have been a bit more brittle.
Telfa said all that remained to be done was the finish work. He said they were "chasing" the waterfall, but the company didn't know.
See MOSES page 3
OAS backs Argentina, calls for truce
By United Press International
WASHINGTON—The Organization of American States today called for an "immediate truce" between Britain and Argentina in the Falklands crisis and offered to support new regional or global peace efforts to end the dispute.
Over the objections of the United States, an emergency meeting of the OAS approved 17-9 a nine-point resolution that endorses Argentina's position over the disputed South Atlantic island chain.
The United States, Colombia, Chile, and Trinidad-Tobago abstained when the resolution was put to a final vote by the members of the House. The Senate Treaty for mutual hemisphere defense.
As the OAS was meeting late last night, diplomatic sources in Washington disclosed U.S. Secretary of State Alexander Hawke was making a request for proposals to avoid a South Atlantic War.
The sources close to the Argentine delegation to the OAS conference said the Haq proposal "is being studied carefully" by the Buenos Aires government, but declined to say whether it raised new hopes of avoiding hostilities in the South Atlantic.
But the New York Times and the Washington Post reported in this morning's editions that
See related story page 10
Argentina rejected a proposal by Haig that he return to the country in an earlier attempts at the growing crisis.
Earlier, Argentine foreign minister Nicanor Costa Mendez told the OAS that Britain was preparing to launch an attack against the Falkland Islands within 24 to 48 hours.
The OAS resolution, based on a proposal originally made by Brazil and Peru, also calls on both sides in the Falklands crisis to refrain from further hostile actions. The resolution also urges full implementation of a U.S.-backed U.N. Security Council resolution calling for cessation
of hostilities, negotiations and Argentina's withdrawal from the Islands is invaded April 2.
The resolution "took note" of Haij's shuttle peace mission and said it would contribute to a peaceful solution of the crisis. Diplomatic sources said Brazil insisted on the mention of the Haij mission, although other Latin American nations, especially Venezuela, were reluctant to accept.
The United States has never publicly recognized either British or Argentine sovereignty over the Falklands, but it has made a splendid British control and administration" there.
Brazil, Peru, Costa Rica and Honduras proposed the resolution and Argentina, Venezuela, Colombia, Ecuador and Bolivia cosponsored it.
Staff Reporter
By JIM LEHNER
Police say unlit campus invites crime
A nighttime walk alone on campus can be an eerie experience even to the bravest at heart. The reflection of the moon off Potter Lake, the creek that winds sidewalks can send chills up and down one's spine.
"I don't care what anybody says. I don't think that this University is a safe place at night, which is precisely why I don't venture out in the city." N.D., graduate student, said recently.
"I don't go to the library at night because it's dark from my dorm, McCollum, to Watson. Walking between the buildings gives me the creeens."
"There are so many areas where someone might be hiding, like bushes and unlit parking lots. If the lighting was better, I'm sure I would attend more campus events at nighttime."
attract more campus visitors. Carlson and others are questioning the lighting system at the University of Kansas because of the hazards associated with the dark.
Jeanne Longaker, KU police sergeant of community services, said students would be doing themselves a service if they restricted their travel at night to well-lit campus areas.
"Well-lit areas include Irving Hill Road, the eastern part of Jayhawk Boulevard and the major walkway from Robinson gym to Wescoe," she said.
She said that areas with poor lighting were Memphis and north-north near the Campanile, where Fliers placed the tables.
"Although the campus lighting has improved, it is still below jar," she said.
"If one area is poorly lit, such as Memorial Drive, it can cause serious prisms. Any area that is unlit sufficiently can be a potential hangout for deviant characters."
migrating LONGAKER SAID the University had made an attempt to provide safe access routes to better lighted areas.
"Irving Hill Road and the adjacent parking lot at Stouffer Place was a personal safety and security area along with the Satellite Union." Imlaker said.
We feel relieved with the Irving Hill lighting.
Before lights were installed up there two years ago, it was considered an unsafe area for anyone. We had patrolnet monitoring that area constantly back there."
Longaker said that most lighting complaints her office received were about Louisiana Street heading north toward Gertrude Sellards Pearson Hall.
longaker said lighting made people feel secure even if the security was just a state of mind.
"That's our biggest complaint area, but it's on city property," she said.
"It makes people more comfortable," she said. "They don't have to feel apprehensive about every more the makeover is lightning fast, but they must be more like a criminal most criminals work out of dark places."
Marsha Margolis, Highland Park, III, senior, said the lack of adequate lighting on campus and in the resident hall areas made those places more likely for rapes.
"It's a wonder there aren't more rape victims on campus with all the poorly lit areas,"
See LIGHTING page 12
Speakers argue man's origin
By JIM LEHNER
Staff Reporter
A creation scientist said last night that evolutionary theories were not supported by scientific research and an evolution advocate contended that creationist beliefs were full of失误.
The men, Duane Gish, creationist, and Wiley, evolutionist, were the speakers in a dual lecture sponsored by Student Union Activities. They would inform the lecture in the Kansas University Ballroom.
Each speaker lectured for 50 minutes, then had a 20-minute question and answer period.
Giah, a biochemist from California, said evolutionists based their theories on the faulty assumption that life is random.
"Evolutionists say that millions of years ago, a hydrogen gas explosion occurred, leaving us and the planet earth, and life simply began," he said. Club there was no scientific evidence to
She simply begin the said.
Gish said they were no scientific evidence to back this claim.
"It's a theory that many evolutionists pass off as a fact." he said.
But in his speech, Wiley, a curator of KU's Museum of Natural History, said creationists were the ones who had no scientific evidence for their beliefs.
CREATION-SCIENCE puts too much emphasis on the Bible. Wiley said, thus failing to be
"Religion is not a science, it is a matter of faith," he said. "Evolution is based on scientific
Last fall in Arkansas, Wiley testified against teaching creationism in public schools in the state.
theory and should be taught in the classrooms. Religion can be taught in a social studies class that deals with religion as a topic, but as a science it has no logical value."
"Science does not regard the Bible as logical, but it does. Wiley said." The Bible is full of misconceptions.
He said the Bible was written by people who perceived what they saw and heard to be the only truth.
"Creation scientists believe that the Bible is a truth. Therefore they're off base."
During a question and answer period, Giah said that he did not base his creation-science theory on the fact that he was born.
An audience member asked Wiley why he was trying to discredit Gish. Wiley said he respected Gish, but he thought Gish's theory that there had to be a God was illogical.
"Gish gives no scientific data to back up his claim that there's a God." Wiley said. "He just said that because of his scientific evidence, there must be a God."
"It's been proven recently that no type of early man walked upright. It was just a plain old ape walking upright, but evolutionists refuse to listen."
"I base my evidence on creationism on the experiments that I have performed "Gish said. "The evolutionists have bits of fragmented data, and there, and much of that has been proven false."
Weather
Point
RAIN
Today will be mostly cloudy with a 50 percent chance of showers, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka. The winds will be from the east-northeast at 5 to 15 m.p.h. The high will be in the rain for most of the day.
Tonight will be mostly cloudy with a low around 40.
The outlook for tomorrow calls for clear to partly cloudy skies with a high in the 60s.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, April 28, 198
News Briefs From United Press International
Reagan to discuss budget with congressional leaders
WASHINGTON—President Reagan, indicating he will accept some form of tax increase to break the budget impasse, arranged yesterday to go to Capitol Hill to meet with Democratic Speaker of the House Tip O'Neill and Senate Republican leader Howard Baker.
David Gorgen, White House communications director, said the meeting would take place in the President's room of the Senate chamber today at 3
After the negotiations broke up late yesterday, Larry Speakes, White House deputy press secretary, told reporters the "narratives" have narrowed the differences on the range of most issues" and "felt the time was right to bring in the leaders."
O'Neill's spokesman, Chris Matthews, said that Speakes' comment was incorrect and that negotiators had not narrowed their differences.
Security is still very much in place. No matter Matthews said Reagan wanted a meeting just between himself, O'Neill and Baker, but o'Nell persuaded Reagan to include Rep. Richard Bolling, D-Mo., and House Democratic leader Jim Wright.
Bush to solidify relations in Peking
WASHINGTON—In a bid to improve sensitive U.S. relations with Peking, Vice President George Bush will visit China at the conclusion of his current trip.
Bush will be the highest ranking U.S. emissary to Peking since Reagan took office 15 months ago. President Reagan conferred with Chinese Premier Zhao Ziyang in October at the summit meeting of developing countries, Mexico, Mexico, and Secretary of State Alexander Haug visited China in August.
Bush, who was in Singapore on Tuesday, is expected to visit Peking sometime between May 5 and 9 at the conclusion of his current trip, which will be scheduled for October.
Officials said they expect Bush to confer with Chinese Vice President Deng Xiaoping, among others, during his stay. The exact itinerary has not been worked out, officials said, and it is unclear what, if any, other cities Bush will visit.
Jetliner crashes in China, kills 112
PEKING-A Chinese jetliner on a popular tourist run from Canton to Gulson crashed in a mountainous region of Southern China, killing all 112
people aboard including 14 Ambulance, Chinese airlines say they were the worst crash of a Chinese domestic airliner on record, officials said.
The U.S. Consulate in Canton quoted officials the state-run domestic airline CAAC as saying two American tourists were among the dead. Their flights to Boston and New York came in March.
Confirming the crash more than 24 hours after it occurred, the official Chinese news agency Xinhua said there were no survivors among the 104 passengers and eight crew members aboard the British-made three-engine trident jet.
Former policy gave Sirhan parole
SOLIDA, Calif.-Former state policy encouraged setting a parole date for Sirhan B. Siran, assassin of Sen. Robert Kennedy, according to James Carroll, the state attorney general.
"We knew that this case was going to come back and haunt us," said Hoover, a member of the board that in 1975 granted the September 1984 parole date to Sirhan. The current board is considering revocation of that date.
"The emphasis was on granting parole dates," Hoover said of the system seven years ago.
Sirhan, 38, shot and killed Kennedy in June 1968 in Los Angeles the night of the Senator's victory in the California presidential primary. In 1969, Sirhan was convicted of the murder and sentenced to death, but the sentence was overturned in 2010 when the California Supreme Court overturned the state's death penalty law.
Because the parole board could find no record of disciplinary or psychiatric troubles and because Sirman had no prior convictions, he
Reporter's ordeal to be investigated
KANSAS CITY, Mo.—The Air Force Inspector General said he would be interviewed by air base personnel a journalist's spokran newspaper yesterday.
Lt. Gen. Howard W. Leaf announced the investigation in response to a request made to Secretary of Defense Caspar Weinberger, said John M. Wylie II, Kansas City city president of the Society of Professional Journalists, Sigma Delta Chi.
Wylie called for the investigation on behalf of the society after Pennis Crabtree, a 1981 KU graduate and former reporter for the University Daily Kansan, was detained April 13 at gunpoint and then forced to stand for two hours and be eagled against a fence outside a missile silo at Whitman Air Base.
Crabtre, on assignment for the Kansas City-based National Catholic Reporter, said she did not enter the air force compound and was later released.
Nat'l Wildlife Federation sues Watt
WASHINGTON—The National Wildlife Federation yesterday sued Interior Secretary James Watt in an attempt to block coal lease sales in the state.
The federation's action, on the eve of Wednesday's scheduled interior department bidding for the leases, was taken in the U.S. District Court for
The suit does not affect the bidding process, a federation spokesman said. Thirteen tracts of land covering about 32,000 acres that contain almost 1.5 billion tons of coal reserves are involved in the suit. The federation noted that current U.S. coal production is just over 800 million tons per year.
The federation asked the court to prevent lease sales until comprehensive land-use plans could be developed for the region.
"This sale could provoke social and environmental change over the next 50 to 100 years in a region that already is experiencing some of the ravages of profound change," Jay Hair, federation executive vice president, said.
Cody's estate left to elderly priests
CHICAGO—Cardinal John Patrick Cody left the bulk of his estate to the sick and elderly priests in the Roman Catholic Archdioceses of Chicago.
The will did not mention Helen Dolan Wilson, Cody's life-long friend and the object of a federal investigation into his alleged mishandling of tax documents.
The document was filed as thousands of mourners paid their last respects as Holly Narie Cathedral, where Cody's body was displayed for public view.
Cody, 74, died early Sunday at Northwestern Memorial Hospital of an apparent heart attack. His body, dressed in blue and white wessels, was found in the house on Greenwich Street.
A funeral is scheduled for noon tomorrow. Apostolic delegate Plo Ligah, pope John Paul II's personal representative in the United States, will be the catechist.
City to finance hospital ambulance station
By RICK DULLEA Staff Reporter
a second Douglas County ambulance station will be built on a tract of land on Second Street between Missouri and New York near Lawrence Memorial Hospital.
The Lawrence City Commission made possible the construction of the new ambulance station last night by acquiring the land to Douglas County for $10,825.
"The purpose is to build a second county ambulance station on hospital grounds," Ted McArlane, director of ambulance service, told the commission.
"Being at the hospital will be a critical advantage, since we train our personnel at the hospital."
McFarlane said the new station would speed ambulance response time in Lawrence by 14 percent, making it an average of four minutes from the time
In other action, the commission unanimously voted to "respectfully decline" an offer from the Union Pacific Railroad to split the cost of constructing it and pedestrian access at Fourth Street on the railroad tracks in North Lawrence.
the ambulance service received a call to the time ambulance attendants walked through the front door of a victim's home.
COMMISSIONERS AGREED that the railroad's original offer to pay the entire cost of the overpass was more expensive than the most in the railroad's most recent proposal.
The railroad changed its offer when the city denied the railroad's request to close Eighth Street at its intersection with the railroad. The commission had approved the railroad's request to close Eighth Street at its intersection with the railroad.
Union Pacific representative W.A.
Bridge asked the commission to seize
the company stock.
In other business, a proposed progress on Naismith Valley residential development was stalled at the meeting when Commissioner Nancy Shontz presented a list of questions about storm-water drainage and the flood plain at the development site, located between 24th and 26th streets.
$100,000 offer to build the pedestrian overpass. The commission assigned the city staff to investigate the possibility of state funds being available.
"I don't see how we can seriously entertain passage until these questions are addressed," Shontz said.
THE QUESTIONS concerned the developer's plan to alter the flood plain and any possible harm that might result from that.
The commission also approved a plan for improvements at Johnny's' barn, the fourth. Second. The plan was remodeled into the room of Johnny's to be remodeled into a private club.
"Any restriction in the flow will harm the value of the property," Shontz said, adding that she was concerned about existing residential properties downstream and how a change in the flood flow could affect property values.
The improvements, which are expected to be complete by the end of the summer, will add 1,300 square feet to include a stairway and restrooms.
A split in the commission developed when commissioners discussed whether to authorize City Manager Buford Watson to seek preliminary work on the construction of a new airport terminal at Lawrence Municipal Airport.
ALYSSA
The commission decided to authorize the order, in a 4 to 1 vote with Mayor Marci Francisco dissenting, contingent on the approval of funds for the airport at the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission meeting tonight, when the airport's capital improvement plan will be discussed.
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University Daily Kansan, April 28, 1982 Page 3
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Opinion
Page 4 University Daily Kansan, April 28, 1982
Taking on a tough job
When Eugene Staples steps into his new job on July 1, he will face some tough obstacles.
Staples, the newly appointed hospital administrator for the University of Kansas Medical Center, is taking charge of a hospital that is $6 million short of the amount of money needed to meet its budget this fiscal year.
The hospital is suffering from a serious shortage of nurses and a significant drop in the number of patients.
Recently, state and University officials have agreed that the Med Center is having trouble competing with other area hospitals.
They offer several possible explanations for the hospital's financial woes.
Some say that the depressed economy is causing people to put off treatment for nontreating medical problems.
And one legislator, State Sen. Paul Hess, R-Wichita, attributes the institution's financial problems to inefficient management.
Others blame the hospital's troubles on the academic nature of the institution.
Staples, currently the administrator for the University of West Virginia's hospital, will inherit this less than promising situation when he takes up the hospital's administrative reins.
He was the selection committee's first choice out of 62 applicants, and the KU administration is confident that he has the experience to iron out some of the Med Center's problems.
We welcome Staples to KU and wish him well in the difficult task ahead.
Bolstering the hospital's sagging finances while still protecting the institution's academic functions is a tall order for anyone to fill.
Modern aesthetic sensitivity lost in pop culture swamp
Art; who needs it?
Not most people, if today's popular culture tells us anything. The things Americans spend time and money looking at, reading and listening to are often in aesthetic sensitivity, if not an utter downfall.
Art as a serious endeavor—both on the part of the artist and his audience—is ignored by all but a relative few. Instead, what passes for art is merely a commodity, something we turn on at the flick of a switch or pick up on our way out of the grocery store.
It is important to distinguish between what art is and what it is not.
Art is a product of intelligent effort. It involves skill and requires craft. It aims at the mastery of art.
1
TOM
BONTRAGER
people and their emotions and thoughts. It is the reflection of the world to which the shape of life is added.
Art is not trite. It is not meaningless. When it borrowed from tradition, it does so for beauty's sake, not tradition's. And it is never, never not traditional, mind of being sold for the highest possible price.
A KU professor enjoys calling literature a "true lie." The paradoxical mataphor applies to other art forms as well. Painting and pieces of music, for example, are never the things they represent—they are fabrics, fictions. Yet what it stands for, with such by embodying the spirit of it.
By these standards, much of what is peddled today as art is not. In every department, serious work is.
In literature, best-sellers are written by people like Harold Robbins and Barbara Carland, authors who stagnate in musty, unimaginative—but quite lucrative-genres. One has only to peruse a public book-rack to learn the meaning of the word "shallow."
Good literature is still being written, of course, but its readership forms a distinct minority. How many people do you know who curled up in front of you and to come to sieu by Saul Bellow or Bernard Malumud?
Probably the best examples of successful schlock are found in the realm of music, where three-minute pop tunes with little significance and less variety are churned out every day like a gorilla. The performers call themselves artists, then promptly give lie to their titles by intentionally
singing harshly and out of tune. Guitars—what wonderful acoustic instruments!—are often amplified and distorted beyond recognition, listener to guess where the melody's to be found.
The problem is not ultimately the fault of the genre or idiom in which a work is written. To use a literary example, we might call Hemingway's "A Farewell to Arms" a love story, a war story or both. It is then somewhat set apart from gems like "Love's Searing Passion" and "Bomb's Away!" by its all-important commitment to artistry. Good literature, and good art, in general, may possess elements of a particular genre, but they always transcend the boundaries of determinism to tell us something new about ourselves and the way we view the world.
Likewise, there is nothing inherently the matter with the musical idiom of rock 'n' roll, if only its practitioners would demonstrate more concern for beauty than they typically do. The limitations of 4/4 time, unvarying instrumentation and bangdams are difficult one to overcome; perhaps that's why so few groups have tried and fewer have succeeded.
Clearly, the unstable status of entertainers in the public eye must breed the desire to capitalize on marketability. But entertainers shape the tastes of their fans, and they have an obligation, if they call themselves artists, to uphold certain standards.
Admittedly, the present situation is not unique. Civilizations of other eras have had their diversions, their trite entertainments. An important difference today, though, is technology. It has become increasingly supplanted by formulaic drivel, reproduced, reprinted and broadcast ad nauseam. The classics in music, literature and visual art are in no danger but are kept alive in our cultural memory by a small portion of the population. It is not surprising that in any depth by a huge majority of Americans.
In a time of unusual economic strife—although perhaps things aren't so bad, after all—one might well ask, "Why bother with art? It's not essential."
Not to physical sustenance, no. But humans, in their very actions, in their communication with one another and, most consciously, in their art, hope to convey the truth of their condition to others like themselves. This they cannot help but do.
And when we accept as art its best imitator, when we dull our senses with packaged encapsim, when we lose our appreciation of the beauty and majesty are capable of, then we deny our own nature.
Ask again, "Who needs art?"
We all do, and more than ever.
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KANSAN
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Letters to the Editor
Printing salaries will cause more problems
To the Editor:
I was disappointed to read my salary in the University Daily Kansan on Friday. Although the editors of the paper had intended to enhance the discussion of faculty compensation, presumably with the idea of helping us convince the Kansas Legislature that our pay is inadequate, some other, less desirable results are likely.
Several fields are blessed with relatively high salaries while others are far less fortunate. Knowledge of actual dollar discrepancies between well and poorly compensated departments will only increase the bitterness of the relatively poorly compensated. This will poison the information when financial difficulties are widespread and the University community must work together.
The figures are presented without perspective. My salary may seem high to many taxpayers, but it is not evident to the legislator or citizen that despite my doctorate and 10 years of teaching experience, graduate students who earn master's degree under my supervision still make more than 1 do when they take jobs in the oil industry.
Similarly, brand new Ph.D.'s in geology, working in industry earn about 40 percent more than I do. The Kansan could have compared average salaries with other options that faculty members have and made its point of inadequate compensation far more clearly.
A fact that has been generally overlooked in discussion of faculty salaries is that it is not possible for a faculty member to be promoted in any financially real sense. Promotion from rank to rank involves only a trivial salary increment (I got $400); otherwise salary increases are mostly about the average of the University unclassified raises.
Classified workers, despite their woeful undercompensation, have a series of grades in addition to merit raises and annual scale increases. The only avenues open to faculty for substantial salary increases are entering the college system by giving them academic life—students' teaching, research—of shaking down the University by threatening to leave.
The objectives of the Kansan editors are admirable, as expressed. Complete openness will increase rancor and decrease understanding of our problems in the state. I hope that future treatment of this matter will put the raw data in perspective.
Worth remembering
Anthony W. Walton, associate professor of geology
A word of warning and a simple request
Frustrated by a lack of response to their questions, the protestors moved their non-violent demonstration to the administration building, honing to force communication.
On April 19, 1982, a group of concerned students at the University of Texas gathered together in public protest. Their purpose was to question the university's decision to deny tenure to a Marquette faculty member.
The University of Kansas suffered through the fear and unrest of the late 68s and early 70s along with the similar institutions, but its surplus resources still present of Chancellor E. Lawrence Chaffers.
Distant though it may seem now, there was a
University of Texas President Peter "The Immovable Object" Flawn—ever anxious to prove that students are not an irresistible force"-answered with the university police and 18 arrests. Three of those students face possible charges, and they may be subjected to university disciplinary action.
Of course, KU students need not be concerned by these remote happenings since "it can't happen here." At any rate, there was a time when it did not happen.
time when KU students gathered together in large numbers to protest and debate, when they, too, had fears and questions crying to be answered. When that hour came, Chalmers members rushed to the National Guard, but with compassion, understanding and direct communication.
Before it was vogue to do so (if indeed it is now), Chalmers actually listened to the student in the lecture.
We must not forget those days, that man.
Granted, Chalmers had his shortcomings (as holdovers from that era will beisterously testify) but very few with regards to students.
Nor would it be fair or accurate to color the present administration in an unsympathetic light, untested as it is in this respect. We simply cannot rely on these voices to remind us of the past and what it means to students. We must remember for ourselves. We must build our own monuments for the benefit of those who must follow those radiant fading, important footsteps.
Today the KU Student Senate will consider a petition to urge that the Visual Arts Building be reinstalled.
Chalmers deserves such a monument, less for the man he is than for the principles, ideas and beliefs of his time.
Chairmen Hall" would serve as a daily reminder of these things for generations to come. KU needs that reminder, lest the disease spread elsewhere should find a home in Lawrence.
former KU student body vice president and University of Texas law student
Minorities hit hardest
To the Editor:
The students, faculty and staff who participated in the recent reception for Rep. Larry Winn should be applauded by the entire University. These people showed their concern with the financial aid cuts backed by President Reagan.
What concerns the members of Alpha Phi Alpha, the oldest black fraternity in existence, is how the president and Congress can repeatedly eye the eyes to the plight of the black student in Aargel.
The drastic cutbacks proposed by the Reagan administration will hurt anyone seeking higher education who cannot keep up with spiraling tuition and college costs, but the most seriously hurt will be the minority students. Many, or should we say most, black students rely on student aid to assist them in financially surmounting their problems. It seems that minorities and the middle class are being forced to carry the burdens of the very rich and very poor.
And what irritates our members even more is that Reagan has the gall to back a plan that would give parents who send their children to private schools a tax break. Reagan calls this a political favor, and it really is a political favor for the financially powerful—the group to which he owes his election.
What the president has done is set up a reward that those lucky enough to send their money to the president problems to pay.
plague public schools along with his financial aid cutbacks.
Congress must realize that the president's neglect of those without financial advantage borders on sinful, and that if the Reagan administration would back, instead of stabbing in school to suppress student activism, public schools would continue to disfellowshade education that thousands of students seek.
Reagan is going to push for his incredibly thoughtless and inhumane programs until the people of this nation say 'enough.' And the time to say "enough" is now, not when financial aid is cut back by more than 50 percent. Just ask yourself what you would do if your financial aid was cut, and you'll understand the severity of this problem.
Alvin A. Reid and the members of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity Inc.
Keep on fighting To the Editor:
So the controversial Phyllis Schifaff has come to mind. The disagreement and controversy I use is here again.
I'm a pro-ERA woman, and I was angered by some of the things she said in her speech last week.
Scalfly points out that no woman is capable of carrying a 280-pound man off a battlefield. This seems to be a bit unreasonable. May the 138-pound woman couldn't carry a 280-pound man, but couldn't she carry another woman off the field, or even a lighter man? I can pick up my boyfriend with no problem now, and adrenaline does strange things to one's body.
I'm not too sure that men and women would get along very well fighting side by side in a battle. The男 would probably spend too much time with them that they weren't holding their rifles the right way.
Perhaps it would have made a difference if the crowd had been "armed with facts, figures and well-aimed questions," but apparently, Schaffy has all the answers to any questions one may put to her, or she succeeds in evading the question altogether.
But that's not the point of this letter. On April 21, the Kansan made some observations about the conduct of the crowd that came to see Schlafy that I disagree with.
The object of the ERA is not only to have women be drafted, but to guarantee their equal status with men. Men are still able to make more money, even though they are doing the same jobs and have the same skills that women have. I've grown a bit like a man makes, a woman makes about 60 cents.
If the ERA is passed, hopefully this will change. By its supporters being calm, quiet and rational, I doubt that it will pass. If I may make some vague correlations, how quiet and rational were the people in America before the 2016 election, when women got the right to vote? When Blacks were fighting for their rights? Before the American soldiers were pulled out of Vietnam?
They all did everything they could to fight for what they believed in, and I hope the ERA
Anne Johnson, Manhattan sophomore
Letters Policy
The University Daily Kansan welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten, double-lettered and contain no 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 institution and his position. The Kansan reserves the right to edit or reject letters.
University Daily Kansan, April 28, 1982
Furlev
From page 1
"Our conclusions should have told them earlier that they should be doing something." Wilson said. "That's the thing I'm dissatisfied with."
The residents of Furley, who are even more issatisfied, have fired a $10 million lawsuit against the city.
"It is terrible; it is rotten; it is scummy to think that our government wants to work in this way."
THEY SAY Harkins worked hand-in-hand with NIES, and that the secretary would have granted NIES the expansion permit if Stephan hadn't stopped him.
"The only two people you can believe are Attorney General Stephan and Frank Wilson."
"Unguestionably, KDHE won't tell us
when we've worked on hand-
in with the company."
That statement was echoed by Toni Harvey, an English teacher at Wichita State University who last year spent eight months investigating the Ark Valley as a reporter with the Ark Valley News.
Harvey, whose work won the state Victor-Murdock award for outstanding reporting, said both the KDEE and NIPS had responded angrily to a complaint that tried to downplay the Halton report, she said.
"Everything that Frank Wilson had to say has been virtually ignored by the Department of Health and Environment," she said. "The entire team is so ignorant about what's happened out there."
"It's been a nightmare and it's still a nightmare."
But for Harkins, Wilson's involvement in the Furley controversy has been a nightmare.
As a temporary item we want care be taken on the project in the first place,* he added.
In reference to Wilson's judgment of Haliburton, Harkins said, "I can't imagine anyone in a position like Wilson's dealing in such wild and incorrect speculation."
Harkins and several other state officials, including Hambleton, say the differences between Wilson's and Haliburton's reports are because of differences in the way the two men went about
HAMBLETON SAID Halliburton's study centered on laboratory experiments to determine whether the soil around the Furley site was permeable to water.
Because the soil around the site is predominantly clay, which is relatively impermeable, Haliburton reported that the site would not leak liquid chemicals, Hambleton
But Haliburton did not detect cracks through the wood, and did between layers of clay. Holliburst said.
"Frank thought Halliburton didn't see those features on purpose." Hambleton said. "I can't understand that."
"Maybe Halliburton was paid just to look at the soil, Wilson said. "But that strikes me as casual."
Wilson admits that Halliburton may have accurately computed the found, but, he said, could not prove it. He remains certain.
"The whole issue should be whether there was underground water on the site. Even a geotechnical engineer should have understood that."
Although state officials say the fact that Wilson is a geologist and Haliburton an engineer explains the differences in their reports, Wilson doesn't agree.
Because of Halliburton's past, he in particular should understand the importance of reporting issues in the workplace.
Just prior to Haliburton's study at Furley, the Oklahoma Department of Health rejected a Haliburton study of a swine flu strain. The Stellwarp picture of water conditions on the site.
Don Hensh, a director at the Oklahoma agency, said, "Haliburton's report was denied because there were some unanswered questionable matters in the presence of shallow water under the site."
Haliburton said no parallels existed between the two studies.
Wilson, however, disagreed. The parallel, he said, was that both reports were unacceptable.
However, Hensch said accusations of seduction at Haliburton's part never arose.
BUT WILSON disagrees now with less vigor than before. For months he has implied, without the support of Hambleton or any state officials, that some wrongdoing had gone on at the Purley
But Wilson, a tall, stocky man who says he tends to shoot straight, now responds with both a grim face and a smirk.
When asked why state officials hardly responded to the survey's report, Wilson thought it was "not a problem."
"As to whether there's any covering up going on, I think there is," he said.
Wilson said his report made the KDHE look bad, because Harkins nearly granted the expired license.
In what he thought was an attempt to play down that fact, Wilson said, the KDHE immediately hired yet another engineering firm after the survey delivered its findings.
At about the same time, NIES also engaged another firm, Woodward Clyde of Chicago, to build a new facility in Brooklyn.
Although the firm hired by KDHE determined that none of the work done by Halliburton or the survey could be considered "state of the art," the survey team had substituted the survey's report, Wilson said.
"The Woodward-Clyde study was much more extensive, thorough and costly than ours," he said, "but their results were pretty much the same.
On that point, Hambleton agreed.
"Our report gave KDHE a true geological picture."
But in a recent KDHE newsletter, Mel Gray,
a professor of environment fails to
acknowledge the validity of the study.
"Of the four engineering reports done on the site during the last five years." Gray wrote,
Hambleton said, "That is not fair to our report."
"only the Woodward-Clyde report gives the true geological picture."
THOUGH he disagreed with Wilson's belief that such statements were attempts to discredit the survey's involvement in the Furley controversy.
"Frank's bolting point is lower than mine," he said.
But the differences between Hambleton and Wilson, two KU geologists, go beyond tem-
Hambleton, who admitted he did not want the Furley issue to damage his relationship with KDHE, said, "I have a profound sympathy for regulatory agencies."
Wilson, however, said his sympathies lie with the people of Furley.
"KDHE tends to just ignore the people altogether." Wilson said. "You can't do that."
Partly because of Wilson's testimony, this session the Kansas Legislature established a state hazardous waste board to review any further requests for dump sites.
However, Wilson recently was ousted from another board that will study the report of a second Woodward-Clyde study, this one on the seriousness of the leakage at the existing site in
"They knew I wouldn't keep the result of that study quiet, " Wilson said.
The Woodward-Clyde report should determine when, if ever, the Furley waste site is reopened.
But Harkins, a member of the board from which Wilson was dropped, said he had lost patience with Wilson's search for a Furley conspiracy.
"We are not the least bit interested in what Wilson seems to have conjured up in his mind," Harkins said. "I have done everything that's been done to me if I lived next to the door. I were worried. too."
"But I'm looking for a solution. I'm not looking for a victim . . . for someone to hang up. If someone did something intentionally dishonest, eventually it will come to light."
Moses
were and putting in some of the fine detail. They will then put on the patina, clean it and wax it, he said.
From page 1
"Then we'll be ready to move it, I hope," he said.
He said the work on the sculpture had been a valuable teaching aid.
"It has served as a teaching tool and it has served its purpose well," Teff said.
"A lot of people have learned a great deal and it has tested the facilities here, too."
HE SAID IT was a great learning experience
(HE SAID IT) on it to get the opportunity
to work on a project.
Tefft said that he was sad to see the project end, but that he was glad to have been a part of it.
"It's much more important to me that it gets completed," he said.
Tefft hesitated to say how much the sculpture cost to construct. Money for the materials and for some of the students' salaries was raised through the School of Religion.
Tefft received no pay for his work
"A comparable piece of sculpture would be worth $100,000," he said.
The statue will be dedicated on May 12, Taylor said. At that time, the donor of the burning bush stained glass window, who has remained anonymous, will be introduced.
The Rev. William Coffin, senior minister of the Riverside Church in New York City, will speak at 8 p.m. on May 12 in Woodruff Auditorium. His will open the lecture series sponsored by the school.
Taylor said Coffin would speak on "The Arms Race and the Human Race."
An ordained Presbyterian minister, Coffin has been involved in civil rights and anti-war movements and has served as a member of the present's Advisory Council for the Peace Corps.
YEARBOOKS ARE HERE!
The 1982 Jayhawker will be distributed in front of HOCH April 26-30 and May 3-7 from 9 a.m.-4 p.m.
RUYI
(extra copies available)
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for colored girls who have considered suicide/when the rainbow is enuf
a choreopem bntozake shange presented by the university of kansas theatre
april 29,30 & may1 8:00 p.m. may 2,1982, 2:30 p.m. university theatre/murphy hall tickets on sale in the murphy hall box office, all seats reserved, student & senior citizen discounts available for reservations call 913-864-3982
COLE
BRITCHES CORNER
LAWRENCE
Page 6
University Daily Kansan, April 28, 1982
C
Assembly discusses Western Civ. budget
By ANN WYLIE Staff Reporter
Faculty members in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences are continuing to discuss the 1983 western civilization budget, Robert Lineberry, dean of the college, said yesterday at a College Assembly meeting.
"We will continue to meet and discuss how we can reach the goals, which I believe of us as share, to improve both our students and our graduate programs," Llineberry said.
one western civilization budget became an issue March 25, when James Lister found that Lineberry had by it 50 percent, from $106,995 to $3,500.
The other $35,499 will be transferred to the history and philosophy departments to finance graduate students who are willing to teach western civilization.
In another matter, the assembly lodged a formal complaint against an assembly ballot for positions on senate matters that violates the assembly's bylaws.
The bylaws require that the College Elections Committee nominate two faculty members for each senate committee.
But for some committees, such as the Committee on Sabbatical Leave, that requirement was not met.
"I think it is necessary to go out and beat the bushes for someone to serve on these committees," Thomas Beiseker, associate professor of speech and drama, said. "I like to be assured that the effort was made and that these are
in fact the only faculty members willing to serve on these committees."
Lineberry said he would forward the complaint to the Elections Committee.
In other business, the assembly unanimously voted to reaffirm, with a grade change, the college's exception to a University-wide requirement that a student take his final 30 hours in residence at the University.
The provision originally stated, "In the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences a student may complete six of his or her final (30 semester hours in nonresident study, which includes correspondence study and extension courses as long as he or she has a 2.0 grade point average in total and in residence hours."
The assembly changed the grade
but is what statute regulations require.
But is what statute regulations require.
"We may not liberalize an already existing senate rule," Stephen Goldman, associate professor of English, said.
The residence provision was in the catalog, but there was no record of the assembly's approving it, Goldman said.
In another discussion, the assembly unanimously passed a proposal for a new second major program or a program that must be taken in conjunction with another major, called conflict and management.
A description of this major states,
"The major is a desirable choice for
students preparing for administrative
and leadership careers where com-
petition would be enhanced by
knowledge of conflict management
methods."
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Members remain anonymous
Student group protests tuition increase
By ANN LOWRY Staff Reporter
No other Coupons accepted with this Offer
News releases from anonymous KU students say they have joined forces to increase student awareness and action against KU tuition increases and cuts in student loans.
Calling themselves the SATISFACTION Conspiracy. (Students Against Tutition Increases S F Action.) the members attributed posters and news releases on campus to inform students.
"It is not enough to be concerned or upset. We, each one of us, must act." one news release said.
When the group first appeared on campus about a week ago, its members expressed concern that their identities would be dangerous.
Little pieces of paper bearing the word SATISFACTION have been taped on walls and doors across campus.
"We are unable to go 'public' at this time. The danger is too great," one release stated. It did not say a type of danger the group teared.
The number of members and their identities had been kept secret
"They discussed whether to have a large increase or every other year have smaller increases." Welch said. "As I understand it, it's inevitable we're going to have increases in tuition."
Ems called for a meeting between the Board of Regents, Student Senate and other campus leaders.
"Last year, all of a sudden it
sprung up on us. Bang — we hit
with a 22 percent increase," he said.
"We were asked to work with
them."
However, Robert Ens, identified as a junior in biology, consented to the use of his name on several of the news releases later in the week.
Ens could not be reached for comment.
Staci Feldman, Student Senate's executive secretary, said that Ensa was the only person's name she had heard associated with the group, but she said, "I don't see how one person could do all that work."
Welch said this was the first year student opinions were requested by the Regents.
SHE SAID it would cost too much and take too much time for one person to put out all the information that the conspiracy had distributed.
However, she said the conspiracy had put the Senate's telephone number on some of its information.
"They have not used the Senate's copy machine. I've kept an eye on it." Feldman said.
The Senate last week requested that students send postcards to their congressmen. Welch and Joe Robb, Senate treasurer, took the cards to Washington, where she caravan headed to Washington, D.C. the caravan started at UCLA.
A statement by Bens said that the group thought the tuition increase had not been adequately discussed and that the increase would affect the most.
She said the group wrote to David Adkins, student body president, apologizing for using the Senate's number.
Feldman said she had taken about six calls from people who were crious, but they would not leave their house and number for them to contact them.
IN THE NEWS releases and on posters the group urged students to write or call members of the Kansas Board of Regents to express opposition to the 20 percent tuition hike and to write or call congressmen to express opposition to cuts in student loan programs.
However, David Welch, student body vice president, said the students were rerepresented because
Welch said that members of SATISF ACTION, or any students could go talk to the Regents.
She said she had told Ens that all students knew about the tuition increase for next year—the question was what students should do about
"Ens said it was so students could
She stressed that the Senate was not connected to the conspiracy in any way.
Adkins served on the Regents' Ad Hoc Committee which considered the tuition increase.
He said the Senate had also acted to express student opinion on loan cuts.
have some place to gripe," Feldman said.
"It's a great idea. It's just that the approach is pretty poorly planned," she said.
"I think their idea is legitimate," Feldman said. "I don't think the way they're going about it is particularly hopable."
Welch said Jamie MacKienze, student body president at the University of Missouri, planned to take them to Washington.
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University Daily Kansan, April 28, 1982
Page 7
Wife savs town watched 'bully' die
By United Press International
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Trena McElroy sat across from about 40 residents of Skidmore, Mo., in a grand jury waiting room, just as she said she had faced dozens of them the day someone killed her husband, a "town bully" most were relieved to be rid of.
The 25-year-old widow told her story again yesterday to the second grand jury to investigate the vigilant-style shooting death of Kenneth Rex McElroy last July 10. She and her lawyer claim a conspiracy of silence has kept the dozens of witnesses from telling what they saw.
"I seen Del Clement get the gun out of the pickup and shoot," Mrs. McEilroy said she told the grand jury.
Clement, his brother Royce and their mother were among the 40 or so people who came from Skidmore for the proceedings.
"A lot of people seen what happened, and a lot of people could have come forward," she said.
Few mourned the passing of McElroy, who died of multiple
gunshot wounds from a high-powered rifle his wife said was fired across the street from McEliroy's pickup truck.
Many Skidmore residents said they felt their property, their livestock and their lives were safer with McEliory dead.
MrEiroy was slain in his pickup truck in broad daylight on the main street of Skidmore, a farming community of 440 in northwest Missouri. None of the more than 60 people Mrs. MrEiroy said she saw standing around the truck when the shots were fired admit to seeing it.
KANSAS CITY, Kan.—The University of Kansas Medical Center will conduct free blood pressure examinations and diet consultation throughout May, Janet McMillian, a nurse at the Med Center, said yesterday.
As part of National Hypertension Month, the pharmacy department will offer the blood pressure checks and diet advice in the lobby of the hospital every Monday and Friday during May, from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m., McMillan said. A doctor at the hospital, a diettist and possibly a volunteer from the American Heart Association.
The Heart Association is concerned with hypertension, too, because of its
Blood pressure checked free
deterimental affect on the heart," McMillian said. "We hope to have their help with this project also."
The pharmacists are conducting the examinations, she said, because pharmacists often see more cases of undiagnosed hypertension than doctors. Pharmacists, she said, need people who need prescriptions needs filling, while doctors might see the same patient only once every six months or year.
Other departments at the Med Center will work with the pharmacists during National Hypertension Month.
literature on blood pressure problems in children, and the geriatrics department will offer information for older people. Also, she said, the cafeteria will publish free recipes for low-sodium diets.
For example, she said, the pediatrics department will offer specialized
If a visitor to the hypertension check booth is found to have extremely high blood pressure, McMillian said, he immediately will be referred to Bruce Johnson, associate professor of medicine.
Johnson will be available to examine people with chronic high blood pressure immediately, McMillan said, but he will schedule appointments for people whose conditions are not diagnosed as serious.
on campus
TODAY
The Society for Creative Anachronism will sponsor A DESSERT REVEAL, beginning at 6:30 p.m. at the Library. Free medieval foods will be served.
THE KU SAILING CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in the Kansas Union parlor.
THE DUNGEONS AND DRAGONS
CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in the Trail Room of the Kansas Union.
THE UNDERGRADUATE PHILOSOPHY CLUB will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Oread Room of the Kansas Union.
TOMORROW
THE KU AMATEUR RADIO CLUB
will meet at 7 p.m. on the second floor of
Learned Hall.
Supportive Educational Services will observe it's Fifth Annual Student Achievement Day Ceremony, Friday, April 30, at Potter's Lake Picnic Area from noon to 3 p.m.
Dr. Robert Cobb, Executive Vice Chancellor, University of Kansas, will be the Keynote speaker.
(in case of rain, Kansas Room, Kansas Union.)
PETER C.
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May 17-28, 1982
• Intensive two-week program
• 14 professional writers, poets, artists on staff
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Friday April 30/Saturday May 1
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan, April 28, 1982
。
KU student solves embalmers' problems
By BARB EHLI Staff Reporter
Positioning a corpse while embalming it is a mortician's problem, but it took an engineering student to design a solution.
Morticians had to be content to improvise with a combination of rope, trash can, a rubber head block, buckets and tape until John Macy, Hosining senior, developed a system of body blocks.
With the financial backbone of a Hoskington mortician and lawyer, and 12 to 14 months of time, Macy designed Lego-like blocks with interlocking parts, took kids from manufacturers cost-call analysis and marketing studies.
But Macy said the original idea came from the mortician.
"It's his basic idea. He was the mortician." Macy said. "He saw the definite need for it. I took his idea and developed a product."
Macy said he expected his product to earn "conservatively $7 million," but Macy has already earned a free one-week trip to the American Society of
Mechanical Engineers national finals in Phoenix, Ariz. this November. He is one of 11 finalists from across the country to compete, but not own the patent on the body blocks.
To submit his project, Macy needed volunteers to demonstrate how the blocks would be used. Only his fiancée would pose for the pictures.
"Have you ever asked 'How would you like to wear leotards and pose on some blocks for a picture?', '"Macy asked.
MACY STOOD outside of the glass display case where his project was displayed on the third floor of Learned Library, explained the body blocks' functions.
"There are 115 different positions or configurations for a body," Macy said. "With the interlocking aspect, at least 90 percent of the time they would be able to be used."
Macy said the blocks held the arms in place by offering support under the elbow.
Another configuration with the blocks solves the problem of holding the head up on a body that has a curvature of the head. You'll encounter, among older people, Macy said.
For a tall corpse, he said morticians could order a longer coffin, or, by bending the knees, they could fit the body into a shorter coffin.
"If they're freshly dead, you can move them around and position them."
So no matter what the size of the body, the blocks can adjust to hold it, with one-20,000th of an inch clearance on either side, Macy said.
Macy carefully researched and planned his project.
He said he learned about plastic and tia uses, talked to several manufact-
"I learned how to embalm," he said.
"I learned how to embalm for background."
Macy said he considered using several different types of materials for the blocks until he settled on polypropylene plastic.
Steel blocks wouldn't work because they would scratch the mortician's porcelain tide tops. Macy said, and it was not practical for manufacturing purposes.
"Plastic was the best because of the chemical composition," Macy said.
and easy to clean, even with strong substances like bleach, in order to conform to state and Federal health laws.
"You've got blood and miscellaneous
you don't want it to stick." Macan said.
Macy described the two types of plastic dies or forms that he had to collect.
One type was a thermoforming plastic that operates on the principle of a candle, Macy said. Heat can melt a candle and put it in the plasmon be reused, Macy said.
HE SAID the plastic would be durable
Thermosetting plastic, when heated,
becomes a hard substance that doesn't
change its molecular structure, much
like the concrete that dries. Macy said.
This summer Macy will be working full-time for Bendix in the plastic industry.
Macy's said that plaques are a rater
business aid that butts the user of
the computer because it says "Don't
use"
"I want to洗 in plastics," Macy
wrote, "we got some other ideas I'm
working with."
On the record
Burglaries stole almost 7,000 worth of cash sometimes between 11:15 p.m. Sunday and 10:30 p.m. Monday from a restaurant in Manhattan. Massachusetts ST., police said.
Police did not know how the burglar entered the building or how they got into the safe. There are no suspects.
Police said employees locked the money in a safe and left. When they returned in the morning, the money was missing.
BURGLARS ALSO STOLE more than $1,700 worth of cash and checks sometime between 8:45 and 9:45 a.m. Monday from Potter's 66 Service station, 23rd and Louisiana streets, police said.
Burglar entered the office and took a bag. The guard claimed the checks off the desk, police said.
BURGLARS TOOK about $400 worth of camera equipment sometime April 12 from Alpha Tau Omae fraternity, 1537 Temple St. police said.
There are no suspects.
After breaking into a room, burglaries stole a 35mm camera, lens and flash
attachment, police said. There are no suspects.
THEVES ALSO STOLE two sewing machines sometime between April 16 and 17 from Grace Sellards Pearson residence hall, KU police said.
Thieves removed the hair sewing machines, worth more than $100 each, from the building.
There are no suspects.
BURGLARS STOLE an un-
determined amount of change
sometime between 11am on Sunday
and 4pm on Monday. Wheels
skate center, 3210 west St., police said
Burglar hid inside the skate center, and took rolled quarters, dimes and nickels, police said. There are no suspects.
BURGLARS ALSO stole change,
sometime between April 12 and Monday
from a residence at 1244 Prospect Ave.
police said.
Police said burglars may have used a key to enter the residence and steal more than $200 worth of quarters, dimes and half dollars.
There are no suspects.
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719 Massachusetts St.
Lawrence, Kansas
Come See Bruce The MOOSE!
ries
The University of Kansas
School of Fine Arts Presents
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in performances of
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George Lawner and
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Hoch Auditorium
Admission at free
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University Daily Kansan, April 28, 1982
Page 9
Debate squad takes first in regional tournament
The KU ducked squad won first place in the 49th annual Missouri Valley Debate League Conference last weekend on the KU campus.
The KU affirmative team of Jerry Gaines, Houston freshman, and David Rhaesa, Salina junior, and the KU negative team of Steve Crombs, Los Angeles senior, and Zac Grant, Manhattan senior, had a combined record of 10-2.
Rhaeaes was chosen by debate judges as the third place affirmative speaker, Grant the first place negative speaker the third place negative speaker.
An affirmative team supports a topic, and a negative team opposes it. This
year's collegiate debate topic is "Resolved; That the federal government should significantly curtail the use of labor unions in the United States."
This is the second straight year that KU has won the tournament, which includes schools from the Missouri and eight conferences and regional schools.
Emporia State University placed second, and Kansas State University took third.
E. C. Buehler, KU director of forensics from 1925 to 1964, was honored at the tournament. he was a founder of the tournament in 1933.
Bill 008 asks the Recreation Advisory Board to spend $1,960 for a security system in the women's locker room at Robinson Center.
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Motivating and Educating Minority Engineers, which the Senate had also turned down.
SCoRMEBE's $4,437 request was trimmed to $1,215 by the finance committee.
Bill 006 covers the budget of the Black Student Union, which was turned down by the Senate pending a vote to override the F- Finance and Auditing committee.
Bill 099 asks for $1,536 for the KU Amateur Radio Club, whose budget was put on hold pending inspection of the club's equipment.
Senate to discuss budget at final meeting
BICYCLE
HANDLE WITH CARE
Send Your Bicycle Home.
By ANN LOWRY Staff Reporter
the Kansas Board of Regents to name the Visual Arts Building after J. Ward Lockwock, an artist who attended KU in 1916.
Senate Meeting The Senate will meet at 6:30 tonight in the Big Eight room of the Kansas Union.
We can ship your bike home to you carefully and safely.
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841-6642
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The Senate had passed the budget except for a few items that were tabled. However, David Adkins, student counselor because it allocated $20,000 more than the Senate had to spend according to the revenue code.
The bill asks that $3,793 be allocated.
The equipment had been lost when the club folded and left the equipment in the Senate's care. The Senate found the equipment in the projection booth of Woodruff Auditorium this spring.
The Student Senate will reconsider the fiscal 1983 budget at the last Senate meeting this year.
Bill 007 is for the funding of the Student Council for Recruiting.
Yes,
we are buying books now through finals!!!
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The Senate also will hear the results of Adkins' research on the effectiveness of the Associated Students of Kansas.
"The budget will take first priority," Welch said. "I really don't think StudEx will act alone on a matter that important."
The other legislation on the agenda are:
Y
All other legislation not decided by 11 p.m. tonight will be decided this summer by the Student Executive Council, which will body vice president, said yesterday.
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Page 10 University Daily Kansan, April 28, 1962
No clear advantage for Britain Argentina seen in Falklands
By United Press International
LONDON—The recapture of South Georgia by British marines may have looked easy but neither side can claim victory. But in late August, battle erupts over the Falkland Islands.
The 149-year-old squabble over a tiny community of sheep farmers in the bleak and inhospitable South Atlantic could engulf Britain and Argentina in a war more prolonged and costly than either side imagined.
Britain has the edge in firepower and technical sophistication but the age-old advantages of time, geography and the weather are on the side of Argentina.
BOTH SIDES still look to a settlement through negotiation or minimum force, but at any time the southern Atlantic could be a testing ground for an awesome array of late 20th century armor.
Much of the weaponry on both sides is British. In the past Britain has sold Argentina modern armaments as well as surplus military equipment.
The deadliest threat is from Britain's 4,200-nuclear-powered submarines. At least two are believed to be in the waters off the coast of Japan. 25 commuter-guided torpedoes.
But they are all-or-nothing weapons. They cannot be used in a limited display of force—they will either do nothing or blast a ship out of the water.
Argentina has four diesel-electric submarines, two American World War II vintage craft and two bought a decade ago from West Germany. But one of the old subs already was knocked out in the South Georgia operation.
BRITAIN ALSO has 16 major ships in the South Atlantic, including two aircraft carriers, two assault ships, five destroyers and seven frigates. These are supported by about a dozen naval auxiliary ships and 35 civilian vessels, including the 45,000-ton aircraft carrier Veinticinco de Mayo—built in Britain in 1942 but modernized to take high performance aircraft.
The British navy also has nine destroyers and a 13,600-ton cruiser—44 years old but carrying ship-to-ship and anti-aircraft missiles. In addition, there are several fast patrol boats and three corvettes.
Argentina has no civilian back-up feet, but it does not need one. Britain has to ferry every gallon of oil, every round of ammunition since 8,000 miles;
Argentina's coastline is 450 miles away. If the crisis escalates into the first full naval war, since World War II, the missiles will be the primary weapons.
BOTH SIDES have large stockpiles of French-built Exocet missiles, which skim the waves at almost the speed of sound in on targets up to 20 miles distant.
Both nationals also have British-built Sea Dart missiles designed to destroy the Exocets, although Argentina has only two destroyers.
In the air, Argentina has more and faster aircraft. The deadly lineup of 100 high-performance jets included U.S.supplied A-3 skywolf hawker-bombers, B-52 stratedge II warplanes and their Israeli derivatives, known as Dazegers.
But the Falklands are at the extreme range of some of Argentina's air bases and radar control, and the Veinticointe fighter aircraft fighters. The runway at Port Stanley can accommodate only Argentina's Mirage jets with a light load, and the tough, short-takeoff Pucarca turboprop planes developed to attack guerrilla
Against this, Britain's two carriers hold about 40 or 50 helicopters and 20
sea Harrier fighter-bombers, much slower than the 1,460 mih Mirages, but more versatile and maneuverable with its fixed landing and take-off capability.
ALSO ON STANDBY is a British force of Vulcan long-range bombers—replied from the scrap yard in case the U.S. bombs airfields on the Argentine mainland.
Neither side is saying exactly how many troops they have. Argentina may have about 9,000 men on the Falklands, compared with around 5,500 British troops board the Royal Navy task force.
For certain, Britain lacks the 3-1 advantage military commanders think is needed to guarantee victory for an ennured position, assaulting an entrenched position.
But along the indented 800-mile coastline of the archipelago, British forces could easily establish a beachhead in a lightly defended region and set up an airship for Harriers and transport helicopters.
With a well-equipped army of 130,000,
90,000 of whom are conscripts, and
thousands more are eager to join,
Argentina has ample reserves. But it
will have difficulty reinforcing the
islands.
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Reagan might testify in trial
UMKC Box Office 276-2704
By United Press International
HINKLEY, 28, a lonely driver who professed an infatuation for teenage movie star Jodi Foster, has been accused of sexually sanity. A similar plea led to the
WASHINGTON-John W. H. Hinckley, Jr. went on trial yesterday on charges that he tried to assassinate President Ronald Reagan. Prosecutors said Reagan may deliver historic testimony and would probably have shouldered the charge if they could show that Hinkley may have stalked former President Jimmy Carter.
UPB
U. S. district judge Barrington Parker began the process of finding a jury "free of bias, free of opinion" despite the incessant publicity about the shooting attack 13 months ago, and security measures were in effect.
The judge dismissed two of the jury candidates and questioned several others into the evening hours.
The winnowing process, which could last for days, was to resume
Parker, assembling the prospective jurors in the courtroom where the 1974 Watergate trial opened, spent the day questioning an annual total of 30 prospective jurors about their backgrounds and attitudes.
acquittal of would-be assassins of President Andrew Jackson in 1835 and former President Theodore Roosevelt in 1912.
ABC News reported yesterday that "sources close to the case" say White House press secretary James Brady, shot in the head during the attempted assassination of Reagan, requested a request to testify at the trial.
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this morning. Twelve jurors and six alternates will be seated.
In addition to the 90 on hand yesterday, more than 200 other people were on notice they could be called into court.
HINCLEY, A Colorado olman's son, has pleaded insanity to all 13 counts against him, ranging from assaulting his mother to President to weapons violations.
Parker intended to quiz the possible jurors about their views on mental illness and the idea of an insanity defense. Hinckley would face life in prison if convicted of the most serious charge against a man of insanity, it is probable he would be committed to a mental hospital.
The trial, the first in 80 years for a man charged with shooting the president, could last a month or longer.
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University Daily Kansan, April 28, 1982
Page 11
Group keeps alumni in touch
By DEBBIE DOUGLASS Staff Reporter
For graduating seniors who want to keep track of fellow students, becoming a member of the Alumni Association or Alumni Association is one option.
As a member of the Alumni Association, a person will receive the Kansas Alumni magazine and attend other activities about the activities of other KU alumni. Invitations to class reunions, campus activities and group trips with the Flying Sox will be sent to an Alumni Association membership.
Dick Wintermote. Alumni
Association secretary-treasurer, said yesterday that the response of graduating seniors to membership had been very good.
"A lot of seniors have been in to see us," he said.
He said that he did not know how many seniors had signed up for memberships so far, but that the team was on course through commencement on May 16.
FOR ONE PERSON, the membership rate is $12.50 a year. A husband and wife membership costs $15.50 a year.
Wintermote said that $2 from each membership fee would be given to the 1982 class gift fund.
As a member, Wintermote said, a person may also be able to use the
unami-faculty club, which will be in the "Boots" Adams Alumni Center that is now under construction.
He said the club probably would consist of game rooms, a library, reading rooms, a banquet room, conference rooms and a lounge.
"We hope the building will be done by May 1883 or early June," Wintermote said.
"The foundation is finished and they are now erecting the steel for the walls." Wintermote said.
The completion of the $4.2 million alumni center building, located at 13th Street and Oread Avenue, will coincide with the Alumni Association's centennial celebration.
Hobson ordered to jail
Jury named for Hobson murder trial
By United Press International
OLATHE, Kan.—A jury of seven men and five women was selected yesterday to hear evidence in the first-degree murder trial of Sueane Hobson, accused of hiring her son and another youth to kill her 13-year-old stepson.
Just minutes after the jury was selected, a weak and shaken Hobson, who had been free on bond, was ordered to spend six months her nights for the duration of the trial.
Robert Jones, associate Johnson County district judge, ordered the 39-year-old Overland Park woman to jail
to "guarantee her appearance in court." She will remain in the county jail until her trial resumes at 9 a.m. today.
"For security purposes, I've modified her bond to require that she report to the Johnson County jail this evening not later than 8:30 p.m. and that she be released in time for trial tomorrow," Jones said yesterday.
Hobson will be required to spend nights in jail for the duration of the trial expected to last two weeks, or judge again decide to modify the bond.
Jones said he modified the bond to guarantee her appearance, but when asked by reporters to elaborate on the security, Jones refused to comment.
NOTICE TO ALL STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS
However, one courthouse source told the Oltahe Daily News that Jones made the decision to prevent another delay in Hobson's trial.
Registration materials for the 1982-83 academic year are now available in the Office of Student Organization and Activities, 220 South Dumbo Street, New York, NY 10017. Students will be listed in the last IAU Faculty/Student Staff Directory and will be included in the Annual Report and will participate with the student XU's student organizations.
TYPESETTING STATS/PMT
On Sunday night Hobson was admitted to the Shawnee Mission Medical Center in Merriam for treatment of an apparent drug overdose, the Olathe Daily News reported. The trial had to be continued until yesterday.
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University Daily Kansan, April 28, 1982
1.
Lighting
From page 1
Margolis said. "I'm afraid to visit the dorms in the evening because the parking lots are so dark.
"Having night classes becomes a health hazard if you're a woman and don't have someone to walk with you to your classes. You won't be guarded so guard you won't be the next one attacked."
Boe Bryant, a volunteer at the Rape Victim Support Service, said her group had been so involved recently in the accessibility of blue light bulbs that she didn't give the lighting situation much thought.
"There may be a problem with the lighting system at KU and probably on most campuses," he said. "But because we simply haven't received any complaints from rape victims about the lack of lightening the reason for their attack. We've been dealing more with helping victims getting accustomed."
BUT SHE SAID that the lighting was a good discussion topic in future meetings.
"It's a good topic to discuss in the living groups and in the dorms," she said.
Carlson and KU should start installing more lighting on campus instead of constructing new classrooms.
Longaker also said lighting was a much-needed investment for existing buildings—especially Blake and Twente Halls going toward Sunnside Drive.
"There have to be lighted better; they are a definite security risk," the sergeant said.
But people in facilities operations and KU
nousing departments, who are responsible for the maintenance of the campus lighting already has been improved.
They think the campus is well lighted.
refrigeration is in charge of campus lighting. He said he thought his department had done a great job.
"In the past five years we have done a lot to improve the campus lighting," he said. "We've installed sterner poles with mercury vapor lights that give off 250 watts on Jawhay Boulevard.
"The last several years we've upgraded the street lighting. Our most prized project had been the installation of high-powered mercury vapor lights on Irving Hill Road."
He said lights on Irving Hill Road had been badly needed.
"The big problem that we faced then, and are facing always, is the allotment of funds that we are allowed to do a major job of uprating the lighting," he said. "The University was Irving Hill as an immediate concern, so they granted us the money."
BEEM SAID his department took care of all the campus lighting except for the residence hall areas, which are the responsibility of the KU housing department.
"Some of the problems we have are with the security lights, which are usually on buildings or
He said sometimes his department would not find out that a light was inapparable for several days.
"Vandalism is also a problem with our little
toadstool lights. People knock them over and it takes time to replace them," he said.
The man in charge of the lighting for the residence halls is J.J. Wilson, director of KU housing. Wilson contends the lighting in the residence hall areas are adequate.
"We provide good lighting for the students, I think." Wilson said.
He said that his department tried to direct its lighting system to areas that were "dark spots," such as large bushes, entry ways and parking lots.
"We're always checking to make sure the lighting is safe for students," he said. "As far as what we can determine by police records, there are many crimes committed as a result of poor lighting."
He said the reason the walkway from McCollum Hall to the Satellite Union was not lighted that he would rather see students taking Irving Hill Road or 15th Street to campus.
"It's economically unfeasible to light everywhere on campus," he said. "By not lighting that area, we are giving the students a darker environment is a danger zone and should be avoided."
One student who has adamantly worked on the Student Senate for better campus lighting is Jiachen Li.
"I was on the student Senate committee two years ago that proposed a plan to install lights on Irving Hill Road," Mendoza said. "They inquired about that but is only a pittance of what needs to be done."
'I and others advocated more lighting around
Stouffler Place and the walkway from McColllin grass have been pretty minute. In those grass have been pretty minute.
"I believe that the whole campus needs to be lighted, because right now it's inconsistent, with some spots being well-lit while others are snarselv lit."
MENDEOZA SAID that he thought the solution to be implemented to be implement a whole new lighting system.
A new lighting system is just what Ron Helms, director of architecture and urban design, plans to propose to the University administration next fall.
He said he planned to follow the same procedure he used when he was at the University of Colorado, which adopted his master plan for a new lighting system.
"What I'm going to propose in the fall here at KU is the same thing that we did in Colorado," he said. "I will have students from the engineering department at KU, and they will conclude that light is a deterrent to crime."
"At Colorado, I had my students work with the police department. They would tell the cops what to do."
"This would entail any type of crime that was committed at night. They would then mark down the location where the crime had been committed on a campus map."
Helms said the students at Colorado had access to police records over a two-year period and their study revealed that some crimes might be solved in well-areas but most of them were not.
one of the problems the University of Colorado had was with maintenance," he said. "Many of the lights would be inoperable for long periods of time without being fixed.
"We weren't sure if the lights were on when the crimes were committed or if the were out. The police were there."
HELMS SAID that after the two-year study was completed, the university granted him the money for a seven-phase plan that called for relighting the whole campus.
"The first phase of the plan called for the lighting of a major route across campus, which when implemented increased night travel immensely." Helms said.
The second phase of the plan, he said, was a through light around the Colorado student audience.
Helms said more lighting would be installed in the coming semesters.
He said sufficient lighting did more than defer crime.
"Lighting also provided a safety system mechanism," he said. "Well-lit areas provide safety for kids on foot, for drivers, people on mopeds and bicycles and pedestrians in general."
"It provides security for buildings and facilities. Lighting actually isn't a deterrent to crime—it doesn't stop crime from happening, but moves it to a darker area or further away. In that sense, lighting is effective in combatting crime."
Helms said he didn't know how KU would receive his plans, but he is willing to back up his ideas. "He's a strong leader," he said.
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University Daily Kansan, April 28, 1982
Page 13
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HURRICANE
Revised weather plan gives safety guidelines
By BECKY ROBERTS Staff Reporter
Dreeded tornades, for which Kansas is infamous, usually twist through the state from early spring until late fall, but occur most often in May and June.
In the last 30 years, there have been more than 800 tornadoes in Kansas during the months of May and June, from the National Weather Service.
In 1980 and 1981, there were 58 tornadoes in Kansas. Last summer a tornado in Lawrence killed one person, the couple and caused $17 million in damage.
With these statistics in mind, the executive vice chancellor's office and the KU police department's public safety division have formed a committee to update the University's emergency weather procedures, John Mullens, coordinator for public safety, said yesterday.
"Though the policy is not new, it has been rewored, revised and some of the procedures have changed as to who should notify whom," Mullens said.
During severe weather, there are no specific guidelines for each building on campus, Mullens said. There are, in general, safety guidelines to be followed.
Tornado warning sirens will sound only if a tornado has been sighted in Douglas County. Students should move immediately into basements, hallways, restrooms and other protected areas. If possible, they should try to move to the lowest level of the building and to rooms without windows, Mullens said.
MULLENS SAID a tornado watch would be issued if weather conditions were right for a tornado. A tornado has been sighted on the ground.
"Technically, it's not a tornado until it touches the ground," Mullens said. "There are a lot of storms that have the possibility of developing but don't."
Anyone who is outside during a tornado warning should lie down in a ditch away from trees and power lines and cover his head with his hands. But, if there is a lot of lightning, Mullens said, a person should not lie down.
"In a heavy electrical storm, it's the worst position you can be in," Mullens said.
Instead, people should kneel and put their hands on their knees so that the electric current won't go to their heart and chest.
People can tell when lightning is about to occur because their hair will fall out, Mud, and mud.
Mullens said hundreds more people as killed by lightning than by torrents.
Civil defense sirens are one way to people more protection from tornadoes.
There are three times when the civil defense sirens will sound, Mullens said.
At noon on the first Monday of each month, the sirens are tested. The other two times they sound in emergency situations.
If a tornado has been sighted, the campus sirens, on top of Watson Library and Joseph R. Pearson Hall, will be at continual three-minute intervals.
It is important to remember that there is no all-clear signal for sirens in Kansas, Mullens said. If the sirens mean another tornado has been sighted.
"Its the old civil defense air raid warning - in case of a nuclear attack or explosion," Mr. Aboosh said.
The other tone of the sirens is the civil defense warning, Mullens said.
Residents learn tornado safety procedures
Stouffer called safe
By JAN BOUTTE Staff Reporter
The Council for Emergency Preparedness mines no words on the subject—"Tornadoes are killers."
Lawrence residents were reminded of the destructiveness of the natural phenomenon when a tornado twisted through a neighborhood June 19, 1981, killing one man and mangling homes and businesses.
The residents haven't forgotten that reminder now that another tornado season has begun, and neighborhood groups as well as the county office for emergency preparedness are asking residents about emergency procedures for tornado situations.
The Stouffer Neighborhood Association was one group that became concerned about safety and formed a committee to examine tornado procedures for residents of the University-owned apartments.
Monica Hendershot, Lawrence junior and chairman of the tornado committee, said last summer's tornado was the first experience with a funnel cloud for many Stouffer residents and there was
Henderson's committee has been working with the housing department to develop a procedure that would residents would find comfortable.
"I felt that this was a life issue," she said.
confusion on where to go, because the Stouffer apartments have no basements.
AFTER AIN informational meeting with Joe Eagleman, KU professor of meteorology, the two men needed on a new safety procedure.
Stouffer residents should go to the first floor of their apartment buildings. Residents will also have the option of going to Oliver or Hall if volunteers are found to supervise the groups in the halls.
The residents had earlier doubted the safety of their buildings, but Eagleman stressed the dangers of walking or driving during a severe storm and the limitation of short warning time to take shelter.
Eaglean assured the Stouffer residents that their buildings, which are constructed of steel reinforced concretes, were as safe as any, but. "If you're going to get a direct hit, it is going to make a different difference where you are."
said, "Suddenly, staying in their own place was not a disagreeable thought."
reendershot said she planned to stay in her apartment building if the sirens sounded but she was still hoping to find monitors so that Oliver and Ellsworth would be available for other residents.
"I want people to know they have that option if they don't feel safe here," she said.
J. J. Wilson, director of housing,
Wilson said, "I think that Stouffer Place is better constructed than most apartment complexes in town."
In all University residence halls and scholarship halls, the resident directors have weather warning signs in front of emergency situations are posted.
Wilson said that in the residence halls, students were instructed to move inside the halls or go to the basement.
"Any of our corridors is safe," Wilson said. We think we can stand winds up to 160-170 mph."
WILSON SAID that the instructions recommend that residents stay in the halls outside their rooms so that the students could monitor the storm by watching their televisions or listening to their radios. Even on the top floors, he said, the halls are a safe place to be.
"I think information is what people really want in that situation," Wilson said.
In apartments or houses, people should take shelter on the lowest floor of the building away from windows and doors in rooms such as a closet or bathroom.
Students living off campus, often in apartments and houses not as sturdily constructed as University housing and without basements, are left to their own resources in emergency situations.
The type of housing most prone to destruction by tornadoes is mobile homes. In last June's tornado, Gavilage Wallidge (motor) park. A nighttime tornado struck the
All the mobile home parks in Lawrence have tornado shelters built into the ground, according to their administrators.
When the June tornado swept the south end of town where Gaslight is located, the power to most of Lawrence was knocked out, including power to local radio stations. The stations KLWN and KLZR went off the air, causing confusion for some Lawrence residents.
The department for emergency preparedness reminded residents to keep battery-operated radius and hand on hand for emergency situations.
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PROJECT 800
835 MASS.
LAWRENCE, KANS. 86044
843-4833
Jay
SHOPPE
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PROJECT 800
835 MASS.
LAWRENCE, KANS. 66044
843-4833
--only those who believe can obey"
Maranatha Campus Ministries
Salvation
“Sinners have drugged themselves with cheap and easy grace by accepting the proposition that only those who believe can obey”
Message: Obedience and Selection
Wednesday 7:00 p.m. Pine Room 841-0318
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Did you have fun at the muscular dystrophy superdance?
Interested in planning next year's?
There will be a Meeting for those interested in helping plan next year's dance: 6:30 tonight
April 28th
International Room Kansas Union
Page 14 University Daily Kansan, April 28, 1962
.
KCP&L agrees to sell portion of Wolf Creek
By United Press International
KANSAS CITY, Mo.—The Kansas City Power & Light Co., has entered into a tentative agreement to sell part of Kansas' Wolf Creek nuclear power plant and LaCyne coal-fired plant to the Kansas Municipal Energy Agency.
KCP&L made the announcement yesterday at the company's annual stockholders meeting. Under the agreement, KCP&L would sell up to 4.5 percent of the Wolf Creek plant to 2 percent of the LaGoyt plant to KMAE.
KCPR4L and the other major partner in the Wolf Creek project near Burlington, Kan., the Kansas Gas and Electric Co., have wanted to sell about
11 percent of the plant since Kansas Electric Power Cooperative Inc. announced it would buy only 1 percent of the amount it had considered purchasing.
KMEA, a group of municipally owned electric utilities located mostly in northwestern Kansas, signed the agreement of interest to invest in Wolf Creek and LaCyge, contingent upon its ability to obtain financing.
The Wolf Creek nuclear power plant is scheduled to begin operation in 1984. The project's current estimated cost is $1.9 billion.
KANSAS CITY, Mo.—Police officers armed with a revolver and shotgun yesterday shot and critically wounded an unarmed 29-year-old man following the attempted robbery of a U.S. mail carrier that was interrupted by police.
By United Press International
Police shots interrupt robbery
The suspect's name was withheld pending the possible filing of charges. The suspect was in critical condition late yesterday following surgery at Truman Medical Center, a nursing supervisor said.
"Give me your money. This is a robbery," the mail carrier told police the suspect had advised him to leave town, but shortly after noon yesterday, police
department spokesman Sgt. Jim Treece said.
Officers alerted to the possible holdup arrived on the scene and a man began running west into Gillam Park. Three officers cornered the suspect in the park and the suspect placed his hand inside the door, as if he were reaching for a weapon, police said in a statement.
The officers, who had their weapons drawn, ordered the suspect to drop his weapon and remove his hand from inside his coat. The suspect refused and two of the officers opened fire. Treece said.
A faculty committee has chosen 34 students out of 99 applicants for interviews to become University Scholars.
Faculty pick Scholar finalists
Thirty students originally were to be picked for interviews and 20 of them were to be interviewed.
Outstanding sophomores who are chosen University Scholars take a special course and study under faculty members. They also receive a $500 stipend.
But Al Johnson, assistant to the vice chancellor for academic affairs, said the committee was so impressed with the work that it wanted to interview them all.
The students had to have at least a 3.5 grade point average and sophomore standing next semester to be eligible for application.
Sixty students applied last semester for the program, which began this semester. The program was implemented as part of the Report of the Commission on the Improvement o Undergraduate Education released las fall.
Twenty scholars will be selected each semester.
each of the 34 finalists will be in interviewed May 12 by one of two teams of faculty members and ad ministrators. The team members are Deanall Tacha, vice chancellor for academic affairs; David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs; France Horowitz, vice chancellor and graduate ad minister; Cobb vice chancellor; David Katzman, associate dean of the college of Liberal Arts and Sciences; anc Francis Heller, professors of law.
The committee will announce the Scholars about May 24, Johnson said after the committee receives the final transcripts from this semester.
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Our Elegant Diamond Studs!
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Michael's DEPARTMENT STORE
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WE'VE GOT THE FEVER AND WE'RE
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Phone
749-4333
Address
800 Mass.
ewelers
women's clothing
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Spill Skirts reduced to $^{241}$
Selected Blooms regularly £29 to 150 reduced as low as $^{71}$
Spring Blossoms reduced as low as $^{130}$
Coordinated Separates for Spring Savings of 40%
Lingerie reduced 30%
Big Back of Bits'n Pieces save up to 60%
Infant Gift ITM reduced up to 40%
Housewares
Glassware reduced 30%
Plastic Glasses and Miniature Ice Bucket save 25%
Sun Tea Jars reduced 30%
Show Curtains and Accessories save 50%
Shelton Ware Service Dishes save 30%
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The Southern Hills
Shopping Center
23rd & Ouedahi
Hours:
Monday, Thursday 10 a.m. - 4 p.m.
Sunday 1 p.m. - 8 p.m.
...now '7
men's clothing
Ocean Pacific T-Shirts
$12.99 now '7
Selected Polo Shirts
regularly $7 to $14 now '12*
Selected Sport Shirts
regularly $7 to $13 now '14*
Broad Sleeve Dresses
reduced 35%
Roland Dress Stacks
regularly $4 to $65 reduced to '35*
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS
The University Daily
KANSAN WANT ADS
Call 864-4358
one two three four five six seven eight nine ten
15 words or fewer .225 .250 .325 .350 .375 .425 .455 .500
15 words or more .225 .250 .325 .350 .375 .425 .455 .500
CLASSIFIED RATES
ERRORS
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
AD DEADLINES
The Kanan will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be issued in person or be delivered by the $8 payment office at 643-758.
KANSAS BUSINESS OFFICE
118 Flint Hall 864-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Paid Positions
Fall Business Manager
Summer Editor
FOR RENT
The Kansas is now accepting applications for the Summer Editor and Fall Semester Business Admin positions. Students paid positions and require some newspaper experience. Application forms are available in the Student Senate Office, 105 B. Street, University of Kansas Student Organizations and Activities, 220 Strong Hall; and in Room 200 Flint Hall. Completed applications are due in 200 Filt Hall at 4:30 p.m., Wednesday, April 28.
ENTERTAINMENT
The University Daily Kansan is an Equal OpportunityAffirmation, a way of recognizing are sought from all qualified people regardless of race, religion, color, sex, disability, national origin, age, or ancestry.
Every Tuesday is open microphone night as
Off the Wall Hall hosted by the Ebeling
Bros. $2 pitchers, 75 bottles, 4-12
No. 36
To the best secretaries on the hill: Dary. Savra, Marmie, Judy, April, Lort. Lena, Janice, Nancy, Marmie, Dary, Lena, Nance, Nancy, Mary, Bark, Terry, Bill, Nance, Hail, and Sue (seen at **4-28** Hail).
Live in the CRISTIAN CAMPUS HOUSE
This summer & fall. Become a part of a growing campus ministry. Call Alan Nasen,
campus minister 845-692-768.
tf
Wanted outgoing Christians and con-
scientists to share 5 bedroom house at
14th & Kentucky next fall & spring $180-
$230. Utilities included. Units required.
Darryl. B41-7692. B41-7692.
Rooms available for summer $100-$140 per month utilities included. Close to campus and quiet atmosphere. Call Darryl 841-7602.
For rent to mature male student. Quiet,
comfortable efficiency apartment. Private
kitchen. Close to the Union. Reasonable
price. 842-4185. tf
HANOVER PLACE. completely furnished.
14th & 16th on弘山. Only $3 blocks from KU. DON'T DYNTLY. Reserve your apt.
phone: 841-1212 or 843-1445.
TRAILRIDE. Lodge for fall - Studi-
lons 1 & 3 berms, apt. 2, & 4 berms, town-
house wall to walk wall & draps furnished
wall to walk wall & draps furnished
wall to walk wall & draps furnished
KO.U. bus 5000 W. Sacramento 5000 W.
Bancroft 5000 W. Sacramento 5000 W.
Established STUDENT COOPERATIVE on campus and downstown. Own bedroom/study. Six sleep meetings each week. $75-$120. Utilize a utilitarian SUNFLOWER HOUSE. 846-842-311
PRINCETON PLACE PATIO APARTMENTS.
for roommates, features wood burning fireplace,
2 car garage with electric oplighter;
roommates' kitchen, quiet surroundings. Open house
9:30-5:30 daily at 2200 Princeton Blvd., or
phone 842-275 for additional information.
Excellent location to campus and downtown.
Central) airheat. Available May 15. Call
Summer sublease. Fem. only. Clean close to campus. Low wtl. 841-706-80. 4-30 MED CENTER BOUND? NEW! refurbished 2 JR Dukes applies now. Carpet, A/C, Gym, Locker. Free parking.
SOUTHEAST PARKWAY TOWNHOUSES,
& dorms you'll like. Use our apartments
and dorms you'll like. Use our apartments
& bedrooms. We'll be happy to teach
fitted garage, swimming applications
of private pool, and walk-in closet. Call Calgary Lewis in to inform us of your modernized apartment. In our modernized priced townhouse,
MORE SUBLEASE MAY Request free, walk
to campus or downtown, rent reasonable
recoverable in summer, Call 843-7166, comfortable, clean,
well equipped.
**Waning to sublease blever, 2 bdm. apt. for summer. New AC, dishwasher, carpet, electric garage opener, 1½ bath.水浴室,电动垃圾机,1½浴室,电动垃圾机,1½浴室。** 740-1344-104,4-28
Must see to believe. Furnished rooms with
unfurnished security & downstairs.
No pets. Phone 841-550-3020.
June-July sublease $2 & Mls. 2 bdm.
June-July cond. furnished $225,
443-329 1234, 443-329 838
Summer sublease. Furnished studio apartMENT with A/C, pool, tennis courts. Great loft. $489.00 per month.
ment with A/C, pool, tennis courts. Great location.
PRICE NEGOTIABLE 749-4538 - 45-30
Sublease, choice 2 br. apt., furnished. between campus & downtown, 749-4538 - 45-29
MASTER BEDROOM AVAILABLE starling starting with fivelfronts. Call 811-1634 for detaill.
Sleeping rooms 1-3 bedroom apartments.
For summer or full year. 842-7955. Lodge for summer or full year.
**JERRY CARTER**
$20,000 turnaround rate nahm home
$45,000 turnaround rate nahm home
$20,000 turnaround rate nahm home
$45,000 turnaround rate nahm home
$85,000 turnaround rate nahm home
$85,000 turnaround rate nahm home
Sublease large 2 BR apartment near stair
841-8235, water paid, central air,
4-29
Availon & Harvard Squared Apartments. 1. &
2. 105th St, NW. Call 618-608-8000,
or Aug. 1, 1 occurrence. Call 618-608-8000.
Now leasing new 2 & 3 bedroom duplexes.
Available for Aug. 1 occupancy. Fireplaces,
garages & much more. 841-6080. Kaw-
Valley Management, Inc.
Summer Sublease. 3 bedroom townhouse at
Trail Ridge. $400/month. Call 749-161-4-28
--paid. no pets. 113 Louisana. $190. 4-80
Available June. 1. 2 bedroom
apartment with a/4 room in
$30 per month on electric
Deposit required. Phone: 847-607-400
Phone: 847-607-400
SUMMER SUBLEASE. New furnished town-
house. 13th & Ohio. 3-4 people. Price
negotiable. 749-1243 or 749-2436. 4-30
THE SUMMER PLACE!
NAISMITH HALL
"Just Across The Drive From Campus"
+ to learn more
✓ Private Sleeping Study Areas
✓ Carpeting
✓ Fourteen Meals Per Week
✓ Air Conditioning
✓ Free Utilities
✓ A Lease Agreement for your Summer
✓ Versatility in Payment Plans
✓ High Rise Living With a Swimming Pool
✓ Water Features in Your Home
1 bedroom apartment with loft. Furnished.
AC. Next to the Sanctuary on 7th. Great
condition. Call 842-8709. 4-36
1800 Naismith Dr.
*Spaecious S bedroom*, 1½ bath, full kitchen.
*Summer subtire*. Less than 3 blocks from the beach, pool, sauna, gym room and quick mallettena. Fully equipped with furniture and lease extension available. Rent negotiable.
Summer sublease $65.00 off per month. Located at Haven Place Apartments. New, furnished, excellent Placement. Fall option. 41-2802. 4-29
SUMMER SUBLEASE. Available May 15.
walk to campus or downtown.
2 bedroom, $250 + itis reasonable in sum-
mer.
2 bd. dorm required. Call 842-765-1120.
4-30
Sublease 2 bedroom apartment at Meadow
Anytime May to August 15. Call
832-302-5022
For May, very nice summer school rooms
in the Oakland suburbs. Don’t miss
no pets, clean baths, call after 9:45
or at 1209 Ohio. Beautiful views from
the hills around Oakland and
bath. Also nice single apartment.
4-30
HOUGHTON PLACE. Summer leases. 841-
5775. 2400 Alabama. Iff
INEXPENSIVE DUPLXE --4 bedroom 2
AC/PCB $390/month. $413-$908. 4-28
Furnished upstairs studio apartment, available May 15. On U.R. bus route, and close to downtown. C/A. 841-3991. ___ if
5 bedrooms, 1½ bath. 2 car garage, fireplace,
all appliances $700 month. 3 duplexes
bath. 1 car garage. All appliances.
close to campus. 749-833-7681. 4-30
- 4
SUMMER SULELAGE with option for fall.
Modern 2 bedroom apartment, low utilities,
short walking distance to campus and down-
town. 841-175. 4-29
2 bedroom apartment to sublease for summer, options for fall. Will negotiate price. One block from campus. Call 845-1476. 4-28
Summer Sublease, fall option -Studio $180
Summer Sublease, close to campus -4-30
downsw. 749-1088
For rent, 1 bedroom apartment with loft furnished, water paid, walking distance to campus. 749-0536. 4-28
Summer sublease with extension option in fall; 3 bedroom apartment with central air, fully carpeted, dilwater, pool and eatery. Make an offer. 841-8898. Make an offer. 841-8898.
2 bedroom apartment 5 R, central air, stove and refrigerator, no jets. Grades preferred. Available. June 1, $240 924 New Hampshire; 835-8501 4-30
Summer sublease with option in fall. New 3 bedroom duplex on Orchards golf course, 2015 University Dr. $465.00 per room. 841-8225.
Summer sublease on spacious apartment for two. Rent is negotiable. More information? Call Amy D. at d.843-6263 or Lisa K. 843-4715.
Summer sublet–mid-May to mid-Aug. Right next to campus. Two bedrooms. All utilities paid, including air conditioning. Swimming pool. Call 843-4609 before 11 p.m. 4-28
2 bedroom townhouse 3 blocks from campus,
14th & Kentucky. A/C, full kitchen, garage.
furnished 1½ bath, price to sublease. Call
842-2905. 4-30
Summer sublease. Reduced rate. Walk to campus. Furnished. Air conditioned. 841-7855. Ask about #303. 4-28
Summer and fall rentals, houses and apartments. Near campus, no pets. Lynch Real Estate. 843-1601 or 841-3233. 4-30
For rent, 3 bedroom apartment, furnished,
on bus route. 1200 sq. ft., email app.com on bus route. $250/month. Email app.com on bus route. $250/month.
Spacious furnished 4 bedroom home 2704
Stratford Road. Family room, pool table,
all appliances, 21' bath. Available August 1st.
Room with balcony. Additional amenities +
utilities 267-0175. References required.
Two bedroom apartment in residential area
summer and fall. Call Cali After 5:00
am for details.
SUMMER SUBLEASE. Please fall. May rent free. Unfurnished 1 bedroom apartments. $1,295 per month. Low rent & utilities. CA/heat. Nataly 749-368-8410. 5:00 & weekends or January 4-28
844-8419
Sublease 2 bedroom apartment, 15 block
to West Side of the building
Available May 19 - July 31, 2014, 814-0672 at 6 p.m.
Sunleap, TRAILRIDGE 1 bedroom apartment with deck and patio in the fall. May rent free. Call 49-848-5300
FARULOUS DUPLXE Live in styel 3 bedrooms, 15 baths. Central air conditioning.
Roommates, for May 1, summer and possible spring.
Roommate to choose from:
students preferred. Come take a look at #423
424.
Bulsham Mendysbrook studio assn. instruction
counsel body work studio. May 1-30, 2015
boston college art school. May 1-30, 2015
Must sublease 2 bedroom apartment for summer, $20 rent prepaid—no bills, 2 pools, laundry room, on bus route. 842-7486. 4-28
THREE BEDROOM HOUSE—across from Olive Hall, central air supply to Olive Hall, central air supply to BEDROOM APARTMENT. Basement apartment across from Olive Hall, fireplace, part carriage house, outdoor kitchen, 925 a.m. $252 a month. A42-812-218 after 6:00, before 9:00 on weekends. Both available at 9:00.
Large older comfortable house next to
stadium. Suitable for 4 or maybe 5 people.
Available mid-May, year's lease. No pets.
843-823-89
MADBROWKOOW. Now available for June.
Furnished studio, electric kitchen, and draperies. 2 swimming pools, 5 tennis courts. 842-4500, 842-4500, 842-4500, 4-60
Summer sublease large beautiful 2 bedroom
apartment with water and cable
Excellent location.
$18,000/mo.
Summer sublet 2 rooms available May 15-
April 16. Boys and Girls 4-8. Behind
Watson. 849-6720. 4-29
Sublease June 1-Aug. 15, 3 bedroom, back
yard, 2 car garage, close to campus, $315
+ 49
utilities, $41-3577.
Now taking applications for fall and summer leases, KJI students only.
Jayhawker Towers Apartments
Bedroom apartments on campus
- swimming pool
- air condition
- on bus line
- swimming pool
- air conditioned
- utilities paid
- cablevision
- cablevision
- laundry facilities
- furnished or unfurnished
New policy for fall semester:
Tower A—Grad Students only
Tower A—Grad Students only Tower B—Women Students only
Tower B—Women Students only
Office Hours
Mon. Fri. 8:00-5:00
Sat. 6:00-12:00
Sun. 9:00-12:00
1603 W. 15th 843-4993
Sublease May 15-Aug. 1, Full furnished,
stocked kitchen, color TV, A/C, 2 blocks
east of union street or whole or for $29. May rent
negotiable. 749-0651.
Duplex, great location 811 Ohio. 2 bedroom,
stove, refrigerator, a/c, carpet available
now $220.00. 1-795-683-4-29
Furnished apartments for rent near downtown and university. No pets. Reserve your apartment now: 841-5000. 4-30
For summer and fall of 82, a 2 room apartment 9th and Kentucky. $130 a month + utilities. Call 841-7277 after 5 or 43-5272.
KING-SIZE WATERBED, SWIMMING POOL
KING-SIZE FURNITURE, with two furnished furnitures come with this spacious 2 bed room. These will be secured in blocks from campus). Bent negligible because I have to lubricate for June and July.
To see believe.-Excellent location, sublease
room. 3-400 sq. ft., New kitchen, New
central air & carpet. 4-30
House for summer sublet. Very close to
compass and downtown. Call 664-4785 or
312-556-6900.
2 bedroom, 2 bath extra-large apartment for summer suites. Park 25. Park 749-2688.
Furnished one bedroom apartment. Bills paid. No pets. $13 Louisiana. $195. 4-30
Sublease for: summer. Furnished studio apartment; available May 15, 2 blocks from campus. AC, option for fall lease. -4189 a.m. p.i.m. Call 746-7883 4-28
Summer commute needed to share apartment with 2 friendly, very comfortable girls. Rent plus 1/3 utilities. Call 864-1530. 4-1318.
Will consider all offers. Summer and/or/for
apartment. Wooden apartments on lowa-
rae from Capital Federal Bank 2 bed-
rooms and pool. For details call 415-836-1
J-30-43
Share a beautiful house near campus. $85
+ 1/5 utilities. Summer/fall. 841-4678. 4-30.
SUMMER SULLEASE, 1 bedroom apartment,
furnished, carpeted, air conditioning, 14th
& New Jersey. All utilities free. $130/
month. 749-4606
Summer sublease: 1 bedroom Cedarwood
Apartment, furnished. Female only. Term
negotiable. Call 843-8094.
4-3
Two bedroom apartment, on bus route.
Available after final for summer full year.
Has dishwasher, in laundry; in bedding
and towels; in storage space.
You're not paying. 841-5583. 4-3-6
New duplex in Orchards—2 bedrooms.
Pretty area—Garage—No pets. On bus route
841-8454. 4-2
Spacious Meadowbrook studio apartment summer sublease. May and August free Will be paid $200 month; normally $230. ga & water paid Call after 5:39. 814-746-4768
Summer sublease with option for fall, for 3nbed room 2 bed. Malls installed (pool a/c/e) etc. Contact mid-May. first payment. Contact manager about H-88. Contact manager about H-88. 4-3
SUPER SUMMER SUBLEASE- 2-bedroom furnished, modern look, sitting level, 11 bath rite Kitchen, in Hanover Place. Call (314) 786-5900. Rent negotiable. 1-4-38 Kentucky.
Roommate needed summer: 3 bedroom, bath furnished apartment. a/c close to campus. $125 + 1/3 utilities. 841-3721. 4-36
Sublet Hanover Place studio apartment. Five minutes from campus. Phone 842-6316 Keep trying. 4-30
Summer sublease with fall option, 1 bedroom, water & gas paid, air conditioning dishwasher, laundry. Trailridge. Call 841-1809. 4-30
1 BLOCK FROM KANSAS UNION. Purchased apartment for two grad or senior, or graduate students. No pets. Refs. Lease required. $230.00 each. Triplex Applicant June 1, 2 bedroom plus dn. family or 2 students. $232.00 each. No pets, no near campus. $895.00 per month.
**SHARE BEAUTIFUL TWO BEDROOM**
**SHARP HOME SCREEN, 2 BR.**
May 20. Fall option. Carpenter's
room, weather/door, a/c, living
room, quiet, green space,
street parking. $140 - each. 843-764-
5200.
Must ablause: One bedroom furnished apartment with study loft and central air See to appreciate. 842-6611. 4-30
SUPER HOUSE for SUMMER SUBLAGE
HOUSE in fashionable SW area. Deck
garage, big yard, park nearby with female
garage; 81-307. Keep dry.
841-307. keep dry!
Fall sublease, large one bedroom apartment,
Park 25 complex, call 864-3043. Ask for Jaap
or call 841-8413. 4-30
Roommate to share large 4 bedroom house garden, fireplace, on bus route, grad student preferred; $112/month + 1% utilities 841-6074 4-30
Summer sublease! modern furnished studio
apartment—/e/ walk-to-walk-carrying to
cared next to the Sanctuary! Call 842-2133
Cheap. No Hills to Conquer.: Large 2 bed-
room, great location, pool, a/c. 749-0658.
4.30
For sublease in May. 1 bedroom apartment.
Close to campus and downtown. 841-8625
weekends. 6 p.m. weekdays. 4-30
HANOVER PLACE- Sublue-2 - bedroom
apartment. two bedrooms, 7 with optional
bathroom. fully furnished. Fully furnished.
kitchen. spacious study room. lift level. 2
kitchen. RENT VERY NEGOTIABLE: call 30-
1544.
TRAILRIDE townhouse for summer sub-
lease to lease in fall 3 bedroom, 2 bath,
bathroom, kitchen, & free cable, fireplace, swimwear,
kichen, & free lawn court. Rent negotiated.
Call 41-819-3080
Looking for a place to live next fall *Kolnina University has vacancies. For information call Keenualian Christian Ministries.* 1204 Oread. 843-4933.
Summer sublease—Beautiful 1- bedroom
apartment at Sundance. Purchased A/C.
Available May 17, $230/month. May rent free.
749-684-081. 4-30
Depresently to sublease 2- bedroom apartment. Excellent location with A/C, carpeting, comfortable living for 2 or 3 rooms. $420.00 but very neglected. Call 814-6953.
□
University Daily Kansan, April 28, 1982 Page 15
2 bed-
749-0268.
4-30
FOR SALE
1st floor apartment at 10th & Missouri. 2 large rooms and bath. Nice carpeting and plenty of windows. 749-0166. 4-30
*Western Civilization Notes. Now on Satellite.
Makes sense to use them -3). As study guide,
for class use in the analysis of Western Civil-
lization, or for analysis of Western Civill-
lization in our Analysis of Western Civill-
lization book, or for The Bookhunt,
and Bookhunter.
Alternator, starter and generator specailist
AC BOTTLE ELECTRIC 843-905-6000,
AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC
Stereo-Televisions-Video Recorders. Name brands only. Factory sold cartons. Lowest prices in the K.C. area. Get your best offer call Total Sound Distributors 913-583-4030 4-30
TENNIS HACKETS—Head, Wilson, Dunlap,
Jay McCullough. You win if you buy it in good condition.
84¢, but buy it in good condition. 84¢.
1972 Grand Prix Model J—Excellent condition all around. See to appreciate. Andy at 843-9048. 4-29
1979 MAZDA RX7-GS PURRFECT. 843-825
or 842-6353.
ATTENTION Eositeer Audio, HAfer DII
Hewlett-Packard Audio, Hewlett-Packard
Sonic Hologram, DBX-IBX Counder,
Mumbaiishi, LI-20 turntable, ND4 4202A,
Audio Tech Power Meters, Audio Control
Control D-11, ADS 400 Satellite Speakers,
& M K Walnut Subwoofer. Portable rack
home rack set, box cabins, all carts,
box containers and boxes, call Gary at
641-119
4-28
641-119
b172 BMW 2002 tii fuel injected with 5
miles on a used condition. Running condition.
Call 861-283-8182
4-28
*Baltian/ wight nightstands; O'Sullivan stenzer
settee; bike race. K4 823-855. 9:40
bike race. K4 823-855. 9:40
1758 Rabbit, 2 doar hatchback, $1000, or
before May 31, 81. 601762, FIREING
4-30
MATERBED - Quenese-size in very good con-
dition for $145. For $300 call Marita at 841-1900. 4-30
for $350.
Living room set, 3-suite dinette suite, bed & bath suite, 2-piece kitchenette, Excellent condition CALL 4-309-647-1400
4-309-647-1400
1975 Flat 124 Sport. Runs OK, $1450 or
trade for £91.84-1548 after 2. 4-28
Selenicine American. 300-plus issues from
1980 to 1985. 1980-1985 4-29
1979-6853 4-29
2. speaker cabinets with mid-range horn and
84-506-3902, 127 watts RMH
84-506-3906, 127 watts RMH
4-30
4-30
1974 Honda CB500 looks nice, runs great
1974 Honda CB500 asks $3500. Must-4
864-289-309
864-289-309
Community Auction. 700 New Hampshire
houses. Have two motorcycles, several dressers,
guns and lots of fun miniatures. Guns and
lots of fun miniatures accepted daily.
lift sale time, and Thursdays at 11:45 for 4
hours. Call the Auction Company at (800) 267-3900.
Fiorita Glba 1890. Excellent condition.
a/c, stereo, 3-door. Silver metallic. 11.000 miles. 843-9234. 4-30
BGW 410 Stereo power amp. 230 watts.
Mint. $475 firm. Call Bryan at 843-5817
4-803
72 gold Pinto, good school car, low miles,
gas saver. Call 841-3225.
4-29
New Women's clothes. Leather - Cavallini Kilt,
$350; Sheer - Crested Kilt, $195; Blouson -
$110; Sweaters and shoes ($85-100)
Hospital bed with mattresses—steel construction. 20 dollars, ask for. Rob. Bakh. 4-328. 4-30
Marantz stereo, furnishable, speakers, $160
Marantz stereo, built-in sound system,
$240 Charger, $250 full mattress, frame
$700 Charger, $900 full mattress, frame
$800 Charger, $900 full mattress, frame
$800 Charger, $900 full mattress, frame
Older organ. Concomita, with long pads
connected to bridge $250, 814-263-4500
4-30
4-30
Crazy Ernie wants to offer you a slightly used 1980 air conditioned unit that is in excellent working condition, windows that open, Call 843-6849 Ask for Ernie. Steve or Bob. 4-30
Fisher speaker. $250. 749-1965. 4-30
1972 Toyota; automatic, n/c/am/fm radio,
4 extra tires. Excellent condition. Owner
availing $500. Will give away for
business. Call 614-421-4192 at 5 a.m. p.m.
8:31-9:31 any time.
Harmon and Kardon tuned Straight
Akings, and Kardon-Tuned. Aaking 1965
make offer. 749-1965
4-30
Stereo speakers. Essex, four 100 watt
speakers for $1000 or four 400-watt
speakers, 78-1965. 4-30
4-50
1972 Pontiac Lemans station wagon for sale.
It has a rear lift and make an offer. $275 or less
or $325 or less.
For sale bed, sofa and chair recliner. Call
Innage. 749-3536. 4-30
76 Scirroco, 4 speed, ac, am/fm radio. Must
joe to appreciate. $3,500 or compromise.
81-47-499 Call after 5:00 p.m. 4-30
12 speed ladies' bike. $75. Call after 5:00
p.m. 841-4709. 4-30
Camera system: Mamiya C-220 body. 80 mm
ad 180 mm f/2.8. 1972. John Bassel. 1972.
1972. John Bassel. 1972.
**Apple II +**, computer, disk drive. **Silent-Type printer**, Power mod. 593, "color TV," screenware. **software**, for retail. **For commercial** $109 to sell for $270. **Catalog** 841-1833. **Catalog** 4-30
MGB-GT 88 "Grulling green, new baby bottles,
Buried by May 3, 83-485 or $1000 for best
4-60
Guitar and case (Imperador) $75, not
electric. Phone 842-5030. Mon.-Fri. 4-30
chair. Dinette set, recorder. Canlay Rd.
842-8993. 4-30
1258 Church, 1900, good condition. 749-0110.
1972 Subaru 1300, good condition, 749-0110
4-30
1977 HONDA CIVIC. Great MPG. Super car for college student. $1800. Must sell. 841-
4266. Keep trying.
4-30
1980 VESPA BRAVO MOPED. See it to believe it, excellent condition. Under 300 miles, $50 or best offer. 864-6724. 4-29
Mattresses, box-springs, sofa-bed, and 3-
shelf bookcase. Call 841-7723. 4-30
Frigidaire washer and dryer, good condi-
dion, $200 pair. Call Janice, 841-7593. 4-30
Ladies clothing sale 70-25% off retail price.
New spring and summer fashion Fridays
and Saturday only. 9 a.m.-7 p.m. VIP Room.
Ramada Inn.
Sears' Kennore 1.7 cu. ft. refrig. 8 month old for great dorm or small apartment. Must sell by May 13. Call 864-5899. 4-29
Miniatures--Printer's Trays, Jewelry, KU-
MINIatures. VIP room. Fri.-Sat. 30 and Jst.
Kanamina. I am 9. To 7. 4-30
For Sale: Allied 4-track stereo tape deck
with 12 tapes. Call 842-8327.
FOUND
Found: Key in SE corner of O Zone parking lot. Call 841-3404 to identify. 4-29
1 pair keys at Pizza Shoppe. 6th & Kasoid.
Call 842-0600 4-29
HELP WANTED
Calculator in Learned Hall last week. To claim, give aerial number or full description of calculator, along with date and place it was lost. 843-8098. 4-30
Programmers. Local Company needs part-time engineer for microcomputers. We can supply equipment. Send resume to P.O. Box 3859, Lawrence. Attention: David.
Are you committing to from Kansas City
I need someone to drop off UD at the KU
I need someone to drop off UD at the KU
Bob bovies, Administrator of Continuing
Bob bovies, Administrator of Continuing
KU Bb 884-6455, and Olathe, KC. KU 653-2100
KU-Y is seeking a full-time coordinator for a 3 semester period to play a key role in the program's general member of $25 would be quarter time and the program coordinator will
JUNIOR & SENIOR History, Meteorology &
Geography participate in a reading study for 40
and 150 minutes on an assigned day. Students
in 10:30 to 13:00 on one hour and April 26
from 10:30 to 13:00 on two hours. Students
with 336 or more points on the Fraser Hall or call
319-798-6600.
Positions Available. Fulltime summer positions available. Earn $1035 per month. Must be willing to relocate. Write Summer Work P.O. Box 269, Lawrence, KG 6044-4358
W. T.C.S. is needing women committed to helping older people who are given the opportunity of battling or going other life changes. Next training session starts May 29. For more details call 4-30
Anticipated Graduate Assistantships & Graduate or Undergraduate hourly position at Technology Center-KAIBS Program, Nichols Hall-Campus West Gates 492-745-6100. Title: Graduate hourly. Length of employment: Summer 1982 to fall of the current year. Salary: $3.25/hr; regular hourly. Graduate qualification: Master's degree in graphic design. Duration Photo and image interpretation; cartography; digital data analysis tasks. GPA: 3.50 assigned work; literature searches; drafting; other assigned work; coursework in photo interpolation, remote sensing, cartography, application. Application forms and further information available online. Applications accepted now through May 5. Equal Opportunity Affirmative Action.
ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT - The Center for East Aim Studium Academic Affairs, August 15-18, 2002. B.A. and experience in office-related activities required; familiarity with university administration and editorial experience preferred. Annual salary $800,000 plus benefits including commissions, salaries,ifications and experience. Applications will be considered starting June 7, 2002, and will be addressed to Professor C.J. Lee 106 Strong Hall University Chicago, IL 60610 (312) 349-2849. Contact Professor Lee for further information. An Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action policy is sought from all qualified people regardless of race, national origin, age or ancestry, national origin, age or ancestry.
Energetic, permanent waitresses. Must be willing to work. Hourly wage plus 1pc, commission and incentive bonus. Applies at GAMMONS after 5:00 p.m. 4-30
PHYSICAL THERAPIST
Lawrence Memorial Hospital has a physical therapist. Our department treats in-patients and out-patients and offers 8-5 M-F and some Saturday mornings; information call Nancy Huey. Employment opportunity available. Qualified Handicapped urged to apply. 4-29
COLLEGE STUDENTS. If you live in K.C.
area and need summer employment. Call
Chaile Loyne collect (913) 722-3811,
or 30:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
interview 4-30
ASSISTANT MANAGERS. JAYHAWKER TOWERS, (4 Positions Available). The University Manager, one half time, seeking a live-in, one half time. Assistant Manager for each of the four Jayhawkier positions. Position development status preferred. Group work experience is desirable. Department experience is desirable. Apartment furnished plus stipend to work until July 1, 1982. Complete job description available in http://www.yayhawkers.com/JobDetail/5.00 p.m. Wednesday, May 12, 1982; 5:00 p.m. Monday, April 13, 1982; resume and names of two references to the Death of Student Life 218 Strong Hall. Opportunity employer. 4-28
College Students: If you live in K.C. area and need summer employment, call HARLEM JOONEY COLLLECT 911-725-8000 for interview. am 3:30pm to 4:30pm
Research Assistant, B.S. degree. One Semester
July 30th, 1982 **for SIMULTANEOUS INTER-
plus room and minimum** Contact for
B.S. degree, 815-381-6614, K.S.U. *Equal Opportunity*
Business student wanted 1 or 2 days per week to work on accounting and general tax matters. You are a single individual who is very familiar and所会 requested in various会计, Tonganacus, Ka 845-219 Askh.
Teacher for summer program elementary
programs; 455/ month; $255/month; 1-441-655-4-20
Course Information
Person to care for 3 great kids, approximately 20 hours per week. Schedule flexible. Must be able to drive, have own transport. 842-7268/842-5454. 4-20
Attention: Undergraduates. Are you still looking for your summer work program? How does it pay per month averaged $1,098 for a summer work program. How does it pay per month averaged $749-3237. 4-30
Part-time help needed weekends and Mondays A-1 Rental, 2900 Iowa. 4-50
Summer business opportunity—continue
investing your time. Set own hours and earnings. Call
us at (312) 428-7200.
"ADVENTURES IN HEALTH" NERIS DIES
DISTRICTORS NO SELLING TO
NURSE SERVICE GROUP SEND
SASE TO: MR. YOUNG. C/O AIR, BOX
31. STILLWATER, 047 K7467. 4-35
Students: Did your spring break turn out to be a success? If you were still looking for summer work, be able to help. If you are hard worker, be willing to assist. 5227 for interview appointment. 4-30
LOST
PERSONAL
Instant passport, visa, ID, & resume photographs. Custom made portraits b/w/ color. Swells Studio. 749-1611. **tf**
Lost—firme in black case. Friday morning
4-16. Reward. Bali—411-0528.
4-28
Remember, *mother loves you, show her how you feel this Mother's Day. Swell*'s portrait of fine quality, faction guaranteed, of a mother... -80-
Did you have an at the muscular dystrophy superdisease? interested in next year's dance? There will be a dance in Kansas. Kentucky Union's International Room.
Say it on a sweatshirt with custom silk-screen printing 1 to 1000 shirt art by Swelle 749-1811. if
The Keggc--Weekly Specials on Keggs!
Call 841-7650-1610 W. 23rd.
HEADACH, BACKACHE, STIFF NECK,
LEG PAIN? Find and correct the
position of the proximal toe in
chiropractic care. 843-5236.
Blue Cross and Blue Star Insurance
The Kansas is now accepting applications for Summer and Fall Semester business staff positions. Application forms are available from the Office of Student Office, 105 B, Kansas Uison, in the office of Student Organizations and Activities, 220 Strong Hall; and in Room 200 Flint Hall. Applications for applications are in 220 Flint Hall by 09 am Friday, April 30.
Skillet's liquor store serving U-Daly since 1949. Come in and compare. Willard Skillet Ridley. 1906 Mass. 843-8138. tr
Community Auction 700 N.H.
The University Daily Kansei is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer. Applicants must be qualified people regardless of race, religion, color, sex, disability or national origin, age, or ancestry.
Business Staff Positions
COMPRESIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES
Free pregnancy *testing*; early and advanced
i-patient care; gynology; contra-
nial i-patient care i-455 & Roe, Overland Ptz,
913) 642-3000
Red wind break with lining in Wescow on Tuesday night. call, 841-326-04-28
MARY KAY COSMETICS—Full-time beauty consultant. 842-6641. **tf**
Spring format. Barb I'li's Second Hand Rose.
SI Indiana. Open Bills 5. p.m. 842-4766. 4-16
Every Wed. 6:30 p.m.
Consignments Accepted
Wed. 10 a.m. till sale
Sat. 10-5
841-2212
PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH-
RIGHT, 843-4821.
Wanting to talk with someone? Gay & Leanish Peer counselors available through headquarters (814-2343) or information center (864-3506) just call.
$6.95 Per Day SPECIAL
LEASE-A-LEMON
Rent any car (Mon, Tues, Wed)
$6.95 Per Day.
$60 Per Week
$225 Per Month
Television-Televisions-Video Recorders. Name brands only. Factory制版 cartons. Lowest prices in the L.C.A. area. Call for cash. Sound Distributors 4-30 913-384-3000
Cannot be combined with any other specials. All cars are mechanically sound, state inspected and ready to rent We accept checks, cards, visa mastercard 749-4252
Remember, O most gracious Virgin Mary, that never was I known that anyone who came to me was implored by my intercession was left undailed. Inspired by this confidence, I fow to thee, "This is what God intended me to stand saint and sorrowful." O Lady of the Incarnate Sacrament, O master and answer me, Amen.
TAN ME
Guaranteed Safe &
Effective: UVA Tan Beds
Call 841-6232 North Side Court
For Appointment Holiday Plaza
LOOK YOUR BRONZED &
BEAUTIFUL BEST
FREE session (new customers only)
15% OFF
Get ready for the lazy, GATOR DAZZLE game this weekend! Friends (Nike, Boost, Sportmann, Calvin Klein) and a couple of friends (Jim) are waiting during April at Alvamarque Ballpark. The ballpark is a huge, a HALLE MECHANIZDE IS 15% OFF Club or Golf club, is male to male of Kakao Club or Golf club, is male to male of Parkview Parish, is male to female of 8 p.m., is a day a week.
MASSAGE. The Human Body has 640 important pressure spots. Massage has been shown to help people to maintain excellent muscle condition & relaxation for better health.
GREAT HOME for summer sublease. 6 bedrooms in new residential area—4th and Kauai's only, but route to town. Great suite for close to 6 people for 180- and talk to anyone on Georgette Waters at 141-
Graduating seniors: take advantage of our senior portrait special. For information, call Sweils Studio: 748-1611. 4-20
GEORGE'S USED FURNITURE & Antiques
OPEN 9- p.m. 1035 MASS. BUY-SELL-
TRADE 4-30
PICK UP YOUR YEARBOOK IN FRONT OF HOCH TODAY
Dance classes at the Lawnerville School of Ballet will begin in January 2017 and continue in session May 26-June 4. Regular summer session starts June 7.
For schedule 842-4595. 4-30
Romp in the hay with T.J. Call 843-6244 4-28
Vintage clothing—just bought out an estate.
Come see. Inflation Fighter. 8 E.7th. M-Sat.
10-5, 30-10. Twill. tl 8.
Termination of problem pregnancy to 26 weeks LMP
as out-patient
WHCS—Wichita 316-684-5108
Professional privacy and confidentiality
Prompt appts. Mon., thru Sat.
SPECTRUM OPTICAL. Bring in you Dr.esz prescriptions and medication in existing lenses. Free adjustment and longer frames available. Complete repair services. Open 10 a.m., M-4:30 p.m. (until 5 p.m.).
Looking for someone interested in taking a coast to coast bicycle trip this summer.
Phone 841-6668. 4-30
Take a break-stop by Barb's Second Hand Rose, 515 Indiana TUE-SAT. 10-5. 842- 4716. 4-30
Dateline: Friday April 30
toto
totdy
show starts at 9
Kansas Union Ballroom
If you think a meal isn't satisfying with
food, you can try one of these:
11:30-1:30
YOU CAN COME IN!
Happy birthday DeAun. Love from a secret*
admirer.
4-28
White Tie Sale, 20% discount on all jeans,
tops, t-shirts with white tag, Thur. 10-8/
Friday 10-6 Sat. 10-3, April 29, 30 and May
1. Westrand Store, 601 Kauai. 841-6123.
HORIZON
would like to thank you
for letting us make YOUI bind of music for the
kind of music for the
past two years.
See 'ya next year!
FOUND on steps outside of Joe's. One's brunette, 5 foot 4 inches, 105 pounds, soft, cuddly. Will hold. Call 748-2034. 4-30
To the women of 5 and 6 North Corbin:
Thanks for a great year. Love, Missy. 4-28
The story of a man who wanted to keep the world safe for democracy , and meet girls.
Bill Murray stars in Snyder.
Billy Bob. Happy Anniversary, buddy!
These past two months have been terrified-
you're the special person? How do you
later? (your # 1 Education.)
4-28
(after your # 1 Enunciation.)
--center for lessons and rentals
Bilin Mary stays in Simpson
Friday and
Saturday, April 30 and
May 1. 7 a.m and 11 p.m. next to the Union
--center for lessons and rentals
SPENCER MUSEUM BOKSHOP—From April 26–May 13 all day. Buy BOOKS in the store or order from our online extra. Open during gallery hours 4–30 For a good time, call T. J. 843-6244.
SAILRIDER
Catch Some Wind
Call your certified boardsailing
842-2366
Melinda - Serry April 28th at 3 p.m. w/o phone—I don't work at home 6 to 10 p.m. Larry Freeman, 217 Morningside Drive, Lawrence.
Kansas 6044.
JOB18 Get the one you really want. Learn 15 steps to a better resume. Includes sample resumes. $10. P.O. Box 731, Shawna Mission, Ks. 66301. 4-28
Musicians wanted immediately for full or part-time established band. All styles. Good pay 749-3649 4-30
TATTOOING - Clyde's Tattoo Parlor, 1917 W.
39th St. K.C. MK-81-924-530-4
- 4-30
sponsored by the committee for the Preservation of Wildlife in Lawrence.
SAT—MAY 8 (Full Moon!)
w/Whitemound,
Live Music starts at 4:30
w/Low Altitude Cooking.
and continues into the night
Ebeling Bros. & More.
Watch for details and map tomorrow
ALL YOU CAN DRINK
just $4.00
map tomorrow.
Clark D. Sittil, I thank God in my reverence to express your love to God for have you lean upon God for your source of help Keep smiling A. friend PS TShirt Keep smiling A. friend PS TShirt
SERVICES OFFERED
Schneider Wine & Keg Shop—The finest selection of wines in Lawerence-largest supplier of strong kegs. 1610 W. 23rd. 843-3212.
WRITING A RESUME? What to say? How to say to 17? Stop by The House of Uber and visit the house. $20 bus machine on resume to House Uber, $28 machinebus, 8-9 M T 3-9 Sat., NOON-Sun. 3
Professional Stringing Tennis and Racquet-
ball. Best Prices in town. Call 842-5521 or
842-6528.
C
copies now of
$ 3 \frac{1}{2} \textcircled{4} $ self service copies
ENCORE COPY
CORPS
25th and Iowa 842-200
GRADUATE STUDENTS THEISI COPIES.
Why pay more and get less? Encore offers
code mades. Also, the code copies made.
Also, we are the only COPY shop that can offer variable reduction, enlargement and Xerox 15000 quality (Best
Encore Copy Corp). Encore 6000,
842.200-842.300
4-30
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, 825th & Ida. 4-30
RESUMES - Professional; students' resumes a specialty. 841-2654. 4-30
LEARN TENNIS from experienced instructor in small groups with other KU. students or private lessons 642-6713 after 6:00 p.m. tt
Party Picture Opportunities
Would you like to operate your own party picture company in Lawrence, Kansas? If yes is your answer and you would like additional information concerning a local franchise send your name, address, and telephone number along with a brief resume to University Daily Kansan, Box 99, Lawrence, Kansas 66045
TUTORING MATH. STATISTICS. PHYSICS.
Call 841-3164 or 845-1747 (ask for Robert)
Experienced Tap Dance Teacher wants begin-
ning and intermediate students. Will
teach in my home. Call Susan. 749-083-
429
Vid-tapes of Academic Skill Enhancement Workshop. Time Management, Final Examination,中期 shown Free Friday, April 38. Room: 1254 N. 1st Street Center, 1251 Strong Hall. 4-604. 4-30
MOPED-CYCLE RIDERS Experienced cycle mechanic will do tune-up or repairs at reasonable rates. CALL JERRY. 841-5123.
TYPING
SPECTRUM OPTICAL - Do you have a screw box? Broken! Broken! Broken! One day service on lense in most cases. Open 10-6 M.-B41-1154, E. 4.7th. 4-20
House sitter for summer, lawn maintenance etc. included. Call 841-4409, 12-8 or 843-3559. After 8:00.
Tutoring—Math 002—Excellent references.
Cheap, call 942-2428. BUA ticket pans for
sale. 4-30
Experienced typist. Thessa, term papers,
etc. IBM Correting Selectric. Call Sandy
at 5 p.m. 748-818-81. tr
it's a Fact, Fast, Affordable, Clean, Typing,
843-5820. tt
ff
Experienced typist. Term papera, these, all miscellaneous. ICM Correcting Selective Elite or Pica, and will correct spelling. Phone 843-9544 Mr. Wright. If
TIP-TOP TYPING—experienced typetr-IBM Correcting Selective II; Royal Correcting SE 5000 CD. 843-8675.
£
TYPING PLUS. Theses, dissertations, papers, letter, applications, answers. And other compositions, grammars, specialized English, international students' tsf or Americans. 814-6254.
affORDABLE QUALITY for all your typing
affordable: themes, dissertations, resumes,
card, mailings, mle. Call Jody 862-7845
after 8:00 p.m.
Experienced typist will type term papers, books, dissertations, books, etc. Have IBM m-doc correcting Selectic II. Call Terry 842-7454 any time or 842-2671.
For PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myra.
841-4980. tt
Experienced typet- thesis, dissertations,
term papers, misc. IBM correcting selective-
Barb, after 5 p.m. b42-2310.
tr
IRON FENCE TYPING SERVICE. Evenings.
140, 147, 157.
Fast, accurate and experienced typist will type your papers. Reasonable. Call 842- 8091. 4-30
Would like to type dissertations, thesis, term
paper, etc. Call 842-3203. 4-30
Experienced typist will type letters, theads,
and distractions. IBM correcting selectic.
Call Dona at 882-2744. tt
MAGIC FINGERS TYPING SERVICE. 843-
6129. 4-30
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Female housemate for 3 bedroom house 1 block N. of stadium. Serious students, prefer grad. $137.00, 841-6545. 4-28
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ROOMMATE WANTED/AVAILABLE for
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Responsible female non-smoker to share 3
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Furniture, washer/dryer provided. Call
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Call-1-283-4473 after 6 p.m.
Female roommate wanted for summer.
Spacious apartment with pool. $95/month
+ 1/3 utilities. Call 864-1617. 4-30
Page 16 University Daily Kansan, April 28, 1982
4V047CQ
0
Dayhawk
BOB GREENSPAN/Kansan Staff
KU third baseman Joe Heeney has stolen 21 consecutive bases from last season to this, and is currently batting .300 for Kansas.
Heeney leads attack Kansas to face WU
By MIKE ARDIS Sports Writer
The Kansas baseball team will try to get back on a winning track today when they take on Washburn in a doubleheader at 1 p.m. at Quigley Field.
"We've just got to regroup and after them," Coach Marty Pattin said.
The Jayhawks have lost five of their last six games and are 12-39 overall, 6-10 in conference play. While the Hawks were a three-game leader, the four fortunes, one player has changed his.
Joe Heeney returned to third base this year after spending last season in the outfield and is hitting 300. Heeney, who was 19-7 at center, started the season in a slump, hitting .633.
"I just had to go out and work on it. The big thing is not going after bad nitches."
"MY MECHANISIC went bad," Heeney said of his slow start. "I was trying to change too many things.
To go along with his hitting, Heeney leads the Jayhawks in stolen bases with 13 this year. In his two years at KU, Heeney has 23 stolen bases, and he has stolen the last 21 without getting caught.
Last Wednesday, Heeney set a KU single-game stolen base record with five thefts. He broke Steve Jetz's record of four in 1980. Jetzt also has the KU stolen base total with 65 in his career.
"They weren't keeping us close." Heeney said of Baker. "They couldn't move to keep us close."
HEENEY WAS recruited for third base out of Shawnee Mission West but was put in the outfield after last year's warm addition of Russ Blaylock at third.
"It's good to be back." Heeney said earlier this year. "I've played third all my life."
With the return of Heeney to third and Mark Gile to second base, the Kansas infield was thought to be one of the best in years.
Early in the season the infielders had problems, and most of those problems came from the field itself. With little grass on the infield and a rising hip on the inside edge of the infield, the players were getting a lot of bad hops.
Recent work on the infield, including the removal of the lip, has helped the performance of the infelders.
"When you know you're going to get a good hop it's easier," Heeney said. "It was self-defense out there.
"The field is in a lot better shape. It gives you confidence. You know where the ball is going to be."
Joe was joined in right field by his brother, Jim Heineen, this year, until Jim fractured his wrist last Wednesday against Baker.
If Joe can remain healthy, the Jahayhwars are set at third, and Pattin recognizes Heeney's importance to the team.
"You can't say enough about Joe Heeney," he said. "He's carrying the team."
The Jayhawks will close out their home season this weekend against Kansas State.
Softball team splits with Emporia State
By TOM COOK Sports Writer
Becky Craft said she knew it was going to be a bad day.
Craft, the third baseman for the KU women's softball team, missed the first game of yesterday's double-header broken nose in pre-game w-ups.
She returned from the doctor's office to start the second game, only to see the Jayhawks fail, 9-7 during their quest for a third. The Warriors won the tournament, May 27-30 at Nahona, Neb.
THE JAYHAWKS, however, did win the opener, 6-1 KU coach Bob Staindiff said he was confident the Jayhawks won the game — a bid for the national tournament.
Kansas, 29-16, is in the middle of an eight-game home stand this week. The Jayhawks are scheduled for a doubleheader today at Holcom Sports Complex against the Wichita State Shockers. Games are at 5 and 7 p.m.
Then they will creighton for two games on Friday and come back to play Southwest Missouri State on Saturday. Stanciflank said the Jayhawks needed to play well this week if they were to receive a bid.
"Losing to Emporia State won't hurt our chances that much for an NCAA berth," Stantliff said. "Still, you don't like to lose at a Div. II school."
Stancliff the NCA4 committee that selects the final 16 teams for the national tournament had ranked Kansas in the top 14 a few weeks ago.
STANCLIFT SAID he figured the Jayhawks were probably third in Region VI teams, behind Oklahoma State and Creighton. The NCAA took two players from each region in the country, and possibly two teams from some regions.
Kansas came out like gangbusters against Emporia State in the first game. Rhonda Clarke struck out 15 batters and scattered five hits as she threw her 18th shot of the season for the Jawhays. Her record is now 24-15.
"Our games with Creighton are very important, as Kancock said. "We have to just trust a kancock."
The Hawks broke out of their offensive slump with 10 hits, including a 3-for-3 performance from Kim Cobb. Pam Cox ripped two hits, but was denied another when an apparent home run was nullified because she missed third base.
With two outs, Garwood ripped a
single, scoring Fox and Ascendio. Cobb
hammered a triple, which scored
Garwood, and Myrtle's single scored
In the second gear, Kansas outhit Emoryia State 13-3, but still lost.
GLORIA GARWOOD scored KU's run in the second after reaching base on a fielder's choice. She went to second base on Cobb's single and scored when Emporia State's center fieldier misplayed a ball hit by Shawn Myrtle.
A first-inning fiasco for the Jahwahs spelled defeat. Tammy Hoffman started on the mound for Kansas, and, when the dust cleared, Emporia State had scored all nine of its runs on just one hit.
Clarke started things in the third with a triple, her second of the year. Shelly Fox walked and Becky Ascencio bowed with a single that droved in Clarke.
The Jayhawks scored once in the second inning and five times in the third.
EMPORIA STATE took advantage of five walks and three Kansas errors, forcing Hoffman to leave the game with two outs in the first.
"It was my fault letting Tammy go
Standluck. I hate piling pilots when
Stancluck. I hate piling pilots when
mistakes behind them are the things that let in the runs."
HOFFMAN FACED 12 battles before being relieved by Clarke. Clarke struck out the first batter she faced, her first of eight for the game, to end the inning.
Clarke then held Emporia State scoreless for the remainder of the game, limiting them to two hits. Emporia Hawks attempted a furious comeback.
"The Jayhawks are down right now." Stanliff said, "We hate to lose that game to that team. You can't spot anyone nine runs on one hit.
NORIA STATE 29
"But I don't think losing it is going to be much of a problem. They'll bounce back."
Becky Craft, KU third baseman, played in the second game of yesterday's double-header with Emporia State, despite having her nose broken by an errant ground ball in pre-game warm-ups. Kansas won the first game, 6-0, and lost the second, 9-7.
Sims first NFL pick
By United Press International
NEW YORK—The National Football League draft didn't only bring smiles to the faces of Kemeth Sims and the rest of his college teammates yesterday. It also fulfilled the wishes of All-Pres Bros Jones, Russ Francis and Mike Barber.
Sims, 6-foot-6, 256-pound defensive end from Texas, as expected was the first pick in the draft, going to the New England Patriots. But the rest of the first round selections were overshadowed by deals that sent Jones and Barber to Los Angeles and Francis to San Francisco.
After Baltimore took Mississippi State linebacker Johnie Cooks and
after the first six rounds held after, no KU players had been drafted.
Baltimore traded Jones, one of the nation's top quarterbacks, to Los Angeles for the Rams' first-and-second draft pick this year. The Colts then selected the man they hope will be Jones' heir, Art Schlicher of Ohio State, with the choice obtained from Los Angeles.
Later in the first round, New England sent Francis, the former All-Pro tight end who sat out last season on the Philadelphia team and Francisco for two high draft choices.
Cleveland took linebacker Chip Banks of Southern California, the wheeling
Rovals' winning streak snapped
Bv United Press International
BOSTON—Carl Vastrazemski singled home two runs and Bob Stanley picked five innings of shutout relief last night to lead Boston to its eight straight triumph, a 7-5 victory over the Kansas City Rivals.
Kansas City jumped to a 1-0 lead in the first inning when John Wathan singled, stole second, went to third on starter Dennis Eckersley's throwing error on an attempted pickoff and scored on George Brett's infield out.
Boston's 10th victory in its last 11 games.
The loss snapped a three-game Kansas City winning streak and was
Boston went into the lead for good when dim Rice scored on a double-play in the fourth.
Scoreboard
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Basketball
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Quarterfinal Round
Best of Seven
Western Conference
olies 115, Phoenix 98, Los Angeles leads
Los Angeles 115, Phoenix 96 (Los Angle -
San Antonio 90, Seattle 97 (San Antonio lea-
ts)
Hockey
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Conference Finals
Wales Conference
Wales Conference
New York islanders 4, Quebec 1 (islanders lead arenas)
Soccer
Vancouver 2, Chicago 1, 2 OT (Vancouver leads series 1-4)
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Quarterfinals
Best of the
Eastern Division
30-38 Baltimore at Pittsburgh
30-28 Denver at Louisville
28-28 Chicago at Cleveland
Coke
BESTWEIGHT STATE Team W L Pct GB
Nebraska 15 5 740 -
Okahanna State 12 4 750 -
Oklahoma 9 4 750 -
Okahanna 8 5 612%
Kansas 6 5 375 7
Iowa State 6 5 175 10
Kansas 6 10 125 11
Baseball
BIG EIGHT STANDING
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Team W 12 L Pct GB
W 12 1 6 .67 -
Boston 12 6 60%
Houston 6 6 60%
Cleveland 6 9 400%
Toronto 6 11 43%%
Toronto 6 11 43%
AMERICAN LEAGUE Eastern Division
California 14 10 737
Chicago 5 9 765 2%*
Chicago 10 7 563 3%*
Seattle 9 7 563 2%*
Indianapolis 8 10 444 6%
Texas 10 9 400 5%
Tampa Bay 9 10 400 5%*
SUPER SALAD
MARYS RESULTS
Oakland at Ballard in appl.
Boston 7, Kansas C8
Toronto 6, Texas 4
California 3, New York 1, called after 7 innings
California 3, New York 1, called after 7 innings rain
Chicago 10, Milwaukee 7
Seattle 7, Cleveland 4, 11 innings
Detroit 5, Minnesota 2
NATIONAL LEAGUE
San Diego 12 4 790
Miami 13 5 7922
Los Angeles 9 8 344
Houston 12 12 4000
Cincinnati 8 11 400
San Francisco 7 11 3533
Team W 12 W 9 Pct. GR
Miami 3 5 6 643
Montreal 7 8 643
New York 8 8 407
Chicago 7 12 407
Chicago 6 12 364
Chicago 6 12 786
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Eastern Division
Cincinnati 10, Amherst 9
Pittsburgh 10, Atlanta 4
Charlotte 9, Detroit 8
San Diego 8, New York 5
Los Angeles 9, Philadelphia 6
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The University Daily
KANSAN
JORN HANXAMMER/Kansan Staff
Thursday, April 29, 1982
Vol. 92, No. 143 UPSS 650-640
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
1970
Fritz Menniger, senior, attempts to juggle in the rain yesterday in front of Flint Finn. Menniger is majoring in exercise science.
Pay increase still undecided by committee
By COLLEEN CACY Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
TOPEKA—A House-Senate conference committee haggled over a classified employee salary increase in night, but was unable to reach the agreement between increases of 7.5 percent and 7.5 percent.
The committee agreed to decide the final recommendation today, after the Legislature extended the 1982 session another day.
Members of the House Ways and Means Committee told the Senate panel that they would settle for an increase of no less than 7.5 percent of their budget, which includes KU's classified employees.
The 7.75 percent would be split between a 6.5 percent cost-of-living increase and a 1.25 percent merit increase.
Classified employees are all University employees, except members of the faculty and administration.
But the Senate Ways and Means Committee members, led by Chairman Paul Hess, R-Wichita, were equally insistent that they would go no higher than 7.5 percent. Hess said the Senate was flexible on the 7.5 percent between cost-of-living and merit increases.
"I hear all the time that classified employees are at the bottom of the list, but that just isn't true." Hess said.
The Senate originally recommended a 7 percent increase, with 5.75 percent for cost-of-living raises and 1.25 percent for merit.
in what Houses the Speaker Wendell Lady, R-Overland Park, yesterday amended the proposal to a 6 percent cost-of-living increase and a 2.5 percent merit boost for a total of 8.5 percent.
The amendment represented an increase of about 84 million, according to the legislative body.
He said the average state employee made about $14,000 each year.
numerous employees have said that their salaries are to low compared to faculty
research staff:
"Employees at universities who are getting much lower than the faculty won't be getting their fair share," Lady said.
salary increases.
But Hess that figures from the research staff showed that since 1971 classified salary increases have been slightly higher than faculty salary increases.
He said the average faculty salary increase last year was 175 percent and the average faculty salary increase for new faculty was 209 percent.
However, classified employees said their salaries were not comparable to the faculty
Classified employees are guaranteed only a
see C1 CLASSIFIED page 5
Weather
It will be mostly cloudy and cool today with a high temperature of 60 and winds from the east at 5 to 15 mph, according to the National Weather Service
Skies will be partly cloudy tonight with lows in the mid-48s. Tomorrow will be partly cloudy, with highs in the mid-50s. The chance of thunderstorms of showers and thunderstorms.
1983 budget OK'd by Student Senate
By ANN LOWRY
Staff Reporter
The Student Senate passed the fiscal 1983 budget again last night, this time for a total allocation of $60,760.
The Senate had passed a previous allocation for about $72,000, based on a Senate subcommittee's recommendation, but David Adkins, student body president, vetoed that.
The second budget to be approved followed recommendations that Adkins wrote for cuts to get the budget closer to the $25,000 allocated to student groups by the Senate Code.
"I realize cuts had to be made somewhere," David Zimmerman, finance and auditing committee and budgets subcommittee cochairman, said. "I just wish the initiative had
The cums came from a number of student group budgets, but the bulk of the cuts, about $10,000, came from the requests of KJHJ Radio, the Services and Hilltop Child Development Center.
come from the Senate and not the executives. It's been dictated by the executives for too long."
Loren Busby, holdover senator and so... finance and auditing chairman, said. "That's what happens when you have a bunch of minions who follow what one person says without question."
The Senate later voted to allocate $1,650 to KJHP
Killen's监察所 and $1,467 to Hillip
Hillip's监察所.
The rationale for cutting Hilton and WTCS, the said, was that they served specialized groups.
In his amended budget, Adkins also recommended funding cuts for international student
KU administrator sees student attitude change
By ANN WYLIE Staff Reporter
Students' attitudes toward themselves and society have become more healthy and realistic since 1970, the year of the Kent State and Jackson State campus uprisings, and the year the Kansas Union burned, David Amstrup's chancellor for student affairs, said yesterday.
Students in the 1960s had a negative attitude, he said.
"I really worry about the mental health of students who find little to be happy about and demonstrate very little in the way of a sense of humor," he said.
Ambler began working in the administration of student life at Kent State in
The University of Kansas was a different type of university when Amber came here in 1977, he said, with different students and more tradition.
But the difference was deeper than just a change of campus. Amber said. Students' attitudes in general had changed.
Some KS student readers agree
I think the trend has been moving from
acting against the system toward acting
student senator and
Prince William schoolboy.
Ambler said he thought there was a paradox between students' words and their realities (1900) 98.
"they talked a good game," he said. "They
nailed a different one."
FOR EXAMPLE, he said, although students discussed the importance of love and caring, many were hostile toward others.
Students now are more able to treat people, Ambler said.
"And yet, I found a lot of them to be a lot less caring than the previous generation or this one, especially if they met with people whose values were different from their own."
"I think it's the method of expression that has changed."
But Cramer said, "I don't think their feelings toward each other have changed.
Amler said a childhood market by a combination of post-war affection and mass communications might have been responsible for a 60% student's inability to communicate.
Hours of watching TV turned children into spectators rather than participants in life, he
I think they came to college with a lack of
See ATTTTUDES page 5
At 92, a walking history book
Russian veteran, Vlada, recalls wars
By DEBBIE DOUGLASS Staff Reporter
The suitcase.
It is a peculiar size, somewhere between small and medium, and is made out of tightly matted
It shows signs of wear. A corner joint has been replaced and one seam is tearing. It is scuffed, and the toe is dislaced.
"It was the first thing American that I ever owned," Vladimir Mochanyuk explained.
"I BOUGHT it when I was in Poland fighting for the Russian army in the first World War. It follow me through the first World War and I went to Yugoslavia, and I came with it to Lawrence."
Like his suitcase, Vlada, his nickname, shows some signs of age.
At 92, he has to use a magnifying glass to read
and he can maintain with his hearing aid,
for his hearing.
"There just aren't many people left like him who witnessed the first World War and the Civil War in Russia. He's like a walking history book," she said.
Vilma moved to Lawrence from Yugoslavia five years ago to live with his daughter, Galina Kuzmanovic, who is a library associate in Watson Library's Slavic department.
WatsonLAB, "He was all alone," Galina said. "None of his friends or relatives in Yugoslavia were still alive."
Vlada served in the Russian army during World War II, as a captain. He had three cannions captured.
He said toward the end of the war with the Germans in 1917, his three cannons were shooting 2.500 rounds a day.
"IT DAMAGED my hearing badly," he said. "You were supposed to open your mouth when the cannon fired, then it doesn't hurt your ears."
could not open my mouth every time the cannon
would hit him. It is not possible," he said,
but it has hit him.
Vade demonstrated the situation of having to open his mouth while fighting, then laughed at its
The war left a lasting impression on vinaa.
"My daughter asks me why I talk about the
The war left a lasting impression on Vinda.
"Once a man directly in front of me, a
Coxassie was hit by gun fire first," she said,
explaining the guns.
war so much," he said, leaning forward, his clenched fists resting on his knees.
"It was so deep. I saw all the butching and killing ground one, and that impressed me so much," he said.
He said that he remembered one time watching a nicely dressed, well-disciplined regiment of 4,000 officers and soldiers go into battle. After training, only one officer and maybe 100 soldiers survive.
HIS BLUE EYES reddened at the edges, but tears did not come.
year but not quite.
"After seeing that and other similar scenes, I hate the military service and I hate war," he said.
Vlada said there were many times during the war that he was almost killed.
Revolution
'After seeing that and other similar scenes, I hate the military and I hate war.'
—Vladimir Movchanyuk, Survivor of World War I and Russian
the sign of the cross, he exclaimed, "Thank God!"
"He saved my life," Vlada said, and motioning
"You know," he said, "all my life I've followed the American words 'In God we trust.'
"Whenever I was in danger, particularly when I was threatened that God would help me and save me."
After the Russians withdrew from World War II, Khalda said there was a civil war to contend with.
He said that the Red Army, led by people such as Lenin and Trotsky, was fighting against the White Army, which supported the former Russian government under the Czar.
"I DID NOT know whether to join the White Army or not," Viral said, shrugging. "I didn't want to fight in either. I didn't believe the White Army was going to win." We knew I knew they were in a poor position politically."
We were in poor condition.
He said he went home to Kursk in South
Russia, but the Red Army had gained control there.
"The Reds forced me to register in their army. They divided the forces in Kursk into four groups, and the first three were sent immediately to fight. I was in the fourth group.
"Not one of those men who went returned from the fighting in one piece. They were either wounded or killed," Vlada said, in a disgusted tone of voice.
He leaned back then in his chair and smiled.
"Before I had to go off and right, a friend or mine gave me a job as a physical education instructor in a middle school, and I was excused from duty.
"I was always a good sportman," he said, squinting as one abmoucher and getting up, demowning the other. "I am very hard."
"I DO MY exercises every day for a half hour in the morning," he said. "Resides that, if the weather is cooperative, I walk for at least an hour every day."
Vlada said that in the United States he had a very comfortable life.
"never lived my life in better conditions than I live now in the United States. I never had fresh air, clean water and fresh food."
He said that as an officer before World War I, he had eaten well, but he said he had mainly eaten brown bread, cheese, borsch, a cabbage and beef soup, and kasha, a cooked cereal.
"Even when I was a young officer stationed in the Far East, my life wasn't as comfortable as it
and be船上, taking the ship. Looking up at the ceiling, Vlada said that when he and his wife left Russia in the fall of 1920, they went on a boat across the Black Sea to Turkey.
...when we reached Constantinople (now Istanbul), the Turkish government quarantined us, and so we had to spend 15 days on the island. And when we left the island, so I've done without food for you," Vlada said.
But after three months of teaching, the White Army came close to Kurak, and he joined it in its headquarters.
WHEN THE WHITE Army lost the civil war, Vlada said, if I fed south to the Black Sea and then went on boats and ships to Turkey, where they found a more remote and less guarded country more than 120,000 refugees. The rule was that
See VLADA page 5
The late Dr.
**CORNER HANDSTITCH** **MARSHAL A**
A former officer in the Cear's army during the Russian Revolution in the early 1890s, 1890-xm-04
Vladimir Mcvanchyan new resides in Lawrence with his daughter.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, April 29, 1982
News Briefs From United Press International
Argentina threatens to deal first blow in Falkland crisis
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina - Argentine said yesterday war with Britain was hours away and warned it might strike first in a pre-emptive attack against the British fleet, now almost within shooting range of the Falkland Islands.
The armed forces were on "yellow alert," the highest alert short of war itself, amid reports that the arrival of a 40-ship British war fleet was imminent.
moment.
The government, however, left the door open for a last-ditch peace settlement. It said a new set of U.S. proposals were under study and had not been rejected as reported by Arentine newspapers.
Britain announced that its fleet would impose a total air and sea blockade starting at 7 a.m. Friday.
in washington, the State Department said Secretary of State Alexander Hage was ready to飞 to Buenos Aires again if the Argentines gave him the
Argentine Foreign Minister Nicanor Costa Mendez met with Haig for more than a year, after attending an emergency meeting of the Organization of American States.
Emerging from his meeting with Haig, Costa Mendez said Haig was always welcome in Buenos Aires. If Haig makes the trip, it will be his third visit to the Argentine capital since the crisis arose with Argentina's invasion of the British-rulesed South Atlantic islands April 2.
Reagan, O'Neill disagree on budget
WASHINGTON—President Reagan traveled the "extra mile" to Capitol Hill yesterday for a summit meeting with Democratic House Speaker Thomas O'Neil, but the effort to reach a budget compromise ended in disagreement after three hours.
Senate Republican Leader Howard Baker has told the Senate Budget Committee to begin work on Reagan's original $767 billion budget proposal. Sen. Paul Laxalt, R-Nev., Reagan's closest friend in the Senate, said, "Senkuk Ixydisapprotized as bell."
Sen. Paul Laxalt, R-Nev., Reagan's closest friend in the Senate, said,
"Frankly, I'm disappointed as hell."
Reagan was asked before the session began whether he was willing to compromise.
And O'Neil quipped, "We're in the Reagan stockade."
"I'm always willing," Reagan said.
Gunmen hijack Honduran airliner
TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras--Three first gunmen hijacked a Honduran airline yesterday that included 15 Americans among the 48 people aboard and threatened to kill a U.S. executive if their demands were not met, officials said.
necessary. At least seven Americans were among a group of 13 women and a child freed by the hikers in response to the attack, and for their release they were able to travel to the U.S. Embassy sponsorship.
as type-Contributor.
The thieves, members of a guerrilla group tied to a series of anti-Anti-Government bombings, demanded that the Honduran government release an unspecified number of political prisoners and provide a full account of missing people who have "disappeared" for political reasons.
Before issuing any demands, the hijackers asked to speak to Monsignor Andres Díaz Montizemelo, the Honduran representative for Pope John Paul II.
Terrorists burn Ulster bus station
BELFAST, Northern Ireland—Five masked Irish Republican Army terrorists burst into the Armagh bus station early yesterday, held two guards at gunpoint and set off incendiary devices that destroyed 24 buses and the depot in a raging fire.
Firefighters stood helplessly by as the building burned because a car blocking the depot entrance was thought to be booby-trapped, police said.
The IRA claimed responsibility for the attack, which caused no injuries. Damage was estimated at $1.35 million.
The car, which security forces suspected might contain a powerful fragmentation bomb, was later found to be harmless by British Army explosives experts. Police said the car, which belonged to one of the night watchmen, was parked in the building entrance by one of the terrorists.
Poland to release 1,000 prisoners
WARSHA, Poland—Polaris's military leaders said yesterday they would release 1,000 Poles being held in internment camps and would lift the nationwide curfew Sunday. Solidarity Leader Lech Walesa will not be among those freed, his wife said.
the official PAP news agency said to the government, with the approval of the martial law leader, Gen. Wojciech Jaruzelski, decided to release those internees whose conduct showed they "will pose no threat to social and state security" in Poland, where martial law was imposed Dec. 13.
The Interior Ministry warned, however, that tough measures would be used against those who tried to resume their political activity.
Among the internees already released was the chairman of the rural Solidarity, Jan Kulaj, who was reported to have had talks with Deputy Premier Roman Malinowski on agricultural issues.
NAHAL TELEM, Israeli-Occupied West Bank—Israeli troops shot and wounded 10 Palestinian demonstrators yesterday on Israel's Independence Day, and government officials dedicated nine new outposts on occupied Arab land.
Ten Palestinian demonstrators shot
The new outposts were dedicated with vows of no more retreats in an attempt to sooth Israel hardliners three days after Israel returned the final third of the Sinai to Egypt, thereby destroying Jewish settlements there in the process.
the process.
Also yesterday, the U.N. General Assembly overwhelmingly passed a resolution declaring Israel was not a peace-loving state and condemning its recent actions against Palestinians in occupied Arab territory.
The resolution fell short of demanding Israel's expulsion from the Assembly after its supporters withdrew that demand under pressure from the United States and other countries.
Brady to testify at Hinckley trial
WASHINGTON—White House Press Secretary James Brady, nearly killed by a bullet fired at President Reagan, is willing to testify at the trial of accused gunman John Hincock Jr., his wife said yesterday.
Brady's wife, Sarah, said that her husband was prepared to tell his story in court, but it is uncertain whether prosecutors would call him to the stand.
Mrs. Brady said, "We've never been told one way or the other," but there had been a conversation with the prosecutor's office on the possibility of Brady appearing in court.
Because the defense has conceded that Hinkley fired the gun, the largest presumed value of Brady's testimony would be to help prosecutors drive him out.
Woman named to run male prison
SACRAMENTO, Calif.-State Corrections Director Ruth Rushn yesterday named the first woman warden of an all-male California prison to replace a superintendent whose staff allegedly took a convicted murderer shopping in Beverly Hills.
If Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. approves the appointment of veteran corrections administrator Midge Carroll, 45, as warden at the California Institution for Men at Chino, she will become the first woman to head a California prison for men.
She was placed in the $532.3-year post at China, a 3,600-mile complex, on a provisional basis following Monday of Superintendent's swearing-in and Deputy Superintendent's swearing-in.
A Department of Corrections spokesman, Phil Guthrie, said that the action was related to investigators' finding that the convicted murderer was escorted from the prison to Beverly Hills to buy clothing, "contrary to department regulations."
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Art Ensemble of Chicago Urban Bushmen
Robert Palmer of the New York Times calls it "... music of awesome terocity," adding, "'... it is a phantasmagorical expedition into the heart of darkness—a trip worth taking, but not a trip to be taken lightly." A two-record set documenting the brilliant Munich performance of Lester Bowie, Joseph Jarmon, Roscoe Mitchell, Malachi Favors Maghostut and Famoudou Don Moye.
Carla Bley
Carla Bley Live!
Yes, that's Lester Bowie, celebrated trumpeter of the Art Ensemble of Chicago, and yes, that's a remake of the classic Platters hit "The Great Pretender. And everything else you might and might not expect from the boss of the modern trumpet ("Boston Phoenix"). With Philip Wilson (drums), Donald Smith (piano). Fred Williams (bass), Hamlet Bluett (baritone saxophone). Fontella Bass (vocals) and David Peaston (vocals).
Musician has called her "America's Great and Neglected Post-Bop, Pre-Avant, Neo-Modern Fe-Male Jazz Composer." Those who already know her music realize, of course, that she's much, much more. Her latest from WATT/ECM, Carla Bley Live!, recorded with her band last July in San Francisco.
On ECM Records & Tapes Manufactured and distributed by Warner Bros. Records
W-12 On ECM Records & Tapes Manufactured and distributed by Warner
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University Daily Kansan, April 29, 1982
Page 3
Libraries secure grants to catalogue collections
By DOUG CUNNINGHAM Staff Reporter
The University of Kansas libraries next year will receive about $168,000 in outside grants that will allow it to catalogue and process material that it otherwise not process now, Mary Hawkins, assistant dean of libraries and coordinator for library grant activities, said recently.
The grants mean that students and researchers will have better access to library materials, she said.
The National Historical Publications and Records Commission granted the libraries approximately $26,000 to process the business papers of a member of the late 1800s. The grant also provided for the cleaning, preservation and storage of the papers.
THE NATIONAL Endowment for the Humanities granted the KU libraries $139,800 to catalogue and process a collection of British manuscript to the University. The grant stars July 1 and runs for two years.
"The funding agencies expect that the regular budget will provide for normal acquisitions and normal processing of material," she said.
The grants are intended to supplement the regular library budget, Hawkins said.
Part of the reason the University has received the grants is that the library has especially good collections in a number of areas.
"The grants tend to build on existing strengths." Hawkins said.
FUNDING AGENCIES, especially at the federal level, are very interested in cooperative arrangements among libraries, she said.
Most grants that the University receives are for the cataloguing and processing of material. Once this material has been catalogued, information about it can be placed in a database. We are also shared with other libraries, Hawkins said.
The library is now in the process of producing a book catalogue of about 14,000 volumes in a history of economics collection. Hawkins said. The book is one of the catalogued with an earlier grant from the Department of Education.
THAT GRANT WAS for $253,656,
and ran from Oct. 1, 1979, to Feb.
28, 1982. It was because of that grant
he received a grant to grant
to produce the book catalogue.
The library submits about six applications a year for grants, she said, and faces stiff competition for them.
"It's highly competitive, particularly with some of the federal cutbacks," she said.
However, Hawkins said the library has not noticed that the availability of grants has been decreasing drastically.
on campus
LAWRENCE TOYOTA/MAZDA
TODAY
THE KU AMATEUR RADIO CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. on the second floor of Learned Hall.
Lewiston THE JAYHAWK SPORTS CAR CLUB will meet at 7:30 p.m. in 4037 Wescoe.
TOMORROW
LAWRENCE TOYOTA/MAZDA
LAWRENCE TOYOTA/MAZDA
A DANCE PROGRAM by student choreographers will be performed at 8 p.m. in 240 Robinson Center.
THE UNDERGRADUATE BIOLOGY CLUB will meet at 4 p.m. in the sunflower Room of the Kansas Union.
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year at a time agreeable to Scholl and winner. Winners will be selected in a random drawing conducted by an independent judging agency, whose decisions will be final. Only one prize per household. No prize substitutions will be allowed. Prizes are not transferable. Retail value of all prizes is $117,000. 5. Winners will be responsible for any federal state, or local taxes. Sweepstakes is open to all residents of the United States, except employees of Scholl its affiliated companies or agencies, their immediate families, and where prohibited by law. All federal, state, local laws and regulations apply. Proof of eligibility may be required. 6. Sweepstakes entries that are in any way illegible, irregular or not in conformity with these rules will be rejected and treated as void. 7. Grand and Second prize winners must sign an appropriate waiver of liability, and if they are under 18 years of age, must be accompanied by parent or legal guardian. 8. For a list of prize winners, send a self-addressed envelope to Winners List Scholl Step into A Dream! Sweepstakes, PO Box 7352, Chicago Illinois 60680 After November 1, 1982
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Page 4 University Daily Kansan, April 29, 1982
Opinion
Good news semester
I've taken to calling spring 1982 the "good news, semester." It has been uneventful, but there's still something going on.
During the semester, there were important and complex stories to cover—such as the preparation for KU's new pre-enrollment system, or the letter of inquiry the NCAA sent KU administrators or the fight for approval of KU's budget.
MICHAEL L. FLEISCHER
Spring 1982 might seem a little bland to those who advocate the gum-ho, muckraking, write-it
But there were few big stories. And no big scandals. None of the stories that editors think about when they eat, study or brush their teeth. None of the stories that dreams about when they finally find sleep.
VANESSA HERRON
today-and-think-about-it-tomorrow brand of journalism.
Part of the reason that there were so few crimes to contend with could be that many crimes never happened.
One story, which was published last month,
illustrates the point.
On a midwinter day, a Kansas reporter swept into the newsroom breathlessly telling of a doctor she had heard was prescribing a drug improperly. The story she whipped up was well-written and exciting—but editors decided it also was unprintable.
A few weeks later, after a lot of fact-checking and rewriting, the story was quietly published on
It contained the same facts it had before, but it was a little less breathless and a little more fair.
Kansan editors faced a similar decision on the day several KU football players were arrested. Editors met, then thought for a long time: How should the story be written and displayed? Should it be on page 1 with a banner headline? Or on the sports page? Or should we publish it at
In the end, we decided to run the story unobstructively, just as we would publish a story on any other sport column. Then we took another sports column that examined the effect the incident would have on the team.
And we didn't regret our decision.
The biggest problem that editors had to face reached its climax at the end of the semester. That problem, the publication of all salaries, was unprecedented.
it took much longer for the staff to compile the
lists than the editors had anticipated. As the last week of classes approached, the editors met again to weigh the possible effects of the salaries' publication.
Would it seem that we had published the list, then retreated before readers could react? Would it be as if the Kanass was simply trying to double it? Would it cause more harm than good?
We didn't have ready answers, and we didn't have the power to force the future. We did, however, have the strong belief that the end result of the list's publication would be positive.
In the days after the list was published, the Kansan received angry phone calls and letters. Administrators weren't as friendly as they used to be. But the deans of the School of Journalism, who had absolutely nothing to do with the salaries, bore the brunt of the criticism.
(monday, after the classified salaries were published, a dean leaked weakly against his door and asked me, "There isn't a third part, is there?" )
Now, the hailstorm of criticism already has diminished. Some professors have said they approved of the Kansan's decision. And we still doubt that they can benefit from the knowledge we have given them.
One of our only regrets is that after this semester, Kansan staff members will not be able to work with Rick Musser, associate professor of journalism. Musser's official title is "general manager" of the Kansan and his unofficial title is "Uncle Rick."
Paul Jess, the professor of journalism who will take over as general manager, is talented and knowledgeable, and at Kansas parties, he can handle it as well as the next man. But Musser still will be missed.
With Musser's guidance (and sometimes when his guidance was tactfully withheld) staff members learned about reporting and citing, they learned how to present evidence they learned, the newspaper steadily improved.
On Jan. 14, in the first Kansan, I outlined my plans for the semester. The Kansan was going to feature more local news and more news about people who are affected by policies. And the new staff was going to uphold the Kansan's fine national reputation.
They did. This semester, Anne Calovich, a Kansas reporter, won first place in news writing in the Heist Competition—the Pulitzer Prize of college journalism. Her efforts and those of other staff members helped the KU School of Journalism place third overall in the competition.
On some days, the staff members did not meet all those goals. But they kept at least one promise I made for them—they always tried their best.
Just as I predicted four months ago, our best was more than good enough.
Some help to build insight others only tear it down
The cycle of experience giving rise to the reflective moment has been both breadmill and
I have between times been enrolled as an undergraduate and a graduate student, been disenrolled as well as disenrtrailed, visited, and finally returned and graduated.
I felt a sincere moment of deja vu Monday when the bus containing me and my fellow glee-clubbers rolled down the grass-lined back entrance to the main campus, Mainsdrive Math.
I was singing second tenor as a sophomore in my high school choir during our annual field trip in 1971 when another bus rolled up the drive and revealed the Hill to me for the first time.
10
W.J. ANDREWS
ferris wheel. The treadmill side is a frenetic abyss wherein no matter what you know, pretend to know, or are supposed to know, knowledge is as a tricked and tricked into parsing. And insight is a fantasy.
The ferris wheel side is a flowing sensation of academic euphoria and personal growth. In
Both sides have been, without a doubt, rewarding, depending on what one perceives as
Rewarding for me are the experiences that have opened doors and twisted knobs in this mechanical gray mass between my ears called "brain."
Even more rewarding are the rooms these doors opened on, and the lights these knobs turned on, so that I might rummage through the newfound space for insight, and see it at all
Insight shows up when the going gets crazy and your dendrites and axons are screaming. The edge of perception is cutting at the tie-ropes of your essence.
The hard part is to let go and realize that those ropes only hold up a curtain that keeps one from seeing insight that lie beyond points at which normal curiosity is satisfied, points beyond
which one might normally be unafraid to pursue his "self."
But this dangerous mission of hide and seek with the unbounds of your inner workings is well known.
Each nudge bumps you along the rhythm run through life, propelling you in the direction of your desired destination.
I received a vademag, catalyzed by my glee-club v. that has been—for me—quired delayed in court.
I used to think the world was full of good people, and good people gone bad because of circumstance-making good people and victimized people.
But I've realized there are also a few fools.
Fools are insincere. They continually attempt to pull back other people's curtains, because they are afraid of pulling back their own. They have neither the strength nor perseverance to break their own social structural on their own lives, so they define themselves by the breakdown of another's structure.
They find a person whose structure is sound, so that when they break it down they can say, "Look, he slipped and fell, so I must be better balanced than him."
A fool is someone who wastes his life, the
sacrifice. They can be found everywhere, even in
the streets.
But the thing the fool never realizes—his inherent mistake—is that this process of sabotage is merely an experience the good man has made, and the bad man has the expense of the fool. Sincere is as sincere does.
It is as if to mention there is a Catch-22 to sincerity. If you are sincere you will suffer sometimes, but gain great rewards. If you are saddened, but gain not, but remain a fool, and a stranger to yourself.
And the fool will always be a fool, and when finally left alone, will crumble. Fool funerals are unreliable.
This final piece is neither warning nor advice,
but indulgence. It is reflection. The recognition of
these things has been the result.
The best bet is to pull our curtains, together,
thanks for helping me pull mine Kansas. I love
them.
KANSAN
The University Daily
Goodbye to the fools.
(USPS 605-649) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Monday and Thursday during June and July except Saturday, Sunday and both days in September. Mail subscription requests to USPS, University of Kansas, Box 218, Douglasville, GA 30176 or by mailing $8 for a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are B$A seminar, paid through the student activity fee. Postmaster: change of addresses of the University Daily Kanal, Pint Hill, The University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 60782.
Business Manager
Nateale Jude
John Oberzan
Rick Musser
Vanessa Herron
Sales and Marketing Adviser...
General Manager and News Adviser
---
THIS PILE OF ASH (ACTUAL SIZE) IS ALL THAT'S LEFT OF SID AND ALICE AND THEIR 3 CHILDREN.
THEY LIVED AT GROUND ZERO WHERE THE MISSILE STRUCK. THE WHOLE FAMILY DIED INSTANTLY.
NOT LIKE OTHERS LIVING MILES AWAY...
... WHO DIED A SLOW, AGONIZING DEATH WHILE THE SKIN PEELED OFF THEIR BODIES.
THIS SMALL PILE OF EASILY SWEPT OUT INTO A PLASTIC BAG.
NO MISS NO FUSS.
IN THE INTEREST OF OBJECTIVITY...
... IT'S HIGH TIME SOMEBODY SAID SOMETHING POSITIVE ABOUT NUCLEAR WEAPONS.
---
---
---
---
2002 MIAMI NEWS
---
Parent's rights went too far for Doe
"Care for a baby?"
"Well, I don't know... I've already had two softer really rough."
More and more, parents of newborn infants have been answering that question with the same detachment as if an acquaintance had asked, "Care for a cigarette?"
"No thanks.
"But it already lit."
"No thanks."
But it's already in.
"Well, snuff it out, damn it."
An unnamed baby died two weeks ago because it had had no food or water. The baby did not die among the huddled masses in Calcutta with its ragged mother wailing in the shadows. It died inside the sterile walls of a Bloomington, Ind., hospital, beneath the faint hum of flourless tubes. It died because its parents did not care to keep it.
We must refer to the infant as an "it," because the hospital and courts have withheld details of the case, including the baby's sex. But to use the pronoun "it" is ironically fitting: the parents evidently did not see their child as a person.
The baby was born with Down's syndrome, as are more than one in a thousand. It would have had retardation and, possibly, physical defects. The baby also was born with a blockage that required an operation before food could reach its stomach. Its chance of surviving the operation were 50-50. A flip of a coin, to live or die.
But the coin stayed in the parents' pocket. They would not allow the operation, nor would they give custody of the baby to others who publicly volunteered to adopt it. The Indiana courts affirmed and reaffirmed the parents' right to let their child die.
To the courts and the press, the baby became known as "Infant Doe." Two weeks ago Infant Doe did just as frantic appeals reached the Supreme Court. So the Court did not rule in the case. Now Infant Doe, God rest its soul, is a hypothetical legal question.
Hypothetical legal questions do not grow up to play baseball or hopscotch. They grow up to haunt those who rely on our courts for justice. In America, why hypothetical legal question becomes more acceptable? Precedent a Precedent is a grim, over-bearing fellow to deal with, not at all like a
laughing boy with a baseball mitt (yes, boys with an syndrome can do and laugh boy and baseball)
Right-to-lifers are outraged that Infant Doe's doctors and parents refused him food, water and corrective surgery, but doctors point out that decisions to let someone die are made in hospitals every day. The patients' ages and the odds that they would survive and possibly recover, if treated, vary. Their outcomes do not.
The question that looms over life-support machines is, "Who has the right to choose, and makes the choice, when the patient cannot?"
The considerations that weight the answer are different in each case. I know of at least one case in which the answers were clear-cut: my brother lay in a coma with his spinal cord
BEN JONES
blocked. The monitors showed no brainwaves. My mother, a nurse, signed the papers, and his life-support system was shut off. His condition was hopeless; it was the right thing to do.
The awful question cannot always be answered precisely, but clearly there comes a point where the chances of survival warrant the cost, effort and anguish of an operation or a wait. Infant Doe's were 50-50—two-to-one—decent odds at any racecet.
The dilemma of whether to let die or not to let die is hardly the same in Infant Doe's case as it is, say, for an old man in acute pain and hopelessly tied to an electronic body. An old man's condition likely will only become worse. His withered body has spent itself.
An old man's mind also may be gone, rendering him incapable of choice. But a baby can grow and be nourished into someone able to understand his life, because it is to deny that infant eventual choice. Even
infant kings, by monarchial tradition, kept
in name until they were old enough to reign.
For parents to make an irrevocable choice for a developing human being is a crime rationalized by the fallacy that the sum product of an infant is either hereditary or en-
The heart of the argument of whether parents have the right to let their child die (it is ghastly to use such words in such an analytical tone, but that is what we have come to) lies in where there lies in the tiny, beating heart of a newborn baby something else from its parents, nor from their ancestors, nor will come from its future experiences and surroundings.
Imatness in a being means the existence of self-determination, of free will. If the child contains something original which its parents did not give it to, they cannot claim the infant is individual, with their custody. The baby is an individual, with individual rights, the same as anyone else.
Or, perhaps, they could not bear the thought-five, seven, twelve years from now—that somewhere in Bloomington, Ind., there would be a blue-eyed, freckled kid growing up, playing in a tire swing under an elm tree, a kid with a shaggy mane. For them, his would be a haunting face to face.
Deny inattentance, and you deny free will. Deny disobedience and your responsibility toward
duty and perils.
Because the hospitals and courts have withheld so much of the case information, it is hard to guess why the parents allowed Doe to die, and harder still to understand why they refused to give up the child to those willing to raise it, thereby ridding themselves both of trouble and of fear. Perhaps he had taught them that old and retarded children before, though their other two children were born healthy. That would seem to point to some compassion.
Perhaps the parents think a retarded life is not worth living. That is hard to believe of people who had bad exposure to retarded drugs or vaccines, and that it can demonstrate their absolute right to the child.
Letters to the Editor
McCollum Hall president responds to critic
To the Editor:
Once again, I am very proud to see an active University that takes an interest in affairs that occur daily here on our great campus. After reading the letters in last Friday's University Daily Kanan, I feel there is a need to respond to the letter sent by one of our students, Salma Bulla (who, by chance, is a senator in the McCollum Hall government).
1. There are no discrepancies concerning the hall elections. I did, in fact, win the election by almost a 2 to margin in regard to my nearest opponent and the other candidates running for president.
I would like to clarify all the things Bull stated in her letter. First, I want to thank Jim Lehner for the fine job that he did in reporting the story in the April 5 article, "McCollum Hall leader wants change." It is toward these two articles that I will address my points.
3. I know and trust the work of Lehner as one of your better reporters, if not one of the best reporters that the Kansan has on its staff. I make this statement based on the stories that Lehner uses in his books. He is certain that he does not use paraphrasing when he establishes quotes in his stories.
2. As far as the words that I have in my vocabulary, the words "reputation," "classify," "infux," "outdated" and "facilities" are indeed very common words. I know these words, but I use them frequently.
4. In the interview with Randle Messner, it was quoted that, "Nick Oropesa has been a hellraiser in the past and will probably be in the future—he's done a lot to improve the hall."
and the "other 600 people" ask what hall improvements I have been responsible for.
I have strived to bring back some of the social life into McCollum Hall. By this I can say that there have been activities not only for American students, but also for foreign students to enjoy. These people know me and have trust in me to represent their interest fairly in the hall government rather than representing just my own interests.
If I am correct, I overheard Bull saying on a prior occasion, "Why don't we have a clock in our cafeteria?" Once again, I was the person most responsible for getting that new clock that is now in our cafeteria! Bull, now you can see the correct time of day so that you can make it to class on time to continue your learning experience.
The television on the seventh floor lobby was broken down and beyond repair. I was the one responsible for getting a new one. I didn't see or hear from Bull when her floor brought the problem to the attention of the hall government (Bull is a resident on the seventh floor). I know this new television is used heavily by the floor, and it has also seen Bull washing it at various times.
6. 1 wholeheartedly agree with Buil that I
never knew whose campaign posters would be torn down next. As a matter of fact, I was putting posts of other candidates back up after they were torn down, and I even though I don't know who lore them down.
5. With regard to Messner being a candidate for the position of hall justice, I would point out that bulb has forgotten that Messner is a second year law student and a fine acting attorney, and has all the qualifications to be a hall justice. Hurry, hurry! The judge should the most administration, and I reappointed him because of the outstanding job he had done in the position under the past administration.
7. Bull hops that both current and outgoing Executive Board members stand up to me. I say that Bull is misinformed. Our current board is not only working smoothly, but we have already accomplished more things than the last administration. I don't get off when Bull says that to "be a dictator" and get rid of the other board members and cites my refusal to work with them. To this I say that Bull is being held accountable for our current board is not only strong but also one of the best boards our hall government has had in a number of years.
8. Finally, I want to address the fact that I have the most security write-ups this year. I believe that these write-ups are in conjunction with policies that other residents and myself believe to be bad policies that need to be changed so that all residents might benefit.
So in closing, I can only say that a lot of people must have confidence in me or I would not have been elected. I can see that working with the candidates accomplish great things in this hall government.
So let's face the real facts. I have a record of working to improve our hall. Last but not least, I repeat my goal to make McColum Hall the residence hall at the University of Kansas.
Nick Oropeza, McCollum Hall president
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University Daily Kansan, April 29, 1982
Page 5
Vlada
From page 1
only White Army officers and soldiers could go on the ships.
'My wife dressed up as a soldier and went with me on the boat,' Vlada said with a wide smile.
The White Army expected women and children to die in the attack, and those of father's faith when the Red Army took over, he said.
Vilada went to Yugolavia, then called Serbia, from Turkey and became a surveyor working on the development of the railway.
"It was easy to learn the Serbian language, because it is a Slavic language," he said. "It took me only a month to be able to read newspapers in the Serbian language."
He said that learning English was a lot harder.
For three years Vlada attended classes twice a
week to learn English at Cordley Elementary School, 1837 Vermont St.
"But now I learn English on my own," he said. "I felt I was a burden to the other students in the class."
HAE SAID HEP will spend two or more hours a day
listen to English teaching tapes and reading
text books.
Besides learning English, Vlada does other things to keep himself busy.
"It goes slowly, but I'm improving," Vlada said.
"My whole life I was very active, and I still have a very same pattern, even though I don't have a job," he writes.
"I work because I am aware for that my health it is absolutely necessary." Wida said, patting him.
"Year round I usually find something to do in
my yard—trimming trees, raking leaves,
shoveling snow and other chores.
"I think I've reached 92 years and lived so long because I worked very hard all my life and kept me busy."
After saying that, Vlada started talking again about the war and its hardships.
"To people it is more interesting to hear about my life in Russia and my participation in the war," he said. "We were said, 'than to hear about my 50 years of life in Ugoslavia working on the railroad."
"You know there is nothing romantic about that."
ability to understand the complexities of life." he said.
From page 1
Gov John Carlin recommended an 8.75 percent classified salary increase, split between a 7.5 percent cost-of-living increase and a 1.25 percent merit increase.
'They talked about being so loving and caring, yet they hadn't learned to interact with each other.'
Attitudes
The Board of Regents suggested a 10 percent increase.
There's not such a difference between what students now say and what they do, Ambler
He said the Senate's 7.5 percent recommendation was unfair.
The attitude now, Ambler said, is "be what you are, but be honest about what you are."
"If you're a prepy, be a prepy. If you're a hipple, be a hipple," he said.
Another change in students is their attitudes toward education. Amber said.
"This is clearly a slip in the face to our state, employees," Miller said in a press release. "It is not their fault that we failed to make the hard work of either cutting programs or raising revenues."
In the 1908s, students were concerned with the relevancy of education, or the appl-
ication of education to the needs of society.
From page 1
"Anything that wasn't—quote-relevant, they wanted to eliminate from the requirements," he said, "as if there was no relationship of the past to the present."
Classified
cost-of-living increase and receive merit in staff evaluations and a complicated pay plan.
Now, Ambler said, students have a consumer view of education.
business pay plan.
Rep. David Miller, R-Eudora, supported the House amendment to raise the classified salary to 8.5 percent.
"They say, I'm buying a product, so give me this product in a naked package," he said.
"Education doesn't come in a nice, neat, symmetrical package."
Senate
From page 1
groups and placed lump sums in the International Club's control.
"I don't want to pass judgment on any of these groups," Adkins said. "I don't think the student body should pay for a number of small groups that seem to be internal and self-serving."
Adkins used the same approach for sports groups requesting equipment, stipulating that the Recreation Advisory Board allocate the money and Robinson Center keep the equipment.
In other business, the Senate passed a petition to name the Visual Arts building after J. Ward Lockwood, an artist who attended the University of Chicago and served as a scholarship to the KU Endowment Association.
The Senate also voted to allocate $3,793 to the Black Student Union and $1,215 to the Student Council for Recruiting, Motivating and Educating Minority Engineers.
Both groups had been put on hold pending questions by the finance and auditing committee.
The Senate also voted to remain a member of the Associated Students of Kansas for another year. Earlier this year the Senate debated at length whether to remain in the association.
Senate Code stipulates that the Student Senate executive committee present for review a report of the committee.
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University Daily Kansan, April 29, 1982
A
Dissent strong in Russia,prof says
By JIM LEHNER Staff Reporter
Although Americans have only become aware of Russian dissidents in the last two decades, there always has been political dissidence in the Soviet Union, William Fletcher, director of Soviet and East European studies, said yesterday at the University Forum.
Fletcher said the Soviet Union had a long and strong tradition of underground publications and literature.
"In the field of Russian religion, there always has been dissent such as Letters from Heaven," which is what the letters produced by dissenters," he said.
However, he said that people who threatened the government during Stalin's reign were silenced by the
government, which sent them to detention institutions.
"The people in the prisons of Russia were said to outnumber the Bantists in America."
He said that because of this treatment Russia had a huge percentage of illiterates during Stalin's reign.
"While the people were in prison, the Russian government gave them nothing to read," he said. "Once Dalin died in 1963, there was a huge religious revival caused by a prison scandal. The KGB, or the MUD as it was referred to back then was monitoring the prison system."
Fletcher said dissidents became better known in the '60s and '70s because of two reasons.
"One reason was that the advent of new technology made it easier to produce things. Dissidents would be able to steal something like a Xerox
machine and work out of their homes.
He said that because the dissidents were able to print more reference books, the nation's literacy rate improved as well as its citizens' knowledge about the government.
Fletcher said there also were more dissidents because of the influence that the western media had on them.
"Up to the '60s, the U.S. media had been relatively silent on Russian problems."
He said, however, that the Soviet government responded to the dissidents in the '60s and '70s by enlarging the prison system.
Fletcher said that dissidents today in Russia were very dormant. "It's not a very exciting country right now for dissidents."
Proposal sent to city commission Industrial development plan OK'd
By STEPHEN BLAIR
Staff Reporter
The 65-item plan, which was prepared by the city-county planning department, will be considered by the Lawrence City Commission.
Staff Reporter
The utilities that the plan would provide to the proposed Kaw Valley Industrial Park north of the city would be provided by the city's cities for new industries, Hank Booth,
The Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission last night unanimously approved a plan that required the state to spend through 1988 on public facilities.
The plan, entitled the Capital Improvements Plan for 1983-1988, included about $3 million for utilities to serve a new industrial park north of Lawrence, and $33,000 to build a new terminal at the Lawrence Municipal Airport.
chairman of the planning commission, said recently.
"When our people go out to show industrial grounds, we're in very bad shade." Booth said.
Martin Dickinson, president of the Chamber of Commerce, which had asked that the utilities be included in the capital-improvements plan, said he hoped the park would attract certain kinds of industries.
"We would hope for industries that are non-polluting, and that would not lead to the need for increased police and fire protection," Dickinson, who is also a KU professor of law, said. "You would hope for an industry that would give something to people in terms of skills and employment."
Another project that is important in
attracting new industries is a new airport terminal, Dickinson said.
The present terminal is understated, he said, and because it is the first thing that a businessman sees when he comes in to the office, he usually attent to the city wears to a job interview.
The capital-improvement plan also designates more than $2 million for a proposed purchase and renovation of the building. House into a performing arts center.
Before the planning commission approved the plan, an official of a council that coordinates social service agencies in Douglas County asked the commission to work toward making the projects finance jobs within the county.
"The official, Jim Schircuit, president of the Council of Community Services," said. "We do have a lot of people in this neighborhood at work and at risk because of that."
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Page 8 University Daily Kansan, April 29. 1982
Senior recital concludes college musical career
By LISAGUTIERREZ
Staff Reporter
A once-in-a-lifetime shot
From the beginning of their college careers, music performance majors at the University of Kansas look forward to this day with dread and anticipation.
It is a requirement for a bachelor's degree. Music in front of them. No second chance. Just one hour of performance...
"Some get so nervous it's all they can do to walk out on the stage." Richard Angeloet, professor of music, said recently.
"But most of them do all right."
At least 20 undergraduate students give senior recitals a year at KU, he said.
Angeletti said the seniors gave a preview performance for the music faculty about four weeks before the actual recital. They play their proposed program and the instructor assembles Angelotti called his a checkpoint.
point
The grade the seniors receive for their senior recital is the grade they receive for the entire semester.
"I don't think it has ever happened that they don't pass," Angelaeli said. "It's never happened since I've been here."
what happens if the student should do poorly at the checkpoint performance?
"They would either have to wait for their recital or change their major," Angelaetti said. "I don't think they'd want to change it so late, though."
A certain amount of pressure is involved in the senior recital performance.
SENIOR RECITALS are harder for piano majors, Angelietti said. Voice majors or flutists can at least share the moment with an accompanist.
Do both impacts go on. One performance on stage. In front of KU music faculty, parents, friends and fellow music students.
Friday night was Kristi Hoffman's turn. It was a culmination of 14 years of piano lessons, the last four under the tutelage of Angelaetti at KU.
Mug night was clear, with just a hint of left-over winter still hanging in the April evening air. Activity was Friday-night feverish.
Life went on around her, Kristi,
Bartlesville, Oka., senior, thought, as
she and her parents suck out the back
door of Bellas Hall at 7 p.m.
The men of Pearson Hall and the
women of Sellards Hall were engaged in counter-assaults of water balloons and raw eggs on Sellards' front lawn.
It would be been silly, Kristi's mother, Barbara, said later, to try to go out the front door with Kristi wearing her zown.
Swarthout Hall was hers from 8 to 9 p.m., the appointed time for the performance.
"I don't look at it as the end of the road," Kristi said two days earlier, as she walked across the campus in Murphy Hall. "I think it's the culmination of four years of work.
"I have to prove to myself and to others that I can do it."
The pressure, Kristi said, was almost nonexistent.
SHE KNEW WELL the pieces she was to perform.
"I performed them at home during spring break in a nursing home, and I've played some of them since last year," she said.
"Actually, I try not to think of being nervous because if I do, then I will be
"I just think about the music."
She's been thinking about music since childhood. She grew up in an environment rich in musical background. Her mother had 11 years of piano lessons, and her father in second grade, a bassoonist, taught her piano and Orchestra. Kristi's mother said the Hoffman family was very musically oriented.
"She has a sister, Heidi, who was in
MARIE SCHULZ
Kristi Hoffman
kZR106
Special Events
ballet and her sister, Sara, plays the piano and the cello," Mrs. Hoffman said.
JAY HAWK
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"If you want to see hands, you sit on the left," Kristi's mother replied knowingly.
"Kristi always said she could not live without her music."
"Where do you want to sit, Mr. and Mrs. Hoffman?" one of Kristi's friends asked her parents.
The Sellards delegation seated itself behind her parents. They waited.
Kristi made the move from playing at family Christmas gatherings to performing in chamber music concerts at KU with ease.
They had stopped to hear her play on their way to the Sellards formal.
Kristi rehearsed until almost five minutes before show time.
About a dozen of the women were from Sellards. They, like Kristi, were dressed in formal wear.
BUT FRIDAY NIGHT was piano night.
Kristi plays the flute, also.
Her father took pictures of Kristi as she sat on the stage at 7:30. The hall was empty, except for a light-and-dashed setting up mikes in front of the stage.
While Kristi was warming up, the rectal hair slowly filled with friends, fellow music students and loved ones.
The impromptu photo session ended as Kristi walked to her music teacher's studio for a few minutes of practice—and praver.
"The next picture the camera's going to crack," Kristi said, laughing.
"Kristi, I think you only have two pictures left on this camera," her father told her as the camera went CLICK and the smile left her face.
From behind the solid-oak door of Richard Angellet's studio came a rush of last-minute music laid out on the keyboard as she went over the music,
Angletti knocked on the door at 7:54. The music stopped. The door opened quickly.
the music she knew so well, one last time.
"IkHi Kristi, I bet you're anxious to angeletti said as he entered the room.
Kristi smiled. "Yeah, oh dear."
AS THEY WALKED toward the recital hall, Angelaetti thanked Kristi for the flowers she had sent him earlier in the afternoon.
"Oh, you deserve them for having to put up with me for four years," she
"I know a secret way to get to the hall." Angelaetti told her as they approached Swarthout Hall and the 60 or so people waiting there for her.
"I don't think you want to walk in front of all those people."
Three minutes later, Kristi walked on stage.
They climbed the stairs, side by side, like a coach prepping his athlete for the big game.
The house lights dimmed. She adjusted the knobs of the piano bench.
Warm applause greeted her as she acknowledged the audience before sitting at the piano.
Back straight, fingers silently
caressing the keys, Kristi prayed,
loved.
She played four pieces, Scarlati,
Beethoven, Brahms and Debusy. Her
musica was like a sweet labyrinth. It
would be music of a silent-screen meltdrama.
"Lord, help me to do this to glorify you," she prayed.
Kristi sighed. Then she played.
When she lifted her fingers from the keys to go to another movement, the silence in the hall was deafening. All eyes were on Kristi, her hands and arms as they charm the music from the wooden box.
Each time her fingers left the keys, a vacuum silenced the hall.
HER MOTHER cried.
Her performance, broken into two segments by a short, breath-catching intermission, ended with a traditional bang of chords.
"It was a battle the whole way," she said afterward. "It's very easy for me to want to play for the sake of playing well." [11]
well.
"It's really hard not to do it just for myself."
The tears flowed freely after the performance, from relief and from happiness.
Tears shone on everyone's cheeks.
Krist's, her mom's and her best friend's.
"On, you played beautifully," Angeletti boasted as he hugged Kristi backstage.
The 'entourage took Kristi to a reception on the upper floors of Mur
"You can tell she's been practicing a lot," a proud mother told Angelietti.
ply.
More hugs, more tears. On Kristi's part, relief.
"I play it hone through that I was playing for God," she said. "And if they did enjoy the recital, it's because the light shone through."
Her father said that Kristi's enthusiasm for music tends to spill over into everything she does.
"Yes, she certainly does like to play. It's her life and she's told us that that's all she really wants."
Kristi said she would like to teach music. She is receiving a degree in music education, a move her mother made after she finally more than music performance.
"She's in love with her music and it's an expression, it fulfills a need to ex-
Friday night's recital was the last piano performance Kristi would give at KU.
"The first thing I thought of when she finished playing was that I was going to miss her," said Shannon Zenoter, Hays junior, and Kristi's roommate.
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University Daily Kansan, April 29, 1982
Page 9
University rifle team upholds winning tradition
By DAVE McQUEEN
Staff Reporter
Nestled away in the catacombs of the Military Science building is a group no one ever hears about.
They spend most of their nights down there on the ROTC rifle range, aiming their single-shot Z2-caliber rifles at a distance of 300 yards. Weekends are spent on the road,
shooting against some of the best competition in the nation.
Although the KU Rifle Club was formed 30 years ago, it still remains a mystery to almost everyone except those on the team.
But while it may be a mystery on its own campus, the KU rifle team is very well known in collegiate shooting circles. Last month it won its third straight Big Eight shooting championship and also qualified earlier in
the year for the NCAA championships in Virginia.
WHILE THEIR ammunition and rifle range are furnished by Army ROTC, the KU rifle队 is far from being a military-only operation. Some of the members are not involved in ROTC, so the coaches are University professors.
"I's really a Kansas University team," Sgt. Maj. Frank Strong, one of
100
JON HARDESTY/Kansan Staff
Shawn Moe, Leavenworth senior, peers behind the scope of his .22 rifle. Moe is one of the top shooters on the KU rifle team and is using a telescope to take aim.
"When I first came here, we had only three shooters," Strong said. "Now we have three teams and possibly a fourth."
Since he came to KU in 1980, Strong has seen the team rise from mediocrity to one of the best.
the team's coaches, said recently. "All you need to be to join a student at the University. When we go to tournaments, we don't compete as the ROTC rife team, we go as the Kansas University rife队."
In competitive shooting, a team consists of four members. They score points by firing from standing, kneeling and troop positions.
Each shooter fires 12 times from each position, and the points are determined by how close they come to the bull's eye.
One big reason for the team's success, Strong said, is its active recruiting program.
Much like the famous "Huntington Beach connection" in football, the rifle team has a recruiting pipeline to Leavenworth High School, which has one of the top high school rifle programs in the country. Three of the team's top four shooters went to Leavenworth.
BEING A GOOD shooter does not require brute strength or size, Strong said. Rather, it is more of a matter of concentration.
"I shooting, you don't have to be strong, you don't have to be monstrous, all you have to do is punch holes in the target." Strong said.
But punching holes in the target is not all that easy. Henry Webster, Leavenworth freshman, said it took total body control.
1981 Beer Shot by Miller Brewing Co., Milwaukee, Wis.
BANK SHOTS,TRICK SHOTS AND OTHER TABLE MANNERS.
All you need is good eyesight, a little dexterity, and three essentials: a pool table, pool cue, and some Lite Beer from Miller.
I'm gonna teach you a couple things that'll1 impress your friends, and 2) maybe lose some friends.
CHEAP SHOTS
Here's a goodie. I call it the "Cheap Shot." Place a ball on the edge of the corner pocket. Then, take a half-dollar and lean it against the side rail at the other end of the table. (If you don't have a half-dollar, you can always write home to your parents; they'd love to hear from you.)
Tell your friends you're gonna sink the ball in the corner, using the half-dollar as a cue ball. It's not hard. Hit the coin solidly on the edge, just above the center, and it will roll along the rail knocking the ball in the pocket. But don't forget to scoff up the half-dollar. Because you aren't
8
supposed to lose money doing trick shots—just win Lite Beers.
THE COIN TRICK
This one drives people nuts. Place a ball on the head spot. With the chalk, make a circle around it, approximately 8" in diameter. Then put a quarter or half-dollar on top of the ball. (Yes, you can use the same one from before, or you can write home to your parents again.) Place the cue ball behind the foot line and have your friends
Lite
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try to knock the coin out of the circle.
Chances are, they won't be able to
(this is a good time to work on your
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When you shoot, do one of two things: hit the object ball head-on with follow-through so the cue ball knocks the coin out, or hit the cue ball very, very slowly so the coin rolls off the object ball.
TABLE MANNERS
Now for simple table etiquette.
After you've "hustled" your friends, you gotta keep 'em. So do what I call "Clearing the Table". Simply offer to buy the next round of Lite Beer. They'll all clear the table fast and head for the bar (or to your room or apartment). Then, once they all have Lite (just one apiece—you're not too rich, remember), tell them with Lite in hand and a smirk on your face that your shots were no big deal—you were just shown' off.
"Mentally, it's got to be the hardest sport there is." Webster said. "You've got to control your eye movements, your nerves and everything at once before you trigger the trigger. Each shot will have a whole match. You've got to take one a time."
The body control is so complete, he said, that some of the shooters who participate in the Olympics are even able to control their pulse and adrenaline.
"In other sports you try to get your adrenalin up," he said. "But here you try to keep it down."
if you keep **But while Webster enjoys the competition of shooting, he said he misses the recognition afforded to other sports.**
"We do put a lot of time into it," Webster said. "But we do get some material things out of it—like medals and trophies. I don't know of any basketball team who gets a trophy just for winning a game."
SHAWN MOE, Leavenworth senior, a member of the team who was recently named to the Big Eight and All-Arsenal teams. She was also bothered by the lack of notoriety.
"I'm kind of a low-key person." Moe said. "I don't go out looking for publicity at all. I've got trophies galore—it's nothing new anymore."
Moe said the satisfaction he derived from shooting came from competing against himself and the release it offered from other pressures.
It's sort of a release from school
work," he said. "I can come down here and tune everything out and concentrate on my shooting."
So if shooting is so much fun, and KU's program is so good, then why is it not better known?
John Michel, professor of speech and drama and one of the team's coaches, said, "I think it's because people associate us with the ROCT and many people don't have a positive feeling about the military."
Michel, whose involvement in shootings goes back to his college days at Ohio State University, said another student was shot during a reaction most people have to guns.
In the future, Strong said the team should be even better. He said they were close to recruiting another strong player and that he should help round out the team.
"They put the riffes we use in the same category of handguns," Michel said. "Nothing could be further from the truth. The main principle of these weapons is to punch holes in the targets."
But the team still faces some problems. For one thing, they need more money. Although they qualified for the national championships, they could afford a transfer to Virginia. Again, because they could use more support from the University.
"If the University people would support KU's rifle team, we would have a national championship in no time at all." Strong said.
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Page 10
University Daily Kansan, April 29, 1982
白
Agencies work to help local victims of incest
By BECKY ROBERTS Staff Reporter
Incest is a far more common occurrence in American society than most people would choose to believe.
Research has shown that as many as one out of every four American girls and one out of every six American boys has experienced some degree of incest.
An exact figure is difficult, if not impossible, to determine because often incest cases are not reported.
These figures are estimates from research that Parents United, Inc. has conducted. The group is a model investment program in Santa Clara County, Calif.
"It's still the most taboo subject in our culture," Richard Spano, KU associate professor of social welfare, said recently.
However, the Lawrence division of Social Rehabilitation Services worked with 18 cases of incest in Douglas County during the 1981 fiscal year. During fiscal 1982, 17 cases of incest already have been reported.
"I would not be surprised if we climb upwards of 20 to 25 cases this year," Jim Baze, director of the Lawrence division of SRS, said.
Because of the growing concern for incest victims and the number of incest cases, several Doug County agencies are developing an aggressive cooperative program for incest treatment.
For the past year, SRS, Bert Bash Mental Health Center, the KU Psychological Clinic and the Douglas County District Attorney's Office have been working to perfect an incest program before they put one in practice.
In March, they felt the program was ready for a test case. The first Douglas County incest family began incest treatment.
Although more treatment programs have developed in the last five years, social workers feel they have only seen the real extent of the problem.
"We can only speculate how many cases are out there. We've only reached the tip of the iceberg." Baze said.
"I think it's a very common problem. We'd be surprised if we knew how many instances there are."
The definition of innest in its broadest form is any type of sexual relations with an immediate family member.
"Innest ranges from exposure by an uncle, to intercourse with an immediate family member." Soano said.
Legally, incest, which is a felony charge, is defined as any lwd fondling, touching or sexual intercourse with a brother, sister, uncle, aunt, nephew or niece. The same actions by a parent or stepparent is aggravated incest.
The most common form of incest is father-daughter relationships.
However, other types of incest such as sibling, mother-son, father-son and mother-daughter relationships do happen.
"Last year, there was a mother-daughter case of incest in Douglas County. That's the first time a case like it has been reported to SR3." Baze said.
Social workers have had problems working with incest victims because of the reluctance to admit involvement in an incestuous relationship.
"It's quite shocking," Baze said, "people don't want to believe it. For years people didn't acknowledge it, and they've been through the girls that were victimized."
Another factor that keeps victims from reporting incest cases is the fear of what will happen to their fathers.
"Before kids are willing to elaborate, they want to know what will happen to their life." They report to report if they know their father won't be thrown into prison."
Spano explained that incest victims loved their fathers in spite of what they had done.
"They're afraid something will happen to their families if they report the incest and, sure enough, the girls are not so alarmed," their fathers go to jail. "Spano said."
Though the public tends to see the parents involved in incontinous relationships as monsters, social workers agree that most are not harming children. There are usually breakdowns in the family that contribute to the incest.
"These men are not dangerous men on the street. Often they are men who have had a lot of reward in their lives or many positive strokes. They need affection and when they don't get it, they look within their family.
"Often the mother is not interested in sex for one reason or another," Baze said.
Although children may be afraid of the family consequences after reporting an inescautous relationship, they are the most frequent reports. Bazae said.
"Frequently, the child will talk to a friend. The friend will talk to the teacher and the教师 will then approach the child." Baze said.
Baze talked about a Lawrence incest case in which weaknesses in the family structure contributed to the incest.
The mother reported that her 13-year-old daughter had been trying to take over her role in the home by always wanting to cook supper, do the shopping and generally take over the mother's duties.
SRS workers, helping the family, discovered that the daughter had had sexual intercourse with her father. In order to rationalize the relationship, she had assumed the mother's other roles, Baze said.
The relationship developed over about four years, Baze said. It began with inappropriate fondling when the girl was about 9 years old.
Baze said the case was unfortunate because the daughter learned a pattern of behavior which taught she could use her sexuality to manipulate men.
The father's personality also contributed to the problem.
Social workers think if there are established programs to help incest victims in a community, more people would report incest problems.
"People report incest only where
'We can only speculate how many cases are out there. We've only reached the tip of the iceberg.'
there is a program established," Chuck Juliano, administrator of Parents United, said.
Jim Baze, director of the Lawrence Social Rehabilitation Services
The numbers of references to counselors has increased in communities where a treatment program has been established, Chris Petr, director of children services at Bert Nash Mental Health Center, said.
One of the goals of the Douglas County incest program is to let people know there is help for incest victims.
"We want to get people to come out of the closets to tell about it so they can be
helped," Mike Mclone, Douglas County district attorney, said.
Another reason for the incest program was to solve the problem of a lack of uniformity in reporting cases to the district attorney's office, SRS, Bert Nash or KU psychological clinical, Malone said.
"All the agencies have something to offer, we want to get together and use the strength of all our sources."
While 18 cases were reported to SRS last year, only four went through the court system. Only two or three cases referred to Bert Nash for treatment.
"There was a complete lack of uniformity. Three different cases of the same nature could be handled in three completely different ways," Malone
"There was a hesitation to involve the district attorney's office because we didn't want the father sent off to prison." Baze said.
"Then we began to see the importance of having the prosecution handle the fathers to get them to go through therapy with the daughters."
The agencies often thought their method of handling the problem was
In incest treatment programs, the threat of prosecuting the father and sending him to jail is often a good way to have him agree to counseling.
Many times the father will deny his daughter's accusations when confronted.
"The girl would tell her story and the father would deny it," Petr said.
"They'd be stuck that way and it was almost impossible to work with the case when the father wouldn't admit something was wrong."
The father must admit to the incestuous relationship before he is eligible to go through treatment and Malone's sentence deferred, Malone said.
Baze said it was important for the father to admit his responsibility in the incestuous relationship and take some of the guilt off the daughter.
"The father needs to go into therapy to help resolve the future sexual attitudes of the girl," Baze said. "She shares the guilt of what happened."
In incest cases, intercourse does not always happen. Many incest cases are avoidable because it is safer. When intercourse does happen, it frequently evolves gradually.
...results, however, are the same.
Injec victims face problems later in life defining their sexual attitudes, realizing that they belong to their own children. Petr said.
Spani cited a California study of female prostitutes which showed that about 50 percent of them had been victims of incestuous relationships.
An important part of the incest program in Douglas County is to offer the counseling to help a family stay together.
Jointly, Bert Nash and KU Psychological Clinic will counsel the families involved. They are basing
their programs on an incest program in Johnson County and on Parents United.
The counseling teams, made up of two professionals from Bert Mash and two from KU Psychological Clinic, will provide care to other family members individually, Pet said.
From there they will counsel family members in pairs and then move on to counseling the family as a group.
While the family members are undergoing individual counseling, each person also will be involved in group therapy. You will be pertened the same things, Petr said.
"The fathers will talk with other fathers and the girls will talk with other girls and so on." Petr said.
The district attorney's office will
be the sole authority to declare
family are eligible to be in the program.
If the district attorney's office finds an incest offender eligible to have his sentence deferred, the family will receive two years of treatment, Malone said.
"An individual is not eligible if there has been any physical harm or forcible action to the child, if the offender has a prior history of sexual abuse or if the individual fails to recognize there is a problem." Malone said.
If at anytime during the counseling the offender is not cooperative, the offender of incest will be brought against him and he will be tried, Malone said.
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University Daily Kansan, April 29, 1982
Page 11
Pete
If you think a "one-piece shell" is an oyster lover's nightmare, you're not ready for Memorex.
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UNION INSURANCE PLANS ACCEPTED
PX/Psychology Club
Undergraduate Research Conferences
The Kansas Union Council Room
9:00 a.m.-12:00 p.m.
May 1,1982
Funded by Student Activity Fee
1
Page 12 University Daily Kansan, April 29, 1982
621
Program analyzes hearing handicaps
By TOM HUTTON Staff Reporter
KANSAS CITY, Kan. - Vault-like doors sealed 7-year-old Shelly into a soundproof cocoon. Her long, dark hair shone on the harsh fluorescent lights, but her smiling face had deteriorated into a frown.
It was time for some serious work.
It was time for some serious work.
Beeps invaded the silence, and Shila fragile hand lifted as she acknowledged she had heard the sounds.
Shelly progressed from simple tone hearing tests to examinations that tested her ability to distinguish voices from background noises. She passed the tone tests easily, but not soundly from background noise, such as traffic and light talking.
Shelly's problem is not unique—more than 18 million Americans suffer from varying degrees of speech or hearing defects. More people suffer from these problems than from cancer, tuberculosis, heart disease and multiple sclerosis combined, according to the National Institute for the Deaf.
She is not deaf. Shelly has problems interpreting sounds. She hears the sounds perfectly, as long as they are in a quiet environment. As soon as Shelly was placed in a classroom or other less-than-perfect situations, she could not understand even the simplest instructions. Her problems had forced her parents to employ special tutors and caused the public schools to label her "learning disabled," although she had an above-average IQ.
Finding why Shelly could not distinguish sounds normally is the work of the speech and hearing department at University of Kansas Medical Center.
IT WILL TAKE about five weeks for Jeff Owen, assistant professor of hearing and speech, to design a program for Shelly and test it thoroughly. The program, if successful, will teach her to deal with the hearing disability and send her back to school without her "disabled" label.
Although not all the problems at the Med Center are as unusual as Shelyl's, her's is a good example of the time when discovery of process of discovering hearing disorders.
"Instead of just seeing kids and sending them down the road, we concentrate on their problems and do everything within our power to solve them," Randy Laskowski, graduate student in audiology, said recently.
Laskowski works with the children treated in the hearing clinic, children who range in age from just a few months to the late teens.
Laskowski must test the softest sound that each ear can receive and the
frequencies at which those sounds can be heard.
However, Laskowski often works with children who, unlike Shelly, are too young to know when to raise a hand. They are unable to respond.
"If I could just get them to raise their hands, everything would be easy—but I can't," he said.
To test these children, Laskowiak uses monitoring machines that look as if they have been salvaged from the space program.
The machine most often used sits in another sound-proof room.
A BLUE TABLE with a connected chair sits in the center of the room and waits to hold the next squirming youngster to undergo hearing tests. A
'Instead of just seeing kids and sending them down the road, we concentrate on their problems and do everything within our power to solve them.'
—Randy Laskowski, graduate student in audiology
large silver button in the middle of the table is Lawkowski's key to getting the uncooperative children to respond to sounds.
When pressed, the button rewards the child with his favorite object—anything from money to food.
It often takes several visits to record an accurate test on these difficult children, Laskowski said, but the results are worth the extra effort.
“What we’re trying to do here is get the most precise testing levels possible—which isn’t easy sometimes with the little ones.” Laskowski said.
"We don't just take readings here," Laskowski said. "We're different than most clinics in our operating fashion. We have to come in when we deal with the hearing problem."
Hearing deficiencies seen at the Med Center vary widely, Laskowski said. Hearing losses in children, he said, were usually a result of congenital disorders, or diseases, or were induced by chemotherapy and cancer-treating drugs.
"It really doesn't matter how the child became impaired," Laskowski said. "It still is a problem that they have with it, with, and one that we try to ally-
Captioned television programs, telephone teletype machines and greatly improved hearing aids have become the hearing impaired in the last 10 years.
It is Laskowski's job to decide whether the hearing loss is a result of problems in the outer, middle or inner ear. If the problem can be solved by sound amplification, he sends the patient to a hearing aid dealer.
Nearly 85 percent of the hearing patients can be treated in some manner, June Miller, chairman of the hearing and speech department, said. And it makes little difference whether a person is six months old or 60 years old.
"The space program, solid-state technology and miniaturization have all changed the ways we can assist people with communication problems," Miller said. "I told them that someday there would be hearing aids that couldn't even be seen—I didn't believe them then."
BUT MILLER opened a cabinet and pointed to hearing aids, and even artificial voiceboxes, that were made to be easily concealed.
Other devices for the hearing impaired also have been miniaturized as technology has advanced.
For example, telephone communication for the deaf, which started in the '50s with expensive, cumbersome word processors, are soon to be mobile.
These four-foot-high, 290-pound $2,000 machines could be used for communication between deaf people only if each person owned one of them.
The Med Center owns such a machine and uses it to schedule appointments for its deaf patients. It also relays information from the deaf to other departments.
"I have a serious case of bronchitis,
unable to work today, have an appointment this afternoon with the doctor," a message recorded on the machine from a deaf volunteer employee.
Such cumbersome communication is on the way out if a speech and hearing scientist, who recently visited the Med Center, has his way.
Harry Levitt, professor of speech and hearing at New York City University, developed a pocket-size telecommunicator that performed many more functions than the bulky teletype machines did.
Levit's machine allows deaf people who do not know sign language to communicate. it has a memory for commonly used phrases, is compact and reliable, and Levit said, is cheaply $150. The retail price will be $29.
Levitt developed the computer for a $10,000 contest sponsored by Radio Shack. He won the contest last November, and the company will begin marketing the device in the next few months.
Bicycles Alive Storm Equipment
Don't Take Everything Home Store It For The Summer Fort Knox Warehouse U-Store it, U-lock it, U-keep the key
1717 W 31st Street 841-4244
Records Tree Equipment
NOTICE TO ALL STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS
Registration forms for the 1982-83 academic year are now available in the Office of Student Affairs and Admissions, 1000 Fifth Avenue. Those who wish to be listed in the fall 1982 Faculty/School Staff/Directory and will be included in the list must submit a copy which will describe KU's student organization's
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University Daily Kansan, April 29, 1982 Page 13
Fund-raiser to finance film on epilepsv
By JAN BOUTTE Staff Reporter
The Delta Tau Delta fraternity and Delta Gamma sorority will celebrate the last day of class tomorrow with an afternoon and evening party to benefit a KU educational film project.
Proceeds from the party, called the Delta Yahoo, held in the Delta Tau Delta parking lot, will be donated to the KU Bureau of Child Research's fund to finance the children an educational film about enilpies.
The film was started by Ross Copeland, a senior research scientist with the bureau until his death from cancer last fall.
Gib Kurschner, Yahoo chairman and Glencoe, Ill., senior, said that
the film was about 80 percent complete when Copeland died.
Kurschner said that about $3,000 would be needed to complete the film, which was intended to inform people about the nature of epilepsy and what a bystander can do to help someone suffer a seizure.
The Delts and Delta Gammas hope to raise the $3,000 with Yahoo by charging $3 for an advance ticket and $4 for tickets the day of the party. Ticket holder can drink beer all afternoon at the party and participate in other scheduled events throughout the day and night.
Kurchersh said the houses planned to have a mechanical bull, a "Dunk the Delt" tank and a "Miss Yahoo contest.
Kurschner said that Copeland first became concerned with educating the public about epilepsy when he
witnessed Kurschner having a seizure at the Delta Tau Delta house three years ago.
three years ago.
At that time, Copeland was the chapter adviser for the fraternity, and Kurschner was a pledge.
Kurchers said that after about three days of not taking his medication regularly and studying late nights, he felt a seizure coming on and told his roommate, but hismate did not know how to react.
Kurschner said there were many degrees of severity of seizures, ranging from a hand tremor or loss of memory to a seizure involving all muscles. The incidence of seizures and epilepsy were more common than most people realized.
"A lot of very good friends and family could be epileptic and you'll never know," he said.
Kurserer is part of the cast of the uncompleted film, in which he demonstrates the normal daily life events who happened to be epileptic.
The film demonstrates how to help a person suffer a seizure. Kurscher said that many actions could be taken if the victim putting a pencil in the victim's mouth to keep him from suffocating. He said that the seizures can be so violent that the victim could break into the pencil, injuring the inside of his mouth.
He recommended using something soft, such as a wallet or a notebook. Kurscher also said to move any sharp objects, such as furniture, out of the vicinity to prevent injuries and also to hold the head of the person so they do not bang them upside up during the seizure.
On the record
Two KU students charged with the March 27 stabbing of another KU student were put in Douglas County Court on $30,000 bond yesterday following a preliminary hearing in Douglas County District Court.
Kaitvan Shushtarian and Nasir Habib Charmchi, both freshmen from Iran, will have to stand trial on aggrigated
battery charges for the stabbing. The court will set a trial date May 7.
Shushtarian and Charmchi were arrested March 27 following the stabbing of another KU student outside a tahoe garage at 75 Massachusetts St.
BURGLARS STOLE a ring worth about $1,500 sometime between 2 and
4:30 p.m. Tuesday from a room at Oliver Hall, KU police said.
Burglaris entered the room while the residents were gone and took the gold ring, which was set with two small and two large diamonds, police said.
THEIEVES STOLE about $400 worth of office furniture sometime during the first two weeks of April from a lounge area in Green Hall, police said.
Police said thieves carried away three round office tables. There are no suspects.
THEIEVS STOLE a car sometime around midnight Tuesday from a residence at 2535 Arkansas St., police said.
Police said the thieves may have used keys to drive the car away. The car was worth $3,200. There are no suspects.
图示建筑效果图
Openings for summer and fall
Naismith Hall
1800 Naismith
843-8569
• Your choice of 14 and 19 meal plans
• Private baths
• Weekly maid service
• Comfortable carpeted rooms
• Heated swimming pool
• Good food with unlimited seconds
• Lighted parking
• Color TV
• Close to campus
• Many other features
Naismith Hall
1800 Naismith
843-8559
SKY DIVING Come Fly With Us Greene County Sport Parachute Center Wellsville, Kansas
Student Training Classes 10 a.m. Tues.-Sun.
call 883-4210 or 883-2535
First Jump Course $55.00. Groups of 5 or more—only $45.00 per person. Price includes: log book, all training, all equipment, first jump.
Students required to show proof of age. Located 4 miles west of Wellsville. For further information call
Wellsville
7th STREET
WELLSVILLE EXIT K 33
1 35 TO KANSAS CITY
Friday April 30/Saturday May 1
$4.00 all tickets at the door
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Don't haul your furniture all the way home this summer.
Save money by putting it in storage.
Compare the prices—
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A-1 Rental Mini-Storage:
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5'x10'—$20.00 month
8'x8'—$24.00 month
8'x10'—$28.00 month
10'x10'—$32.00 month
10'x12'—$36.00 month
10'x24'—$50.00 month
SPECIAL
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Page 14 University Daily Kansan, April 29, 1982
1
Heavy rains force Kansas ball teams to cancel twin-bills
The rain washed away the baseball team's encounter with Washburn, their final non-conference games, and the rivalry between Kansas and Wichita State.
The Kansas Jayhawks' baseball and softball double-headers yesterday were called off because of rain.
KU's baseball team will be back in action Saturday when it starts a four-game series with Kansas State to close out its home season.
The Jayhawks, 19-23 overall, 6-10 in Big Eight play, are in fifth place in the conference and chances for them to
Bar Baehl, assistant sports information director, said the softball games would be rescheduled only if it were necessary.
make the Big Eight playoffs are slim.
The Jayhawks close out their season with a four-game series at Oklahoma State.
The Jayhawks would need to play the games if the outcome would determine whether they receive a bid to the M24C at Omaha. Neb.
Kansas, 29-16, has beaten the Shockers five times this year, three
times last fall and twice this spring. Rhonda Clarke was the winner in each game and recorded five shutouts.
The Jayhawks will conclude their regular season schedule this weekend. They are scheduled to face Creighton tomorrow at 6 and 8 p.m. Kansas will play against Oklahoma at 2 and 4 p.m. Saturday at Broken Arrow Park, 31st and Louisiana.
A possible bid for the national tournament will weigh heavily on the Creighton double-header, KU coach Bob Stancill said.
Royals roll to 8-5 victory
By United Press International
BOSTON - Hal McRae drove in five runs with a homer and a double last night to lead the Kansas City Royals to an 8-5 victory over Boston, snapping the Red Sox' eight-game winning streak.
The Royals jumped on Boston starter and loser John Tudor, 3-1, in
the first inning. George Brett, playing left field for the first time in his Major League career, hit a two-out double. Amos Otis followed with a walk and McRae hit Tudor's 0-2 second inning, his fourth in his fourth homer of the season. Dennis Werth and Greg Pryor also had RH single in the first.
Dennis Leonard, 2-1, went the distance for the victory.
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The University Daily
RETAIL EAGAN BARRAND LIQUOR
Rooms available for summer $100-$140 per month utilizes included. Close to campus and quiet atmosphere. Call Darryl 841-7692.
Wanted outgoing Christians and conscientious students to share 6 bedroom house at 14 de Krentens into fall spring $1000 or $1500. Invited. If Carol Daryl: 814-7092.
KANSAN WANT ADS
Live in the CHRISTIAN CAMPUS HOUSE
This summer a'dall' Beale as part of a
growing campus ministry. Call Alan Airow,
campus minister 853-6929. tf
TRY COOPERATIVE LIVING. Sunflower House, 842-9421. tf
Call 864-4358
FOR RENT
For rent to mature male student. Quiet,
comfortable efficiency apartment. Private
kitchen. Close to the Union. Reasonable
price. 842-4185. tf
HANOVER PLACE. Completely furnished, studios. 4 x 2 feet. 2 hamm. Located between Lake Superior and KU. DON'T DELAY. Reserve your apt. nxt. 841-121 or 844-345. less. 841-121 or 844-345.
GRADUATE
CLASSIFIED RATES
Summer sublease. Ferm. only. Clean, close to campus. Low util. 841-7086. 4-30
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Saturday 5 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
Eagan-Barrand Retail Liquor
KANSAS BUSINESS OFFICE
118 Flint Hall 864-4358
one twelve two three four five six seven eight nine ten eleven twenty three forty five sixty seventy eighty ninety ninety-nine
5 words or fewer $ . 35 $ . 50 $ . 75 $ . 95 $ . 125 $ . 155 $ . 185 $ . 215 $ . 245 $ . 275 $ . 305 $
three words or fewer $ . 35 $ . 50 $ . 75 $ . 95 $ . 125 $ . 155 $ . 185 $ . 215 $ . 245 $ . 275 $ . 305 $
ERRORS
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One last Question:
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FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Southwest Plaza Shopping Center Located behind Hardee's and next to Foodbarn
The Kanana will not be responsible for more than two incorrect entries. 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 based in service area or be posted by the &squiggle business office at 434-3680.
23rd & Iowa
042-6089
9:00 p.m. 11:00 p.m.
ENTERTAINMENT
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Paid Positions
Fall Business Manager
Summer Editor
Every Tuesday is open microphone night at off the Wall Hall hosted by the Beating Bros. 2 pitchers, 75 bottles, 4-12. No orders. 6:30.
The Kasan is now accepting applications for the Summer Editor and Fall Semester Business Applications and provide paid positions and require some newspaper experience. Application forms are available in the Student Senate Office, 105 B, Hall 2. Students must also enroll in Student Organizations and Activities, 220 Strong Hall; and in Room 200 Flint Hall. Completed applications are due in 200 Fint Hall, 5:00 p.m., Wednesday, April 28.
The University Daily Kansan is an equal OpportunityAffirmative Compensation requirements are sought from all qualified people regardless of race, religion, color, sex, disability, national origin, age, or ancestry.
MED CENTER BOUND? Newly refurbished
2 BR Duplexes available now. Carpet, A/C,
Appliances. Call. (913)-381-2878.
4.30
Sublease, choice 2 br. apt., furnished, between campus & downtown, $280 mo., 749-
0955.
ESTABLISHED **STUDENT COOPERATIVE** close to campus and downloon. own/room/six. Sleep eight meals each week. $75-100. Utilize utilities. SUNFLOWE HOUSE. 842-9421.
Furnished one bedroom apt. for sublease.
Excellent location to campus and downtown.
Central air/heat. Available May 15. Call
842-6556. 4-30
TRAILBRAKE. Leaving for full-Festival,
the TrailBrake warehouse houses all have harvested gold appliances and large bathrooms. Launchy facilities on the premium Swim-
ing pool, spa, tennis courts and gym. 4-20
2500 W. 600 h. 843-7332. 4-20
500 W. 600 h. 843-7332.
MASTER BEDROOM AVAILABLE starting with this summer session, $100.00 month with free utilities. Call 841-1434 for details. 4:20
PRINCETON PLACE PATIO APARTMENTS.
room for rookie, features wood hunting fireplaces,
wash/drive 2BR, lake house fully-coupled
kitchen, fully-coupled kitchen 3BR-4.5B,
3BR-3.5D to 3BR at 2908 Princeton Blvd, or
2906 Princeton Dr, or 2907 Princeton Rt.,
SOUTIENE PARKWAY TOWNHOUSES,
8th & Kenard. If your tired of apartments
at the other end, head to feature a br. 1/2 bath, all appliances, at-
tached garage, a gym, a storage room, a garage, we are opening new, and
the summer and fall. Call Craig Levi in
about our modestly priced townhouses, if
you need them.
Thinking of Next Year?
SUMMER SULELEASE May rent free, walk to campus or downtown, June & July rent negotiable, 2 bedrooms, utilities required, quiet. Call 847-7157, comfortable, quiet.
Sleeping rooms 1-3 bedroom apartments.
Duplexes. No pets. Call 842-8971. Lease
for summer or full year. 4-30
1800 Naismith Drive
Check Us Out This Spring or Summer
Must see to believe. Furnished rooms with utilities paid near university & downtown. No pets. Phone 841-5500. tf
Naismith Hall is the Place to
Applications are now available
- Private Sleeping-Study areas
We Think You Will Like Us!
Live..
2 bedroom furnished mobile homes. $185
and $213 per month. Available May 1st.
Clean quiet location. No pets. Jayhawk
Court. 642-970 or 642-912. 4-30
- Maid Service
* Great Location
- Private Baths & Showers
* Choice of Meal Plans
Applications are now available
Call 843-8559 or Stop By
Sublease large 2 BR. apartment near stadium. Water, gas paid, central air. $320
841-8235. 4-29
*Choice of Meal Plans
*Parties
Avalon & Harvard Square Apartments. 1 & 2 bedroom apartments to campus June 1 or Aug 1. occupancy. Call 841-6080. K4w Valley Management, Inc.
Now leasing new 2 & 3 bed room duplexes.
Available for Aug. 1 occupancy. Fireplaces,
garages & much more. 841-608-980.
Valley Management, Inc.
SUMMER SUBLEASE. New furnished town-
house. 13th & Ohio. 3-4 people. Price
negotiable. 749-1243 or 749-2436. 4-30
Schiumer subimbus – Nice 2 bachelor of
math encremery – Eiffel bachelor of math
animeity
1 bedroom apartment with loft. Furnished.
AC. Next to the Sanctuary on 7th. Great.
Call 842-8709. 4-20
*Scausia 2 bedroom, 1½ bath, full kitchen,
bath, living room, pool area. Pizza plaza,
piquero, supermarkets. Malls have pool,
mountain view, hot water heater, cipher lock,
housing hot water heater. Nest nearby.
749-639 or 883-787
2 Bedroom apartments on campus
Sublease 2 bedroom apartment at Meadowbrook.
Anytime May to August IS. Call
843-3052. 4-30
Apartments
SUMMER SUBLUE. Available May 15
walk to campus or downtown. Modern 2
bedroom. $200 + utilities reasonable in sum-
mer prices. Refundable at 80% of deposit required. Call 882-747-800. d-30
Summer sublease $65.00 off per month. Located at Hamover Park Apartments. New, furnished, excellent location. Fall option.
*1-2802
4-29
For May, very nice summer school rooms in large quiet home one block from Union. There are many private baths or see of 1250 Ohio. Beautiful views from the room and back. Also nice single room. 4-30
HOUGHTON PLACE, Summer leases. 841-
5775. 2400 Alabama. tf
- swimming pool
- air conditioned
Jayhawker Towers Apartments
Furnished upstairs studio apartment, available May 15. On KU bus route, and close to downtown. C/A 841-3991. tf
- utilities paid
- air conditioned
- on bus line
- on bus line
- cablevision
Two bedroom campus in residential area northwest of campus. Available June 1. summer and or fall. Call Steve after 5:00 p.m. bmi-3833. 4-30
- furnished or unfurnished
Spacious furnished 4 bedroom home 2704
Straford Road. Family room, pool table, hall
room, large kitchen. 3 private rooms.
4 graduate students or 2 couples. $212
utilities. 267-0175. References required.
- laundry facilities
Bummer and fall rentals: houses and apartments. Near campus no. 312. Lynch Real Estate: 845-1601 or 841-3323. 4-30
5 bedrooms, 2'bath; 2 car garage, fireplace,
all appliances $700 monthly; 2 duplexes
2 bedrooms, 1 car garage, all appli-
ances free; dorms open to campus;
close to school 749-3838, 943-7527 4-30
Summer sublease, with option in Fall. New
3.bedroom duplex on Orchard's golf course,
3015 University Dr. $465.00 per month. 811-
8225
SUMMER SUBLEASE with option for fall
Modern 2 bedroom apartment, low utilities,
short walking distance to campus and down-
town. 841-175. 4-29
1603 W. 15th 843-4993
Summer Sublease, fall option—Studio $180,
utilities included. Close to campus and
downtown. 749-1088. 4-30
Tower B—Women Students only
Office Hours
Mon-Fri, 8:00-5:00
Sat, 12:00-4:00
Sun, 12:00-4:00
2 bedroom apartment 5 R, central air, bed
and refrigerator, no pets. Grab preferred.
Available. June 1; $240, $244 New Hampshire,
843-3501. 4-30
Summer aubreee·with extension option in fall; 3 bedroom apartment with central air, furniture, carpeted, downstairs, pool and eco-friendly features. Make an offer. 841-8900. 4-30
2 bedrooms townhouse 2 blocks from campus.
14th & KENTV. AUC full kitchen, garage,
farmed 1½ bath, priced to submit. Call
842-2905.
4-30
Summer- a breeze on spacious apartment for two. Rent is negotiable. More information? Call Amy D. at 843-6253 or Lisa K. at 843-4715.
FABULOUS DUPLEX! Live in style! 3 bedrooms, 1½ baths, fully carpeted, Central air & heat. Call 842-8851 now! 4-30
Subluate TRAILRIDGE 1 bedroom apartment, May 11- July 31 with extension option in the fall. May rent free. Call #82-825 after 5.
Roommate for May 1, summer and possibly fall. $110/month plus utilities. Serious students preferred. Come take a look. 842-00238.
84-20
4-30
Sublase Meadowbrook studio apartment.
Purnished Heat, water, cable, pad.
Bainton pool, tennis courts. May 1-7 July.
634-843-8982 at 6:30 p.m. 4-30
Summer subunit 2 rooms available May 15-
Aug. 15. $125 per month utilities included.
Behind Watson. 843-6720. 4-29
Befind Watson, 843-6720 4-29
THREE BEDROOM HOUSE—across from
Oliver Hall, central air, very clean, book shelves, large storage area. APARTMENT 4. Easement apartment across many furniture, outdoor seating, central air conditioning. Fare $90 on weekends. Both available 6-11 am.
MADBROWKO. Now available for June,
Purnished studio, electric Kitchen, carpets
and draps. 2 swimming pools, 3 tenuis
chairs, 4 bathrooms. 8-10th floor. 4-30
822-6200, 822 & Cresting
Summer sublease large beautiful 2 bedroom apartment. Furnished, free water and cable TV. Excellent location. 843-7104. 4-30
Sublease June 1-Aug. 15, 3 bedroom, back yard, 2 car garage, close to campus, $215 + uilties, 841-3577. 4-29
Sublease May 15-Aug 1. Fully furnished,
stocked kitchen, color TV, A/Z. 2 blocks
east of union in 2 bedroom, less half
for $299. Kitchen for $299. M-4-29
negotiable 749-6051
Duplex, great location 811 Ohio. 2 bedroom,
stove, refrigerator, a/c, carpet available now $260/mo. 1-796-6833. 4-29
Furnished apartments for rent near downtown and university. No pets. Reserve your apartment now. 841-5500. 4-30
KING-SIZE WATERBED, SWIMMING POOL.
King-size pool with 32-foot watershed furnishings come with this spacious 2 bedroom in Harvard. Square suite abode applies to sublease for June and July.
See to believe—Excellent location, sublease 2 bedroom apartment. New kitchen, bath, central air, & carpet. 841-2119. 4-30
2 bedroom. 2 bath extra—large apartment for summer suite. Park 25. Call 749-2988.
House for summer subst. Very close to
campus and downtown. Call 864-6785 or
864-6793.
SUMMER SULELEASE, carpeted bedroom, furnished, carved, air conditioning, 14th New Jersey. All utilities free. $130/month. 789-4606. 4-30
Furnished one bedroom apartment. Bills
paid. No pets. #13 Louisiana. $195. - 405-276-8288.
Available午 1, 2 bedroom furnished
apartment. New kitchen, a/c/4 blocks from
campus. $30 per room + % electricities.
Dessert required. Phone: 842-767-400
4-30
Will consider all offers, Summer and/or/all apartments. Wooden apartments on Iowa across from Capital Federal Bank 2 bedrooms and pool. For details call 6344-6844.
Share a beautiful house near campus $85
+ 1/5 utilization Summer/fall, b41-467. 4-30
New duplex in Orcheards—2 bedrooms—Pretty area—Garage—No pets. On bus route.
841-8454 4-30
Summer sublease: 1 bedroom Cedarwood Apartment, furnished. Female only. Terms negligible. Call 843-6094 4-30
Spacious Meadowbrook studio apartment,
summer sunside. May and August free.
Will deal $20 month; normally $230. gas
& water paid. Call: 5:00 - 811-474-7960.
Must sublease. One bedroom furnished apartment with study loft and central air.
See to appreciate: 842-6611. 4-30
Two bedroom apartment, on bus route.
Available after finals for summer/full year.
Did laundry in building, water
cleaned up. Wheelchair available.
you're now paying . 841-5634. 4-30
4-30
Summer sublease with fall option. 1. bedroom, water & gas paid. air conditioning. diffrasher, laundry. Trailridge. Call 841-1809. 4-30
Summer ablease with option for fall, furnished 3 bedroom. Mala apartments (pool, a/c, etc.). Auxiliary mid-May; first payment on loan. Contract manager about H-88. 4-30
SUPER SUMMER SUBLEASE- 2-bedroom,
furnished, modern looking, split level, 1/4
bath room in Hancover Place. Chesapeake
Bay! Kiss notEGotable! Kentucky.
4-30
4-30
Roommate needed summer: 3 bedroom, 2
bath furnished apartment, a/1 close to
campus. $125 + a/1 utilities. 841-3727. 4-30
Sublet Hanover Place studio apartment. Five minutes from campus. Phone 842-6315.
Keep trying. 4-30
Fall sublease, large one bedroom apartment.
Park 25 complex, call 864-3043. Ask for Jaap
or call 841-8413.
4-30
SUPER HOUSE for SUMMER BULLEASE.
One person needed to share 3 bedrooms.
The bedroom, garage big, yard park nearby with tennis court. garden, keep $149, negotiation $814-307, keep $149;
1 BLOCK FROM KANSAS UNION. Furnished apartment for two or garer, or serious need. No pets. Refs. Dep. Lease required $250.00 each. Travel included. Trialive available June 1, 2 bedroom plus family, or 2 students, $235 month, accom., 3809 pets, near campus, 4-28 3605 evenings.
SHARE BEAUTIFUL, TWO BEDROOM
FOR SALE
May 20. Fall option, furniture:
bedroom, wardrobe/ dryer, ar, inc.
cool bed, closet, toilet, bath,
quiet room, $140 each, utilities: $450
keep living
Roommate to share large 4 bedroom house;
garden, fireplace, on bus route; grad student
preferred; $112 month + % ¼ utilities
841-6074
4-30
Summer sublease: modern furnished studio apartment—a/c, wall-to-wall carpeting—located next to the Sanctuary! Call 842-3213.
Cheap. No Hills to Conquer!. Large 2 bed-
room, great location, pool, a/c. 749-0268.
4:30
1
For sublease in May. 1 bedroom apartment.
Close to campus and downtown. 841-8625
HANOVER PLACE-Sublease-2 -2 bedroom
apartment available May 15 with optional
rent. Call 841-8625 for kitchen,
kitchen,宾特 study room, split level.
HARBET RENT VERY NOGIEATABLE: Call 743-7900.
TRAILRIDGE townhouse for summer suburbs.
3 bedrooms, 2 baths, living room, dining room, separate kitchen. n, free cable, fireplace, swimming pool. 4 bedrooms. court rent. Nest-40
641 - 819 481
Looking for a place to live next fall?
Koinonia community has vacancies. For介 introductions, visit koinolia.org or marrithen. 1204 Oresdau 843-6933 4-30
Summer breeze-bulisee-A 1 bedroom apartment May I, $350/month May I, 749-0847
Dispersely need to sublease 2 bedroom apartment. Excellent location with A/C, carpeting, comfortable living for 2 or more. $500.00 but very neglected. Call 842-6955. 4-30
1st floor apartment at 10th & Missouri. 2 large rooms and bath. Nice carpeting and plenty of windows. 749-1016. 4-30
4 bedroom townhouse. Trailridge. Summer sublease/fall option. Fall patio, pots, fireplace, on bus route. $125 per person plus ¼' utilities; 841-3686. 4-30
Sublet apartment—rent negotiable, 2 bedroom. Clean, carpet, walk to campus, 842-1590, 4-30
Nice 1 bedroom apartment, air conditioned,
close to campus/downtown. $175/month +
utilities. Call Linda. 841-7451. 4-30
1 bedroom. furnished $125, call 842-2679.
4-30
Summer sublease, nine 3-bedroom town-house,
A/C, D/washout, on KU B. route,
$275 per month + utilities. Call 864-1628
@ 864-1310
4-30
For rent: 1 bedroom apartment, water paid,
walking distance to campus. 749-0536 or
841-5255. Apt. 5. 4-30
2 bedroom Trailinglidge to subiter for June and July. $250/month; water and gas included. Central air, dishwashers, hollowy overlooking pool. 841-6107. 4-30
Summer sublease. 2 bedroom townhouse.
Hanover Place apartments. Garage. a/c/more. Rent negotiable. 749-1668. 4-30
Summer sublease. Large 1 bedroom apartment; partially furnished; a/f free cabana and HHO; laundry; parking; start June (or earlier) $155/month. 740-219-0308 6-30
Summer sublease. Price is negotiable. Located at Hanover Place Apartments. New, furnished, close to campus. 641-432-3832.
FOR SALE
Alternator, starter and generator specialties,
MOTOR MASTER ELECTRIC
AUTOVACUOELECTRIC, 433-8065, 9065
KENWOOD
Stereos-Televisions-Video Recorders. Brands only. Factory sealed cartons. Lowest prices in the K.C. area. Diet your family call Total Sound Discount 913-384-6000 4-30
Western Civilization Notes. Now on sale! Welcome to the Western Civilization Series. Makes sense to use them-1) As study guide, 2) For review, 3) For annotation. "New Analysis of Western Civilization Notes," by Stephen Bookmark, and Oread Bookmark. If you buy this book, try Oread Books.
1972 Grand Prix Model J—Excellent condition all around. To see appreciate. Andy
2 Batan *wood/windheads*, O.Sullivan stereo cabinet, buther bake table dining cloth, classical music, bike rack, Call 842-8588 for 5 - 4.30 1975, Batan 2, door hatch $1600, iPhone 6, leather case
1979 MAZDA RX7-GS PURRFECT 843-8825
842-8625
4-30
TENNIS RACKETS—Head, Wilton, Dunlap.
Prince, Kiney-Good selection, new/used.
Will buy yours if in good condition. 842-671
2:30 a.m. on Friday. tf
Living room set, 5-piece dinette set, bed
room set, coffee table, two end tables,
more Excellent condition. Call 843-3218
after 5:00 p.m.
4-30
Inflatable raft. Great for fishing or river running. Has motor mount. 843-7430 after six. 4-29
Scientific American. 300-plus issues from mid 1952 thru 1980. $80, delivered locally. 4-29
Ford Flesta Ghia 1980. Excellent condition.
a/c, sterio. 3-door. Silver metallic. 11,000 miles.
843-9234.
1974 Honda CB360 looks nice, runs great:
Extras with bike. Asking $550.00, Must sell!
864-2809. 4-30
BGW 410 Stereo power amp. 230 watt.
Mint. $475 firm. Call Bryan at 843-5817.
2 speaker cabinets with mid-range horn and 15" woofer, 175 watts, RMS, Jeff Smith. 843-5366. 4-30
New Women's clothes jeans—Calvin Klein,
Levi, Eniqit, Zena (Zen) $20, Polo shirts ($10),
Blouses ($10), Sweaters and cords ($-10),
Call 892-1583
4-30
Older organ. Consonetta, with long pedals connected to bench. $250. 841-2453 or 842-
3550. 4-30
Hospital bld with mattress-less construc tion. Entrance to room has a ramp. Crazy Ernnie wants to offer you a slightly more airy room with bedroom with windows that op Call 843-8549 Ask for Ernnie Steve Call 843-8549 Ask for Ernnie Steve
1972 Toyota - automatic, a/c/m,fm/rfm
4 extra tires. Excellent condition. Owner
traveling to Europe. Will give away for
a birthday after a purchase of 843-216 any time.
Fisher snaker $250 740.1965 4.30
Custom V4 valve stucco amp 2-128 Celestial
Valve, automatic dual piston. Selling custom nail golfer, All brass 5-string, automatic double drum harpoon Harmon and Kawdon turntable. Straight train cartridge. Asking $200 off offer; 75% off Valve.
Stereo speakers. Essex. four 100 watt cabinets. Sell all four for $1000 or best offer. 749-1965. 4-30
1973 Ponty Leman's station wagon for sale.
Fully equipped, needs some work. Take a
look and make an offer. 843-3752 or 84-
2168 after 6 p.m. 4-30
For sale bnd, sofa and chair recliner. Call
lauyers. 749-3536 4-30
76. Seircron, 4 speed, am/fm radio. Must
suspend apachecrone, $3,500 or compromise.
Sale price: 8.99 p.m. 5:00 p.m.
15 speed indoor bike. Bags: Call after 5:00
pm. 841-4700.
Camera system: Mamiya C-220 body, 80 mm and 180 mm lens, 2 finders. Good condition, $450, 843-7932, Johniele. 4-36
MGB-GT '88. British green, new batteries,
Perelli tires. Runs great $1000 or best offer.
By May 3. 885-858.
Guitar and case (Imperador) $75, not electric. Phone #82-5090. Mon-Fri. 4-30
MUST SELL. Matching sofa, loveseat and chair. Dinette set, recliner. Call Ray at 842-8993. 4-36
1972 Subaru 1300, good condition, 749-0110
1977 HONDA CIVIC. Great MPG. Super car for college student. $1800. Must sell. 841- 4706. Keep trying. 6.30
1980 VESA BRAVO MOPED. See it to believe
it is excellent condition. Under 300 miles.
$500 or best offer. 864-6724
4-29
Mattresses, box-springs, sofa-bed and 3-
shelf bookcase. Call 841-7723. 4-30
4-30
Bottons $20 per pair. Call Jane; 841-7833.
Sea's Keenan 1.7 cu. ft. it’s rugged, 8
mold. Great for dorm or small
apartment. Must sell by May 13. Call 841-7839.
Miniatures-Printer's Trays, Jewelery, KU-
miniatures. VIP room. Fri-Sat. 30 and 1st
l. Ramada Inn. 9 to 7.
4-30
Ladies Clothing店 70%-15% off, retail price
New spring and summer fashions Fri-
sday and Saturday only. 9 a.m.-7 p.m. VIP Room,
Ramada Inn.
9
University Daily Kansan, April 29, 1982
Page 15
Apple II + computer, disk drive. Silent-type printer, HP mod. Sony A 13" color TV, and associated software. Retail for computer. Apple II 2000 will sell for $290. Calm $410-8433.
For Sale. Allied 4-track tape deck with 12 tapes. Call 842-8227. 4-30
Acoustic guitar-Yamaha FG 580. Rosewood and spruce body. Excellent condition. Must sell. $20 w/case. Call Mike 749-4278 4-30
19" Schwinn bicycle, excellent condition.
$79.00. Call Bill at 749-2035, evenings. 4-30
Need fall hosthunting? 1967 12 x 52 b bedroom
home in Perry, HA. Lot rent $40 a
month. Room includes TV, AV.
Available mid-August. Call 884-3836
weekdays or 1-597-5973. Evenings:
4-30
Marmatt STEREO Receiver 292/ew per channel, turntable sem-aux, power amplifier, offerable ten.75 Colm i can cassette, i can snow tread wires, powers on, call my anytime. 843-609) Terry 4-309 calls My anytime. 843-609) Terry 4-309
Simmons mattress, box springs, and frame.
You can pick up May 6th. $50 or best
call: 843-4695.
4-30
1871 Buckle Century, 4-door, 39,600 miles, a bike power brakes, power steering, good tires, Good condition. Original owner. 272-4048 (Opeka). 4-38
Twin bed, desk, book case, 4 har stools, end table. Very reasonable. Call Steve 841-513. 4-20
Vendor PA 100 Head 8 input amplifier with pair of column speakers. Call Stan, 841-8113. 4-20
8-month old Pioneer auto return turntable,
12 watt receiver with clock, Eonex 3 way
speakers. Asking $395.00. 841-4972. 4-30
Schwin ten-speed TRAVELER III Like
new, best offer. Call DAVE 814-8432 4-30
FOUND
Dipair keys at Pizza Shoppe 6th & Kasol.
Call 842-0600 4-29
Found: Key in SE corner of O Zone parking lot. Call 841-3404 to identify. 4-29
calculator in Learned Hall last week. To
calculate, give serial number or full description
of calculator, along with date and place it
was lost 843-8089. 4-30
Found: one red Igloo cooler containing battle of champagne. Ask for Jim at 843-
6767. 4-30
HELP WANTED
Programmers. Local Company needs part-time programmers for microcomputers. We can supply equipment. Send resume to P.O. Box 8509, Lawrence. Attention: 4-30
You are commuting to from Kansas City *NY*
I need someone to deliver UD's at the RU
I need someone to deliver UD's at the RU
Bob Bawls. For information... Continuing
JUNIOR & SENIOR History, Meteorology,
and Astronomy. Participate in a reading study for 40-45
minutes at a leading university with a fee of
10,00 to 10,000 and an appointment with April 23
at 10:30am or Fraser Hall or call 864-444-7900.
Fraser Hall or call 864-444-7900.
SUMMER JOBS AVAILABLE
COLLEGE STUDENTS—
We want ambitious go getters living in Lawrence, Topeka, Emporia, Manhattan, Salina or trade areas for summer work.
ask about our cash awards program. Car helpful.
913-232-2484
KUY-L is seeking a full-time coordinator for the summer semester of "82 would be quarter time and the program $250 a month for a minimum of 18 hours a week. During the summer semester, the coordinator will receive a minimum of 40 hours a week. The coordinator must be dedicated to the needs suffering caused by this new faculty. There are alternatives to the needless suffering caused by this new faculty. Show on your resume section and classism. Show on your resume section which show that you fulfill this qualification. We have a large student community preferred. Send a resume to KUY-L 110B Kansas Union, Lawrence, KS 73072. Email Equal Opportunity@kuy-l.com.
**Positions Available.** Fulltime summer positions available. Born 1925M, born 1930M. Write Summer work P.O. Box 2842 Lawnrys. Work with U.S. is needing nursing committed to providing care for the children who are victims of battery and abuse. For training session start May 20. For more details call 4-300-674-7000.
PHYSICAL THERAPIST . Lawrence Memorial Hospital has a full-time opening for a physical therapist to treat in-patients and out-patient patients. 8-A-M-S and some Saturday mornings, information, and Nancy Huey. Employment opportunities are available. Qualified Handicapped ureg to apply. 4-29
Acknowledged Graduate Assistantships &
Graduate or Undergraduate Admission
KU School of Engineering, KU Office of
Technology Center-KARIS Program, Nichols
Hall-Campus/KU School of Engineering, KU Student Assistance (hourly) Length of employment, Summer I825 Length of employment, Summer I825 $32.50, regular hourly; Graduate Assistance (hourly) Length of employment, Summer I825 $32.50, regular hourly; Graduate Organization (hourly) Length of employment, Organizing files; literature searches; drafting other materials; course work in photo interpretation or grade statu
ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT - The Center for East Asian Studies seeks an educator, B.A. and experience in office-related activities required; fieldwork in education, administration, and editorial experience preferred. Annual salary $90,000,ifications and experience. Applications will be accepted by mail and resume and letter of recommendation to Professor Lawrence, RS 66045 (913-864-5849). Contact information: An Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer. Applications are accepted on the basis of race, religion, color, sex, disability, veteran status, national origin, age and/or age-40.
Energetic, personable waltresses need
Must be willing to work. Hourly wage plus
tips, commission and incentive bonus. Apply
at GAAMONS after 8:00 p.m.
4-90
COLLEGE STUDENT. If you live in K.C. area and need summer employment: Call Charles Looney collect (913) 722-8811 for a 8.30 a.m. to 4.30 p.m. interview.
R-search Assistant, B.S. degree. One Semester and one French Interpreter June 9th–November 14th. Job Interpretation—classroom setting, $20 per room plus room and minimum. Contact: Carl Ordr or Dr Baker K.S.U. Manhattan, NS. Mail resume to K.S.U. Equal Opportunity Employer.
Person to care for 3 great kids, approximately 20 hours per week. Schedule flexible. Must be able to drive, have own transportation. 842-2786/842-5645. 4-30
College Students: If you live in K.C. area and need summer employment, call College Student COLLECT 411-725-8092 between 8: 80 to 10: am. for a profile interview.
4-30
Summer business opportunity—can continue into school year. Designed for students short on time. Set own hours and earnings. Call 749-1828. 4-30
Teacher, for summer program; elementary education or Early Childhood Certificate required; $625/month. Call 1-441-6955. 4-30
Part-time help needed weekends and Monday.
A+L Rental 2900 Iowa. 4-30
Business student wanted 1 or 2 days per week to help in management, bookkeeping, accounting, and general finance; pay for individual who is very familiar with pay for small business practices and tax rules (Tongkauan K. K48-1634, Larry. 4-30
Attention Undergraduates. Are you still asking me for your class interviewing students for summer work program. How does $1,098 compare with $1,025 for a contact call? 740-322-5721. 4-06
*ADVENTURES IN HEALTH* NEEDS DIRECTORIAL BTOBS. NO SELLING EXCELLENT EARNINESS FOR THIS PROGRAM. MON, FEB. 19, MO. YOUNG, C/O AH BOX 514 STILLWATER, WK 74076 4706.
Students: Did your spring break turn out to be a summer success? If you're not ready for summer, be able to help you. If you are hard worker and have your entire summer free, call 780-691-4020.
Need money? Can work at homeown this summer.
Make $200-$1500 and more a month. Call 842-2679
4-30
Aggressive salesman needed for the People Book. Your hours, good profit. Call 1-648-3133 4-30
LIVE-In HELP WANTED Room & board in exchange for childcare (3 small children). Country home 30 minutes from Lawrenceville. Send resume to student. Call 441-4366. 4-20
PERSONAL
Instant passport, visa, ID, & resume photographs. Custom made portraits b/w, color. Wells Studio. 749-1611. tf
Remember . . . mother loves you, show her how you feel this Mother's Day. Swel's Studio for portraits of fine quality, satisfaction guaranteed. 749-611. 4-30
TAN ME
LOOK YOUR BRONZED &
BEAUTIFUL BEST
15% OFF
Spring White Sale
FREE session (new customers only)
Guaranteed Safe &
For Appointment
North Side Cour
Holiday Plaza
Say it on a sweatshirt with custom silk-screen printing 1 to 1000 shirt art by Swella 749-1611. **tf**
The Keeper—Weekly Specials on Kega! Call 841-9450—1610 W. 23rd. | tf
PICK UP
YOUR
YEARBOOK
IN FRONT OF
HOCH
TODAY
COMPENSIFIERI HEALTH ASSOCIATES
Free pregnancy testing; early and advanced
out patient abortion; gynecology; cross-
fertilization; & Roe Overland Park,
II 1913; 642-3100.
U.S. Maternity Services
HEADACHIE, BACKACHE, STIFF NECK
LEG PAIN? Find and correct one of the
problems with your facial care
843-9338. Assure Blue Cross and Lone Star Insurance
too
teddy
show starts at 9
MARY KAY COSMETICS-Full-time beauty consultant. 842-6541. tt
Kansas Union Ballroo
**Spring formals.** Barb's Second Hand Rose
517 Indiana Open 11 p. 5 mpm.-486-746.
Wanting to talk with someone special,
don't hesitate to call through headquarters (914-2842) or information center.
Dateline: Friday April 30
PREGNANT and need help? Call 'BIRTH-
RIGHT', 843-821-7637, tr
Storcs-Televisions-Video. Recorders. Name
buyed. Factory sale cartons. Low-
weight prices in the K.c. area. Get your
price, then call Toll Sound. Download
4-30
Skillet's liquor store serving U-Daly since 1949. Come in and compare. Wilfred Skillet Jr. 1906 Mass. 843-8186. tf
Catch Some Wind
SAILRIDER
center for lessons and rentals
Call your certified boardsailing
Remember, O most graceful Virgin Mary,
who had a long and wonderful life to help you,
sought the Lord who implored the intercession was left unaided.
Implied The Lord's mercy, I came.
To thee. To thee, I come before thee I stand still and sorrowful. O Lady of the earth, O lady of the mercy, hear and answer me, Amen.
MASSAGE. The Human Body has 640 important pressure points. Massage has been used for people to maintain excellent muscle condition and relieve pain, your number, 841-1262. 4-30
Get ready for the lazy, GATOR daze of summer! The Iod gator and all of his of his friends—Kids-ishs, shorts, pants, shoes, everything!) are waiting during April at Alarmar Museum. If you wish to buy a burial in AMERICAN MEMORIAS IS 15% off with KU ID. Come to either the Rocqueport museum or the Lincoln Center onention Parkway. Sale ends April 30th. 8.00 am to 8.00 pm, 7 days a week.
would like to thank you
for letting us make YOUR
HORIZON
--kind of music for the
--past two years.
GEOGRAPHY 5' USED FURNITURE & Antlure
GEOGRAPHY 3' p.153 MASS & AUTLOUR
GEOGRAPHY 3' p.153 MASS & AUTLOUR
See 'ya next year!
Graduating seniors take advantage of our
Graduation seniors take advantage of our
Seattle Swaths 769-1011.
4-30
GREAT HOUSE for summer sublease, 6 bedrooms in new renovated home with bus route-$750 and their cheap for 6 people. Call 841-1390 and to anyone or George Waters at 212-3571. 4-30
Dance classes at the Lawrence School of Ballet will continue through May 15. Special jazz and ballet interim session May 24-June 10. For schedule, 842-4395. 4-30
The story of a man who wanted to keep the world safe for democracy, and meet girls
Bill Murray stars in Singles
Friday and
May 1 7,9 and 11 p.m. next to the Union
Friday and Saturday, April 30 and Dyche Auditorium
Vintage clothing—just bought out an estate.
Come see. Inflation Fighter. 8 E.7th. M-Sat.
10-5:30. Thurs. ttl 8. 4-30
SPECTRUM OPTICAL. Bring in your Drs.
prescription or we can duplicate them.
Free adjustment and lower frames available. Comp
adjustment and lower frames available. Open Bed 160-280,
1.13, E.7 th. M-4-30
--as out-patient
Termination of problem pregnancy to 25 weeks LMP
For a good time, call T.J. 843-6244.
WHCS—Wichita 316-684-5108
Looking for someone interested in taking a coast to coast bicycle trip this summer.
Phore 841-6668 4-30
Professional privacy and confidentiality
Take a break-stop by Barb's Second Hand
Hand. $15 Indiana TUE.-SAT. 10-5. 842-
7476. 4-30
NOTICE TO ALL STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS
Promotions Mon thru Sat
If you think a meal isn't satisfying with out MEAT, try our out-of-th世 WEG-ETARIAN lunch, weekdays, 11:30-11:30. YOU CAN EAT CAB: 794-1517. 4-30
Big Tag Sale. 20% discount on all jeans, tops, shirts with white tag. Leag. Thur. 10-8 Fri. 10-6 Sat. 10-3, 29, and May Westridge Change. 61 Kasid. 841-6125.
Registration materials for the 1982-83 academic year are now available in the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 220 Strong Hall. Those organizations registered by May 7, 1982 will be listed in the fall 1982 Faculty/Student/Staff Directory and will be included in the Summer Orientation Brochure which will describe KU's student organizations.
**SPENCER MUSEUM BACKBOOK--From April 26-May 41 all DOVOR BOOKS in the store.** (Freek's discount.) Open during hours. **FOUND on steps outside of Joe's. One brunette, 5 feet 4 inches, 105 pounds. cuddle, will hold. Call 749-2043. 4-30**
Musicians wanted immediately for full or part-time established band. All styles. Good pay. 749-3649. 4-38
Mellada - Sorry April 28th at 3:00 p.m. won't
be available.
Frailiz 2015 Morningide Drive, Lawrence
Frailiz 2015 Morningide Drive, Lawrence
On Sunday, April 25, MLX of K. U installed the new TPC-C server in the Natick office. Nice is Free, disguising its告我。Our v.p. M. D. has more vigor than Ms. have more vigor。Advise To-Kelly-good. She and Ann our treasure, McGann Lambas S. and Ann our treasure, McGann Lambas S.
**AITTOONG—Clyde's Tattoo Parlour, 117 W.**
**39th. ST. KC. Mp. B181-923-5533** **4-30**
Save Money? Do you love to find bargains or forgotten treasures? Do you love arts & crafts and have a keen eye for the beauty of the lawrence Fleet Mart Grand Opening at the Lawrence Fleet Mart Center, 23rd HIll Shopping Center, 23rd and Ouchi-4h 10
Students...MOVING OR LEAVING TOWAIT to take 'sake' Turn it off into cash at the store or drop it in. 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GAY AND LESBIAN SERVICES OF KANSAS
would like to thank everyone who has supported GLSOK this year and invite you to:
"MAY DAY PICNIC" this Sat. May 1. Call or stop by the office for details. 664-3091
"Last chance dance" Wed. May 5, 8-12 pm Off the Wall Hall.
ARTISTS & CRAFTSMAN. Display and sell your waist at the Lawrence Fleet Mall. No more than 10 people a day. Daily rental only $9 a space. Grand Opening Saturday. Shop for information. Call 841-272-6530. Shopping Center. For information, call 841-272-6530.
Lake to play games, join contests, listen to music, read books, and get dressed for Day WII. Saturday, May 8 from noon to midnight demonstrations and info booths. They must be at the Lake Village Museum quarters, certain counseling center, which is located at Lake Village.
Community Auction 700 N.H.
Every Wed. 6:30 p.m.
Consignments Accepted
Consignments Accepted
Wed. 10 a.m. till sale
Sat. 10-5
841-2212
GARAGE SALE- Saturday only, 8 a.m. -4 p.m. girl's gym, basketball goal, camp stove and equipment, other miscellaneous items 1007 Wort 27th Street 4-30
**STUDENT NURSING HOME AIDES:** Share your experiences with us as a team in the organization. NANSANS for IMPROVE. Input on conditions and quality of care. All correspondents are required to be KNIX 2971; Mass St. #21, Lawrence. K600 6454 (301) 842-3988 or lawnschaser@univ.edu
My junk (including a ten-speed) and I need a ride to St. Louis (Desperes on Peron) or 5/13. Willing to share expenses. Call Steve. 864-2839. 4-30
MEGA-KEGAR Saturday, May 8. Live
businesses will begin at 6:30 a.m.
miles of North Lawson on Airport
Bridge Bridge is temporarily out
dutton and must be parked in front
of the airport bridge. Point of
access站 1 mile to County Line
Rd; east 1 mile to Airport Rd; then on
County Line Rd to Preservation Wild Life
Infrastructure Committee for Preservation of Wild Life Infrastructure
To the Power Six: love and thanks for these past two years. No other band could play George Benson and the Go-Gos in one set. One, two, three... Danny. 4-30
SERVICES OFFERED
Schneider Wine & Keg Shop—The finest selection of wines in Lawrence—largest supplier of strong kegs. 1610 W. 23rd. 843-3212.
WRITING A RESUME? What to say? How to say it?拜止 The House of Uber and pick up our resume on resume or NASD University, 2-4 Monmouth, 3-9 Sat. NOON-Sun. BUN
for 50' we can screen photographs so they can be printed or copied.
Photoscreening
COINTECH
Encore Copy Corps
25th & Iowa
842-2001
GRADUATE STUDENTS THEISIS COPIERS
Why pay more and get less? Encore offers volume of copies made. Also, we are the best shop that can offer variable reduction, enlargements and Xerox 5000 quality (4ft x 3ft) Copies. Encore Copy Corp. 842-2001 4-50
Professional Stringing Tennis and Racquet-
Priced Prices in Call. Call 843-682-8520
843-682-8520
4-30
Put your best foot forward with a professionally printed resume from Encore. We can write it, then 4, and print it for you. Call Encore 852-300-5298, Sioux Falls, Iowa 4-30
RESUMES - Professional; students' resumes a speciality. 841-2654. 4-30
TUTORING MATH, STATISTICS, PHYSICS.
Call 841-3164 or 864-4176 (ask for Robert).
4-30
LRAKN TENNIS from experienced instructor in small groups with other K.U. students or private lessons 842-6713 after 6:00 p.m. tf
Experienced Tap Dance Teacher wants begin-
ning and intermediate students. Will
teach in my home. Call Susan, 749-0053.
4-29
Vidotaphosis of Academic Skill Enhancement Workshop. Time Management, Final Exams, and Semester Wrap-Ups (May 3-9). Register at the Student Assessment Center, 121 Strong Hall, B44-8044. 4-30
Party Picture
Opportunities
Would you like to operate your own party picture company in Lawrence, Kansas? If yes is your answer and you would like additional information concerning a local franchise send your name, address, and telephone number along with a brief resume to University Daily Kansan, Box 99, Lawrence, Kansas, 66045
MOPED-CYCLE RIDERS Experienced cycle mechanic will do tune-ups or repairs at reasonable rates. CALL JERRY. 861-5123 4-30
SPECTRUM OPTICAL - Do you have a screw-box? Broken! *Broken frame*? One day service on lins in most cases. Open 10-6 M-; 841-113. 4 E; 7th. 4-30
House sitter for summer, lawn maintenance etc. included. Call 841-4409, 12-8 or 843-3359. After 8:00.
Tutoring—Math 002—Excellent references.
Cheap, call 842-2428. SUA ticket pass for sale.
4-30
It's spring and the semester is almost over and everybody is ready to start school. When you need to talk to someone, call them or drop in for a few minutes of your time. We're here to listen when you have a question. We can help all services are free and our assistance is fully funded from the Student Activity Fund.
TYPING
Experienced typist. Term papers, these, all miscellaneous. IB Correcting Selective Eile or Pica, and will correct spelling. Phone 843-3654 Mrs. Wright. If
Experienced typist. Theses, term papers, e-
books. IBM Electronic Selectric. Call Sandy after 5 p.m. 748-9818. tf
It's a Fact, Fast, Affordable, Clean, Typing,
843-5820.
tf
AFPDONABLE QUALITY for all your typing needs: themes, dissertations, resumes, mailings, mails, misc. Call Judy 842-7945 after 6:00 p.m.
TIP-TOR TYPFING—experimented tytplist IBM Correcting Selectite II; Royal Correcting SE 5000 CD. 843-5675. †
Experienced typist will type term papers, thesis, dissertation books, etc. Have IBM self-correcting Seleitria E. Call Terry 842-7547 anytime or 842-2671.
*TYPING PLUS* Theses, dissertations, papers, letter, applications, spelling, resume, spelling, grammar, student ec. English tutorial for foreign students or Americans. 814-6254.
For PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myrna.
841-4980. tf
IRON FENCE TYPING SERVICE. Evenings
842-2507. tf
Experienced typist—thesis, dissertations,
determinations, setting selectr,
Barb, after 5 p.m. [842-3210]
Fast, accurate and experienced typist will type your papers. Reasonable. Call 842-8091.
Experienced typist will type letters, thesis and dissertations. IBM correcting selective. Call Donna at 842-2744. tf
MAGIC FINGERS TYPING SERVICE. 843-
6129. 4-30
Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms,
graphics, editing, self-correct Selective.
Call Ellen or Jean Ann 841-2172. tf
Quality typing and word processing available at Encore Copy Corps 25th and Iowa.
842-2001. 4-30
Graduate students tired of typing, retyping and rewriting files in TeX, were asked to word processing it at Encore Call 842-2001 for more information. Would like to type description, thesis term
OVERNIGHT EXPRESS typing-Editing-
Proof guaranteed next day IBM-Correcting Sectric II. VIctor Clark: 842-3
8240.
Would like to type dissertations, thesis, term papers, etc. Call 842-3203. 4-50
For a good type call Debby for dissertations,
theses, term papers, letters etc. at 749-6736.
http://www.library.upenn.edu
Shakespeare could write. Elvis could wiggle; my talent, typing. Call 842-0643 after 5:00 and weekends.
FAST & CLEAR TYPING SERVICE.
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Professional, accurate and fast typing. Dis-
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Person to rent master bedroom of a large 3 bedroom mobile home starting with the summer session. $10,000/month with free utilities Call 841-1454 for more info.
Wanted outgoing Christians and conscientious students to share 5 bedroom house at 140 & Kentucky next fall & spring $180-$250. Send resume to Including. Or Darrie 843-7692.
Female roommate wanted for summer. Nice air conditioned. Close to campus. 841-6543 Call for dotalls. 4-30
FOOMATE WANTED AVAILABLE for summer and next year. Move into my apartment or I can move into yours. Responsible, mate Call: Dave; 842-206-9637
Roommate for summer. House is one block south of campus. Quiet, launder. A/C, washer. dryer, dishwasher. No smoking. 841-8635. 4-30
2 female roommates for summer; 1 fema-
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WANTED: 1 NON-SMOKING Roommate to share 2-bedroom MOVE apartment starting August and/or sublease for summer. 842-9663. 4-30
One female roommate (non-smoker preferred) needed to share 2 bedroom Villa Square apartment during BS-83 school year. Roommates need to be 24+18rs or Caron B642-8168 4-308
Female stairmaster wanted for tailpitting stroomer. House is one block south of campus. Quire. furnished. A/C, wash器, dry洗衣器. No smoking. 841-6623.
Roommates wanted to book 4-bedroom house near campus. Approximately $125 per person, utilizes included. Call 842-7052 or 841-1203.
HOST-FAMILY for 17-year old German girl. MJD July to end August. Cost of living paid or exchange agreement. Call 844-6178.
Roommate(s) to rent apartment for summer
Rent negotiable. Free May rent, no gas or water bath, pool, a/c on bus route.
To Inquire, ask for Steve B. Bors, 844-325-6700.
Housemates needed for $87.50 + 1/5 utilities/month, 1216 Hall. Available June 1st for summer and fall. Call 642-837-450
Mal- roommate for summer and/or next year by male senior to share nice 2 bedroom apartment c./a. waher/druyer, nim-d rent. Rent $40 plus % utilities 841-9632.
MALE ROOMMATE~Nin-room to share 2 bed rooms, apartment 1/2, close to bus route, $18/month room. Tm. 769-3602 after 4:30 PM. Female roommate wanted to share large four bedroom house across from high school. No smokers 80% month + 1/2 utility room.
Female roommate wanted for fall/spring with without apartment I have well-be-haved vases. 841-4177. 4-30
ROOMMATE WANTED Female, non-mosk-
to share 2 bedrooms, apartment at West
Hills, next Fall $100/month + 1/3 utilities.
Call Jennet. 864-1271. 4:30
For Oaks apartments, Roommate for summer and/or fall. $145 with heating, cooling gas and water paid. Nice pool. 843-925-8000. a-30
SUMMER BOOMMAST. Furnished apartment.
Very close to campus. May move in after graduation. Rent + 1/2 utilities $42-
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Need roomie for summer. $120/month plus
$1/unitles. 10 minute walk to campstw
841-4181-4181 p. ask. For Daw: 4-30
Non-smoking female roommate for 2 bedroom apartment, 10-minute walk from campus. Graduate student preferred Call: 1-833-4147 after 6 p.m.
Female roommate wanted for summer.
Spacious apartment with pool. $95/month.
+ 1/3 utilities. Call 864-1617. 4-30
Female roommate wanted to share 2 bedroom townhouse in Quivira Falls, Overland Park 2, pools 3, tennis courts 4, clubhouse. $250 + 1) utilities Call 642-7482 after 6:30am.
Male roommate to share 3 bedroom duplex,
starting in August $106 monthly. Call Servi-
684-1323 or Kent 684-1359
4-30
Male housemate for summer or and fall $100
+ utility. Close to campus. Must be
near and no pet. Smoker. Loud music
player. Call Min-Shm. 81-467-88. Evening.
2 liberal roommates, $100/month. 2 baths furnished. No pigs please! 1138 Kentucky. 4-30
842-320-394
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Page 16
University Daily Kansan, April 29, 1982
121
Scoreboard
Basketball
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Quarterfinal Round
Best of Seven
Entrance Conference
Xon 100, Milwaukee (tied 1-4)
120, Milwaukee (Filadelphia)
Eastern Conference
Washington 120, Boston 103 (series G-1)
Philadelphia 120, Milwaukee 108 (Philadelphia
league series 2.6)
Western Conference
Seattle 114, San Antonio 99 (series tied 1-1)
Los Angeles 117, Phoenix 98 (Los Angeles leads series 2-4)
Soccer
Quarterfinals
Northeast Division
April 30-Buffalo at New York
Eastern Division
April 30-Buffalo at New York
Western Division
St. Louis 4 Deperson (St. Louis leads series 1-4)
St. Louis 2-Mercer (St. Louis leads series 1-4)
Hockey
TONIGHTS GAMES
Conference Finals
Best of the West
Wales Conference
International
Campbell Conference
Vancouver at Chicago (Vancouver leads series
1-0)
Baseball
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Eastern Division
Fresno W L G TL GB
Oklahoma State 12 5 476 789
Oklahoma State 12 5 730 789
Oklahoma 8 6 613 354
Oklahoma 8 6 613 354
Iowa State 5 15 213 100
Iowa State 5 15 213 100
Oakland 6, Baltimore 5, first game
Boston 6, Oakland 4, second game
Kansas City 8, Boston 5
Cleveland, Seattle 1
New York, Chicago 0
Houston, Kansas 2
Minnesota, Dartford 2
Team | W | L | Pct. GB |
Boston | 12 | 7 | 532 |
Boston | 12 | 9 | 632 |
Milwaukee | 9 | 7 | 563 |
Cleveland | 7 | 9 | 488 | 1½% |
New York | 7 | 9 | 488 | 1½% |
Toronto | 7 | 11 | 383 | 4½% |
Toronto | 7 | 11 | 383 | 4½% |
NATIONAL LEAGUE Eastern Division
California 10 10 700
Chicago City 10 10 588 2½%
Seattle 10 9 479 2½%
Texas 11 11 479 3½%
Texas 11 10 373 6½%
Team W L G Pct. GB
NY M 4 1 690 2
Montreal 8 3 690 2
Toronto 10 8 456 3
New York 7 1 388 3
Washington 7 12 468 3
Chicago 7 12 388 3
Atlanta 14 14 727
San Diego 12 12 507
San Diego 9 5 474
San Francisco 7 11 389
Houston 7 11 389
Houston 13 12 6%
St. Louis 8, Houston 4
New York 13, Chicago 5
San Francisco 7, Montreal 10
Atlanta 7, Pittsburgh 10, 10 mixtures
New York, San Jose 6, lappings 12
Celtics lose in NBA playoffs
By United Press International
BOSTON—Rookie Frank Johnson threed in a 25-foot, three-point field goal with three seconds remaining last night to cap a late Washington rally and the Bullets to a 103-102 victory over the Boston Celtics, squaring their Eastern Conference playoff series at one game annie.
Philadelphia 120, Milwaukee 108
Andrew Toney scored 31 points and
Julius Erving added 24 to spark the
Philadelphia 76ers to a 128-108 victory
Seattle 114. San Antonio 99
over the Milwaukee Bucks to take a 3-0
win against their Eastern Conference-
appalled first half.
Gus Williams scored 34 points and Fred Brown helped pick up a sluggish Seattle offense in the second quarter to spark the Supersonics to a 114-99 victory over the San Antonio Spurs.
Los Angeles 11, Phoenix 36
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar scored 24 points and Earvin Johnson added 19 points, 12 rebounds and 12 assists to lead Los Angeles to a 117-86 victory over the Phoenix Suns.
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Jayhawk APARTMENTS West
Williams becomes ASU coach
CARLISLE
Dan Wagoner
Williams is the second member of KU's offensive coaching staff to leave the team in the last month. John Hadd, KU's offensive coordinator, left the team as his offensive coordinator and quarterback coach of the Los Angeles Rams.
"MY AMBITTIONS are to coach in the pros, and you can't get stereotyped as any type of coach," Williams said recently. "You need to get more exposure and get a variety in your coaching."
Ivy Williams, KU's offensive backfield coach for the past three seasons, has been named receiver coaches at State, it was announced yesterday.
By GINO STRIPPOLI Associate Sports Editor
(913) 842-4444
For Williams, Arizona State will be his seventh coaching stop. He opened his coaching career as a graduate assistant at Xavier, his alma mater. He then coached a year in high school before returning to the college ranks as an assistant coach. More recently, he shall. Williams then went to Kansas State as offensive backfield coach from 1975-77 and receivers coach at New Mexico State in 1978.
"They gave me a great offer," Williams said. "The weather is great and the money is better. They also run a more wide-open offense.
Head Coach Don Fambrough said, "We certainly appreciate everything Ivy has done for us over the past three years. We certainly wish him the best of luck."
Don McLeary, receivers coach, will immediately take over as offensive backfield coach. A search will begin for a new receivers coach.
Smith, Wagoner picked NFL drafts two
By RON HAGGSTROM
Sports Editor
524 Frontier Road Lawrence. Kansas 5044
Smith, a co-captain, was the Jayhawks' third-leading tackler last year with 82 stops. As a junior, he was fourth on the team with 91 tackles.
"I FELT ALL along he would go high in the draft," Head Coach Don Fambrough said. "I'm happy he went to Kansas City.
Two Kansas Jayhawks had their dugout taken when they were taken in the NLAF draft.
"One thing he has going for him is that he has exceptional speed," Coach Fambourg said. "He has proven that he is powerful and aggressive in spite of his size."
Wagoner might be a surprise pick to some people, but when one considers how NFL teams look at speed he is no surprise at all.
"Smith has two things going for him at Kansas City—One, he is a durable player and the two, style of defense they play is to his advantage."
Noseguard Greg Smith was drafted in the seventh round by the Kansas City Chiefs and defensive back-punters against the Chicago Bears at the Detroit Lions in the ninth round.
Smith showed his durability last season with the Jayhawks when he did not miss a single game or practice.
"My speed was the only thing I had going for me," Wagoner said. "My size had nothing to do with it."
Last season, Wagner made so tackles and had an interception while playing cornerback. He also averaged over three yards per punt return.
However, Wagoner got a surprise when he was picked in the ninth round. "I talked to the Detroit scout this
WAGONER, who was one of the four players on the squad, is foot-10 and 17 pounds.
"I'll give it my best shot," Wagoner said. "It will be icing on the cake if I make it."
week and I was thinking I would be drafted about the 11th round." Wagener said, "I didn't figure on the ninth round.
THE SURPRISE of the draft might have come when Kansas linebacker Kyle McNorton, who was an All-Big Eight First Team selection by Boston and the Big Eight Press International and the Big Eight coaches poll, was not drafted.
Defensive back Tony McNeely will decide today with whom he is going to sign a free-agent contract. McNeely has joined the Dallas, Denver, New Orleans and St. Louis.
"He'll have more of a choice of where he wants to go."
The All-Big Eight linebacker, who led the Jahayhaws with 132 tackles, didn't waste time choosing where he wanted to attack. The Kansas City Chiefs tract today with the Kansas City Chiefs.
Co-captain and guard David Lawrence signed with the Dallas Cowboys.
"I'm a bit surprised that he wasn't
bit ambrogghe said. But it might
be bit ambrogghe."
"I talked to the Detroit scout this
JAYHAWK NOTES: For the first time in Kansas history, the Jayhawks will have co-captains on offense and defense. The offensive co-captains are wide receiver Russ Bastin and guard Paul Fairchild. The co-captains on the defensive side are end Tim Friess and safety Gary Coleman.
AN INVITATION TO ALL LA & S UNDERGRADUATE STUDENTS
For details, contact Nunemaker Center,
864-4223 or the College Office, 864-3661.
You are cordially invited to make an appointment for an EARLY-ADVISING session with your academic adviser before the semester ends. You may contact either your adviser or your adviser's departmental office to schedule an appointment.
EARLY-ADVISEMENT this semester will enable you to skip some of the enrollment maze next fall.
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Friday, April 30,1982 Vol.92,No.144 USPS 650-640
KANSAN
David Dallas
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
Panel OKs compromise for classified salaries
By COLLEEN CACY Staff Reporter
TOPEKA- After sharp criticism from House Speaker Wendell Lady for "nickel and diner" with classified employee salary increases, a House-Senate meeting last night covered the increase of 7.5 percent.
It would be split between a 6.5 percent cost-of-
living increase and a 1.25 percent merit increase.
the increase and a 1.25 percent merit increase.
The panel of members of the House and Senate
Ways and Means Committee met to agree on
compromise measures. The Senate recom-
mendation of 8.5 percent and the Senate
commendation of 7 percent. This was a diffe-
rence of $4.8 million.
The committee began bargaining Wednesday, but could not reach an agreement between the
THE PAY increases apply to all state employees, including KU classified employees. These generally include all university employees except faculty members and administrators.
House's compromise figure of 7.75 percent and the Senate's compromise figure of 7.5 percent, a difference of $800,000.
Committee chairman State Rep. Mike Hayden, R-Atwood, and State Sen. Paul Hess, R-Wichita, appeared to remain in a deadlock last night until Lady, R-Overland Park, stepped in.
"There's no way I'm going to buy that," he said, referring to a proposal by Hess that the committee split the difference and recommend an increase of 7/5 or 8 percent.
(left side)
Rick Musser
"I can't believe nickel and dining is going on here for 1/8 of a point. You realize what these people do for us."
RESUME
nalism.
Rick Musser, associate professor of jour-
See CLASSIFIED page 4
Thirteen semesters.
General Manager of University Daily Kansan, fall 1977-spring 1982.
Duties: Advise news staff, teach advanced review, criticize Kanzan, defend Kansan.
lester
education: Ph.D. in Mass Communications from Indiana University, 1978. (As an undergraduate, threatened to slip controlled substances into his fraternity brothers' milk.
Grew long hair. Moved out of fraternity house and refused to return.)
Voice: "Like fingernails on a chalk board," report says, or "like the voice of a line
Hair: Thinner, grayer and shorter.
Children: Three. Noah, Liz and Ben.
Wife: One. Brenda.
Fobiles: Refuses to read books written by authors who are younger than he is.
Most extravagant criticism of story:
FOOL/S,CRW. (written in red felt pen).
*
Most extravagant praise: "Oh, right, it is the old woman-dumps-de-pagements-on-city."
Hours: In by 9 a.m., out by 5 p.m.
Salary: $22,000
Staff attitude: "We're going to miss the old hime."
Duties next fall: Teach two reporting classes and one journalism seminar. Thirteen semesters.
Kansan fills jobs for summer, fall
The Kansan Board yesterday selected the 1982 summer session editor and the 1982 fall semester business manager for the University Daily Kansan.
Coral Beach, Kansas City, Kan. senior, will be the summer editor.
Susan Cooksey, Kansas City. Kan. junior, will be the fall business manager.
Applications for summer 1982 news staff positions are being taken. They are available in 200 Flint Hall.
Applications are due by 5 p.m. Tuesday in 200 Flint.
图
Weather
Today will be partly cloudy with a high near 70, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka.
A
weather service in 10pm.
The low tonight will be in the low 40s
with winds from the north at 5 to 15
mph.
Tomorrow will be sunny with highs in the low 70s. Saturday night's low will be in the 50s.
Mary Anne Davidson and her two sons, Jess and John, of Kansas City, enjoy a day in the park learning how to fly kites.
Maranatha: church or cult?
By BARB EHLI Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
The synthesizer soothes and the amplifiers send a soft melody floating throughout the room. The melody is suspended on voices that rise and fall rhythmically.
The song comes to an end with the hushed voices murmuring praise to God the Father.
AHEN
"The reason we come together is to honor God," Duvall continues. "When we know Him, He lets us understand other people."
Lyrics from a transparency sheet are projected on the wall and the voices repeat their message two or three times before the next lyrics appear.
"Thank you Lord. Thank you Father," Bob Duvall, Marantha pastor, says. "Father, our hearts do rejoice you. Alleluia. Praise you Lord. Praise you Father. Thank you Lord."
Some members of Maranatha Ministries, caught up in the music, raise their arms high, as if to catch the free-floating notes and channel them toward their hearts.
"You know what we did the other night? Do you want to know what we did the other night? We threw kisses to God—we love him that much."
MARANATHA MINISTRIES, once considered by church leaders to be just another fundamentalist Bible group, has increasingly stirred controversy among church leaders, who
call Maranatha a cult and charge that it practi ces mind control on its members.
Local church leaders are hearing more and more stories of students who describe unsettling experiences during their involvement with Maranatha. Stories of prearranged marriages and students competing all finance demands in the town are being covered. Maranatha's (fundamentalist beliefs).
turbulenceHaskBenefits:
Robert Weiner established the group in 1972 after his involvement with Campus Crusade in California.
Maranatha has grown from a drug counseling center in Paducah, Ky., into a church with 32 campus ministries in the United States. There are eight ministries located worldwide, said, with nine being located in England, Mexico, Brazil, Canada, Venezuela, Argentina, Australia and Israel.
THE NAME MARANATHA originates from the Aramaic language found in Greek script translation of First Corinthians who maranatha is a prayer which means "One Lord come."
The Beliefs
Maratha's teachings strongly emphasize that drinking, using drugs and dating are sins. The tenet that prohibits dating is the most controversial of Maratha's beliefs.
A Marantha booklet entitled 'God's Perfect Choice' had to this say in a discussion on daring
"There are many other things that could be said about the 'dating plan'. However, in light of
the few things we have pointed out, any plan which subjects people to the possibility of being hurt, broken-hearted, emotionally scarred, rejected and defied sexually can certainly have originated in a person of the god of love. We must conclude that this plan had its origins in the pits of hell."
its origins in the plea of
"Amen," "Duvall added. "God told us that
that's the way it's supposed to be and I consider
that a great joy.
"It's a conviction that we have that we feel is valid and is scriptural."
DUVALL ADDED that he first kissed his wife on their wedding day.
on their wedding day.
Drinking is another area that MaranthaТАnada was being sinful. Nick Pappas, traveling Marantha evangelist, talked extensively about drinking as well as drugs and dating when he spoke last week in the Kansas Union on a four-day stop in Lawrence.
day stop in lawrence.
"How much life is in the discos tonight?" he asked. "How many people are looking for someone who's as lonely as himself?"
soften.
Asked why they are against drinking,
Marantha members and leaders both answer,
"The Bible says that no drunkard shall enter the
Kingdom of God."
Maranath publishes a monthly magazine and several Bible supplements. It also has a commitment form that members sign, and a Statement of Covenant of the Maranatha
The Statement of Covenant read in part: "I See MARANATHA page 5
WHAT DO WE RECUTE?
JOHN HANKAMMER/Kansan
Nationally known cartoonist Paul Coker sits amd clutter in his room and hides behind his drawing from Mad magazine. See related story page 11.
Budig pleased with progress made during first year at KU
By ANNE CALOVICH Staff Reporter
Gene A. Budig has found in his first year as chancellor that it takes travel in Kansas to do the most good for the University of Kansas.
so good the girl has spent four nights a week in Kansas towns other than Lawrence to gain support, future students and money for KU.
"one of the best things I did this year was to travel extensively," he said Monday.
Budig said he was pleased to get money from people he talked to in the state and from the Kansas Legislature. The money for Haworth Hall from the Legislature was essential, he said, but securing money for the libraries was one of the year's greatest accomplishments.
Budig was president of West Virginia University before he came to KU.
He met with alumni groups, civic groups, local and state officials, public school teachers, and administrators and teachers and staff of community colleges in the state.
"I got exposed to a good cross-section of Kansas," he said. "I also had the opportunity to talk to a significant number of high school seniors.
BUDIG SAID he did not intend to cut down on his travel next year.
"People in the west half of the state tend to feel ignored. We must do a better job in reminding them KU is their comprehensive state university. We need to get more of our faculty, staff and students out in the state—their presence would be very helpful to the institution."
campus. I spent much less time at the Med Center in West Virginia—it is much smaller there."
Budig also spent a lot of his time at the College of Health Sciences in Kansas City, Kan.
An university presidencies are different assignments." Budig said. "This one was somewhat different in that I had to spend so much time at the Med Center, where a lot of our faculty is located in the United States a very complex organ. The total budget is somewhat larger than the one for the Law系."
IN THE PAST eight months, he said, $200,000 extra has been committed to the libraries, and an additional $100,000 has been added to the base budget for 1982-83 for the libraries.
"Iam especially proud of what we were able to do for the library," he said. "We have underscored our commitment to the library and it is important to the future of the University of Kansas."
Budd said that 1981-82 also was a good year academically.
He said that although ACT scores were declining nationally, the scores of KU freshmen had increased over the last two years and were now three points above the national level of 18.7.
He said KU ranked 11th among all public universities in number of national neri scholarships.
AND KU is assisting students to stay in school with financial help. Budig said, About 4,500 students work at KU on a payroll of more than $8 million, he said, and to offset expect declines in the payroll, $18,000 of University funds and a year for student employment opportunities.
See BUDIG page 4
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, April 30, 1982
News Briefs From United Press International
Reagan seeks deficit remedy by pressing for amendment
WASHINGTON—President Reagan said last night he would ask Congress to set in motion the process of passing constitutional amendment requiring states to allow same-sex marriage.
"We have tried the carrot and it failed," Reagan said in his nationally broadcast speech on the budget impasse. "With the stick of a balanced budget amendment, we can stop government's squandering, over-taxing ways and save our economy."
Reagan pledged the nation's budget would be balanced. Once that is achieved, he said federal deficits should be prohibited by law.
"There's only one way to do that," he said. "So, tonight I am asking the Congress to pass, as soon as possible, a constitutional amendment to require
If approved by Congress, the amendment will be sent to the states and will take effect two years after 38 states—three-fourths required—ratified it.
Thirty-five senators sent a letter to Reagan earlier yesterday, urging him to support a balanced budget resolution approved by the Senate Judiciary
The Senate is expected to bring the issue up for a vote as early as next month. Sixty-six votes are needed for passage and the resolution has 58 coin two separate Republican-initiated letters to the president, 63 House members and 35 senators also expressed opposition to the administration's decision to remove Iraq from the State Department's list of countries whose governments support terrorism.
Junta prepares for Falklands war
BUENOS AIRES, Argentine—Vowing to "bomb immediately" any British ship or plane, Argentina set the stage yesterday for all-out war, declaring a 200-mile sea-and-air war zone around the Falkland Islands. London said its war fleet would lay siege in an identical Falkland blocks at 7 a.m. EDT.
An 11th-hour U.S. peace effort appeared to collapse, and the White House grimly conceded there was "very little basis for optimism." Reagan administration sources said the United States might soon jettison its role as mediator and issue a statement in support of Britain.
In a communique, the military junta said *wain* "within the 200-mile limit" or any aircraft, "overlying argentine air space" would be considered safe. The military junta also said that *wain* "within the 200-mile limit" or any aircraft, "overlying argentine air space" would be considered safe.
It applied to the Falklands and the islands' dependencies, South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands, as well as to the Argentine coastline.
Argentine military officials, who earlier slapped a dusk-to-dawn curfew on the Falklands, said they regarded the decree as an order to shoot first and then take control.
Honduras refuses to pay ransom
TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras—The government said it would not pay "even one cent" of the $100,000 ransom demanded by four leftist hijackers holding 28 hostages, including seven Americans, aboard a hot, cramped airliner.
The hikers, who threatened to kill at least one American if the government refused to turn over 80 political prisoners, raised a ransom and retaliated.
The gunmen, members of the leftist Lorenzo Zelaya revolutionary forces, seized the four-engine Dehavilian Dash-2 plane with 44 other people aboard Wednesday on a domestic flight and forced it to Tegucigalpa's Toncontin Airport.
Fourteen passengers and two stewardesses were freed in the course of the day.
Poland begins release of internees
WARSAW, Poland—Poland has freed 275 intreiteses, the first of 1,000 prisoners being released on Friday. A security crackdown in Warsaw's official media said yesterday.
Fifty-seven Warsaw residents, including Halina Mikolajska, a well-known dissident actress, were released Wednesday from the capital's Bialooleka prison while another 154 were released in the Katowice region, the report said.
Sixty-four women, a third of the female internees, were freed yesterday, according to the government newspaper.
The 1,000 internees being freed by martial law authorities include blue-collar workers, farmers, scholars and students, the newspaper said.
Four fugitive leaders of the outlawed Solidarity Union have formed a committee to fight the martial law regime until Lech Walesa, the union leader, is freed, a statement recently circulated yesterday said. Walesa's wife said her husband would not be one of those released.
Congressmen oppose sale to Iraq
WASHINGTON-Nearly 100 members of Congress, including more than one-third of the Senate, told President Reagan yesterday they oppose the sale of six U.S. aircraft to Iraq and asked him to deny the needed export licenses.
The letters were sent just one day before the Commerce Department was expected to issue export licences for the sale of six L-100 cargo transport vehicles.
The congressmen argued that the aircraft had a military potential because they were considered the civilian version of the C-130 military transport plane.
"We believe the intended approval of such sales to Iraq and the changed regulations are premature and undermine our stance opposition against ISIS."
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Page 3
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Pane 4
Universitv Dailv Kansan. April 30. 1982
7
Students can complain if finals fall unfairlv
Students who think their professors are unfairly scheduling finals, or have several exams on one day, should complain to the chairman or dean of the department or school where the exam is given, the executive vice chancellor said yesterday.
Robert Cobb, executive vice chancellor, this week sent to faculty and staff members reminders of regulations for giving final exams.
"The rules are to ensure avoiding as far as humanly possible in-conveniencing the students either by conflicts or having them so exhausted from previous exam that it perform will on finals," he said.
The regulations require that final examinations be given at regularly scheduled times. No final can be given during the last week of classes.
A professor cannot give a class an exam during that week unless he also schedules a comprehensive final examination.
Also, professors are prohibited from posting grades by names or student identification number.
This is to ensure that a professor does not give a final during that week and call it a last unit exam, Cobb said.
Cobb made several suggestions for posting grades, including having students sign a waiver form to allow them to post the grades by student number.
Also, Cobb said, a professor could number individual examinations and post scores according to those numbers.
Another suggestion was that students provide stamped, self-addressed envelopes so the students can be given the exam grades to the students' homes.
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From page 1
Budig
BUDIG SAID KU also was more able to attract and serve handicapped students. In 1978, the student assistance center provided service to 15 handicapped students. In 1982, 135 students received assistance there.
Budig will outline other improvements in his State of the University Address to be given at the All-University Supper the night before commencement, May 15. He will emphasize that KU was selected one of the top 29 universities in the country, a four-star university, by the New York Times Selective Guide to Colleges, 1982-83.
In his statement, Budig says that KU is no longer a pioneer in the honors field but will try to regain that status. Using the University Scholars program, which was established this year at KU, as a national model will help, Budig said. The program recognizes 20 outstanding bobmohomes a semester.
In addition, there are 45 distinguished
professors at KU, and three new professorships to be funded by the Endowment Association.
DESPITE MIXED feelings about the Legislature, Bush is optimistic about KU's future. He says that although the worsening economy is spreading to Kansas, the Legislature has tried to work for higher education, and has come through with money for Haworth Hall and Moore Hall additions.
He said that there were dew universities that received as much from their states ad KU did from Kansas.
Private funds are helping to build up the University through scholarships from the National Endowment Association, Budig said, and through the new alumni center, which he stressed would also be used as a faculty club. The alumni center is financed by the Alumni Association.
Ground also will be broken on a $3.5 million communications building.
Classified
Hayden said that if some state officials received sizeable raises, classified employees should get equal treatment. He referred to the $54,000 salary of the executive officer of the Kansas Board of Regents.
From page 1
"All we ask for is a little consistency," he said. "If we're going to pay this man $4,000, we ought to think of playing the people in rank and file more."
LADY SAID Wednesday that it wouldn't be fair to give University classified employees a salary increase in return for the faculty's salary increase of 7.5 percent.
KU Classified Senate leaders have said that classified salaries were too low compared to those of the faculty. They said a direct comparison of classified salary increases to faculty increases was not accurate.
This is because classified employees are guaranteed only a cost of living
increase. The merit increase allocated by the Legislature is only an average figure, since classified employees receive merit increases based on staff evaluations and their level in a complicated pay plan.
Each University department uses its own method of determining merit in admission.
The conference committee last night also completed work on the omnibus appropriations bill, which includes a proposal that the future has approved but not yet financed.
The bill includes $50,000 for Kansas applied remote sensing programs based at KU's space technology center and $150,855 for the bureau of child research. The programs needed to cut costs in federal grant next year.
THE UNIVERSITY of Kansas Medical Center also received an additional $252,17 to supplement nurses' salaries, equal to a 5 percent increase.
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University Daily Kansan, April 30, 1982
Page 5
Maranatha
From page 1
therefore commit. In the area of my finances and material possession, my abundance is made available.
The covenant also says that all things operating in the member's life will be watched over and directed to building the Kingdom of God.
Dwall said the statement meant that if any people were was in need, the others should come to his aid.
"In early America, the Church took care of the people," he said.
A MEMBER OFFERED Duvall her car, for example, when he was in the shop a few weeks ago.
DUVALL SAID that he not seen the Covenant itself since November 1880, and that since his group began at KU in September 1880 it would be impossible for such chitches that were included in Bible supplements.
The Covenant also says that God ordained those who were in authority, so to resist them was to resist God's will. The next point stressed obedience because those who were in authority "watch over your souls, as they must give an account."
During one of his talks, Pappas cited a survey by Campus Crusade that questioned college students about their fears. It said that 95 percent of students would never have someone else to love.
Pappas said that only God could give the freedom and freedom from loneliness which people lack.
"You're either serving God or you're serving Satan. Pappas said, "There's no in between."
The Critics
This hardline ideological stance has caused varied reactions among leaders of organized religions in Lawrence, many in response to words and actions of Maranatha members.
"I personally believe it is as much as sect as the "Moonies or any other sect," said Paul Messino, First Presbyterian Church pastor. "I was a supporter of that year ago.
"In the beginning as I dealt with them, I camped groups that had a legal view of the Bills."
BUT MESSINEO and other church leaders said they changed their first impressions of Maranatha after some members of the clergy come to them with questions about Maranatha.
One young woman came to Messina when the Maranatta Church told her God wanted her to be a nun.
The elders said they had two weeks in which to make plans, and six weeks to marry, he said. So far, she has not married him.
far, she has not married him. Duval denied arranging marriages, but
DeeDee Tillman, Manhattan senior at Kansas State University and former Maranatha member, described her experiences with the group.
"To get married, you could never date," DeeDee said.
She said Maranatha members believed God would instruct each man and woman who to help them succeed.
"You give it to the elders, and they pray on it and decide," she said.
She said that one girl had thought God told her to marry two different times, but the elders had
DeeDee was a Maranatha member at Manhattan and Lincoln, Neb., for six months. The Lincoln and Manhattan groups followed the same beliefs, she said.
F RANK TILLMAN, DeeDee's father and professor of industrial engineering at K-State, testified before the State Legislature in favor of a deprogramming bill to allow parents to kidnap children from "cults" in order to deprogram them.
Tillman said his daughter was deprogrammed from Maranatha in one and one-half days.
Tillman, Messina and Rev. Vincent Krise, a Catholic priest at St. Lawrence Center, said Maranatha chose Bible verses to complement its doctrine.
They have an artistic way of taking things out of context. "Tilman" they take a line here from "The Wolf," and the man's name is
DeeDee and her father said money was an important angle to Maranatha.
"If you took the money angle out of them, you wouldn't see them." Tillman said.
Deee said, "They have this saying about giving money if you don't give 10 percent, or probably God is giving it."
"You need to be giving 30 to 40 percent of what you earn."
DeeBee said, "It's a dangerous thing in the set up of the group. The elders are right and you are
REV. PETER CASPARIAN, Episcopal pastor
Revered and highly respected House, had a mild opinion of Marinatha.
"I see Maranatha as a reasonably typical historical movement—a reaction against organized churches," Casparian said.
Right now, he said, Maranatha is in its "first flush of enthusiasm and zealousness, and thinking that they are not going to have the problems an organized church has."
"What I would say is basically a problem to me, is that college students will be exploring a different type of religious experience during their college years," he said.
Campus Crusade could be considered by many to be the type of religious experience because it is inter-ethnic.
He said churches needed to maintain a realistic approach when dealing with students.
Dan Keller, Campus Crusade director, said he thought Maranatha was a Christian organization much like Campus Crusade except Maranatha did not be a church, while Campus Crusade did not.
'Obviously, Maranatha is a Christian organization 'Keller said.
KELLER SAID Maranatha was not a cult.
However, Maranatha leaders do not approve of the beliefs of other churches.
or Die Benis." People from Campus Crusade think Maranatha is fine, but people in Maranatha do not think that people in Campus Crusade and Ichthus are saved."
Orthodox Church. Icthus is another Bible study group that attracts young people. Both encourage participation in local churches.
The different interperipes of the word **Christian** has caused another controversy **Christian** has caused another controversy
Maranatha members believe that Maranatha
"You're not a Christian because you belong to a specific denomination. You'll be like that young girl who spent Sunday, Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday in Bible study, but spent Thursday, Friday and Saturday in drunkness."
—Nick Pappas, Maranatha evangelist
is a true Christian church and that most people in
the world may simply go through the
process of worshiping God.
"It's not enough to confess you're a Christian—you are manifesting the Christian life!" Pappas asked. "You're not a Christian because you belong to a specific denomination. You'll be like that young girl who spent Sunday, Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday in Bible study, but spent Thursday, Friday and Saturday in drunkenness."
PAPPAS WAS originally a member of the Greek Orthodox Church before his involvement with Maranatha. His wife, Patty, had been a member of the Roman Catholic Church.
Krishe voiced the same concern as Casparian and Messione. He said Maranatha was against
want to reach the unchurched, and yet it seems like they do a very serious job of trying to attract people who do have a church relationship", Krihesa said. "A number of people involved not only become pro-Maranatha, but they also become anti-Catholic."
Maranatha gave anti-Catholic pamphlets written by Keith Green of Last Days Ministries to a young Catholic woman who was becoming involved in Maranatha.
Green, who is not a member of Maranatha,
declined to be interviewed.
In his literature Green wrote, "Mouths that used to speak out boldly against the Church of Rome have been quieted by the times. It no longer is in vogue to speak of the pope as 'the Antichrist' or the Catholic Church as the 'whore of Babylon.'"
Dwall said, "We don't teach Keith Green's writings at all. We don't distribute them."
WHEN REMINDED of the incident, Dvall said that that was an isolated incident and that to his knowledge, it was the only time it had happened.
But Messina asked, "Why is their (Marnarantha's) press printing it up?"
"I think they attack every denomination there is," Messina said.
Caspian said that in the past few months, he was aware of Maranatha's anti-Catholic ideas.
"They see the Roman Church as a symbol of corruption in institutionalized group history." Caspian said. "They're trying to strip 2,500 years of history from the church that the Ace (of the Apostles) had."
Caspian said he had been concerned when he heard the girl. He said it prompted him to write a letter to Green.
IN MARCH, Caspian received a postcard from Green that thanked him for his letter and said, "We are responsible to do what God has told us to . . . and we believe in our hearts that one of these things is to expose Catholicism for what it is and to warn people of its deception."
"One of my problems is that they say they
Pappas clearly expressed his disagreement with the Roman Catholic Church.
"What does it take to become a saint? If you believe the Church in Rome, 400 years after you've died, they'll evaluate your life; and if you're to be on a medal or dashboard, you'll."
KRISEI SAID he did not think Maranatha
reliation and religious belief of other cultures
The Believers
"Anyone who claims to teach another person in a public forum should have credentials to teach," Krishe said. "There is no student at the University of Kansas who would sit in any
classroom under any instructor, that they knew someone had authorized that instructor to
The Epipacist, Roman Catholic and Presbyterian churches all require an undergraduate degree and three years of education, and affirmation by their respective church hierarchy.
Massinee said the Presbyterian Church required proficiency in Greek and Hebrew, the languages of the Bible, and a degree in Old Testament, New Testament or Bible Study.
He said Maranatta's misunderstanding of organography and the deprive structure, reflected its lack of credentiality.
Bill Reginole, administrator at the Marantha Campus Center in Gainesville, Fla., countered this charge, saying pastors such as Duvall went to the intensive intense Bible study course with workbooks.
"They are trained right on the job until they are mature enough." Reginolea said.
HE SAID the length of time for the Bible study varied from person to person.
"It depends on how fast he wants to move and what God's spoken to him about," he said.
Reginaole said Maranatha gave an overview of the history and did not offer a degree for the course.
But Maranatha members are idealistic and enthusiastic about God. One Maranatha member is a Rhodes Scholar.
Several members of the group talked about their beliefs.
'I'm not perfect, but I hope to attain it,' said Chris Alexander, Fontana, Kani, sophomore.
"I was walking around hurt from past relationships, . . . during that time God draws man to repentance. He showed me that I was living a life without God.
*Marnaranth is called to the college campus.*
*People like yourself and myself will be world*
*changing.*
Kurt Richter, Lawrenceville, N.J., senior.
sooks like an enthusiastic about his faith.
"Now I know him. He's reality in my life." You say he knows anybody on the man. You've got to humble you to him.
"My desire is to be the best person I can be. I needed healing from the touch of God."
Messina told Maratha members seemed to be insulted, but the sincerity reminded him of Lauren's past.
"Linus said it doesn't make any difference what you believe as long as you're sincere." Messine said. "Linus is always waiting for the Great Pumpkin.
"Sincerity is not really the criteria for one's belief."
But Tilman said, "It's like carbon monoxide. You don't know you're in it, till it gets you out."
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Page 6 University Daily Kansan, April 30, 198
Mixed-media dolls juxtapose pastels
By DAVID HENRY
By DAVID HENRY Staff Writer
Art making has been defined by some as the desire to bring order and understanding to random experience. Others view it differently. They believe that the creative process should transform everyday experiences into something fantastical.
Beginning May 9, the Spencer Museum of Art's Kress Gallery will be divided literally in half, giving equal space to both points of view.
Suzanne Klotz-Reilly's fantastical mixed-media assemblages and doll-like beings, and Peter Thompson's complex, yet ordered pastel drawings and watercolors provide two very different insights into this ongoing controversy about art.
asbH a work of Klotz-Relly defies easy categorization; it has been called "bizzare" and "acentric" by critics. Yet no single word adequately explains her irreverent doles—spindly legged figures with faceless ceramic knees frozen in toothy screams. Klotz-Relly
turns the innocence and charm of childhood into a nightmarish vision.
Her mixed-media shadowbox, "She'll Break Your Heart and Make You Cry," is equally beguiling. Composed of fabric, clay, wood and tiny objects, "She'll Break Your Heat" depicts an amorphous clay creature attacking a Barbie doll in bed.
Klock-Reilly's exhibition, entitled "Humming Heart Gardens," is somewhat of a homecoming Although born in Wisconsin, she grew up in Shawnee Mission and received her BFA degree from the Kansas City Art Institute in 1966. She subsequently taught art in Massachusetts, Kansas, Texas and California before moving to Phoenix, Ariz., where she has worked since 1975. "Humming Heart Gardens" is Klock-Reilly's first Kansas exhibition.
The work of Thompson draws upon very different concepts than those of Klok-Rellly. Thompson's large pastels and watercolors, all created in the last three years, are complex networks of rapidly drawn, colored lines. Out of the chaos of individual marks emerge calm geometric shapes. This tension between the order of the final products and the helter-skelter
process which creates them is the hallmark of Thompson's work in the exhibit.
While Thompson describes the drawings as "mark-making," he avoids defining his work.
"It's a collective accumulation of ideas over the years. You think about painting for 25 years and then when someone asks you, 'What are they asking you for painting?' He hard to understand," she said recently.
Thompson also is no stranger to Kansas. Trained at Rhode Island School of Design and Yale in the early 1965, Thompson has taught the University of Kansas since 1965. He has served as chairman of the painting and drawing department and as associate dean of KU's School of Fine Arts.
KU students will have a unique opportunity to explore the course at a preview opening in week 7 from 8 to 10.
"It's a TGIF at the museum with music, root beer and pretzels," Linda Bailey, Spencer Museum membership coordinator, said. The museum's Central Court will be transformed into a dance floor, with music provided by the Thumbs and Marty Olson, Bailey said.
Javhawk Jam '82 relocated
The event, moved this year from Potter Pavilion to the hill between Memorial Stadium and the Campanile, will start at 2 p.m. and end at 4 p.m. The bands will play around 10:30 p.m.
More than six area bands will set up stage south of Memorial Stadium this Sunday as Jayhawk Jam #2 gets underway, Irene Carr, SUA director, said yesterday.
The band lineup this year includes the Tunes, Betshell Calipar, Murphy's Law, the Artists, Sylvan Williams, and Chad O'Connor.
PETER TAYLOR
"They are rock bands, bluegrass, New Wave— you name it," she said. "There will be something there for everybody."
But small acoustic groups will appear at the event as well, she said.
Carr said some of the bands were from Lawrence, although others would come from Kansas.
The event is free, and everyone is welcome to come and bring refreshments.
"It's just a day of fun," Carr said. "People usually come and make a picnic out of it."
Carr said the event was a KU tradition dating back to 1897, although it was called Wheatstock until two years ago.
THE UNDERGRADUATE BIOLOGY CLUB will meet at 4 p.m. in the Sunflower Building.
on campus
TODAY
A DANCE CONCERT by student
BOWING THE BALL will be performed at b.p.m.
240仁邦中心学校
A SYMPOSIUM sponsored by the COUNSELING STUDENT ORGANIZATION will begin at 8 a.m. on level four of the Union.
TOMORROW
JON HARDSEY/KYANNE Staff
Christine Cressie, standing, Monica Lacey, left and Cheryl LaCoste play three of the seven women portrayed in the University Theatre production of "For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide/When the Rainbow is Enuf." The play, which is a dramatization of the role of black women in today's society opened last night and will run through May 2 in the University Theatre, Murphy Hall. For ticket in formation call the Murphy Hall Box Office.
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University Daily Kansan, April 30, 1982
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Page 8 University Daily Kansan, April 30, 1982
Codv funeral draws clergy, state officials
By United Press International
CHICAGO-Cardinal John Patrick Cody, shepherd of the largest Roman Catholic archicloece in the nation, was laid to rest with pomp befitting his stature and little mention of the scandals that dogged his last steps.
Under a cold, gray sky the church's mighty and the state's powerful came together yesterday to bid farewell to a friend. It was a leader and leaned on as a friend.
Nine cardinals, 49 bishops, columns of priests and other clergy and the city's top officials took reserved seats to celebrate a 9-mile rite of Christian burial. Outside Holy Name Cathedral a crowd of 802 waited in the chilly air, listening quietly to the noon service via loudspeakers.
The cardinal, seriously ill and beset by controversy, died of heart failure Sunday at the age of 74.
In his last year he had the object of a federal investigation into allegations that he diverted up to $1 million in tax-exempt church funds to the benefit of Helen Dolan Wilson of St. Louis, a lifelong friend.
Mt. Carmel Cemetery in suburban Hillside.
MRS. WILSON was in a front row at the funeral mass and burial following at
The funeral homily, delivered by an old friend, the Rev. John J. Fahay, made no direct reference to Cody's but But Pahey said, "He did suffer."
"Greatness comes from the acceptance of suffering," the priest said. "God's annotated should suffer and die."
Then, turning to the closed casket draped in cardinalate red covered by white, he said, "Old friend, we say farewell. Because you suffered, it will be easier for us to suffer. Watch over us. Wait for us."
Chief celebrant of the solemn pontifical Mass was Archibishop Pio Laghi, Pope John Paul II's apostolic delegate to the United States. It was a ceremony of liturgy, hymn and song, the strong voices of the assembled priests reverberating through the old cathedral.
Cardinal William Baum, prefect of the sacred congregation for Catholic Education at the Vatican, brought the
Pope's apostolic blessing to the mourners and to the city of Chicago. President Reagan sent his condolences in a letter read during the service.
AS THE BELLS OF HOLY NAME tolled over the near North Side and members of the Knights of Columbus stood in capped attention outside the cathedral. The abbots emerged from the cathedral. Then came the cardinal's casket.
Cody, the fourth cardinal and sixth archbishop of the Chicago archdiocese, administered the nation's largest archdiocese with 2.4 million members for 17 years.
Chicago police in dress uniform, some mounted on horseback, flanked the funeral-gear. Fifty blue-uniformed and white-gloved members of the main team stand guard inside stairs, above two columns on either side of the main door to the cathedral.
Prior to the funeral Mass, a group of six lay palay筐ers closed the bronze casket in which Cody's vestment-clad body had lain on public view since
Monday night. His red hat was to be hung from the cathedral ceiling beside those of Chicago's three previous cardinals.
EIGHT NORTH American cardinals—John Krol, Philadelphia; Humberto Medieros, Boston; John Dearden, Detroit; Lawrence Shehan, Balkmore; Timothy Manning, Los Angeles; John Carberry, Canada; John Carberry, St Louis; and Terrence Cooke, New York—headed the clergy.
Cody was interred in a crypt just below the tomb of Archibishop Patrick A. Feehan, Chicago's first archbishop. Also entombed nearby are William Quarter, first Bishop of Chicago; James E. Quigley, second archbishop; Cardinal Samuel Stritch and Auxiliary Archbishop William O'Brien.
The mausoleum, of Romanesque architecture, is located on a rise in the center of the cemetery. Built of limestone from Bedford ind., and made with a bronze support supporting a bronze statue of the Angel of the Resurrection.
Ferguson tells board union fiscallv sound
The Kansas Union should end its fiscal year in good financial shape, Warner Ferguson, associate director of the Union, told the Kansas Memorial Union Corporation Board of directors last night.
He said that although total operations were down $22,900 from last year, net income was still good.
He said the Union earned nearly $10 million in actual income.
"Our actual income has tripped in almost four years, which is amazing," Ferguson said.
"I'm also very happy with our employees, because without them we couldn't operate."
The bookstore was profitable, Ferguson said, as was the concessions department.
"We have made excellent recovery in our working capital funds," he said. "Our volume will increase in the past, but it will be constant."
Ferguson said he also was pleased with the employee retirement plan for next year.
"We're making a concentrated effort to upgrade the retirement plan," he said.
And Ferguson had good news for students: the Union's 1982-83 budget does not call for a student fee increase.
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David Ambler, vice chairperson for student affairs, said the increase in student enrollment over the years has been due to buildings and lessen student fees.
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University Daily Kansan, April 30, 1982
Page 9
Senate's performance discussed
By ANN LOWRY
Staff Reporter
Although some students and members of the Student Senate have questions about Senate's value, other members defend its importance despite several improvements this semester.
“It’s a lot of little things that add up to a professional organization,” David Welch, student body vice president, said yesterday. “That doesn’t come screaming out in big red letters, ‘Hey, what look Senate has done.’”
He said the Senate had tried to establish credibility with the administration and the students and he thought it had succeeded.
"I think one of our major accomplishments this term is we have effectively set up a working relationship with the administration by attending meetings—going to meetings with administrators and faculty with the view we're here to provide input, not argue." Welch said.
DURING THE YEAR, students worked with faculty and staff members on committees such as the Parking and Traffic Board, the Health Advisory Board, Recreational Services Board, Student Advisory Council, University Council, the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation and the Kansas Union Memorial Board.
Welch said it always took Senate administrations time to prove their credibility within such groups because the first semester was a learning
process.
But Loren Busby, holdover student senator, said, "It's been a kind of year
where nobody's rocked the boat, just administered to the bureaucracy without moving forward or backward."
busty said he had noticed that senators were more concerned with getting out of meetings quickly than taking time to become well-informed
"What botheres me is the KU Student Senate was created in 1969 in response to national student movements to provide a voice in student affairs," Busy said. "All we're doing now is allocating money."
WHILE ALLOCATING the student activity fee is a large responsibility, Welch said, committee participation in other areas grew considerably this year and the Senate became more organized than it was last year.
"We have tried to get as many students involved as possible," Welch
Some of the Senate's main issues, Welch said, were trying to get beer in Memorial Stadium and protesting cuts in financial aid for higher education.
The Communications Committee finished a Senate brochure that the last administration started, the Academic Affairs Committee gave the students' opinion to the Committee on the Status of Undergraduate Education at KU, the rights committee reviewed the curriculum and the Cultural Affairs Committee helped the Swarthout Student Society's student membership drive.
EXCEPT FOR THE bills dealing with the budget, most of the legislation passed by the Senate this semester was administrative.
One bill renamed the Student Legal Services as Legal Services for Students. Another stated that the Senate would support the chance to speak before Senate.
Resolutions against higher education loan cuts and the KUAC's student activity fee hike were passed.
The Senate passed resolutions supporting the Friends of Solidarity and the Swarthout society's student membership drive.
The Senate passed a petition to rename the Visual Arts Building after J. Ward Lockwood, a former KU professor. He is among some of his paintings to the University.
The Senate passed a petition to allow students to serve three years on the University Council and another to establish a committee of faculty, administrators and students to consider the beer-in-the-stadium issue.
NONE OF THESE issues caused fireworks.
"I think the problem with the attitude toward Student Senate is the fact that Senate is a big trusteeship," Jim Cramer, student senator, said. "The issues and things they deal with are sometimes so technical that the average student would think nothing was going on.
"It's not something that's going to fire up the average student, but that doesn't mean it's not necessary or important."
Wich said the Senate had plans for two main projects to begin this summer; buying a computer system for the Senate and instituting a new lecture series to bring big-name speakers to KU.
On the record
A KU student told Lawrence police that his roommate had threatened him with a six-inch butcher knife and then stolen about $260 from him at about 12:30 a.m. Tuesday at their residence at $248 Murphy St., police said.
Police said the roommates had been arguing and the victim went into the bathroom to get away from the suspect. While the victim was in the bathroom, he grabbed a knife and grabbled at the butcher knife and swung it at the victim when he came out.
The victim left the apartment. When he returned, the suspect was gone and the money was missing, police said. There have been no arrests.
POLICE ARRESTED a 19-year-old Douglas County woman for allegedly attempting to forge a check at abut a 17-year-old in the State Bank. 595,154 ST. police said.
Gail R. Grandtaff, Rt. 2 Humbult was arrested after she allegedly tried to write a $225 check that was not hers. A police closed for several months, police said.
Grandstaff is being held on $5,000 bond in the Douglas County jail.
VANDALS SHATTERED a plate glass window worth about $600 sometime Monday at the House of Usher, 838 Massachusetts St., police
They said vandals threw an object at
the window and shattered it. There are no suspects.
VANDALS ALSO CAUSED almost $500 worth of darmage to West Junior High School, 2700 Harvard Road, sometimes during of March, police were warded.
Reported Vandals had thrown rocks and bricks through about 20 plate glass windows at the school, police said.
There are no suspects.
BURGLARST STOLE more than $300 worth of stereo equipment about a 4 a.m. yesterday from a parked car at 554 Pine Cone Drive.
Police said burglar broke the passenger side window and stole a cassette stereo. There are no suspects.
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Page 10 University Daily Kansan, April 30, 1982
[ ]
Beagles take to a dog's life in drug testing lab
By KEVIN HELLIKER Staff Reporter
The dogs are trained to line up for drugs.
The injections aren't considered harmful, just unapproved as yet for humans, said Taker Higuchi, a professor of chemistry and research in INTERX, a pharmaceutical laboratory on West Campus.
Researchers at INTERx keep about 40 bengues on hand for experimentation with drugs. Higuchi said. Mostly the antibiotics or drugs given to the dogs
are designed to fight such human ailments as arthritis.
Karen Engle, an assistant at INTERx, who trains the dogs and administers drugs to them, said they were working around the building than as nausea pills.
"Everybody here just loves the dickens out of them," she said. "Everybody's got their favorite dog."
HIGUCHI SAID the laboratory bought the beagles as puppies, worked with them for about five years and then settled the animals into good homes.
"Any animal experimentation is looked on suspiciously." he said. "But
we provide as humane and comfortable environment here as possible."
The dogs are kept in cages in a brick shelter behind the INTERx building. Once every six days, they are brought into the room and injected with drugs, Engle said.
"The animals always want to come into the building because they like the attention." she said.
Engle said the dogs received individual attention, to the extent that most of the 40 acquired their own names such as Tyrone, Picasso and Ralph.
"We feel that these are very distinctive animals." Higuchi said.
Many of the animals are named after KU professors, he said. But he declined to say which professors' names had been borrowed.
Higuchi said beagles were first used as experimental animals about 100 years ago and because the dogs were so injured, the practice had continued.
"Our animals are so friendly," he said, "they are totally cooperative."
feels particularly rambunctious, you just let him feel good."
BUT EVEN DOGS have their bad days, Engle said.
Riguchi said that dogs, like people, reacted to drugs differently, and their individual reactions were largely the same for each animal's emotional makeup.
"If a dog is down some day, you give him a little break," she said, "and if he
"There are great distinctions between dogs," she said. "Some dogs are hyperactive, and others are calm. That is where the difference is that dogs are absorbed through the intestines."
Higuchi said the dogs were never subjected to unhealthy drugs on a permanent basis. In fact, he said, there was no evidence that the dogs had the laboratory released them because
they were healthier and better trained than most animals.
"We've never had to sacrifice a dog," he said.
INTERx has worked with the beagles for about 10 years.
"I if we don't have healthy and happy dogs, we don't have good experiments," Engle said.
bangle, who has lived in the country with animals all her life, began working with the bangles about a year ago. She saw that she had a better subject to work with, she said.
"They're warmer than most people," she said.
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University Daily Kanean, April 30, 1982
Page 11
MAD cartoonist wouldn't have it any other way
What-me
a Jayhawker?
Tax receipts and other papers were piled in front of the closet. Unopened Christmas presents were stacked on a newspaper on a chair against the wall.
"I think that one is a police scanner," Coker said. "Where would I put it if I opened it?"
COKER PULLED an issue of the New Yorker from under the pile of papers on the bed, removed the mailing wrapper and the date was June 4, 1979.
Amid the cluster, nationally known cartoonist Paul Coker, 2120 Terrace Road, sketches drawings for Hallmark cards, MAD magazine and other publications. He also drawn the characters, costumes and backgrounds for such seasonal television series as "Frosty the Snowman," "Santa Claus Is Coming To Town," "The Night Before Christmas" and "The Leprechaun's Christmas Gold."
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A cardboard box of markers at his feet, Coker said, "I usually work on my lan all huddled and cramped."
"I'm saving them for a long illness when I'll get to read them," he explained.
A large wooden desk is completely covered with drawings, magazines, cards and papers. A twin bed is barely discernible beneath a hounding mound of more drawings, papers and magazines, and in their brown mailing wrappers.
Coker, bearded and wearing jeans and a navy blue sweatshirt with a hole at the wrist, said that his working space contradicted the image many people had of cartoonists bent over nest drawing boards, but that it worked well
"I know where everything is this way," he said. "What I need is on top." Coker, 53, grew up in Lawrence and
By KIM NEWTON Staff Reporter
Coker spent 10 to 12 years in New York City and the contacts he established then have enabled him to free-lance from his home in Lawrence. He said people were already going should go to New York, Chicago, Los Angeles or Dallas.
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"I was enormously ambitious. I had no sense of where I stood in talent and skill in relation to other cartoonists," he said. "I naively went around to see everyone and developed a lot of contacts."
"I didn't know home video games had control centers," he said, laughing. "The editor sent it back and sketched it in."
Coker said he recently did a rough drawing for MAD magazine of a man watching a video game on television.
"Nobody's going to use somebody in Lawrence when they can find someone closer in the city, especially when you are heading toward a light deadlines," he said.
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graduated from Lawrence High School, where he drew the "Chester Lion" mascot. He received his bachelor's degree in drawing and painting from the University of Kansas in 1951. After a brief stint in the Navy, Coker worked for a Kansas City television station and later for Hallmark cards.
Coker said he also tried to avoid looking at the work of other cartoonists.
WHEN HE THOUGHT he had enough material, Coker said he put together a portfolio and went to New York City. Although he did not have a job awaiting payment, he was offered Hallmark cards, which would pay the rent while he was looking for work.
Coker said he also tried to avoid looking at the work of other cartoonists. "I try not to look at drawings by cartoonists I like whose style I am in some ways envious of and whom I know I can copy," he said.
"It's impossible not to be influenced, but I try not to be overly influenced. People send me books of drawings of animals, but I don't look at them. I can't."
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Movin'out? RENT A RYDER TRUCK
If youre 18 or over you can rent a Ryder truck to use locally or on a one-way (rent-it-here, leave-it-there) trip to another city.
Compare costs before you make plans for moving at the end of the semester. With a truck you can take along your stereo, 10-speed, clothes, all your stuff, and still have plenty of room for one or two other people and their things, so you can share the costs. Compare that to a plane ticket. Or even a bus
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Page 12 University Daily Kansan, April 30, 1982
SUPPORT NATIONAL PLAID DAY, MAY 21,1982... OR I'LL BLOW YOUR LIPS OFF.
DEAD MEN DON'T WEAR PLAID
MAY 21,1982 NATIONAL PLAID DAY BE PLAID AND BE GLAD!!
OPENING AT A THEATER NEAR YOU
Watch for the Plaid Party at your campus!
BOTTOMS UP!
a serious drinking establishment
May 3 from 8-12 p.m. $1 cover charge and 25' draws.
Prizes awarded for the 3 best entries in the Steve Martin look-alike contest. Wear the most outrageous plaid costume and win a prize! Door prizes through out the evening. Be there to celebrate plaid!!!
I
By Sa
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the pro
C1
K that she
queet
Ullman's
the
queet
Ullman's
the
queet
Ullman's
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queet
Ullman's
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queet
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* 1982 UNIVERSAL CITY STUDIOS INC
University Daily Kansan, April 30, 1982
Page 13
Local attorney to run for governor
B. JANET MURPHY
By JANET MURPHY
Staff Reporter
A local attorney plans to challenge Gov. John Carlin for the Democratic nomination for governor this year.
The attorney, Lance Burr, RT, 3 said he was waiting to file until his running mate—a woman—had decided whether he run. He declined to identify the woman, saying he wanted her to be able to make her decision without pressure.
Burr, 39, is a graduate of the University of Kansas and the KU School of Law. In 1974, he lost the Democratic victory for attorney general to Curt Schmidder.
Two important points of his platform,
his said, be nuclear waste and
decomposed form.
HE SAID THE Wolf Creek power
plant was “financially a disaster.” He said the project started out costing $480 million and to date has cost about $2 billion. The problem of nuclear waste and waste disposal be a main concern of all people in Kansas, he said.
"We have not educated the public to the grave dangers of this by-product," he said.
Concerning prison reform, Burr said he had worked in the prison system and was a staff member at the jail.
he said.
Burr has been involved in the protest of the plant for 12 years and is hopeful it will never go into operation.
Carlin's recommendations to pay more to prison charges at the Kansas State Pentiencyt at Lansing was not a solution to the problems there, he said.
solution to the problem.
"I want to relieve the violence and pressure so the guards will have a better time of it," he said.
Oceans of Fun readies for nearing splashdown
BJAN BOUTTE
Staff Reporter
Oceans of Fun is making waves in Kansas City.
The wave machine in the new water theme park's Surf City attraction was tested Tuesday, sending breakers across the one million gallon pool.
Visitors to Oceans of Fun need a swimsuit and a towel and perhaps a little sunbathe to let them through atop the Kansas City shore.
The aquatic theme park, scheduled to open May 22, is billed as the biggest pack of its kind by Worlds of Fun, the developer of the new Zoo borders
obiana Harrison, public relations representative for Oceans of Fun, said that the president of Mid-America Enterprises, the company that runs the two parks, had travelled to water parts and country to get ideas for Oceans of Fun.
"It's all the good aspects of all the other parks." she said.
OCEANS OF FUN features 30 water-related attractions which require 7.5 million gallons of water to operate, Harrison said.
In addition to the wave pool, which is to be used for body surfing and swimming, there is an old-fashioned water hole with tire swings, dubbed Sophane's Lagoon, which ranges from 10 feet down.
tourism who works for both Worlds of Fun and Oceans of Fun, said Oceans that a different consumer target group. Worlds of Fun
"We're going to draw a different class of people to the water park." Harrison said. That group is 18 to 49 years old.
To attract adults, Oceans of Fun includes an adult-only pool, which includes jetsprays and whirlpools around its perimeter and a "Belly Up" bar at which swimmers can be served while they are in five-foot-deep water.
Oceans also includes a young children's water playground that will be supervised by Oceans employees.
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Harrison said this was a big advantage over other amusement parks.
"What's so nice is that you can drop the kids off and go enjoy yourself without worrying," she said.
HARRISON emphasized that the park would be staffed with certified lifeguards at all the water attractions and that employees would be in first aid.
She said that the new park would employ about 200 people and that the two parks would share the same administrative staff.
At the other end of the park is Bucaneer Bay, a five-acre lake for water shows and boating. The park offers sailboats, paddle boats and kayaks by the half hour, at what Harrison called a nominal fee.
THE BEACH OF Buccancer Bay is still waiting for its sand, on which volleyball, badminton and sunbathing is planned.
Oceans of Fun has the usual shops and arcades, plus private showers and locker rooms for the guests who choose to change into their suits at the park.
1 price of visits to Oceans of Fun is $10.50 a day. Combination passions for Ocean and Worlds of Fun are $19.75.
All that's left to finish Kansas City's answer to an eighth sea level of landscaping, a few sidewalks and the sand for the beach. Harrison said the park had been carefully planned around existing trees and foliage.
He said he would like to see full employment for inmates, perhaps with the cooperation of labor unions. With that, he said, he would begin a repayment program for victims of crimes.
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He said he would like to start changes in the criminal code, specifically concerning the insanity plea for murder.
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ANOTHER AREA that needs to be revised is the life sentence, he said. He wants it to be just that—a life sentence with no chance for parole.
there would be less pressure for the death penalty if fewer violent criminals were paroled, he said.
Burr, a native of Salina, said his planters have encouraged encourage more for the farmers.
Because he has a farm background, he said, he can see the problems farmers have, such as not getting the prices they deserve for their products.
Woman's rights also are very important to Burr, and he said that was one reason he wanted to have a woman as a running mate.
"We need a spokesman for the farmers, to give them unity and a forum."
"It's time we involved more women in politics." he said.
Burr said he favored liquor-by-the-drink. But, he said, he would like to see laws passed requiring a minimum prison sentence for anyone who commits a violent crime while under the influence of any intoxicating substance.
PLANNING TO SPEND
THE SUMMER IN
TOPEKA?
Celebrate
MEISNER
MILSTEAD
LIQUORS
Wine
Festival.
Caffeine no trade for sleep
But they can't sleep now. They have that final in Western Civilization tomorrow and a whole army worth of reading to do in one night.
They feel it coming, but they fight it.
By LISA GUTIERREZ Staff Reporter
Pop a Vivarin, they think. That'll do it.
Sleep.
"Sleep and rest is not an old wives' tale," Martin Wollmann, director of Watkins Memorial Hospital, said yesterday.
MANY PEOPLE misuse the stimulant. They ignore usage instructions on the pill box that state they should not be used as a substitute for sleep.
SLEEP MAY be essential, but many students forego it for red-eyed study sessions drifted through under教研室. Some stimulants that contain caffeine.
"Just when I had a test to study for or a lot of reading to do," he said, "whenever I felt it was absolutely necessary."
"It is a life-supporting necessity It's as essential as water and food."
Gene Martin, professor and chairman of the pharmaceutical practice department of the School of Pharmacy, said the lack of sleep was more harmful than the amount of caffeine contained in the pills.
"I stayed up until about 2 or 2:30 a.m. because I had a 7:30 class," she said. "But then you have to take the following day to stay awake."
Two popular stimulants are Vivarin and No-Doz pills. Vivarin tablets contain 200 milligrams of caffeine each and No-Doz tablets contain 100 milligrams each. The dosage of dosage of No-DoZ is two tablets.
Luchen, Prairie Village sophomore, and a former No-Doze user, said, "Sometimes, you're so tired that concentration on what you're studying."
Luchen said he never used the stimulants to stay awake all night.
"Sure, you can abuse your body with a lot of things," he said, "but I think it's a matter of missing sleep."
"I think the most detrimental thing is the missed sleep."
"While I don't encourage their use," Martin said. "I'm not worried about their usage for a short period of time."
Contact the Washburn Summer Session Office (Tapera, KS 66621)
(Phillips 295-8100) for applications, schedules and further information.
He used the stimulant a couple of times last semester, he said. He hadn't used it very often.
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"Whether they're addictive is another question." he said.
A person is addicted to a substance when he experiences side effects when he quits using it, Wollmann said.
But Wollmann said the stimulants could be habituating.
Martin said that people who quit drinking coffee might experience sleepiness and drowsiness and that people who became used to other caffeine-based stimulants might develop the same withdrawal symptoms.
842-4499
BUT A PERSON doesn't have to stop using the stimulants in order to feel the physical effects.
refer to physical traits.
The symptoms all reflect that the body has been pushed by a chemical." Wolmann said.
He listened rapid heart beat, extra beats of the heart, restlessness, excitement, shakiness and ringing in his ears. He experienced physical symptoms of stimulant use.
The extent of the reactions, Wollmann and Martin said, depends entirely on what each individual's body is accumulated to.
WOLLMAN SAID people should consider past experiences with the stimulants before using them.
"What is excessive can be one small dosage." Wollmann said.
25th & Iowa
"This is one final, but there will be another final and another final and after school, they will be the test that's not called a final," he said.
"A person better learn how to cope with these crises and the not-so-nice things in life."
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You are cordially invited to make an appointment for an EARLY-ADVISING session with your academic adviser before the semester ends. You may contact either your adviser or your adviser's departmental office to schedule an appointment.
UNDERGRADUATE STUDENTS
EARLY-ADVISEMENT this semester will enable you to skip some of the enrollment maze next fall.
For details, contact Nunemaker Center.
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Saturday 1:00 p.m. Forum Room
Maranatha Campus Ministries
April 26, 1982
Annette Fischer
Jesus Christ touched my life many times before I realized the extent of devotion that was required of me by my Savior. Many times, Jesus caused spiritual unrest to rise up within me for the sacrifice I had made in order to be subjected to my actions in the opposite direction. Maranatha is the body of people in Christ that helped me to understand the true meaning of devotion and set my life on the path to God's kingdom. My heart and soul were broken when I reached out and touched those who are blinded by Satan works. I am living proof. Through God's grace I have the secret to love, happiness and success. He has led me to Maranatha and joined him in the Spirit of Revival.
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Page 14 Universitv Daliv Kansan. April 30. 1982
口
Tacha's energy, optimism extend to education
By ANNE CALOVICH
Staff Reporter
In her 6-year-old son's eyes, Deanell Tacha is the vice chancellor for the United States.
And if the University of Kansas is as important as the United States to David Tacha, then that is probably true.
The enthusiastic, ever-smiling vice chancellor for academic affairs uses the budget priorities she helps form as her platform and spreads the word of her undergraduate education reform plan all over the University of Kansas.
It sprouts from her birthplace, in Scandia, and from the fact that her grandmother was in the first class of KU's school of nursing. It started when
But education isn't politics for Tacha, it's her bell-hem commitment.
she came to KU and got her undergraduate degree in American Studies in 1968. It continued when she came to KU as a law professor in 1974.
IT'S SOMETHING that now steals her nights and weekends as well as her days, and she's finding in her first year what is often a difficult access is balancing care and family.
She has a husband, John, who owns a business that books and sells educational entertainment. And they are children: John, 7; David, 6; and Sarah, 2.
"The timing of this particular job is just not particularly good for me," Tacha said. "There are times when I really have to say, 'You have got to step back and take a more balanced perspective.'"
"There are those who will say I fall into the category of evangelist because
I am so optimistic about this University and the people that are here and get so troubled with some of the problems that I perseudm myself for zealous ountism.
Tacha must smile in her sleep.
Administrators schedule meetings starting sometimes at 6 a.m., meetings that roll into the early evening and are followed by KU social events she must attend to ensure the airbriefcase is there to do before the children have gone to bed.
HER OWN undergraduate career at KU has caused her to be concerned about undergraduate education now. She has spurred on the Report of the Commission on the Improvement of Undergraduate Education which was passed in 2015, and which calls such things as a University-wide core curriculum.
She meets with deans, administrators and faculty members regularly.
David Amber, vice chancellor for student affairs, said he enjoyed working with Tacha.
CAROLINE
"She's done an exceptional job in her first year," he said. "We will see a lot of improvement in our overall academic program particularly at the undergraduate level in that she has taken a personal interest in the commission's report and the achievements are empowered by the emphasis and leadership she has provided for it."
But getting around to the day-to-day problems of faculty and working toward the big goals also are a problem for Tacha.
"One of the frustrations this year is that I ask for as open and candid answers to questions, but the problem is the physical accomplishment of that task. There is so
**THIS MEANS she is so booked up it scares even her. When someone called and wanted her to speak in September, I thought sure she'd be free. She wasn't.**
I'm sending you one, so please send me back one that tells me more about you cause I never knew you very much. Forget. Erase. Exclamation point.
much I want to think through with other people," she said.
Ambler said, "You don't get in administration of higher education if you're a low-energy person who wants a quiet life, to be able to go home at 5, kick off your shoes and play with the students." She has one of the most important jobs in the University. She has the lion's share of the University's programs and
"And when the telephone rings for her, I just go, 'Help my years!' "
"I made a choice early on that I would not be happy unless I had both a very active family life and a very active professional life," Tacha said.
Tacha laughs at her son. But she knows there are trade-offs when a woman has both a family and career. She learns that half the work of raising the children.
Deanell Tacha
'I've been so identified with this institution, it's just hard for me to see anything but being a faculty member.'
—Deanell Tacha
resources. She is responsible for all the academic part, probably 75 percent of the University in the budget."
So life has become a juggling act: how to fit all those with serious problems into the schedule that's already full, and how to get her son to tumbling and make it to an honors banquet in the evening.
Moments at home are special; the Tachas don't talk shop at home.
BUT THE CHILDREN know mommy's very busy; they're used to frequent phone calls when she's home, but not when her dictating letters late into the night.
"Every night she always wakes me up," John, the elder son, said.
"To Jim: I'd really like to know what your letter's about. That's why
"But my children and my husband are largely responsible for the amount of energy I have to do other things.
"It's been very gratifying to me to have a personal life that's very separate from my University life."
The most time Tacha has taken off work has been three weeks, when she had her youngest child. Otherwise, there was the time she passed out one week and then worked at Old Green Hall in front of her law class when she was nine months pregnant. However, she managed to teach the remainder of the course, with an extra class a week to finish it more quickly, giving the final before the baby was born.
perhaps did not give the same amount of time to their family as they did to their professional lives.
TACHA SAID her family helped her job and she worried about the men in higher education she worked with who
m many ways it's the only way I can maintain some perspective on the kinds of problems that develop day by day here and it gives me quite a commitment to the future of higher education or real personal commitment," she said.
TACHA IS IDEALISTIC. She sits in front of the Student Senate committee and tears well in her eyes as she, still smiling, describes her excitement upon discovering that many professors teach freshman and sophomore classes.
She sits in her family room, enjoying a rare night at home, tears of fatigue showing in her eyes, and she still looks up with admiration words "commitment" and "essential."
"I am so optimistic about what I'm doing right now at the University," she says, explaining her hectic life. "The energy level just builds."
She intends to keep on with her job. After her first year, she finds the faculty to be the biggest reward in the quest for excellence in education.
"This faculty is absolutely remarkable in my mind," she said.
"I enjoy the administrative side of it, but I enjoy it because I see myself trying to facilitate faculty and students," she said.
"I've been so identified with this institution, it's just hard for me to see anything but being a faculty member."
For that reason, she'll take up one old job along with the other two next semester. She'll go back to teaching.
"There's nothing like teaching," she
"There's nothing like teaching," she said.
"She works for the whole United States!" David said.
Or spreading the word.
The University Daily
KANSAN WANT ADS
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one $2.50 two $7.75 three $3.25 four $3.25 five $6.25 sixteen nine ten
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to run
Monday Friday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Friday 5 p.m.
Thursday Friday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
AD DEADLINES
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
The Kanan will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be
ENTERTAINMENT
KANSAS BUSINESS OFFICE
118 Flint Hall 854-4358
FOR RENT
Every Tuesday is open microphone night at Off the Wall Hall hosted by the Ebeling Bros. $2 pitchers, 75瓶, 4-12. No cover. 4-39
Live in the CHRISTIAN CAMPUS HOUSE
This summer & fall. Become a part of a
weekend campus trip. Alan Tunk
nak, campus ministry.鸟482-6092. tf
TR COOPERATIVE LIVING. Sunflower
House.鸟482-9421.
Wanted to educate Christians and connect
to share 5 bedroom house at
14th & Kentucky next fall & spring
100-14th & Kentucky next fall & spring
MED CENTER BOUND? Newly refurbished
2 BR Duplexes available now. Carpet, A/C,
Appliances, parking. Call (913)-381-2878.
THE MAID SERVICE
—THE FOOD—
*THE SOCIAL LIFE*
Are Just Three Of
The Many Reasons
People Come To Nalasmith Hall
Summer Or Fall/Spring
Individual Leases
NAISMITH HALL
1800 Nalasmith Drive 843-8559
Established STUDENT COOPERATIVE close study. Six evening meals each week. $75 study. Six evening meals each week. $75 study. Six evening meals each week. $75 HOUSE. 942-3611. UBILIES. SUNFLOWER.
TRAILDRIAGE. Leasing for full.-Schools. houses. All have harvest gold appliance, wall to wall carpet & drapes furnished. tennis & racquetball. On K.U. bus. rooms. One bedroom on one bedroom. For sublease. Excellent location to campus and downstream. Central air heat./avail May 15 4-30
PRINCETON PLACE PATIO APARTMENTS.
for roommates. features wood burning fireplaces, window coverings, water/wrafter/rayer, office fully-suited spaces, kitchen/family room. 3-5 day availability at 1209 Prinneton Bldd.; or 3-6
Jayhawk Tower Apartments
Now taking applications for fall and summer leases. KU students only.
2 Bedroom apartments on campus
• utilities paid
• swimming pool
• air conditioned
• on bus line
• cablevision
• laundry facilities
• furnished or unfurnished
New policy for fall semester
Tower B-Grade Students only
Tower B-Women Students only
Office Hours
Mon-Fri, 8:00-5:00
Sat, 8:00-12:00
Sun, 12:00-4:00
1603 W. 15th 843-4993
SUMMER SUBLEASE May rent free, walk to campus or downleown. June & July rent negotiate. 2 bedroom, utilizes reasonable room. Call 81-746-3591 quiet. 4-30
SOUTHERN PARKWAY TOWNHOUSES,
69th & Kakau. If your tired of apartments
in the city, consider a feature 3 br., 4 baths, all appliances,
at arroyo; 5 br., 2 baths, pool, lots of amenities,
summer and fall. Call Craig Levin in
about our modestly priced townehouse,
for us.
Must see to believe. Furnished rooms with utilities paid near university & downstown.
No pets. Phone 841-5500. tf
Summer sublease. Furnished studio apartment with A/C, pool, tennis courts. Great location. PRICE NOT AVAILABLE. 748.636-4.30
cation. PRICE NEGOTIABLE. 749-824-3000.
MASER BEDROOM AVAILABLE starting with free utilities. Call 841-1544 for details.
with free utilities. Call 841-1544 for details.
Sleeping room 1-3 bedroom. Duplexes. No pets. Call 842-8971. Lounge or summer full year. 4-30
SUMMER SUBLEASE. New furnished townhouse. 4-30
negotiable. 749-1243 or 749-4250. 4-30
2 bedroom furnished mobile homes. $185
clean, quiet location. No pets. Jawahry Court. 841-6707 or 841-6082. 4-30
Avon & Harvard Square娶妻公寓. to campus June 4, 2014. No pets. Jawahry Court. Call 841-6080. 4-30
Now leasing 2 3 bedrooms. Available for Aug. 1 occupancy. Fireplaces. Valley Management. Inc. 841-6080. 4-30
Summer sublease.-Nice 2 bedroom house. Close to Valley Management. Inc. 841-6080. 4-30
Spacious 2 bedroom. 1/2 bath. full kitchen. plumbing, supermarkets. Mala has pool, gym room and quick maintenance. pizza,
1 bedroom apartment with loft. Furnished.
AC. Next to the Sanctuary on 7th. Great
condition. Call 842-8709. 4-30
5 bedroom, 3½ bath; 2 car garage, fireplace,
bedroom, 1 bathroom, 1 bath, car garage, all appliances.
3 bedroom, 1½ bath, all appliances. close to campus,
749-8382, 843-7821. 4-30
Summer Sublease, fall option-Studio $180
in fall; 3 bedroom apartment with central air,
bathroom, 1 bath, car garage, all appliances. downtown,
749-1088. 4-30
Summer sub lease with option in fall; 3 bedroom apartment with central air,
bathroom, 1 bath, car garage, all appliances. downtown,
749-1088. 4-30
2 bedroom apartement in center airtight,
bathroom, 1 bath, car garage, preferred. Available, June 1, $240. 924 New Hampton,
bathroom, 1 bath, car garage, optional utilities (One of Lawrence's finest). Make an offer. 841-9890.
2 bedroom apartement in center airtight,
bathroom, 1 bath, car garage, preferred. Available, June 1, $240. 924 New Hampton,
bathroom, 1 bath, car garage, optional utilities (One of Lawrence's finest). Make an offer. 841-9890.
Summer sub lease on apartment for two. Rent is negotiable. More information? Call 841-6383 or Lisa K. Mauger, 842-2900.
Summer sub lease on apartment for two. Rent is negotiable. More information? Call 841-6383 or Lisa K. Mauger, 842-2900.
2床room townhouse in block from campus,
1² & Kentucky, A/C, kitchen, garage, comfortable. Clean, quiet, fall option. For May, very nice summer school rooms in large quiet house one block from campus, 1² & Kentucky, A/C, kitchen, garage, comfortable. Clean, quiet, fall option. For May, very nice summer school rooms in large quiet house one block from campus, 1² & Kentucky, A/C, kitchen, garage, comfortable. Clean, quiet, fall option.
2床room townhouse in block from campus,
1² & Kentucky, A/C, kitchen, garage, comfortable. Clean, quiet, fall option. For May, very nice summer school rooms in large quiet house one block from campus, 1² & Kentucky, A/C, kitchen, garage, comfortable. Clean, quiet, fall option.
2床room townhouse in block from campus,
furnished apartments for rent near downtown and town center, now. 841-5030 Room rental now. 841-5030 TV. Excellent location. 843-7104 4-30
Summer sublease large beautiful 2 bedroom apartment. Furnished, free water and cable TV. Excellent location. 843-7104 4-30
KING-WATER SEDUCTION, SWIMMING POOL summer sub lease large beautiful 2 bedroom at Harvard Square. Apartmentes 16 to 19 have to sublease for June and July. Each suite includes a spacious two bedroom come with this spacious 2 bedroom apartment. New kitchen, bath, central air, & carpet. 12-30
To believe--Excellent location, sublease 2 bedroom apartment. New kitchen, bath, central air, & carpet. 12-30
Furnished one bedroom apartment. Bills paid. No pets. 113 Louisiana. $135.
House for summer sub lease. Very close to Harvard Square. Appartmentes 16 to 19 have to sublease for June and July. Each suite includes a spacious two bedroom apartment. New kitchen, bath, central air, & carpet. 12-30
Furnished one bedroom apartment. Bills paid. No pets. 113 Louisiana. $135.
House for summer sub lease. Very close to Harvard Square. Apartmentes 16 to 19 have to sublease for June and July. Each suite includes a spacious two bedroom apartment. New kitchen, bath, central air, & carpet. 12-30
Will consider all offers. Summer and/or fall apartment. Wooden apartments on campus, for rent only. All utilities free. 14th month rent. 784-6066. All utilities free. 14th month rent. 784-6066. All utilities free. 14th month rent. 784-6066. All utilities free. 14th month rent. 784-6066. All utilities free. 14th month rent. 784-6066. All utilities free.
Share a beautiful house near campus. New utilities. 5/10 duplicates. Summer/fail. 841-4787 4-30
New duplex. Orchards-2 beds. Older Bedroom Apartment furnished. Female only. Terms negotiable. Call 843-6094.
Spacious Meadowbrook studio apartment, summer sub lease. May offer for bus route. Water dishwasher, laundry room. Low / lower tier of the house you pay in fee. 841-5030 4-30
Summer sublease for office for furnishings. Modern looking, split level, 14th month rent. Rent negotiable. Call 749-1748 or 749-1749
Summer nobilee-Beautiful 1 bedroom
apartment at Suffurned. Furnished. A/C.
Available May 17 $230/month. May rent
please. 749-0848. 4-30
Available May 17, $220/month. May rent free. 749-6847. 4-30
Diagnose properly. Excellent location with A/C, carpeting. comfortable living for 2 or 3 rooms. $250/$500 but very regular. Call 842-8955. 4-30
int floor apartment at 749-$3125 and carpeted. carpeting ± plenty of windows. 749-$1616. 4-30
broom townhouse. Trailblade. 4-30
sublet apartment. Trailblade. 4-30
sublet apartment - rent negotiable. 2 bed+fall option. Patio, pool, fireplace. 1812 per person plus life annuity. Call Linda. 749-$1651. 4-30
sublet apartment, air conditioned. Nice to campus/downstreet. 175/month, utilities. Call Linda. 749-$1651. 4-30
1 bedroom, furnished. $125, call 842-6279. 4-30
summer sublease, nice 3 bedroom townhouse. Nice to campus. Call 842-9586 or 844-1310. 4-30
1 bedroom. rented water. water paid, walking distance to campus. 749-9586 or 844-1310. 4-30
2床trailblade to subtler for June and $300/month, water and gas incl. furniture. Call linda. 749-$1607. 4-30
Summer sublease. 2 bedroom townhouse. Harneower Place apartments. Garage. at 749-$1607. 4-30
Summer sublease. Large 1 bedroom apartment at Hanover Place Apartments. New, furnished. close to campus. 841-8432. 4-30
Summer sublease with fall option. 1 bedroom left (optional 2nd bedroom). Water paid, c/a fall option. 749-2179 or 844-1252. 4-30
summer sublease furnished Sunshine. Water paid, c/a fall option. 749-2179. 5 a.m. or manager. 841-5255. Available 5-14.
RENTAL BEDMOBILE PROPERTY. We have several 2 bedroom apartments and 3 bedroom units on our available lot. On bus route on bus route. Call Dick Emerson Real Estate. Responsible law student awaiting apartment startling if. Cat accepts, call Sleuye collection evenings. (362) 867-887. 4-30
Graduate students. 2 bedroom house available for summer. Fabulous location. Air conditioning. Water paid, laundry room. Call Sleuye collection evenings. (362) 867-887. 4-30
Summit House. Summer sublease 2 bedroom unit. Water paid, laundry room. Call Sleuye collection evenings. (362) 867-887. 4-30
Institutional for rent. 1 bedroom, good location. Call 749-3551. 4-30
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Notes. Note on Sale
on Saturday. Prepare to make sense to use them-1). As study guide.
Makes sense to use them-1). As study guide.
*New Analysis of Western Civilization*
*available now at Town, Griffin.* The
book is updated.
Alternator, starter and generator specialists.
Parts, service, and exchange units. BELL
AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC. 843-9609. 3900
W. 6th.
Stereo-Records-Video Recorder. Name brand-only. Factory sealed cartons. Lowest prices in the K.C. area. Get your best price. call TSO. Total Sound Distributors 913-406-3200.
1979 MAZDA RX7-GS PURRFECT. 843-8829
or 842-6335. 4-30
4-30
TENNIS RACKETS—Head, Winn, Dunlun,
Prince, Yonex–Good selection, new/used,
6713 by 8:00 p.m. in good condition, 842
6713 by 8:00 p.m.
2 Rattan (wood nightstands, O'Dulian stereo
cabinet, butcher block dining table, classic
dresser, coffee table), 841 6714–6716. Keep
trying.
1975 Rabbit, 2 door hatchback $1600,
or best offer before May 5th, 841 6716–6719.
room set, 3 square dinette set, bed
room set, coffee table, two end tables and
more. Excellent condition, Call 843 3230–3231.
2 speaker cabinets with mid-range horn
and 15’ woofer, 175 watt. RMS, Jeff Smith,
843–3366.
1974 Honda CB360 looks nice, runs great.
Alessa bike, Asking $4500. Must be
844–3809.
Ford Fiesta Ghia 1980. Excellent condition,
silver metallic. Silver metallic, 110
miles, 843–9234.
BGW 410 stereo power amp. 230 watts
Mint, $475 firm. Call Bryan at 843–5817.
New Women's clothes, jeans--Calm Klein,
Levi, Eggert, Zena ($20). Polo shirts ($10).
Blouses ($10). Sweaters and cords ($5-10).
Call 842-1583.
Older organ. Consonant, with long pedals
connected to branch. $250; $341-8453 or $
350; $350.
Merante stero, furnishable, speakers, $150
Mesa stero, furnishable, speakers, $150
Shallow stero, full mattress, frame $100
Shallow stero, full mattress, frame $100
connected to bishop. $250, 841-7435 or 843-
2865. Hospital bed with mattress. steel construction.
20 dollars, ask for Bob. B41-3258. 4-30
Ernie wants bed with mattress. less. Fita any bedroom with window that
does not open. Call any bedroom with windows that
does not open. Call any bedroom with windows that
does not open. Call any bedroom with windows that
does not open. Call any bedroom with windows that
does not open. Call any bedroom with windows that
does not open. Call any bedroom with windows that
does not open. Call any bedroom with windows that
does not open. Call any bedroom with windows that
does not open. Call any bedroom with windows that
connects to bishop. $250, 841-7435 or 843-
2865. Hospital bed with mattress. steel construction.
20 dollars, ask for Bob. B41-3258. 4-30
Ernie wants bed with mattress. less. Fita any bedroom with window that
does not open. Call any bedroom with windows that
does not open. Call any bedroom with windows that
connects to bishop. $250, 841-7435 or 843-
2865. Hospital bed with mattress. steel construction.
20 dollars, ask for Bob. B41-3258. 4-30
Ernie wants bed with mattress. less. Fita any bedroom with window that
does not open. Call any bedroom with windows that
connects to bishop. $250, 841-7435 or 843-
2865. Hospital bed with mattress. steel construction.
20 dollars, ask for Bob. B41-3258. 4-30
Ernie wants bed with mattress. less. Fita any bedroom with window
FOUND
Calculator in Learned Hall last week. To be a number or number of fun, visit the calculator. About calculators and plates 4-36
Found one red lignos cooler bottle of champagne. Ask for Jillm at 4-36
Tuesday near Pastor Lake; one set of kelp '79 - 169-421. 6:30 p.m.
C
University Daily Kansan, April 30, 1982
Page 15
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HELP WANTED
Programmers. Local Company needs part-time programmers for microcomputers. We can supply equipment. Send resume to FO Box 3559, Lawrence. Attention: David.
Are you commuting to from Kansas City?
Yes. We have one of our four bedrooms. I loved something about DUF's at the KU Box Room. For information contact BJ Box Room.
BJ Box Room, 301 North O'Dell and Olive, KC, KS 65111 950-488-4888
JUNIOR & SENIOR History, Meteorology,
Humanities and Natural Science majors to
participate in the following classes:
April 22, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30
10:00 to 13:00 on the hour and April 23 at
15:00 and 11:00. No appointment necessary.
Spray Fraser. Hail or call 4-301-
Ext. 66.
KUY is seeking a full-time coordinator for a 5 semester period, June 8 to May 13. The coordinator will lead the quarter time and the program coordinator quarter time activities, and will be responsible for a minimum of 10 hours a week. During this time, the coordinator will receive a minimum of 10 hours of work per week. The coordinator must be dedicated to alternatives to the needless suffering caused by the current system of sectarian and classism. Show on your resume that you fulfill this qualification, and show evidence of community preference. Send a resume to KUY-K19 1 Kuman Univ. Lawrence, Kanada KUY-K19 1 Kuman Univ. Lawrence, Kanada Affirmative Action Employer. 4-30
Positions Available. Furnish summer positional available. Enroll $1035.00 per month. Must be willing to relocate. Write Summer Work P.O. Box 262 Lawnson, Keesa 6644. 4-503-788-1393.
Artistified Graduate Antisitanthips &
Graduate or Undergraduate hourly positions
Toronto Medical Center-KAIBS Program, Nichols
Hall-Campus West University Assistant job (hourly). Length of employment Summer 1892
$3.35 per hour; regular hourly; Graduate
qualifications. Duties: Photo and image interpretation, curriculum development; data analysis; library research; drafter; other files; literature searches; drafter; other files; grad status; course work in photo
interpretation, remote sensing, cartography;
application forms and further information.
Application forms and further information.
Applications accepted now through May 5.
Elegant Opportunity Affirmations 4-30
Employer
SUMMER JOBS AVAILABLE
ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT - The Center for East Asian Studies an institute of the University of Arizona, 1892-82. B.A. and experience in office-related activities required, further education, administrative, and editorial experience preferred. Annual salary $35,000 qualifications and experience. Applications will be accepted starting from a position offered to a resume qualified for recommendation to Professor C.J. Lee 160 Strong Hall University, 912-834-3849). Contact Professor Lee for further information. An EA Equity Opportunity. Applications are sought from all qualified people relevant to university or national veteran status, national age, or ancestry.
COLLEGE STUDENTS-
913-232-2484
ask about our cash awards program. Car helpful.
We want ambitious go getters living in Lawrence, Topeka, Emporia, Manhattan, Salina or trade areas for summer work.
Energetic, permanent waltresses wanted.
Must be willing to work. Hourly wage plus
tips, commission and incentive bonus. Apply
at GAMMONS on 5:00 p.m. at
4:30 PM.
COLLEGE STUDENTS. If you live in K.C.
area and need summer employment,
visit college collect (913) 722-881
between 8 and 8:30 a.m. to ample
rooms. 4-30
Person to care for 3 great kids, approximately 20 hours per week. Schedule flexible. Must be able to drive, have own transportation. 842-2788-624-565. 4-30
Research Assistant, B.S. degree. One Semester Exp. in Library Science; 10月, 1985 for SIMILARGANE INTERNET training room and minimum. Contact Cyril Tay, 327-624-5161, K.U. Equal Opportunity. 327-624-5161, K.U. Equal Opportunity.
College Students: If you live in K.C. area and need summer employment, contact FIRE OFFICY COLLECT 912-723-5000 between 8-4:30 am or 4-5:30 interview.
4-500
Summer business opportunity—can continue into school year. Designed for students short on time. Set own hours and earnings. Call 743-1828 4-30
Teacher for summer program; elementary education or Early Childhood Certificate required: $625/month. Call 1-441-6955. 4-30
Part-time help needed weekends and Mondays
A-1 Ariel, 2900 Iowa. 4-30
Business student wanted 1, or 2 days, for the day of orientation. Must have accounting, and general tax work. Will accept all applicants. Who is very familiar and accustomed to English. Tonga. Kg. X-83. 213k. Ask for email: tonga.kgx83.academy.edu
Attention: Undergraduates. Are you still looking for your interviewing student? What are your summer work program. How does $1,000 go toward your internship appointment, call 749-522-378. 4-30
"ADVENTURES IN HEALTH" NEEDS DISC
TATTERORS, NO SELLING EXCEELLENT
COMPANY MARKETS AND SASE TO
MR. KYOUNG, O/C AOI, HAWK
51 STILLMATERIAL, 047.7697
4-30
Need money? Can work at homeown this summer.
Make. $200-$1500 and more a month.
Call. 842-2679. 4-30
**Agressive salesman needed for the People**
Block. Your hours, good profit. Call 1-648-
532. 4-30
LIVE-IN HELP WANTED Room & board in exchange for childcare (3 small children). Country home 30 minutes from Lawnerville. No phone or internet access. Student. Call 441-4566. 4-30
Need each? New multi-level marketing marketl
shell on campus or on campus. No initial investment.
Will send large SASE, to PARK
FRESH FOOD! Route a Box 345
Kamloop 6007. 4-30
PERSONAL
Instant passport, vitia, ID, & rename photographs. Custom made portraits b/w, color. Swella Studio. 749-1611. tf
Remember . . . mother loves you, show her how you feel this Mother's Day. Swell's Studio for portraits of fine quality, satisfaction guaranteed. 749-1811. 4-30
Say it on a sweathirt with custom silk-screen printing 1 to 1000 shirt art by Swells 749-1811. tf
The Kegger—Weekly Specials on Kegs!!!
Call 841-9450-1610. W 23rd.
HEADACHIE, BACKACHIE, STIFT NECK,
LGE PAIN - A. J. M. D. Mark Johnson
for modern chiropractic care. 843-9336.
Accepting Blue Cress and Lone Star insurance.
Business Staff Positions
The Kansan is now accepting applications for Summer and Fall Semester business staff positions in the Student Senate, available in the Student Senate Office, 105 B, Kansas Union, in the office of Student Organizations and Activities, 220 Strong Avenue, Des Moines, Iowa. Combined applications are due in 200 Fint Hall by 5:00 p.m., Friday, April 30.
The University Daily Kansan is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Action university sought from all qualified people regardless of race, religion color, sex, disability, gender origin, age, or ancestry.
Spring formal. Barb's Second Hand
515 Indiana. Open time p. 842-7476. 4-30
Wanting to talk with someone? Gay & Lebian Peer users available through headquarters (814-2345) or information center (864-3506) just call.
PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH-
RIGHT, 843-4821. tf
Skillet's liquor store serving U-Daly since 1949. Come in and compare. Willford Skillet Eudaly. 1900 Mass. 843-8186. tr
Streets-Televisions-Video. Recorders. Names brand only. Factory sells cartons. Lowest prices in the C.R.A. Get your host to call a Total Sound Disc 918-354-6000 4-30
Remember, O most gracious Virgin Mary, that never knew me. I should help you, sought thy protection, impled thy intercession was left unadvised. Inspired by this conditionalism, I come before thee I stand with sorrow and sorrow. O Lady of the earth in thy mercy, hear and answer me, Amen.
Get ready for the lazy, GATORATE at
Nike (now Nike), Boost, Sporthosman, Calvin
Finke (now Finke), Boots, Thornton Hansen,
Bungi) are waiting during April at Alvamarve
and Westfield in bang. ALL MEMBERSHIP IS 15% OFF
Club or Golf Club, is mille west of Kauai
Club or Golf Club, is 80 minutes west of
8:00 am to 9:00 pm, 7 a.m. week a day.
West Coast Saloon
You get more for less,
for longer at the Coast.
25' Draws
NOON-6 p.m.
EVERY FRIDAY
2222 IOWA
841-BREW
Graduating seniors; take advantage of our senior portrait special. For information, call Swella Studio: 749-161. 4-30
MASSAGE. The Human Body has 840 known important in the Office. Massage has been important for people to maintain excellent muscle tone and strength. Leave your number, 842-1620. 4-30
GEORGE'S USED FUINTURE & Antiques
OPEN 9-6 p. 1035 MASS. BUY-SKILL-
TRADE.
4-30
$6.95 Per Day SPECIAL
**GREAT HOUSE for summer sublease, 6 bedrooms in roomy basement.** Call 811-3450 on bus route -750 and that's cheap for 6 people. Call 841-1380 or online at georgewaters.com 4-159 7579.
LEASE-A·LEMON
Bent any car(Mon, Tues, Wed)
$6.95 Per Day.
$60 Per Week.
$25 Per Month
Cannot be combined with any other specialties
are mechanically sound, state inspected
clean & ready to rent. We accept cash, checks,
vault mastercard, 749-4225.
Dance classes at the Lawrence School of Ballet will continue through May 15. Special jazz and ballet intermission starts June 7. For schedule, 824-4595. 4-30
SPECTRUM OPTICAL. Bring in your Dr. prescription or we can design a custom frame for you. Free adjustment and looser frames available. Complete repair service. Open 10:45, M-20, SUNDAY 9:30AM - 7:30PM.
Vintage clothing—Just bought out an estate.
Come see. Infation Fighter. B 8 E. 7th. M-Sat.
10-5-30. Thurs. 11. 8. 4-30
Take a break-stop by Barb's Second Hand Rose. 515 Indiana TUE-SAT. 10-5. 842-
4746. 10-3.
If you think a meal is not satisfied with
out MEAT, try our out-of-the-world VEG-
ETARIAN lunch, weekdays, 11:30-1:30.
You CAN EAT JAN: 749-1317. 4-30
Looking for someone interested in taking a coast to coast bicycle trip this summer. Phone 841-6668. 4-30
For a good time, call T.J. 843-6244. 4-30
SPENCER MUSEUM BOOKSHOP--From April 24-May 19 all DOVER BOOKS in the store will be $30 off (Friend's discount extra). Open during gallery hours. 4:30-8:30
White Tail Sale. 20% discount on all jeans, tops, suits with a white tag. Thurs. 10-8. Friday 10-6. Sat 13-10. April 29, 30. and 1. Westridge Change. 601 Kasand. 841-300-7555
FOUND on steps outside of Joe's. One brunette, 5 foot 4 inches, 105 pounds, soft cuddly. Will hold. Call 749-2034. 4-30
Community Auction 700 N.H.
Consignments Accepted
Wed. 10 a.m. till sale
Sat. 10-5
Every Wed. 6:30 p.m.
Melinda - Sorry April 28th at 3 p.m. w/night.
work-I don’t get home until 6 p.m. larry Freman. 2517 Morningside Drive, Lawrence.
= 60044. 4-30
841-2212
TAN ME
Musicians wanted immediately for full or part-time established band. All styles. Good pay. 791-3649. 4-30
LOOK YOUR BRONZED AND BEAUTIFUL BEST
15% OFF
Spring White Sale
FREE session (new customers only)
Effective: UVA Tan Beds
Call 914-6230 North Side Court
Guaranteed Safe &
Holiday Plaza
Save Money! Do you love to find bargains or forgotten treasures? Do you love arts & crafts antiques, and more? Flight Matt Grand Opening Saturday! May 6th from 4:00-3:00. SEE ADVERTISING.
or Appointment
TATTOING-O -Clyde's Tattoo Parlor, 1917 W.
39th St. KC, Mo 816-931-5435.
- 430
PICK UP
YOUR
YEARBOOK
IN FRONT OF
HOCH
TODAY
Students--MOYING OR LEAVING TOWNS
to take care of family. Ask if turn off at cath at the
town center. Call 212-803-5000, Southern Hills Shopping Center,
942-1892, 942-1893, or fax 604-0836 - 458.
*
ARTISTS & CRAFTSMAN Display and sell new
craftsmanship, tools, equipment, advance registration, lease, or compartmentalization. Visit us on Saturday, May 8th, Southern Hills
Hillside, 1061 N. 75th St., for a free session in
1982, 842, 1589, or 749-836. 4-30
past two years.
would like to thank you
HORIZON
Like to play games. Join contests. Listen to DAY VII. Saturday. May 8 from noon to midnight demos and info booths. Don't miss quarters, criss-crossing and fun activities. Ferry Depot.
--kind of music for the
See 'ya next year!
GARAGE, SALE - Saturday only. 8 a.m.-4 p.m.
girl's bicycle, basketball goal, camp sieve and equipment, other miscellaneous
1977 West 27th Street. 4-30
for letting us make YOUR
choice of music for the
Jateline: Friday April 30
too teddy
show starts at 9 $3
To the Power Six: love and thanks for these past two years. No other hand could play George Benson and the Go-Go in one set. One, two, three... Danny. 4-30
MIGA-KEGGAR SATURDAY. May 8. Live
bridge from Port Brace. Boat ride
6 hours & 4 miles of Lawnware on Air-
port Brace. Bridge is temporarily out. Detour
to Port Brace. Bridge is temporarily out.
Junction at 4 miles & 1 mile to County Line
Cast, 1 mile to Airport Brace, 2 miles to
City Committee for Preservation of Wild Life in
Port Brace.
Dateline: FridayApril 30
Kansas Union Ballroom
Dear new JA. A.: We are proud to call you our sisters! Here's to your enthusiasm, and good luck with finals. Love, The AOPI activities. 4-13
My junk (including a ten-speed) and I need a car to Bi Lice (Desper Deser) on 5/12 or 5/13. Willing to share expenses. Call Steve. 864-2839. 4-30
GIBO. I lust for you, you Italian sex kkrr! (BIN) but how many times you have heard those words?! !!! If you had a hard time hearing them, ask GIBO. YOU only have one problem. DEAREST GIBO.
Termination of problem pregnancy to 26 weeks LMP
Only say the problem, "be confident, self-confidence."
Perhaps that could be overcome, you GOD!
ETERNALLY YOURS . . . Your Classified Admirer.
4-30
as out-patient asleep or awake
WHCS—Wichita 316-684-5108
Professional privacy and confidentiality
Uncle. Rick was always the trooper. Even when he told me to quit, he sold out. He did dread and scream. But we never had to worry about it. We unleashed him. Uncle Rick 14. he's been fun, constantly the news, foolish news. Press C: 4:00-8:00.
The story of a man who wanted to keep the world safe for democracy · and meet girls.
Bil Murray stars in Stripes
Friday
Saturday, April 30 and Dyche Auditionium
May 1, 7 and 19 n. next to the Union
ALPHA DEBIT PL SENIORS "bon voyage"
Everyone get paid and wild and leave
your mark May 2nd. L & l. You AOPI
Sisters.
4-30
--center for lessons and rentals
SENIOR DEL-TELDS (the wild ones) Congratulations on graduation. Best wishes for the future. Hope to see all of you on the 13th. Rick & Bob. 4-30
SAILRIDER
Catch Some Wind
Call your certified boardsailing
842-2366
center for lessons and rentals
012 8266
Remember, Wrenches! Faith and hope and charity one for you and one for me. Money doesn't grow on trees, But babies come from Ladies!
4-30
Surfer, here's a great year, a fun room-mate. Field, a broken heart, heart-matter, a broken foot, small slumber parties, special talks and a very nice game. A great summer love, TBY
NOTICE TO ALL STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS
Registration materials for the 1982-83 academic year are now available in the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 220 Strong Hall. Those organizations registered by May 7, 1982 will be listed in the fall 1982 Faculty/Student/Staff Directory and will be included in the Summer Orientation Brochure which will describe KU's student organizations.
W. L. Since September it's been great, road trips. Blanche's what you see, yeshas; 34%; can she sweeze, talls, fireplaces, handbands, hold aids and a lot of thanks. C.J.S. 4-30
There once was a man named Tom Jones,
Who made the girls wiggle and moon, His methods were firm. He made them dance. And he sent them away home.
4-30
ALL YOU
CAN DRINK
April 30th
Last day of classes
Delta Tau
Delta House
111 W. 11th
The last day of class, my, the year's gone
away. I have a big loot and to teach Meghan Lamda Chi.
Throughout the year we've shared
been really digging. "I pledge my life until it
is real," I said to Ms. Lamda Chi's
friends. "I will all meet Meghan Lamda Chi's
twigs." This comes as follows:
4-30 WDOWLD!
Heads-Recapping: Shower wall destruction, frozen punch! "Clubs blue club by misappropriation," Pink Flamingos-How-Dive? Where's Namen Save'vie? Have revenge on what—really goes in on our house? What would Phyllis Bye Mr. C! Kamakarian Thanks for the gift by Mr. C! Kamakarian thanks for the gift forever. Hail Easter Bunny's a long hair. To those poor men who could not afford it, I'm sorry. Hardy! Who did—lucky devilswitch out! For them, I don't take life seriously, Namen Don't take life seriously,
Anyone needing a ride to San Francisco after finals please contact Kathy at 841-4464. 4-30
DEFRAY TRAVEL EXPENSES: Wanted,
driver to trail small sailboat to Boston
for May 28, $10. 893; $11. 035-0418, or 913-2548.
566c. Ex231. Jack 234. 4-30
GAY AND LESBIAN
SERVICES OF
KANSAS
would like to thank everyone who has supported GLSOK this year and invite you to:
"Last chance dance" Wed. May 5, 8-12 pm Off the Wall Hall.
"MAY DAY PICNIC" this
May; May 1. Call or stop
by the office for details.
864-3091
JT. I hope you soon recover from the burns that I suffered in a car crash, a line which "weighted" heavy on my mind. You are probably not as likely to favor you stayed, your gull is for sure, your dog is for sure, you won't be able to BIT him. You want to be best will? Be TY fun, if your date is at home.
SERVICES OFFERED
WRITING A RESUME? What to say? How to say it? Let *St.* by The House of Uher and pick up the Uber. Use on resume or use Uber. Use on manuscript, 8-9 Mt. S-3at, Noun-3 Sun.
Schneider Wine & Keg Shop—The fnet
selection of wines in Lawerence—largest
supplier of strong kefs.
1610 W. 23rd. 843-
3212.
Professional Stringing Tennis and Racquetball. Best Prices in town. Call 842-5821 or 842-6582. 4-30
Would you like to operate your own party picture company in Lawrence, Kansas? If yes is your answer and you would like additional information concerning a local franchise send your name, address, and telephone number along with a brief resume to University Daily Kansan, Box 99, Lawrence, Kansas 66045
Party Picture Opportunities
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, 8th & Iowa. 4-30
GRADUATE STUDENTS THEISI COPiers
Why pay more and get less? Encore offers
new software that allows copyes to be
copied made. Also, we are the ONLY copy
shop that can offer variable reduction,
largements and Xerox Copy Coors.
Encore Invoice Copy Corp. 52th & Ivy,
842-201-3900, 842-201-3900
4-30
LEARN TENNIS from experienced
instructor in small groups with other KU.
students or private lessons 842-6713 after
5.00 p.m.
Photoscreening
For 50* we can screen photographs so they can be printed or copied.
SRI MARTHA VISHEKAR JEWELLERY
Encore Copy Corp
25th & Iowa
842-2001
RESUMES - Professional; students' resumes a speciality. 841-2654. 4-36
TUTORING MATH, STATISTICS, PHYSICS.
Call 841-3164 or 864-4176 (ask for Robert).
4-30
Vid-tapos of Academic Skill Enhancement Workshop. Time Management, Final Exams, April 30- Friday, April 30- 8:30. Register for 30- Beginner Class, 40- Center, 121 Strong Hall, 84- 400. 4- 30
SPECTRUM OPTICAL - Do you have a screwdriver? Broken! Broken! Broken! One day service on lens in most cases. Open 10-6 M.-84, Siilil-4. 4 E.7th
house sitter for summer, lawn maintenance etc. included. Call 841-4409, 12-8 or 843-
3359. After 8:00.
Tutoring—Math 002—Excellent references.
Cheap, call 842-2428. SUA ticket pass for
sale. 4-30
It's spring and the semester is almost over and everybody feels great again. We're going to talk to someone, call or drop by Headquarters. We here are to listen when you've having a hard time. We also have information we can provide you with, confidential and. We never close HP's data. And we never close HPA's data.
Experienced typist. Term paper, theses, all macrolese. IBM Correcting Selective. Elite or Pica, and will correct spelling. Phone 853-6254 Mrs. Wright. If
It's a Fact, Fast, Affordable, Clean, Typing,
843-5820. tt
TYPING PLUS. Thes., dissertations, papers, letter, applications, resumes. Assistance composition, grammar, spelling, vocabulary. Foreign education, foreign student or American B1-81254.
Experienced typet. Thesis, term papers,
etc. IBM Correcting Selectric. Call Sandy
after 5 p.m. 748-3618. tf
TYPING
TIP-TOP TYPING—experienced typlist—IBM Correcting Selective II; Royal Correcting SE 900 CD, 843-5675. *tf*
Fast, accurate and experienced typist will type your papers. Reasonable. Call 842-8091. 4-30
AFFTODABLE QUALITY for all your typing needs: themes, dissertations, resumes, callings, maillots, mile. Call Jody 842-7945 after 5:00 p.m.
For PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myra.
841-4980. tf
Experienced typist will type term papers, thesis, dissertations, books, etc. Have IBM self-correcting Selectic II. Call Terry 842- 4754 anytime or 842- 2671.
Experienced typist will type letters, thesas, and dissertations. IBM correcting electric. Call Donna at 842-2744. tf
IRON FENCE TYPING SERVICE. Evenings
842-2507.
Experienced typed, iDesktop, diskartizations,
term papers, mike. IBM correcting selective
Barb, after bp. 842-2310.
**tf**
Would like to type dissertation, thesis, term papers, etc. Call 642-3203.
For a good type call Debby for dissertations,
theses, term papers, letters etc. at 749-4736
4.20
MAGIC FINGERS TYPING SERVICE. 843-
6129. 4-30
FAST & CLEAN TYPING SERVICE. Re-
sonable price, call J19. 749-460-3
4-30
Reports, dissertations, reserves, legal forms,
graphics, editing, self-correct Selective.
Call Ellen or Jean Ann 841-2172. If
Quality typing and word processing available at Encore Copy Corp. 25th and Iowa.
842-2001. 6-30
Graduate students tired of typing, retyping and retyping your thesis or dissertation? Save time and money by word processing it at Encore! Call 842-2001 for more information.
OVERNIGHT EXPRESS: typing-Editing
Proofed guarantee next day. IBM
Correcting Sectric II. Victor Clark: 842-
8240.
TYPING-EDITING-GRAPHICS IBJ Corp.
Selectible, full-time tilt, spelling
correction to composition assistance,
Emergency service advice. 841-2987,
603
Professional, these and fast typing. Disser- sations, terms, term papers, etc. Call Allison, 842-7158, after 5:00. 4:00.
I'm back! Call Mary 341-6873 for all you typing needs, at the right price. 4-30
Former medical research secretary will type term papers, theses, books, misc. Call Narcey. 841-5802. 4-30
WANTED
Female roommate for summer. Nice,
air conditioned. Close to campus. 841-6543.
Call for details. 4-30
Person to rent master bedroom of a larger 3 bedroom home home starting with the summer session $10,000/month with free utilities. Nokia 611-8434 for more info. 4-308
Wanted outgoing Christians and con-
scienced students to share 5 bedroom house at
Kentucky root host & fall $890
$150 per week. Utilities included.
Call Darryl 844-789-8623.
ROOMMATE WANTED/AVAILABLE for summer and next year. Move into my apartment or I can move into your residence,合理. Call Dave: 842-266-901
female roommate wanted for fall/spring semester. House is one block south of campus. Quilet, furnished. A/C, wash dryer, dishwashers. No smoking. 844-625-9700.
One female roommate (non-smoker preferred) needed to share 2 bedroom Village Squares apartment during 84-85 hours. Call Jody Bazley or Caron Bazley 864-2185 or Carol Bazley 864-2185. 4-30
Roommates wanted to campus. 4-bedroom house near school. Approximately $125/month per person, utilities included. Call 842-7052 or 841-1203. 4-30
2 female roommates for summer; 1 female for next year. Completely furnished. Shannon. 843-5633. 4-30
Housemates needed for $87.50 + 1/2 u/s
utility月, 121 Ohio. Available June 1
for summer and fall. Call 842-8575. 4-30
WANTED: 1 NON-SMOKING Roommate to
share 2-bedroom MOVE apartment starting
and or sublease for summer. 842-
956. 842-956. 4-30
HOST-FAMILY for 17-year old German girl Mid July to end August. Cost of living paid or exchange agreement. Call 864-6178. 4-30
MALE ROOMMATTE - Non-smoket to share 2 bedroom apartment 1½ bath. Close to bus路 $120 money + 1½ utility + deposit Available May 1. Tim 749-7882 1-430
WANTED: 1 NON-SMOKING male roommate to share 2-bedroom MVEP apartment starting August and/or sublease for summer. 842-9665. 4-36
Female roommates wanted to share large four bedroom home across from high school.
No smokers. $85 month, + 1/5 utilities.
Call Shella. 843-0384. 4-30
Male roommate for summer and or next year by senior male to share two 2 bedroom spaces c/n. w/header/driver/sundeck. Rent $40 plus ½ utilities @ 4.5% 8:30
Female roommate wanted for fall/ spring with without apartment. I have well-behaved cats. 841-4177. 4-30
For Oak apartments. Roommate for summer and/or fall. $145 with heating, cooling, gas and water paid. Nice room. 843-5825. 4:30
ROOMMATE WANTED: Female, non-mo-
tored to stair 2, bedroom apartment at West
Hills, next Fall. $100/month + 1/3 utilities.
Call Janet. 864-1271.
Need roomie for summer. $120 month plus
½ utilities. 10 minute walk to campus. Call
841-481-269 at 6 p.m. Ask for Dave. 4-30
Non-smoking female roommate for 2 bedroom apartment. 10-minute walk from campus. Graduate student preferred. Call: 1-843-1427 after 6 p.m.
SUMMER ROOMMAZE. Pursued apartment. Very close to campus. Move may in after graduation. Rent + 1% utilities $82-
0177 anytime. 4-30
Female roommate wanted for summer.
Spacious apartment with pool. $98/month
+ 1/3 utilities. Call 864-1617. 4-30
Female roommate wants to share 2 bedroom townhouse in Quivira Falls, Overland Park. 2 pools. 3 tennis courts. clubhouse $250 + $125 utilities. Call 642-8648, after 9 a.m.
Male roommate to share 3 bedroom duplex,
starting in August. $186/month. Call Steve
864-1352, or Kent 864-1359
4-30
Male housemate for summer or and/or fall
+ utility. Close to campus. Must be quiet
and neat. No pet. Snoker. Loud music.
Call Mimi. Salm-Sil. Hl41-64376. Everyone
2 liberal roommates, $100/month. 2 baths,
furnished. No pigs please! 1138 Kentucky.
941-3204. 4-30
Male roommate, furnished mobile home.
$85/month + 1/5 utilities 843-921-3 4-30
4.
University Daily Kansan, April 30, 1982
---
0
KU faces Wildcats
The Kansas baseball team closes out its home season this weekend with head-headers against Kansas and Utah to sorrow and Sunday at Quizlev Field.
The Jayhawks, 19-23 overall, 6-10 in the Big Eight, have to sweep the Wildcats to keep alive any hopes of staving in the playoff race.
"We got to win the rest of the games, or at least seven," leftfield Bill Yelton said. "It could be possible, if we play good enough."
Pitching for the Jayhaws will be Randy Mcntosh and Duke Lohr tomorrow and Jim Phillips and Kevin Kroeker on Sunday.
To get into the playoffs, the 'Hawks must beat Oklahoma for the fourth spot in the Big Eight playoffs. Oklahoma, 8-5 in the conference, faces Iowa State and Nebraska to close out its season.
Oklahoma must lose five of eight and the Jayhawks must win seven of eight to make the playoffs.
Kansas State, 26-21-1 overall, 2-14 in the conference, has not won a conference game since splitting a double-header with Iowa. State earlier this year. Last year, the Hawks took three of four from the Hawks.
KU, with its 23 losses, is close to setting a Kansas record for most losses in a season. The 1975 team set the record with a 15-25 mark. The last team with a losing record was the '77 team at 22-23.
Last year, when the Jayhawks went 32-19, 12-11 in conference play, it was their pitching that kept them in the games, compiling a 3.47 ERA. They pitched from ERA bullets to 5.16, while the hitting also rose, from .275 to .294.
Blue Jays romp past Royals
By United Press International
KANSAS CITY, Mo.—Buck Martinez knocked in four runs with a homer and a single last night to carry the Toronto in 40 victory over the Kings City Royals.
Toronto pitcher Dave Stieb blank the Royals on five hits. Stieb walked four and struck out four in winning for the first time in the league. It was his eighth career shutout and also the first complete game by a Toronto pitcher in 1982, enabling the
Blue Bays to extend their winning streak to three games.
Martinez hit a three-run homer, his first of the year, in the fourth, to give Toronto a 4-10 lead and singled him to run a cap to a two-run sixth inning outburst against Kansas City starter Paul Solitoff 0-1.
The Blue Jay scores the only run Stieb would need in the first without the aid of a hit when Damascus Garcia walked, stole second and took third in a scoreless error by catcher John Wathan and scored on Garth Gars's sacrifice飞.
'Hawks to play alumni
The KU football players will finally get a chance to hit someone other than themselves when they take on a KU player in the 10 p.m. tomorrow at Memorial Stadium.
"We'll play the game just like last year, by the ear," Coach D冯Fambrough said. "A lot will depend on the team and how large a squad they have.
"This is mainly a day for our alumni. It's something they enjoyed very much last year, and it was a success because of their enthusiasm."
Mike Fisher, academic counselor,
will coach the alumni team. Fisher's
coach will be Michael Douglas.
Douglas, Douglas, the All-American
quarterback from the 1968 Orange Bowl
squad, was named last year as the top alumni offensive player of the game. Laverne Smith, KU's all-time leading scorer, will be on hand to play for the alumni.
Recent stars such as Bob Fiss, Brian Bethke, Ed Bruce, Chris Toburen and David Lawrence, who has signed a free agent contract with the Dallas Cowboys, will add youth to the alumni team.
Defensive co-captains Tim Friess and Gary Coleman and offensive co-captains Paul Fairchild and Russ Linder have both been selected Frank Seurer has had a great spring and will be counted on to lead the Jayhawks' offense.
Women's golf team takes sixth
With nine holes remaining in the 54-hole women's Big Eight Golf Championship in Ames, Iowa, Wednesday, Kansas was in good position. They had rebounded from the sixth-place position they started the day in and had a good shot at finishing fourth in the seven-team field.
But in those nine holes the women managed to shoot 35 strokes higher than they did on the front nine and back nine, before repeating last year's performance.
The sixth-place finished matched head coach Ross Randall's earlier prediction about the tournament, but Randall said it was "a future of KU women's golf was bright."
year and the three or four recruits we're expecting, we'll have a really strong team."
"We should be much, much more competitive next year," Randall said. "With the girls we'll have back next
Oklahoma State won this year's event with a three-day total of 917 strokes. Oklahoma followed with 980, then Missouri 981, Nebraska 992, Iowa State 1,002, Kansas 1,010 and Kansas State 1,261.
"The girls were disappointed with their finish," Randall said. "They didn't know how they were doing, but they knew they were beating people."
Despite the disastrous final nine, the Jahyawks scored 331 for the final round, their best of the tournament, beating three teams.
Scoreboard
TOMORROW'S GAMES
Quarterfinal Round
Best of Seven
Friday, May 26
Basketball
Boost at Washington (series lied 1-1)
Philadelphia at Milwaukee (Philadelphia leads
Seattle at San Antonio (series tied 1-1)
Los Angeles at Phoenix (Los Angeles leads
series 2-4)
Hockev
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Conference
Best of Seven
Wolf Conference
Ireland leads
Island leads
Water Quality
New York Islanders 5, Quebec 2 (Islanders lead series 94)
Campbell Conference Chicago 4, Vancouver 1 (series tied 1-1)
Soccer
Quarterfinals
Best of Three
Jacksonville
April 10–Buffalo at New York
April 30–Baltimore at Pittsburgh
Western Division
St. Louis 4, Devon 5, Memphis leads series 1-0
Memphis 5, Wichita 3 (Memphis leads series 1-0)
Baseball BIG EIGHT STANDING
Team Pw 15 15 15 Pct. GB —
Nebraska 15 15 750
Okahanna State 12 9 460
Okahanna 9 8 691 2½%
Okahanna 9 8 161 3¼%
Iowa State 5 15 1520 10
Kansas State 5 15 125 11
AMERICAN LEAGUE Eastern Conference
Team W 12 L Pct. GB
Boston 12 7 638
Beaufort 12 8 539
Milwaukee 9 7 363
Cleveland 9 7 471
Toronto 8 11 470
Chicago 8 11 470
Ralston 7 10 412
Baltimore 12 10 424
California 15 15 6 714 3%
Chicago 15 6 7 714 3%
Houston 10 8 356 3%
Oakland 10 11 478 4%
St. Louis 10 12 478 4%
Minnesota 6 13 375 3%
Texas 6 13 375 3%
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Oakland 9, Baltimore 8
Chicago 3, Detroit 2
Cleveland 5, Seattle 1
California 2, New York 6
NATIONAL LEAGUE Eastern Conference
Team W 14 Pct. GB
W 14 62 Pct. GB
Montreal 16 53 Pct. GB
Ottawa 10 8 Pct. GB
Pittsburgh 10 8 Pct. GB
Pittsburgh 10 8 Pct. GB
Chicago 7 13 Pct. GB
Chicago 7 13 Pct. GB
Atlanta 10 15 3 790
San Diego 13 12 5 100
San Francisco 8 11 421 6½%
Cincinnati 7 11 164 6½%
Milwaukee 14 34 360
Pittsburgh 9 Houghton 8
Atlanta 3, Chicago 0
San Antonio 6, Angeles 7, Montreal 3
San Diego 6, New York 4
Find it in Kansan classified. Sell it, too.Call 864-4358.
Proudly Presents
JANET JAMESON
1st Set Starts At 9:30
The Band
kansas
TEXTBOOKS TWO LOCATIONS BEGINNING MAY 3,1982
KU
CASH FOR
union bookstores main union level 1 satellite shop
The University of Kansas
School of Fine Arts presents
The Combined Choirs' Chorus,
Glee Club and Symphony
in performances of
Francis Poulenc's GLORIA
and Sergei Prokofiev's
ALEXANDER NEVSKY
George Lawner and
Philip Michael Orlando,
Conductors
Sue Ann Stutheit, Soprano
and Inci Bashar Paigei Mezzo Soprano
Solists
3:30 pm Sunday, May 2, 1982
Hoch Auditorium
Admission is free
SPRING CONCERT
$
B.S.U. ELECTIONS
April 29th and 30th
Booths Will Be Set Up At:
Wescoe 10:00-5:00
Union 10:00-5:00
Thursday: Templin, Lewis, Hashinger, Ellsworth McCollum
Friday: Oliver, G.S.P., J.R.P.
DURING DINNER
PLEASE BE SURE AND VOTE
Funded by the Student Activity Fee
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
KANSAN
Friday, April 30, 1982 Vol. 92, No. 144 USPS 650-640
Graduation Issue
Jobs
Campus recruiters thin out
...page 2
Summer
Summer in Lawrence—the living is not easy
...page 3
Home
Is there life after college?
...page 4
Page 16
University Daily Kansan, April 30, 1982
---
C
KU faces Wildcats
The Kansas baseball team closes out its home season this weekend with double-benders against Kansas and Iowa, who narrowly bowled Sunday at Quiziel Field.
The Jayhawks, 19-23 overall, 6-10 in the Big Eight, to have to sweep the Wildcats to keep alive any hopes of staving in the playoff race.
"We got to win the rest of the games, or at least seven," leftfielder Bill Yelton said. "It could be possible, if we play good enough."
Pitching for the Jayhawks will be Randy McIntosh and Duke Leon tomorrow and Jim Phillips and Kevin Kroeker on Sunday.
To get into the playoffs, the 'Hawks must beat Oklahoma for the fourth spot in the Big Eight playoffs. Oklahoma, 8-5 in the conference, faces Iowa State and Nebraska to close out its season.
Oklahoma must lose five of eight and the Jayhawks must win seven of eight to make the playoffs.
KU, with its 23 losses, is close to setting a Kansas record for most losses in a season. The 1975 team set the record with a 15-25 mark. The last team with a losing record was the 77 team at 22-23.
Kansas State, 26-21 overall, 2-14 in the conference, has not won a conference game since splitting a double-header with Iowa State earlier this year. Last year, the state took three of four from the 'Hawks.
Last year, when the Jayhawks went 32-19, 12-11 in conference play, it was their pitching that kept them in the games, compiling a 3.47 BRA. In 2015, they scored a BRA balloon to 5.16, while the hitting also rose, from 275 to 294.
Blue Jays romp past Royals
Bv United Press International
KANSAS CITY, Mo.—Buck Martinez knocked in four runs with a homer and a *n* single last night to carry the Toronto Tigers to 10 victory over the Kansas City Royals.
Toronto pitcher Dave Stieb slank the Royals on five hits. Stieb walked four and struck out four in winning for the first time in three decisions this season. He was one of two and also the first complete game by a Toronto pitcher in 1982, enabling the
Blue Bears to extend their winning streak to three games.
Martinez hit a three-run homer, his first of the year, in the fourth, to give Toronto a 4-10 lead and singled home to run cap a two-run sixth inning outburst against Kansas City starter Paul Splittert, 0-1.
The Blue Jay scored the only run Stieb would need in the first without the aid of a hit when Damascus Garcia walked, stole second and took third in a score error by catcher John Wathan and scored on Earth 4's sacrifice fly.
'Hawks to play alumni
The KU football players will finally get a chance to hit someone other than themselves when they take on a KU player. In tomorrow, p.m., at Memorial Stadium.
"We'll play the game just like last year, by the ear," Coach Don Fambridge said. "A lot will depend on us and how large a squad they have."
"This is mainly a day for our alumni. It's something they enjoyed very much last year, and it was a success because of their enthusiasm."
Mike Fisher, academic counselor, will coach the alumni team. Fisher's team will have quarterback Bobby Johnson and backup quarterback from the 1968 Orange Ball
squad, was named last year as the top alumni offensive player of the game. Laverne Smith, KU's all-time leading scorer, will be on hand to play for the alumni.
Recent stars such as Bob Fiss, Brian Bethek, Ed Bruce, Chris Toburen and David Lawrence, who has signed a free agent contract with the Dallas Cowboys, will add youth to the alumni team.
Defensive co-captains Tim Friess and Gary Coleman and offensive captains Paul Fairchild and Russ Bastin lead the Jayhawks. Quarterback had it all but had a great spring and will be counted on to lead the Jayhawks' offense.
Women's golf team takes sixth
In but those nine holes the women managed to shoot 35 strokes higher than they did on the front nine and the back nine, across faces, repeating last year's performance.
The sixth-place finished match head coach Ross Randall's earlier prediction about the tournament, but Randall said it was the future of KU women's golf was bright.
year and the three or four recruits expecting, we'll have a really strong team.
"We should be much, much more competitive next year," Randall said. "With the girls we'll have back next
Oklahoma State won this year's event with a three-day total of 917 strokes. Oklahoma followed with 800, then Missouri 981, Nebraska 992, Iowa State 1,002, Kansas 1,010 and Kansas State 1,261.
With nine holes remaining in the 34-hole women's Big Eight Golf Championship in Ames, Iowa, Wednesday, Kansas was in good position. They had rebounded from the sixth-place position they started the day in and had a good shot at finishing fourth in the seven-team field.
"The girls were disappointed with their finish," Randall said. "They didn't know how they were doing, but they knew they were beating people."
Despite the disastrous final nine, the Jayhawks scored 331 for the final round, their best of the tournament, beating three teams.
Scoreboard
Basketball
TOMORROW'S GAMES
Quarterfinal Hound
Best of Seven
Endeavor Conference
Boston at Washington (series tied 1-1)
Philadelphia at Milwaukee (Philadelphia leads
aaaaa)
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Seattle at Sun Antonia (series tied 1-4)
Los Angeles at Phoenix (Los Angeles leads series 24)
Hockey
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Conference finals
Best of five
Wales finals
(tallies) (ladderists)
Water Conference
New York Islanders 5, Quebec 2 ( Islanders lead
104 )
Campbell Conference Chicago 4, Vancouver 1 (series tied 1-1)
Soccer
Quarterfinals
Best of Three
Eastern Division
April 30—Boston New York
April 30—Baltimore Nürnberg
Western Division
St. Louis D.C. (SL) St. Louis series 14-10
Memphis 5, Wichita 6 (SL) series 14-10
Baseball BIG EIGHT STANDING
Team Team Num Pct Pct GB
Nebraska 15 5 750 -
Okahama State 8 4 692 -
Okahama 12 4 692 2¼%
Okahama 8 5 615 -
Kansas 6 10 373 -
Kansas State 6 15 269 7
Kansas State 6 14 250 11
AMERICAN LEAGUE Eastern Conference
Team L奥林匹克 Pct. GB
Boston 12 W 7 632
St Louis 12 W 8 580
Milwaukee 9 W 7 630
Cleveland 8 W 7 471 %1
Toronto 8 W 11 434
Work Boston 8 W 11 424
New York 5 W 12 412 4
Philadelphia 5 W 12 412 4
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
California 15 10 6 714 3%
Kansas City 15 8 6 596 3%
Oakland 10 11 12 475 3%
Texas 10 12 10 475 3%
Tampa 6 10 375 3%
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Eastern Conference
YES RESULTS
Oakland 9, Baltimore 8
Chicago 3, Detroit 2
Cleveland 5, Seattle 1
California 2, New York 6
Team W 9 Pct GB
Boston 8 54 Pct 68
Montreal 7 63 261
Milwaukee 10 8 471 4½
Nationals 8 10 471 4½
Chicago 7 13 256 4¼
Cleveland 8 13 256 4¼
Atlanta 12 13 5 790
San Diego 13 13 5 701
San Francisco 8 11 421
San Francisco 8 11 421
Cincinnati 8 11 364
Cincinnati 8 11 364
**YESTERDAY A'RYSULTS**
Pittsburgh Bounty 6
Atlanta 3, Chicago 1
Los Angeles 4, Philadelphia 5
San Francisco 0, Minnesota 3
Find it in Kansan classified. Sell it, too.Call 864-4358.
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Graduates face tight job market
By JANET MURPHY Staff Reporter
TEXT TWO L BEGINNING
In a little more than two weeks approximately 3,000 KU seniors will walk down the hill, pick up their diplomas and face the real world of a job.
Unemployment is running at nine percent nationwide and at 5.1 percent in the United States.
As the job market gets tighter and tighter, students may have a hard time finding that first job. They will be competing with more experienced workers, Don Mills, director of the local Job Service, Center, 835 Ohio St., said recently.
Or no job.
Mills said that he did not see any areas in the job market exending.
He said that unemployment has been increasing for the last year and a half. Often, he said, when one field becomes depressed it affects other areas as well.
One example is construction. With cuttables there are real estate, sales auctions and all of the others.
Unemployment increase blamed
"When they're down, they're down," he said.
Mills said the office has many people coming in whose backgrounds are in art or craft.
kansas
unior
main
satel
KU
He said it did help to have those backgrounds for a promotion but people in those areas are taking whatever they can get in the way of jobs.
"You're not getting any requests for those areas." he said.
There are jobs in the business and engineering fields, he said, but opportunities are limited.
KU
For social work, he said, the government dollars being appropriated and agencies being supplied to him.
Vernon Geissler, director of the University of Alabama, agreed that the market was winger less than usual.
But, he said, it has been an excellent year of recruiting.
He said that companies were a little more cautious of cutbacks in some production areas.
Recruiters in the steel and auto areas are sounding cautious at this point.
He said that the computer science, engineering and business fields were excellent areas for jobs now, and that they are still highly sought after. The fields were highly optimistic about hiring.
Although the numbers have not been tabulated, Geissler said he would not be surprised if fewer students got jobs this year than last year.
but, he said, 1982 was different from past years when students may have been taught to solve word problems.
"This year you might get five offers whereas last year you might have had 10."
Geissler said he saw the presentation of the individual as extremely important. He said that 80 percent of the students did a poor job of marketing themselves, that they cut corners, do poor resumes and do not take time for a good presentation.
He suggested that students take the time to research the companies they are in interested in.
He also said students should be flexible,
have several job choices and be willing to
leave school.
"Go for broke and get some offers," he said.
But Geisler cautioned against just window shopping, taking interviews with managers.
Jim Henry, assistant director in the placement center, said he did not think the staff should be able to
"We continue to receive many telephone calls and letters from personnel directors in businesses across the country, asking us for help them with their staffing needs," he said.
Henry said that in the area of sales and marketing there was more recruitment
"They're just not feeling it that bad in the professional areas," he said.
In the School of Business, many students Fred Madauga, placement director, said.
He said that the School had its best fall last semester, with a record number of companies interviewing students. He said that the number of companies coming in this spring semester was down, compared to last fall and last year.
He said overall the number of interviews were up, but that he was not sure if the companies were really hiring more or simply were talking to more students.
Recruiters remain guarded, he said,
when asked how hiring was going.
"When they come, they tend to be pretty optimistic about the numbers they're"
"They usually respond that its the same as last year."
But, he said, some of the larger companies, such as International Harvester
and Caterpillar, had not done any on campus interviews. He said he saw that as an indication that things were bad somewhere.
open, he said.
JOURNALISM
Madaus said that students who restrict themselves to a geographic area or a particular type of job may have trouble finding one.
ENGINEERING
He said that too often students set their job sights on the large metropolitan areas. But, he said, there was valuable experience to be gained by working on a small daily or weekly newspaper or in a small radio station.
The journalism market is tight and there have been fewer recruiters on campus this year.
Leibengood said that job opportunities for graduates had been declining slightly over the past decade.
Engineering is an area where there seems to be plenty of jobs, but even this market is depressed somewhat, according to Pam Madi, placement director.
That way students would get some experience and be available if an opening did
Many newspapers are working universities to continue to do so until the economy improves.
"There are jobs out there for the student who remains open," he said.
Being flexible is important in journ-
al settings. An esteemed dean and scho-
ool placement office, said Elena
Internships, usually reserved for those continuing in school, are being offered to many students.
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University Daily Kansan, April 30, 1982
Page 3
Economy may reduce summer job availability
By JOEL THORTON
Staff Reporter
But because of the worsening economic situation, KU students may have a hard time finding employment this summer. Ed Hirschman, the founder of the Kansas Job Service, said recently,
Summer jobs in the past have been as plentiful with 99-degree days in July.
"If the economy continues in its current pattern, it may be as difficult for students to find jobs as it has been for 10 years," Mills said.
MILLS SAID traditional summer jobs, such as construction and agriculture,
For example, about 1,300 construction workers normally work during the summer in Lawrence, many of them college students. A lot of them will be down to about 900 workers. Mills said.
"That is the general trend of the depressed attitude," he said.
In other cities, officials fear increased crime and urban unrest may occur this summer because of cuts in the summer youth employment program, a U.S. conference of mayors survey showed last Monday.
A survey of 125 cities showed nearly 90 percent planning to serve fewer youths this year than in 1981, with only one of five states having a plan to dip into this year's summer jobs problem.
In Douglas County, that will be the case, Mills said.
MAYOR HELEN Boosalis of Lincoln, Neb., head of the Mayor's conference, said a news conference that city officials in the district have tiring daysl in the streets this summer.
"When a considerable amount of skilled laborers don't have jobs, students will hire them."
March's unemployment rate in Douglas County was 4.3 percent, Mills said. Although that figure is well below the national rate of 9 percent, whenever the rate is above 4 percent, students' job opportunities are diminished, he said.
Mills said there would be problems when school ended and 500 to 1,000 KU students, as well as 3,000 government employees, entered the Lawrence job market.
He said students would have the best chance of finding employment in the service industry, which included restaurants, stores and gas stations.
THE JOB Service Center usually helps 800 students find job each summer. Milton
The center acts as an intermediary between applicants and employers, Mills said. Applicants fill out forms with their educational and skill qualifications, and submit them to the applications and sends the names of the most qualified applicants to employers.
Mills said the center normally placed 20 to 25 percent of the student applicants. He said that many of the students his agency had enrolled were not employed became discouraged and stopped looking.
"We will be lucky if half of those we don't place get jobs this summer," he said.
Anthony Redwood, associate professor of business and director of the KU Institute of Economic and Business Research, said the unfavorable summer job outlook was the result of the delayed impact of the national recession hitting Kansas.
HE SAID THAT because Kansas was less industrialized than some of the Eastern states, it was feeling the effects of the recession later than the other states.
Redwood said recent factory layoffs had reduced workers' purchasing power in areas where students worked, such as at the university. He also compares with students for summer jobs.
"Students are not immune to the national condition," he said.
Lawrence employers gave varied forecasts for the summer job outlook.
Eric Walter, director of personnel at Packer Plastics Inc., said his company had not been affected much by the recession.
Walther said Packer would hire 50 students on a part-time basis this summer, many of them from KU. Preferential treatment is given to students who work for the company during the school year, he said.
"WE MANUFACTURE plastic food containers, hence our business hasn't been hit by the economic downturn like manufacturers," he said.
However, officials at two other businesses said they would not be hiring as many summer employees as usual because of the recession.
Mike Sullivan, director of personnel at Lawrence Paper Co., said his firm was hiring 10 to 15 students this summer, several fewer than in recent years.
Pam Seltis, an inventory specialist at E and E Specialties Inc., said her company had already hired 25 persons for full-time work in "the busy" season of April through August.
Selts said many of the summer employees at E and E, which manufactures displays for grocery stores, are KU students.
E and E normally employs 25 to 30 people during the busy season, she said. Although the company may hire that many this summer the staff said, still had to be on hand to serve necessarily.
CHRIST MURRAY, Tangonian fresher, said he had applied for work with the company.
"It doesn't look like I have a very good chance!" he said. "I had a hard time hearing."
'Most places are just taking applations,' he said. 'I'm not doing so hot'
Henn said he had considered applying at local printing shop, where the owner knew him.
Bill Henn, Lenexa sophomore, said man in place where he had applied wife in place.
KANSAN
He said he needed to find a job to stay in school.
The University Daily
Kansas Telephone Numbers Newsroom--864-4810 Business Office--864-4358
USS (HP64) published at the University of Kansas daily August through Monday and Thursday June and July except Saturday, Sunday and holidays. Second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas or 80% for travel to the county. Third-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas or 80% year outside the county. Student subscriptions are a $6 semester, passed through the student activity fee. Postmaster: Send changes to address of the University Daily Kansas, Flint Hall. The University of Kansas
Vanessa Herron
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General Manager and News Adviser
Business Manager
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Page 16 University Daily Kansan, April 30, 1982
☐
KU faces Wildcats
The Kansas baseball team closes out its home season this weekend with double-baders against Kansas State at 1 p.m. tomorrow and in Tulsa at 4 p.m.
The Jahawks, 19-23 overall, 6-10 in the Big Eight, to have sweep the Wildcats to keep alive any hopes of staving in the playoff race.
"We got to win the rest of the games, or at least seven," leftffeldier Bill Yellton. "It could be possible, if we play good enough."
Pitching for the Jayhawks will be Randy McIntosh and Duke Lohr tomorrow and Jim Phillips and Kevin Kroeker on Sunday.
To get into the playoffs, the 'Hawks must beat out Oklahoma for the fourth spot in the Big Eight playoffs. Oklahoma, 8-5 in the conference, faces Iowa State and Nebraska to close out its season.
Oklahoma must lose five of eight and the Jayhawks must win seven of eight to make the playoffs.
KU, with its 23 losses, is close to setting a Kansas record for most losses in a season. The 1975 team set the record with a 15-25 mark. The last team with a losing record was the 77 team at 22-23.
Kansas State, 28-21 overall, 2-14 in the conference, has not won a conference game since splitting a double-header with Iowa State earlier this year. Last year, the team took three of four from the "Hawks."
Last year, when the Jayhawks went 32-19, 12-11 in conference play, it was their pitching that kept them in the games, compiling a 3.47 ERA. Then, with the hitter ERA ballooned to 5.16, while the hitting also rose, from 275 to 294.
Blue Jays romp past Royals
By United Press International
KANSAS CITY, Mo.—Buck Martinner knocked in four runs with a boner and a single last night to carry the Toronto Rangers to victory over the Kansas City Royals.
Toronto pitcher Dave Stieb blanked the Royals on five hits. Stieb walked four and struck out four in winning for the first time in three decisions this season. He also hit and also the final complete game by a Toronto pitcher in 1982, enabling the
Blue Jays to extend their winning streak to three games.
Martinez hit a three-run homer, his first of the year, in the fourth, to give Toronto a 4-1 lead and singled home a run to cap a two-run sixth inning outburst against Kansas City starter Paul Sullitzer 0-1.
The Blue Jay scored the only run Stieb would need in the first without the aid of a hit when Damascus Garcia walked, stole second and took third in scoring error by catcher John Wathan and scored on Garth Gorsis sacrifice飞.
The KU football players will finally get a chance to hit someone other than themselves when they take on a KU player. They'll tomorrow at Memorial Stadium.
'Hawks to play alumni
"We'll play the game just like last year, by the ear," Coach Don Fambrough said. "A lot will depend on the team and how large a squad they have.
squad, was named last year as the top alumni offensive player of the game Laverne Smith, KU's all-time leading scorer, will be on hand to play for the alumni.
"This is mainly a day for our alumni. It's something they enjoyed very much last year, and it was a success because of their enthusiasm."
Recent stars such as Bob Fiss, Brian Bethke, Ed Bruce, Chris Toburen and David Lawrence, who has signed a free agent contract with the Dallas Cowbys, will add youth to the alumni team.
Defensive co-captains Tim Friess and Gary Coleman and offensive co-captains Paul Fairchild and Russ Baskin and his wkts Carterback and Seurat has great spring and will be counted on to lead the Jayhawks' offense.
Women's golf team takes sixth
With nine holes remaining in the 54-hole women's Big Eight Golf Championship in Armes, Iowa, Wednesday, Kansas was in good position. They had rebounded from the six-place position they started the day in and had a good shot at finishing fourth in the seven-team field.
The sixth-place finished matched head coach Ross Randall's earlier prediction about the tournament, but Randall said a future of KU women's golf was bright.
But in those nine holes the women managed to shoot 35 strokes higher than they did on the front nine and back nine, on pace, repeating last year's performance.
year and the three or four recruits in contact, we'll have a really strong team.
Oklahoma State won this year's event with a three-day total of 917 strokes. Oklahoma followed with 980, then Missouri 981, Nebraska 992, Iowa State 1,002, Kansas 1,010 and Kansas State 1,261.
"We should be much, much more competitive next year," Randall said. "With the girls we'll have back next
"The girls were disappointed with their finish." Randall said. "They didn't know how they were beating, but they knew they were beating people."
Despite the disastrous final nine, the Jayhawks scored 331 for the final round, their best of the tournament, beating three teams.
Scoreboard
Basketball
TOMORROW'S GAMES
Quarterfinal Round
Best of Seven
Eastern Conference
Eastern Conference
mouston at Washington (series tied 1-1)
Philadelphia at Milwaukee (Philadelphia leads
Western Conference
seattle at San Antonio (series tied 1-4)
Los Angeles at Phoenix (Los Angeles leads series 2-4)
Wales Conference New York Islanders 5, Quebec 2 (Islanders lead
Hockey
YESTERDAY AFF RESULTS
Combined
Count of Seven
Washington
California
tankers lead
12 islanders lead
Campbell Conference Chicago 4, Vancouver 1 (series tied 1-1)
Soccer
QUARTERFINALS
Best of Three
Central Division
April 30–Buffalo at New York
April 30–Baltimore at Pittsburgh
Western Division
St. Louis, 4 wins; SI (SL) leads series 1-4
Western Division
Lead series 1-4
BIG EIGHT STANDING
Team | L | W | Pct. | GB -
Nebraska | 15 | 7 | .580 | ---
Okla-state State | 12 | 4 | .759 | ---
Okla-state | 12 | 4 | .651 | 2½%
Okla-state | 12 | 4 | .615 | 3¼%
Kansas | 6 | 10 | .375 | 10%
Kansas | 6 | 10 | .376 | 10%
Kansas State | 2 | 14 | .125 | 11
Baseball BIG EIGHT STANDING
Team W WL Pct. GB
Boston 12 7 7 .632
Atlanta 12 8 6.532
Milwaukee 9 7 5.683
Cleveland 9 7 4.714
Toronto 8 11 0.471
Rocky Mountain 8 11 0.412
Portland 5 12 0.294
AMERICAN LEAGUE Eastern Conference
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
California 11 11 7 714
Chicago 11 11 5 871
Cleveland 10 11 266
Corkland 10 11 455
Oakland 10 11 455
Portland 10 11 375
Toronto 6 10 132 b
Texas 6 10 132 b
EASTERN DAYS RESULTS
Oakland 14 Chicago 20 Detroit 2
Cleveland 5 Seattle 1 New York 2
Toronto 8 Kansas City 9
NATIONAL LEAGUE Eastern Conference
Team L A C E Pct. GB
Tampa 14 6 59
Montreal 14 6 563
Ottawa 10 8 363
Pittsburgh 8 10 471
Chicago 8 13 458
Chicago 8 13 278
Atlanta 15 5 5 790 --
Jacksonville 15 10 5 701 --
Los Angeles 10 10 5
San Francisco 8 11 421
Cincinnati 8 11 364
Chicago 8 14 8/8
**ESTERDAY A'RESULTS**
Pilsham School 6
Alanta, Chicago 3
Los Angeles 4, Philadelphia 0
Philadelphia 0
San Diego 4, New York 8
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Page 4 University Daily Kansan, April 30, 1982
CAS
TEXT
TWO L
BEGINNING
kansas
union
KU
kansas unior KU main satel
Poor economy sends grads home
By JAN BOUTTE Staff Reporter
Liston explained that even though he had a good job, he was not able to cover the big, unexpected bills because he had no savings left.
Diplomas don't produce jobs
For many, the second sends them back to square one—home with the folks.
"IDDUN" have any other choice but to move home, "JE Liston Kansas City, Ct."
And after that walk down the hill following four years of total immersion in college, the new graduate clutches two a new diploma and an empty bankbook.
The last final is over, that last research paper footnoted and tried. @last at.
His is a familiar tale.
But Jeff's room had already been filled by the next brother in line, and the household had adjusted to life without Jeff. He started a new lifestyle during his college years.
Of 40 seniors from last year who were contacted randomly from the student directory, 21 had moved back into their parents' homes for at least three months—until they found jobs, or got on solid financial footing.
Even with his parents' help, Listen used every penny he had, and some he had but none he didn't.
His new job paid for the everyday expenses, even the payments on his school loans, but when the big car repair business had to move back into the family room
“IT'S A BIT degrading to move back in after being on your own,” Lliston said.
Only five graduates took permanent jobs in cities away from their family homes, and the remaining 14 of the 40 returned to school to seek graduate degrees.
Giving up some independence for
failure is necessary for many
new college graduates.
or Terry Dwyer, who graduated last December, moving home was a way to save money to buy a house. But as interest rates climbed and the housing market worsened, Dwyer saw his goal slip away. So he moved into an apartment with two bedrooms at the first of the year, a full year after moving back into his parents' home.
Most could not support themselves immediately after graduation.
THE GRADUATES are not the only
those affected whose lives are
affected by the move home.
These situations cause problems for more than just the student who must give up some of his independence when he moves back under his parents' roof. The entire balance of the home is affected, no matter how temporary the stay.
The first problems that crop up deal with the physical—one more body around the other.
For many, their rooms have since been given to shilings, or converted to a den or ascension.
Liston decided not to shake up the bedroom assignments at home and spent his nights on the couch, leaving his old room to his brothers who had appropriated it while he was at the University of Kansas.
Liston's father, Warren, saw this as the circumstances were quite temporary.
"HE NEVER really unpacked anything." Warren said.
all those who were living at home said they saw it as a temporary situation. The consensus was that more than a year's stay would be taking advantage of their parents' hospitality, and would be longer than the graduates could handle.
While the graduates moved home to save money, all said that they contributed a share toward covering the household expenses.
Each said they had made an agreement with their parents when they moved back in on what their share would be, but that the payments slide when money was short.
"I understand that some problems arise when they bring their new lifetimes to us."
"It's difficult to coolekake," she said.
Warren Liason listed it also was difficult for parents to live with a child who had his own ideas of how to run a house.
MOST OF THE graduates said they had not had run-ins with their parents because they had been careful to do unacceptable things while living at home.
The graduates said returning home was much like returning to the rules of high school, and they would do their account for where they were going with whom, and at what time they would be back.
"It's just difficult readjusting to your new program," he said. He graduated in 1981 from Overland Park, said.
"I tried not to interfere with what would have gone on if I hadn't been there," Jeff Jankowski said.
Warren Liston said "I understand many
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The adjustment period is trying for the rest of the family as well as the returning
parents have problems handling that situation—but maybe they just make it up.
KELLEY SAID she and her mother out problem as they occurred, patrick was taken to the hospital.
For Jeff and Jennifer Liston, who returned to share their home with three siblings, and for Terry Dwyer, one of six children, the impact on the household was less than that of Kelley's move home to join one sister.
The change seemed to affect the smaller families more drastically than the larger families.
The Kelley household went from
no children living at home to two when the
sisters moved back in after graduation,
and there was more drastic for their
mother.
"She just got adjusted to us being away, then we were back," Kelley said.
FOR SOME, the period of time for living at home had a very definite termination date, a wedding. Four of the women graduates contacted lived with their husbands and friends that because they were so busy with wedding plans, other problems never
Others had less final deadlines for moving out of the house.
came up, and some were avoided because the family knew there would be an end to it.
For some, the goal was to move out when a better job came along, others a certain amount of money in the bank, and one who had no money. But money than she had to spend each month.
Whatever the goal, those who had already left the nest for the second and allegedly final time, were glad to be out on their own again.
In spite of the problems encountered with money, space and lifestyles, both the parents and graduates said they would not hesitate to enter the same kind of living arrangements again if it became necessary.
"I REALLY kind of miss him, now that he's moved back out," she said.
Dorothy Dwyer said having Terry back home was not a problem.
While Jeff Linton said he hoped it would not become necessary, he would not make the change.
Warren Liston said he was glad to be there when his children needed him.
"I'd never want them to take advantage of me by never moving on to their own,"
"and that's how you want to know."
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University Daily Kansan, April 30, 1982
Page 5
Preparation important for job interviews
By VINCE HESS Staff Reporter
The key for a college student who has a job interview is knowing himself and the business, according to several KU placement officials.
Also important are feeling comfortable during the interview and following up with the interview.
"The first thing is to be prepared," Vernon Geissler, director of the KU University Placement Center, said recently. "Go out and explore."
GEISLER SAID that a student should contact either his office or one of the individual school placement offices. The offices can provide information on prospective employers and can schedule interviews.
The student needs to compile a resume and to research the business in which he is interested, Geissler said. For example, a letter of application to a business should be addressed to a specific person in the common "To Whom It May Concern."
The College Placement Council, which aids career planning and placement personnel at colleges as well as employers who hire graduates of these colleges, said in its College Placement Annual 1982, "Nothing turns recruits into employees. The interview and discover that the candidate knows little or nothing about the firm."
Geisler said the annual, which lists employees' hours, was one more week on business.
THE ANNUAL lists other sources of information, including the yellow pages of telephone directories, Chamber of Commerce lists from professional associations, commercial and
state employment agencies, the businesses' annual reports and prospectus and such business publications as Register and Moody's industrials.
ourstaff
in the College Placement Council advised
in the annual, "You should research a
company as though you were buying stock
in it."
IN A. Maggie Cartar, director of the KU School of Law placement office, said the personality of a student may not fit with that of a business, and the student can usually find this out by learning about the business.
Geisler said that for the actual interview, the student should dress well and adopt an attitude of flexibility and trust. The student should be flexible in telling the business what type of job or responsibilities he wants and trusting in the recruiter's word on job openings and responsibilities.
"Cultivate your confidence before beginning an interview. Be enthusiastic! Job offers are lost because of seeming indifference."
The annual also said a student should avoid a limp handshake, shaky voice, restless hands, wandering eyes, smoking, chewing gum and slouching in a seat.
THE COUNCIL Placement Annual said, 'How you present yourself in the interviews is as important as what you have to present. Dress appropriately—coat and tie, preferably a suit, for men and tailored dress or suit for women.
tation to what the teacher said.
Cartart also suggested that the student
Carrat said a student should have in mind several questions about the business. They need not be complex questions but should show an honest interest in the business and explain why they will help the "know what he wants to do in relation to what the firm does," she said.
approach the recruiter at the beginning of the interview with an outstretched hand and a greeting like, "I'm pleased to meet you , . , . . . The student should remember the name of the recruiter and thank him at the end of the interview.
ALSO IMPORTANT is maintaining eye contact with the recruiter, she said.
Cartarr said the student should bring along extra copies of his resume and transcript in case the recruiter forgets to bring his copies along. The student should also have an extra snapshot of himself because a recruiter sometimes meets so many students that he needs pictures to help remember each student.
The College Placement Annual said of job interviews on a college campus, "Generally, these interviews are 30 minutes in length and designed mainly as an evaluation process; the job is an evaluation process." The pool. The interviewer is merely trying to identify the candidates who will be given further consideration."
The annual said the student should not bring up such matters as salary, fringe benefits or vacations, but he should be prepared for questions from the recruiter on such subjects as the student's knowledge of the company, his reasons for applying with the company, and what responsibilities he is an employee, what he considers important about his personality or work habits and what he considers his strengths and weaknesses.
The annual said the student should not apologize for his grades in college but did not.
"DON'T TELL an interviewer that you could do better if you had to do it over," it said. "Employers are aware, however, that sometimes special circumstances affect grades, and they are receptive to legitimate explanations."
Often, it said, a company's application form has two blanks for the student's grade point average—one blank for the college and the other for the last two years.
Near the end of the interview, the annual sa.c. the recruiter will either tell the student what to expect next, such as a letter on his job application. Otherwise, the student should ask what he might do next or when the company will contact him.
The annual suggested a follow-up by the student, something strongly recommended by Geissler, Cartart and Parni. The annual suggested a follow-up by the School of Engineering placement office.
The annual said the follow-up could be a brief letter either thanking the recruiter for the chance to be interviewed or asking questions. The latter is used or about the status of the job applications.
about theSALES.
USUALLY, GEISSLER said, a student will think of more questions after the interview.
Cartart said a student should write a short letter about every three weeks to a business in which he is very interested.
The student should also write a letter of acceptance to the company with which he gets a job, the annual said. He should write letters of rejection to businesses that gave him job offers or to which he applied for a job.
The annual also suggested that a student practice being interviewed so he can feel prepared. Geissler said his office offered 90 workshops this semester that included videotaped mock interviews of students and group sessions. Some employers volunteer to conduct the mock interviews and to critique the students afterwards.
and oversee the work.
A student can also make an appointment for a mock interview at the placement office, Geissler said.
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Page 16 University Daily Kansan, April 30, 1982
0
(1)
KU faces Wildcats
The Kansas baseball team closes out its home season this weekend with double-henders against Kansas and Denver, whereorrow and Sunday at Quail Field.
The Jayhawks, 19-23 overall, 6-10 in the Big Eight, have to sweep the Wildcats to keep alive any hopes of staving in the playoff race.
"We got to win the rest of the games, or at least seven," leftfielder Bill Yelton said. "It could be possible, if we play good enough."
Pitching for the Jayhaws will be Randy McIntosh and Duke Lohr tomorrow and Jim Phillips and Kevin Kroeker on Sunday.
To get into the playoffs, the 'Hawks must beat Oklahoma for the fourth spot in the Big Eight playoffs. Oklahoma, 8-5 in the conference, faces Iowa State and Nebraska to close out its season.
KU, with its 23 losses, is close to setting a Kansas record for most losses in a season. The 1975 team set the record with a 15-25 mark. The last team with a losing record was the '77 team at 22-23.
Oklahoma must lose five of eight and the Jayhawks must win seven of eight to make the playoffs.
Kansas State, 28-11 overall, 2-14 in the conference, has not won a conference game since splitting a double-header with Iowa State earlier this year. Last year, the team took three of four from the 'Hawks.'
Blue Jays romp past Royals
Last year, when the Jayhawks went 32-19, 12-11 in conference play, it was their pitching that kept them in the games, compiling a 3.47 ERA. Then in the game, ERA bullied to 5.16, while the hitting also rose, from 275 to 294.
By United Press International
KANSAS CITY, Mo.—Buck Martinez knocked in four runs with a homer and a single last night to carry the Toronto Giants to 14 victory over the Kansas City Royals.
Toronto pitcher Dave Skeet blanked the Royals on five hits. Stieb walked four and struck out four in winning for the first time in three decisions this season, and also the first complete game by a Toronto pitcher in 1982, enabling the
Blue Jays to extend their winning streak to three games.
Martinez hit a three-run homer, his first of the year, in the fourth, to give Toronto a 4-10 lead and singled home a run to cap a two-run six innings outburst against Kansas City starter Paul Solittrifo; 0-1.
'Hawks to play alumni
The KU football players will finally get a chance to hit someone other than themselves when they take on a KU team in 30 p.m. olympia at Memorial Stadium.
"We'll play the game just like last year, by the ear," Coach D冯Fambrough said. "A lot will depend on the team and how large a squad they have.
"This is mainly a day for our alumni. It's something they enjoyed very much last year, and it was a success because of their enthusiasm."
Mike Fisher, academic counselor,
will coach the alumni team. Fisher's
greatness is evident in his coaching
Douglas, Douglas, the All-American
quarterback from the 1988 Orange Bowl
squad, was named last year as the top alumni offensive player of the game. Laverne Smith, KU's all-time leading scorer, will be on hand to play for the alumni.
Recent stars such as Bob Fiss, Brian Bethke, Ed Bruce, Chris Toburen and David Lawrence, who has signed a free agent contract with the Dallas Cowboys, will add youth to the alumni team.
Defensive co-captains Tim Friess and Gary Coleman and offensive co-captains Paul Fairchild and Russ Baintein lead Jayhawks. Quarterback will have had a great spring and will be counted on to lead the Jayhawks' offence.
Women's golf team takes sixth
With nine holes remaining in the 54-hole women's Big Eight Golf Championship in Ames, Iowa, Wednesday, Kansas was in good position. They had rebounded from the sixth-place position they started the day in and had a good shot at finishing fourth in the seven-team field.
But in those nine holes the women managed to shoot 35 strokes higher than they did on the front nine and back nine, the races, repeating last year's performance.
the six-place finish matched head coach Ross Randall's earlier prediction about the tournament, but Randall said it would be a future of KU women's golf was bright.
year and the three or four recruits expecting, we'll have a really strong team.
"We should be much, much more competitive next year," Randall said. "With the girls we'll have back next
Oklahoma State won this year's event with a three-day total of 917 strokes. Oklahoma followed with 980, then Missouri 981, Nebraska 992, Iowa State 1,002, Kansas 1,010 and Kansas State 1,261.
The girls were disappointed with their finish," Randall said. "They didn't know how they were doing, but they knew they were beating people."
Despite the disastrous final nine, the Jayhawks scored 331 for the final round, their best of the tournament, beating three teams.
Scoreboard
Basketball
TOMORROW'S GAMES
Quarterfinal Round
Best of Seven
Eastern Conference
Eastern Conference
Boston at Washington (series tied 1-1)
Philadelphia at Milwaukee (Philadelphia leads
2-1)
Western Conference
Seattle at San Antonio (series tied 1-1)
Los Angeles at Phoenix (Los Angeles leads series 2-4)
Wales Conference
New York Islanders 5, Quebec 2 (Islanders lead
Hockey
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Conference Picks
Boston vs.
Conference
Campbell Conference Chicago 4, Vancouver 1 (series tied 1-1)
Soccer
Quarterfinals
Bart St. Paul
Eastern Division
April 30–Buffalo State
April 30–Baltimore at Pittsburgh
April 31–St. Louis
St. Louis 4, Dverver 2 (St. Louis leads series 1-4)
Saturday
Baseball BIG EIGHT STANDING
BIG LEAGUE STATISTICS
Team | Scores | Pct. | GB —
Nebraska | 15 | 5 | 760
Oklaahoma State | 12 | 4 | 648
Alabama | 9 | 4 | 602 2½%
Oklaahoma | 5 | 8 | 615
Kansas | 6 | 10 | 375 7
Kansas State | 5 | 10 | 375 11
Kansas State | 2 | 14 | 125
AMERICAN LEAGUE Eastern Conference
Team W W L Pct. GB
Boston 12 7 538
Baltimore 12 7 659
Milwaukee 9 7 563
Cleveland 8 9 471
Toronto 8 9 471
New York 7 10 412
Ballimore 10 12 494
California 15 12 6 714
Chicago 13 8 5 106 2½"
Chicago 10 12 6 356
Oakland 10 12 6 356
Oakland 10 12 6 356
Texas 6 10 12 455
Texas 6 10 12 455
Texas 6 10 12 455
Texas 6 10 12 455
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Oakland 8 Baltimore 6
Chicago 3, Illinois 7
Cleveland 5, Seattle 1
California 9, New York 0
Texas 1, Kansas 2
NATIONAL LEAGUE Eastern Conference
Team
Lakers
Eastern Conference
TEAM
GB
Miami
14
9
6
563
Moore
14
9
6
563
Pittsburgh
10
8
6
471
Pittsburgh
10
8
6
471
Chicago
8
9
12
350
Chicago
8
9
12
350
Atlanta 15 12 5 790
California 13 12 5 705
Los Angeles 10 10 10 5
San Francisco 8 11 423
Cincinnati 8 11 364
Miami 8 14 384
YEARZON A YRESULTS
Pilgrimage 6
Atlanta 3, Georgia
Los Angeles 4, Philadelphia 5
San Francisco 3, Montreal 3
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
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Lawrence relaxes in summer
Page 6
The hungry crushes of humanity that appear on campus sidewalks at 20 minutes after the hour may disappear for three months.
But what is left behind when the last run to Joe's Bakery is made and the last final exam sweated through is a slow-paced cultural, recreational and social activities.
"WE HAVE JUST a little bunch of activities that people can participate in during the summer." Freed DeVictor, a park recreation and Recreation in Lawrence said recently.
CAS
Recreational activities in the city are diverse.
The city of Lawrence does not pack up and move away when the student population of the University of Kansas leaves for the summer.
By LISA GUTIERREZ Staff Renorter
DeVictor said that the 25 parks in the offered almost 1,300 acres of rescue facilities.
These include South Park, near Massachusetts Street between 11th and 13th streets; Centennial Park, Ninth Street between Iowa Street and Rockledge; Central Park, Sixth Street between Kentucky and Tennessee streets, and Broken Arrow Park, near 31st and Louisiana streets.
TEXT
TWO L
BEGINNIN
"We do get into overnight camping in some of the parks," DeVictor said.
"There are several tennis tournaments, a wide variety of music concerts in the summer and classes in fitness, art and dance," he said.
kansas union
KU main sate
KU
He included Riverfront park in his list, saying that the area has 10 miles of land along the river with 10 miles of land along the
Kansas River at the north end of the downtown district.
"We've got some boat ramps and campaies down there," he said.
"WE HAVE CANOE trips and nature walks periodically."
In addition to the parks, Lawrence has two public swimming pools for summer
The Lawrence Municipal Swimming Pool at Eighth and Kentucky streets, will be open daily during the summer from 1:30 to 5:00 a.m. for Memorial Day and close on Labor Day.
Summer recreation can be found not only in the city, but just a few minutes and two-and-one-half miles away from Lawrence.
An indoor swimming pool, at Lawrence High School, 19th and Louisiana streets, will be open for public swimming from 1 to 5 p.m. daily from 1 to Aug. 22.
The 7,000 acres of Clinton Lake, on
Clinton Parkway, feature boating,
skiing and fishing.
Registration for many of the summer activities sponsored by the department will begin May 20. Mail-in registration will be taken until May 26.
DEVICTOR SAID most of the classes would begin during the week of June 7.
"We have five parks here at the lake," I said, and Jame Carney, a ranger with the U.S. Army Parks and Recreation.
"The state park is run by the Kansas State Park Authority and they have an ISSN number."
Permits for this park cost $1.50 a day.
Carev said, Year-round permits can be
purchased for $10 and are good at any state park in Kansas.
In the Bloomington area of the lake,
Carey said overnight camping costs $5 a
night in areas without electricity; $6 in
areas with electricity.
"THERE are three other parks you can camp in for free. They have less space."
These areas are Outlet, the area below the dam; Rockhaven, on the south shore of the lake and Woodridge, the westernmost lake, approximately 20 miles from Lawrence.
"Camping areas are restricted to campain; Carey said have separate facilities." A called Dept.
These areas are open from 6 a.m. to 10 p.m. daily.
Tom Wilkerson, director of Recreational Services, said the hours for the Robinson complex for the summer would be as follows: the gym will be open from 6 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. Monday through Friday, and 2 to 8:30 p.m. on the weekend; weight
"We'll have team sports, softball, soccer, co-recreational football, three-player basketball, raquetball, badminton and table tennis." Richardson said.
For those preferring their recreational activities on land, Robinson Center on the KU campus will be offering a full program of intramural activities, according to Ron Richardson, associate director of Recreational Services at Robinson.
"Also, in the Bloomington area, the Clinton Marina runs sailboats, paddle boats, fishing boats and canoes," Carey said.
"In the summer, we more or less just go out and play."
"THESE ARE for KU faculty, staff and students. There's no charge during the summertime."
The Spencer Art Museum, also on campus, has ten galleries, including permanent exhibitions as well as temporary displays.
Summertime in Lawrence is also enhanced by two bowling alleys, seven indoor movie theaters, lighted tennis courts and outdoor picnic areas. An unique places such as Quantrill's Flea Market, 811 New Hampshire St., and The Swap Shop, 608 Massachusetts St.
training areas will be available from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. and 5 to 8:30 p.m. Monday through Friday, and 2 to 8:30 p.m. on the weekends.
Museums offer entire days worth of viewing everything from wildlife preserved in its natural habitat to historical artifacts of Lawrence.
Several Lawrence art galleries are free to the public. The Lawrence Art Center, Ninth and Vermont streets, features works by local artists and craftsmans. The Hand & Eye (1) in the Casabah, 803 Massachusetts St., exhibits and sells work by local artists. The Lewis Gallery, 918 Seventh St., and the Landis Gallery, 918 Massachusetts St., are also open to the public.
IN ADDITION to recreational areas and IN events offered during the summer, the more cultural and social-oriented person may find summertime lure in any of a number of museums, art galleries, antique and live theater presentations in Lawrence.
"We'll only have one pool open this summer, and it will be open from 6:30 to 8:30 a.m. 11:30 a.m. to 12:50 p.m. for the day, and from 9:30 a.m. to 10:30 a.m. for recreational use." Wilkson said.
The Museum of Natural History in Dyche Hall on the KU campus will be open 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Saturday, and 1:30 p.m. on Sundays.
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University Daily Kansan, April 30, 1982
Page 7
Foreign language skills open doors to careers
By COLLEEN CACY Staff Reporter
Mary Ellen Connell, a KU graduate, recently returned from Kenya, where she spent four years working in the American embassy as a public affairs officer.
Carol Kalin, another KU graduate, is an administrative assistant for an international trade law firm in New York City
Bruno Brunelli are a concierge at the Mayfair Regency Hotel, where many foreign actors stay while visiting New York City.
THEIR DUTIES vary widely, but all these people's jobs have one thing in common—the ability to speak a foreign language to their work and helped them get hired.
According to statistics compiled in 1979 by the President's Commission on Foreign Language and International Studies, international trade involves one of eight American manufacturing jobs. About 6,000 U.S. companies exported goods and 20,000 exported foreign markets.
American investment abroad is around $300 billion, and it is estimated that every 1 billion of exported manufactured goods at least 30,000 jobs in the United States.
"The amount of import and export sales is increasing substantially," George Hiller, vice president for international commerce, Bank in Kansas City, Mo. said recently.
"To be successful, you've got to be in a position to meet the people on their own turf—know their customs, speak their language."
HILLER IS ALSO an alumni coordinator for the Thunderbird Campus of the American Graduate School of International Management in Glendale, Ariz. He spends time each year at the University of Kansas to work with students for the school, which specializes in training people for jobs in international business and banking.
It offers courses in traditional business classes such as economics and accounting as well as in Latin American and Asian countries and teaches eight foreign languages.
"Americans are at a disadvantage. The percentage of Americans who speak a second language is much smaller than those abroad," Hiller said. "It's not uncommon to see people in Europe who speak two or three languages."
According to KU faculty in the Spanish and French departments, opportunities abound for graduates with both technical training and foreign language ability.
"When you've got two or three candidates, the language is what distinguishes one from the other," William Blue, associate professor of Spanish and Portuguese, said. "It's easier to teach specifics of a business to someone who
specifics of a business to someone who speaks the languages."
ACCORDING TO the department of admissions and records, 84 students earned degrees in foreign languages during the last year. More recent figures are not yet available.
Blue said companies and factories in states with large Spanish-speaking populations such as California, New Mexico and Arizona, often need a bilingual employee at all levels—from secretarial to administrative positions.
There are also jobs for journalists who speak Spanish in areas near the Mexican border.
Parmela Manson, a 1979 KU graduate, is one of three reporters on the Arizona Republic who produce a bilingual section of the newspaper once a week.
"The section 1 work for has a large
Hispanic population—about 70 or 80 percent," she said. "It's helpful in Arizona to be able to speak Spanish. It's the prevailing culture."
She said she applied for her job because she had heard that the Republic was going to lose.
MANSON HAS a bachelor's degree in
bachard and has studied in Barcelona,
Spain.
New York City's melting-population of people from many different ethnic backgrounds, is another idea place for someone with a business or technical training to get an edge over the tough competition without a foreign language skill.
"In a city like New York, the need for a foreign language has always been strong," Mary Morin, head of the Bilingual Agency, an employment agency in New York City, said. The agency places people in bilingual offices and serves as presidents of corporations," she said.
Morin said the agency dealt with all foreign languages, but particularly English, in its work.
Carol Kalin, a KU graduate who worked in French, said she got her job with the Gottschaff law firm through one of New York's illegal employment agencies in New York.
"It was entirely because of my French and my secretarial skills," she said.
KALIN IS A secretary and administrative assistant who works with a Frenchman, helping his prepare technical drawings for the steel industry in France and Belgium.
She deals with international trade law, and said she also does some translating.
A more unusual job is Bruno Brunell's. A
female attorney in Mayfair, Regency
Hotel in New York City.
Brunelli serves as translator for the hotel's foreign guests, booking theatre venues.
He speaks Italian, German, Spanish,
French and English, "all with an Italian
speaking mother."
"He has quite a life. He eats out every night, and he can walk into every restaurant in town and never has to pick up his food. He sends them all their business," he said.
It also has many fringe benefits, according to assistant manager Peter Teter.
He said the job required a detailed knowledge of the city and its finest treasury.
TERRENOVA SAID most of the hotel's managers were required to speak at least two languages. He speaks Spanish and English.
"I applied there because I knew the World Bank was very anxious to get people who could speak French," she said. "Now I've moved up, I do administrative work, but I still speak French with the people in the office just for the fun of it."
Sometimes, a foreign language ability can lead to a job that will be a stepping stone to a higher position in a large company.
Beth Skinner, a KU graduate, started as a secretary at the World Bank in Washington, D.C., where she said about 25 percent of the employees were Americans.
The official languages of the World Bank are English, French, German and German.
"There are lots of jobs at the World Bank where a knowledge of French or German makes your value to the bank much greater." Skinner said.
"It's especially helpful if one is in a technical specialty such as engineering."
See LANGUAGES page 10
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University Daily Kansan, April 30, 1982
A
KU faces Wildcats
The Kansas baseball team closes out its home season this weekend with double-headers against Kansas and Omaha in tow sorrow and Sunday at Quigley Field.
The Jayhawks, 19-23 overall, 6-10 in the Big Eight, have to sweep the Wildcats to keep alive any hopes of staying in the playoff race.
"We got to win the rest of the games, or at least seven," leftffler Bill Yelton said. "It could be possible, if we play noodle enough."
Pitching for the Jayhawks will be Randy McIntosh and Duke Lohr tomorrow and Jim Phillips and Kevin Kroeker on Sunday.
To get into the playoffs, the 'Hawks must beat out Oklahoma for the fourth spot in the Big Eight playoffs. Oklahoma, 8-5 in the conference, faces Iowa State and Nebraska to close out its season.
Oklahoma must lose five of eight and the Jayhawks must win seven of eight to make the playoffs.
KU, with its 23 losses, is close to setting a Kansas record for most losses in a season. The 1975 team set the record with a 15-25 mark. The last team with a losing record was the 77 team at 22-23.
Kansas State, 26-21-1 overall, 2-14 in the conference, has not won a conference game since splitting a double-header with Iowa State earlier this year. Last year, the state took three of four from the 'Hawks.
Last year, when the Jayhawks went 12-31, 12-11 in conference play, it was their pitching that kept them in the games, compiling a 3.47 ERA. They won from ERA bouloused to 5.16, while the hitting also rose, from 275 to 294.
Blue Jays romp past Royals
By United Press International
KANSAS CITY, Mo.—Buck Martinez knocked in four runs with a homer and a single last night to carry the Toronto against victory over the Kansas City Rivals.
Toronto pitcher Dave Steb blanked the Royals on five hits. Steb walked four and struck out four in winning for the first time in three decisions this season. He was the last to win and also the first complete game by a Toronto pitcher in 1982, enabling the
Blue Jays to extend their winning streak to three games.
Martinez hit a three-run homer, his first of the year, in the fourth, to give Toronto a 4-10 lead and singled out to run a cap to a two-run sixth inning outburst against Kansas City starter Paul Solitott, 0-1.
The Blue Jays scored the only run Stieb would need in the first without the aid of a hit when Damascus Garcia walked, stole second and took third down by catter by catcher Wathan and scored on Garch long's sacrifice fly.
'Hawks to play alumni
"We'll play the game just like last year, by the ear," Coach Don Fambraugh said. "A lot will depend on the alumni and how large a squad they
The KU football players will finally get a chance to hit someone other than themselves when they take on a KU player in 10 p.m. tomorrow at Memorial Stadium.
"This is mainly a day for our alumni. It's something they enjoyed very much last year, and it was a success because of their enthusiasm."
Mike Fisher, academic counselor, will coach the alumni team. Fisher's coach is Will Douglas, Douglas, the All-American quarterback from the 1968 Orange Bowl
squad, was named last year as the top alumni offensive player of the game. Laverne Smith, KU's all-time leading scorer, will be on hand to play for the alumni.
Recent stars such as Bob Fias, Brian Bethek, Ed Brue, Chris Toburen and David Lawrence, who has signed a free agent contract with the Dallas Cowbys, will add youth to the alumni team.
Defensive co-captains Tim Friess and Gary Coleman and offensive co-captains Paul Fairchild and Russ Bastin lead the Jayhawks. Quarterback had had a heat spring and will be counted on to lead the Jayhawks' offense.
Women's golf team takes sixth
With nine holes remaining in the 54-hole women's Big Eight Golf Championship in Ames, Iowa, Wednesday, Kansas was in good position. They had rebounded from the sixth-place position they started the day in and had a good shot at finishing fourth in the seven-team field.
But in those nine holes the women managed to shoot 35 strokes higher than they did on the front nine and back nine. On pace, repeating last year's performance.
year and the three or four recruits expecting, we'll have a really strong team.
The sixth-place finish matched head coach Ross Randall's earlier prediction about the tournament, but Randall said it was a "future of KU women's golf was bright."
Oklahoma State won this year's event with a three-day total of 917 strokes. Oklahoma followed with 980, then Missouri 981, Nebraska 992, Iowa State 1,002, Kansas 1,010 and Kansas State 1,261.
"We should be much, much more competitive next year," Randall said.
"The girls were disappointed with their finish," Randall said. "They didn't know how they were doing, but they knew they were beating people."
Despite the disastrous final nine, the Jayhaws scored 331 for the final round, their best of the tournament, beating three teams.
Scoreboard
Basketball
TOMORROW'S GAMES
Quarterfinal Round
Best of Seven
Quarterfinal Round
Best of Seven
Eastern Conference
Boston at Washington (series tied 1-1)
Philadelphia at Milwaukee (Philadelphia leads
Rochester Metropolitan
Seattle at San Antonio (series lled 1-1)
Los Angeles at Phoenix (Los Angeles leads
series 2-6)
Hockey
Wales Conference New York Islanders 8. Quebec 2 (Islanders lead
Hockey
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Conference West
Best of Seven
Walden Conference
wk Islanders lead
Ilanders lead
Campbell Conference Chicago 4, Vancouver 1 (series tled 1-1)
Soccer
Quarterfinals
Best of Three
Eastern Division
April 30–Baltimore vs. VCU
April 30–Baltimore vs. Pittsburgh
Western Division
St. Louis D-backs vs. Memphis series 1-4
Memphis vs. Wichita (Memphis series 1-4)
Baseball BIG RIGHT STANDINGS
Team W 15 Pct. GB -
Nebraska 15 5 790 -
Kalamazoo State 9 4 760 -
Michigan 15 4 692 2¼%
Oklaahoma 8 4 615 3¼%
Kansas 8 5 375 0/
Kansas State 8 15 230 10 /
Kansas State 15 14 125 11
AMERICAN LEAGUE Eastern Conference
Team W L W Pct. GB
Boston 12 12 8 .500 -
St Louis 8 8 6.000 -
Milwaukee 9 7 3.633 1½%
Cleveland 8 9 7 4.713 3%
Toronto 8 7 9 4.713
New York 8 10 4.124 4
Ralneuir 8 10 4.124 4
California 12 15 6 714 3%
Albuquerque 10 11 8 556 3%
Kansas City 10 8 6 556 3%
Oakland 10 11 475 4%
San Francisco 10 12 475 4%
Texas 10 12 375 7%
Oakland 9, Baltimore 8
Chicago 3, Detroit 2
Cleveland 5, Seattle 1
Miami 4, Kansas City 0
Tampa 7, Kansas City 0
NATIONAL LEAGUE Eastern Conference
Team W | L | Pct. GB
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| W | 14 | 8 |
| Montreal | 7 | 363 |
| Ottawa | 10 | 563 |
| Pittsburgh | 8 | 471 |
| Chicago | 10 | 353 |
| Atlanta | 9 | 289 |
Atlanta 15 5 750
Baltimore 15 10 300
Los Angeles 10 10 1
San Francisco 8 11 423
Cincinnati 8 12 364
Oklahoma City 12 14 384
YEARLY RESULTS
Pittsburgh 2, Houston 0
Atlanta 3, Chicago 0
Los Angeles 4, Philadelphia 0
San Francisco 3, Montreal 1
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Page 8 University Daily Kansan, April 30; 1982
CAS
TEXT
House bill to upgrade language competency
Rep. Paul Simon, D-III, chairman of the House Education and Labor Committee, introduced the bill into Congress last year. He now is trying to work on our infrastructure, the New Fenwick, RN-J, according to Dick Penning. Simon's legislative assistant.
In response to a federal report that found the level of foreign language competence in the United States "nothing short of scandalous," members of the U.S. House of Representatives are trying to pass a bill that would step up foreign language education at American colleges and universities.
The commission reported "a serious deterioration in this country's language and research capacity." It said such a deficiency would endanger our national security. The commission municate with our allies and to analyze the potential behavior of our enemies.
kansas union KU main sate
By COLLEEN CACY Staff Reporter
Both Simon and Fenwick served on the President's Commission on Foreign Language and International Studies, formed by President Carter in 1978 to evaluate the condition of foreign language and international studies in the United States.
THE BILL, which was approved by Simon's committee but awaits action by the House Rules Committee, establishes a program of federal grants to states for public schools and universities, with the awards based on enrollment figures.
The commission found that only 15 percent of American high school students studied a foreign language, down from 24 in 1980. The percentage of American colleges and universities now
SHE SAID this would encourage high schools and grade schools to beef up their foreign language programs, knowing that they would be required in college.
KU faculty in foreign language departments agree that the need for Americans
Mariyn Odell, a KU graduate who has traveled abroad in three countries and speaks six languages, said studying a foreign language is a better understanding of other cultures.
"The only way to approach an understanding of another culture is to have some notion of the way they talk," William Blue, associate professor of Spanish and Portuguese, said. "You understand that you'll never come to a full appreciation of the people."
students ought to concentrate on a good liberal arts education, and that includes a foreign language. It's good for the mind to study foreign languages, but it use it to make money or not." Oddell said.
to learn foreign languages and know about other cultures is important, not only for use in international business, but simply to gain an appreciation of how other people
require a foreign language for admission,
compared to 34 percent in 1966.
At the University of Kansas, the number of foreign language majors is about half of what it was a decade ago. In the 1979-80 school year, 84 people graduated with a foreign language degree, compared to 148 in 1969-70.
"I wish very much that the grants to higher education would go only to those colleges and universities which have entrance or graduation requirements in language and foreign study," she said in testimony before the committee.
"THE FOREIGN AFFAIRS agencies of the U.S. government are deeply concerned that declining foreign language enrollments in our schools and colleges will lower the quality of new recruits for the armed services and increase language training costs, already at a level of $100 million in 1978," the commission said.
Simon said his legislation would combat the problem by promoting the study of foreign languages at an earlier age and helping students to take more students into their programs.
But Fenwick objected to the idea of per capita grants and favored giving grants on a competitive basis to colleges and universities only, with a preference to teach classes in less commonly taught languages, such as Arabic, Chinese and Japanese.
Universities would receive more money foreign language enrollment increased.
The report cited a peak in salaries of $30,432 a year for a new bachelor's in petroleum engineering, up 14.2 percent over last year.
Of 19 programs at the master's level, chemical engineering recorded the highest average salary offer. At $2,712, this figure rose to $12.2 percent over 1982's salary figure.
Fewer jobs, but salaries rising
By United Press International
NEW YORK—College graduates are being offered fewer jobs than predicted this year but they are commanding higher salaries, up to $30,000 a year for a beginning petroleum engineer, according to a college placement council report.
Computer science dominated the science in number of offers with annual salaries exceeding $300,000.
Geology and related geological sciences ranked second with an average of $82.836.
Judith Kayser, manager of the council's department of statistics, said recently that the few job offers failed to live up to predictions by recruiters last fall. Their rejection was a stumbling block regaining its equilibrium, but that has not occurred, she said.
SHE SAID the exceptions were the petroleum and computer fields, where demand is high and graduates scarce.
"Among new employers the situation seems to be wait, and let's see if there's recovery before we go into the hiring mode."
The college placement council report, released Monday, is based on information from 184 placement offices at 161 of the nation's 3,000 colleges.
For other majors in the 1982, the report mixes some good with some bad for what was described as a cloudy outlook. Job offers, generally, are down compared to last spring. But starting salaries are higher than they were in 1981.
The report is an early barometer of the iob market for new college graduates.
"Some employers seem to be postponing hiring decisions while they wait to see when economic recovery will begin," Kasver said.
SECOND IN SALARY among engineers was $72,168 for chemical engineers, an 11.5 percent gain over amounts offered this time last year.
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University Daily Kansan, April 30, 1982
Page 9
Dressing for success
Clothes can make or break the interview
By GINA THORNBURG Staff Reporter
KU seniors are learning that their clothes can make or break them in job situations.
"Clothes are real important in an interview situation," said Kate Swanson, personnel manager of a local retail clothing store, J. Michael's, 1601 W. 23rd St." The interview is your one chance to make a good impression."
SWANSON SAID it was important for students to wear shoes and interact with the style and feel of their clothing.
older suit may indicate that you aren't aware of what is being on in society.
And certain colors can be used to make a good impression.
"Some colors give off a more authoritative look than others." Swanson
"IF YOU WERE interviewed for an accounting position, you should probably wear dark colors, such as grays or blacks."
A personnel manager, on the other hand, should wear brown or beiges, she said. Browns and beiges are warmer colors than blacks, navys or grays.
'I think that a personnel manager has to
her interviews probably had similar
indications, such as internships and high
grade jobs.
Men are more limited than women in what they should wear to interviews, said Randy Gordon, manager of the Britches Corner, 843 Massachusetts St. Men should wear simple patterns, he said, such as pin stripes or solids in navy or gray.
"The clothing fit and not be something the looks like it was his dad's"
Wait, "looks like" is correct.
The text:
"The clothing fit and not be something the looks like it was his dad's"
Let me re-read line 2.
"The clothes look like it was his dad's"
Yes.
Final check of the whole text:
"The clothing fit and not be something the looks like it was his dad's"
The word "clothes" is clear.
The word "looks" is clear.
The word "like" is clear.
The word "was" is clear.
The word "his" is clear.
The word "dad's" is clear.
Okay, I'm ready to transcribe.
"The clothing fit and not be something the looks like it was his dad's"
"SO YOU WANT to wear something that will set you apart," she said.
"I always feel safer if I overheat," he said. "It's not going to do you a disservice to look at you."
Reigier, a business administration
reigier, saidaddress codes may vary within a
country.
Mike Regier, Hiawatha senior, said he could not remember how many interviews he had been to, but he said appearance was important in each one.
IN AN INTERNSHIP Reiger had last summer at a manufacturing firm, a sport coat was appropriate at the corporate level. But better in other parts of the firm, he said.
'If you have the time or the opportunity, you should find out about the business. Some businesses require women to wear skirts, so wearing a pantsuit to an interview could be a drawback.' —Kathy Swanson,
Zenger said that comfort as well as appearance was important in the interview.
"I figure I won't look very nice if I'm uncomfortable," she said. "You're not very comfortable in an interview anyway, but you can get to comfortable by the way you dress."
-Kathy Swanson J.Michael's
nature of the business for which students were interviewing.
Style also is important in choosing clothes for an interview, she said.
"Even if you have a nice three-year-old suit, it may be important to wear a zip-up shirt."
"If you have the time or the opportunity, you should find out about the business," she said. "Some businesses require women to wear skirts, so wearing a pantsuit to an interview could be a drawback.
"Certain clash creates position. You'll want to look different for an art director position as opposed to a loan officer position."
be in a position to let people feel comfortable getting close to her," she said.
Zenger, an advertising and public relations major, said most of the people at
*Grays, navys, or blocks are much more authoritative, people are a bit more formal*, *and they look cool.*
"If they interview so many people that look alike in the same suit," she said, "what is going to make them remember you?"
Shannon Zenger, Hays senior, wore a cream-colored suit with a maroon blouse to most of her 20 interviews. She chose to wear a lighter colored suit, she said, because most of the other interviews wore brown or navy suits.
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Page 16 University Daily Kansan, April 30, 1982
[ ]
KU faces Wildcats
The Kansas baseball team closes out its home season this weekend with double-headers against Kansas and Ohio to score in Owego and Sunday at Quailfield.
The Jayhawks, 19-23 overall, 6-10 in the Big Eight, to have sweep the Wildcats to keep alive any hopes of staving in the playoff race.
"We got to win the rest of the games, or at least seven," lefttfeldar Bill Yelton said. "It could be possible, if we play good enough."
Pitching for the Jayhawks will be Randy McIntosh and Duke Lohr tomorrow and Jim Phillips and Kevin Kroeker on Sunday.
To get into the playoffs, the 'Hawks must beat out Oklahoma for the fourth spot in the Big Eight playoffs. Oklahoma, 8-5 in the conference, faces Iowa State and Nebraska to close out its season.
Oklahoma must lose five of eight and the Jayhawks must win seven of eight to make the playoffs.
KU, with its 23 losses, is close to setting a Kansas record for most losses in a season. The 1975 team set the record with a 15-25 mark. The last team with a losing record was the '77 team at 22-23.
Kansas State, 26-21 overall, 2-14 in the conference, has not won a conference game since splitting a double-header with Iowa State earlier this year. Last year, the state took three of four from the 'Hawks.'
Last year, when the Jayhawks went 32-19, 12-11 in conference play, it was their pitching that kept them winning. This year the team ERA ballooned to 5.16, while the hitting also rose, from 275 to 294.
Blue Jays romp past Royals
By United Press International
KANSAS CITY, Mo.—Buck Martinier knocked in four runs with a homer and a single last night to carry the Toronto Kansas 14 to victory over the Kansas City Royals.
Toronto pitcher Dave Stib blank the Royals on five hits. Stib walked four and struck out four in winning for the first time in three decisions this season, but they didn't and also the first complete game by a Toronto pitcher in 1982, enabling the
Blue Jay to extend their winning streak to three games.
Martinez hit a three-run homer, his first of the year, in the fourth, to give Toronto a 4-10 lead and singled home as run to cap a two-run six innings outburst against Kansas City starter Paul Solitorto 0-1.
The Blue Jays scored the only run Stieb would need in the first without the aid of a hit when Damascos Garcia walked, stole second and took third when Bromley scrubbed by catcher Wathan and scored on Garth lors's sacrifice fly.
'Hawks to play alumni
The KU football players will finally get a chance to hit someone other than themselves when they take on a KU player in the 40th period, tomorrow at Memorial Stadium.
"We'll play the game just like last year, by the ear," Coach Don Fambrough said. "A lot will depend on the alumni and how large a squad they
"This is mainly a day for our alumi. It's something they enjoyed very much last year, and it was a success because of their enthusiasm."
Mike Fisher, academic counselor,
will coach the alumni team. Fisher's
team will have quarterback Bobby
Gilbert, who was a backup quarterback from the 1988 Orange Bowl
squad, was named last year as the top alumni offensive player of the game. Laverne Smith, KU's all-time leading scorer, will be on hand to play for the alumni.
Recent stars such as Bob Flesh, Brian Bethek, Ed Bruce, Chris Toburen and David Lawrence, who has signed a free agent contract with the Dallas Cowboys, will add youth to the alumni team.
Defensive co-captains Tim Friess and Gary Coleman and offensive captains Paul Fairchild and Russ Baintek in the Jayhawks. Quarterback will have a great spring and will be counted on to lead the Jayhawks' offence.
Women's golf team takes sixth
But in those nine holes the women managed to shoot 35 strokes higher than they did on the front nine and back nine. In pace, repeating last year's performance.
The sixth-place finished matched coach Ross Randall's earlier prediction about the tournament, but Randall said it was a future KU women's golf was bright.
"We should be much, much more competitive next year," Randall said. "With the girls we have back next
year and the three or four recruits we're expecting, we'll have a really strong team."
Oklahoma State won this year's event with a three-day total of 917 strokes. Oklahoma followed with 980, then Missouri 981, Nebraska 992, Iowa State 1,002, Kansas 1,010 and Kansas State 1,961
"The girls were disappointed with their finish," Randall said. "They didn't know how they were doing, but they knew they were beating people."
Despite the disastrous final nine, the Jayhawks scored 331 for the final round, their best of the tournament, beating three teams.
Scoreboard
With nine holes remaining in the 54-hole women's Big Eight Golf Championship in Ames, Iowa, Wednesday, Kansas was in good position. They had rebounded from the sixth-place position they started the day in and had a good shot at finishing fourth in the seven-team field.
Basketball
TOMORROW'S GAMES
Quarterfinal Round
Best of Seven
Eastern Conference
Boston at Washington (series tied 1-1)
Philadelphia at Milwaukee (Philadelphia leads
series 2-4)
**wherein contained**
Seattle at San Antonio (Los Angeles lead 1-1)
Los Angeles at Phoenix (Los Angeles leads
series 3-4)
Hockey
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Conference Finals
Wales Conference
Wales Conference
Waters Conference
New York Islanders 5. Quebec 2 (Islanders lead
series 10)
Campbell Conference Chicago 4, Vancouver 1 (series tied 1-1)
Soccer
Quarterfinals
Bat out of Three
Eastern Conference
April 30—Baltimore
New York
April 30—Baltimore
Pittsburgh
Western Conference
St. Louis D.A., Kentucky
Washington State series 1-4)
Michigan D.A., Wisconsin
Washington State series 1-4)
Baseball BIG EIGHT STANDING
BIG EIGHT STANDING
Team 15 5 Pct. GB
Nebraska 12 5 370
Oklahouan State 12 4 790
Oklahoma 8 5 615 3½%
Oklahouan 8 5 615 3½%
Kansas 6 10 375 7
State 6 10 375 7
Kansas State 6 14 129 10
AMERICAN LEAGUE Eastern Conference
Team | E | L | Pct. | GH
Boston | 12 | 7 | .632 | 68
Beijing | 12 | 8 | .590 | 68
Milwaukee | 9 | 7 | .563 | 1¾
Cleveland | 9 | 8 | .471 | 3
Toronto | 9 | 7 | .461 | 3
New York | 7 | 10 | .412 | 4
Baltimore | 10 | 12 | .412 | 4
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
NATIONAL LEAGUE Eastern Conference
MARCH 20
Oakland 9, Baltimore 8
Chicago 3, Detroit 2
Cleveland 5, Seattle 1
California 9, New York 8
Oakland 6, Baltimore 7
Californians 15 6 6714
Chicago 11 10 8506
Cincinnati 18 8 356
Oakland 10 12 455
Tampa 10 12 455
Texas 6 10 375
Newton 6 10 375
Team W 14 L Pct.
W 14 L 7 663
Montreal 7 7 663
Oakland 10 8 363
Pittsburgh 8 9 471
Chicago 7 13 372
Baltimore 10 13 381
Atlanta 15 15 790
Los Angeles 10 13 760
Los Angeles 10 10 1600
San Francisco 8 11 431
Cincinnati 8 11 364
Chicago 8 11 364
RESULTS
Pittsburgh 8, Houghton 0
Atlanta 3, Houston 0
Los Angeles 4, Philadelphia 0
San Francisco 0, Montreal 3
New York 1, Oakland 1
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
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Page 10 University Daily Kansan, April 30, 1982
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Ann Mallonnee, another KU graduate who earned a bachelor's degree in French literature, is the Canadian account manager in the marketing division of Jim Henson, Associates, creator of the Muppets characters of Sesame Street fame.
Henson licenses the Muppet characters and names to six companies in Montreal, and Mallonne travels to Canada to act as a producer for the licenses and Henson, Associates.
From page 7
have those skills plus a language are very valuable. "
SHE SAID she used her French when dealing with the French-speaking中国人.
TEXT
TWO L
BEGINNIN
Even the Muppets are bilingual now.
Norris Lacy, chairman of KU's department of French and Italian, said that former French majors at KU were as many as 55 different occupations.
"The most common ones are business and journalism," he said, "and more recently, international law and economic policy." He added that international banking and government service.
"There are a very large number of situations where the foreign language is not a primary, but a secondary skill. For exam- ple reasons, I don't know what percent of the time doing what everyone else does and 10 percent of the time working with international currency. They fill some need the company has that someone without the language skill could do."
kansas union KU main sate
John Garland, assistant professor of business who teaches a class in international business, stressed that foreign language training alone would seldom be enough to get a job with an international company.
"It's not a requirement, but an asset," she said.
"I CONSIDER foreign language training really critical," he said. "But the real value of language training to a person in international business is the cross-cultural sensitivity that's necessary to operate in this crazy world."
Fluency in at least one foreign language can help someone entering the business world get his foot in the door, according to Mike Woodrow, regional manager for Latin American for Storage Technology Corporation, a $1 billion company that manufactures higher technology systems for IBM computers.
practice business and law, and probably gain into exporting and importing," she said.
"When I came in, my job was to open up the continent and run the business," he
But entering international business is not the one way to get a job that involves travel.
"Sometimes companies need a certain part of the world covered, like banks with branches all over the world," Waxman said.
About 300 firms recruit at Thunderbird each year for jobs in international business.
William Blue, associate professor of Spanish and Portuguese
The U.S. State Department offers a wide range of positions, many of which are
Ann Waxman is a KU graduate who is now working toward a master's degree in international management at Thunderbird in Arizona. She received a bachelor's degree in Spanish from KU and plans to attend law school.
For students who plan to live abroad someday, studying a foreign language can be a useful aid.
'When you've got two or three candidates, the language is what distinguished one from the other. It's easier to teach-the specifics of a business to someone who speaks the language.'
"WE SERVE AS press and cultural attaches in American embassies abroad."
said. "We're now open in five South Parking days a year outside the United States."
"I got the job because I was fluent in Spanish and Portuguese and had a business background. My language capability helped me in."
Connell said the ICA operated the Fulbright Scholarship program, taking American students and professors abroad and bringing foreign students to the United
"language-designated," according to Mary Elen Connell, a KR graduate who is now a foreign service information officer for the U.S. Air Force, formerly the U.S. Information Service.
"I WOULD LIKE to live abroad and
She spent four years in Nairobi, Kenya, as an information center director and a public affairs officer at the American embassy.
"Even if you start as a bilingual secretary
you can really rise to a good position, you can really rise
to a good position."
Dell speaks French, Polish, Russian,
Spanish and Sero-Croatian, and has
expanded his learning to include
English.
"Any American business person does well to study a foreign language," she
The Corner • The Corner
"I hope to get into the State Department eventually," she said. "Now there is the chance."
"It leaves more doors open—just to be a well-educated citizen."
Odell also did a brief stint as a Polish interpreter for a writer who was travelling
"They'll teach you, but it's to your advantage to already speak a foreign language," she said. "If all other things are equal, the State Department looks very favorably at people who have a language background."
The State Department no longer requires all its employees to speak a foreign language, but prefers them to because it saves the department the money and time of putting an employee in intensive language course, Connell said.
"IT'S THE NUTS and bolts of international trade," she said. "Shipping and freight forwarding, getting people naid—all the mechanics."
There are about 29,000 full-time positions in the U.S. government that require competence in a foreign language. These include foreign intelligence, news broadcasting, law enforcement, census taking and customs collection.
The Corner • The Corner - The Corner • The Corner
There are also jobs locally for a language major who wants to use that skill to teach English.
The Corner The Corner
Marilyn Odell, another KU graduate,
orks for a Kansas City, Kan., shipping line.
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University Daily Kansan. April 30. 1982
Fees drop, hall costs rise in fall
By DON KNOA Staff Reporter
Barring any unforeseen increases in the student activity fee, KU students will pay less to enroll next year than they did this previous year. Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs
But the possible decrease in student fees won't be much—just $7.
KU students now pay $117 in campus student fees.
Ambler said students will no longer have to pay $4.50 each semester for the construction of Wescoe Hall, the $7.5 million humanities building. Bonds for the hall, which was completed in 1973, will be retired. Ambler said there also would be a $4 reduction in health fees. Meanwhile, the vice chancellor expects the Kansas Board of Regents to approve a $1.50 increase for a health services maintenance fee.
As a result, in-state students should pay $452 in total enrollment fees next year, down from $459. Out-of-state students will pay $1,110, also at $7 reduction.
But a lower fee rate won't be all students will find when they return to campus next fall.
Housing payments will increase at all university residence halls, he said, by an average of 2.5%.
But despite stories of scarcity limited financial aid for next fall, Ambler said that opportunities for on-campus employment would be increased.
"We're increasing the amount of money available for students to work," he said.
A $1.1 million increase in Kansas University Endowment Association scholarships will also offset tighter restrictions made on the federal government's Guaranteed Student Loan program. Ambler said.
"The actual facts of financial aid would warrant us saying that the amount won't
decrease next year," he said. "Those who have need will be funded."
Ambler said the increasing cost of a college education was still a concern for the students.
"But there is help," he said, "and it still is possible to work your way through it."
"A student might be able to get by on just that," Ambler said, "but that's the minimum. You have to assume that there would be help from parents or loans."
Ambler said that a student who worked full-time for 11 weeks during the summer for the minimum wage would make $1,478. The same amount would be made for week during school, would bring in an additional $1,876. Taken together, the student would earn $3,534 a year, just $46 less than the Office of Student Affairs for an in-state undergraduate.
Ambler said the most successful students in college were those who worked.
Weekend Arts
TODAY
MASTER CLASSES FOR PIANO will be given by Leon Fleisher at 9 a.m. and 2 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall. The classes will also be given tomorrow at the same times and the public is invited to sit in on the sessions.
THE UNIVERSITY THEATRE season will close with the staging of the play "FOR COLORED GIRLS WHO HAVE CONSIDERED SUICIDE/WHEN THE RAINBOW IF ENUKE" The play will be held on Sunday in the University Theatre through Sunday. For ticket information call the Murphy Hall Box Office.
TOMORROW
A SENIOR RECITAL will be performed by a Hale Hite, tenor, at 8 p.m. in Brattleboro.
A MASTERS RECITAL ON PIANO will be performed by Jennifer Coleman at 8 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall.
Jobs
From page 2
EDUCATION
"Most students have had at least one offer," she said, "when last year it was $100, and now it's $250."
Most of the on-campus recruiting ended around spring break, she said, and recruiters hoped to do more hiring this year.
"Employers are saying that hiring is
reducing in the summer, for a turnaround this summer," Madison said.
"Most of our engineers have been successful in getting jobs."
In Education, many positions are just now coming on, Terry Gellman, placement director.
However, he said, there was a slight drop in the vacancies listed this year as the demand for workers increased.
School districts have been forced to make economic cutbacks, he said.
"We still have a lot of people looking for jobs and getting jobs," Glenn said.
Some of the better teaching areas include mathematics, special education, industrial arts, vocational agriculture and the sciences.
Also, he said, in the past year they have taught a slight change for the better for teachers.
LAW
Maggie Cartart, placement director in the School of Law, said that things seem to be working well.
However, she said, the types of positions available were changing.
Government job opportunities are down, she said, and she anticipated fewer on-the-job positions.
But, she said, there are more jobs in district or county attorneys' offices than
she had seen in the last two or three years.
Carrart said that the BAR exam figures greatly into some students job search. She said that many students do not look for or decide about a job until after the test.
She said that she has heard from some students and lawyers that it was a tight market. She said she thought employers are thinking a little harder about what kind of an employee they want and waiting a little longer on hiring.
"Students just have to look a little harder," she said.
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Page 16
University Daily Kansan, April 30, 1982
1.
KU faces Wildcats
The Kansas baseball team closes out its home season this weekend with double-headers against Kansas and Oklahoma to sorrow and Sunday at Quietley Field.
The Jayhawks, 19-23 overall, 6-10 in the Big Eight, have to sweep the Wildcats to keep alive any hopes of staving in the playoff race.
we got to win the rest of the games, or at least seven." leffeldier Bill Yelton said. "It could be possible, if we play good enough."
Pitching for the Jayhawks will be Randy McIntosh and Duke Lohr tomorrow and Jim Phillips and Kevin Kroeker on Sunday.
To get into the playoffs, the 'Hawks must beat Oklahoma for the fourth spot in the Big Eight playoffs. Oklahoma, 8-5 in the conference, faces Iowa State and Nebraska to close out its season.
Oklahoma must lose five of eight and the Jayhawks must win seven of eight to make the playoffs.
KU, with its 23 losses, is close to setting a Kansas record for most losses in a season. The 1975 team set the record with a 15-25 mark. The last team with a losing record was the '77 team at 22-23.
Kansas State, 26-31-1 overall, 2-14 in the conference, has not won a conference game since splitting a double-header with Iowa State earlier this year. Last year, the team took three of four from the 'Hawks.
Last year, when the Jayhawks went 32-19, 12-11 in conference play, it was their pitching that kept them winning. They pitched a 347 ERA. This year the team ERA ballooned to 5.16, while the hitting alrosse, from .275 to .294.
Blue Jays romp past Royals
By United Press International
KANSAS CITY, Mo.—Buck Martinez knocked in four runs with a homer and a single last night to carry the Toronto against victory over the Kansas City Royals.
Toronto pitcher Dave Stieb blanked the Royals on five hits. Stebb walked four and struck out four in winning for the first time in three decisions this season. He was a starter and also the first complete game by a Toronto pitcher in 1982, enabling the
Blue Jays to extend their winning streak to three games.
Martinez hit a three-run homer, his first of the year, in the fourth, to give Toronto a 4-10 lead and singled home to run up a two-run sixth inning outburst against Kansas City starter Paul Solitoff, 0-1.
The Blue Jays scored the only run Stieb would need in the first without the aid of a hit when Damascus Garcia walked, stole second and took third by catching error bycatcher John Wathan and scored on Garth Gorses saffrony飞
'Hawks to play alumni
The KU football players will finally get a chance to hit someone other than themselves when they take on a KU player in the game tomorrow, p.m. tomorrow at Memorial Stadium.
"We'll play the game just like last year, by the ear," Coach Don Fambrigh said. "A lot will depend on the team and how large a squad they have."
"This is mainly a day for our alumni. It's something they enjoyed very much last year, and it was a success because of their enthusiasm."
Mike Fisher, academic counselor, will coach the alumni team. Fisher's team will have quarterback Bobby Bowden and running back quarterback from the 1980 Orange Bowl
squad, was named last year as the top alumni offensive player of the game. Laverne Smith, KU's all-time leading recruit, will be on hand to play for the alumni.
Recent stars such as Bob Fiss, Brian Bethke, Ed Bruce, Chris Toburen and David Lawrence, who has signed a free agent contract with the Dallas Cowboys, will add youth to the alumni team.
Defensive co-captains Tim Friess and Gary Coleman and offensive co-captains Paul Fairchild and Russ Bastin lead the Jayhawks. Quarterback will be counted as a great spring and will be counted on to lead the Jayhawks' offense.
Women's golf team takes sixth
With nine holes remaining in the 54-hole women's Big Eight Golf Championship in Ames, Iowa, Wednesday, Kansas was in good position. They had rebounded from the sixth-place position they started the day in and had a good shot at finishing fourth in the seven-team field.
But in those nine holes the women managed to shoot 35 strokes higher than they did on the front nine and the back nine, at pace, repeating last year's performance.
The sixth-place finished match coach Ross Randall's earlier prediction about the tournament, but Randall said it was the future of KU women's golf was bright.
year and the three or four recruits in the tactic, we have a really strong team.
Oklahoma State won this year's event with a three-day total of 917 strokes. Oklahoma followed with 800, then Missouri 981, Nebraska 992, Iowa State 1,002, Kansas 1,010 and Kansas State 1,261.
"We should be much, much more competitive next year," Randall said. "With the girl we have back next
The girls were disappointed with their finish." Randall said. "They didn't know how they were doing, but they knew they were beating people."
Despite the disastrous final nine, the Jayhawks scored 331 for the final round, their best of the tournament, beating three teams.
Scoreboard
Basketball
TOMORROW'S GAMES
Quarterfinal Round
Best of Seven
Boston at Washington (series tied 1-1)
Philadelphia at Milwaukee (Philadelphia leads
Western Conference
Seattle at San Antonio (ties tied 1-1)
Los Angeles at Phoenix (Los Angeles leads series 2-4)
Hockey
VERSTERDEN RESULTS
Conference Flims
Waala Conference
Walna Conference
Wales Conference
New York Islanders 9, Quebec 2 (landers lead
Campbell Conference Chicago 4, Vancouver 1 (series tied 1-1)
Soccer
Quarterfinals
Best of Three
Knickerbocker
Eastern States
April 30–Buffalo at New York
April 30–Baltimore at Pittsburgh
Western States
St. Louis, D. Devin at Memphis series 1-4
Memphis, W. Michaels at Memphis series 1-4
Baseball BIG EIGHT STANDING
Team | W | L | Pct. | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Nebraska | 15 | 5 | .790 | -- |
| Oklahoma State | 12 | 9 | .760 | -- |
| Oklahoma | 9 | 4 | .692 | 2¼ |
| Oklahoma | 8 | 5 | .615 | 3¼ |
| Iowa State | 5 | 15 | .379 | 7 |
| Kansas State | 5 | 14 | .250 | 11 |
AMERICAN LEAGUE Eastern Conference
Team | L | W | Pct. | GB
Boston | 12 | 7 | .532 | .608
Boston | 12 | 7 | .532 | .608
Milwaukee | 9 | 7 | .563 | 1¼%
Cleveland | 9 | 7 | .471 | 1½%
Toronto | 8 | 12 | .414 | 3%
New York | 7 | 12 | .412 | 4%
Racine | 5 | 12 | .424 | 6
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
California 15 6 7 714
Colorado 13 10 6 714 2½*
Kansas City 10 8 7 698 3½*
Oakland 10 11 475 676
Texas 10 12 675 675
Tennessee 10 13 375
Oakland 9, Baltimore 4
Chicago 3, Detroit 2
Cleveland 5, Seattle 1
Nashville 7, Kansas City 9
NATIONAL LEAGUE Eastern Conference
GB
3
$ 3 \frac{1}{2} $
$ 4 \frac{1}{2} $
7
8
Team W 14 L Pct.
W 19 L 7 Pct.
Montreal 7 7 563
Milwaukee 8 7 563
Pittsburgh 8 7 471
Chicago 8 9 471
Boston 5 13 278
Philadelphia 5 13 278
Atlanta 15 5 750
Boston 15 5 750
Los Angeles 10 10 900
San Francisco 8 11 421
Cincinnati 7 11 384
Houston 8 12 484
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Pittsburgh 9 Houghton 8
Atlanta 3 Chicago 4
Los Angeles 4 Philadelphia 0
San Francisco 7 Montreal 3
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Page 12 University Daily Kansas, April 30, 1982
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