C
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The University Daily
KANSAN
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
Monday, June 7, 1982 Vol. 92, No. 145 USPS 650-640
Israel battles guerrillas
By United Press International
BEIRUAT, Lebanon—Thousands of Israeli invasion troops pushed into Lebanon yesterday to battle Palestinian guerrillas from the southern border region to towns near the capital of Beirut, Syria said its forces joined the fighting in an escalation of the conflict.
The Israeli offensive, spearheaded by columns of tanks with naval, air and artillery bombardments, had by evening reached the town of Damour, just 13 miles south of Reitur.
"We are in a war situation," an Israeli air force commander said at a base in Israel. "We're succeeding in catching the terrorists no matter they are, and we are keeping them under fire."
The PLO also said Israeli troops had made an amphibious landing north of the coastal city of Sidon, 22 miles south of the capital, and were fighting fierce battles with eperuas.
Palestine Liberation Organization sources said Israel gumbots were pounding the coastal road outside Damour and that Israel warplanes were flying low-level missions over the town.
"They are coming from everywhere!" a man shouted in Sidon as he and thousands of other civilians fled north to escape bombing by Israel jet fighters who "yelled a woman her cellphone."
The long expected invasion, the second in four years, came on the fifth anniversary of the 1967 war. The Americans were on the attack.
In Jerusalem, a military command statement said that "Israeli defense forces today launched a search-and-destroy operation against sources of Palestinian fire and guerrilla concentrations that have been firing on Israeli villages for the past few days."
The invasion followed two days of intense Israeli bombing raids of guerrilla positions in the town. A number of civilians were killed.
retaliation for Thursday's shooting in London of Israel's ambassador to Britain.
A PLO spokesman in Beirut vowed: "Our mor-
tunity is very high, and our fighters will fight until
the end."
There were no immediate reports of casualties from either side, but a U.N. spokesman said one Norwegian soldier in the peacekeeping force in North Africa was killed when he was caught in a cross-fire.
The PLO said its forces destroyed two Israeli warplanes, two helicopters, 42 tanks and 20 armored personnel carriers. It also reported 150 Israel casualties and said Israel commanded the fight against them but abandoned the town of Zahrani "after suffering unexpected fatalities and material losses."
Israel released no details on the invasion, but admitted for the first time since the 1973 Mideast war that it had lost aircraft in combat - one jet and one helicopter, presumably shot down by
Palestinian sources placed the size of the Israeli force at 20,000 men, but Israel would provide no figures on its troop strength. Israeli military sources there were about 8,000 guerrillas in the south.
Israeli troops also battled the Palestinians in the streets of Tirey, 13 miles north of the border on the Mediterranean coast. Paratroopers landed in the towns of Anasar and Zahrain further to the north.
The PLO and U.N. sources said the guerrillas had slowed the advance of armored columns in Tyre. The fighting enveloped the city in a cloud of black smoke, and terrified civilians poured into the Lebanese army barracks seeking protection.
In Damascus, the Syrian military command said contingents of its 25,000-man force occupying Lebanon were engaged in artillery duels with Israeli forces in an escalation of the conflict that
Photo by Susan Page
P
See Lebanon page 7
Participants in the American Legion Boys' State play volleyball Friday in the Lewis Hall parking lot. The Boys' State activities ended Saturday.
Argentina united in crisis,prof says
Rv ANDREW DEVALPINE
Staff Reporter
Day recently returned from a 10-day stay in Buenos Aires.
The 'Gaucho ethic' is an important factor in understanding Argentine determination to hold on to the Falkland Islands, Larry Day, professor of journalism, said Saturday.
"If the Argentinians stick it out at Port Stanley, if they make a fight of it, part of it will be the oath of the Gancho. who also stonched the man to tight or a cause he believes in," he said.
Day has covered Argentine affairs off and on since 1961.
story. Buenos Aires has been my beat," he said.
"THE GAUCHO." Day said, "is a tradition in Latin American like our cowboy, but more adventurous."
After it became apparent that the British would invade the Falklands, Day said, he found himself 'more and more anty on wanting to be in on the story. I felt that it was my
After hectic last-minute preparations, mostly concerned with trying to secure financial commitments by newspapers and news services to buy his stories. Day after Kansas
"I ARRIVED IN BUENOS Aires the following morning at 1:30, just about the time the Brit
Day said that this undeclared war between Great Britain and Argentina had united the Argentians as nothing else had in all their history.
"I've never seen Buenos Aires so calm, prosperous and united," Day said.
Despite the war, Day said, information was easy to obtain.
"In 1962, the military was everywhere," Day said. "Just to get into a building, you had to show everything but a birth certificate and note from your mother."
"I found Buenos Aires more open this year, during this state of emergency than at any other," he said.
British move toward Port Stanley
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina—British forces, backed by 4,000 fresh troops from the ocean liner Queen Elizabeth 2, pressed toward the Falkland Islands' capital of Stanley yesterday to cut off the main 7,000-foot garrison, reports from the islands said.
Argentina, in a military communique, said its bombers pounded British positions on the island after dark Saturday, and a top Argentine admiral called the British position "hopeless." Britain made no comment on the reported bombing raid.
There were no new reports of ground fighting, as both sides assembled their forces under dense fog for a final and possibly bloody battle.
The Argentine military presence is squeezed into a little corner around Port San Juan, the gateway. Gen. Jeremy Moore, the ground forces commander, little more squeezed before we are finished."
CONTRIARY TO speculation by the press that the military junta of Argentina can't resist an attack.
"There was no war hysteria or military heavy-handedness." Day said, "That's why I don't think there will be any public retribution for the junta for occupying the Maldivines."
"Las Islas Malvinas" is the Argentine name for the islands.
There is a possibility of more political friction after the conflict is resolved, Day said, but it won't be a reflection on the decision to occupy the Falklands.
"I was on the streets, in the subways, buses, trains and coffee shops 18 hours a day for 10 days," he said, "and I didn’t find more than a couple of times who felt that the move was inappropriate."
A key to understanding what happened is that the Argentinians are united in one cause, Day said. A number of factors cemented that unity. Most important were Argentine militias and police who reported reports indicating the British were going to declare the Falklands independent, Day said.
"Of course, these have been rumors, and that's all I know they are." Day said.
Anglo-Argentine—the descendants of British settlers—thought to be 500,000 strong, also voiced their support for the Argentine position. Dav said.
The German community in Buenos Aires held a demonstration of solidarity for the Argentine cause, Day said. Thousands of German-Argentines marched into a plaza in Buenos Aires carrying banners and signs, pledging their allegiance to Argentina by singing the Argentine national anthem, Day said.
Budig baby doing fine
The newest resident of 1532 Llane Lane - the Chancellor's Residence - is expected home
Kathryn Angela Louise Budig is the five-day-old daughter of Chancellor Gene A. Budig and his wife, Gretchen. When she was born at 1:34 p.m. Wednesday at the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan., she was 18 and one-inch lengths long and weighed five pounds, eight ounces, according to extensive care nursery records.
Mrs. Budig said the baby had a respiratory problem at birth.
"She was breathing too quickly at first, so she couldn't take a bottle," she said. "She was put into the intensive care unit, in an incubator or isolete, and fed intravenously."
MRS. BUDDY SAID Kathryn remained in ICU during BUDG, but was moved into her mother's care.
"She's fine now and very hungry." Mrs. Budig
The baby was taken back to the nursery Saturday night, however, because Mrs. Budd had a
breakfast, it is normal when a mother's
bread milk meal comes to the table.
Mrs. Budgid said that when the mother had a fever, for whatever reason, the hospital staff would not let her near her baby. Her fever was gone yesterday morning.
She said she visited the nursery yesterday to watch the baby being bottle-fed.
Mrs. Budgid said she expected to leave the Med Center with her new daughter sometime this month.
THE BUDIDS also have a son, Chris, 17, and a daughter, Mary, 15.
Mary said she expected to be baby-sitting her little sister soon.
"I think she looks like my dad," she said.
Mrs. Budig said the baby had lots of dark hair
"But I don't expect it to stay that way, because her evelipses and brows are so fair," she said.
Mrs. Budig, 39, said she did not know whether she planned to have more children.
Happy day
CLOUDY
Weather
Today will be mostly cloudy, with a 20 percent chance of thunderstorms and highs in the low 80s, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka.
Winds will be variable at 5 to 15 mph.
Tonight will be partly cloudy, with a 30 percent chance of thunderstorms and lows in the morning.
Tomorrow will be cloudy, with highs in the low 80s.
Wednesday will be mild, with a chance of thunderstorms and highs in the low 80s.
and You See to Pray The Mercy
St. Luke African Methodist Episcopal Church celebrates its 129th anniversary yesterday. Paulette Barnes (left) and Wandra Washington (right), daughters of Pastor J.F. Washington, provide music for the celebration.
Photo by Susan Page
African church honors past
By KATHLEEN FEIST
Staff Reporter
Not every church is so honored as to have the governor read the liturgy for its Sunday services, but yesterday was a special occasion for St. Lake's African Methodist Episcopal Church, 900 New York St.-the celebration of its 120th anniversary.
Gov. John Carlin, along with State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Darlevance, Mayor Marc Francisco and other city commissioners, attended the ser-
vices meeting of the council, pastor of the predominantly black parish.
"The church has a very important part in history in Lawrence and an important place in American culture."
The congregation's first church building was constructed in 1862 and was like a shack. Washington said. In 190, on a adjacent lot, the present church was built, he said.
51. UCKE'S CHURCH is part of the AME Church, which was founded in 1873 in Philadelphia by Richard Allen. According to Washington, Allen and all other black walks between Chicago and St. Louis could not receive communion until after the white congregation had received the sacrament.
"The church was founded on a principle of kindness." he said.
St. Luke's, despite its predominantly black population, is open to all members of the communal community.
The AME Church developed because of the inhuman treatment of blacks and other social class groups.
The church in Lawrence served as a refuge for citizens during Quantrill's raid in 1883 and grew with the influx of slaves and ex-slaves escaping through the underground railroad. Washington
The church continued to develop out of the AME philosophy of self-help. "We preached to do what they could for themselves." Washington said.
LANGSTON HUGHES, poet and novelist, was a member of the church, where, Washington said, he worked as a janitor while he lived in Lawrence.
Washington attributed much of the success of
Monday Morning
the church to the determination, courage and faith of the parishioners.
"Many churches in the area have started and closed," he said.
When his church ceases to meet the needs of parishioners, Washington said, then it fails to do so.
"For 20 years, we have been meeting the needs of the people," he said.
Washington admitted there was "plenty more to do" to continue the success of the church.
"I'M HOPING to get 12 people to study and re-evaluate the church, to think in terms of all of them," said Ms. Barris.
Washington, who served as a minister in Spokane, Wash., before moving to Lawrence last October, said he enjoyed the church here.
"I'ts growing and moving," he said. "At the See AME more."
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, June 7, 1982
News Briefs From United Press International
Pope to meet junta leaders during his visit to Argentina
BUENOS AIRES, Argentine—Pope John Paul II will meet with the rulers junta when he visits Argentina this week, the government said yesterday. This will be a marked contrast to his visit to Britain, in which he deliberately avoided political leaders.
John Paul, who arrives Friday for a 33-hour visit, is the first pope ever to visit officially Catholic Argentina. The government said the pontiff would meet with the ruling military junta and with leaders of the army, navy and air force on the afternoon of his arrival.
During the pope's visit to Britain last week, a planned meeting with Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher was scrapped to avoid any notion that he was planning to move to London.
"You, like the holy father, can also carry a message of peace," the magazine said.
To coincide with the papal visit, one Argentine magazine began a campaign calling on people to wear badges marked "Peace is Possible."
Photographs of the pope appeared in profusion on the streets of Buenos Aires, almost outnumbering the blue-and-white Argentine flags signaling his arrival to the city.
Argentinians grew increasingly concerned about the rising death toll in the Falklands War, but most continued to show solid support for the war.
German magazine attacks Reagan
BONN, West Germany—The West German news magazine Der Speiler, in a cover story titled "The Unpleasant Guest," said yesterday that President Reagan would get the most unfriendly guest ever given a visitor to West Germany.
The magazine, a frequent critic of U. S. policy, is one of the most influential publications in West Germany. The store said that some Europeans consid- er the British as being too selfish.
The article said no Western autocrat, no Third World dictator and no Communist Party leader had ever received the hostile reception Reagan had on his way to power.
"Ronald Reagan is synonymous for dangerous atomic he-manship, as a cowboy who shoots from the hip, who plays with rockets and bombs, who has a mania to grab the red steer by the horns and drag it to the ground," the magazine said.
"Cartoonists draw this president as a devil with rockets instead of horns on the head."
West Berlin police reported an attack on a U.S. installation, the 11th such attack in Germany this month.
They said a fire was set Saturday outside the office of The Friendship Force, a group that arranges exchange visits of American and German students.
Anti-nuclear rally brings in 85,000
PASADENA, Calif.—An estimated 85,000 people, thousands more than expected, jammed the giant Rose Bowl yesterday for Peace Sunday, a rally for global nuclear disarmament, which included a concert by a lineup of rock stars.
By morning, promoters had sold out the planned 80,000 seats that were available in front of the huge concert stage set up in the 100,000-seat stadium. The company has been able to sell over a quarter of the
Sponsored by the Alliance for Survival and various religious groups as part of a campaign for nuclear disarmament, the raltedy boosted an impress-
Stevie Wonder, Linda Rondstadt, Jackson Browne, Stevie Nicks, Dan Friendsberg, Jocelph Walsh and Graham Hass headlined the entertainment or the selections at the 2015 ESPYS.
Music, however, wasn't the only reason for the rally. Organizers said it was "a celebration of life and peace" on the eve of the second United Nations summit in New York.
Jesse Jackson, Martin Luther King, III, Muhammad Ali, Jane Fonda and President Reagan's actress, actress Patti Davis, made brief appearances
Davis warned the crowd that 'We are trembling on the edge of catastrophe, and we are getting much closer to that catastrophe.
"I am working to turn that around," she said. "It's not going to be easy. I can see it, but we need to think we have good chance of saving this Earth. I think it would save money."
Election results humiliate Schmidt
HAMBURG, West Germany—Chancellor Helmut Schmidt's Social Democratic Party lost control of the provincial parliament of Schmidt's home state of Hamburg yesterday in a humiliating setback that could lead to his ouster.
"It is a political earthquake," commented Walther Leiser Kiep, the leader of the Christian Democrats in Hamburg. The Christian Democrats upset the Social Democrats in West Germany's second largest city for the first time in 25 years.
Schmidt, who staked his political reputation by campaigning heavily in the provincial election, was attending the summit of Western leaders in Verona.
Official returns of yesterday's election gave the Christian Democrat 43.2 percent of the votes and 56 seats in the city-state's 129-seat parliament.
The Social Democrats lost 14 seats, and their share of the vote plummeted from 51.5 percent in the 1978 parliamentary elections to 42.8 percent.
Oath may help bigotry, jurist says
CHICAGO—Allowing graduates of Oral Roberts University's law school to practice in Illinois would give biggy a boost, Saymour Simon, Illinois
In an address at John Marshall Law School's commencement, Simon said, "What I fear most is the encouragement that accruing Oral Roberts will lend to the bigots in our land. Bigots do not share Oral Roberts' religious mission."
Controversy has surrounded the Tulsa, Okla., school since it filed a judicial court challenging the American Bar Association's refusal to accredit
The school, named after the famed fundamentalist preacher, requires new students to take an oath recognizing Jesus Christ as their Lord and Saviour.
"If we tolerate the religious practices of Oral Roberts University in requiring its applicants to take that religious oath, are we not limiting the religious freedom of all those who wish to study the law, but are unable, as a matter of conscience, to subscribe to that oath?" Simon asked.
"Miracle" tortilla attracts believers
LAKE ARTHUR, N.M. - Maria Rubio says she was cooking lunch for her husband Oct. 5, 1977, when a startling thing happened. A face appeared on the monitor of her television.
Since that day, the couple's lives and those of their six children have been changed by what they believe was a miracle. Part of the family's living room was transformed into a shrine, and 10,190 pilgrims have trekked to their home to worship.
It was, she believes, the profile of Jesus Christ.
"A lot of people said the image was painted on, and one time, a woman said I'd made it with a hot medialion," said Mrs. Rubio.
Others are less skeptical. Some even claim miracles resulted from the tortilla.
Each weekend brings to the Rubios' home a succession of visitors from as far away as California and Mexico, who come to pray for a sick relative or give thanks for a recovery attributed to the tortilla. They kneel before an adult in a long white dress. The tortilla rests within a 10-inch deep square hole within the altar.
Summit ends with compromises
of him today, meeting with Pope John Paul II at the Vatican and Italian President Sandro Pertini and Prime Minister Giovanni Spadellini in Rome. Then the king came to London to meet Queen Elizabeth II and Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher
VERSAILLES, France—President Reagan hammered out a hard-won compromise with major U.S. allies yesterday to close the "open door" policy of trade with the Soviet Union.
Wrapping up the two-day summit, all but overshadowed by heavy Middle East fighting and the Falklands War, Reagan emerged a winner, although not getting everything he would have liked.
In return, Reagan promised to try to reduce what the allies denounced as "unacceptably high" U.S. interest rates and to become more involved with solving the economic problems of emerging Third World nations.
At the economic summit, the seven nations—the United States, Great Britain, Canada, West Germany, Italy, Japan and France—compromised on the sensitive issues: high U.S. interest in raising prices for their economic recovery and Reagan's demand that the West squeeze Russia's economy by cutting export credits.
Reagan has another hectic day ahead
"This will limit the amount of credit to them." Regan said. "How you define 'limit' will be left up to the experts." Mr. Brown will open door more. It's an open book.
"pursue a prudent and diversified economic approach to the USSR and East Europe consistent with our political and security interests.
Donald Regan, treasury secretary,
said the major 1.5% victory was the
right thing to do.
Reagan won agreement on the export credit imits despite reservations from France, which said it saw nothing wrong with profitable, commercial ventures with Moscow not involving advanced technological goods.
But Regan played trump cards by pledging to work for lower U.S. interest rates and by throwing the immense weight of the United States behind
renewed efforts to help developing countries.
French President Francois Mitterrand, summit host, said after the final working session yesterday afternoon that he would have liked a more solid U.S. commitment for lowered interest rates.
"I haven't eaten my fill on that subject, you might say," Mitterrand said just before dinner
Mittterrand won two personal victories during the summit. He extracted a U.S. pledge to become more actively involved in financial assistance to emerging nations and got enthusiastic support for his pet issue of using advanced technology to reduce world unemployment.
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University Daily Kansan, June 7, 1982
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Leaders stress value of economic growth
By KATE DUFFY Staff Reporter
Community leaders should continue to work together to promote economic development in Lawrence, which would insure low taxes and stable city services in the future, the chamber of commerce president said Friday.
President Martin Dickinson told city, county, business and educational leaders at the chamber's annual community planning meeting, held at the Kansas Union, that increased economic activity would also increase jobs and promote a high quality of life in Lawrence.
Dickinson presided over the four-hour meeting, which was attended by 28 representatives from the Lawrence City Commission, the Douglas County Commission, the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce, the University of Kansas, Lawrence Unified School District 497 and Haskell Indian Junior college.
PARTICIPANTS AGREED that economic development was important, but did not specify what it meant.
improve the local economy. Mayor Marci Francisco expressed doubts that simply attracting new industry would solve the problem of a sluggish econo-
"Industry is laying off, and industrial expansion is important, but we don't want to feel the roller coaster effects like the rest of the nation," she said.
"The educational system is still Other communities want industry, and how many are there to go around?" Francisco asked.
Francisco also said it was important to support existing businesses, as well as new ones.
Tom Gleason and Nancy Shontz, city commissioners, agreed during the discussion that they would like to see a high-technology research park established in Lawrence as a primary form of economic development. Research parks generally have been associated with the design and development of electronic equipment and with other light industry.
BUT SHONTZ EXPRESSED doubts expansion new land for industrial expansion
"I think we have all the land we need within the city limits for industry," she
The chamber recently canceled plans for an industrial park north of Lawrence.
Gary Toebben, executive vice president of the chamber, discussed a study saying that research parks were most successful in areas with a strong, nearby waterfront; not necessarily necessary for Lawrence's stability that the city keep attracting new industry.
Currently, Toebben said, Lawrence industry pays the city between $3 million and $4 million a year in property taxes.
City Manager Buford Watson stressed that it was everybody's job to attract new businesses, especially retail, to downtown Lawrence. He also mentions participants to "be positive and tell developers why we want down town business."
"Next week is Industry Appreciation Week, and I bet half of the people in this room don't know that Aeropidm manpower or what Color Press prints, he said.
Watson also said rising transportation costs were critical to Lawrence's future. Most eastern cities pay 60 percent to 90 percent of their public transportation costs, he said, and there was a chance that county could finance a fixed-route bus system.
LAWRENCE'S ONLY PUBLIC bus system, financed by KU Student Senate, will probably not expand any further and may be cut back in the future, David Amber, vice chancellor for student affairs, said.
Ambler said that although KU's enrollment had increased over the years, the number of students using the bus system had remained the same.
About three weeks ago, the city commission appointed a Transportation Advisory Board, whose task, Transco said, will be to assess what Transportation currently exists in the city and consider ways to add to it.
"One concern of the board is to coordinate existing transportation services for special populations and find out how the existing system, including the KU bus system, can be augmented." Francisco said.
SPRINGFIELD, Ill.—With the deadline for ratification only 23 days away and their hopes for victory fading, more than 40,000 proponents of the Equal Rights Amendment marched and rallied yesterday here and in three other states considered essential to victory.
Thousands rally for $ER^{A}$
Demonstrations were held in Illinois, Florida, Oklahoma and North Carolina, although North Carolina's fifth time to table the proposal.
The ERA, which would-guarantee equal rights for women under the U.S. Constitution, has been approved by 35 states, and needs three more to win ratification. The campaign is concentrating on the four states in which its leaders think it has the best chance.
Former first lady Betty Ford; Sharon Former rockeeller, first lady of West Virginia; and Chicago Mayors Hugh Carey and Elaine Illinois rally, which began with a
religious service honoring seven women festing for the amendment.
In Washington, D.C., which has no voice on ratification, more than 1,000 women participated in an ERA vigil at the National Cathedral, and most of the 1,500 delegates to a YWCA convention in Washington fasted yesterday in support of the ERA effort.
More than 10,000 people, a "conservative estimate," police said, marched a mile-long route to the Florida statehouse in Tallahassee.
"It's been a long, long time. It's been a hard battle. This is our last mile. We are one mile from home." He turned to the burying ceremony. Dade county NOW president.
Gov. Bob Graham, who called a three-day special session of the legislature June 21 to consider the amendment, led the speakers.
A crowd police estimated at 11,000 rallied in Oklahoma City for Oklahoma to reconsider ERA.
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The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Presents the 1982 Summer Concert Series
The University of Kansas
School of Fine Arts Presents
the 1982 Summer Concert Series
have a taste
of our treats this summer
MARIE-CLAIRE ALAIN, Organ
8:00 m Friday June 18
Plymouth Congregational Church
8:00 m Tuesday June 29
MICHAEL LORIMER, Guitar
8:00 m Tuesday June 29
Swarshout Rectal Hall
Chamber Music with
8:00 p.m. Tuesday July 6
Swarshout Rectal Hall
THE ASPEN SOLOISTS, Piano Trio
8:00 p.m. Tuesday July 6
Swarshout Rectal Hall
THE CHICAGO BRASS QUINTET
8:00 p.m. Tuesday July 3
Swarshout Rectal Hall
Tickets go on sale Monday June 14 in the
Murray Hall Box Office at 1345 Second Avenue
for sale until closing at 1:30 p.m.
One Student with ID $3.50; Semi-Private Curtains and
Box Office from 8:00 a.m. on nights of
Monday -iday
performance
have a taste of our treats this summer
M
Harrison Ford in
BLADE RUNNER
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Opinion
Page 4 University Daily Kansan, June 7, 1982
Season of difference
Yes, Toto, we are in Kansas once again. The wheat fields, the scarecow, the stockyards and the tin man are all still out there, a little wetter and rustier than usual, but basically constant and unchanging. But don't let the familiar atmosphere hull you into a sleepy, summer-time stupor, all is not calm on the Midwestern front.
In fact, an undercurrent of change, with its beginnings several months back, will sweep over our own favorite Hill, swelling into an almost miraculous metamorphosis before the summer's end. The University Daily Kansan, currently an outmoded paper-and-pencil operation, will be transformed into a modern-day, computerized newspaper. The VDTs are coming, and nothing can stop them now.
With the computer system coming to the Kansan newsroom, the password for the summer will be "different," which is appropriate for this summer's Kansan for several reasons. As in the past, the summer Kansan will be published on Mondays and Thursdays, rather than every day, as during the regular semester. The collapsed publishing schedule creates differences in the nature of the paper. Breaking news stories are not as plentiful, but more in-depth and analytical pieces are possible.
paper change, but this summer, a physical difference in the editorial page will be realized. Monday papers will include the traditional Kansan "Editorial Opinion" page. However, Thursdays will see page four transformed into a "Topics" page, dealing with a single, specific topic each week on an issue, theme or informative basis.
Not only does the general tone of the
The Topics pages are an attempt to better serve the reader by offering concentrated, in-depth and analytical coverage of subjects such as U.S. foreign policy, local music and education.
Along with these physical changes in the content of the Kansan, physical changes will also be inherent in this summer's newsroom as the computer system is installed and tested. The change to video display terminals from typewriters and paper should speed Kansan production time as much as the Concorded speed intercontinental air travel.
So, as each summer brings changes to the Kansan, 1982 will be no different. Some of the differences will be short-lived, as in the past. Daily publication will, of course, begin again in the fall, but that publication will be up-to-date, much simplified and truly a real-life journalistic experience for future Kansan staffs.
IS THIS
WHERE YOU
FILE FOR
UNEMPLOYMENT?
NO, THIS IS
WHERE YOU
FILE FOR
BUSINESS
BANKRUPTY.
©1982 MIAMI NEWS
Sexual liberation has gone too far
Sex!
That's right, sex! I must not ashamed of the word. In fact, I kind of like it. Sex, sex, sex, sex.
Unfortunately, some of the traditional pleasantries surrounding sex are becoming unpopular. Prompted by hard-core feminist films and lectures, charges of discrimination, chauvinism and exploitation are being bandied about because of expense of open, unabashed practitioners.
One feminist presentation currently making the rounds had been dramatically titled "Killing Me Softly." In this short propaganda piece, advertisement excerpts are used to draw the media-presented image of the exploited female.
The picture that emerges from this film makes the worthwhile point that society and advertisers appreciate women only for their beauty, not because they are further than their total worth as a human being.
This explotation, which has been troubling mankind for quite some time, is one of the most fundamental yet perplexing obstacles facing our society. All people, regardless of their race or sex, must finally be appreciated for their human worth, or our culture will not progress.
This means that males and females can no longer afford to exploit any other male or female. This also means that legal contracts such as marriage or employment should be based on an equivalent basis. Work loads and pay scales should be equal, regardless of race or sex.
After "Killing Me Softly" makes this worthwhile point, however, it generates some undesirable side effects. The film goes on to imply that women who look pretty behave in a less-than human manner and function according to the dictates of the male-controlled advertising model. In the male who appreciates female beauty is labeled a chauvinist bent on sexual exploitation.
This new push to turn admiration of sex appeal into an insult is most distressing because the women's movement proponents fail to account for the human need and desire of women. After all, people are enamored by the beauty of other things besides prettie men and women.
For example, people feel a thrill of pleasure when they see a classic automobile. An early-model Corvette built low to the ground and has a wide stance give an aesthetic experience that is hard to rival.
When someone is staring at a such sight, however, seldom does anyone say, "Hey, why're ya 'lookin' at that sleek Corvette like that? You figurein' on exploit it for your own physical gratification? You thinkin' about punchin' its accelerator?"
Of course, the sleek lines of a Corvette cannot be compared to the glory of the human mind and soul. People were made for truer purposes than having their accelerators punched. Still, people are like cars in that speed and beauty are part of their total worth, and admiring that speed or beauty is a compliment, not an insult.
EROS
It's even more natural for men to admire the beautiful features and shapes of a female than to admire a Corvette. Such admiration is important, in conjunction, but a fulfillment of the need for beauty
If this is true, human beings should be glorified by admiration, and each party should
John Scarffe
gain something. The admirer should gain a
leasing memory and a broader sense of bea-
ly, while the beautiful person gains a sense of-
worth.
Admiration of beauty should also be wel-
combe because it is relative and seems to be in infinite supply. For example, just because I admire the stark beauty of the Sangre De Cristo mountains, my admiration for the gentle slopes of the Northern Colorado Rockies is not limited. Despite arguments to the contrary, admiring one mountain, or one person, does not insult all others.
This unlimited ability to appreciate physical attractiveness is as important to the sexual process as it is to beauty and self-esteem. If women were to stop looking pretty and men were to stop looking at them, an unhealthy decline in American populations could result.
After all, physical attractiveness is the beginning of the mating process. Men and women court members of the opposite sex who have a broad range of physical beauty. Often, these courtshifts result in sexual activity (or vice versa), and this sometimes leads to the continuation and growth of the species. Like it or not, surviving long enough to create another human being is one of the best measures of a human's total worth.
Feminists who are working hard to develop
For example, if an already insecure male was shouted down or glared at because he admired a woman's beauty, many solid family relationships would never get started.
male sensitivity to warm and female feelings and problems would so well to keep these facts of life in mind. They would also do well to realize that men have feelings and problems of their own.
The solid family relationship my wife and I share is an example of one that began, partly, because we were not ashamed to express appreciation for each other's beauty. This expression reached a culmination a few weeks ago when I accompanied her to the hospital.
I was not sexually exploiting my wife and I was definitely interested in the final outcome, so trained by Lamaza classes, I helped her during the six-hour labor and 20-minute delivery. In those few hours, we discovered another beauty of the female body—giving birth.
When it was all over, however, and my good-looking son was lying on his mother's belly, the doctors and nurses all stared at him! What a bunch of chauvinists!
Letters to the Editor
Human fetus is an individual
Thomas Long, president of KU Young Democrats' offers the reasoning, or statement rather, than "It is an obvious and undeniable truth that an unborn fetus is an inseparable part of a woman's body. Therefore, to forbid a woman to be pregnant, it is to invade her constitutional right to privacy."
Is the fetus part of a woman's body?
This proposition deserves close scrutiny.
To the Editor
If a fetus is truly an "inseparable part of a woman's body," then the answer to the question "How many eyes does a woman in this condition have?" would, in fact, be "Four."
It would also only be logical to ascribe that a woman in this condition has for example, two heads, (one internal and one external) and 21 fingers, or (ad absurdum) two sexes and contractions; A part of a woman's body is, after all, a part of a woman's body. You cannot have it both ways.
I can now hear the protest cries that "No one meant it was a part of the woman's body like that—that's crazy!" I agree. That is crazy (the undeniable and obvious truth may not be so)
Perhaps some clarification can be provided by looking at the test-tube baby.
What the test tube provided was the environment upon which the embryo was dependent for its survival. No one would argue that the embryo had survived, even though it said that the test tube had suddenly become biotic.
Whatever one might think of it, the test-tube baby provides the illustration that the embryo or fetus is not an inseparable part of the woman's body, not merely an element of private concern.
The embryo had an existence and integrity quite apart from the test tube though it depended upon the environment provided by the test tube for its continued survival. Likewise, the fetus in a human embodies on the environment provided by the other, yet has its own integrity and existence.
The relationship of the domicile fetus to the mother is dependence, not identity.
Kirk Allison
Kirk Allison
Wichita sophomore
KU lighting is adequate
To the editor:
I am somewhat disturbed that it has become necessary to write a letter to the editor and apologize for the newspaper to the people in the University who have diligently worked in support of, and obtaining, the lighting we have on this campus.
In a front page article April 28, headlined "Police say unit campus invites crime," I personally was misquoted several times, starting with the headline. At no time did I say that an unit campus invites crime, nor did I say that Stouffer Place or the scholarship were used to invite that 'any creature' is unit sufficiently can be a potential hazard (for deviant characters).
I did not say that "Lighting was a much-needed investment for existing buildings. They should be built toward Sundays Drive. They have to be lighted better; they are a definite security risk."
What I did say was
The University has done much to improve the lighting, such as Irvine Halls, areas around Stouffer Place, some of the scholarship halls, Marvin Grove and some parking lots. I did say that areas that, in my opinion, needed to be considered for additional lighting were Memorial Drive, the area between Blake and Twente halls and in between some other buildings.
The reporter also conveniently neglected to state that the University police receive very few assault reports. The reporter did, however, give credit to those deserving in the light efforts, such as Don Beem and J.J. Wilson. These two individuals have always been willing to work with the student groups and the police department.
Jeanne Longaker.
Bentley Community Service
Kansas University Police Department
The University Daily
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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.
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University Daily Kansan, June 7, 1982 Page 5
'Rocky III' corny, but works
MICHAEL GEBERT Contributing reviewer
Whether "Rocky III" is better than its predecessors, I'm not sure. It is, however, the one that comes closest to giving the audience a sense of what it's like to fight a world heavyweight championship.
By now, Sylvester Stonehall is the audience's every reaction figured out. He knows exactly when and where to react, but he doesn't have a audience to a quivering, beaten pulp.
The squeeze is on in "Rocky III." Disco music blares, pieces are amplified a la "Raging Bull," and one big scene between Rocky and his wife, in which she tells him essentially to win one for the Gipper, is even shouted out sound of waves pounding the beach. Has any movie ever been this intense?"
THE PROBLEM WITH making sense of movies that have to end each time in a boxing ring is how to introduce various characters and situations in the James Bond films. For "Rocky"
III. "Stallone had the next best thing—a vicious, scary-looking fighter called "Clubber Lang," played by a fellow named "Mr. T."
in a very well done opening montage, we see Stallone reaping the benefits of his championship, doing American Express commercials and the like, while Lang trains in various picture- enque ways.
Rocky's going soft. He dresses well, he enjoys his family, but he's not the fighter we knew. Lang, on the other hand, is very different on the cast of "Cat People" and win.
The problem is that Lang's somewhat deficient in the milk-of-human-kindness category. Rocky does charity benefits, but Lang is an arrogant, hateful humour. And Lang can be good-looking, gooey-gooey this time, but with this guy running around, who can complain?
When they finally meet in the ring, Lang demolishes Rocky. That loss, in addition to the death of his beloved trainer, Mickey, nearly does poor work on the rooftop. He who bears a grudge against Lang, Soon, the man from whom Rocky won the
world championship is training him to win it back and, at the same time, shows us all how to believe in ourselves.
IT STOUNDS CORNY and it is, but "Rocky III" works. I wasn't on my feet cheering when Rocky scored a blow. I find that hard to do when the blow has hit me. If I get the ball out it hit the screen, yet that is, of course, the key to the whole thing.
Stallone's screenplay is brilliant. I don't mean that it contains stunning character revelation or witty dialogue, but that it unmerely pulls the audience along exactly as it wishes—we cheer when Stallone wants us to.
That could be manipulative. In the first film, it definitely was. By now, though, Stallone knows better than to have the bleeding Rocky calling out for Adrian (Talia Shire) in the middle of Madison Square Garden.
The friendship of Rocky and Apollo Creed is believable because the two are still antagonists. The death scene of Rocky is the most moving for its restraint.
on campus
TODAY
ORIENTATION FOR NEW STUDENTS entering KU's summer session will be from 9 to 10 a.m. in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
A PERSONNEL SERVICES WORK
SHOP will cover the topic "Effective Communication on the Job" from 1 to 4:30 p.m. in 892 Carruth-O'Leary.
Enrollment and fee payment for the Lawrence Campus summer session will begin at 8 a.m. in Hoch Auditorium and Wesco Hall.
TOMORROW
The Student Assistance Center will sponsor an ACADEMIC SKILLS ENHANCEMENT WORKSHOP on time management, flexible reading, listening and note taking at 1:30 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room of the Union.
'Nicholas Nickleby' awarded 4 Tonys
**NEW YORK——"The Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickley," the marathon 8-hour production that cost $20 a ticket, won Tony Awards last night as the best play in Broadway's 1983-84 season and for best actor, best director and best scenic design, "Dreamgirls" and "Nine" shared it awards for musicals.
"Nicholas Nickley" had entered the 35th annual Tony Award ceremonies as the heavy favorite for best play and won out over "Crimes of the Heart," "Master Harold . . . and the Boys" and "The Dresser."
"Nicholas Nickley," the Royal Shakespeare Company's adaptation of Charles Dickens' work, played only a limited engagement. It sent theater agents who could afford the ticket price to the heart of early 18th-century London
David Edgar wrote the adaptation
"Nine," which deals with Italian film director Guido Contini and the score of women in his life, won best musical, best director for a musical for "Nine."
Although ticket sales in the 1982-83 season hit a record of $222 million, the season nevertheless was among the drearest in recent memory.
Spiraling production costs, a lack of bell-ring shows and substantially reduced attendance cut into the bottom line.
Only 48 shows were presented during the season that just ended, compared with 60 in the 1960-81 season.
The advent of the $40 ticket for a musical and $30 for a play was the chief reason for the dip in attendance. Add to that state of the economy and the availability of Broadway's best on cable television and videotape stores for home viewing, and the outlook for Broadway's future is bleak.
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The University of Kansas Department of Health Physical Education and Recreation For Additional Information Dial Rec Information 864-3456
Event
Team Sports Softball
Soccer
Co-Rec Volleyball
Three Person Basketball
Individual Sports
Tennis Singles
Racquetball Singles
Summer Recreational Sports Activities
Play Begins
Badminton & Table
/*** Co-Rec Wed., June 9 5:30 p.m.
/*** Slow Pitch Thurs., June 10 5:30 p.m.
/*** Fast Pitch Thurs., June 10 6:00 p.m.
All meetings take place in 202 Robinson
/**Thurs., June 10 6:30 p.m. 201 Robinson
/**Thurs., June 10 6:00 p.m. 201 Robinson
/**Thurs., June 10 6:00 p.m. 201 Robinson
*Thurs., June 17 5:00 p.m. 208 Robinson
*Thurs., July 1 5:00 p.m. 208 Robinson
Tennis Singles
*Thurs., July 15 5:00 p.m. 208 Robinson
Golf
Horseshoe Tournament Dual Sports Racquetball Doubles
*Every Wednesday—time and place to be announced
*Wed., July 21 5:00 p.m. 208 Robinson
Tennis Doubles
*Thrurs., July 8 5:00 p.m. 208 Robinson
Mon., June 14
Mon., June 14
Mon., June 14
*Thurs., June 24 5:00 p.m. 208 Robinson
Wed., June 16
Tues., June 15
Tues., June 15
Sun., June 20 1:30
p.m. Robinson Tennis
Courts
Tues., July 6 5:30
p.m.
Robinson Racquetball
Courts
Sat., July 17 10:00
a.m.
Lifetime Sports
Room,
207 Robinson
Wed., June 16
Co-Rec Sports
Softball
Volleyball
Tennis (Mixed Doubles)
/*** Wed., June 9 5:30 p.m. 202 Robinson
/*** Thurs., June 10 6:00 p.m. 201 Robinson
/*Thurs., July 8 5:00 p.m. 208 Robinson
Fri., July 23 6:00 p.m.
Mon., June 14
Tues., June 15
Sat., July 10 10:00
Johannes Tennis
Courts
Mon., July 12 5:30
p.m. Robinson
Racquetball Courts
Sun., June 27 1:30
p.m. Robinson Tennis
Courts
Please Note: All tournaments that are scheduled for weekends will begin Saturdays at 10:00 a.m. and Sundays at 1:30 p.m. unless otherwise noted on tourney schedules.
Robinson Center Summer Hours
Gymnasiums:
Gymnasiums:
Mon. 6:15-7:00 a.m. Aerobic Dance beginning June 7
Mon. 5:00-7:30 a.m.
Sat. & Sun. 2:00-8:30 p.m.
Weight Training Room:
Mon. 6:30-7:00 a.m. Weight Training beginning June 7
Mon. 5:10-7:30 a.m. 4:30-8:30 p.m.
Sat. & Sun. 2:00-8:30 p.m.
Pool (new pool only):
Mon. Fri. 8:30-9:30 a.m. Open Lap Swim, beginning June 7.
Mon. Fri. 11:30 a.m. 12:30 p.m. Faculty/Staff Swim
Mon. Fri. 5:00-6:00 p.m. Rec Swim
Sat. Built in 2:00-3:00 p.m. Rec Swim
Lifetime Sports Room:
Lifetime Sports Room:
Mon.-Fri. 5:00-8:30 p.m.
Sat. & Sun. 2:00-8:30 p.m.
Robinson Center will be closed Monday, July 5 for the July 4 holiday and July 31-August 15 for maintenance and repairs
Current student, faculty, or staff I.D. required to enter the Robinson Complex.
Page 6
University Daily Kansan, June 7, 1982
By United Press International
OLHAEMA CITY—The sluggish economy and the recent oil glut have cooled the once-hot demand for engineering graduates, but the salaries of technical majors still dwarf all others, college and industry officials say.
Salaries for engineering grads taking jobs with energy-related companies commonly start at more than $30,000 a year.
Placement directors at Oklahoma's two largest public universities said recruiters no longer were stumbling over each other to sign up engineering majors, as they had been during the past five years.
Petroleum engineering certainly had been in heavy demand, said William Audas, head of placement services at the University of Oklahoma.
BUT THE DEMAND has slowed, even to the point where some offers made last fall to students graduating in the spring have been withdrawn.
"I'd say we're on the flat side of a rather high plateau," said Max Brady, division manager for human resources for Getty oil in Tulsa.
Demand for petroleum engineers, as for many others in technical professions, is a "cyclical thing" and is "either fear or famine," he said.
Don Briggs, director of Oklahoma State University's placement services, said the demand for "technical types" has grown. And I think we are seeing a slowdown.
"The demand is starting to level out, instead of almost going straight up, as it has in the last three or four years," he said.
Briggs said, however, the law of supply and demand had begun to revive a need for graduates in education.
"People certified to teach in public schools are probably one of the highest-demand candidates on the campus," he said. "They're extremely important teachers. That a lot button right now."
However, starting salaries of up to $36,000 a year for engineering graduates still tower over the salaries offered to teachers by tax-supported school districts and probably will continue to do so, Briggs said.
Accountants, though not as highly paid as engineers, enjoy strong demand and have a wide reach. "Cynomys has softened and "the stock market has gone to hell," said Rocky Duckworth, a partner in the Oklahoma City office of Peat, Marwick, Mitchell & Campbell.
"Public accounting is kind of an economic swing-proof business," he said. Duckworth said that in the six years he had been with the Big Eight accounting firm, "every year, our demand has been greater."
Those with bachelor's degrees in geology have not fared well, said Jeff Ruiz, division recruiting coordinator for Getty.
"Bachelor's degrees in geology are a dime a dozen," he said. "Even a master's degree—they're starting to be all over."
But Ruiz said demand varied according to a graduate's record and his school's reputation. Students of one Colorado technical college "may actually get a job offer a year and a half before they graduate" be said.
But he said the oil glut had forced many major oil companies to put a
The situation apparently has made some technical graduates a "little negotiable on their salaries." Ruiz said. With half a dozen small independent oil companies folding every week, he said, companies are passing up new graduates who have experienced professionals who can hit the ground running."
Getty apparently will not cut back its hiring, but Ruiz said planers had to look ahead to what their needs would be next year, and "it's hard to say how many positions will be available for college graduates."
"I'll be fewer, certainly," he said.
GLENEDEN BEACH, ORE. (UPI.) The new chairman of the Western Governors' Conference says he is frustrated that the 35th annual meeting of the West's leaders did not produce a solution to the nation's housing slump.
Cure for housing slump sought
Oregon Gov. Vivec Atiyah said economists had told the conference "there doesn't seem to be a solution, that you can't get there from here."
"That's not an acceptable answer," said Aithey, a publican seeking his second term as governor in a state wrought with economic problems stemming from a slack housing industry and high interest rates.
The 17 governors of western states and Pacific territories, in a bi-partisan, unanimous vote, approved a resolution asking congress and the Reagan administration to allocate a balanced budget within three years and to slow growth in defense spending.
The idea was that a balanced budget would produce confidence among lenders and consumers to help bring interest rates down.
"How much effect that (the resolution) is going to have is hard to tell, but it is at least coming from more than one day," said after the conference ended Saturday.
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By United Press International
Storms flood New England; tornadoes hit Iowa and N.D.
FT WORTH, Texas—A federal bankruptcy court is so overwhelmed by the task of supervising 80,000 creditors of Bramif Airways that it will open a sepa
The court will more than double its current staff of seven women and its office space to handle the parade of attorneys, Barriff ticket holders and former employees of the defunct airline.
Braniff filed a Chapter 11 bankruptcy position last month, swamping the office.
At least seven people were dead and six were missing in a weekend of New England storms.
While record rainstorms waged an all-out assault on southern New England on Sunday, driving 1,300 people from their homes and washing dams down water-choked streambeds, a pair of swimmers slammed north Dakota and Iowa.
MOVE 'EM OUT PRICES
"Sporty things for sporty people . . . for 35 years"
Bernetta Leiden, bankruptcy clerk for the northern district of Texas and coordinator of the office expansion, dimensions of the case were stagering.
Tornado warnings were in effect through Sunday night for North Dakota and central and northwestern Minnesota. A severe thunderstorm watch was also posted for the western two-thirds of Iowa.
Extras:
Baseball and Softball Shoes, metal and rubber cleated,
odds and ends
"Most of the time, we have one credit or three. Occasionally, we get 3,000 or 5,000, but, my God, we've never had 80,000." she said.
Two Lake Auburn, Maine, boaters were missing. All were presumed drowned.
Recursions hampered by fog, rain and three-foot waves sought two women canoensis missing since Saturday night in Rhode Island's Narrasnaget Bay. Nearly 100 people, 14 boats and a helicopter were involved in the search.
Braniff bankruptcy overwhelms court
A tornado that touched down in Sibley, Iowa, encompassed a seven-to-eight-block residential area, Oceola County Sheriff Robert Rolfesza said. At least 10 people were injured by flying debris in the storm. Officials said all were treated at area hospitals and later released.
Sheriff's officials in North Dakota's Ramsay County said a twisted touchdown about four miles north of Devil's Lake, blowing one mobile home from its foundation. No other damages or serious injuries were reported.
Richard Herberts said he and his family were out motoring and could see the twister.
"I heard a rumble when we were driving down the road, and the next thing there was debris flying around." he said. "I turned the car around and started honking the horn to alert the neighbors.
burst. Warren Bates, about 30, was vied etaping a rafting trip when his raft was caught in the freezied current of a Connecticut river.
To help handle the overflowing work load from the Branifac case, the court plans to open a separate annex this summer. Nine temporary employees; whose jobs may last for several years; will be hired.
Intense thunderstorms rumbled through the Dakotas and Iowa, petting down trees in the area.
"We've had no reports of any major flooding," said Highway Department Dispatcher Stephen Cass. "The minor washouts have been more or less all over the state, but we've been able to handle them with the normal crews."
A spring not easter dumped up to eight inches of rain on Long Island, snarling traffic and causing low-level flooding.
"The tornado hung around for about 90 seconds."
"The tributaries of small streams are going crazy." Frank Gradand, director of plans and operations for Connecticut Water Authority, might anger them, the less problem there is.
Up to eight inches of rain in 24 hours swamped western Connecticut, where 900 residents of Naugatuck, Ansonia and Seymour fled to schools, gardens and churches. There were about 400 evacuations elsewhere in the state. Water rising six feet in five minutes swept away a dam at Clinton.
By United Press International
Less severe flooding washed out some New Hampshire roads.
An unidentified man drowned in a car that was washed into a rain-filled ditch in Orange, Conn. An unidentified woman was swept away while trying to walk from a water-struck truck in Salem. A man who was locked up on Friday at a golden Rhode Island road
Six other New Englanders were reported missing. Richard Poggio, 15, was floating down a water-gored Connecticut brook when his inner tube
Summer-starved residents of the Midwest and Northwest put off backyard barbeques another night. Temperatures on Sunday morning nosedive into the 20s in the Great Basin, and Yakima, Wash., shivered through 35-degree readings that broke a 68-year-old record.
Under Chapter 11 rules, the company or trustee eventually produces a reorganization plan, which must satisfy both the court and the creditors.
It was 36 degrees in Madison, Wis., and Chicago's low of 40 tied an 88-year-old mark.
Almost all parties in the Branifax case expect the Chapter 11 proceedings and reorganization to take several years.
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University Daily Kansan, June 7, 1982 Page 7
I bank
by the
ors of
a sepa
obble its
and its
and of
s and
air
clerkss and ension, were
credit
3,000
er had
Lebanon
From page one
could lead to the fifth full-scale Mideast war in 35 years.
Meanwhile, at the western economic summit in Versailles, France, President Reagan called on Israel to withdraw its troops and sent veteran mediator Philip Habib to Israel with a personal appeal to Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Olmert to stop the fighting, Israel rejected the request.
Rengan also ordered an immediate evacuation of non-essential American personnel from the compound.
The United Nations Security Council met yesterday in an emergency session and unanimously demanded a total coarse-fire in Lebanon of Israel forces from southern Lebanon.
Yesterday's invasion was the second all-out brach attack in four years against Palestinian Hamas.
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Congressional aides—not just the senators and representatives who employ them—have become frequent guests out-of-town trips, and reports said today.
Lobbyists entertain aides
Under the law, neither the lobbyists nor the aides are required to report the journeys to such places as Las Vegas, Lake Tahoe and Rocky Mountain, and must do not, the Washinon Post said.
House ethics rules specify that outsiders may pay for meals, lodging and travel for congressional staff members on fact-finding duties. Members of a direct relationship to official duties."
But the paper quoted Harry Cone of the House Committee on Standards of Official Conduct as saying, "the rules make it clear that we are not supposed to be disguised vacations."
THE CASTLE TEA ROOM
John Sherman, press secretary to house
Ways and Means Committee Chairman Dan Rostenkowski, D-III., told the paper the staffers' trips are a necessary part of life in the capitol.
Two of Sherman's colleagues in Rostenkowski's office were named by the Post as guests on a $1,000 bid for Freeport McMoran Inc., one of the nation's major mineral companies
Legislation now before Congress could affect the firm's tax liability by several million dollars.
From page one
Washington's two daughters, Paulette Barnes and Wandra Washington, few in from Jacksonville, Fla. for the special occasion. They, along with their mother, Audrey Washington, sang during the afternoon service, sponsored by the AME Society, a women's group in the AME Church.
The New Orleans trip—for Rostenkowi Aide James Healey, Ways and Means Committee Counsel Robert Leonard and James E. Ritchie, a lobbyist for Nevada casinos and off-track betting groups—was one of several outings sponsored by corporations and trade groups for committee staff members, the Post said.
AME
end of my first year, I hope to write a good report for the Bishop."
The oldest continuous member of the Lawrence AME Church, Martha Chiesk, 70, had the honor of cutting the celebration cake. Chiesk has been a member of the church for 60 years. Robert Jones, a 70-year member of the Lawrence AME churches, said he had seen many changes.
momentum as there used to be. There are so many old people" Jones said.
"They are physical changes mostly." Jones said, referring to the remodeling done within the building.
phone: 843-1151
"SPIRITUALLY, THERE'S not as much
Hanson, who has attended the AME services several times, said she enjoyed the energy of the church. She said she had attended funerals, musicals and other functions there.
"I like it there," she said. "I feel a part of it."
She said that one of the reasons she enjoyed the chicken soup was because it was fresh.
"It's just fantastic," she said. "It isn't soft and formal. The warmth and so much wonderful rhythm. "A second reason I enjoy it is because the church is not at all discriminatory."
THE MONTH OF JUNE has been proclaimed as
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It will be celebrated on June 15.
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"As long as the church continues to meet the needs of the people," he said. "I expect it to last longer."
Washington said he expected the church to last another 120 years.
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Page 8 University Daily Kansan, June 7, 1982
Mother Teresa says abortion is a sign of spiritual poverty
By United Press International
FORT WAYNE, Ind.-Nobel Peace Prize winner Mother Teresa said the ready availability of abortion in the United States, which she views as murder, demonstrates a great spiritual poverty.
Mother Teresa, 71, made her remarks Sunday before an invitation-only audience of 3,000 people at Bishop Dwener Hight School.
The man, whose work has been concentrated among the poor in India, illustrated her point by using a Biblical anecdote about the Virgin Mary's trip to visit Elizabeth when both women were pregnant.
As Mary entered the house, "the 6-month-old baby in the womb of Elizabeth leapt with joy at the presence of Jesus."
"How strange that this little unborn child was the first to recognize the presence of Jesus, and yet today, that little child is still under terrible destruction, of being destroyed
by its own mother," Mother Teresa said.
"Let us ask Elizabeth to teach us how to love the unborn child, and if you don't want that little child, give him to me. I want him," she said to a long ovation.
At the news conference, she called abortion a "sign of great poverty" and "the greatest destroyer of peace."
She asked the audience to recognize the presence of Jesus in the "distressing disguise of the poor." She said at the news conference earlier in the day that the most severe poverty in the United States was spiritual, rather than financial.
Mother Teresa spent Saturday night at the Crosier Center, and attended Sunday Mass celebrated by Bishop Robert M. Campbell of the Fort Wayne-South Bend Diocese.
Her visit was prompted by an invitation from Rev. Steve Morrison of the Crosier Center, a former seminary that has been restored to its original buildings and religious retreats and seminars.
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"I predict about 600,000 cars will be sold in June and I anticipate a 300,000-car gain for the year, even though we're behind right now.
The Baltimore News American on Sunday quoted Avid Jawudi, of Colin Hocston, in Co. in Detroit, as saying, "The 384,000 domestic cars sold in May tell me the recession is over, as far as this industry is concerned."
a story about the recent surge in car sales and whether it points to a long-term recovery in the beleaguered industry.
Jouppi's comments were reported in
BALTIMORE—An auto industry analyst says the recession that dramatically cut car sales is over.
Some auto dealers in the Baltimore area predicted flat June sales, however, especially in the absence of General Motors' 12.3 percent interest rate program.
By United Press International
Auto slump called over
In other business, the commissioners will consider authorizing the mayor to sign an agreement with the Kansas Department of Transportation for traffic control improvements at 19th and Kentucky streets and at 19th and Tennessee streets. The commission also would require owners regarding Kasold Street sidewalks and will consider several sign variances.
Commission to consider plans for neighborhoods, downtown
Lawrence city commissioners will discuss a resolution Tuesday to officially adopt six neighborhood plans and develop a plan for the city developed during the past five years.
"Since GM plans none of those in June, I think sales this month will be flat," said Pat Hayes, owner of Pat Haves Buick.
Last month, a planning staff report said the plans, which have already been approved by the city commission, had not been adopted in a manner that amends the city's comprehensive planning guide. Plan 95.
AT LAST TUESDAY's meeting, the commission asked the staff to draw up a resolution that would make the plans official city documents.
Harry Frampton, sales manager for Suburban Chevrolet, said a noticeable improvement in car sales would not come until mid-1983.
The meeting begins at 7 p.m in the commission chambers at City Hall, Sixth and Massachusetts streets.
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University Daily Kansan, June 7, 1982 Page 93
assessioners
amongor to
Kansas
for trif-
19th and
and Tention
also
bet side
eral sign
m in the City Hall.
Photo by Jill M. Yates
14
Participants in Ted Owens' Jayhawk Basketball Camp begin practicing yesterday behind Naismith Hall, Junior and senior high school boys are attending the weekly camps, which last through the end of June.
On the record
A 20-YEAR-OLD LAWRENCE man suffered a spinal fracture and multiple cuts and bruises after he was knocked from his bicycle while riding on K-10 on Saturday afternoon, a supervisor at Lawrence Memorial Hospital said.
Dirk J. Medena, 130 Tennessee St., was riding castaway on K10 when a truck driven by Ernest Peterson, Olathe, sidedswimmed him when he tried to pass Medena, a dispatcher for the Douglas County Sheriff Department.
INVESTIGATIONS INTO the cause of a fire Saturday that caused $20,000
damage at a boys home at 1320 Haskell Ave. will continue today, Lt. Larry Stermerman of the Lawrence Fire Department said.
Kent Boehm, resident manager of Achievement Place for Boys Inc., was treated and released from Lawrence Memorial Hospital for first-degree burns on his face. Stemmerman said one else was injured in the fire, he said.
The fire started at 6:12 a.m. Saturday and was extinguished in 15 minutes, Stemmerman said.
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842-3963
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843-8019
repair cameras that monitor the root
Eight of the cameras have been useless for three months, Nelson said.
He identified the other prisoners as Clair Lloyd Beaker, 19, held on charges of first-degree assault; Donald Gene Bland, 18, charged with second-degree murder; Gilbert Norman Fritz, 30, charged with attempted first-degree murder; Frank Donald Garcia, 28, charged with second-degree luger; Jose Marcelo Pazo, 30, charged with first-degree sexual assault; and Larry Laman Smith, 23, charged with aggravated robbery.
Police arrest one of eight prison fugitives
Seven still free after escaping
By United Press International
LITTLETON, COLO—Authorities captured one fugitive, but continued their search Sunday for seven others who pried out a bar in a skylight at the Arapahoe County Jail and made their way to freedom during the night.
One of the fugitives was identified as Ross David Thomas, 38, charged with first-degree murder and aggravated homicide in Osceola, Florida. Colo., liquor store clerk in March.
Lee Seward. The two are suspected in numerous violent crimes committed before their capture in Utah. Seward was being held in a different section of the Arapahoe County jail and did not escape early Sunday with the others.
Thomas earlier escaped from a New Mexico prison with accomplice Eddie
Sheriff Ed Nelson said Sunday that the skylight was "not at all secure" and had probably been in that condition since the jail was remodeled in 1965. He set the skylight was protected by a bar set in a wooden frame.
"I can only speculate that the archi tect and the construction company never checked it." Nelson said.
Aurora police picked up Harvey Bernard Satterwhite, 19, Sunday afternoon in a store parking lot. Satterwhite, facing trial for car theft and burglary, was being held in Aurora and scheduled for transfer back to the jail later Sunday.
Nelson theorized that the prisoners had outside aid. Seven sets of bright orange jail overalls were found at various points within a block of the jail, and they were to conclude that the prisoners had closing waiting for them when they escaped.
Nelson blamed county commissioners for failing to authorize money to
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1 and 2 Bedroom Apartments
Our Community Offers:
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Mick's
1339 Mass.
842-3131
Openings for summer and fall
Naismith Hall
1800 Naismith
843-8559
- Your choice of 14 and 19 meal plans
- Private baths
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- Lighted parking
- Color TV
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- Many other features
Page 10
University Daily Kansan, June 7. 1982
milestones
STANLEY SHUMWAY, professor of music theory, has been named chairman of the new music department in the School of Fine Arts. Dean James Moeser said the consolidation of the departments of music performance, composition and composition and music history would allow more flexibility in KU's music program and enhance its effectiveness.
WAYNE OSSNESS, chairman of the University of Kansas department of health, physical education and recreation, recently was elected PRESIDENT OF THE AMERICAN ALLIANCE OF HEALTH, PHYSICAL EDUCATION, RECREATION AND DANCE. His presidency will begin in April 1983 when the 60,000-member professional organization holds a convention in Houston.
DAVID SHULENBURGER, associate professor of business, has been named the 1982 BYRON SHUZT AWARD WINNER; JOSEPH SHUZT, associate professor of economics, has been named the 1983 SHUZT AWARD WINNER.
KU alumnus Byron Shutz, a Kansas City real estate agent, mortgage banker and investment adviser, established the award in 1978. The award is intended to stimulate distinguished teaching in economics and business.
PAULA BUSH, Kansas City; Mo., DR. ROBERT DOCKHORN, Prairie Village, JEANNE GORMAN, Kansas City; Kan., MARCIA KYLE TAKAHU, Martin City; MARTIN SOLTER, Prairie Village have been elected to three-year terms on the board of directors of the Greater Kansas City chapter of THE UNIVER-
SITY OF KANSAS ALUMNI ASSOCIA-TION.
RICHAD CRAFT, Weston, Mo.; MON JAISTAUFFER, Topeka; DWIGHT WAGNON, Overland Park; KEN WAGNON, Wichita; BJR. Brownville, Texas, were elected to the KANSAS UNIVERSITY ENDOWMENT ASSOCIATION BOARD OF TRUSTEES at the 1982 meeting last month in Lawrence.
PATRICIA EWALT, associate dean of the School of Social Welfare, has been named ACTING DEAN OF THE SCHOOL by Deanell Tacha, vice chancellor for academic affairs. Tacha said she expected to name a permanent dean next fall to replace David Hardcastle, who resigned the position at the end of the spring semester to return to full-time teaching.
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Arkansas River shares are low
Stephan pledges help in water battle
GARDEN CITY, Kan—Convinced by western Kansas farmers that the Sunflower State is getting less than its rightful share of water from the Arkansas River, Kansas Attorney General Robert Stephan said he would ask legislators to finance a lawsuit if necessary.
Stephan met Saturday with Kansas members of the Arkansas River Compact, who are complaining that only 30 percent of the agreed amount of Arkansas River water is making it into Kansas.
impounding water that should be coming into Kansas." Stephan said
"We feel Colorado is improperly
Kansas members allege that people in Colorado, where the river originates, are diverting at least two major tributaries that flow into the Arkansas. Such diversions are forbidden under provisions of the compact set up in 1946 after much over河 how much water Kansas should be allocated from the Arkansas River.
Stephan said that the most immediate concern was the Trinidad Reservoir.
"I'm convinced that there has been a misappropriation of water." Stephan
said, adding that the general flow had been decreased almost 70 percent in the
$20 off all Prescription
Stephan said he would meet with Kansas compact members again on June 15. None of the Colorado compact members attended the Saturday meet-
Compact members from Kansas this year had requested about $20,000 from the Legislature to hire attorneys to help them fight their battle with Colorado. And they did so down. Instead, an interim study is being conducted this summer on the issue.
$20 off all Prescription
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University Daily Kansan, June 7, 1982
Page 11
ttle
flow had ent in the
--meet with again on compact meet-
Watson wins Midwest race
nansas this
from 200
yrs to help
Colorado,
m down.
being con-
que.
Rides were bumpy on Detroit circuit
By United Press International
DETROIT—Despite a win on the bumpy and tight 2.5-mile Detroit Grand Prix circuit—the first run in the Midwest—John Watson said yesterday that the downtown street track needed revisions before next year's race.
Watson, who won the race on the 62nd lap when the two-hour time limit was called, said during a race delay that he would like a few of the track's 20 turns either eliminated or at least widened to for greater speed and passing room.
The track snaked through downtown streets normally reserved for production automobiles, and was described by him as extremely bumpy and in need of resurfacing.
"The circuit surface was very bad, very bumped," said Didier Pironi, who placed third in the race. "A few cars broke their suspensions today."
"The circuit is very bad for a turbo," said the French driver of a turboc charged Ferrari. Priori added that the car was very slow for the turboc charged cars.
More than $800,000 in taxpayers' money and funds from Detroit Renaissance Inc., the race's sponsor, was used for the 2.5 miles of street resurfacing. The total cost of constructing the track was not immediately available.
"The track has holes in the surface, and they are very difficult for the car. You just jump from one manhole cover to another." said Austrian Niki Lauka earlier in the week. Incident was involved accident and forced from the race Sunday.
Better organization and cooperation is needed between the race officials and drivers, Pironi said, in order for a safer and more desirable track to be built.
Drivers said there was a shortage of safety tires in several areas of the track and 'escape' areas around some of the tracks to be expanded for safety reasons.
76ers romp Lakers,135-102
By United Press International
PHILADELPHIA—It was a day that the Philadelphia 76ers 'fast break emerged from under the huge shadow cast by the fast break of the Los Angeles Lakers in the previous two games.
The 76ers established their running attack in the third quarter to break open a close game yesterday and, behind Andrew Toney and Julius Erving, kept themselves alive in the NBA with three matches with a 53-82 romp over the Lakers.
Toney scored 31 points, and Erving, who did not score until 2:21 remained in
RESEARCH SCIENTIST
the second quarter, added 23 as the 76ers cut the Lakers' advantage to 3-2 in the best-of-seven matchup. Game six is set for tomorrow night at the Los Angeles Forum.
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The 76ers shot 71 percent from the field in an 81-21 point second half and converted 18 points out of 19 fast break opportunities. Traiting 70-14 with 7:51 went on in the third quarter. Philadelphia left on a 3-22 spurt to take an 80-72 lead. The team was allowed Los Angeles to get any near-six points the rest of the way.
CYCLES PEUGEOT
Darryl Dawkins gave the 76ers a big lift from the bench, scoring 20 points, 14 of them in the second quarter, as the team was poised to win, waiting for Erving to get untrapped.
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Erving, who missed his first eight shots in the game, went 8 for 9 in the second half on the way to 18 points and contributed a game-high 12 rebounds.
Bob McAdoo led the Lakers with 23 points, and Norm Nixon added 20, but scored only two points in the second play. Jones added 23 points for the 76ers.
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The Kansan is now accepting applications for Summer Staff Artist/Photographer: Application forms are available in 118 Fint Hall, Contact Sharon Bodin, Business Manager
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Live in the CHISTIAN CAMPUS HOUSE this summer & fall! Become a part of a growing campus ministry. Call Alan Rosenak, campus minister *428092*. tf
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One phone call will solve your housing needs. Completely furnished studios, 1BR, 1BHR with kitchenette, 2BR, 3BR furnish apartments.
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2500 West 6th 843-7333
FOR SALE
Alternator, starter and generator specialists. Parts,
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Box Office Manager (Full Time) Murphy Hall,
Bachelor's required. Preferred starting July 19.
Application to Jeffrey Conard, Contact Jacqueline
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Kannas, Lawrence KS 66400, AAO/EEO Employer.
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6-12
Flexible hours. No experience necessary. Job in is a position offered by Center, Leavenworth, Kansas. Must be a Veteran and in school full time. For more information, contact Office or Benefit Clerk 6/28 914-680-3000. Exc. 222.
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6-21
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TYPNING PLUS. Theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications, resumes. Assistance with composition, grammar, spelling, etc. English tutoring for foreign students or Americans 841-6244
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MONEY, WEALTH, CAN BE YOURS IF YOU FOLLOW A PROVEN PLAN, SEND LARGE SASED FOR DETAILS. RONALD ATWATER. 95 MORGAN ST. APT. 12, STANDARD CT. 08005
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Page 12
University Daily Kansan, June 7. 1982
a. 100 b. 125 c. 37 d. 25 e. 100 f. 200
Controversy still follows Bell as NCAA checks his grades
Problems continue to follow the University of Kansas football program, this time with the question of whether Kerwin Bell was eligible to receive an NCAA scholarship after being graduate from the high school in Huntington Beach, Calif.
A Kansas City Times copyright story revealed that Bell did not attain a 2.0 grade point average for his sixth, seventh and eighth semesters at Edison. A 2.0 average is the minimum requirement for participation and athletic scholarships.
However, the problem was that Bell had a 2.0 he when he enrolled at KU. (He was 18.)
[Name]
KERWIN BELL
making up some of his work during the summer, and two of his grades were raised.
AN NCAA RULE states that summer school can be used for eligibility, but not for improving a GPA. Mike Fisher, academic counselor, determined that because Bell was not enrolled in summer school classes, the work he did was high school makeup work, and his two grades were changed.
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Bell's changed transcript was then approved by KU's office of admissions and certified to the Big Eight office.
Steve Morgan, a member of the NCAA legal staff, said that post-graduate work could not be substituted for the purpose of increasing a GPA.
Therefore, although Bell was eligible to enroll at KU, he was inelegible to enroll at UCF.
KU MUST NOW WAIT to see what action the NCAA will take against the football program and Bell. According to Sid Wilson, KU's sports information director, no statement will be made by KU until the NCAA makes its ruling.
The NCAA can move in many different ways. It can take away the Jayhawks' four victories and two ties in the NCA Tour tournaments that Both played in during 1981.
For Bell, the situation is more problematic. Because of a hardship ruling last spring, he is now a sophomore. He has already been a junior or him make up the 1984 season.
KU is still awaiting word from the NCAA on charges of recruiting violations made against the University by Kansas State University and Missouri. Since early April, when the NCAA conducted a preliminary investigation, no word has come from the NCAA offices on these charges.
AIAWA
**Special feature**
Tudie McKnight, KU long,jumper, placed fourth in the NCAA track championship last week in Prevail, Utah.
Tadle McKnight has been leading the way for the KU women's track team all season. Last weekend, she led the Jayhawks to a 26th place finish at the first NCAA track championship for women, held in Provo, Utah.
Tracksters run in Utah
Kansas, which has competed in the AIAW championships in the past, scored 12 points, finishing well for the UCLA, which scored 154.
McMknight earned fourth place in the long jump with a jump of 21-1/8. Long jump winner Jennifer Jennison jumped at Lake Los Angeles, jumped 21-9/8.
Stine Lerdahl was the only member of the women's team to collect points. Lerdahl, who fouled on a drive by the Rangers in the shot put with a toss of 49-6%.
McKnight was also a member of the 4x400 relay team, which took 11th place. McKnight, Lorna Tucker, Cherise Taylor and Donna Smitherman saw a Big Eight record of 3:41.34 in the race.
Also competing for the Jayhawks, but not placing, were Tucker in the 400-meter dash. Kim Jones in the 120-meter race and Becky McGramaham in the 80-meter race.
THE MEN'S TRACK team scored only nine points to place 53rd in the 61st annual men's championships.
Jeff Buckingham was the only other KU athlete to make it to the finals, but did not clear the opening height of 17-6 on the pole vault finals.
The Jayhawks scored all nine points Friday in the discus event. Matt Friedeman led the way for KU with a throw of 190-6 for seventh place. Clint Johnson, who beat Friedeman at the Big Eight Championships in May, was close behind with a throw of 187-6 for 10th place.
Owen Buckley was injured while competing for the Jayhawks in the decathlon. Buckley pulled a groin muscle during the 100-meter dash, the first event in the decathlon, and finished second in the race. He struggled in the final of either four decathlon events in first day. The injury worsened overnight, and Buckley withdrew from the competition.
The men's track team had five other participants at the NCAA championships, but none of them placed: Warren Wilhoite in the long jump, Rodney Bullock in the 400 meters, John Sease and Valentino Robinson in the 110-meter hurdles and Johnson in the shot put.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, June 10, 1982 Vol.92, No.146 USPS 650-640
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
Photo by Susan Pat
Workmen continue construction on the new utility tunnel that will connect Allen Field House and Robinson Gym. The tunnel will be about 540 feet long. Operating the Caterpillar is Clarence Wingert of Lawrence.
Utility tunnel construction continues
Staff Reporter
By ANDREW DEVALPINE Staff Reporter
Construction on utilities tunnel to upgrade the University of Kansas utilities system is under way at the corner of Nasmith and Sunnyside drives, Allen Wiechert, University director of facilities planning said Tuesday.
With construction continuing through the summer, the traffic flow on Nassim Drive will be minimal.
A detour has been cut into the law of Allen Field House so that traffic will be able to get up the hill while Naismith is torn up. Wiechert said. Construction on the tunnel, which began May 16, will continue throughout the summer and conclude before enrollment next fall.
The new tunnel will extend from Robinson Gymnasium to Allen Field House.
"If the weather cooperates, and it hasn't so far, we should have no trouble," he said.
The steam now used to supply Allen Field House with heat flows from Haworth Hall to Murphy Hall, and from Murphy through an underground line to Allen Field House, Witcheret
Before, because the line was buried, the only way to repair it was to dig it up. Wieckert said.
"The utilities tunnel makes it possible for utility people to maintain the steam line because you can walk in the tunnel and the line is there hanging on a rack," he said.
The present system is more than 20 years old, Wiechcurt said.
"It has worn out its life expectancy by five years or more," he said.
The new tunnel will connect with an existing tunnel at the northwest corner of Robinson Gymnasium, Dick Perkins, assistant director in charge of utilities management, said.
The steam will then be rerouted, he said. Instead of passing from Haworth to Murphy, it will flow directly from Haworth to Allen Field House.
The Kansas Legislature appropriated $996,000 for the project, Wiechtert said.
Included in the cost in another utility tunnel to replace a second buried line between Haworth and Balmoral.
"But we'll be working on that later," Wiechert said
Israeli troops race to Beirut, seize Palestinian strongholds
By United Press International
Israeli tanks and troops seized the last Palestinian strongholds outside Beirut yesterday and raced to within six miles of Palestinian Liberation Organization headquarters in the panicked
Israel reported its troops destroyed all Syrian missile batteries in eastern Lebanon and shot down three of them.
Israeli warplanes early today attacked the sand dunes south of Beirut International Airport four miles south of Beirut, and nearby Bourl) Al Bajarujin and coastal Ouzal). Palestinian reinforced.
"Iraeli forces attempted a sea and air landing at Beirut Airport," the Palestine News agency Wafa said. "The Israeli attempts were repulsed."
Waves of jets pounded the coast today just south of the airport for the second time in less than 12 hours. Wafa said. The raids continued early today.
An israeli armored column was reported yesterday to have advanced to Khalde, two miles from the airport and six miles from PLO headquarters in the capital.
Syria accused Israel of seriously escalating the fighting by bombing military installations in a suburb of its capital of Damascus, but Israel's army said that people were killed and 48 injured in the attack.
"It's a lie," an Israeli military spokesman said of the official Syrian news agency report. "Our planes never crossed the border, nor got near Damascus."
Israel Defense Minister Ariel Sharon said the destruction of the Soviet-made Sarm-6 anti-aircraft missiles "was a turning point" of Israel's war on Russia to push the guerrillas out of southern Lebanon.
In a move that could widen the fighting in Lebanon, Iraq offered Iran an unconditional cease-fire to end the 20-month-old Gulf War. American officials urged a unified Islamic front against Israel.
Israel said it downed at least 30 of Syria's Soviet-built MIG fighters since the invasion began Sunday, 23 of them on yesterday alone, in a raid launched by Russia against the biggest one-day air duel since World War II.
Syria said 92 Israeli planes were involved in one battle, while a second dogfight brought 96 Israeli jets up against just 62 Syrian aircraft.
Cooler weather hoped for as air conditioning curtailed
See Lebanon page 10
By CAROL MILLS
Staff Reporter
Fortunately, temperatures cooled off yesterday for those University of Kansas employees without air conditioning.
Many University employees are suffering through the hot and humid Kansas days without cool offices. They are without air conditioning because of a $189.37 deficit in the University's
"I'm sitting here watching the thermometer stuck at 90 degrees." Bob Porter, assistant director of Facilities Operations said on Tuesday. "I hope we have a cool summer."
utility appropriation from the Kansas Legislature.
Because of an increase in natural gas prices, the University needed an additional $757,360 to maintain cooling in all buildings and offices. The Legislature appropriated only $683,87 on April 27, forcing the University to cut back natural gas usage to make up the deficit.
Much of the power used by the University is generated by steam, which is generated by natural gas.
Porter said the total daily utility bill for the university was about $10,000, including electricity and water.
See Air page 10
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Weather
Today will be sunny, with a high in the upper 70s and light easterly winds, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka.
Occupational therapist's 'archangels; patients helped to lead routine lives
Tonight and Friday will be clear to partly cloudy. The low tonight will be in the mid-leses.
There is a chance of showers and thundershowers Saturday and Monday. Lows will be in the 60s and highs in the 80s.
It will be partly cloudy on Sunday
By KATHLEEN J. FEIST
Staff Reporter
The 74-year-old woman had suffered two strokes, but with the help of her occupational therapist, she was able to laugh as if she didn't have a care in the world.
"I've been benefited in every way," Frances Denton said. "They helped me to live."
Denton and others like her are helping to celebrate Occupational Therapy Week, June
"I just can't say enough for them," Denton said, who can function normally in her home with the help of specially fitted gadgets. "They're really nice to work with and haven't get me down on anything."
Although Denton's sentiments are echoed by countless others, these archangels of therapy are often confused with those in their sister profession, physical therapy
"There's a fine line between the two," said Suzanne Richmond, Holdregue, Neb., senior, from the KU occupational therapy department. The physical therapist works on muscle development only, she explained, while the occupational therapist teaches the patient to relearn normal everyday activities such as dressing, feeding or writing.
"ork along with the muscle and get the patient back into everyday life," she said. Richmond said that if a patient was parapazized and had to be treated with an inpatient therapist would go to the home or place of employment and modify the accessories that the patient worked with.
"It it was a desk, then we would fit it up to get the wheelchair under the desk," she said. Jim Stickland, Ottawa, junior and occupies the front seat of the he he's been happy since he switched majors.
Strickland said he first became interested in occupational therapy after developing problems in his back that destroyed some nerves and left only a third of his left leg with
"It's so fascinating," he said.
saying.
"I know what it's like to just lie in a hospital
bed and be pushed around by a physical therapist," he said. "The occupational therapist works with a person as a whole. We take the personal approach."
Striekland said that there was an overlap within the two professions since the occupational therapist does work with muscle development in the upper extremities of the body.
Mildred Copeland, an occupational therapist in the child research department, said that occupational therapy has been very beneficial in helping young children.
Copeland, who works with young children between the ages of four months to seven years old, said she had seen much success in the use of occupational therapy.
The distinguishing factor between nurses and occupational therapists is that the nurse has to be able to assess the client's needs.
"Nurses have a whole floor of people and carry a heavy load," Strickland said.
"The earlier the parents bring in their children the more successful we are in determining the problems with the motor skills," she said. "We can see by testing what kinds of problems they have and therefore close the developmental gap."
Copeland lands with children with physical handicaps, such as cerebral palsy, and those who are mentally retarded or mentally impaired by defects walking ability or color discrimination.
Copeland said that the department had a home program where parents were taught how to use objects in the home as part of their child's therapy.
Rita Lucas, a part-time occupational therapist at Lawrence Memorial Hospital, said that the occupational therapy program there just recently administered a home program.
For instance, a plastic-covered cylinder filled with foam, which the department uses as a means to develop the child's neck and stomach muscles by fastening it to the stomach, can be substituted with a sleeping bag or pillow.
The program involves the occupational therapist going to the patient's home and working with the family.
"We teach them to function indepen
dently. Lucas said. "We adapt them to hands and handle them with bigger dials and handles with bigger fingers."
"it a woman had a stroke, it's very frustrating to go home. We teach them to keep house agents."
Lucas has helped Denton as well as a number of other patients adapt to their homes.
Lawrence Memorial Hospital has three occupational therapists, one dealing with hand splints, one with psychology and another with geriatrics. Lucas is involved with geriatrics.
Lucas has recently formed a Stroke Club which consists of about 40 patients who have learned to manage on their own after suffering a stroke. He said, the club and only three meetings.
An occupational therapist starts with $40,000 to $60,000 a year, she said.
$40,000 to $100,000 or a stock. KU has the largest occupational therapy department in New York.
It is also the only university in the state that offers a specific occupational therapy department that stands on its own; Barton County Community College has an Occupational Therapy Association and Empowered Therapy Association offers a division in its Biological Sciences Department.
Since 1944, 1148 student have graduated from KU with a major in occupational ther-
apy.
A student must have 122 credit hours for a bachelor of science degree, including a three-month affiliation with occupational therapy departments in different hospitals, Wyrick
KU offers a 4-year occupational therapist program and a 3-year occupational therapist program.
In celebration of Occupational Therapy Week, the Third Annual Kansas Occupational Therapist Association Conference and Saturday at the Holiday Inn on Highway 10 in Kansas City, Kan.
MRS. ELIZABETH LEE BROWN
A victim of two strokes, Frances Denton, Route 4, puts on a brace provided for her by Rita Lucas, an occupational therapist at Lawrence Memorial Hospital. The device helps her stretch the muscles in her hand that were previously paralyzed.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, June 10. 1982
News Briefs From United Press International
Schmidt, Reagan sympathetic to anti-nuclear peace ralliers
BONN, West Germany—President Reagan and West German Chancellor Holm Schmidt spoke kindly yesterday about anti-nuclear demonstrators against Iran.
During a 90-minute talk with Reagan, Schmidt also defended the demonstrators.
"I understand your genuine concerns," Reagan said during a speech to the Bundestag, West Germany's parliament. "I would be at the head of your parade if I believed marching alone could bring about a more secure world." During a 90-minute talk with Reagan, Schmidt also defended the demon-
"The chancellor said that, aside from a violent minority which is condemned and resisted, most young people in the peace movement" have a "problem with their education."
Reagan's first day in West Germany ended without serious problem. Protesters, who have permission to rally tomorrow when the NATO summit takes place, were on hand for his arrival.
According to a peace campaign organizer, Michael Ziege, the greatest risk of a violent protest against Reagan's visit is not in Bonn, but in West Germany. The threat posed by the new administration is
As police bacred for possible trouble, Reagan was greeted with "Reagan Go Home!" bumpsters all across West Germany.
countries we protest; a pro-American organization bought ads in 39
western American newspapers yesterday, headlined "Friendship with the American people."
TOPEKA, Kan.—To ensure the credibility of the daily advice she doles out to Americans, Ann Lands铃铃 Meninger Foundation professionals about
Building named for Ann Landers
Landers was in Topena for a dedication ceremony for the foundation's 18 new buildings completed this year in a $35 million project. The new structures sit among seven older buildings on a 300-acre hilltop that is the foundation's west campus.
"When I became Ann Landers, it was apparent that I would need consultations," she said. "I recognized early that the people at Mennings are the funniest."
The foundation is involved in treatment and prevention of mental health problems, education of professionals and research. During the ceremony in the new gymnasium, Menninger officials named a building after Eppie Lederer, an Am Landers is known outside her column.
TULSA, Okla.-Ronald David Roberts, eldest son of evangelist Oral Roberts, was found dead northwest of Tulsa early day from an apparently self-inflicted gunshot wound to the heart, officials said. He was 37.
"There were some handwritten notes in his car, and we found more notes in his Tusla apartment," George Waymion, Osage County sheriff, said. "There were other substances found in the car, and those were sent to Tulsa for analysis. It anpears that was a suicide case."
Ronald Roberts pleaded guilty in April in Tulsa on one count of forging prescriptions to obtain an addictive type of cough medicine and was charged with fraud.
Son of Oral Roberts found dead
Roberts, an antique dealer, was never invited with his father's organization as was his younger brother, Richard, who is an evangelist with the church.
Fund to be made in honor of Paige
KANSAS CITY, Mo.—Flags were flown at half-staff yesterday in memory of baseball great Leroy "Satchel" Paige, the legendary negro League player.
Mayor Richard Berkley planned to hold a news conference today to announce a Satchel Paige Memorial Fund, which will be used to renovate and modernize a stadium that was renamed in Paige's honor during ceremonies last weekend.
Considered to be one of the best pitchers to pick up a baseball, Paige died Tuesday of heart failure. Baseball fans and players across the country are mourning his passing.
Berkley yesterday requested that Kansas City residents and businesses fly their flags at half-staff in memory of Paige.
Services for Paige were set for 2 p.m. Saturday at the Watkins Brothers Memorial Brush Creek Chapel with burial in Forest Field Cemetery.
Schlitz beer to merge with Stroh
MILWAUKEE—The Josit Sohlt Brewing Co. started a three-barrel operation by a German immigrant in the basement of his restaurant in I849.
Shareholders of the old-line Milwaukee firm will end an era by formally approving a $495 million merger with the Stroh Brewing Cof. of Detroit.
It will be a quiet ending for a firm that became a beer industry dynasty under the powerful and influential Uniblen family and once boasted of its own business.
During the '60s and early '69s, Schiltz battled head to head with longtime rival Anheuser-Busch of St. Louis, then began feeling the financial pinch several years ago when beer sales failed to support an ambitious and expensive expansion.
The decline deepened in the mid '60s when Schlitz was taken into the federal courts for illegal marketing payoffs.
Schiltz, hit by falling sales and red ink, skipped to No. 3 in the industry last year. On April 15, is following a number of aborted takeover attempts, officials said.
WASHINGTON—Government psychiatrists concluded that John W. Hinkley Jr. was sane when he shot President Reagan, without evaluating many of Hinkley's writings, which were laced with deep despair and loneliness, a prosecution witness said yesterday.
"One doesn't judge a state of mind from fiction a man has written." Dietz said. Teeflingy for a fourth day. Dietz was underdog cross-examination
Park Dietz, the government's opening psychiatric witness, said that a writer's writings were not that useful in determining his mental state.
Hinckley's writings not evaluated
Dietz, who has问了他 Hinckley was seeking easy fame when he tried to袭犯 Reagan, said the defendant may have seized on news reports after the shooting to concoct links between his behavior and the main question "$Taxi Driver," about a lonely cabbie who stalks a presidential candidate.
The defendant, occasionally looking bored, fiddled with his hands as Dietz testified, and for a second day he fixed his gaze on a blonde artist sketching
He waved at her with his little finger, to seem to feign a pose and once mouthed words to her. At another point, he put his clip-on necklace in his hand.
Fierce fighting claims lives Argentina vows no surrender
By United Press International
The president made his remark to the nation's cabinet amid reports that the military government is planning to take over the control of the Falkland Islands, a British control of the Falkland Islands, a British colony since 1949 that Argentina claims as its own.
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina—Saying "Argentine honor has no prize." President Gen. Leopoldo Galteri vowed yesterday his country would not surrender in the Falkland Islands War.
Gattieri said his generation was ready to settle once and for all the Falklands question which he termed a 1940-year "colonial problem."
"I say that we will not capitulate," Galieri said. "This does not mean we will not negotiate. But only with dignity, honor and justice."
Meanwhile, Britain said yesterday that it lost many soldiers and two landing craft, but shot down eight enemy jets in a fierce air and sea battle on Tuesday.
London said yesterday that its forces were firmly in control of a new beachhead at Bluff Cove and Fitzroy Bay and were moving into the French battle for control of the disputed islands.
be "one of the blackest days for the task force" since the Falklands conflict began.
"The British force suffered great losses of life." Capt. Enrique de Leon, Argentine military command spokesman said of the battle.
In London, the British defense ministry insisted its 9,000 ground troops encircling Stanley were "ready to go" in an assault final assault to take control of Stanley.
Argentina scored a major victory and turned back Britain's first moves of the final offensive.
However, in Buenos Aires a spokesman for the military command said
Argentina admitted the loss of two warplanes and an unspecified number of troop casualties. The attack was the first major Argentine air strike in eight months.
No new fighting was reported yesterday.
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University Daily Kansan, June 10, 1982
Page 3
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CARLOTTE & RONALD
Chancellor Gene A. Budig and his wife, Gretchen, are glad to have their week-old daughter, Kathryn, home. Mrs. Budig and Kathryn returned from KU Med Center Monday.
Budig baby at home
By CANDICE SACKUVICH
Kathryn Angela Louise Budig, her body in a bottom-up fetal position, was barely discernible beneath the white cover as she lay sleeping in her cradle.
Staff Reporter
The 8-day-old daughter of Chanceleen and Mrs. Gens A. Budig weigh less than
Mrs. Budg was obviously proud, and still somewhat in awe, as she showed off her baby. She said she often found "just staring at her while she sleeps."
"It still amazes me how such a tiny head could have such perfect facial features and well-shaped, tiny ears," she said.
The Buddies' baby was born June 2 at the University of Kansas Medical Center. Mrs. Budd said she decided to go to the Med Center, in Kansas City, Kan., "because it's connected with KU. It just seemed appropriate that I go there."
SHE SAID NURSES at the hospital showed Kathryn to Budig soon after the birth.
"Since then, he has had the typical fatherly reaction." Mrs. Budig said. "He says that she's beautiful, and so tiny."
She said Budig held the baby often and helped take care of her.
baby," she said, "and he has."
During Kathryn's and Mrs. Budig's first night at home, she said, Budig got up for each night feeding, went down-
"He promised to help me with this baby," she said, "and he has."
"That was a big help because I'm not supposed to do climb stairs," she said.
peered to climb stairs yet," she said. He said, "I intend to spend as much time as possible with baby as I can. Katrinny is a beautiful baby and she will keep us young for a long time.
stairs to warm the bottle and brought it upstairs.
HE SAID SHE was a good baby, and he sounded amazed when he said, "I have not heard her cry yet."
The Budgs' other daughter, Mary Frances, is saw the baby at the Med Center but was on vacation when Mrs. Budg and the baby cme home Monday.
But their son, Chris, 17, was there and reacted enthusiastically to his new sister's homecoming. Mrs. Budig said,
"He's been bringing some of his friends in to see her," she said. "It's 'fan seeing these big, macho guys starring in wonder at this tiny baby."
because she and baby boy.
"Because of her small size, the hospital pediatricians suggested that she eat every three hours," she said.
"THE FIRST TIME I watched her feeding, she was taking only half an ounce." Mrs. Budg said. "She later started taking an ounce and now takes two ounces at a feeding. That shows how quickly she's progressing."
The birth of the Budig baby is a historic phenomenon at the University of Kansas. Mrs. Budig said that the last time a baby was born to a KU chancellor was in the early 1900s to Chancellor and Mrs. Frank Strong.
Kathryn, however, is the first baby to be born to a chancellor residing at 1532 Lilac Lane, she said.
Police, city can't settle pact
Since arriving in Lawrence Monday, a federal mediator has worked to bridge the month and one-half week of his job with city labor negotiating teams.
Buford Thompson, a commissioner with the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service in Kansas City, Mo., said at the end of Tuesday's five and one-half hour session that the two teams had discussed the main issues, but "there was still a difference between the two groups."
sonnel director, could be reached for comment.
Neither team's chief negotiator,
Gary Sampion, representing the
Lawrence Police Officers Association,
and Jackie McIlan, city, per-
THE TWO GROUPS HAVE been working on a new labor pact since mid-April, but the deadline for reaching an agreement passed last week with three issues still undecided.
The issues center on higher wages, insurance for police dependents, and LPGA membership on a police policy-making board.
The next negotiating session will be Monday. Thompson said.
The negotiating teams have until Monday to compose their final contract proposals to be sent to the City Commission.
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MARIE-CLAIRE ALAIN, Organ
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Plymouth Congregational Church
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MICHAEL LORIMER Guitar
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THE ASPEN SOLOISTS, Piano Trio
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THE CHICAGO BRASS QUINTET
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Swarthout Recital Hall
Tickets go on sale Monday, June 14 in the
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King Solomon cello 15'4" by 60"琴架; public admission
Other Solomons with ID: 60"琴架; Music Center tickets $1
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Page 4 University Daily Kansan, June 10, 1982
Analysis
Ronald Reagan
Ronald Reagan stars in a classic American role
By JOE BARTOS Editorial Editor
CAROLYN GARDNER
In the 20th century, the rise of mass media has made the cultivation of a public persona an important part of advertising.
Franklin K. Roosevelt, the first great media president, used radio appearances and newspaper coverage to project an image of effective action and resolve in a desperate period of American history. A generation later, another master of media, John P. Kennedy, established a picture of himself as a youthful, dynamic and glamorous person, easily dealing with the print and electronic press.
But few presidents have tended their image with as much skill, ease and effect as Ronald
Like Roosevelt and Kennedy, Reagan has a flair with mass media and has used this ability to bolster his popularity and boost his programs. But, unlike these two great presidents, Reagan has pursued an image of a conservative, almost reactionary nature.
As opposed to the new social programs and progressive foreign policies of Roosevelt and Kennedy, Reagan seeks a return to private enterprise, military expansion and other elements of American policy that were typical around the turn of the century. In keeping with his policies, many men steeped in the American past—behind his policies and persona lie the American Way.
A nebulous but powerful notion, the American Way is an attitude of cheerful self-reliance, horse sense and divine morality that is our heritage as a people. Formed on the frontier and in the factories of an emerging nation, it is a common, mythical ideal.
It is an ideal that Ronald Reagan both preaches and practices. His economic policy of gogo growth is a result of his optimism, while his support of increased private enterprise and
In addition to cheerful self-reliance, Reagan is powered by divine morality. Manifesting itself both as a sense of decyce and a belief in the divine righteousness of his cause, this traditional morality is at the base of Reagan's ties to groups advocating moral issues such as prayer in the face of persecution and oppression to the Equal Rights Amendment and at the base of his vehement foreign policy.
defense spending reveal his underlying impulse of self-reliance.
While his belief in the American ideals of optimism, self-reliance, decency and divine authority is the fundamental force behind his policies, Reagan's public image is also a manifestation of that same power. And that persona is the source of his strength with the American public.
Time and time again, Ronald Reagan is able to tap the force of Americans' shared belief in the American Way. Through his masterful grasp of the medium of television, Reagan is capable of more than just communicating his faith in the Way—he radiates it. Every word, every reaction and every video nuance is the act of a man who is the incarnation of our shared ideal.
When Ronald Reagan appears on television to defend his policies, he does so in simple, emphatic terms. It makes no difference whether he is explaining in a few words what experts have written volumes about - convinces because he sounds like he knows what he is talking about.
When Reagan is chastised in the press for "mispeaking," he reacts like a man whose integrity has wrongly been impun. It doesn't matter whether he was actually inaccurate—what convenues us is that he acts like a man who has been wronged.
They want to believe in simple solutions to complex problems, they want to believe in a return to a glorious past and they want to believe in an absolute authority. But most of all, they want to believe in the comforting, familiar ideal of the American Way.
No doubt a large part of Reagan's effectiveness is his seasoned skill as an actor. But no actor could play as successfully as a teacher, but this receptive American public wants to believe him.
In times of crisis for his administration, Ronald Reagan appears on television to appeal to the American public. A skilled actor, he plays upon the deep, almost conscious faith of the public in the American Way, to marshal support for his presidency and his policies. As long as his credibility remains intact, his appeal will remain unstoppable.
Democrats alternatives humorous Sensible solutions offered by Reagan
By JOHN SCARFFE
Columnist
The foundations of supply-side tax theory are logically irrefutable, given that one recognizes the essential rationality of the human animal. Simply put, once one accepts that a tax rate of 100 percent would provide less than-optimal revenue to the taxing government (in this case because the taxes would all starve), one must accept that the tax rate that would provide optimal government revenue is something less than 100 percent. Such a tax rate would be low enough to ensure that it would not deter workers in their rational search for increased earnings.
In reality, the congressional budget deadlock demonstrates that silence is the president's best weapon. The United States Congress has never been noted for its intellectual depth, and the current comic-opera over the budget is beginning to take on the characteristics of a Keystone Kops film. Our men in Washington need no help from the White House in demonstrating their utter inability to produce any sort of alternative economic policy, liberal or conservative.
Logic, however, has always been at a premium in Washington. The current chaos on Capital Hill bears little resemblance to the coward Congress of 1981, and impatient supply-siders are beginning to wonder just when the president will commence cracking the whip. The Great Communicator has remained curiously silent within Washington's recent economic firestorms, allowing old-guard liberal Democrats ample opportunity to thunder at the cameras about the coming fiscal Aramageddon without response from the White House.
some time to come, and it's only a matter of time before the president jumps in, guns blazing.
Economic policy we must have, however, and this year's congressional elections are shaping into a battle between the supply-side theorists and the anti-supply-side theorists. Wills will be winning the fiscal shots for
He will have some powerful support for his arguments when he does. The dramatic drop in the inflation rate caused an immediate 8 percent increase in the purchasing power of people on fixed incomes—retirees, for example. Even now, the nation's savings rate is at 6.3 percent and is rising for the first time in a decade. There are many industries, the Commerce Department's Index of Leading Economic Indicators increased in April for the first time in a year.
Against all of this, the Democrats seem to have nothing to offer but higher taxes and the frantic printing of money. While we are not (thankfully) a nation of economists, there appears to exist in America a grass-roots recognition that the immediate inauguration of Ted Kennedy isn't
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go to do much for our economic health. And as they have so clearly demonstrated over the past several months, the House of Representatives good or bad anything for our economic health, good or bad
The president's situation can only improve over the summer. By July and August the economy will be feeling the full effects of the second recession, which is an opportunity the Democrats might have of convincing the American people of the need to cancel the third-year cut. It appears, alas, that Tip O'Neill's irrational attempts to turn the clock back to 1967 are doomed to failure.
Part of the fundamental nature of the Democratic Party appears to be the complete inability to deal with defeat in a presidential election. It seems that the House of Representatives, now under Democratic control, is convinced that the election of 1860 didn't really happen. The American people spoke, but the Democrats weren't listening.
The fundamental philosophical differences between the two parties are compounded in this case by the gross managerial incompetence the Democrats are demonstrating. It will be exceedingly difficult for them to present themselves as practicable alternatives to the supply-siders if they continue to publicly fumble the budget process.
President Reagan never promised an overnight return to prosperity. He did present the American people with a coherent, logical, long-term plan to return our economy and system of government to the real world. It would seem that the only argument the opposition can offer consists wholly of strident rhetoric and political bumbling. The choices are obvious.
The intellectual and practical bankruptcy of the Democratic Party is nowhere better illustrated than in California. In this year of supposed crisis, a choice is offered to the voters of that state in their Democratic candidate for the 11th district, a choice between Jerry Brown and Gore Vidal.
In one of the most politically important states in the Union, the Democratic Party can do no better than a moonbeam political creature with no evident firm convictions about anything and a mediocre novelist who seems to be running because he has nothing better to do. One wonders what visions this party has for the rest of the nation.
Education, employment seriously neglected
Reagan dooms U.S. economy. future
By ALVIN A. REID
Columnist
Over the past year and a half, what hasn't been said about Ronald Reagan and his infamous economic policies? Reagonomies haunts me like a spectre, and I feel like tearing my hair out by the roots every time I hear its chilling name. Unfortunately, Reagonomics will probably be part of the American vocabulary forever, complete with a definition in Webster's Dictionary.
No recent president has been watched as closely by the press and the American public, and Reagan, to his credit, has handled his presidential responsibilities with honesty and candor.
But the president is making some critical long-term mistakes that could wreck the future of this nation. By purposefully snubbing the public school system and letting the unemployment rate run wild, the Reagan administration is mortgaging the country's economic stability.
Reagan is, of course, facing strong opposition from the black community because many of his budgetary cutbacks mean minorities have to sacrifice to the point of nonexistence. Because so few African Americans are Reagan's political policy, it seems that the problem involves race. This is far from reality.
One of the most essential factors in the phenomenal economic growth of this country has been that its people have been well educated. Public education is more responsible for this amazing growth than any other type of learning, and it enables students to college students so drastically that only the very rich or needy will be able to attain higher education.
As a conservative, Reagan should understand that the backbone of this country is the American economy.
The battle with Reagan isn't a race struggle, it's a class conflict. Reagan is an redneck hat, but he is a friend of the wealthy. He isn’t unaccented, stuffed shirt, but he is a very conservative man.
Public high schools flounder near collapse because they simply aren't receiving the funds needed to educate this country's youth. This is partly due to lack of government support and partly because citizens, ravaged by high interest and unemployment, keep rejecting tax levies.
After the Russians launched Sputnik in 1959, the Eisenhower administration almost immediately decided to make millions of dollars in aid available to college students, especially at the graduate level. The result is a well-educated nation with well-informed politicians and leaders. Now the president wants to trash all the good that was created.
It seems to be in fashion to laminate public schools these days, and, as a favor to wealthy political cronies. Reagan is going to aid the sorry children of his own parents by providing credit to parents who send their children to
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private schools. This is less than 10 percent of the general public, so this shrewd move can only be interpreted as a pat on the back to the big wheels that it was time for Reagan to become president.
If you don't get a decent education, chances are you can't get a steady job, and the unemployment rate, which currently stands at a post World War II high, will be driven even higher. But your prospects are clear, a clear enough sign that anyone, even a president, should clearly see a ballooning menace.
It's time for Reagan to take action to combat the spiraling unemployment rate before the botch
One of the most important economic indicators considered by leading economists is the Gross National Product (GNP). With low employment, the GNP is low, the country isn't runnng at maximum capacity, and problem will arise. With a staggering unemployment rate, it'll more than 9 percent, the country's growth is in doubt, and curaure America's sick economy will be futile.
The Reagan administration repeatedly says that the key to the success of Reaganomics is giving the program time to work, but time has run out. It will be interesting to see when Reagan decides to drop his tough-guy facade and abandon his ridiculous thinking on the education and employment fronts. In this election year, Reagan must decide whether to tangle with the big-money influence that sent him to the dark side of the poor and minorities or to continue adding fat to the fire by proposing another set of ludicrous cutbacks.
If something isn't done about unemployment, and soon, some very ugly situations could arise. An unemployment rate of 9.5 percent means a 13 percent rate or higher for blacks and a rate so high for black teenagers that it isn't kept by the unemployment bureau. Couple these figures with the fact that Black Americans, and throw in the summer heat, and you have a very explosive formula brewing.
hopefully, Ronnie and his ranch hands will come to their senses and devote some governmental attention to public education and unemployment and forget his beliefs opposing the military occupation. It is likely his countrymen to sacrifice, so now it is time that this country asked Reagan to sacrifice.
Better energy outlook results from reliance on free market
Reagan can continue with deaf ears now, but when it's time to make emergency legislation to keep the top on the powder keg it will already be too late.
EZC
By DANNY J. Boggs
N. Y. Times
WASHINGTON - In early 1981, U.S. energy policy changed markedly. Reliability on manipulation of prices and government regulation was replaced by an emphasis on market response as the best avenue to stable energy supplies, free of undue dependence on foreign sources of petroleum. As a result of these policies, perhaps the only Washington figures more pitiful than the energy lawyers, unemployed in droves, are the energy journalists, self-employed in crises and other real-world events rather than reporting administrative shadow-boxing with the ever-elusive "crisis."
10 get a real feeling for the remarkable change in our energy situation, we must look at the statistics for the first year of the Rugaean administration, which have now become available.
—The United States' oil net imports fell to 5.1 million barrels per day, less than one-third of the total consumption. This was down more than one-fifth since 2012 and down 3.5 million barrels per day from 1977.
Total consumption of oil products also fell by more than one million barrels per day.
—Oil production outside of Alaska began to increase for the first time in a decade, as the number of oil wells drilled increased 40 percent in one year and the number of operating drilling
rigs increased by more than 1,000 after complete decontrol of oil prices.
- Our net imports of all forms of energy were less than 10 percent of our total use of energy, the
Since the president's decontrol decision.
despite the cries of some critics (Sen. Howard M. Metzenbaum of Ohio predicted $2 per gallon gasoline by the end of 1983, the price of all petroleum products has declined in real terms. The world price of oil is down almost 20 percent in real terms, largely because the United States
Finally, this administration has made enormous advances in creating a strategic petroleum reserve that is truly a deterrent to interruptions in supply and would be highly useful in the event of shortages.
no longer is subsidizing petroleum imports and restraining petroleum production. Gasoline prices have fallen almost 20 cents per gallon, and oil company profits are generally declining. In other words, the industry is impossible without controls, but they are perfectly consistent with Reagan's energy policy.
In the four years before President Reagan's inauguration, barely 100 million barrels had been placed in storage. In less than a year, this amount was more than doubled, and the strategy petroleum reserve now contains more than 400 million barrels, more than 140 days of crude oil imports from Arab members of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries.
In an effort to deflate the obvious significance of these facts, several alarmist "explanations" have been given, primarily that these are simply the results of recession and higher prices caused by Reagan. That won't wash. Economic growth in 1981 was actually higher than was projected in the last predictions made by Jimmy Carter's predecessor, Ronald Reagan. The prices of petroleum products were lower. These two conditions should have worked to create more consumption and more imports, yet
imports in 1981 were actually 1.5 million barrels per day lower than projected, which saved Americans from sending some $20 billion overseas.
In short, these improvements in the energy situation must be attributed almost entirely to the individual efforts and initiatives of American producers and consumers. These improvements did not result from implementation of some government master plan. They were the outgrowth of an effort by Congress to provide visible ribbon cutting or regulatory mandates that could be identified as the explicit causes. In fact, this is not surprising; a bit of reflection will indicate that free decisions are almost invariably wiser than coerced ones, and the best decisions are made by those who feel their effects, not by bureaucrats issuing orders while employees work. This wisdom is the heart of the Reagan energy. As many facts rather than symbols, that policy is working.
This does not indicate that energy is no longer worth thinking about, either by citizens, or by the federal government. It does mean that concern is best expressed, and our energy situation can best be improved, by the actions of free Americans rather than by government programs and controls.
(DANNY J. BOGGS IS A SPECIAL
PRESIDENT FOR POLICY
DEVELOPMENT)
University Daily Kansan, June 10, 1982
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'Dead Men' does wear thin
By ROSE ROUSSEAU Contributing Reviewer
Gazing from under a slouched fedora, cigarette dangling loosely between his sneering lips, detective Rigley Reydon (Stephen Doyle) is very keenly detective.
Reardon, the hero of the new Carl Reiner Film, "Dead Men Don't Wear Plaid" makes every effort to convince his audience that he is a bona fide private eye of estimable vintage and not a comedian of the 80s given to sly and dirty means of evoking laughter.
His accessories and associates are exactly what one would expect. He has the small, slightly seedy upstairs office his profession requires, his name stenciled on the glass in the door. His friend and sometimes mentor is none other than Philip Marilow (Humans Rogart), who is even willing to assist protection on an occasional tough case.
BEST OF ALL, early in the film Reardon gains a client-a client of the tall, stacked, brunette type who
will obviously figure in Reardon's reluctant heart in the future.
An Aspen Film Society production. "Dead Men" is a marvelous spoon on and salute to the American detective film genre of the 40s and early 50s. Given Writer Martin, and director by Reiner, the film stars Martin and Rachel Ward as Reardon's client, Juliet Forestest.
THE GENUS of the film is not the thin, absurd yet funny plot, not the manner in which Martin and Ward have us embarrassingly howling at certain off-color references. But by splicing carefully selected film clips of Bogart, Ray Milland, Alan Ladd, Lana Turner, Ava Gardner, Bette Davis and numerous other screen luminaries, Reiner has infinitely enlarged 'Dead Men' scenes through effective editing, these actors and actresses function as necessary characters in "Dead Men's" story line.
Costumes for the contemporary actors, designed by the late Edith Haed, have been meticulously created in sequences with those in the film clips.
"DEAD MEN" clever premise is also its downfall. We can easily laugh at the gags like Hotel Guanao, but we can laugh at the gags like "precious enchida" in an obscure South American night club and the vision of a drugged Reardon happily shaving his tongue in eagerness preparation for a date with Ingrid
Martin, working his face into an alternate grimace of determined authority or doped oblivion, is a strange interoper in the pieced archives of films that "Dead Men" represents.
HIS RELATIONSHIP with Forest is even less believable. She certainly seems no more real or attractive than females with whom she is justapted.
Instead, the audience gradually develops the eerie feeling that Martin is simply another Walter Mitty living a modern-day life of fantasy and adventure through his head. RigbyJeordonen's body part is farce is farce, the substance of it is ultimately, though pleasantly, shallow.
After a stormy discussion, Lawrence city commissioners voted 41 at Tuesday night's meeting to pass a resolution officially adopting the six neighborhood and the Downtown Comprehensive plans.
By KATE DUFFY Staff Reporter
During the discussion, commissioner Don Binn accused his fellow commissioners of "back-dooring the issue and irritating the planning commission."
Under Kansas statutes, the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission, a 10-member, appointed advisory group, has the exclusive authority to adopt comprehensive plans.
"In the past, the City Commission has always on plans and the after they've come from the planning commission." Clark said Wednesday.
But City Commissioner Barkley Clark said the City Commission's role was not clear.
Commission adopts plans for land use
And if the plan is contested in court, he said, it has more judicial clout if the City Commission has approved it. it
The problem lies in the wording of the original resolutions approving the plans, which designate present and
future land use and zoning for Lawrence's six older central city neighborhoods and downtown.
Last month, the planning department issued a report stating that the plans, already approved by both commissions, had not been adopted in a manner that would amend Plan '96, the city's comprehensive policy and land use
CITY COMMISSIONERS ASKED the staff to draw up a resolution that would make the plans a part of Plan '95 and official city documents.
Since that time, Clark said at the meeting, he received a phone call from a planning commission member asking the City Commission "not to elevate the neighborhood plans so much that they supersede the comprehensive plan."
"We'll consider them in conjunction with Plan 95." Clark said. "We'll be coordinating them and use the whole effort to think the conflict is resultably downfall."
Bims, placing the only dissenting vote, said he feared the planning commission members would view the adoption as a surrption of their power.
LINDA FINGER, acting director of the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Department, said Wednesday that she felt there was simply a misunderstanding between the two commissions. She said she was not sure whether the planning commissioners would discuss the resolution at their June meeting.
Last year, the commission voted to amend the code for children above the age of three, but rescinded the amendment in January.
In other business, commissioners voted 4-1 to have the staff study problems associated with revising the Uniform Building Code to allow children under the second grade on the second floor of day care centers and schools.
Carolyn Thomson, a teacher-supervisor at the Educare Day Care Center at the University of Kansas, told the commission that the present code restricted the number of day care slots in Lawrence.
"CHILD CARE IS A CRITICAL issue for many people in town," she said, "and the code's restrictions make it harder to find."
Thomson said the Health Department, which inspects day care centers, received about 20 calls a month from persons interested in starting centers. However, she said, most cannot fit the building code's floor requirements because there are few appropriate one-story buildings in town.
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Page 6 University Daily Kansan, June 10, 1982
Pioneer quilts displayed
DAVID HENRY Staff Writer
The role women played in recording the movement westward into the American wilderness has long been overlooked.
Although the names of George Catin, Charles Russell and Federic Remington are firmly associated with 58th-century romans, few, if any, women join their ranks.
Recently, however, this oversight has been remedied, spurred on by renewed interest in the arts and crafts created by American pioneer women.
Central to this rediscovered artistic tradition is quiltmaking, the tedious piecing together of fabric scraps into colorful patterns and designs. "Log cabin" quilts are a visual view through Aug. 1 at the Spencer Museum of Art, displays 12 examples of these useful and beautiful objects created by pioneer women.
THE TERM "LOG CABIN" describes one of the many patterns that 80th-century quilts took. This particular pattern is made with narrow strips of fabric, or "logs", arranged on four sides of a small center square, according to Ann Roth, KU graduate student in textile design, who arranged the exhibition. Each block is generally pieced so as to create light and dark
sides. The fascination of Log Cahn quilts lies in the patterns created by arranging these individual blocks into a pattern that matches in an introduction to the exhibit.
Yet the Log Cabin pattern is not merely decorative. The center squares, usually red or yellow, symbolize the chimney extending from the cabin's fireplace, the heart of the pioneer home, according to Roth.
Of the 12 quilts in this exhibit, five were selected from the museum's collection and the others were borrowed from Kansas residents. They demonstrate the wide range of visual effects possible in the Log Cabin pattern. Some of the quilts, such as the "Sunshine and Shadow" quilt from 1900, are traditional compositions of alternating light and dark squares arranged on a grid.
OTHER EXAMPLES, though, are far more lively. An 1850 kusit, for example, contains areas of light and dark that combine and break up along a diagonal, creating patterns that appear to advance and recede in space. A silk and satin quilt, made from fabrics highly textured with a glossy explosion of brightly-colored fabric pieces in an amazing modern-looking composition.
This quilt, with its complex geometric relationships, reflects the immense care that women took to create Log Cabin quilts.
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There still are no suspects in the Memorial Day murder of Mark Swanson, but new leads are developing on a regular basis, assistant Police Chief Maj. Ron Olin said yesterday.
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Investigators are questioning all persons who may have been in Swanson's apartment the night of the murder, Olin said.
"We do not consider an individual to be suspect until our investigation determines that he is worthy of more investigation," Olin said. "Anything beyond that is speculation, and speculation is not what we base our job on."
"IT ISN'T a concrete thing," he said. "Some people who might look good today may not look good tomorrow."
Olin said he thought the investigation was progressing in a positive way.
Swanson, 28, was found shot to death outside of his home at 105 Kentucky St. shortly before midnight on May 31. He had been shot
A quantity of marijuana, which Olin said, could be measured in pounds, was found in his apartment.
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"We are not investigating drugs. We are investigating the killing of Mark Swanson," he said.
OLIN SAID that the investigation was focusing its attention on the homicide, not on the drugs.
"We have liberally used the inquisition tool to subpoena different phone records and to interview indi- viduals we were reluctant to talk." Malone said.
Olin said that knowledge could be used in determining the validity of someone's statement, "and/or the accuracy of information told to us."
"That information alone is merely one of the pieces of information that an acquaintance of Swanson has knowledge as part of the crime."
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Former Vice President Walter Mondale will be the featured guest at a fundraising reception in Lawrence Saturday and Tuesday to discuss the need for the U.S. House of Representatives.
"He asked us if we would have him in," Kabeline said. "He is making a lot of appearances around the country now. It's my personal speculation that he's getting ready to enter the 1984 presidential campaign."
MIKE KABERLINE, treasurer of the Slattery for Congress Committee, said Monday's endorsement was not solicited.
The $25-a-p plate reception will be held at 5 p.m. Saturday at the Lawrence Holiday Inn Holmide, 200 West Turnpike Access Road.
Mondale will endure Democrats Bill Kostar, candidate for the 4th Congressional District, and Jim Slattery, candidate for the 2nd Congressional District.
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Slattery, a former state representative from Toppea, will get 90 percent of the proceeds from the reception. The firm will bring firm executive will get 10 percent.
"I'd say the chances are 40-60 in Winn's favor," Kostar said. "After all, he's got a 16-year head start on me."
KABERLINE SAID his candidate would get most of the proceeds because her ordinance originally planned to inquire in only 10 days. We later asked Kostar to get in on it.
Kostar said he would get only 10 percent of the proceeds "because Lawrence is no longer in my district, and most of the work to get Mondale here."
kostar said this was his first can-
dency for the ard Congress Distri-
tive.
"where happy decisions are made."
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When our government categorizes as work the production and distribution of, for example, innermost worthless video games, pornographic publications, and trashy libel-minded biographies, it both creates a group David Stockman considers productive and sanctions the organized waste of time, energy, and resources. While the papier-mache process of the last two decades may delight Mr. Stockman and his yellow narcotics in the "supply-side" contingent, they should ponder whether this country can remain free or productive without an educated, enlightened populace and an economic mechanism which uses our potential constructively.
A study published in Nature magazine states that Japanese children have steadily increased their edge over Americans on standard intelligence tests this century. Says the study: "It seems doubtful whether a rise of this magnitude could be accounted for by change in the genetic structure of the population. Instead the explanation probably stems from differences."
To Mr. Stuckman, who considers financial success ipso facto pro of productivity, our economic system is the embodiment of perfection. Therefore he would probably consider the 16,000 hours spent watching television by the average child between the ages of six and eighteen to be time well spent. According to a recent effort by Elyane Roland of the Los Angeles Times Syndicate, child-development experts agree that the hours spent by the youngest set enduring the offerings of the electronic outhouse inhibit their physical and intellectual development. There also exists a two-year study conducted by the National Institute of Mental Health which calls "overwhelming" the evidence that "excessive" violence on television causes aggressive behavior in children.
The Washington-based Association of American Geographers recently issued a 24-page report which called "appallingly low" the level of geographical literacy found in the United States. Theodore Shabad of the New York Times News Service says that "The report ... was prompted in part by recent surveys in American schools and colleges suggesting widespread ignorance among young people about other nations, their languages and their cultures." The report described the skills and tools of geography as essential "for portraying and explaining the world in which we live."
While the production of such waste material presumably gains Mr. Stockman's unabashed admiration, Phillip Botley of the New York Times News Service informs us that "Foundations, government agencies and professional societies have all pointed to an alarming decline in scientific and technical competence among the general public. They warn that many individuals are not competent to make wise choices in everyday life, to perform effectively on the job, to vote or carry out other civic responsibilities." The National Science Board, the government's top policy-making body for science education has called the situation "critical."
The April 5th issue of *Newsweek* describes budget director David Stockman as conceding that "Reagan's policies will probably widen the income gap between rich and poor". Mr. Stockman holds that the efforts of previous administrations to narrow that gap were forebodied because "that narrowing required a steady increase in the tax burden on producers that would eventually have undermined economic growth without it. the basis for financing the increase in social-welfare transfer programs."
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University Dally Kansan, June 10, 1982
Page
R-Kan. y Winn s ninth
CAROLA VILLEZ
Special to the Kansan
0-60 in
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aption.
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Peter Thompson, KU professor of art, puts the finishing touches on one of his paintings that is part of an exhibition on display at the Spencer Art Museum. The exhibit, entitled "Recent Works," is made up of informal pastels and watercolors, and will be on display through July 11.
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KU artist splashes on color
Eight watercolors, each almost five feet square, and 16 pastels, most measuring more than three feet square, make up this outburst of color on the sky.
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Splashes of reds, greens, blues and yellows in bread, abstract strokes are the mark of KU Professor Peter Thompson's informal pastels and watercolors now on display in the Spencer Museum of Art.
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Thompson, a professor of art, started most of the works during a sabbatical from the university in the spring of 1981. His exhibition, "Recent Works," which opened May 7 and runs through July 8, includes a new book on its corporate and business members.
a common theme in the pastels is the placement of squares within squares, the squares determined by different colors.
Colors in Thompson's work evolve from corner to corner and edge to edge, starting out blue or black but ending up yellow, red or gray
Thompson allowed the paint to drip down the paper while painting the watercolors, adding to the already varied color schemes.
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decided while in nursery school to be an artist, has taught at the University of Kansas since 1966. Twelve of those years were spent as chairman of the drawing and painting department in the School of Fine Arts.
Her show, "Humming Heart Gardens," uses a rainbow of materials to communicate its message.
"All the Time in the World," a wall piece, shows a household of "Mom" and "Dad," and their respective concerns. Mom's side is the household side, complete with a clothing and pinock clock, a cigarette cabinet, cigarettes, pins-up and cowboy boots.
Other works in the exhibition are similar. Most of them are made of wood, tree branches, clay, teeth, costume jewelry and old clothing.
Maria Prather, acting curator of painting and sculpture, said that the museum also planned to acquire one of the works from the collection. The caled course Series VII, Number 3
Mixed-media includes painting,
drawing, pastels, sculpture, pottery
and other forms of art.
The museum acquired one of Thompson's pastels, Series V, Number 7, in 1879.
Running concurrently with the Thompson exhibition is an exhibition of mixed-media material by Suzanne Klotz-Reilly.
Most of the work depicting people
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There are several pieces such as end tables, desks and cupboards that Klotz-Reilly has either built from scratch or modified "Road Trip" to a desk setup. The 'Desk' is a Rabbit Desk and "Rabbit Hutch" started out as an ordinary desk and hutch.
includes only hair and teeth, with the face void of any expression except an open mouth. Stuffed old clothing often includes shoes, bodies and stocks are used for fingerprints.
Koltz-Relly now works full time as an artist in Phoenix, Ariz. She earned a fine arts degree from the Kansas City Art Institute in 1966 and also studied at the University of Missouri and Texas Tech University.
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The museum owns one of Klotz-Reilly's works, a piece titled "Carol," which was acquired in 1968. The exhibition of her work will run through July 11 and is in the east side of the Kress Gallery.
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Also on display at the museum is a continuing exhibition of work by Kansas artists located in the north balcony.
THE CASTLE TEA ROOM
A painting by Streeter Blair that depicts "KU's First Morning, 1866" is included in the exhibition. Blair was born in Cadmus; Kau, in 1868, and graduated from University College London.
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Page 8 University Daily Kansan, June 10, 1982
Cooney will disprove critics in title bout
GINO STRIPPOLI
Guest Columnist
It is what the heavyweight division of boxing has needed ever since Muhammad al-Beit Joe Frazier in the "Thrilla in Manila" seven years ago.
Holmes vs. Cooney.
It has everything a heavyweight championship fight is supposed to have: the undefeated champion vs. the undefeated No. 1 ranked contender; experience vs. youth; the boxer vs. the pucher.
The Holmes-Cooney matchup has been inevitable ever since the two came face to face in a Mexico City restaurant during the World Boxing Council Convention in December 1800. Holmes, holder of the WBC heavyweight crown, told Cooney that he was stupid for a white boy. Cooney responded by repeatedly asking Holmes how he drove the nail even deeper when he told Holmes, "You need me more than I need you. Don't forget that."
That statement hurt Holmes more than anything, mostly because it rings of truth. Holmes turned pro during the heyday of All, Frazier and George Forrest. The latter was winning all the way, 29 by knock out. Still, his game has always been lacking.
SINCE HOLMES WON the championship on June 9, 1978, against Ken Norton, he has successfully defended his title II titles, winning 10 by knockouts. Al had haunted Holmes' early years as champion until Holmes knocked out the
overweight and aged Ali in the 11th round.
Cooney then replaced Ali as Holmes' shadow.
Since the Alli fight, two of Holmes' three bouts have been questionable. He failed to knock out Trevor Berbick but won the 15-round decision. He knocked out Leon Spinks in three rounds and finished off Renaldo Snipes in 18 rounds.
In the Snipes bounce on Nov. 6, 1981, Holmes was knocked down in the seventh round. Holmes fought back and in the 11th round the referee stopped the fight. Snipes did not seem hurt at time. During a post-fight interview with ABC Snipes and Holmes started throwing punches at each other. To say the least, the referee's decision to stop the fight was questionable.
That was Holmes' last fight.
FOR THESE REASONS, boxing pu-
rists say that Cooney has not paid his
dues. They say his managers have
taken the easy fights and that Cooney
hasn't gone through enough to become a
champion.
Boxing experts say another strike against Cooney is his inactivity in the past two years. In 1860 he fought twice, and in 1975 he added a combined total of only six rounds.
In 1980, Cooney destroyed Jimmy Young for four rounds with devastating left books to the body. Later that year, Cooney, knocked out Ron Lyle in the first round, breaking Lyle's ribs in the process. In 1981, Cooney put Norton into permanent retirement with a knock out 33 seconds into the first round.
The Norton fight, held May 11, 1981, was Cooney's last fight. Injuries forced him to cancel a scheduled fight against Joe Bugner and forced the postponement of the title fight with Holmes, as originally scheduled for March 15.
Holmes has insisted that Cooney wants no part of him and that had a
let to do with Cooney's injury. Holmes also has been asking "Who is Cooney?" and "Why should I move from him?"
HOLMES WILL LEARN the answer to both of those questions tomorrow night at Caesar's Palace in Las Vegas.
Cooney will come out punching and attempt to get Holmes on the ropes. If Cooney can get Holmes in a corner early in the fight, it will be a quick fight. In the corner, Cooney will do to Holmes the punch. In the opposite direction, Norton: He will punch the body into submission. He will use the left hook, which AI Braverman, veteran trainer and fight manager, has said is the best since Joe Louis', to hurt Holmes. He will make the same hand that has knocked him down three previous times.
Holmes' only chance is to hurt Cooney early. Because of Cooney's quick fights, it is not known whether he can take a punch. If Holmes can hurt him early and Cooney can't take a
punch. Holmes must finish him early in the fight.
Holmes 'experience' left job (the best in the business) and overhand right all have to work together to beat Cooney. You can be as hard as you are, and can't dance for 13 rounds anymore.
Cooney, at 25, has his best day in front of him. Holmes, at 32, had his bad day.
AS I SEE IT, HOLMES will hit Cooney with everything he has, but Cooney will keep coming. This will disprove the notion that Cooney can't take a punch and prove the beginning of the end for Holmes.
If it goes past seven rounds, it's a testup. But Coney will win the title by 10 seconds.
Editor's note: Gino Strippoli was associate sports editor for the Kansan during the 1982 spring semester and will edit during the 1982 fall semester.
Groups march for disarmament
About 200 supporters of nuclear disarmament will march down Massachusetts Street Saturday morning.
The march celebrates the opening of the U.N. Special Session on Disarmament in New York. It is sponsored by Daughters of the Earth and the Lawrence Coalition for Peace and Justice.
The march will begin at 10:30 a.m. in Central Park at 7th and Kentucky streets and will end in South park.
A brief tour is a picnic at the park will follow.
"WE'VE ASKED people to bring brown bag lunches, to staithe away so that they can conversate and exert themselves." One of the march organizers, said.
"This issue is sufficiently urgent We thought we should get involved.
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University Daily Kansan, June 10, 1982
Page 9
30 a.m.
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Blaze at Boys Home labeled 'suspicious'
The cause of a fire that left $20,000 damage last Saturday at the Boys Achievement Center, Inc., 1320 Haskell, is now regarded as "suspicious," Lawrence Fire Chief Jim McSain said Wednesday.
The fire destroyed a second-story bedroom, and there was extensive heat and smoke damage to the rest of the floor. McSwain said
for the fire to start," he said. "We've taken all the necessary steps to eliminate accident reason.
"When you eliminate all the accident causes that you can, then it becomes suspicious."
But the investigation had uncovered no evidence that would indicate arson, MeSwain said.
Kent Boehm, co-director of the home, could not be reached for comment.
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KU students will get a break in fees this fall, the assistant director of business affairs said yesterday.
Martin Jones, assistant director, said the campus privilege fee would be reduced by $7 for the 1982-83 school year and tuition would remain the same.
The fee will be reduced because the building debts for Watkins Memorial Hospital and Wescoe Hall will have been paid by that time.
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"The University is interested in keeping the fees from rising." Jones said.
It is University policy not to increase fees more than once in the average student's stay at the University, he said.
Students paid $1.6 million of the building, which cost $7,680,59.
enrollment and other factors, the bond will be paid by Sept. 1, 1982.
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ERRORS
one two two two three four four six seven eight nine ten
one two two three four five six seven eight nine ten
three four five six seven eight nine ten
one two two three four five six seven eight nine ten
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
The Kansan will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can land in newspaper or be called the "new business office" at 843-5088.
KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE
118 Klint Hall 864-4758
ANNOUNCEMENTS
The Kansan is now accepting applications for Summer Staff Artist/Photographer. Application forms are available in 118 Ft Hall. Contact Sharon Bodin, Business Manager.
Staff Artist/Photographer
The University Daily, Kansas is anEqual Opportunity/Affirmation employer. Applications are sought by all people identified of race, religion, color, sex, disability, national origin, or ancestry.
FOR RENT
SOUTHERN PARKWAY TOWNHOUSES, 380th & Kasdell. If you’re tired of the noisy and cramped apartments, you like it. Our duplex feature is by W. Witty, with a spacious pool, & no privacy. We have openings now, for Augusht. Call Claire Gravel (evenings and weekends) at 612-494-5780 for information about modestly priced townhouses.
Atrative 3 BR RH Ram, Infurnished, DR or study,
enrolled end treatment. Available now 842-839-6000;
6-10
PRINCETON PLACE PATIO APARTMENTS. Now Available. 2-car garage with fireplace, built-in fireplace, 2 car garage with electric openers, quiet surroundings, $40 per person, 36-80 day rent information, tf. or phone: 452-729-1222 or phone: 452-729-1224. information.
---
Swimming Pool And An Active Social Calendar
Business Manage
---
- Private Baths
- Sleeping Study Areas
- Carpeted
- Fourteen Meals Per Week
- Air Conditioning
-Free Wi-Fi
- A Lease Agreement for your Summer Plans
- Free Payment Plans
- High Rise Living With A Swimming Pool
1800 Naismith Dr.
"Just Across The Drive From Campus"
AVAILABLE AUGUST Spacious Suites 4 exclusive
room types. Family room, table pool, FP, all appliances, 2 carriage 970 Straford Road on KU80 line. Accepting 4 mature responsible residents. KBU 800 a.m.-6 p.m.
28th floor
STUDENTS
HANOVER PLACE
One phone will solve your housing needs. Completely furnished studios, 1BR, 1BW with 2nd and 3BR furnished apartments
SUNDANCE
Between 14th and 15th on Massachusetts Rentals from 250/mo
7th and Florida
(On KU Bus Line)
Rentals from 205/mo.
841-5255
842-4455
TIBURON
meadowbrook
15th & Creatline 842-4206
9th and Emery Rd.
Rentals from 250/fmo
841.8056 892.4455
SUMMIT HOUSE
NEW 4-PLEXES
COLDWATER FLATS
Available now. Furnished spacious studio in private home, safe home, bedroom 2, living room, kitchen, bathroom, guest suite, quiet, privacy. Two grad students, $500/month. We will consider less for an angle 84-87 nights. Services included.
413 W. 14th St.
Rentals from 280/mo
841-1212 842-4455
1955 Louisiana Rentals from 285/mo.
841-8280 842-4455
Needed—Graduate Student to share house w/other graduate students. Close to campus Waker/Dryer, All Utilities Pk. $200.00, 841-8075.
6-14
916 Indiana
922 Tennessee
All 3BR, 2 Bath. Rentals from 426/me
841-5255 842-4455
SPACIOUS STUDIOS
All offered by Mastercraft Management Professional Maintenance and Management
One, two, and three bedrooms Check now for summer availability Beautiful grounds, swimming pool
842-4455
lighted tennis courts
MED CENTER BOUND* Newly refurbished 2 BR
parking car (913) 827-6540, A/C, Appliance
parking car (913) 827-6540
TRAILRIDGE
2,3,and 4 bedroom townhouses will be available for fall
3 pools, tennis court, and
Racquetball club.
On K U. but line
One, two, and three bedrooms
2500 West 6th 843-7333
Woman. Furnished room in shared house. Total rent 1280. Total bills 1,148. 1 bit from M-F 844-840-142, 1 mid-M-F 844-840-146.
Furnished Apt., Grad Students. Utilities paid. A/C,
no pets. F213/812, 1333 Vermont, 843-309, 6-21
1 bedroom semi-furnished. Near campus. 843-9094 or
842-7077. No pets.
Two bedroom furnished mobile home, $150.00 per
night. quiet location. No pets. Jayshan,
Court #647-9707.
Share house. Low rent. Split utilities. Some furniture 842-413. Keep trying. 6-14
Room in large quiet house one bk. from Union. Must have clean habits and no pets. See at 1209 Ohio, before noon, $110.00. 6-17
FOR SALE
New 1 bedroom kitchen in four-pers. 1 back from the living room, two baths. Fully equipped kitchen, at 141 Gulf Dr. dragged, fully equipped kitchen, at 141 Gulf Dr.
Bookcases, stereo cabinets, cedar chests, benches,
tables, desks, etc. custom built to need in your
woods. Call Michael K. 9 a.m. to b. 8 m. Sunday
through Saturday. 834-8982.
Alternator, starter and generator specialists. Parts,
service, and exchange units. BELL AUTOMOTIVE
ELECTRIC, #43-0098 W. 300 h. ft.
tf
Part time cleaning office buildings five evenings per
week, Sunday first Thursday, for approximately
3 hrs. each time. Please call 845-4343 for additional
information and an app visit.
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Make sense in a new way! 1-800-432-5676, www.westerncivilization.com—1. Ask study guide. 2. For class preparation. 3. For exam preparation. "New Analysis of Western Civilization" now available at Town Clerk, The University of North Carolina.
or 842-4135
**Moving Sale:** sofa bed, dresser, cabinet,书桌,springs and, rug. Call 718-239-6500 or call 822-743-6940, VALVY AREA or call 822-743-6940.
73 Ply 4DR At $495
73 Celica ST 4sp $995
74 Mazda RX-4 Wgn AT $995
75 Ply Fury 4DR AT $995
76 Chevy Malibu Classic $2250
77 Fiat X-19 4sp $2450
76 Mach I Mustang $2195
842-5622
Residence Hall Director, Joseph R. Pearson Hall), The University of Kansas, M.S. and previous experiences. Responsible for the supervision of a hall housing approximately 400 male students. Applications received by 16月, 18月, will be given first priority. Req. Master's degree in Office or Residential Program, 123 Strong Hall, University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas 60680. Qualified for Opportunity/Learning Action Emloyer. 8-17
CAR SYSTEM - Place In-Dash casante AM/FM
ENHANCES ENCORE ncx on all, must sell us!
Nikon D5000 D3000 D2000
Front wheel drive, am/fm. 5-speed. Low mileage.
Great economy. 840-6135. 6-24
Box Office Manager (Full Time). Murphy Hall
Bachelor's required. Preferred starting July 19.
Application deadline June 18 Contact acquies-
cive supervisor if not available. Keesler Acquires
Kansas, Lawson, KS, 65035. AA/EO Employer.
Call
FIXTURE hours. No experience necessary. Job is in education. Please apply. Mail resume to Financial Center, Lawnerville, Kannan. Must be a graduate and in school full time. For more information, contact the Financial Office or Attorney F. Lawrensen.
HELP WANTED
ACADEMIC COMPUTING CENTER. Student enrolled in the program for application software; assist with consulting, seminars and workshops. Qualifications: excellent written and oral skills; high level of language experience with applications software packages; student with knowledge of various software packages; familiarity with statistical analysis packages, text processing and Honeywell TBS, programming experience; fall full time during summer half time during regular school holidays; resume to Lyndon Molyznicki, Room 214. Academic Competing Center. For additional information contact
Model needed for K.U. bookstore's Third Gift Catalog. Shooting wears a black dress with white trim, required. No permission needed. 5 males, 5 females needed. Cake decorating required. Bkept to 8-10pm. 846-446 for Appointment # 3293.
ACADEMIC COMPUTER COORDINATOR: University of Kansas Regents Campus, Evening Center, Eventoving event evening activity—specifically, design, documentation, presentations, computer consulting as needed. Thorough knowledge of PORTMAN or PARAL REQULATED.Submit a letter of request to Portman, University of Kansas Regents Campus, 900 Main Street, Overland Park, Kansas 68686, before Monday, April 14 for Opportunity Affirmative Action. 617-852-4117 Employer
PERSONALS
SPECIAL, RATES, HAIRCUTS $5.00, PERMIS-
"ONLY" $29.00, Charme Bair Fashion 1033-
Missa. Deea Jones 433-5800. 6/38
Come visit our new shop, BARB'S VINTAGE ROSE,
918% Mass (above Davis Painta) Mon-Sat,
10:41-24:45
SAILRIDER
Catch our June specials onn-1
* Used Sailriders
* Group rate lessons
* Rentals
Sunrise Safety certified
boardsailing center
842-2366
Stop and see Doc at Baird's Vintage Rose, 91% Bass (above Davis Paints) Mon-Sat, 10-15, 841-245. 6-17
Study Skills Workshop. Time Management, Frietable
Listening, Notaking. Tuesday, June 1, 8:30-9:30 p.m., Jayhawk Room. Kaisa Union, Freeport,
Maine. The Student Association. Genesee College - 647-624-5100
TATTOOING - Clyde's Tattoo Parish, 1417 W. 38th
SL, KC, Mi 816-931-5535.
LEASE
A
LEMON
Daily, Weekly, Monthly All Cars One Rate
SIGS A Day
FIRST 50 MILES FREE
THEN 85 A MILE
$9^95 A Dav
Small, intermediate and large cars and trucks available. All mechanically sound, state insured, clean and ready to rent.
CALL US AT
COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES: Free pregnancy testing; early and advanced oustipation abortion; gynecology; contraception. 145 & Roe, Overland Park, KS (913) 648-300. If
9th & Miss. 24th & Iowa
749-4225 841-0188
The Kegerber-Weekly Specials on Kegal!! Call
841-940-1810 W.23rd.
PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTHRIGHT,
484-4821
---
Skillet's liquor store serving U-Day since 1940. Come in and compare. Willfred Skillet Endaly. 1000 Mass. #831-836. t
Vintage & Classic
Contemporary Clothing
Linda & Linda
10 West 9th St.
913-843-9708
Mon.-Sat. 11/5
The Etc Shop
VOLUNTEER NEEDED at Headquarters.
Lawrence's 24 hour crisis counseling center. No previous clinical experience needed. Training required information technology. Details: 814-2345.
6-10
Welcome back! Photos for any occasion. David Bernstein Photography. Call Sean at 749-1516. 6-24
Say it on a shirt. Custom silk screen printing.
T-shirts, baseball shirts and caps. Shirt art by Swells.
749-1611. $7.99
West Coast Saloon
25' Draws
NOON-6 p.m.
EVERY FRIDAY
The Tradition Continues
841-BREW
LOST at enrollment. Silver Mont Blanc ballpoint pen
with gold clip. Sentimental value. Reward. Laura —
841-6988. 6-17
DARE TO GO BEAR The American Sunbathing Association has a FAMILY I am club city near you. Advance marriage status, RTA-AFANs, Inc. Rt. 1-609, Scarson, Ks. 3036 Send stamp, 3036.
COME ON DOWN! every Thursday from 6:00 p.m. 4:00 p.m. we will have a meal, Bible study, discussion and revelation. Don't dry up on it until you do. The Baptist Center, 829 W. Ipman, 841-801. 6-10
SERVICES OFFERED
MONEY, WEALTH, CAN BE YOURS IF YOU FOLLOW A PROVEN PLAN. SEND LARGE SASE FOR DETAILS ATRONAL ATWATER. 99 MORGAN ST. APT. 12, STAFFORD CT. 00055. 6-21
Put your best foot forward with a professionally trained instructor and print it for you. Call Encore 842-3500, Jenn & Mike at (842) 3500-7991.
Photoscreening
For 50" we can screen photographs so they can be printed or copied.
Encore Copy Corps 25th & Iowa 842-2001
Schneider Wine & Keg Shop—The finest selection of wines in Lawrence—largest supplier of strong kegs 161W, R24, 843-3212.
WRITING/PSYCHO-DYNAMICS will find you
natural expression-editing, tutoring, tutei-
rary research, science writing, Graphoanalyst Visual
Clark: 842-8240
KU Freshman woman would like to live with a sim-
person, a working couple or an elderly person.
She would like to be called by phone and she
will call收集 by 410-253-3486 or write: Rosemant
Hernandes. 310 Charleston, Independence, Md.
Have your own personalized bumper ticket? Deluxe
any. Message $3.00, K. Gill, 521 Geranium,
Place, Orlando, California 98218
7/11
TYPING
Experienced typist will type term papers, thesis, dis-
sentations, books, etc. Have IBM self-corre-
lassification II. Call Berry M 42749 anytime or M 4271-11.
800-553-8274
Shakespeare could write; Elvis could wiggle; my talent, typing. Call 842-6043 after 5:00 and weekends.
7/12
It's a Fact, Fast, Affordable, Clean, Typing 843-5820
TIP TOP TYPING - Experienced Typists - IBM Co-
creating Selectic II, Royal Correcting SE3000C1C
943-6575
Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms,
graphics, editing, self-correcting Selective Call
Ellen 841-2172.
Experienced typist. Tern papers, thesis, all macaqueanus. IBM Correcting Selector. Eltie Pica, and will correct spelling. Phone 843-654 Mr Wright.
TYPING PLUS, Thess. dissertations, papers, books, articles on linguistics.
position, grammatica, spelling, etc. English tutor; notes,
position, grammar, spelling, etc. English tutor; notes
AFPDONABLE QUALITY for all your typing needs
themes, dissensions, charts, maps, maili-
nice. Call Judy 842-7945 after 6:00 pm.
Professional, accurate and fast typing. Dissertation, Theses, term papers, etc. Call Allison, 942-7190; after 5:00. 7-29
For PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myra. $41-400.
Overtight Express-Editing-Typing. IBM Selectric
Victor Clark. 843-8240. 7-28
Have Selective, will type. Professional, fast, at-
fraid. Bette, 842-6697 Evening and weekend.
Experienced typist—thesis, dissertations, term papers, misc. IBM correcting selectic. Barb, after 5 p.m. 840-2310 tr
Students: I will take care of all your needing needs.
I am fast and very reasonable. Please call April
during the day at 843-0101; evenings and weekends:
843-0944.
WANTED
Roommate. Wanted for summer. New 4-BR house near Alamagua. Washer/dryer, AU $150 + 1/2 utility. 784-3694
Housemate. Wanted. 3 BR-$85.33/month + 1/2
utilities. Fireplace, seepered porch. Close to campus
and downtown. Call 642-6368 after b.
Roommate wanted for June & July. Trailridge
townhouse, all kitchen app., patio, tennis courts,
swimming pool, call 841-6866 6-10
Roommate needed for 3 BR house for summer and fall. Available immediately $65/mo + 1/3 utilities 814-5461 6-14
Roommate wanted. Unfurnished house close to cam
garage. Garage + hassement shop. Prefer grad. student
or working person. Phi, ell. 843-2822. 62-1
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.
Classified Heading:
Write Ad Here: ___
Classified Display:
1 col. x 1 inch—$4.00
| | 1 time | 2 times | 3 times | 4 times | 5 times |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 15 words or less | $2.25 | $2.50 | $2.75 | $3.00 | $3.25 |
| Non-words | .02 | .03 | .04 | .05 | .06 |
.
Page 10 University Daily Kansan, June 10, 1982
Air
From page one
Dewey Allaire, associate director of business management of Facilities Operations, said that the project was in compliance with regulatory requirements.
"That's compared to $260,000 in January," he said.
Alaire said that over the past six years, the natural gas price rose nearly 450 percent. Porter said that 12 years ago the average monthly cost of natural gas was $27,000.
"Now it costs us nearly $15,000 a month," he said. "That's stazering."
University officials had not seen the drastic shortfall coming.
"There was no way for us to anticipate such a
executive Hogan, associate executive
vice chairperson."
However, since the budget was approved by the Legislature last year, two cost increases
To make up the nearly $100,000 deficit, Chancellor Gene A. Budig, Hogan, Robert Cobb, executive vice chancellor and the University directors began deciding which buildings would be air conditioned and which would not. Those without it must wait until July 1 for relief.
amounting to a 32 percent increase overall, created a deficit in the utility fund.
Hogan said that his office had received complaints from University units, and he, in cooperation with Facilities Operations, had responded as quickly as possible.
Decisions to install room air conditioners or to turn the central air back on were made by Cobb, Hogan and Tom Anderson, director of Facilities Operations. Buildings that housed research projects requiring cool and constant temperatures, or units such as the science labs, museums, the
Porter said some room air conditioners were installed in rooms that were without ventilation at all. Although some employees, like those in Watson, were using fans to keep cool, he said offices were not supplied fans by the University. Porter said rumors that fans would be conti-
Computer Center and the libraries, were provided air conditioning.
"We've had no problems with fans," he said. "I haven't seen any documents preventing the use of fans. Obviously there is an energy usage, but certainly not as much as an air conditioner would use.
Because the University faces more than just a temporary need to conserve on its utility bills, a task force has been established by Hogan to study the future energy needs of the University.
study the future energy needs of the UN. Energy.
We did a lot of energy-conserving things.
much as we're doing now, during the oil embargo of the seventies. "Porter said." It's a 'vicious' story.
Porter said some of the larger buildings were cooled with steam powered generators that have to be working to maintain other physical operations. Buildings such as Wescow and Haworth halls have air conditioning by virtue of their location and connection to a major generator.
Some units, originally on the "no air conditioning" list, now have cooler environments, though they are not air conditioned.
Carruth-O'Leary Hall had its air conditioning turned back on because the electrical bill was paid by student fees instead of state appropriated money. It also allowed students to leave windows could not be opened. Large buildings, such a Murphy Hall and Watson Library, have a high, 80 degree setting.
Lebanon
Syria admitted losing 14 planes and said Israel lost 10 planes, but Israel denied any losses.
Israel said 32 soldiers had been killed and 144 wounded in the offensive.
The FLO said 8,000 people had been wounded by the Israelis during the invasion, but gave no other casualty figure. It said Israel lost 80 kills, five warplanes and four helicopters.
Although both sides indicated they want a full-scale war, Syria reportedly rushed 10,000 reinforcements to Lebanon—said to have been sent by units in Beirut—to bolster its 20,000-man force.
Israel, which is estimated to have at least 25,000 men in Lebanon, publicly called up reserve units to beef up defenses on the occupied Syrian Golan Heights.
--announces
A MAN BAKING PANINI
FREE
The Grinder Man
FREE large drink and 50* off any Maxi sandwich Limit 1 per coupon
27th & Iowa, Lawrence 842-2480
Offer Expires June 14, 1982
--announces
Time-Out
The
Softball Pitchers Special
$1.75 pitchers for
everyone in uniform
PLUS .40° draws
Hours
11-12 pm Daily Time-Out
The Place to Party!
FREE
2408 Iowa
842-9533
Smoking Cessation Course for KU Students
Eight-2 hour sessions will feature the materials and exercises of the Breathe Easy Smoking Clinics normally charging $195.00 for tuition.
Time: 3:30 to 5:30 p.m.
Beginning Today
Place: Regionalist Room
KU Student Union
Co-sponsored by the KU Drug Information Group and the Drug Abuse Council of the Douglas County Citizens Committee on Alcoholism
J. HOOD BOOKSELLER QUALITY USED BOOKS
Hardcover
Paperback (1/2 Price)
Magazines, Records, Music
Prints
Search Service for Out-of-Print Books
Tues-Sat: 11am-6pm Sunday: 1pm-6pm Monday
GAMMONS
SNOWW
1401 MASS. 841-4644
15c Draws 75c Bar Drinks (till 10:30)
TONIGHT
(10:30 till close)
50c Draws $1.25 Bar Drinks
Rent it. Call the Kansan. Call 864-4358.
P. S. Don't forget Gammon's regular Friday and Saturday night happy hours. 75c Draws and $1.25 Bar Drinks - 11 to 12 p.m.
Leaving Town?
At airline counter prices no extra service charge
Airline Tickets
ices
ge
Make your travel arrangements on campus
See Maupintour Travel Service for:
- The lowest airfares - Complete travel arrangements
- Eurail and Japan Rail Passes
- Car rental — Hotel confirmations
KU Union 900 Massachusetts
- Student semester break holidays
749-0700
travel service
Maupintour
- Travel Insurance
Fast Delivery
LUNCHEON SPECIAL
KINGSIZE Single Topping
Plus 32 oz. Pepsi
Delivered For $7.25
7" Pizza, Salad and Soft Drink
$2.95
PIZZA Shoppe
6th Kasold Westridge Shopping Center
842-0660
VISIT THE
JAYBOWL
Cool-Comfortable
TOMMY HAWKINS
Bowling, Billiards Video Games
Mini-Summer Bowling League Wednesday Nites 6:30 P.M. June 16 - July 30 (Seven Nights) Sign up at the Jaybowl or call 864-3545 Summer hours—10 a.m. til 5 p.m. weekdays except Wednesday. Wednesdays open til 9 p.m.
KU
Jay Bowl
KANSAS UNION
BOWLING
3 Ways to Save at the JAYHAWN
SUMMER SAVINGS
5%
Jayhawk Bookstore
1420 Crescent Rd. Lawrence, Ks. 66044
block west of the fountain
Exp. 6-14-82
GIVE % OFF
3 Ways to Save at the JAYHAWK Bookstore
SUMMER SAVINGS
5% TEXTS
Jayhawk
Bookstore
1420 Crescent Rd. Lawrence, Ks. 66044
block west of the fountain
Exp. 6-14-82
5% OFF
top of Naismith Hill
10% JAYHAWK BOOKSTORE
KU
ALL SUPPLIES
Exp.
7-31-82
10% SAVINGS
20% OFF 1 ROLL OF FILM
When You Leave a Roll to Be Developed
12 Exp. $2.99
20 Exp. $4.49
24 Exp. $5.24
36 Exp. $7.49
Exp.
8-15-82
Jayhawk
Bookstore
1420 Crescent Rd. Lawrence, Ks. 66044 • 843-3826
NEW
KODAK DISC PROCESSING
20% SAVINGS
top of Naismith Hill
10%
JAYHAWK BOOKSTORE
KU
Excluding Sale Items and Texts
ALL SUPPLIES
Exp.
7-31-82
10
TEN % SAVINGS
10
NEW
KODAK
DISC
PROCESSING
$4.49
KANSAN
Monday, June 14, 1982 Vol.92, No.147 USPS 650-640
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
Photo by Susan Page
NUCLEAR MADNESS WHO WILL SAVE THE CHILDREN?
PEACE RALLY
About 200 pronounces of nuclear disarmament march down Massachusetts Street on Saturday morning before gathering for a peace rally in South Park.
200 join demonstration
Marchers support disarmament, peace
By STACEY LANE Staff Reporter
A girl in a sandwich board stepped to the rhythm of the drums and headed east on Seventh Street with about 200 other supporters of nuclear disarmament.
"Stop The Arms Race, Not The Human Race," her board read.
The Saturday morning march was in recognition of the United Nations Special Session on Disarmament II, which began in New York last Monday.
The parade stretched for two blocks as it moved down Massachusetts Street. People held sign that read, "Arms Should Be For Hugging," and "Peace, Back By Popular Demand." A mult-colored cloud of balloons lobbed over their heads.
PEOPLE IN THE DOWNTown shops waved at the smiling marchers, and children on the sidewalks danced to the beat of the percussion band.
The stream of marchers was on its way to the gazeebo in South Park where the Brown Rice Cow People led a sing-along and two speakers delivered speeches to the crowd.
"This is only a tiny step in a long, long walk."
John O'Brien's associate professor of geology and sociologist at the University of Utah.
"We've got to stop them, because they're going to kill us, they're going to kill our children," he said of nuclear arms.
Harry Schaffer, KU professor of economics and Soviet and East European studies, asked, "What kind of total insanity is it when we are told that the cost of nuclear weapons up more and more and more nuclear weapons?"
"THIS CAN'T BE the only way this world can live! It is total nonsense," he said.
The march was sponsored by the Daughters of the Earth and the Lawrence Coalition for Peace and Justice, which also co-sponsored Ground Zero Week last April.
Tom and Anne Moore, founding members of the coalition, were not at the Lawrence march on Saturday. Instead, they joined about 700,000 disarmament supporters in New York City.
usion misrepresented in a news report that New York was the largest nuclear arms protest in the nation's war.
"It was enormously successful," Bettina Corke, a spokeswoman for the group that organized the huge New York rally, said yesterday.
"We now have the strength to consolidate the issue nationally and internationally."
Shontz and State Rep. Betty Jo Charlton, D-Lawrence, were a part of the gamut of marchers in Lawrence.
THE NEW YORK march included people from all walks of life, as did the Lawrence demonstration. Children, parents and teachers marched together in protest of nuclear arms. City Commissioner Nancy Ginsberg
The Coalition for Peace and Justice also sponsors a silent vigil on the first Sunday of each month at 12:30 p.m. in front of the Douglass Center, where it will hold a meditation and praer for nuclear disarmament.
"It the vignet) is a kind of thing it's hard to say no to. "Allan Hannon, a member of the coalition," said. "It's a about peace as opposed to war, life as opposed to death. It's hard to be in favor of murder."
"I'm a lot more hopeful now than I was a year ago," Hanson said. "It's stuff like this, the grassroots movement, that is changing minds in Washington."
MANY OF THE marchers were purple armbands the insignia of those opposed to nuclear weapons. The trees lined the堤坝 with black branches, and their decorated with strins of purple cloth for the demonstration.
Hanson said he thought that the most concrete thing a citizen could do to spur nuclear disarmament was to petition, write or talk to his representatives and senators.
An opinion poll concerning nuclear disarmament is scheduled to appear on the Douglas Institute's website.
County baltimore in November.
"The people are going to speak through the ballot," Hanson said. "That's going to be a beautiful thing."
KU pay increases sought by Regents
By CANDICE SACKUVICH
Staff Reporter
After hearing budget requests from KU officials at a special meeting Thursday, the Kansas Board of Regents announced Friday that it would request salary and operating expense increases from the Kansas Legislature for fiscal year 1984.
The Regents settled on the following salary increases;
- 10 percent for unclassified employees, who are mostly faculty members, including a 9 percent salary increase and a 1 percent increase for the faculty retirement fund.
- 7 percent for classified employees in the form of a recommendation because their salaries are set by state guidelines and are not a part of the Bergens budget.
$ 9 \textbf{ pccent for student employees}
$ 9 \textbf{pccent for student employees}
The text is a list of numbers and special characters.
No additional context or instructions are needed.
CHANCELLOR GENE A. BUDIG said KU's fiscal 1884 request for program improvements was $1 million less than the request submitted a year ago.
He said that two-thirds of the requests for additional resources on the Lawrence campus were denied.
"It is a pared and reasonable proposal that we believemts strong support." Budig said.
Keith Nitcher, director of business and fiscal affairs, said that one factor in the lower budget request was a drop in enrollment of 476 students between the fall of 1980 and the fall of 1981.
"Because our credit-hour production was less,
we can give up $77,478 as an enrollment
adjustment."
THE NUMBER OF students enrolled and the number of credit hours generated help determine the amount of money KU will receive each year from the Legislature.
In the past, the Legislature has trimmed back the faculty salary increases proposed by the Regents. This year, however, the Regents are considering a reduction in members, than last year in hopes of avoiding a cut.
James Pickert, Regent from Emporia, said, "Last year we felt 13 percent was justified, and we did our best to defend it. We ended up with an approval of 7.5 percent from the Legislature."
See Budget page 8
Weather
AAAAAAHHH
today will be partly cloudy, with a 20 percent chance of thunderstorms, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka. The high will be in the low 80s, with winds from the south to southeast between 15 and 25 mph.
mph.
Tonight, it will be cloudy with a 60 percent chance of thunderstorms, with a low in the mid-60s.
1 tomorrow will be cloudy and cooler, with the temperature ranging between the high 70s
The extended forecast for the rest of the week is partly cloudy and pleasant, with the highs in the mid-70s and the lows in the mid-to- upper 50s.
By KATE DUFFY
Rains damage East Lawrence
Staff Reporter
Most days Garfield Street is very quiet.
Located between 13th and 14th streets in East Lawrence, it is a friendly block of small frame houses, neighbors who chat frequently across the street and flower garden and a dog named Lamar Gene.
But don't visit there when it has been raining
for very long. Chances are Garrard Street will look more like a lake than a residential block.
Residents say that's just what happened over the Memorial Day weekend when once again they watched their street become a river and their vards, small lakes.
Mary Holl, 817 Garfield, has lived on the block about one year long, enough for her house to be vacant. She's been married since 1954.
The water rose so high her neighbor, Rose Jimenez, 82 Bertalfard, almost lost her small dog, Lamar Gane, when railroad ties supporting a bridge collapsed, the strong currents, trapping him under the shed.
her neighbors' homes were flooded twice that weekend—Friday and Sunday.
"About 15 of us sat up until 3 Saturday morning, watching the water rise and waiting to see if we would have to move more of our possessions out," Boll said.
SHE AND HER neighbors described an eerie
mood with flood waters during
watershed flashages of light in trees.
"It was so dark that it was the only way we could see." she said.
"The current moved so quickly," Bolt said, "it popped the manhole cover off the sewer."
FLOODING IS NOT NEW to Garfield Street residents, nor for the neighboring E13th St.
Cat food corporation and humane societies work together in assisting feline friends
See Weather page 8
By CAROL MILLS Staff Reporter
Tori and her kittens lived in an abandoned car until the property owner decided to clean up the area. so he took Tori and her litter to the Lawrence Humane Society.
Now Tori walks, along with about 40 other cats, for someone to adopt her.
The 9-Lives Cat Food Corp is trying to help, too. In conjunction with humane societies throughout the nation 9-Lives is using its cat food products to promote the adoption of cats and kittens.
IF SOMEONE should adopt a book like Tortie, Morris will provide them a book on cat care, an adoption certificate and coupons for free cat
Fortunately for her, June is Adopt-a-Cat Month, and the staff of the Humane Society, 1805 E. 1910 St., is trying even harder to find a home for Torti.
The National Humane Society declared June to be Adopt-a-Cat Month because this is the peak breeding season for cats, Linda Decielles, manager of the Lawrence Humane
"Not only are we trying to find homes for all our cats and kittens, but we are trying to educate the public to have their cats neutered," she said.
dogs
WE HAVE A regular home-finder report on radio station KLWN, and we do get quite a few calls about the animals we tell about on the air," she said.
involved in the investigation, and she said that, as of Friday, the Society was keeping about 35 kittens and about 50 cats.
The home-finders report is broadcast daily at 1.30 p.m. The broadcast is strictly a public service and not restricted to residents.
and the temperament of the animals housed at the shelter are announced.
The broadcast tells listeners whether the animal being advertised is good with children, whether it is neighbored, the bread of food, or a small yard. A new yard is needed to keep it from straying.
But along with the announcements and the organization's efforts to educate the public the Humane Society also takes responsibility for stray and unwanted animals in Lawrence.
Monday Morning
The treasurer of the Society, Nancy Golden
DONATIONS MAY COME in the form of voluntary donations from people who have not adopted a cat or dog, but who simply want to help the Society.
Patterson, the annual cost of maintaining the shelter was about $92,000 a year.
"We receive about half of that from donations and half from the city," she said. The city contributes budget support because the shelter also acts as the city dog pound.
Or, if someone should adopt a cat, the new owner donates $25 for neutering the cat and $7.50 for shots, which all cats get when they are adopted. Decelles said she hoped that the new owner would give an additional donation to help fund the shelter.
Maintaining a cage and feeding a dog or a cat costs the Society about $5 a day, Decealles said. "So we can't keep them here indefinitely," she said.
"We keep the cats at least three working days," she said. "We may keep them longer. It really depends upon the animals' behavior and temperament.
'Most aren't here more than a month. We
either find them a home or have them put to sleep."
Most of the animals brought in are kittens, particularly in the spring months, she said.
"That's another thing we want to educate the public about," she said. "Not only should owners have their pets neutered, but they should also be aware of their responsibility for the animal's life span."
Some animals had homes before being brought to the shelter. But people get tired of keeping them, Decelles said, or the owners can't afford them anymore.
PREVENTING NEGLECT, as well as cruelty, to these pets, is the responsibility of the Society. Volunteers for the Society have volunteered to clean up areas headed by the Society's president, Chris Long.
On the average, the shelter houses 150 to 200 dogs a month, and about 75 to 150 cats. The Society finds homes for about 21 percent of the dogs and about 27 percent of the cats. Most of the dogs are reclaimed by the owners, but about 7 percent of the cats are reclaimed.
"People who lose their cats don't think of checking with us until a month passes," Decelles said. "It's hard to identify a cat, much more so than a dog."
"We put to sleep about 47 percent of the dogs and about 68 percent of the cats," Decelles said. The reason for the higher percentage of cats is that so many of the cats brought to the shelter are wild and can't be managed by the owner.
"PERHAPS THE LITTER was born somewhere outside of the owner's home and they didn't know about them," she said. "So they grew on wild."
Seventy percent to 80 percent of animals in shelters across the nation are put to sleep, Decelles said. "Our record is much better here," she said.
BUTTON CATS
Photo by Susan Page
Homeless Tori and her kitewalk at the Lawrence Humane Society for someone to adopt them. June is Adopt-a-Cat Month at the Humane Society.
]
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, June 14, 1982
News Briefs From United Press International
British attempting to retake Falklands capital of Stanley
PORT STANLEY, Falkland Islands—British troops atop three commanding outposts traded furious mortar and artillery barrieges with besieged Argentine soldiers yesterday and pressed their drive to retake the Falkland Islands capital of Stanley and end the 10-week war.
As many as 4,500 paratroopers and marines, backed by naval and air bombardment, overran Argentine footbolds in a surprise attack Saturday night. Britain said its troops had advanced five miles in the attack, but Argentina claimed it lost only half that territory.
Neither side released casualty reports from the attack, but Nott for the first time reported that 59 men were killed and 74 wounded Tuesday in Argentine jet raids on British forces that landed at Fitzroy Bay. The casualties brought Britain's war dead to 201.
He said the delay in releasing the casualties helped achieve a surprise in Saturday's mails and kept Argentina from assessing "exactly when, how or why" the casualties occurred.
Defense sources said troops were locked in combat under clear skies, with Argentina $7,000-mile garrison furiously battling to hold on to their last fortress.
They described the position of defending Argentine troops, surrounded on three sides by British guns and with their backs to the sea, as "frankly
U.S. ally replaces dead Saudi king
RIYADH, Saudi Arabia—Saudia Arabia's King Khaled Ibn Abdul Aiz died yesterday after suffering a heart attack and was succeeded by his half brother, Crown Prince Fahd, the power behind the throne for many years and one of the United States' closest allies in the Arab world.
Less than seven hours after he died in the mountain resort town of Tafil, the 69-year-old Khān was buried in the royal cemetery after prayers in his home.
Tens of thousands attended the simple ceremony, which lacked all the trappings of the Saudi's vast oil wealth.
The United Arab emirates and Qatar led in way in declaring 40 days of mourning, with all government offices closed for three days. Iraq announced a three-day mourning period, and Egypt declared a two-week period of mourning.
Immediately after Khaled's death, the royal family went through the formality of declaring Fahd, 60, king, thereby ensuring the continuation of the moderate, pro-Western policies of Khaled, who ruled Saudi Arabia for seven years as the nation became the main foreign supplier of U.S. oil.
Pope to visit if Poles stop rioting
WARSAW, Poland—Sporadic clashes in at least three cities marred the generally peaceful observance of six months of martial law yesterday, and Polish military authorities warned that an August visit by Pope John Paul II would depend on calm in the country.
The official news agency PAP said security forces had quickly dispersed "extremists of solidarity" attempting to instigate demonstrations and arrest them.
An eyewitness in Gdansk said only a few dozen people were involved and "there were no real excesses."
In a communique read on national television, PAP said the military authorities would welcome a visit by the pontiff, who has accepted an invitation by the Polish church to visit his homeland in August for the 600th anniversary celebration of the Black Madonna icon.
However, the communique added, "the visit should be preceded by thorough organizational arrangements for which adequate socio-political support is required."
Western observers viewed the communique as a form of ultimatum.
"They are telling the people, 'Be good, and if you are good then maybe we will let you have the Pope,' " said one Western analyst.
Police mar drug users' float trips
ST. LOUIS—Several area canoeists say their float trips on the Eleven Point River in southern Missouri were be spoiled by sheriff's deputies hiding in bushes and using binoculars to try to catch drug users, a St. Louis newspaper reported.
Virgil Mullaney, Oregon County chief deputy, said the patrols were necessary. The St. Louis Post-Dispatch reported in its Sunday editions.
"If we didn't patrol down there, within a month the river wouldn't be fit to use," said Mullatney. In most cases, he said, depuises the canoeists smoking marijuana and the canoes usually are searched with their permission.
But some people said their canoes were searched without permission, the Post-Dispatch said.
Drug arrests increased after Junior Henry became sheriff in January 1081. There were five drug arrests along the river in 1860. Last month there
The Post-Dispatch said most canoeists arrested on drug charges chose to pay fines of up to $150 for possession of an ounce of marijuana rather than going to jail.
Jerry Richards, owner of a cane rental in Alton, Mo., said the drug crackdown was meant to raise revenue. Maloney had no estimate on the cost of the crackdown and did not provide details.
Gas prices up 6.4 cents a gallon
LOS ANGELES—The price of gasoline has climbed 6.4 cents a gallon nationwide during the past three weeks, according to a national survey of all cars on U.S. roads. The average gasoline price was $2.15 per gallon.
The average price, which includes federal and state taxes, was 127.6 cents per gallon yesterday. The average wholesale price is without discount.
Regular leaded gasoline at self-service pumps was 119.70 on an average, Lundberg said, up 7.6 cents since the last survey May 21.
Unleaded regular was at 126.15, up 8.6 cents over the three-week period.
Regular leaded and unleaded fuels make up more than 80 percent of all汽油。
Lundberg said that the lowest price in more than two years occurred in mid-April when average prices were at 117.83 cents a gallon, and that the retail price increase since then was 9.8 cents a gallon. At wholesale it has gone up 10.93 cents from a low of 92.61 cents.
The all-time high price at the pump was 137.82 cents in March 1981. At wholesale it was 113.52 cents.
Poll says Reagonomics is feared
For the first time since Reagan became president, those who strongly oppose him outnumber those who strongly support him. However, 48 percent of those polled generally approve of him, compared with 45 percent who generally disapprove.
WASHINGTON—Americans fear that President Reagan's economic policies will hurt their personal finances, according to a poll released yesterday by Newsweek stating that nationwide support for the administration is sliding.
More than half- 52 percent of those polled said they feared their personal finances would be worse off because of Hegan's supply-and-economic
Correction
In the June 10 issue of the Kanan, John Scarft is mistakenly listed as the author of a column on page 4 titled "Titred often sensible experiments."
Israel attacks Beirut airport
By United Press International
The Israelis took control of the Khalide junction on the coast just south of the airport, giving them command of the main coastal highway to Beirut from the south, Lebanese military officials said.
Israeli troops surrounded the last Palestinian stronghold outside Beirut today, seizing Beirut International Airport in the northern highways out of the Lebanese capital.
A force of Palestinian guerrillas, the last line of resistance outside Beirut, was trapped in the south Beirut suburbs by an Israeli drone. The port of the city—a distance of just 4 miles.
The taking of Baada, which sits astride the Berul-Damascus road—the other strategic highway—earlier cut off the Palestine Liberation Organization
The Israeli advances left all of Moselm West Beirut open to Israeli artillery located on the surrounding hills and effectively choked off any escape route by land for the PLO guerrillas or their leaders.
headquarters in West Beirut from its link with Syria.
A Lebanese army officer confirmed the Israeli takeover of two runways at the Berat airport, which is closed. The Israeli army also Lebanese troops stationed at the airport.
PLO leader Yassar Arafat was
bounded with the surrounded guerrilla
(GRASS)
Defense Minister Ariel Sharon, who personally led the attack Sunday on Baabda, visited the eastern half of Beirut overnight and met with Lebanese Christian representatives, Israel radio said today.
The Christian phalangists, who control the eastern sector of the city, joined Sharon's forces in the drive to seize
FOR A TASTE TREAT LUNCH—DINNER—SNACK
THE WERE NO fighting reported between Israel and Syria, and their separate cease-fire appeared to be holding. The PLO protested Israel's "flagrant" violation of their cease-fire in a message to the United Nations.
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The their fragile cease-fire broken after 12 hours, Israeli and PLO ground forces batted at a guerrilla-held compound near Beirut and the heights overlooking Beirut.
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Baabda, a suburb 4 miles from the city that houses Lebanon's presidential palace.
Egyptian Minister of State Sthutos Ghali sent a message to Israel Foreign Minister Yilzak Shamir that the Israeli foreign ministry said contained a plea from the terrorists (Palestinians) to stop the fire on the front."
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Shamir said, "It wasn't us who opened fire after the declaration of a ceasefire," and "If the terrorists will stop firing, we will also cease the fire."
Shamir, leaving on a diplomatic mission to France, said Israel wants Palestinian guerrillas barred from returning to any of the bases destroyed in the war there beyond the 25-mile safety zone that was a stated goal of the invasion.
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Israel closed in on the Palestinians in Beirut following air attacks on the airport and part of West Beirut. Sharon's troops move in an arc from below the airport toward Baada, occupying several villages and the way.
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The Christian line, running inland and curving downwards from sea in East Beirut, completed the circle around the Moslem western sector.
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RENCE TOYOTA MAZDA LAWRENCE TOYOTA MAZDA LAWRENCE TOYOTA MAZDA
Page 3
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Students face difficult search for summer jobs
inians in on the Beirut. g from toward edges on
inland sea in circlector.
By CAROL MILLS
Staff Reporter
Students in Lawrence, whether looking for a permanent job or simply for summer employment, are finding work as a co-ordinator of student employment said Friday.
"Basically, the same number of jobs exist this summer as last summer," said Pam Houston at the KU Financial Aid office. "But students are realizing that jobs are hard to come by, so they are holding on to the jobs they've had."
"Normally, we have 1,200 to 1,300 people in construction jobs," he said. "Now we have only about 700."
THOUGH THE JOB CRUNCH in Lawrence may be a reflection of the national unemployment problem, Ed Mills, manager of the Lawrence Job Service Center sees the local squeeze as typical of Lawrence.
Manufacturing layoffs have affected the local job market. In April, manufacturers in the area employed nearly 4,700 people. In April of 1882 only 4,500 were employed by local industry.
SEASONAL AND INDUSTRIAL job markets are affecting the potential openings for students, too. High interest rates have caused a decrease in construction, and fewer people can afford to buy new homes or borrow money to have repair work done on their old homes, Mills said.
"Things aren't much different than they were a year ago," Mills said. "When enrollment goes down, as it always does in the summer, there is less retail and wholesale trade. Consequently, the employers just aren't hiring as many people as they do during the regular school year."
"Apparently the kids aren't finding jobs at home, so they're staying in Lawrence and going to school, hoping to find some work," he said. "That adds competition to an already tight market."
Mills said he thought national companies were affecting the local job market.
SUPER SAVINGS
"These people who have been laid off, or are out of work, need jobs, too." Mills said. "So the students are having to fight even harder for jobs."
"I see definite results of the national economy in the layoffs that have been occurring in Lawrence," Mills said. "This has caused employers not to take on students in the summer as they have in the past."
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VISIONS
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What is left for students, Houston
tourist, recreational or
temporary jobs?
HE SAID THAT when the local unemployment rate was more than 3 percent in the spring, he could almost guarantee that students would have trouble trying to find summer jobs.
for the month of June
VISIONS
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841-721
Mon.-Sat.
10 a.m.-5 p.m.
"We have some farm-related jobs that are bout 10 to 20 hours a week," Mills said. "But the work is being delayed because of the wet fields."
Mills said his office received about 20
nurses and his staff, and a third of the
applicants are students.
temporary job
Houston said students should realize that they must take clerical, custodial or housekeeping positions, and they
Mills said he foresaw little change in local employment over the next 90
"I had a housekeeping job posted on our job board," Houston said. "So many students had called the worm who did this, she asked that the ad be taken down."
must be diligent in the process of job hunting.
SPOT JOBS ARE all Mills is predicting for students for 'the rest of the summer, too. Even the number of teachers who have been reduced because of wet weather.
"Both the East and West Coasts are the first to be hit by major economic changes," Mills said. "The Midwest is likely to be affected and the last to recover."
"She felt so bad that it was such a poor job and so many students were applying for it."
SOME STUDENTS aren't having trouble finding jobs.
"It depends on how serious they are about finding work," Houston said. "If they have a good attitude and are persistent in the search, they will find something, though it may not be what they want."
WITH THE REDUCTION of construction work, local layoffs in industry poor summer for farming, students from school, from adults without full-time jobs.
"We are just now feeling the effects of the employment problems that have affected the metropolitan areas over the last two years. If the nation does recover, it will still be a white before we see the change locally."
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The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Summer Concert Series Presents
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan, June 14, 1982
Opinion
A pox upon their houses
The world is at war. And as the battles rage, it's hard to find any heroes.
In the Falklands, a decayed colonial power struggles against a brutal fascist regime to regain a part of her lost empire, in an inane war fought primarily to bolster sagging governments back in Britain and Argentina.
In Lebanon, Israel has bombed civilians and invaded a neighbor (again) under the filmsim of pretexts. The Israelis are faced with foes who also have a fondness for bombing civilians and whose continued refusal to recognize Israel's existence has blocked any serious peace settlement.
And in Central America, leftists and rightists are still stabbing, shooting and bombing each other, mostly hitting innocent bystanders in the process.
Nearby, the Islamic brotherhood gases at itself as Iraq and Iran have at each other with a zeal usually reserved for helpless hostages.
**KEY 13** ITS possible to make clear sense out of this seemingly absurd scenario. For behind all these conflicts lies a dark influence even more pervasive than the current rash of ill will among men.
This force emanates from the United States and the Soviet Union. Recklessly pursuing their own interests throughout the globe, the two superpowers have created an unstable world order of opposing alliances and rickety regimes. Then they have set a fire to this flimsy structure by arming everyone.
Of the four main areas of conflict in Latin America and the Middle East, the United States has supplied arms or military assistance to three-fourths of the sides involved. And those we haven't helped (and some we have) have gotten aid from the Soviets.
OUR EAGERNESS to sell our nation's arms is almost as great as our eagerness to deploy the carnage we have caused. How ironic it is to hear our leaders lament over the damage caused to our Latin American and Mid-East policies, when those policies were the cause of their own destruction.
Perhaps we will learn a lesson from all this bloodletting and pursue a more just world order with a reduced arms level, instead of the military and economic hegemony we now seek. But that is unlikely
So, a pox upon our house, too.
The Djembe 82
Letters to the Editor Art tribute
To the Editor:
The black art creation in Marvin Grove has been the bolt of irreverent cloaks hereabouts.
This subline expression (The Rock Island Memorial) was prophetically erected some while ago, and, I hear, will soon bear on a brass plaque the legend, "RUPTURED RAILROAD."
Letters policy
The University Daily Kansan welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten, double-spaced and not exceed 500 words. They should include the writer's name, address and phone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, the letter should include the class and home town or faculty or staff position. The Kansan reserves the right to edit or reject letters.
Ira Budd
Electrician. Facilities Operation
The University Daily
KANSAN
USPS 650-440. Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Monday and Thursday during June and July except September, Sunday and holidays, second-class pupil payment at Lawrence, Kansas Subscriptions by mail are $5 for six months or $6 for a year in Douglas County and $8 for six months or $8 for a year in Klamath County. Mail to USPS Box 1097. Postmaster: Send changes to the university at the University Diana Kanaan, Flint Hall. The University of Kansas
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Reagan GO HOME!
DOWN WITH FASCISM
Europe
Doe Barton, '82
Women crippled by beauty standards
Guest Columnist
By WENDI WARNER Guest Columnist
Last Tuesday, after an especially stressful day, I laced up my Nikes for a run along the river. So I soon was gliding down the familiar gravel path soaking in the last rays of the sun. As the day's worries slowly slipped away, I felt alive as if the run was a celebration, a dance into the night.
WHEN I GOT to the first bend in the path, I heard breathing behind me and turned to see two male runners. They quickly closed the distance as us. As they passed me, one smiled.
I stopped abruptly and stood frozen, staring at their backs until they were two bobbing dots in the distance. Then I turned around and walked home. The evening had lost its splendor.
Some days I can let things like that pass; I want to run too much not to. But I'm never aware of a store or a catcall without feeling a rush of excitement, never take such actions as compliments.
Few people seem to understand my thoughts on this. I don't know whether I've grasped them enough myself to put them clearly into words. But I do know well how violated and handled I feel when a stranger feels free to voice his opinion on my body.
AS AN ATHLETE, I've always admired the human body. And some days I appreciate my sexuality so much I can't concentrate on anything else (despite the slow-dying myth of the low female sex drive). As a feminist, what I can't appreciate is society's rigid standards of what constitutes female beauty, for its attitude that constantly associates women's bodies with sex.
Perhaps it can be better explained by looking at the complaint often voiced against feminists: We don't appreciate, or want others to appreciate, physical beauty or sexuality.
Women by nature are not meant to be bone thin. Our bodies are inherently the softer, more rounded of the two sexes. Yet I can't count the number of women I know who torture their bodies trying to reach an "acceptable" weight, no matter what the cost. Anyone who has ever tried to lose weight knows what a thought-consuming process it is, especially once the body is reluctant to shed any more pounds. And when it comes time for them to another is tried. Too many women's lives are trivialized by unsuccessful and unnecessary diets.
It is not an overstatement to say that the physical standards of beauty expected of women are difficult to reach. They are never reached. Once, if ever, we are the right size, it's time to make sure that our breasts and thighs are firm, our legs are smooth-shaven, and our cheeks are rosy. We always have either too much or too little of something. Some day a woman might get it all right (she'll be the first), but it won't last, for she, like all the rest of us, will age.
AFTER EXPRESSING these ideas, I'm often countered with a statement like "Well, we have to deal with it."
But the male goal is not as difficult to reach as the female's. "Beautiful" men are thin; correspondingly, men's bodies, which burn calories quickly, are more easily made thin. Fat is unacceptable in society's definition of male obesity because nature have much less body fat than do women.
but the contrast goes beyond this. In our society, men are not admired primarily for their physical beauty, but for what they accomplish. Women are often noticed for their looks before anything else. I know of many women, some “beautiful,” some not, who have told of experiences similar to my run along the river. After years of being friends with the girls, it is any wonder so many of us women feel that there’s nothing to us but breasts and buttocks?
There is nothing wrong with admiring the physical beauty of women. I'm awed by it. But we are wrong to narrow our definitions of beauty in a way that cripples women, and to make them feel that physical beauty, or the lack of it, is what determines their worth.
I will always love and care for my body, even the parts that could never squeeze into our mold of physical beauty. But I will do so because it is the shelter for all that I really am—my talents and dreams, my constant though human attempts at compassion and caring. I will treasure my self, and love my family. My primary, part of myself and will use all of myself to express and nurture that sexuality with whomever I choose to love in that way. For me, such a life is brimming with beauty.
Treatment of elderly maligned
Social Security offers no real solution to elderly's problems
Did you kiss your grandmother when you left home today? Or did you leave that up to Uncle
If the government is taking care of Grandma for you, don't expect them to send the very best. Encouraged by monetary drought and a hot wind from the executive branch, financial affection has been offered.
Meanwhile, one of the nation's most valuable resources is at some dim, far-away rest home having a gay old time watching the debate on its threatened Social Security checks.
SHIRLEY DEITCHMAN, a 74-year-old widow, has been watching the debates, and she's worried that Social Security cost-of-living increases might soon be cut.
I can't live without Social Security," the retired New York saleswoman said in the May 24 time cover story on Social Security. Even with her check, Mrs. Deitchman didn't have enough money this year to attend a $3.50 Passover dinner, and her utilities are about to go up $10.
Although people like Mrs. Delichman are troubled about their checks, no one except economist Alan Greenspan knows if or when Social Security might be cut. The bipartisan commission that Greenspan leads must decide the fate of the 48-year-old government program now paying out $17,000 more in benefits every minute than it collects in taxes.
Unfortunately, proposing such solutions would be short-sighted. They would place the fate of both Social Security and a happy American society at risk in the hands of a bewildered, deficited government.
---
Social Security past 1983. The Greenspan commission might consider tapping general revenues, such as income tax, or slowing the inflation of Social Security benefits.
Two general classes of solutions might get
Such solutions also might fail in the long run
John Scarffe
when the baby boom generation starts to retire in 2010. By the early 21st century, the ratio of Social Security taxpayers to beneficiaries could drop as low as two to one.
THESE TWO groups of solutions are not only short-sighted, they are inadequate. Like so many other political solutions, they treat the symptoms rather than the disease. The real problem is not a bankrupt trust fund, but the often maligned treatment of the elderly.
Americans are infamous for their treatment of the aged because they have so effectively
managed to push retired folks into dusty coworkers, the increasing number of rest homes and retired retirees.
Even more distressing is the increasing number of elderly, female transients. Often called bag ladies because they carry paper shopping bags with handles, these transients wear strange clothes and wander the city without a home, a family or sufficient food.
To atone for this poor treatment, Social Security has been used increasingly to guilty ply the retired with favors. As a result, Social Security has become the primary source of income for most of the aged. Although originally intended only to ward off disbursement, about one-third of the retired body on Social Security for 90 years their income, and 15 percent have no other income at all.
This steady increase in benefits, however, has only added fuel to the conflagration, because it has allowed Americans to rationalize away their private duty to the elderly. After all, why should anyone take care of their retired parents if it looks like the government will do it for them?
Along with many other elderly people, these women are financial and physical outcasts from a society they loved. Worse than many primitive societies, women are walking and leaving the need to die aloof.
These rationalizations force the elderly to become even more financially independent. This
drives up the retired person's expenditures against creating the need for higher Social Security benefits.
Since poor treatment of the elderly creates such a cycle, there is only one effective, long-run solution. Americans must take matters into their own hands by taking the elderly physically and mentally to appointments with their Social Security to return to its intended level, while providing a few fringe benefits for society.
'Closer living quarters for the elderly are not only cheaper, they also put the younger members in contact with a source of wisdom and experience. They are aady missing from many young people's lives.'
THIS SOLUTION's biggest advantage is its reliability on American citizens rather than their budget-stalled Congress. For example, the elderly can be brought back into society's mainstream by providing living arrangements for them close to their younger relatives.
Instead of paying rest home prices that could be as high as $1,500 a month, relatives could provide a finished basement with an outside exit or find a nearby apartment. Such arrangements make health care easier and less expensive. Grandchildren can pick up extra expenses from their grandparents or, if the family can't be around, a full or part-time companion can be hired.
Even if the elderly must live in a nearby rest home or retirement village, contributing more finances and time to their lives is still important. More family contact with them can lift them from a purposeless existence of waiting from one tasteless meal to the other by keeping them in tune with those more concerned with life than death.
The government could help private citizens take the elderly back into their lives by encouraging and providing tax incentives. For example, income tax breaks could be awarded for those who make even small contributions to their pension or retirement. They would be increased in proportion to the amount given, with those who provide shelter for the elderly also receiving substantial breaks.
Despite these tax breaks, many folks will still want to scream, "i can't afford it!" Before saying this, however, imagine placing in a bank account the blood, sweat, tears and money it took for today's elderly to raise depression-era families.
Then open a savings account and encourage family members to contribute only a few dollars every month. Such a fund would give Ucms Club access to the need for light Social Security benefits.
Then, as you leave home every day, give your grandmother all your love with a few kind words.
University Daily Kansan, June 14, 1982
Page 5
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By NEAL McCHRISTY Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
Former Vice President Walter Mondale said Saturday that Reagan's economic policies were dividing the country.
"They're on their way to creating two Americas—One for the well-to-do and one for the rest of us," the sunburned
er
Walter Mondale
candidate for the 3rd District U.S.
House of Representatives seat and Jim
Slattery as a candidate for the 2nd
District includes Douglas County.
Mondale told the crowd of about 150 at the $23-a-plate reception at the Lawrence Holiday Inn Holidone.
The crowd had come to hear Mondale's endorsement of Bill Kostar as a
MONALESA SAID the Kemp-Roth bill would not help high interest rates and unemployment. The bill was passed in August 1801 and provided for tax cuts
"I take absolutely no responsibility for the Kemp-Roth bill." Monday said. "I opposed it when it was first proposed. As you know, many Republicans are shocked by it. I think, called to voodoo economics.
"Someone called it a riverboat gamble."
Mondale said he thought it was both of those things.
"It never made any sense to me how you could have the biggest deficits in the history of mankind without having real high interest rates," he said.
THE IDEA OF the bill, Monday said, was to cut taxes. Interest rates would decrease, business activity would increase, tax revenue would increase and a balanced budget would be achieved shortly.
"There is only one thing wrong—it's nuts." Mordaed said.
In a news conference earlier, Mondale had outlined what he said were the steps to curb the spread.
area—farmers are experiencing their Great Depression," Monday said.
"We now have the highest bankruptcy rate for small businesses since the Great Depression, and we have the highest unemployment rate since the Great Depression and we have the highest deficits in the history of our nation."
"Today, as a result, farmers in this country—and I come from a farm
Mondale said high interest rates were responsible for the plight of farmers
Normally, he said, interest rates ride 2 percent to 3 percent above the inflation rate, but interest rates rise below the inflation rate because credit dollars are being
The cuts in programs, Mondale said, have been mostly in those for the elderly, the poor, the unemployed and students.
absorbed by the federal government to pay the national debt.
"JUST THIS past week, they voted to sharply increase the cost to elderly Americans who are sick," he said.
"They are going to cut half a million additional young Americans off from their student assistance."
He referred to Lawrence as "one of the great educational centers of our country and the Midwest."
"Anybody who looks to the future of our nation and fails to see that, more than ever before, the educated mind is
indispensable to America . . . does not see the future clearly," Mondale said.
Mondale said that the tax cuts and accompanying program cuts had decreased high technology necessary for the defense of the United States. In addition, he said, "as you look around, you have this policy of distributing the costs and burdens on those who are least able to pay it."
"In 1981, as a result of this tax bill, Occidental Petroleum报税 $750 million in income, owed not a penny in federal income tax and got $125 million back in tax breaks as a result of the Harbor Leasing bill," Mondale said.
"Have we become a survival-of-the fittest society? Is there some kind of new social Darwinism that has seized our nation?" Mondale asked.
MONDALE SAID the public could have an effect on policy.
"For nearly 18 months, this administration refused to do anything about nuclear arms control until the public became aroused and made it clear to this administration that it demanded some sensible steps to restrain nuclear armaments, and now, at least, this administration has changed its tune and, at least, is talking about strategic arms," he said.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan, June 14, 1982
On the record
A 50-year-old rural Lawrence man reported missing Thursday was identified as the same man found murdered in southwestern Douglas County Friday, Dougherty County Attorney Mike Malone said yesterday.
Malone said police had a suspect in the case, but no formal charges have been filed. He would not say whether the suspect was in custody.
Dana Hitchain, Route 4, Lawrence,
was reported missing Thursday when
he did not show up for work at Rankin
Construction Contractors, Malone said.
Friday afternoon, police were led to a spot in southwestern Douglas County where a body, now known to be Hatechell's, was partially buried under a
An autopsy performed on Hatchlec Saturday revealed a gunshot wound to the back of the head and other head injuries. The cause of death is still unknown, Malone said.
BURGLARS STOLE close to $2,000 in stereo equipment from an apartment in building O on Regency Place sometime between May 17 and June 11, police
Burglarls entered through the window and removed the items, police said. No arrests have been made.
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Chances are Nixon and/or some of his close associates didn't do anything which hadn't been done by previous presidents. Other presidents recorded phone conversations and "private" conversations in the Dual Office without the knowledge of those being recorded; other presidents behaved in a questionable personal manner in the White House; other presidents had their unnamed helpers raising money which probably was never reported or accounted for; other presidents made secret reports; and on and on.
While discussing, in his Saturday column of June 5, Abilene as a possible location for the Richard M. Nixon Presidential Library, Dolph Simons Jr. reaches the following quasi-conclusion:
WAS RICHARD NIXON JUST ANOTHER MISBEHAVING
PRESIDENTIAL Cipher?
The only trouble is that Nicon was caught and lied about some of his activities. He left office in disarray.
In 1972 it was revealed that the Air Force and the Department of Defense had falsified reports in order to conceal the secret bombing of Cambodia in 1969 and early 1970. While the subsequent invasions of Cambodia (1970) and Los (1975) were at least open expressions of Mr. Nixon's off-promised "peace with honor," the earlier bombing raids were undertakings with neither a national precedent nor a legal foundation.
Public Briefing After completing its Watergate investigation, the House Judiciary Committee recommend three articles of impachment against Mr. Nixon, charging him with obstruction of justice in connection with the Watergate investigation; abuse of power through misuse of the Internal Revenue Service for political purposes; illegal wirewrapping, establishment of a private investigative unit that engaged in unlawful activity, and interference with the lawful activities of the FBI, the CIA, the Department of Justice and other government bodies; and failure to comply with subpoenas issued by the House Judiciary Committee.
As the ‘‘other president’’, each of whose alleged misconduct in office was comparable to Mr. Nixon’s, aren’t really named, we were left only with Mr. Nixon’s.
Even after the Committee to Re-elect the President's responsibility for the Watergate break-in was established, Mr. Nixon insisted he knew nothing about it. When Mr. Nixon's appointee as Watergate special prosecutor, Archibald Cox, continued attempting to obtain the tapes of some conversations secretly recorded in the President's office, Mr. Nixon dismissed him. Mr. Cox's replacement, William Ruchliellah, was soon discharged from the police station, and after questioning, he admitted both to having been aware of the Watergate break-in shortly after it had occurred, and trying to halt the Federal Bureau of investigation's inquiry into it.
The House Judiciary Committee's action persuaded Mr. Nixon to become the first man ever to resign the presidency. Although a pardon exempted the offender from the entire punishment prescribed for the offense, President Ford, in a burst of tralomical compassion, greatly expanded the term's definition by granting to Mr. Nixon a full pardon "for all offenses against the United States which he, Richard Nixon, has committed or may have undertaken or taken part in." President Ford's pardon thus precluded any legal response to both Mr. Nixon's known and yet-to-discovear machinations.
In the presidential pantheon. Richard Nixon—a man willing to coverty war against those, either here or overseas, of whom he disapproval—stands alone.
Let's hope this remains true.
William Dann
Kansas town begins cleanup after wind storm, sudden flood
2702 West 24th Street Terrace
By ANDREW DEVALPINE Staff Reporter
It will be months before things are back to normal in Rossville after last Wednesday's flooding, Rossville's maveral said Saturday.
Cleanup was continuing in the town of 1,045 people, which is halfway between Topeka and Manhattan on Highway 24. Of all towns in a four-county disaster area encompassing Shawnee, Jackson, Pottawatomie and Leavenworth counties, Rossville was hit the hardest by flooding.
Gov. John Carlin declared these counties disaster areas Wednesday.
"WE HAVE THE water and service systems operating normally now," George Stadler, mayor, said. "The buildings are cleaning up their basements.
"It's the worst mess I've seen in 62 years."
"What we've really had is two disasters in one," he said. "We had a wind storm one night, and two days later the flood came on top of it."
Total damages to the town have been estimated at $1 million, Stadier said, but he said that he thought the figure was arrived at prematurely.
"I think we will have more than that because we didn't realize at first that the water was as deep as it was," he said.
DESPITE THE SEVERITY of the damage—one household's claim is estimated at $15,000—the residents seem to be making the most of it.
"They may be crying at night,
Slipping "but they are laughing in
the daytime.
"They've lost a lot of personal things.
But when you've done it before, you're sure it'll happen again. You just don't know when."
Stadler said that the response from the community has been good.
Some parts of town were damaged more than others, Stadier said. Cross Creek, which cuts through the center of town, empties out of both sides when it floods, he said. But the business sector was hardly affected because the business streets are the highest point in town.
Nevertheless, some stores had a foot of wa. or. he said.
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Stadler said that what looked like a wall of water poured into town.
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"They helped remove 60 rest home patients from the Roseville Valley Manor rest home and just guarded the town in general," Stadler said.
Unlike previous floods, this year the water rushed into town with scarcely any warning. Stadler said.
STADLER SAID THIS flood was the worst of any on record in Rossville.
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University Daily Kansan, June 14, 1982
.
Page 7
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647
st home Valley ered the
By JENNIFER YALE
Staff Reporter
Library and parking fines can now be deducted from employee paychecks because of a state law that came into effect last summer, Robert Cobb, executive vice chancellor, said Thursday.
Under this law, state institutions are required to collect monies in the form of fines and bills by "setting off" the payments paid from payroll warrants, Cobb said.
IN PAST YEARS, the only way the parking service could make the faculty pay their parking fines was by refusing to issue them new parking permits.
Students couldn't re-enroll or get transcripts of their grades until they
had paid their bills, Donald Kearns, director of parking,said.
Bills for hospital debts, tuition, laboratory fees, library fines, housing and national direct student loans have all been collected through the set-off program, said Howard Tiffany, KU assistant controller.
"We turn over our uncollectable debts to the Department of Admiration in connection with it."
The department checks to see if the debts belong to state employees. If they do, the department may issue a lien.
NAMES OF DERTORS are also sent
to Internal Revenue Service, Tiffany
square.
"This is the first tax season in which we can take money out of state income tax refunds to pay fines and debts to the state." he said.
This year the University has only
college-selected $200
offered, Kearns said.
The University will start collecting smaller debts later, he said.
Cobb said fewer than 100 people have been affected by the set-off program. Only five percent of the faculty and staff that have received fines since the law was passed have had they paid money from their paychecks, he said.
"WE HAVE TO receive permission from the state before we can write off accounts," Jeannette Johnson, assistant to the executive vice chancellor, said. "The state is becoming more reluctant to let accounts go."
She said this was part of the reason for the law.
If a person receives three letters from the parking and traffic office and doesn't respond, the amount will be of the employee's next paycheck.
When a staff member has a delinquent fee, he is contacted by mail, Cobb said. At this time he can either pay it or arrange to make payments on it.
THE PERSON CAN appeal to make the payment another way, but cannot appeal the fine itself. Cobb said.
"We have a lot of people come in and set up payment schedules when they receive notice that they are going to be put on set-off," he said.
Cobb said the University had an appeals board, made up of faculty and staff members, to protect the rights of the individual.
Three development firms sent representatives to Lawrence last week for a closer look at the downtown area and 'the community.
The firms had responded to a nationwide search by the city for a company to build new shopping facilities downtown.
Development firms consider downtown shopping facilities
I faint.
"They came here and wanted to look,
and we hope they will want to come back"
"Watson said."
Although two of the firms have not been identified, City Manager Buford Watsona led yesterday that a third firm, Link Program, Inc., a Chicago based company, had been in Lawrence Friday.
FETE WHITENIGHT, chairman of the 14-member Downtown Improvement Committee and a member of the smaller focus group that will
select the developer, said city officials took the representatives on a comprehensive tour of Lawrence.
"They went out into the community and talked to retailers, bankers and neighborhood residents so they could get a correct view of the city," he told staff.
Traditionally, only larger cities have taken on such projects, and it's only been in recent years that small cities such as Lawrence have attempted such major redevelopment of their downtowns. Whitenight said.
THE CITY STAFF will receive letters of interest on the project until June 30. After that they will interview prospective applicants and make recommendations to the City Commission.
GAMMONS
GAMMONS
Appearing This Week
THE TENNESSEE MUSIC FESTIVAL
The Delicate Birkenstock.
TICKETS
Tues. night - no cover charge.
after 9 p.m. 15c draws for everyone from 10-11.
Wed. night - Ladies night. 2 free drinks for ladies
a your foot make a place for themselves.
Mick's
One of the most things about the new Binketskies style is its slope. Slip into the same famous contoured fit on the corrugated bottom and will find a graceful new feeling on the top. The delicate Binketskies. Designed to give you comfort, with class.
1339 Mass
842-3131
NOW LEASING
Our Community Offers:
1 and 2 Bedroom Apartments
fall & summer
- Cable TV available
- 2 Laundry facilities
- Indoor/Outdoor pool w/sundeck—enjoy year-round
- Free Shuttle Bus to Campus
- Summer Storage Plan
COME BY TODAY AND LOOK
The University Daily
swimming
KANSAN WANT ADS
Call 864-4358
CLASSIFIED RATES
524 Frontier Road
Jayhawk APARTMENTS West
AD DEADLINES
842-4444
one two three four five six seven eight nine ten time time
ERRORS
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Monday Thursday 2 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 2 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 2 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 2 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 2 p.m.
The Kansan will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the errors do not materially affect the value of the ad.
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge or for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can
be placed on the main business website at www.h4888.com
KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE
118 F'int Hall 864-4258
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Play begins Sunday, June 20 1:30 p.m.
- 6-12 month lease Option
KU SCIENCE FICTION
SOCIETY
2 informational meetings Tuesday
4:00-6:30, Union Union
557
K.U.
Hillel
Robinson Tennis Courts
invites you to a SHABBAT DINNER
MED CENTER BOUND? NEW refurbished 2 HB
MED CENTER BOUND? New carpet, A/C, Appliances
parking car (913) 850-7655
Tie In With Us
RECREATION SERVICES
FOR RENT
for reservations call 864-3948
by Thursday, June 17
Friday, June 18
6:00 p.m. at the Lawrence Jewish Community Center 917 Highland Dr.
Tennis Singles Tournament
Entry Deadline
Thursday, June 17
5:00 p.m. 208 Robinson
98
PRINCETON PLACE PATIO AFAPARTMENTS. Not Available in North America. Availible in fireplace, 2 car garage with electric space, open room with surfacing, 420 sq. ft. hotel room, ocean surroundings, $420 per month. Open house Saturday through Sunday for additional information.
SOUTHERN PARKWAY TOWNHOUSES 20th & Kasid. If you’re to the rusty of your cramped apartment, you’ll find it at 180 West Coast Drive / 4 Hoodsock, all appliances, attached garage, swimming pool, & lots of privacy. We have openings now, for August. Call Craig Lravis evening and weekend hours. For more information about our modestly priced townhouses.
7th and Florida
(On KU Bus Line)
Rentals from 205/mo
841-5255 842-4455
NEW 4-PLEXES
HANOVER PLACE
STUDENTS
One phone call will solve your housing needs. Completely furnished, 1BR, 18R with 3BR and 3BR furnished apartments.
Between 14th and 15th on Massachusetts Rentals from 250/mo
TIBURON
841-1212 842-4459
SUNDANCE
Needed—Graduate Student to share house w/other
graduate students. Close to campus. Washer/Dryer,
All Utilities Pd. $200.00, $41-8075.
6-14
9th and Emery Rd
Rentals from 250/mo
841-5255 842-4455
live in the CHRISTIAN CAMPUS HOUSE this summer & 'lail! Become a part of a growing campus ministry. Call Alan Rosenak, campus minister 842-6099. tf
AVAILABLE AUGUST Spacious exclusive 4 bedroom apartment in the heart of the city, room table, pool table, FF, all amenities for a garage 798 Standard Road on KU Bass Line. Acceptable responsible students $90.00 a semester. Please contact us.
SUMMIT HOUSE 1105 Louisiana Rentals from 285/mo.
All offered by Mastercraft
Management. Professional
Maintenance and Management
Company
413 W. 14th St.
Rentals from 280/mo.
841-1212 842-4455
All offered by Mastercraft
919 Indiana
916 Indiana
922 Tennessee
All 38R, 2 Bath. Rentals from 426/mi.
841-5255
842-4455
COLDWATER FLATS
Available now. Furnished spacious studio in private safe, home site apartment; 2 bedrooms, living room, dining room, kitchen, quiet, privacy. Two grad student less than $200/month. Includes furniture loss for $60. 842-743-6955, weekends.
842-4455
TRAILRIDGE
2. 3, and 4 bedroom townhouses
still available for tall
3 pools, tennis court, and
On KU bus line.
SPACIOUS STUDIOS
2500 West 6th 843-7333
Woman: A furnished room in shared house. Total rent (
Now-Aug.) $200 + deposit. 1 blk. from Union.
845-544-100. 12:30, M-F.
6-28
Furnished Apt., Grad Students, Utilities paid. A/C,
nopets $210/$215 1633 Vermont, 843-1209. 6-21
1 bedroom semi-furnished. Near campus: 843-8994 or
842-7477. No pets. 7-1
A GOOD PLACE TO LIVE
beautiful grounds, swimming pool lighted tennis courts.
One, two, and three bedrooms.
Check now for summer availability.
Beautiful grounds.
lighted tennis courts
A GOOD PLACE TO LIVE
15th & Crestline 842-4200
Now 12-bedroom apartment in four-pax. 1 block from the courtyard. Fully equipped, fully equipped kitchen, at 1341 Ocan Valley dragon, fully equipped kitchen, at 1341 Ocan Valley dragon.
meadowbrook
Two bedroom furnished mobile home $185.00 per
month; quiet location. No pets. Jayhawk
842-897-3600
Room in large quiet house one bk from Union. Must have clean habits and no pets. See at 1290 Ohio, before noon, $110.00.
6-17
Women's sample jacket Cavin Kien jeans ($22);
Slim fit top & Shorts ($18); Skirts ($15); Shirts ($9)
Cali 43-84 Cali 43-84
EXTRA large apartments, large and small. Next to campus. Utilities paid,Reasonable. 842-145-878.
Moving Safe: safe data, dresser, file cabinet box,
springs, footpad, hatch bed, dresser.
60" widescreen LCD; 1920x1080; 640H; 512MB;
9-10 GB; 32GB; 64GB; 128GB; 256GB; 512GB;
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale (Make sense out of Western Civilization) Make sure you have been taught about the preparation, 3) For exam preparation. "New Analysis of Western Civilization" New Analysis of Town Crier, 4) Book Dress Book and Bookstore Books
Share house. Low rent. Split utilities. Some furniture. 842-6135. Keep tryng. 6-14
FOR SALE
Bookcases, stereo cabinets, cedar chairs, benches,
tablets, desks, etc. custom built to your need in solid
woods. Call Michael Stough 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. Monday
through Saturday. 843-892-3480.
6-12
Alternate starter and generator specialist. Parts.
ELECTRIC 849-5009, W 90th ed.
ELECTRIC 849-5009, W 90th ed.
CAR SYSTEM-SIENE In-Dash casestation AM/FM
CAR JENXEN-JP44, all cuv, must sell. $100.
CAR JENXEN-JP44, all cuv, must sell. $100.
Front wheel drive, am/am, 5-speed. Low mileage.
Great economy. 842-8135. 6-24
Entire Stock of New and Used Clothing and Household Items
25% OFF
INFLATION
Open 10 a.m.-5:30 p.m.
FIGHTER
8 East Seventh
78 Buck Regal, PB, PS, AC, AM-FM, Cruise & Tilt
842-946, mileage 842-606
*Save Money.* Do you love to find bargains or forgeunt treasures? You do love arts & crafts, artisans, and gardening. Mail special requests to: Gardening at 510-247-6098; June 19th, 9 and Sunday June 26th, 8:30. Buy, sell or trade in our climate-controlled mail. 749-6838; 842-1800; 842-1800 Hilsa Hills shopping Center.
HELP WANTED
Residence Hall Director Joseph H. Pearson Hall), The University of Kansas, M.S. and previous experience required for the position of a hall honour approximately 406 male students. Applications received by 18 June 1987 will be given first priority. Contact information: Office of Residential Programs, 123 Strong Hall, University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas 68065. Equal Opportunity Employer - 6-17 Action Employer
Flaxen hour. No experience necessary. Job is in the medical and general libraries. Send resume to an office or be a Veteran and in school full time. For more information, contact the Financial Aid Office Bence F. Lawson, 204-815-6900.
Box Office Manager, (Full Time), Murphy Hall
Bachelor's required. Preferred starting July 18.
Application deadline June 15. Contact:
Ronald/Kayon/Roadal of University of
California 96044 K96044 A/ECO Employer
6-14
ACADEMIC COMPUTTING CENTER. Student Intero. Technology and edit documentation software; application software; seminars and workshops. Qualifications: excellent written and oral communication skills, high language; experience with applications software packages; student profile and Howard University familiarity with statistical analysis packages, text process and Honeywell software. Salary: 600-560 P/E. Full time during summer, half time during regular school. Resume to Lyn Modzrykus, Room 214, Academic Computing Center, 300 W. 8th St., AVE 9200 AA/EOE. 6-14
ACADEMIC COMPUTER COOPERATOR. University of Kansas Regents Center, Evening work. Coordinate system development, code and test code & documentation as required. Perform computer consulting an needed. Thorough knowledge of FORTRAN or PASCAL required. Must have a Bachelor's degree, Mary Gerch, Director, University of Kansas Regents Center, 980 Mission Oval, Overland Park, Kansas 65062. Opportunity to apply. Action Employer
PERSONALS
SPECIAL RATES, HAIRCUTS $6.00, PERMIS-
"ONLY" $20.00, Charme Hair Fashions 10.25-
Massa-Denise Basil, 845-350-8900
10:38
Come visit our new shop, BARB'S VINTAGE ROSE,
918% Maa (above Davis Paints) Mon-Sat, 10-4
841-2451
SAILRIDER
Catch our June special on
* Used Saildriders
* Group rate lessons
* Reservations
* Save your certificate
Catch our June specials on—
Sunrise Sail-your certified boardsailing center 842.2366
Stop and see Doc at Barb in Montage, 191% Mass
(above Davis Park) Mon/Tuesday, 104-811-2451,
6-17
Study Skills Workshop, Time Management, Flexible Learning, Listening, Note-taking, Tuesday, June 1, 8:30-3 p.m., Jayhawk Room, Kansas University, Pioneer. The student. The Student Center Genetic Center
TATTOOING—Clyde's Tattoo Parlor, 1417 W. 99th
SL, KC, Mo. 816-931-6535.
6-21
VOLUNTEERS NEEDED at Headquarters,
Lawrence's 24 hour crisis counseling center. The previous counseling experience required June 10, 2008; June 10, 2007; June 10, 2006; June 10, 2005; June 10, 2004; June 10, 2003; Details 81-2445. 6-10
milton maachusetts.
PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTHRIGHT,
43-4821 t
**MAKE TO GO BARE** The American Samburling
and the Tamarind. The H.I. 1 was
the muscular stature, TRAV-A-TANG, in the H.I. 1
to make it appear like a statue.
**MAKE TO GO BEAR** The American Samburling
Welcome back! Photos for any occasion. David
Bernstein. Photography. Call Sean at 749-161-624.
UNW. DOWN! every Thursday from 6-9 p.m.
4-8:30 p.m. we will have a Bible, Study
discussion and recreation. Don't try on the wine
not nourished. The Baptist Center, 828 W. State
Street, New York, NY 10017.
Another Encore exclusive:
ENLARGEMENTS
Need riders and/or drivers to share expenses from Overland Park area to Lawrence daily. Call 341-5738, leave a message please.
6-17
TEACHING
The first ten days of June have passed and our pool remains unified. Some Gasket Apartments are in 153 West North are not satisfied with services offered by Heritage Management Company-6-14
Daily, Weekly, Monthly All Cars One Rate
s995 A Day
FIRST 50 MILES FREE
THEN 8" A MILE
Small, intermediate and large cars and trucks available. All mechanically sound, state inspected, clean and ready.
CALL US AT
9th & Miss. 24th & Iowa
749-4225 841-0188
Skillet's liquor store serving U-Daily since 1949. Come in and compare. Willard Skillet Eudaly. 1906 Mass. 843-8106.
The Kegger—Weekly Specials on Kegs!! Call
841-9450-1610 W.23rd. tf
COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES. Free pregnancy testing; early and advanced outpatient abortion; pregnancy contraception. 1-435 & Roe, Overland Park, KS 9131 842-3000.
Say it on a shirt. Custom silk screen printing. T-shirts, baseball shirts and cups. Skirt art by Swells. 749-1611. 7-29
SERVICES OFFERED
Schneider Wine & Reg Shop -The finest selection of wines in Lawrence-largest supplier of strong wines. 160 W 2ft, 843-3212. tf
moREYWE, WEALTH, CAN BE YOURS IF YOU FLOW A PROVEN PLAN. SEND LARGE SASE FOR DETAILS ONRAD ATLANTA, M 90 MORGAN ST. APT 12, STANDARD CT. 00000. 6-21
Writing-PRSYCHOLOGYNAMS will find your natural expression-editing, tutoring, library research, science writing Graphoanalyst Victor Cork: 842.8490 7:29
Put your feet forward with a professionally printed resume from Encore. Write it, write it, and print it for you. Call Encore 842-2001, 5010, Iowa.
7:29
KU Freshman woman would like to live with a single person, a working woman or an elderly couple. Will she join the family? Please call 1416-255-3468 or write: Holly Hernandez, 210. Charleston, CA 210-837-5468.
Have your own personalized bumpersticker! Deluxe
designs available. Gt. G1, G21, Geser
Oakland, Ontario, BC000 8000
It's a Fact, Fast, Affordable, Clean, Typing 843-5620.
TIP TOP TYPING—Experienced Typists—IBM Correcting Selectric II, Royal Correcting SE50000
435-6875. ct
Experienced typist. Tern paper, thesis or
dissertation writing. Send resumes to:
Picks, and will correct spelling. Phone 842-5434 Mtl.
e-mail info@ternpaper.com
Shakespeare could write; Elvis could wiggle; my talent, typing. Call 842-0434 after 5:00 and weekends.
7-12
Reports, documentation, resumes, legal forms,
writing, self-correcting. Select Cases (Ch.
Euclid 841-843).
Experimental typist will type term papers, thesis, distortions, books, etc. Have IBM self-certify Selective II. Call Terry 842-4754 anytime or 843-2071. II
TYPING PLUS: Theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications, resumes. Assistance with composition, grammar, spelling, etc. English tutoring for foreign students - or Americans 841-6244
Professional, accurate and fast typing. Discussions. These term papers, etc. Calibure Allison, 615-798-3050.
AFFORDABLE QUALITY for all your typing needs:
themes, resumes, logistics, charts, mailings,
mailc. Call Judy 842-7946 after 6:00 pm. t
Overnight Engraving - Editing Typing, IBM Selectric
Victor Cark 864-8430 7:29
For PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myra. 841-4980
brave Selectric, will type. Professional, fast, affordable. Betty, 842-6987 Evenings and weekends. tf
Experienced typet—theses, dissertations, term papers, misc. IBM correcting electric. Barb, after 5 p.m. 842-310. tf
Students: I will take care of all your needs 1
am fast and very reasonable. Please call April
during the day at 840-4110; evenings and weekends:
843-0046
6-28
Roommate: Wanted for summer 4-12 BH-room
Wonderer/driver, AC $18
Weather/day: 6-17
Room: 6-17
WANTED
Housemate Wanted. 3 hrs. HR=15.33/month + 1.75
utility fees. Free room. Leave case to 6-8
pm. Call 943-259-0000 for info.
Roommate need for 3 BR house for summer and
fall. Available immediately $60/mo | 1-5
841-583-1444 | 1-5 | cita
Roommate wanted. Unharmed house clear to campground. Garage & apartment shop. Perfect grade, shaded from window. Call 516-834-7900.
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.
Name:___
Address:___
Phone:___
Dates to Run:___
Classified Display:
1 col. x 1 inch—$4.00
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| 50-100 words | .02 | .03 | .04 | .05 | .06 |
7
Page 8 University Daily Kansan, June 14, 1982
and
Budget
From page one
PICKERT SAID he thought that KU faculty members were underpaid, and in percentage they
Pickert said the board tried to be more realistic in its request this year and hoped that Gov. John Carlin and the Legislature would approve the full 10 percent.
State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, sounded more cautious.
"I know that I, for one, will be working again for support of the Reents' budget," she said.
"But I think our success in getting the 10 percent faculty salary package will depend on the state's economy and whether we're succeeding in getting the severance tax passed next session."
CONCERNING THE 7 percent salary increase recommended for classified employees, Gail Hamilton, Classified Senate president, said, "We would have liked to have given 10 percent. It takes a 3 to 1.5 percent increase to adequately cover the cost of any plan that was implemented two years ago.
She explained that the plan is tied to a performance evaluation system that works as an incentive.
If the 7 percent increase "is just a cost-of-living increase," Hamilton said, "then it would seem that the Board of Regents is not supporting the merit plan. The 3 percent increase it would take to fund the plan would leave a cost-of-living increase of only 4 percent."
Hamilton said she was not sure classified employees would be pleased with a cost-of-living adjustment.
"IN THE LAST two to five years, we lost about percent because of cost of living increases."
catch up, even though the cost of living is predicted to go down next year."
rickett said the breakdown of the 7 percent increase recommended by the Regents was not intended to hurt them.
Nitcher said that at Thursday's meeting, KU officials "made a strong point that our number one priority was salary and wage increases and reducing expenditures were our second priority."
"A major factor in why we made a smaller budget request this year is that the University chose, instead, to emphasize its priorities for bigger salary and OOE increases than in having a larger request related to individual program improvements," Mitcher said.
UNIVERSITY OFFICIALS requested a total of $3,470,007 for the fiscal year 1984 for improvements in the areas of instruction, research and service.
The highest amounts requested were $1 million for instructional equipment, such as micro-computers, audio-video equipment and laboratory equipment, $1,034,97 for two new mini-computers that would provide 128 remote access terminals for use by students, and $300,000 for library acquisitions and subscriptions.
Buding said the high percentage of KU's request for instructional computing and instructional equipment was to close the quality deficit in instruction.
"Virtually every discipline now requires computing resources as modern society demands far greater computer literacy," Budig said.
Nitcher said the Regents were scheduled to meet June 25 to decide which of the budget improvement requests KU can submit for the governor's approval.
From page one
John Ramos, 825 Garfield, has lived on the block since 1969. He said there weren't any problems with flooding until 1977. Since then, the area has flooded almost every year.
Weather
"In 1977, there was five feet of water standing in the basement of my rental house next door." Ramos said. "I had just put in a new water heater, and I was being the water heater and ensuring the furnace."
Ramos said he thought that new building development around Haskell Street to the east had increased the amount of water the storm sewers had to carry, causing low-lying areas to flood.
City Commissioner Nancy Shontz said she agreed with him.
"IF LAWRENCE WAS better planned in the first place, we wouldn't have this problem," she said. "Each building permit on a limited piece of land is subject to a higher contribution to the water problem is slight."
"That may be so, but you get 100 of those and you have problems."
- may, Lawrence residents voted to disband the seasonal month water fee that financed a stormwater wetland.
THIS PLAN, Shontz said, could have helped solve the flooding problem streets such as Garfield and other areas have experienced for the past five years.
On Sunday, May 30, a torential downpour backed up the city's swollen storm sewer system and neighbors nervously watched as the water crept closer to their homes.
Terry Tolar, owner of Tolar Cabinets, 827 Garfield, came by to check the water level and was shocked to find it within a few feet of his store's door.
thousands of dollars of inventory and machinery floating away," he said.
"I looked at the water rising the thought of the
Tolar then called Shortz, who has had a long-standing interest in Lawrence's water drainage pipeline.
"I talked to at least three families who lost furnaces and water heaters from this flood," Shontz said Friday. "And you know that means there are probably more. This isn't a high-income neighborhood, and people can't afford these losses."
RESIDENTS WERE HAPPY that Shontz came to see the flood damage, but in general they said they were not very pleased with the city staff' lack of attention to their plight.
Bolt said she thought the city ignored their bank because it was in a low-income neighborhood.
"It took me a year just to get them to come and fix the drainage ditch in front of our houses," Bolt said. "You know, they come out here, and they look and listen, but they forget real quick."
Bolt said she thought she might be the only one on Garfield Street who had flood insurance, issued under the National Flood Insurance Program. Most homeowner do not inquire about coverage, according to the Insurance Information Institute of Shawnee Mission, Kansas.
"And then they say there's really nothing they can do, because they're in a flood plain."
BUT BOLT WILL probably drop her policy because the rates are going up by 50 percent next
lear.
After Shontz's trek through flooded Garfield
Street, she notified George Williams,
Lawrence's Public Works director.
The following Tuesday, Williams drove out with his crews and inspected the aged storm sewers' clogged inlets and passageways. By the end of August, two dump truck loads of trees and debris.
Williams expressed hope that cleaning out the sewer would prevent any more flooding this
the two storm sewers, or culverts, running through the residents' yards, carry water from as far west as the University of Kansas campus and as far south as 32rd Street.
THE WHEN THE STORM sews are full, small doors on the inlets, called traps, shut down. After much of the water empties into nearby streams the traps open, the traps back, and the upward water flows in.
Depending on how heavy the rainfall is, this can take minutes or hours, as in the case of a storm.
"When it rains, what you have is potentially good rice paddies here," she said pointing to the field. "You can grow them."
Shontz said flooding occurred in other parts of the city as well. She receives dozens of calls from residents of the area.
Shontz said she would like to see the city carefully study the effects of potential developments on surrounding areas, as well as the existing flood systems, so the system to help prevent future flooding.
But Williams said the city did that through its water detention policy for new building developments over a certain size and its uniform cleanup of the drainage system.
Junior & Senior History & Meteorology majors to participate in a reading study. 84.00 for 45 min. Come to 536 Fraser Hall or call 864-4131 ext. 66
CARDS & GIFTS
Russell Store
CANDIES
Loreal occasions
ARBUTHNOTS
Southwest Plaza 27th & Low
1841-7800
Meanwhile, both on Garfield Street, residents are keeping their fingers crossed that spring will come.
ACADEMY
CAR RENTAL
prices as low
as $8.95 per day
808 w 24th
841 0101
such a deal! all the news all semester for $1035 KANSAS CITY STAR TURTOM KANSAS
新闻
Name___
Address___
Phone & KU ID___
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VISIT THE
JAYBOWL
Bowling, Billiards Video Games
Cool—Comfortable
BOWLING
Mini-Summer Bowling League
Wednesday Nites 6:30 P.M.
June 16 - July 30 (Seven Nights)
Sign up at the Jaybowl or call 864-3545
Summer hours—10 a.m. til 5 p.m. weekdays except Wednesday.
Wednesdays open til 9 p.m.
KU
Jay Bowl
BOWLING
KANSAS UNION
move out and storm . By the truck
running from aspus and
critically to the
ers.
parts of
of calls
u!, small
vn. After
streams
back-up
I is, this case of
the city potential as well as sewer
rough its building uniform
residents at spring
Thursday, June 17, 1982 Vol.92, No.148 USPS 650-640
KANSAN
The University Daily
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
Merit pay raises might be delayed
By JENNIFER YALE
Staff Reporter
Some classified employees may not receive merit pay increases due them in fiscal year 1983, said Martin Jones, KU associate director of business affairs. Wednesday.
Although 54 percent of the classified KU employees, 1,700 people, are due for pay raises on June 18, the finance council of the Kansas Legislature is seeking an amount to be allocated for mary pay until June 25.
"The thing that concerns me the most is the possibility that we won't get our merit increase by the August 1 paychecks," said Gail Hamilton, president of the Classified Senate.
Hamilton said she didn't know whether the University would add the money to the employee's next paycheck, or if not, what would become of that money.
In previous years, all state classified employees received a cost-of-living raise. Hamilton said. Those who qualified, she said, received an additional merit increase, the size of which was measured on a sliding scale depending on the caliber of the persons' work.
THIS YEAR the merit program, which began in 1981, will go through some changes. Patrick fierley, secretary of administration in Topeka, said the program had been out, and he found out so that each
The money will be given out so that each institution gets its share, he said.
Employees at the University are rated as follows: below standard, standard, above standard and outstanding. Last year, employees who received a standard rating received a one-step merit raise, below standard employees received a three-step raise, above standard and outstanding employees received a three-step raise.
Even if the University receives the amount that it has requested, no one will receive more than $10 million.
that but still evaluates. But, not all employees with standard or above standard evaluations will get a merit increase this year, Hamilton said.
THOSE WITH OUTSTANDING ratings should get a 125 percent increase, “if we look at it here, the numbers are pretty good.”
"The way it stands now." Hamilton said, "a person could be a standard worker for ten years and never get more than a cost-of-living increase."
"This is such a blow to those classified workers who have been working here for two years. If they had been where they are now last year, they would have given a two-step pay increase.
"We also have to keep in mind that more employees are going to become eligible for increases throughout the year so we must keep enough in the fund for that."
Galtieri faces political crisis
See Classified page 12
The University has requested $1,814,304 from the Kansas Legislature for salary increases, but no response.
By United Press International
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina - The military government of President Leopoldo Galtieri, battered by defeat on the Falkland Islands and rids in the streets, began to unravel yesterday, and military sources said its future could be decided by the weekend.
The architect of Argentina's invasion, Foreign Minister Nicanor Costa Mendez, submitted his resignation in the aftermath of the Argentine bombing and said was caused by U.S. support for Britain.
President Gallieri reportedly turned down the resignation.
SENOR DIPLOMATIC SOURCES said that Alredo Saint Jean, interior minister, also submitted his resignation. It was also reportedly turned down.
Military and political sources, however, said the government crisis ran much deeper than the resignation offers, with Gaiten growing more angry. "We have a kind of kninds surrender and a 'series of political errors."
In a communique yesterday explaining the reasons for Britain's "partial triumph," the Argentine military command charged that U.S. forces in Syria played a key role in the defeat of its forces.
"This power vacuum cannot last until the weekend," a top-level military source said.
BUT THE COMMAND, saying its troops were outnumbered and its equipment outclassed, said the cease-fire that was signed on Monday only ended the battle for the islands' capital of Stanley and only included forces stationed on the islands.
In London, British officials warned that hundreds of the 15,000 war weary Argentine prisoners were being held in a camp.
starvation and disease because there was not enough shelter to protect them from the bitter
Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher said she would hold some of the prisoners, including officers, until the Argentine government confiscated them. The British reclaimed British territory in the South Atlantic.
BUT GALTIERI, in a nationwide address Tuesday evening that was preceded by massive anti-government riots by a crowd of 10,000 people, made no mention of defeat.
Galtieri warned Britain and any internal 'traitor Argentina would keep waging its bat for the king.'
British officials released a copy of the document, which showed that Menendez had crossed out the word "unconditional" before surrender. The agreement called on the Argentines to turn over all weapons and ammunition and assemble at points named by British commanders.
At no time did he mention the surrender document that Argentine Gen. Mario Mendener and British Field Commander Gen. Jeremy Moore signed Monday in the islands' capital of Stanley.
BRITISH OFFICIALS warned that Argentina's delay in officially confirming an end to fighting would worsen the plight of Argentine troops.
because of 8,000 miles of supply lines and the continued threat by the Argentine air force, the problems of bringing medical aid, food supplies, and equipment to remote areas have led to the point of impossibility. Woodward said
"They are already suffering from malnutrition, exposure, hypothermia, trench foot, scabies and diarrhea brought on by lack of food and pure water, proper clothing, shelter and sanitation," said Adm. Sandy Woodward, British task force commander.
Photo by J. Sharp Smith
VOL. II
With the sun breaking through the rainy skies recently, Melanie Wright, 335W, Fifth Terr., took the opportunity and went for a refreshing dip in the Chi Omega Fountain.
Fun in the fountain—
uveniles tied to murder
Two juveniles are in custody in connection with the June 9 slaying of a rural Lawren man, Mike Malone, Douglas County district attorney, said yesterday.
three or four days if the investigation had been completed by then.
Police also found what they thought to be the murder weapon, Malone said.
Police refused to identify who led them to the body of Hatchell.
minder, weapon, make-offence Police had arrested the juveniles June 10. Malone said, on unrelated charges, which he refused to reveal.
THE JUVENILES, one male and one female,
were identified as suspects in the slaying of Don
Hatchell, 49, Route 4, hours after they were
detained. he said.
Malone said police found Hatchell partially buried under a bridge in southwest Douglas County. Hatchell had a gunshot wound to the back of the head and other head injuries, but Malone said the cause of death was still undertermined.
Police found a 22-caliber rifle eft of the house where Hatchell was shot, Malone said.
Malone said charges might be filed in the newt
See Murder page 12
Weather
SUNSHINE
Today will be partly cloudy with temperatures in the low 80s, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka.
CLOUDY
tonight will be partly cloudy with a 20 percent chance of thundershowers. The low will be in the mid-50s.
Tomorrow will be partly cloudy with the high in the mid to upper 70s.
KU enrollment increases slightly
By CANDICE SACKUVICH
Staff Reporter
There is a strange relationship between enrollment and the economy, Robert Cobb, executive vice chancellor, said Tuesday.
Whether it was because of the economy or by coincidence, seven more students enrolled at the University of Kansas this summer than in 2013. The study may be by Gil Dye, dean of educational services.
On June 8, the first day of summer classes,
7,553 students were enrolled at the Lawrence
campus, and 1,542 were enrolled in the College
campus. Of these, 600 participated in the
total enrollment at both campuses was 8,697.
"When the economy is tight and jobs are
strict, students tend to do school try in
school."
SOME STUDENTS have stayed in Lawrence for the summer because jobs are hard to find and they don't want to leave the ones they have here, he said.
our students have enrolled in summer See Enrollment page 12
Expenditures
Out-of-State Travel—3%
Equipment—1.2%
Telephone—9%
Overtime—8%
Computer Services—3.9%
Capital Improvements—22.5%
Supplier and contractor—11.0%
Lot Maintenance—6%
Salaries—50.0%
Expenditures
Out-of-State Travel—3%
Equipment—1.2%
Telephone—8%
Overtime—8%
Computer Services—3.9%
Receipts
Jayhawker Towers—1.3%
Toll Lot—1.5%
Salaries—69.6%
Permits—40.5%
Receipts
Jayhawker Towers—1.3%
Toll Lot—1.5%
Fines—40.6%
Permits—40.5%
KU Parking Services 1982-83 Budget
KU parking fines pay for services, equipment
By NEAL McCHRISTY
Staff Reporter
A student walking back to his car finds a parking ticket inserted under his windshield wiper and grumbles as he anticipates having to pay the fine.
That same student might not know that his money is used for such items as new parking lots and light fixtures in the lots, which are paid for by KU parking department, director of computers, and Tuesday.
All costs, from making permits and office forms to maintaining the lots, are paid for by fines, permit fees, toils and other revenue generated by parking services. Kearns said. The University furnishes office space, natural gas and electricity, he said.
And costs have risen. Kearns had a row of shiny stickers on the desk, and said, "You ask what costs us money—here are the football parking passes."
cost analysis is an essential part of the parking services operation All projects, such as new parking lots scheduled for construction near Olive Hall and Allen Field House, are financed by bid, Kearns said. Equipment is bought by bid, also he said.
spaces, 19 full-time personnel and 37 part-time personnel with no increase in permit fees in four years and fines in three years has meant cutting back on some services. Kearns said.
Snow removal during breaks is one of the services that has been curtailed, he said.
"We shop. Just because someone says we want this, we don't go out and buy a piece of jacket." he
We're hooking up our truck
Maintaining the approximately 8,500 parking
Booth personnel salaries are now paid by the University.
When asked whether parking services has been squeezed by increasing costs, Kearns said.
New costs include pay increases for personnel, which are set by the Board of Regents. Another added cost will be salaries for toll booth personnel, where they may be paid by parking service during July). Kearns said.
But some services, such as jump starting cars in winter and unlocking cars for people who have locked themselves out, are good public relations, Kearns said, and will continue.
Parking on the KU campus is adequate, particu-
larly with the addition of 200 spaces upon com-
pletion of the lot near Learned Hall and the X
Zone north lot west of the Kansas University, Ksarne
The parking service operation is geared to the idea that every space at the University costs
Those who need handicapped parking permits and medical permits must pay for them. Kearns said that in order to install a handicapped space, there was a cost, which includes a sign designating the space as handicapped and tape for marking.
People with medical permits are asked to verify that a medical condition exists that limits their ability to work.
"The parking board has asked everyone who has a medical permit to go back this year and reapply."
The parking board found that some people with medical permits did not have limited mobility, such as people with asthma who were not subject to high pollen counts in the winter, he said.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, June 17, 1982
News Briefs From United Press International
No promises by NATO on nuclear stand of allies
ANNAPOLIS, Md. —NATO leaders said yesterday they had no intention of promising, as the Soviet Union did, that allied nations would not be the first to use nuclear weapons in a war.
The uncertainty in the equation, whether we will use nuclear weapons or not, must be maintained," said Joseph Luns, NATO secretary general. He is one of about 300 participants at a weeklong NATO-sponsored symposium at the U.S. Naval Academy on global naval issues.
Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko pledged to the United Nations conference on disarmament Tuesday that his country would not be the first to use nuclear weapons. Reading a statement from Brehzney, he said the Soviets expected other nuclear powers to make the same pledge.
The Reagan administration yesterday rejected the Soviet pledge as not being "an effective way to reduce the danger of nuclear war."
President Reagan and Secretary of State Alexander M. Haig have said a pledge by the West not to be the first nation to use nuclear weapons would be worthless, he said.
The Warsaw Pact has vastly superior conventional forces compared with NATO, but nuclear weapons serve as a deterrent to such an attack. Reagan
Moscow has made the "no first order" pledge before, and Washington has rejected it. Roagan, who will address the U.N. session today, has instead said that the United States should "not support" the pledge.
More Watergate song and dance
ATLANTA- Ten years after the downfall of the Nixon administration,
"Watergate: A Musical!" is being polished for a July 7 debut in Atlanta.
Gene Barry, who once starred in the television series "Bat Masterson."
The story revolves around a 12-year-old history buff who sneaks into the Oval Office while his class is touring the White House. He finds a distraught girl, Daisy, and she falls in love with him.
"What develops is a love affair between Nixon and the boy that is destined to fail him. David Lasker, co-author of the play 'It's right is wrong' had the bad idea."
Lakso and Tommy Oliver wrote and scored the musical version of Watergate.
Oliver said the play "makes a lot of statements but no judgements." After its 7月 2 opening, the musical will run for four weeks in Atlanta and then tour. It will be at The Old Stage.
Baptist church elects fundamentalist
NEW ORLEANS—Candidates for top jobs in the nation's largest Protestant church will be scrutinized to determine whether they believe in the historical existence of Adam and Eve, the new president of the Southern Baptist Convention said yesterday.
"I'm not going to pay the salary of somebody who said Adam and Eve were fictitious," the say the Rev. Jimmy Draper, the new president, Draper, a third-generation fundamentalist preacher from Euless, was elected after a bitter confrontation Tuesday between biblical conservatives and
"If that event is fictitious, then there wasn't a fall." he said. "the story of creation is essential, a foundation. It would be foolish to build a skyscraper
Draper said he would not begin a "witch hunt" to weed out moderates in the church's academic communities and agencies.
"But my concern is that the conservative position is ridiculed too often," he said. "We need a balance."
"I don't plan to fire anybody, but I would never appoint anybody who denied portions of the scriptures."
Federal workers accused of fraud
WASHINGTON—Although officials can only document a few cases, Rep. Ike Skelton, D-Mo., said yesterday that there might be widespread embezzlement by employees of Social Security and there are no controls to stop them.
"There are no anti-fraud measures in effect now and none are being planned," he said. "The general accounting office tells me they can't even estimate the amount of money being siphoned off because of the lack of a tracking mechanism."
Skellon is backing a bill that would require stiff penalties for embelizing money from Social Security. The penalties would also apply to those who break the law.
Since 1978, Skelton told, eight employees have been convicted of fraud, embezzling a total of $344,000. The most recent case, in which a Social Security clerk in Riverside, Calif. took $04,000, showed how easy such embezzlement was. Skelton said.
Most of that money was for accounts the clerk set up for fictitious people. In other cases, he had dormant accounts re-started.
Study predicts higher fuel prices
WASHINGTON—The United States faces higher gasoline and heating oil prices and possible fuel shortages because oil companies are deliberately eliminating fuel surpluses and cutting back operations, a study concluded yesterday.
The Citizen-Labor Energy Coalition said oil prices already had increased dramatically in recent months as a result of inventory liquidation and the emergence of new drilling rigs.
"At a time when there is no Arab oil embargo, no Iranian revolution, ample supplies of crude oil and a deep recession, consumers should not be facing substantial price increases for gasoline and heating oil," the study said. "On the contrary, prices should be falling."
Carlin seeks aid for flood victims
Private damage was set at $3.8 million and public damage at $1 million. Carlin said in a letter帖 to the president yesterday. The letter sought a presidential disaster declaration that would entitle flood victims to loans from the Small Business Administration and the Farmers Home Admin-
TOPEKA—In a letter to President Reagan, Gov. John Carlin has set the estimate for damage from flooding in Jackson County and Rossville at $4.8 billion.
"I have determined that this incident is of such severity and magnitude the effective response is beyond the capabilities of the state and the affected local governments and that supplementary federal assistance is necessary." Carlin wrote.
Earlier in the week, the governor took a brief tour of Rossville, which stood in three feet of water last week. Water from Cross Creek poured into the town and temporarily forced many of the city's residents out of their homes. In Jackson County, at least 24 bridges suffered $5 million in damage.
Salvadoran army begins offensive
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador—Salvadaron armed forces said yesterday it began its "largest ever operation" to oust guerrillas from the strategic town of Peruquin and end their two-year dominance in northern Morazan province.
Perquin, 72 miles northeast of San Salvador, has been in rebel hands for 11 days, the longest insurgency occupation in the three-year civil war that has occurred.
The ministry of defense confirmed that all three U.S.-trained battalions were committed to "Operation Morazan," along with other troops that bring the fighting to full force.
"This operation will last as long as is necessary," said a ministry of defense spokesman. "It is the largest ever operation in our history."
The guerrilla offense that captured Perquin was the biggest rebel drive of the year.
PLO appeals to United States for peace as Israel continues invasion of Lebanon
By United Press International
TEV ALIV, Israel—Israel said its Christian allies captured a command guerrilla outpost at a college annex in south Beirut yesterday.
Meanwhile, the badly outgunned Palestine Liberation Organization appealed to Washington for "face to face" talks to end Israel's II-day invasion before a possible blood bath engulfed the capital.
The Reagan administration came under increasing Arab pressure yesterday to abandon its traditional support for Israel against PLO forces.
Reagan promised to "employ every effort" to form a 'lasting and enduring' cease-fire. Presidential aides said Reagan would meet Monday with Menachem Begin, Israeli prime minister, who "major blow up" occurred in combat.
Saudi Arabia warned it might take "the necessary measures," including a possible oil embargo, if President Reagan failed to force Israel out of Syria.
Kamal Jassan Jali, Egyptian foreign minister, met with Reagan for 45 minutes and warned that "risks of a larger conflict loom over the horizon."
The administration appeared to be using the threat of cancellation to press Israel to comply with the shaky ceasefire and not to take over Beirut.
This was a reversal of a state department statement Tuesday that the meeting, planned long in advance of Israel's next president, negatively set 'in view of the crisis.
Israel said none of its 25,000 troops was engaged in combat yesterday. Defense Minister Ariel Sharon said, however, that its forces would stay in Lebanon until a cease-fire guaranteed its demands: a 25-mile security area free of guerrilla on Israel's northern border. total withdrawal of PLO and
"The Lebanese now have a golden opportunity to sort out their internal political affairs, Sharon said. He vowed Israel would not invade Beirut.
Syrian forces and creation of a strong central Lebanese government.
Sharon, warning of a lengthy Israeli occupation, wants the United States to assume a key role in determining the future of Lebanon.
He minimized the threat of Soviet intervention and expressed hope that Syria would begin negotiations with Israel instead of starting new hostilities.
The Soviets, he said, were airlifting the troops to Syria, but on a relatively small scale.
Lt. Gen. Rafael Eitan, Israeli army chief of staff, was on a front-line tour of Beirut and said the invasion had crushed the PLO. In Sidon alone, he said, Israel captured hundreds of tons of weapons in 30 warehouses.
One contained 60 tons of long-range Katyusha rockets, Sagger anti-tank
rockets, grenades, ammunition, Kalachnik rifles and artillery shells.
"The infrastructure of the terrorists in Lebanon has been destroyed as well as their political structure." Eitan said.
paint structure" Ellaan said. In another part of Lebanon, thousands of Lebanese civilians who were under the control of the lightning invasion were beginning to return to what was left of their battleraved towns and villages.
Long lines of civilian cars headed south toward Sidney yesterday but were held up by Israeli roadblocks checking entrances and conveyors of Israeli supply columns.
Hundreds of families who camped along the beach north of Sidon 48 hours earlier were largely gone, leaving behind garbage and the sheets of clear plastic wrapped around palm trees that had served as temporary homes.
But hundreds more refugees were still camped out in the orange grovesear the port town of Tyre or in the mashift camps in the area.
Defendant won't testify
Prosecution rests case in Hinckley trial
Bv United Press International
WASHINGTON - Prosecutors rested their case yesterday in the 37-day trial of John W. Hickey Jr., and the presiding judge, Robert A. Kernan, to support his insanity defense.
The trial headed toward a swift conclusion, with closing arguments likely to begin today and jury deliberations excreted by tomorrow.
If convicted of the most serious of 13 counts against him, Hinckley, who pleaded by reason of insanity, faces up to life in prison.
If acquitted, he will be committed to a Washington mental hospital for an indefinite period.
Before telling the jury that the government had rested its case, chief prosecutor Roger Adelman introduced as evidence one final blown-up chart of
Hinckley's travels in the months before the shooting.
The 25 prosecution witnesses, including law enforcement officers and government psychiatrists, have portrayed Hinkley as a calculating, crouchng gunman, father, revenge killer his parents and proof of himself by shooting Reagan.
U. S. District Judge Barrington Parker agreed to allow defense lawyers to call two more psychiatrists for rare "sur-reburth" testimony in support of their argument that Hinckley was driven by anger over the large impulses on the day of the shooting.
But defense lawyer Vincent Fuller elected only to recall his lead psychiatrist expert, Carpenter of the University of Maryland, in an attempt to convince him that Carpenter planted ideas that Hincock's mind he was insane.
in reluctantly allowing the testimony of Carpenter and James Evans, a Washington psychiatrist, the judge ruled that the defense called nearly a dozen medical witnesses.
"I think there's either enough there to guide the jury or confuse the jury," Parker said.
Parker asked whether the defense, which has held open the option of having Hinkley testify, would put the defendant on the witness stand to describe his expertise he must demonstrate experts say drove him to make the attempt on Reagan's life.
"We will not put him on the stand, your honor." Fuller said.
With the jury absent, Parker then called Hinckley to the stand and asked the 27-year-old defendant whether he understood his rights.
"Yes, it's totally my decision."
replied Hinckley. On June 2 he had told the court, "I have been advised by counsel that I don't want to take the stand."
Before lawyers try to summarize for the jury the 10,000 pages of testimony, the judge has planned to rule on what instruction he will give the jury.
Campus Hideaway
Prosecutors want Parker to stress that legal commitment procedures could allow for Hinkley to be released if he is found to have been insane at the time of the shooting. The defense is pushing for instructions stressing that a key issue is whether Hinkley specified that he will the president and other victims.
Legal experts said it was rare in modern times for defendants to testify in insanity cases.
$3 with coupon
Luncheon Buffet Special
Mon.-Fri. 11-2
The March 30, 1988 attack on the president left Reagan and three others wounded.
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Expires June 30
LIVE MUSIC LIVES
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Thursday, June 17 IMPROVISATION 101
Bring your favorite instrument. Sign up at is 9 p.m.
FOLK BLUES BETH SCALET
$1.50 Black or White Russians all night.
Saturday, June 19
LIVE SAX ON STAGE!! BLUE PLATE SPECIAL
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2013.2.713.
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--should be started before labor o cyl
modified slightly higher.
* install new spark plugs
set engine recommended
use fuel injection
adjust carburetor
inspect operation of choke
install new fuel filler(Mazda and
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* run engines not included
COVER
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Limit one per person/per night, June 17-19
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University Dally Kansan, June 17, 1982 Page 3
Son of Sacrifices Bertha Igor Like father . . like son! Iggy's on the loose half of Nelson's Price
Bertha Igor
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Reg. $349.95 7 SACRIFICED @ $249.88
**Marantz** cassette deck with soft-touch controls, LEDs
and Dolby-C #006117003
Reg. $399.95 6 SACRIFICED @ $249.88
**Sony digital cassette deck with Dolby-C**
006116004
Reg. $299.95 6 SACRIFICED @ $249.88
Sony digital cassette deck with Dolby C
Reg. $419.95 1 SACRIFICED @ $299.88
TURNTABLES/CARTRIDGES
1013161009
Reg. $239.95
2 SACRIFICED @ $139.88
Technics quartz drive, fully automatic turntable
drive autoload with min
15116003
Rep. $219.95
1 SACRIFICED @ $149.88
10390305
Rep. $449.95 8 SACRIFICED @ $299.88
Pioneer tangential turntable with MC cartridge
sure nude hyperelastic cartridge
Reg. $13.150 1 SACRIFICED @ $99.88
Shure
hyperellip
0181420
2 SACRIF
Like father . . . like son! Iggy's on the loose with the second half of Nelson's Price Chopping Spree!
AUDIO-SYSTEMS & CABINETS
Ploner System w/20 watt ampifier, tuner, cassette deck, turntable, speakers and cabinet #031169000
Reg $1095.00 7 SACRIFICED @ $695.00
Ploner System w/32 watt ampifier, tuner, cassette deck, turntable, speakers and cabinet #033169001
Reg $1295.00 7 SACRIFICED @ $795.00
Ploner System w/45 watt ampifier, tuner, cassette deck, turntable, speakers and cabinet #033169002
Reg $1495.00 3 SACRIFICED @ $895.00
Ploner System w/65 watt ampifier, tuner, tape deck turntable, speakers and cabinet #033169003
Reg $1695.00 2 SACRIFICED @ $995.00
ENTRE STOCK OF PULASKI SOLID WOOD AUDIO
CABINETS ARE SACRIFIED AT HALF PRICE!
**Symphonic** compact system with AM/FM stereo cassette tape with counter & auto-stop. automatic record changer with hung dustcover and two deluxe speakers: #046211000
Reg $199.95 11 SACRIFLIC@ $149.88
**Sanyo** compact 14-watt AM/FM stereo. Dohly cassette with AMSS, LEDs, furnitable and cartridge. #046114001
Reg $399.95 12 SACRIFLIC@ $349.88
**Symphonic** digital system with AM FM stereo. 8-track and cassette featuring counter and auto-stop. automatic record changer with dustcover, dustcover and two deluxe speakers: #048211000
Reg $299.95 12 SACRIFLIC@ $199.88
**Akai** audio system w/23 watt amplifier tuner, cassette deck, furnitable and cabinet with glass top and doors: #030010000
Reg $989.75 20 SACRIFLIC@ $499.88
HEADPHONES
Mura standard headphones with Dynamic speakers.
060076000
Reg. $14 95 4 SACRIFICED @ $5.88
Mura open-air headphones with volume control.
601706000
Reg. $39.95
1 SACRIFICED @ $15.88
Audin Technica 'Gram-Cracker' headphones
061003000
Reg. $29.95 14 SACRIFICED @ $19.88
Vanco headphones with leatherlike design #60142400
Reg $29 95 *4 SACRIFICATED* $7.88
Audio Technica Point-One mini-headphones
062003000
Req. $29.95 1 SACRIFICED @ $19.88
62003001
Reo. $49.95 3 SACRIFICED @ $29.88
Audio Technica Point-Five mini-headphones
062003002
Ren. $79.95 4 SACRIFICED @ $49.88
CAR SPEAKERS
Planner 20 watt, 5½" thin speakers with 4 oz magnets
12509300
Reg $44.95 6 SACRIFIED@ $24.88
Jensen 75-watt, 6½" traxial door speakers with 16 oz
magnets #12606002
Reg $149.95 2 SACRIFIED@ $74.88
Jensen 50-watt, 4 x 10" traxial speakers @12706000
Reg $179.95 7 SACRIFIED@ $89.88
Jensen 100-watt, 6 x 9" coaxial speakers @12806001
Reg $129.95 2 SACRIFIED@ $64.88
Jensen 100-watt, 6 x 9" traxial speakers @12806000
Reg $179.95 1 SACRIFIED@ $89.88
Jensen 100 watt, 6 x 9" traxial II speakers
12806000
Reg $179.95 1 SACRIFIED@ $89.88
Marantz 60-watt, 6" 3-way speakers with 20 oz
magnets #126171000
Reg $99.95 1 SACRIFIED@ $49.88
Altec Sub-Wooper system
Reg. $249.95
1 SACRIFICED @ $49.88
PORTABLE CASSETTES/RADIOS
Sony mini-cassette with optional AM/FM adapter #02099001
Reg $79.95 4 SACRIFICED @ $99.88
Panasonic walkman cassette comes with mini-phones #204994000
Reg $129.95 1 SACRIFICED @ $79.88
Panasonic walkman recorder comes with mini-phones #204994001
Reg $129.95 4 SACRIFICED @ $89.88
Panasonic walkman recorder with AM/FM and mini-phones #204994002
Reg $219.95 1 SACRIFICED @ $139.88
Panasonic micro-cassette has pause control #20594000
Reg $69.95 3 SACRIFICED @ $44.88
Sanyo AM/FM stereo cassette with tone control #207114001
Reg $69.95 3 SACRIFICED @ $59.88
lIeER Iggy
Sony AM/FM stereo cassette has two walker speakers.
Recipient #993 14895 1 SACRIFICED @ $19.88
1
Maranz AM/FM stereo cassette has 12 LEDs with 4%
speakers @ 071710071
1 SACRIFICLED @ $159.88
+
Pioneer low-profile AM/FM stereo cassette kit #07093002
Reg. $249.95 1 SACRIEFED @ $179.88
**Panasonic AM/FM portable** #22604901
**Racquer** $44.95
**3 SACRIFIED** @ $29.88
Sony AY FM/FM portable radio with LEDs and tone control
2269909000
| | SACCHED BY #34 $BR
Sanvo white clock radio with wake-to music setting
828114000
Req. $9.95 4 SACRIFICED @ $19.81
Sanyo walnut look clock radio with buzzer @281214001
Reg. $49 95
10 SACRIFICED @$19.88
BLANK AUDIO-VIDEO TAPE
**BASF 3-hour beta videatec**
Reg. $21.95 72 SACRIFICED @ $14.88
**BASF 6-hour VHS chrome videatec**
Reg. $29.95 50 SACRIFICED @ $19.88
**Maxell 90-minute low noise cassette**
Reg. $3.59 85 SACRIFICED @ $2.99
**TDK low noise 90-minute cassette**
Reg. $4.25 98 SACRIFICED @ $2.99
**BASF 90-minute premium cassette**
Reg. $4.99 601 SACRIFICED @ $2.75
258075004
Reg. $5.29
4 SACRIFICED @ $2.79
TDK 90-minute premium cassette
Reg. $6.00
92 SACRIFICED @ $3.19
Maxell 90-minute premium cassette
Reg. $7.29
9 SACRIFICED @ $3.89
Maxell 60-minute chrome bias tape
Reg. $5.29
8 SACRIFICED @ $2.79
BASF Five 90-minute cassettes plus vinyl carrying case
259208001
Reg. $35.90
408 SACRIFICED @ $19.88
BASF 90-minute chromic bias tape
Reg. $6.29 467 SACRIFICED $3.79
TDK 2/4/4 hour VHS videoe tape
Ren. $30.00 SACRIFICED @ $26.00
Maxell 90 minute chromite bias tape
Reg. $7,29
8 SACRIFIED @ $3.89
CALCULATORS/TELEPHONE EQUIPMENT
**Panicasonic mini-card calculator with carry pouch**
276904000
Reg. $19.95 14 SACRIFICED @ $14.88
**Texas Instruments financial calculator**
Reg. $49.95 5 SACRIFICED @ $29.88
**Texas Instruments investment calculator**
Reg. $64.95 6 SACRIFICED @ $39.88
**Panicasonic portable printing calculator**
Reg. $79.95 3 SACRIFICED @ $49.88
**Panicasonic 12 digit desk calculator with display**
286904000
Reg. $59.95 7 SACRIFICED @ $34.88
**Panicasonic 10 digit desk calculator with display and printer**
288904000
Reg. $59.95 1 SACRIFICED @ $34.88
Panasonic mini-card calculator with carry pouch
CSTD
C
Panasonic 12 digit desk calculator with display and printer #288094001
Reg $139.95 2 SACRIFIED @ $79.88
Panasonic deluxe telephone answerer #310094000
Reg $219.95 6 SACRIFIED @ $149.88
Panasonic portable printing calculator with display #279094000
Reg $99.95 1 SACRIFIED @ $59.88
PhoneMate two-cassette answerer with remote #311142006
Reg $129.95 1 SACRIFIED @ $179.88
TELEVISION/VIDEO RECORDERS/CAMERAS
SONY 12.5 inch HD TV
**Sony 26 console with Matrix stereo sound #47099000**
Reg $1489.95
1 SACRIFIED@ #1113.70
**Panasonic 45 rear projection TV #40094000**
Reg $3495.00
2 SACRIFIED@ #1995.00
**Panasonic 60 told projection TV #40104000**
Reg $3995.00
1 SACRIFIED@ #1995.00
**Sony 50 front projection TV #50209900**
Reg $2995.00
3 SACRIFIED@ #1995.00
**Sanyo programmable video cassette recorder with repeat memory #25114001**
Reg $795.00
9 SACRIFIED@ #499.88
**Sanyo programmable video cassette recorder with beta-scan and remote #26114000**
Reg $995.00
10 SACRIFIED@ #599.88
**Sony five-hour programmable beta video cassette recorder #27099000**
Reg $1495.00
2 SACRIFIED@ #995.00
**Panasonic color camera with power zoom lens #40094000**
Reg $995.00
4 SACRIFIED@ #685.20
**Panasonic color camera with two-speed power zoom lens #40094001**
Reg $1095.00
1 SACRIFIED@ #752.24
**Fisher programmable video cassette recorder with electronic tuning #30223000**
Reg $799.95
1 SACRIFIED@ #599.88
**Panasonic HVS video-recorder programmable with remote optional #530094001**
Reg $1290.00
1 SACRIFIED@ #695.00
**Panasonic video-recorder with slow-motion fast scan and remote control #531094001**
Reg $1290.00
1 SACRIFIED@ #695.00
CAR STEREO/DETECTORS/$CANNERS
Audiokiv in-dash AM/FM mini-cassette #10265004
Reg $209.99 5 SACRIFICED @ $99.88
Sanyo in-dash AM/FM mini-cassette w/ Dolby and metal
tune #10114005
Reg $219.99 12 SACRIFICED @ $129.88
Panasonic in-dash AM/FM mini-cassette with Dolby
11195004
Reg $219.99 4 SACRIFICED @ $129.88
Sanyo car stereo SYSTEM with AM FM stereo cassette
plus two full range 6" speakers INSTALLED
126114000
Reg $199.99 SACRIFICED @ $99.00
Pioneer 10w, 5-band equalizer-power booster with 10
LEDS #122903001
Reg $199.99 2 SACRIFICED @ $139.88
Jensen 15-band parametric equalizer SACRIFICED @ $12460000
Reg $199.99 3 SACRIFICED @ $39.88
Jenson 10w power booster SACRIFICED @ $121600000
Reg $99.99 1 SACRIFICED @ $39.88
Clarion car equalizer/power booster #122022001
Reg $199.99 SACRIFICED @ $59.88
Jensen 34 watt booster with 5-band equalizer
122000000
Reg $179.99 1 SACRIFICED @ $69.88
Pioneer 30 watt, 5-band equalizer-booster with LEDs
122093000
Reg $179.99 1 SACRIFICED @ $89.88
Clarion equalizer-booster #122022000
Reg $219.99 1 SACRIFICED @ $109.88
Regency 3-band, 4-channel police scanner #231203006
Reg $89.99 2 SACRIFICED @ $29.88
Whistler super-heterodynamic radar detector #327203006
Reg $349.99 $199.98
Speedomatic speed transmitter with horn #329159000
Reg $79.90 5 SACRIFICED @ $199.88
RECORDS/TAPES
FREE STOCK LOCATOR SERVICE
Select stock of miscellaneous artists/albums
including at least 80 LPs
@ SACFUEDT @ 99!11
Quantities are limited to stock on hand and items being sacrificed may not be placed on lay-away. If your local store is out of stock in the item you're interested in call 913-267-6560 (Collect) and ask for Bertha. If we've got any left -- anywhere --she'll find 'em for you!
master charge
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Limited to in-store stock. Some items may not be displayed in all stores.
If any local dealer offers any of these items, new & in-stock. at a lower price this week ... bring in the ad and we'll meet the price or give you one thousand dollars! Ask us for the details
2
JJ
NELSON'S
TEAM ELECTRONICS
University Daily Kansan, June 17, 1982
Analysis
Administrators insensitive to needs
KU neglects nontraditional students
By PATTI HACKNEY
Guest Columnist
Students who work for their livelihood or are raising their children while attending school are not a narity anymore. But the University hasn't recognized that fact in their policies. The dominant attitude and system still serves the traditional model of education instead of encouraging, nontraditional students.
ALTHOUGH the easy-access program exists to help, it is not geared toward the degree-seeking nontraditional student. The Nontraditional Student Organization means well, and the students there are more likely to but weekly meetings are not what an already over-committed student needs or wants.
Nontraditional students normally must work to afford an education while supporting their families. But jobs that are flexible enough to accommodate a student's day classes are nor-committed to the minimum wage). Thus, financial aid is needed to supplement income and pay tuition.
Many times, financial aid with a part-time job just isn't enough. The student must find full-time work to meet household expenses. And if the student's salary is low, the student at minimum wage is still at the poverty level.
navid Stockman's claim that those who really want an education will work for it without financial aid is a sham, a crock and an outright lie. Those who can afford an education will get it, and those who can't will not. And the trusism that the rich get richer (and educated) and the poor get poorer (and pushed out of the higher-paying job market) is even true.
THE UNIVERSITY system does not support the nontraditional student. Look at the number and extent of evening courses. There is no way a person can hold down a chair or uphazardly chosen by departments with no plan to help a person who can only take night courses.
A small but very frustrating situation for students with children is that when schools are closed in the town because of bad weather, the university usually remains open. Those students with children are in a bind. Your child is home from school, and you have to go to work and classes. More coordination between the University and the public school system could be an answer, or some kind of emergency day care on campus for only those days when the public schools are closed because of weather and the university remains open.
EXTRACURRICULAR activities present one of the largest obstacles for nontraditional students. What seems to be an added opportunity for on-hands experience and socializing with fellow students can sometimes be the road to contacts and exposure needed to land a high-paying
Work on the Kansan (when you take Advanced Reporting) requires a story in every day, which means the person is working in the newsroom every evening. What family member with children works in the newsroom? What evenings a week in the Kansan newsroom, while working a job and attending classes? That feat is difficult enough for the traditional student, and totally out of reach for nontraditional students, and yet, it allows the student to string books to show) are many times based on involvement with the Kansan.
SURELY EVERY school in the University has its examples. The Law School has the Law Review, a journal put out by the students, and those who work on it gain prestige and exposure that can be the cutting edge in their competitive field.
But these students are a measure, it is said, of the student's true interest and enthusiasm for their profession. The Stockmans of the world say that if they really are dedicated, they will find a way to become involved in these activities, despite all obstacles.
IS THAT A Fair barometer of caring and dedication? Is the student who works a full-time job, supports a family, maintains a house, takes a full class load, keeps a decent grade point average and attempts a good family life any less dedicated? The rewards that go to the student involved in the extracurricular activities do not necessarily show the most dedication.
That is not to belittle in any way the accomplishments of the student who does work hard on the Kansan or the Law Review; it just puts some students on a high level of 'dedication' and how it is presently measured.
BUT THEN again, isn't that a microcosm of "the hard cruel world"? Those who work long and hard and steady are those who are necessarily rewarded. You can go to work every day, work hard, be dedicated and be laid off or never get a raise, or just get good pay and a chance to take extra advantage, those family contacts, or who are in the right place at the right time who get the payoff.
I don't have any pat answers. We are talking about a system here - attitudes ingrained into administrators that filter down into every classroom and the way each instructor operates. I don't expect the University system to be focused on the needs of the schools need to consider their value systems and re-evaluate the way their school treats nontraditional students. In these times especially, with a crippled financial aid program and the number of students having to work through the semester, it may be hard to do. Adequate alternatives should be thought out for the students who want that experience and education, but not at the cost of their families or their sanity.
"WITH FALLING enrollments, it would be an economically sound practice to encourage nontraditional students. Working while attending school can help you keep the number of people to gain an education.
Many causes for decline of education
By LOREN BUSY
Guest Columnist
THE QUALITY OF EDUCATION at any college or university is reflected by the skills and capabilities of the institution's graduates. And it is no secret that the reading, writing and verbal communication skills of college graduates have been declining. Many post-graduate schools and colleges have faced concerns about the standard fundamental communication skills of college students.
In turn, the colleges and universities often blame elementary and secondary schools for these problems. The situation is a familiar one. These schools very seldom hold a student back regardless of how inadequately he or she may be prepared.
Some institutions are able to protect their educational standards by using selective admissions policies. Undoubtedly, the University of Kansas could also improve the quality of education it offers by tightening its admissions standards. The luxury of a street admission policy, however, cannot impose absolute dream for a state law that must accept all state high school graduates who apply.
IN THE OPINION of many KU students, having to take all Kansas graduates is only one of several problems. There are many complaints that are well known to the entire University. They have been the central point of discussion among students, faculty and administrators.
A lot of students think that courses are too difficult or are poorly taught. Related to this is the complaint that faculty members spend the time teaching graduate courses and doing research.
Another common gripe is about faculty advising. In several instances, there is either little or no action. Many professors do not have many students who have seen their adviser think the quality of advising was inadequate.
THERE ARE MANY who place the blame for the decline in quality of undergraduate education on former administrators at KU. Many people point to the administration of former Chancellor Archie Dykes (1973-980) as the main cause of the decline. For a variety of reasons, appropriations from the Kansas Legislature were made to support the college. Us' not important to establish what the reasons were or where the blame lies at this point.
Even though increased funding would solve some problems, such as the growing number of teaching assistants needed and the decrease in professors attracted to KU, problems would still exist. Difficult courses would still be here, as would poor advising and other problems.
According to a publication prepared by the office of student affairs titled "Student Profile." "After six semesters at KU, 41.3 percent of the class who entered in the fall of 1979 have left the University." From data gathered thus far on the classes that entered in 1979 and 1980, it appears that this figure will be easily repeated by both classes.
This figure is not cause for great alarm. Probably close to all of the 1,000 students had a vast array of excuses for their failures. It's always easier to blame something abstract than to blame oneself. In all likelihood, in practically every case, the blame for dismissal lies with the student.
missal rate is high and why students in general are dissatisfied with the quality of their education. The solution rests with the student. Tacha said that data obtained from studies of ACT scores show that 80 percent of the students who attend KU are capable of achieving a 2.50 GPA. Yet the total University GPA is only 2.68 (as of the fall of 1980).
CERTAINLY THERE are many reasons for students to leave KU. Unfortunately, a precise breakdown for why the 43 percent left KU is not clear. The failure of instruction and dismissal policies were implemented two years ago, the number of academic dismissions has increased dramatically. According to Dean Natalie Tacha, vice chancellor for academic affairs at KU, the dismissions for academic issues in the past 12 months.
THE ANSWER is the same for why the dis-
A large number of students don't come to KU with the commitment and dedication needed to succeed. Many students say she or he didn't even book for a class until the night before a test.
Closely related to this is attendance. Again, it isn't uncommon to see a student in class only on the day of a test. Attendance is such a large problem that the Commission on the improvement of Undergraduate Education suggested an increased attendance policy be considered.
The commission also recommended several other changes in undergraduate education. Some of these recommendations are: to establish clearly defined academic standards, to establish clear guidelines for student achievement and reward teaching at the undergraduate level; to evaluate regularly the quality of the undergraduate program; and to communicate to prospective students and the people of Kansas the academic commitments of KU to a high quality educational institution; and their recommendations are being implemented.
Just having these recommendations implemented, however, won't discontent that presently exists. Students must come half way toward achieving academic achievement for quality education. Even if KU were to soon have the most outstanding advising program in the nation, it wouldn't matter unless students participated. Well over 50 percent of KU students are self-advised, and the majority of them receive their adviser once a semester. Unless students accept their share of responsibility, nothing will change.
Education at KU
Student body threatened from within and without
By ALVIN A. REID Columnist
The university student is quickly becoming an endangered species. What once was a thriving elan is dwindling every semester and, if something doesn't change soon, extinction is possible. Between education budget cutbacks, elimination of over 50 percent of all student financial aid and spiraling college costs, receiving a first rate education is becoming a thing of the past for many people. The University of Kansas is approaching this dangerous trend.
THE ECONOMIC status of the average KU student may be high, but this university relies heavily on students who must receive some type of financial assistance to defray the mounting cost of tuition. Should these students lose any more financial aid, many will have to settle for other colleges and KU will be the biggest loser of all.
Part of the problem lies with the student himself. In fact, the KU student is his own worst enemy. Students are quite aware of their plight, but too many of them won't lift a finger to help themselves. If the existing situation is to be reversed, those enrolled at this university had better start taking more interest in University affairs.
Pretty soon students will be receiving less and less education for more and more money. How many sophomores and junior know that tuition is going to skyrocket after spring 1983? Along with that, room and board prices will be higher, as will prices of books and supplies.
THE ONLY PEOPLE who are great enough in number to battle these runaway price increases are students. Every student has a vote and can use his ballot to show some clout. Let Kansas representatives know how you feel about the college education that is slipping through your
But, until the KU student starts taking the initiative and gets off his duff, the odds of graduating from an accredited university will grow worse everyday. Next fall, look around and see how many of your friends aren't here. And not all of the missing people were academically dismissed. They simply couldn't keep pace with the financial burden
IN THESE DAYS of educational cutbacks, the most endangered type of student is the minority
student. What's alarming is that the black student may be the most apathetic of all. The way America is running, any black student enrolled in college, especially a fine university such as this, should consider himself very lucky. Because attending college is such a grand opportunity, black students should be fighting tooth and nail to hamp on to it.
Instead of following in the apathetic footsteps of his white counterpart, the black student should be trying to fill every leadership role he could mustered. The student would equality in every facet of education. This includes protesting the proposed cuts in financial aid favored by President Reagan. While these cuts would affect many white students, they would decimate the black student population at
AT THE CLOSE of the spring semester the black students of KU found themselves fighting each other instead of the problems that threaten them all. The Black Student Union is taking the first steps in becoming campus leaders, as are the black students' organization, the Black Student Union, and unofficial groups must put their petty grievances behind them and become strong allies.
amount KU's black students decide to get on the ball, they could have one of the best black student bodies in the Big Eight, or in the nation because of other students' sluggish behavior. The limelight is there, but someone has to make an offer to him. KU wants him to find some motivation and take an active role in this university, minority education at KU will be seriously limited.
By utilizing the Kansan and the campus radio stations and by simply writing letters to politicians and KU administrators, the black students' group is able to gain a voice in shaping whim of an animal struggling for survival.
GRADUATING FROM the hallowed halfs of KU is a prestigious moment for any student, be they black or white. But if the same thing can be said 10 years from now, the student is going to have to decide to take part. Not only must the faculty and staff be concerned, but so must every individual student who pays through the nose for the right to enroll each semester. The student has to figure out that this entire campus is made possible by him—and to keep it, to be to be fought for. If the college student's future in Lawrence is threatened, so is he.
The University Daily KANSAN
ISPS 609-640) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Monday and Thursday June, June and July except September. (Susan J. Smith, Student Services, Kansas State University, Lawrence, Kansas) Mail for registration $25 for 8 year or $42 for 10 year or 8 year in Douglas, Kansas or a year outside the University. Student subscriptions are $3 a semester, paid through the student activity fee. Postmaster: Send change of address to the University Daily Kansai, Fell Hall, the University of Kansas, Kansas City, Kansas.
Editor Coral Reach
Sales and Marketing Advisor
General Manager and News Advisor
Business Manager
Sharon Bodin
John Oberzan
Paul Jess
Fundamental goals of education at the University of Kansas
By MICHAEL L. JOHNSON Guest Columnist
Like any public university, the University of Kansas is dedicated to a variety of educational missions that may be characterized in many different ways. However, if one is concerned, as I am here, with presenting an overview of those missions, one must have some relatively simple criteria of categories in terms of which they may be classified and briefly discussed and evaluated.
BRAIN IN HULLE
PROPABEDEUTIC EDUCATION involves teaching and learning at the introductory level. It is education in the fundamental forms of knowledge, including basic information essential or core-curricular subjects. Its mission is generally to enhance and consolidate the student's command of those forms of knowledge and skills in preparation for more advanced and, typically, more specialized or vocational learn-
Thus, I propose that those missions be categorized in terms of a kind of twivum. By this scheme the University has three missions: (1) providing exemplary education and (2) mathematical education.
It is the kind of education realized in the student's completion of the basic freshman and sophomore courses in English and mathematics, plus the social sciences such as history, psychology, history of art and
chemistry. At its most basic level, it habitulates the student to avoid写 run-on sentences and to grasp and use the notion of algebraic proportion; at its most advanced, it habitulates the student to distinguish analytically two pieces of music from different eras.
DISCIPLINARY EDUCATION involves teaching and learning at a higher level and in a variety of ways. Students are典化 forms of knowledge and skills associated with that discipline. Its mission is to deepen the student's understanding of those forms of knowledge and to refine and polish those skills in areas of study.
It is the kind of education realized in the student's completion of a terminal degree,
whether at the undergraduate or graduate level. It enables the student to graduate and secure employment more or less related to the kind of job offered, setting it a higher degree and subsequent employment.
MATHETIC EDUCATION is more general or more holistic than propeudectic or disciplinary education and involves teaching and learning about the discovery, cultivation and enlargement of cognitive faculties, those radical abilities that relate to the whole process by which any form of knowledge or any skill is learned and used. It is education in generalized forms of meta-knowledge and meta-skills. its mission is to help the student to learn the processes of knowledge structure in which the forms of knowledge apply to any discipline inhere and are elaborated to analogize among them, to understand how understanding is accomplished.
It is the kind of education realized (sometimes almost in a single moment of enlightenment) in the student's achievement of a polymathic and intelligently fluid mind-set, one informed by the need to cultivate intelligent intellect. In lifelong self-education, it enables the student to grow with an open and whole view of the human enterprise, the artificial closures of particular subject areas or activities, and to live adaptively, comprehensively, even enthusiastically, in a world of self-realization.
which being paralleled by its compass,
THE UNIVERSITY of Kansas for the most
Placing a special emphasis on mathecic education involves a special kind of commitment. *President's education is hugely, though if should be more focused on the sciences* in the city of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences;
part does an at least respectable job in fulfilling all of these three educational missions. However, if it is to be the kind of university presently envisioned by its more optimistic administrators and faculty members (count me as a member of both groups), it obviously must continue to improve manifoldly all the entities (schools, programs, courses, whatever) subsumed by the especially, I would suggest, the many aspects of those entities relevant to matheduc education.
disciplinary education is partly the responsibility of the college but more largely the responsibility of the various schools of the University; but mathetic education is the responsibility of the entire academic community of the University.
TO BE FULLY and generally realized, it requires a thoroughgoing and ongoing commitment to interdisciplinary teaching and learning. This is particularly important because made but must make if it is to educate its students appropriately and richly for a future that promises to be terribly problematic but nonetheless replete with wonderful opportunities for growth and development, it is intensive enough to perceive and exploit them.
In his poem "In Broken Images," Robert Graven delineates two very opposite kinds of death.
He continues quick and dull in his clear images;
I continue slow and sharp in my broken images.
He in a new confusion of his understanding;
1 in a new understanding of my confusion
I in a new understanding of my confusion
Cheery I want attention at the University of Kansas, at least the best ones, to identify with the speaker.
University Daily Kansan, June 17, 1982
Page 5
Some staff laid off No summer school at Haskell
or with
But there is something missing this summer-students.
The lawns at Haskell Indian Junior College are being mowed, people walk from the chapel down toward the administration building and cars remain parked in the parking lots.
Gerald Gipp, president of the college, said recently that he was forced to cancel summer classes this year because he had not received word from the Bureau of Indian Affairs about an appeal for more money to operate the college. He made the decision to close the college to allow students to make plans for the summer, he said.
The Bureau of Indian Affairs informed Gipp in early March that $34,700 of the facilities operations budget, the portion of the budget that pays for materials, utilities and maintenance personnel, had been cut.
In mid-April, Gipp was told that $300,000 of the cut had been restored because of an appeal. It was too late.
to plan a summer session by then. Gipp said.
LAY-OFFS FOR the summer included 28 educational staff, which includes dormitory and food service personnel in addition to teaching staff. Fifteen people from facilities operations were laid off. Of the remaining 149 staff, about 50 are teachers...
All personnel are scheduled for a two-week furlough during the summer to keep the college within its budget. Gipp said.
The 50 teachers now at the college are working at the library, keeping abreast of developments in their field, preparing for the fall session or eligible for educational leave, Ginp said.
"Everyone, if there is a two-week
furlough period, will be back on
campus no later than August so that
they will have sufficient time to pre-
pare for the fall session, including
those who are now laid off," he said.
Because summer school has been canceled, about 26 students will
have their graduation postponed, he said.
The students and faculty are not the only ones who suffer, Gipp said.
the only ones who suffer, Gipp said. "I think there's a need for a full summer program, not just for our student population, but also for the bureau's educational system as a whole," he said.
GIPP SAID HASKELL Indian Junior College was a training ground for teachers who taught in other American populations in other areas.
The grounds will not stay completely idle. A workshop is being conducted there on property management.
"Not having the opportunity to do that is very frustrating because there is so much potential for the teacher to perform for higher learning," he said.
Preliminary projections of the budget for the next fiscal year, which begins Oct. 1, indicate that the budget will increase in the budget. Gipp said.
MILWAUKEE
HILLMAN
JUNIOR COLLEGE
Photo by SUSAN PAGE
A skeleton staff is working at Haskell Indian Junior College, which is void of students this summer. Gerald Gipp, president of the college, said he was forced to cancel summer classes because of a cut in the school's facilities and operations budget.
FBI director sees riot-free summer
ST. LOUIS—Even though teenagers are committing more violent crimes, FBI Director William H. Webster said yesterday that some teenagers have the power of rieps this summer.
Webster told reporters his "general observations" led him to think cities would remain peaceful despite near-record unemployment in some inner-
city areas and rising crime rates among young people.
He also said big-city police departments had learned from their mistakes.
"I'm rather encouraged by what I see," he said. "There's plenty of room for people to express themselves lawfully."
The rate of violent crimes committed by teenagers has gone up more than 60 percent in the last 10 years. Webster said. The rate of property crimes committed by teenagers has jumped 50 percent.
People 16 years old are guilty of the largest number of property crimes, he said.
87%
'39
76%
'49
60%
'69
'81
33%
24%
40%
52%
48%
With the exception of the years during World War II, 1944 and 1945, more men than women have attended the University of Kansas each year. However, in recent years, the number of women at KU has increased. Almost 50 percent of the student population is now women.
Study looks at student changes
By NEAL McCHRISTY Staff Reporter
In the early '70s, presbyter was probably remembered as an insult hurled at Ryan O'Neal by Al McGraw in the 1970 film "Love Story," and allogators burned themselves on riverbanks before their images sewn on a shoalish shirt.
Changes in word use and fashion are not the only changes among students from 167 to those enrolling last fall, a KU study shows.
THE FACULTY AND staff will know better whom they are working with, and therefore do their jobs better
In 1871 there were more full-time students, students younger than thirty and freshmen interested in social sciences and education. There was a decrease in these areas with the students that enrolled last fall, the study by the office of the vice chancellor for student affairs revealed
through the study's findings, David Amber, vice chancellor for student affairs, said recently.
"It's very easy for the faculty to believe that the student population doesn't change every year, and the purpose of this profile is to show the changes that have occurred in the student population," Amber said.
the majority of new students that enrolled in the fall of 1981 were white, male freshmen majoring in health professions or business. New students were predominantly from northeast Kansas and came from town of more than 10,000 people.
Many of those freshmen may not stay past their junior year if a trend continues similar to that of a Student Assistance center study of freshmen
AMBLER SAID those figures included people who left to attend other
Four out of 10 freshmen entering KU in 1978 dropped out before their senior year, that study showed.
schools. He said early enrollment could help identify people intending to withdraw at the end of a semester, instead of continuing, which students don't return to re-enroll.
Of these students who dropped out, half said that they had defianced plans to re-enroll, and one-third said they might enroll in the future.
The main reasons students gave for leaving KU were health-related, family or personal problems, conflicts in work and school and emotional problems.
other findings of the study include:
* Minority enrollment increased by 0.2 percent from 1973 to 1981. Most minority students were black or Hispanic
- Women held the highest grade-point averages in 1981, comparing composite scores of men and women.
Healthy diet might help reduce risk of cancer
WASHINGTON—Americans could reduce their chances of getting cancer by cutting down on fat, salt-saturated foods and alcohol and eating more fruit, vegetables and whole grains, said theional Academy of Sciences yesterday.
A scientific committee of the Academy's national research council cited reports that diet could be responsible for 50 percent of women. However, it
said, much is still unknown about the relationship between diet and cancer.
"Our recommendations should not be regarded as assuring a cancer-free life," said Clifford Grobstein, chairman of the study. "But we believe a significant reduction in cancer incidence can be achieved by modifying our diet, as well as changing smoking habits."
Consumption of saturated and unsaturated fats, now 40 percent of
total calories in the average American's daily diet, should be cut to 30 percent of the committee said. Fat is one of the most important factors in the breast prostate and large bowel.
Excessive drinking, especially when combined with cigarette smoking, has been associated with an increased risk of cancer of the upper gastrointestinal tract. If alcohol is consumed, it should be in moderation, the committee said.
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SAUCES (included)
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YOU MAY ALSO WISH TO ADD:
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3 I Sausage 1.00 6 Xtra Sauce 50
Combos of any two items 1.50
ALL ITEMS AVAILABLE FOR CARRY-OUT
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1. Meat Ravioli ... 2.40
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SAUCES (Included)
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2. Spicy Tomato
YOU MAY ALSO WISH TO ADD:
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Soft Drinks ... Tea ... 40
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Page 6 University Daily Kansan, June 17, 1982
Orientation aids new students
By KIM NEWTON Staff Reporter
About 3,000 to 3,500 new students are expected to participate in the University of Kansas summer orientation program, which is designed to ease the adjustment process for new students. Lovely Ulmer, coordinator of the summer orientation program, said recently.
Between June 12 and July 17, will visit the campus and participate in the enrollment program and activities by the office of educational services.
"The summer orientation program's purposes are to inform incoming students of what the university expects academically, to acclimate them to the University and its services, to advise and enroll them efficiently and correctly, and to allay their fears," Ulmer said.
Ulmer said most new students were worried about getting lost, performing well academically and making friends.
"SOMETIMES THEY WAY if they will get to know their professors or if they can room with people from their hometowns," Ulmer said. "Usually these problems are worked out, or there are services available to help them, such as information services, if they get lost."
"We find once they get here, because of the nature of the University, they have access to a wide variety of services, both academic and social, that break down into smaller groups that they can deal with."
The summer orientation program, as described in KU brochures, enables undergraduates new to KU to meet with students from other colleges and tour the campus and find what stuf-
dent organizations and activities, housing, financial aid and counseling services are available.
Ulmer said last year's report evaluating student and parental responses to the orientation session surveys showed that 95 percent of the participants received answers to their questions and more comfortable with selecting KU.
STUDENTS WILL meet in ten small group supervises by student group leaders who have undergone 80 hours of training and are answering questions during the sessions.
The group leaders will be responsible for conducting walking tours of the campus and bus tours for parents. They will also assist students in learning to transfer information from the Timetable onto class cards in a mock exercise before actually enrolling with their advisers.
Lynn Huss, OrmahA, Neb, junior, said the group leaders spent two weeks learning the layout of the campus and the history of the buildings and meeting with different schools and organizations.
Umer said the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences was offering "co-coding" this year for students interested in professional schools their junior years.
A STUDENT interested in entering the School of Business, for example, would be able to meet with a business professor and an adviser from the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences during the session. Ulmer said.
"The sooner a student can establish contact in fields he may be interested in the better off he is." Ulmer said.
Charles Krider, associate dean of the School of Business, said co-advising was important because students needed
to know the requirements for the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, as well as the requirements needed to enter the professional schools.
James Carothers, English professor, said, "I think the summer orientation program is beneficial to both students and faculty because it gives them more leisure time and access academic opportunities and pre-registration makes enrollment easier.
An adviser in the summer orientation program for twenty years, John Landgrebe, chemistry professor, said he helped the program was "very successful."
"I think students coming earlier in the summer relieves the anxiety and answers questions they have that might not get answered in the fall." Landen adds, "Because the advantage of doing it early because they get the classes they want."
WHILE STUDENTS are enclosing, parents will have the opportunity to meet with various deans, administrators and faculty members.
"We're seeing a real increase in parental involvement," Ulmer said. "It slacked off in the '60s and '70s, but now we're seeing more parental support."
"Last year a family from Wyoming drove down for the orientation and drove back when it was over." Ulmer said. "Frequently we have people who are in our backyard to follow us back. Some families try to combine the sessions with their vacations."
The registration fee for summer orientation is $9 for students and $7 for parents. The fee includes a luncheon, the orientation student packet and identification cards.
Overnight housing will be available in Gentrue Sellars. Pearson Hall for $8 a room the evening before and during the sessions.
THE GENEVA CLUB
Photo by J. SHARP SMITH
Lending a hand —
Fixing a car on a hot afternoon becomes a group effort for these Lawrence youngsters.
BURGLARS BROKE IN the door of a house at 104 New Jersey St. Monday night and stole $280 worth of tools, said there. There are no suspects.
THEVES, USING A刀架, ripped open the compact top of a 1974 Trium parked outside 1296 New Jersey St. and store 842 in stereo equipment
On the record
THEIVES STOLE $390 worth of stero equipment and tools from an unlocked car at 1512 E. 13th St. some
sometime between Sunday and Tuesday, police said. There are no suspects.
THEIVES STOLE an A/M/FM eight track stereo值班 at $190 from an unlocked car at 1140 a.m. to Tuesday morning, 10:00 p.m. Monday and Tuesday morning, police said.
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HONDA - HARLEY-DAVIDSON
University Daily Kansan, June 17, 1982
Page 7
Tues.
spects,
eight
am
ey St.
monday
said.
Few teens care about draft. counselors sav
By CAROL MILLS Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
The draft and nuclear war do not concern most young people today. Bob Love, Lawrence High School psychologist, said Tuesday.
But the Reagan administration is attempting to make draft registration important to all 18-year-olds.
"These kids don't see war, or even the draft, as a threat," he said. "I think the whole business is just too far removed from them."
YOUNG MEN WHO have failed to register for the draft may be forced to comply under governmental pressure, said Betty Alexander, public information officer for the Selective Service System in Washington D.C. Tuesday. "In an effort to get the word out to all candidates, we have authorized the prosecution of those who have deliberately refused to comply with draft registration," she said.
"An estimated 800,000 men have not registered for the draft," Alexander said. "Right now, we're issuing prescription orders for those who have sent us mail." He added that he happily and for those who have been reported on by their friends or neighbors."
Although, according to Alexander, most young men know they must register, local school counselors say there has been little recognition or concern about registration among high school students.
"THE STUDENTS seem to have no opinion for or against it," Lowe said. "Most of the kids are worried about the everyday things like dating, their parents or driving cars. I can't see that the young men in our town young men one way or another."
Anti-draft committees and organizations in Lawrence, too, are not nearly as active as they once were, an anti-draft counselor said.
"I'm surprised that no organization exits," said Leroy Chittandon, himself once active in anti-draft demonstrations.
"IPERSONALLY feel that there is so much apathy on the part of the public that actively organizing seems such a futile thing to do.
"I'm quite willing to help those young men who feel opposed to registration," he said. "Those men will have to face the government all alone, and I don't want to see them do that. I want to help."
Chittendon said that Jack Bremer, campus minister at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1203 Oread, was also involved in anti-draft counseling.
Bremer said he had seen only a handful of people concerned with the draft.
"It is important that young men understand and clarify their attitudes about the draft and registration," he said. "In theory, there has not been a wide concern."
A U.S. Army recruiter in Lawrence, a city near the Army was well staffed nationwide.
"We're not putting in more people than we were two years ago," he said. "But those we are putting in are better qualified people than two years ago."
"Because of the economic times, we have more re-enlistments, and we are seeing a lot of young men and women who want to enlist," he said.
He said nearly a third of the people who wanted to enlist were turned down because of the higher mental standards now required.
"During peacetime, the Army must recruit skilled personnel." Rouse said. "We want the kind of people that we have to train over a year's time. Like if a particular person needs to learn a language, that's the kind of person we
want in during peacetime, so he will be trained should we need him in periods of war."
Alexander said no expectations existed to re-institute the draft.
"THAT WOULD HAPPEN only in an emergency," she said, "the president must request a draft and Congress must approve it."
Alexander said the public information push was not meant to be a threat.
But for those who do not find it easy to go to the post office to register, failure to do so carries a stiff penalty.
"We just want the young men to realize that registration is a serious thing, and that they must comply," she said. "All they have to do is go to the post office and fill in their name, address and date of birth. It's easy."
Alexander said that the maximum penalty for failing to register was either a $10,000 fine, five years in prison or both. However, she stressed the point that the actual penalty would be decided by the courts.
Alexander said that by early July, Social Security records would be compared to the current register to find out who has not registered, and that those young men would have to face the consequences.
Police reject city's latest contract proposal
Members of the Lawrence Police Officers Association voted a resounding 38-3 no to the city's latest work agreement proposal Tuesday.
LPOA chief negotiator, Gary Sampson, said wages were still the divisive issue between police and the city.
The city offered the police a 6 percent wage increase in January 1983, a 5 percent increase in January 1984 and an average increase of 2.5 percent in July 1984, 1 percent less than the police asked for in their last proposal.
JACKIE McCLAIN, the city's personnel director and chief negotiator, said
Monday that she was not surprised the police refused the proposal.
"Their negotiating team was not supportive of the proposal, and so I figured neither would the force." McClaim said.
"It was the best we could do with the resources we have available."
Sampson said the vote against the city's proposal was overwhelming because "everybody feels that is not adequate."
"We're just asking for fair treatment." he said.
When the deadline for reaching an agreement, June 1, passed, a federal mediator, Buford Thompson, was called into Lawrence.
THE MEDIATOR met twice with the negotiating teams last week in an attempt to reconcile differences involving three police demands: higher wages, health insurance for dependents and a criminal justice department as a departmental policy-making board.
The city and police have been constructing a labor pact since mid-April.
McClain said the two sides may have been too far apart in the beginning of negotiations to come to an agreement on a proposal.
But Sampson said he thought a change in negotiation methods was needed to effectively work out a labor pact. He praised McClain's abilities as chief negotiator for the city, stating she would use these skills with us than were her predecessors.
But he said he would like to see the city switch to binding arbitration, in which an arbitrator steps in and works out a contract that must be accepted by both, if the two sides could not come to an agreement.
"It would keep both sides more honest," Sampson said.
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Commissioners disagree, saying almost one-third of those on the list had moved, many leaving no forward address.
The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Summer Concert Series Presents AIRE ALAIN
velveous talent combined with exquisite taste" Normandie
Zook demanded the city send a refund to everyone who was on the water department's mailing list duri- gency. He found in which the fee was charged.
8:00 p.m. Friday, June 18 at Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont. Tickets on sale June 14 in the Murphy Hall Box Office, 913-864-3982. All years general admission for $5 public. $2.50 KU students. $4 senior citizens and other students.
---
The group organized a petition drive that brought the ordinance up for a vote in May.
E. R. Zook, 629 W 2st St., a chief organizer of Citizens for a Better Government, told commissioners he thought their refund suggestions were "Mickey Mouse attempts and a stall."
have a taste Our treats this summer
The staff was also asked to figure the costs of tracking down former customers and mailing refunds to them.
THE LETTER, also approved by the planning and county commissions, would make it possible for Lawrence to receive Urban Mass Transit Funds and special planning money.
After an hour's discussion, the commission voted to have the staff study the possibility of refunding the money by crediting current water department customers' bills for the amount of study fees they paid.
City Commission to refund tax to Lawrence residents
By KATE DUFFY Staff Reporter
"If they want to make a contribution to you, let them turn that check around and endorse it to you." Zook shot back.
Staff Reporter
City commissioners decided at Tuesday night's meeting to refund the nearly $80,000 collected from a storm water study for a storm water drainage study.
About $64,000 of the money has already been paid to a Kansas City firm for the first portion of the study.
COMMISSIONER NANCY SHONTZ told Zook that many people would not want a refurb
"The public expects you to live up to what you said in court." Zook said, referring to last December's lawsuit, in which the city declared it would refund the money if it lost the case.
out like that," Commissoiner Bark- ley Clark said.
But Zook said the city had made a mistake and should be forced to pay the penalty.
Groups to ask city for funds
City commissioners will hear 1983 federal revenue sharing requests from about 25 organizations at a public hearing Thursday.
Lawrence has been allocated $637,000 from revenue sharing for the coming
year. In the past, these funds have been used for capital improvement, the financing of various social services agencies and building the City Hall.
The hearing will begin at 2 p.m. in the commission's chambers at City Hall Sixth and Massachusetts streets.
Airline Tickets
At airline counter prices no extra service charge
Make your travel arrangements on campus
---
AIRLINES
See Maupintour Travel Service for:
- The lowest airfares - Complete travel arrangements
- Eurail and Japan Rail Passes
- Car rental — Hotel confirmations
- Student semester break holidays
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* Travel insurance
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KU Union 900 Massachusetts
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Page 6 University Daily Kansan, June 17, 1982
Orientation aids new students
By KIM NEWTON Staff Reporter
Abcut 3,000 to 3,500 new students are expected to participate in the University of Kansas summer orientation program, which is designed to ease the adjustment process for new students, Lovely Umi, coordinator of the summer orientation program, said recently.
Between June 12 and July 17, will visit the campus and participate in the enrollment program and activities by the office of educational services.
"The summer orientation program's purposes are to inform incoming students of what the University expects academically, to acclimate them to the University and its services, to advise and enroll them efficiently and correctly, and to allay their fears." Ulmer said.
Ulmer said most new students were worried about getting lost, performing well academically and making friends.
"SOMETIMES THEY wonder if they will get to know their professors or our neighbors in order to have their hometowns." Ulmer said. "Usually these problems are worked out, or there are services available to help them, such as information services, if they get
"We find once they get here, because of the nature of the University, they have access to a wide variety of services, both academic and social, that break down into smaller groups that they can deal with."
The summer orientation program, as described in KU brochures, enables undergraduate new to KUU meet with KUU faculty and students to tour the campus and find what student organizations and activities, housing financial aid and counseling services are available.
Ulmer said last year's report evaluating student and parental responses to the orientation session surveys showed that 95 percent of the students answered questions to their questions and felt more comfortable with selecting KU.
STUDENTS WILL meet in ten small groups supervised by student group leaders who have undergone 80 hours of training and answered answering questions during the sessions.
The group leaders will be responsible for conducting walking tours of the campus and bus tours for parents. They will also assist students in learning to transfer information from the Timetable onto class cards in a mock enrollment exercise before actually enrolling with their advisers.
Lynn Huss, Omaha, Neb., junior said the group leaders spent two weeks learning the layout of the campus and the history of the buildings and meeting with different schools and organizations.
Ulmer said the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences was offered "co-educating" this year for students interested in professional schools or professional schools their junior years.
A STUDENT interested in entering the School of Business, for example, would be able to meet with a business professor and an adviser from the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences during the college, Ulmer said.
"The sooner a student can establish contact in fields he may be interested in the better off he is." Ulmer said.
Charles Krider, associate dean of the School of Business, said co-advising was important because students needed
to know the requirements for the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, as well as the requirements needed to enter the professional schools.
James Carothers, English professor, said, "I think the summer orientation program is beneficial to both students and faculty because it gives them more academic possibilities and pre-graduate makes enrolment easier.
An adviser in the summer orientation program for twenty years, John Landgrebe, chemistry professor, said he felt the program was "very successful."
"I think students come earlier in the summer relieves the anxiety and answers questions they have that might not get answered in the fall," Landau says. "But the advantage of doing it early because they get the classes they want."
WHILE STUDENTS are enroling, parents will have the opportunity to meet with various deans, administrators and faculty members.
"We're seeing a real increase in parental involvement," Ulmer said. "It slacked off in the '60s and '70s, but now we're seeing more parental support."
"Last year a family from Wyoming drove down for the orientation and drove back when it was over," Ulmer said. "Frequently we have people fly in for the program and fly back in to see their families on the sesions with their vacations."
The registration fee for summer orientation is $9 for students and $7 for parents. The fee includes a luncheon, a student packet and identification cards.
Overnight housing will be available in Gentrure Sellards Pearson Hall for $8 a room the evening before and during the sessions.
A
Photo by J. SHARP SMITH
Lending a hand — Fixing a car on a hot afternoon becomes a group effort for these Lawrence youngsters.
BURGLARY BROKE In the door of a house at 1004 New Jersey St. Monday night and store $200 worth of tools, realize said. There are no suspects.
On the record
THEIVES STOLE $390 worth of stereo equipment and tools from an unlocked car at 1512 E. 13th St, some
THEIVES, USING A knife, ripped open the convertible top of a 1974 Trompark padded outside 1206 New Jersey St. and stole $425 in stereo equipment
sometime between Sunday and Tuesday, police said. There are no suspects.
time between 11:09 p.m. Monday, and
7:43 a.m. Tuesday and Thursday. There
is evidence in the case
THEIES STOLE an AM/FM eight track stereo valued at $150 from an unlocked car between 10:00 p.m. Monday and Tuesday morning, police said.
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HONDA – HARLEY-DAVIDSON
University Daily Kansan, June 17, 1982
Page
Few teens care about draft, counselors sav
By CAROL MILLS Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
The draft and nuclear war do not concern most young people today. Bob Love, Lawrence High School psychologist, said Tuesday.
But the Reagan administration is attempting to make draft registration important to all B- year-olds.
"These kids don't see war, or even the draft, as a threat," he said. "I think the whole business is just too far removed from them."
YOUNG MEN WHO have failed to register for the draft may be forced to comply under governmental pressure, said Betty Alexander, public information officer for the Selective Service System in Washington D.C. Tuesday, "In an effort to get the word out to all potential applicants, we authorized the prosecution of those who have deliberately refused to comply with draft registration," she said.
"An estimated 800,000 men have not registered for the draft," Alexander said. "Right now, we are issuing prosecution orders for those who have sent us their names. We will be working and for those who have been reported on by their friends or neighbors."
Although, according to Alexander, most young men know they must register, local school counselors say there has been little recognition or concern about registration at high school students.
"The STUDENTS seem to have no opinion for or against it," Lowe said. "Most of the kids are worried about the everyday things like dating, their paraphernalia, and I can't see that the present generation is young men care one way or another."
Anti-draft committees and organizations in Lawrence, too, are not nearly as active as they once were, an anti-draft counselor said.
"I'm surprised that no organization exits," said Leroy Chittendon, himself once active in anti-draft demonstrations.
"I PERSONALLY feel that there is so much apathy on the part of the public that actively organizing seems such a futile thing to do.
"I'm quite willing to help those young men who feel opposed to registration," he said. "Those men will have to face the government all alone, and I don't want to see them do that. I want to help."
Chittenord said that Jack Bremer, campus minister at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1203 Oread, was also involved in anti-draft counseling.
Bremer said he had seen only a handful of people concerned with the draft.
"It is important that young men understand and clarify their attitudes about the draft and registration," he added. "It is likely, there has not been a wide concern."
A U.S. Army recruiter in Lawrence, Sgt. course, asked the Army was well prepared to serve with him.
"We're not putting in more people than we were two years ago," he said.
"But those we are putting in are better qualified people than two years ago."
"Because of the economic times, we have more re-enlistments, and we are seeing a lot of young men and women who want to enlist," he said.
He said nearly a third of the people who wanted to enlist were turned down because of the higher mental standards now required.
"During peaceetime, the Army must recruit skilled personnel." Rouse said. "We want the kind of people that we have to train over a year's time. Like if a particular person needs to learn a language, that's the kind of person we
want in during peacetime, so he will be trained should we need him in periods of war."
Alexander said no expectations existed to re-institute the draft.
"THAT WOULD HAPPEN only in an emergency," she said, "the president must request a draft and Congress must approve it."
Alexander said the public information push was not meant to be a threat.
"We just want the young men to realize that registration is a serious thing, and that they must comply," she said. "All they have to do is go to the post office and fill in their name, address and date of birth. It's easy."
Alexander said that the maximum penalty for failing to register was either a $10,000 fine, five years in prison or both. However, she stressed the point that the actual penalty would be decided by the courts.
Alexander said that by early July, Social Security records would be compared to the current register to find out who has not registered, and that those young men would have to face the consequences.
Police reject city's latest contract proposal
Members of the Lawrence Police Officers Association voted a resounding 38.3 no to the city's latest work agreement on oregon Tuesday.
LPOA chief negotiator, Gary Sampson, said wages were still the divisive issue between police and the city.
The city offered the police a 6 percent wage increase in January 1983, a 5 percent increase in January 1984 and an average increase of 2.5 percent in July 1984, 1 percent less than the police asked for in their last proposal.
JACKIE McCLAIN, the city's personnel director and chief negotiator, said
Monday that she was not surprised the police refused the proposal.
"Their negotiating team was not supportive of the proposal, and so I figured neither would the force." McClaim said.
"It was the best we could do with the resources we have available."
Sampson said the vote against the city's proposal was overwhelming because "everybody feels that is not aduate."
"We're just asking for fair treatment," he said.
When the deadline for reaching an agreement, June 1, passed, a federal mediator, Buford Thompson, was called into Lawrence.
THE MEDIATOR met twice with the negotiating teams last week in an attempt to reconcile differences involving three police demands: higher security, greater accountability and increased LPOA representation on a departmental policy-making board.
The city and police have been constructing a labor pact since mid-April.
McClain said the two sides may have been too far apart in the beginning of negotiations to come to an agreement on a proposal.
But Sampson said he thought a change in negotiation methods was needed to effectively work out a labor pact. He praised McClain's abilities as an economist, saying he was more "straight and honest with us" than were her predecessors.
But he said he would like to see the city switch to binding arbitration, in which an arbitrator steps in and works out a contract that must be accepted by both, if the two sides could not come to an agreement.
"It would keep both sides more honest," Sampson said.
City Commission to refund tax to Lawrence residents
By KATE DUFFY Staff Reporter
The group organized a petition drive that brought the ordinance up for a vote in May.
Commissioners disagree, saying almost one-third of those on the list had moved, many leaving no forward address.
Zook demanded the city send a Zook demand to everyone who was on the water department's mailing list during the week in which the fee was charged.
"It would be an administrative nightmare to send scatter-shot mail
Tuesday night's meeting to refund the nearly $80,000 collected from a storm water drain for a storm water drainage study.
Staff Reporter
E. R. Zook, 629 W 2st St., a chief organizer of Citizens for a Better Government, told commissioners he thought their refund suggestions were "Mickey Mouse attempts and a stall."
In December, the city stopped collecting the monthly 50-cent fee, added to residents' water bills, because of an error in the ordinance authorizing the fee. In the May election, Lawrence voters decided nearly 24 to discontinue paying the fee.
About $64,000 of the money has already been paid to a Kansas City firm for the first portion of the study.
After an hour's discussion, the commission voted to have the staff study the possibility of refunding the money by crediting current water department customers' bills for the amount of study fees they paid.
The staff was also asked to figure the costs of tracking down former customers and mailing refunds to them.
THE LETTER, also approved by the planning and county commissions, would make it possible for Lawrence to receive Urban Mass Transit Funds and special planning money.
"If they want to make a contribution to you, let them turn that check around and endorse it to you." Zook shot back.
Lawrence has been allocated $637,000 from revenue sharing for the coming
COMMISSIONER NANCY
SHONTZ told Zook that many people
would not want a refund.
"The public expects you to live up to what you said in court," Zook said, referring to last December's lawsuit, in which the city declared it would refund the money if it lost the case.
Groups to ask city for funds
WE WANT YOUR BODY!
City commissioners will hear 1983 federal revenue sharing requests from about 25 organizations at a public hearing Thursday
But Zook said the city had made a mistake and should be forced to pay the penalty.
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The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Summer Concert Series Presents LAIRE ALAIN
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have a taste
8:00 p.m. Friday, June 18 at Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont. Tickets on sale June 14 in the Murphy Hall Box Office, 913-864-3982. All seats general admission for $5 public, $2.50 KU students, $4 senior citizens and other students.
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University Daily Kansan, June 17, 1982
'Poltergeist,' 'E.T.' are good fun
By MICHAEL GEBERT Contributing Reviewer
With "E.T." and "Poltergeist," Steven Spielberg is now responsible for five movies that, by the end of the year, might make a total of one billion dollars. What can you say to a success story like that?
Well, are the five films any good? I think so. Spielberg is a commercial director, but his films, "Jaws," "Close Encounters" and "Riders of the Lost Ark," are "E.T." and "Polterger," nevertheless represent some of the greatest moviesaking in recent years. And these new films both at least in part, bear this out.
spettiberg handles action as well as anybody around and knows how to hook it into a story. Unlike George Lucas and his imitators, who see plot and character as something you put between special effects to pass the time (as in "Star Wars," or even in the Lucas-Broadway "Raiders"!) Spettiberg, more than anyone, understands the elements together. It may not be the most exalted kind of filmmaking, but it was good enough for John Ford, Kurosawa and a few other giants.
"E.T.," Spielberg's pet project, demonstrates this. It is the story of a boy and his alien—sort of a follow-up to "The Chronicles of Zootopia" where dentally leaves three-foot spaceman
behind, a boy finds him, befriends him, and the two share adventures as the extraterrestrial creature tries to find his way home.
THE FILM OPENS BRILLiantly with a scene in which the UFO is scared by humans, and other scenes, such as the meeting of boy and alien and a great car-and-bike chase, show Spielberg at his best.
The characters, the boy, his kid sister and sassy old brother, are established with wit and economy as being typical modern kids, down to the "Star Wars" junk that knits their rooms (there's a toy shark, too).
But there is an unfinished feeling to the film. A sympathetic scientist comes in too late and a telepathy angle is never really explored. The film has a great first look, but then it becomes her very pleasant, for an bourn and a half. Is that enough?
It might be. There have been a number of recent movies, such as "Grasse," "Heaven Can Wait," "Raiders," etc., that were very successful simply because they were pleasant to sit through. Conversely, I think Spielberg's only failure, "1914," failed, not because it wasn't dazzling, but because it was kind of nasty and cynical.
"E.T." exudes charm from every place; it gives audiences what they want. That's all summer movies are supposed to do.
NEVERTLEESS, LIKE "Raiders",
'E.T. 's suggests that Spielberg is sticking with old tricks. I think that will be Lucas' downfall. When his imagination for special effects runs out he'll be like a child. He's not over and over, falling flat on the new ones. "Poltergeist" makes me think Spielberg could escape that fate.
"POLTERGEIST" also shows the value of collaboration with co-writer Melissa Matthiom ("The Black Stallion") and co-director Tobe Hooper, who made the overrated Texas Chanssaw Massacre" and, more recently, a good TV film, Salem's Lot," and a decent horror cheapie called "The Fun House." The result is a sharper, meatier film, less reliant on the effects.
A suburban family in a new housing development notices little things which suddenly escalate into big things when a storm results in the kidnapping of their young daughter by other-worldly forces. A team of researchers comes in to investigate what happens to physical mumbo-jumbo, tries to exercise the house to get the child back.
Because the special effects in this movie are sinister rather than charming, there is more characterization here than in "E.T.," but both films show the same tendency toward establishing character in the first ten minutes, before the action gets underway. In "POLtergeist" that may be a good idea. We're probably spared another十teen minutes of dew-eyed explanation
while Jerry Goldsmith's violins weep on the soundtrack.
Nevertheless, it is worth citing Jobeb Williams and Craig T. Nelson as the couple, who are both funny, touching and believable. One reason I prefer "BET" to "EIT," is its idyllic, Peter Fan-ish sense of "Wonderliger," has a healthy satirical edge that Williams and Nelson both make good use of.
ON THE DEBIT SIDE, "POLTERGEIST" seems to be made up in part of other Spielberg movies—the setting is the same as in "E.T.", one character comes from "Jaws," the researchers come from "Close Encounters" and there are some ethereal wraiths that are just as silly as they were in the climax of "Raiders of the Lost Ark."
Maybe that's just a phase he's going through. At its best, "Poltergeist" shows Spielberg's facility for giving us quick and complete setting and characters, and his ability to weave his story around them.
No wonder Hollywood loves him. He's not only a money machine, he'd the new Frank Capra, always optimistic, confident that he'll always get his shark, that people from outer space just want to be friends.
It is a precarious position in these times, harder in times of vague unease than it was for Capra in a full-fledged suit. In the future he may well have the gifts to retain.
AUVAILS
Photo by Jill M. Yates
Power company's plan rewards energy savers
The Kansas Power and Light Co. has been paying bonsies to Lawrence customers who replace old air-conditioning systems with more efficient ones, said Hal Jenner, energy consultant for the Lawrence division of K&P/L, Friday.
The bonuses are part of a "Save the Megawatts" plan initiated in March to help residential customers cut their summertime demand for electricity.
Because of residential air conditioning, usage peaks in the summer are higher than heating peaks in the winter, Jensen said.
it KP&L reaches its goal, it will not build a four power plant at its Jeffery Energy Center, near St. Marys, he said.
OUR GOAL IS to shave 100 megawatts by 1987" he said.
"The bonus idea to shave megawatts
money for everyone, whether they
participate in the plan or not,
because we'll have a lower rate base if
we can avoid building another plant."
Jensen said.
More than 20 Lawrence customers have collected bounces for replacing old air conditioners with more efficient models or electric heat pumps, which are central heating and cooling systems.
JENSEN SAID single-family residential customers could collect houses of
To qualify for bonuses, KP&L residential customers must have the equipment installed by a qualified heating contractor in accordance with industry standards.
- $200 for replacing an electric central air-conditioning system with a new heat pump with an Energy Efficiency Ratio of 5.5 or more. The EER is determined by dividing the British thermal unit of cooling capacity by the number of watts needed to operate it.
- $100 for replacing an air-conditioning system with a new unit with an EER of 9.0 or more.
- $20 for installing a gas air-conditioning system.
"THE HIGHER THE EER, the more efficient the unit. So customers can get the same amount of cooling for less electricity."
Jensen said KP&L wanted customers to replace old air conditioners with new ones with an EER of 9 or more.
- $100 for installing an add-on heat pump with an EER of 8.5 or more.
"We're looking at air conditioners that are 10 years old and older," Jensen said. "They average an EER of about 6
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"The add-on rate of interest is 9.8 percent." That would be 1639 percent over a five-year period, but we can fit it with an shorter period of shorter time. Jensen said.
KP&l will finance replacement costs at low interest rates for ju to five years.
Landlords can use the plan to attract renters, he said.
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Mosier, who earlier this week submitted the state's compliance report with the federal ASCS, said he had hoped more Kansas farmers would participate in the reduced-acreage program. The program is aimed at cutting wheat production so the market price will go up.
Participation in the program entities farmers to eligibility for a federal target price of $4.05 a bushel, which means that if the average market price for their wheat is below this year, the federal government will make up the difference, Möster said.
Destruction of 37 bushels per acre—which is the state's average yield per acre, means about 31 million bushels of wheat will be harvested and expects a bumper wheat harvest this year of 488 million bushels.
"As units wear out, they could be replaced with more efficient ones. Utility bills would be lower." Jensen said about the money saving plan since its inception three months ago. Jensen said that more than 200 people had incurred, and that company inspectors had completed more than 100 audits.
"These inspections and recommendations are not necessarily for equipment replacement. We also check such items on the roof, cabin and weather striping." Jensen said.
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Farmers will destroy wheat to receive government aid
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To comply with the program, farmers must agree to destroy 15 percent of their wheat crop, either by letting livestock graze on it, cut and burn the grass or mow it. Fifteen percent of 5.6 million acres is 640.0 acres, Mosier said.
Their compliance with the 1982 reduced-acreage program means that production on 40.3 percent of the state's wheat-based acres will be cut by at least 15 percent, Frank Mosier, executive director of the State Utilization and Conservation Service in Manhattan, said yesterday.
TOPEKA-Kansas farmers controlling about 5.6 million of the state's 14 million wheat-based acres have made themselves eligible for government assistance by agreeing to buy 840,000 acres of their wheat.
on campus
COMMONWEALTH THEATRES
GRANADA DOWNTOWN
GENE WILDER GILDA RADNER
Hanky Pakyk
PC
EVE. 7:15 & 9:15 MAT. SAT. & SUN. —2:00
EVE 7.35 9.30 MAT SAT -SUN 2.15
ROCKY III
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BOYS TEAM WORLD CUP
The Greatest Challenge
ROCKY III
The entry deadline for RE-CREATION SERVICES tennis singles is 5 p.m. Play will begin at 1:30 p.m. Attendance at the tennis courts. Sign up on 260 Robinson
TODAY
SATURDAY
Registration for MIDWESTERN MUSIC CAMP, junior high division, will be at j.p.m. in the lobby of Murphy Hall.
SUNDAY
Orientation for new students in ENGINEERING AND ARCHITECTURE and URBAN DESIGN, and take place all day in the Kansas Union.
THE BUREAU OF CHILD RESEARCH Planning Committee will
ERIK KETCHERSIDE will perform a master's recital in conducting at 3:30 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall.
meet at 9 a.m. in the Kansas Room and the alcoves in the Union.
HILLCREST 2
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MILAN, IL 60214
A mini Twist $1.25
TWISTERS
DINING & CAFE OUTLET TWO GATE
A Fruit Twist
A 16 oz soft drink 60%
OURSPECIALPRICE $1.98
A Fruit Twist 75°
A 16 oz. soft drink 60°
Whistle Stop
Train Station
This coupon good until June 24,1982
carin or Carry Out Phone for fast service
116 West 23rd St. Phone 749-5305.
One Hour Photo
- One day enlargement service
23rd and Iowa 841-8266
- One hour print service at no extra charge
a.m. - 7 p.m. M - F
8 a.m. - 6 p.m. Sat
12 p.m. - 5 p.m. Sun
no extra charge
- 1½ day Ektachrome slide
- Fast, dependable service
- The cheapest, freshest film in town
Locally owned and operated by Greg Borel and Greg Heinze
Rick Desko, Kansas City, Kan., graduate student, and Dan Sall, Big Fort, Montana graduate student, play some pretty cool jazz using an old refrigerator as a stero cabinet.
WE SELL
Kodak
FILM
Rain delays completion of new alumni center
By KATHLEEN FEIST Staff Reporter
Despite recent heavy rains, construction of the "Boots" Adams Alumni Center, Eighth and Oread, is expected to finish on schedule, said Dick Wintermute, executive director of the University of Kansas Alumni Association. Tuesday.
However, Bill Valentine, superintendent of the building project, said Tuesday that construction was a month behind because of the rain.
"We're having the same success as harvesting wheat," Valentine, employee of Ray Anderson Construction of Topeka, said.
basement and the retaining walls for the first floor.
According to Valentine, the delay has left 80 percent of the three-story building unfinished.
"WE COULD HAVE been framing the third floor to pour in a Valentine said.
so far, $2,000 has been spent to pump
valves in the system. Which Valve
sale will be an unexpected one?
The center was originally projected to be finished in May 1983. So far, the construction team has completed the
The company also must pay for equipment rental such as fork lifts and trailers that have been sitting idle in the rain, he added.
But the Alumni Association has not felt the money crunch experienced by the construction company because of the rains.
Winternote said the rain has had no effect on the cost of the building because they pay the contractor only the price originally agreed upon.
THE COST OF THE project will amount to $5 million for the Alumni Association, none of which will come from the University, Wintermute said.
The association has been able to collect more than the amount needed.
"We have to nurture a little about $25 million in private funds," Wintermor said. "Private funds." Wintermor said.
fall & summer
NOW LEASING
1 and 2 Bedroom Apartments
Our Community Offers:
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- Cable 1 V available
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524 Frontier Road
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University Daily Kansan, June 17, 1982
Page 9
M. Yategqn
ontana
stereo
of
n
alls for
to pump
rich Val-
cost.
pay for
bills and
live in the
Photo by Jill M. Yates
has not
need by
cause of
h had no building for only n
et will
Alumni
ill come
te said
lone said.
to col-
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about $S
distributed.
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1
GARLANDIA
HOLA ESTATE
Campaigning for their prospective candidates, participants in the American Legion Ladies Auxiliary Girls' State march to Templin hall in an attempt to drum up voter support.
Girls' Staters hold elections for governor, representatives
By KATHLEEN J, FEIST Staff Reporter
It's official.
The newly elected governor of Kansas is Carry Avery from Manhattan, Governor, that is, of the 60th annual Republican convention. Hashinger and Lewis halls this week.
Avery, who was elected to the mock government office last night, is one of 52 girls who are learning the process of local government by experience.
Since Sunday, when the girls first arrived, 40 senators and 72 representatives have been elected as well as an attorney general and seven Supreme Court judges.
CITY AND COUNTY officials have been elected to govern the 16 cities, which are Arkansas Indian tribes and the eight counties, which are named after Kansas rivers.
Avery said getting her city of Pawnee in the campaign short of her helped her in the campaign.
"I're really enthused," Avery said. She was elected along with Lisa Mick, Shawnee, who will be lieutenant governor.
She said the questions and interviews presented before an audience also
helped her win the question During the question and interview
period, Avery said she supported the severance tax and better sex education policies.
Avery will meet with Gov. John Carlin on Friday when the girls venture to Topeka's House chamber to pass mock legislation. Other newly elected state officials will also meet with the Kansas officials whom they are emulating.
THE GIRLS WHO were elected as county officials will meet with Douglas County officials today.
The girls, who represent approximately 284 cities, are chosen during their junior year of high school by the American Legion Ladies Auxiliary, which sponsors Girls' State, said Lois Leconge, director of Girls' State.
To be eligible, each girl must rank in the top 10 percent of her class, and, depending on the auxiliary unit, is required to be made aware, being selected to attend, she said.
THE PURPOSE of Girls' State is to make young women more aware of politics. Teenogle said.
But, according to a couple of uninterested young women, politics was not the main reason for coming to girls' State.
"We're here to meet guys," said Kim
warmer, who plans to become a
pharmacist!
The session will end at 9 a.m. Sunday.
GET INTO
SUMMER
at
NAISMITH HALL
Plus, only Naimshim offers you weekly maid service, a 14-meal-a-week dining plan, and a full schedule of summer social activities.
You'll enjoy everything under the sun at Naismith, including a full-sized swimming pool and completely air conditioned indoor facilities.
So, for a cool, comfortable summer, check into Naismith Hall.
Local food program aids needy
Phone 843 8559 or drop by 1800 Naismith Dr.
By CANDICE SACKUVICH Staff Reporter
Some women and children from low-income families may be eligible to enroll in a supplemental food program. The Health Department official said Saturday.
The department's Women, Infants and Children Program was initiated in 1977 to provide specific foods up to age 4 and pregnant or lactating women.
A WOMAN OR CHILD must be a resident of Douglas County, meet low-income guidelines and have a nutritious diet. You may be eligible to enroll in the program.
Vitamins A and C, iron and calcium are nutrients that tend to be lacking in the diets of low-income women, infants and children. Gwen Kytos, WIC coordinator, said.
"If a woman qualifies for the program, we issue her a check voucher for specific foods in specific amounts. WIC, as a supplemental program, is not
Program participants can get milk, cheese, eggs, fruit juices, peanut butter and certain cereals that are vitamin fortified and have a low sugar level.
intended to supply all a person's nutritional needs." Kvtos said.
These foods meet the nutritional requirements for people who are deficient in iron, calcium and vitamins A and C. The standards were set by the Bureau of Maternal and Child Health of Kansas Department of Health and Environment.
DR. ALVIN SILVERS, a general practitioner in Kansas City, Kan., said low birth weight could be caused by an iron deficiency in the mother.
"The baby would rob the mother of iron and they would both be anemic," he said. "The baby could have a small weight and be subject to various diseases."
Silvers said other nutritional deficiencies could also cause serious problems.
*A calcium deficiency could cause rickets in both the mother and the baby. The characteristics are poor bone
Silvers said he thought that, in many instances, lack of education of expectant and new mothers defeated the purpose of nutritional aid.
structure, flat pelvis and flattening of the ribs. "he said."
KYTOS SAID nutritional education was part of the WIC program.
"We introduce people to better health care. We have several nutrition-information signs posted in the office, and we inform them out to participants," she said.
Good prenatal care is an important element in the birth of a healthier, heavier, child, she said. That could save potential medical expenses.
Every dollar spent on the WIC program, including the bulk of three dollars in medical care, she said.
THE ESTIMATED 1898 poverty level for a family of two, with female younger than 65 as the family head, was according to the U.S. Bureau of Census.
"The income level guidelines are the same as for the school lunch program, according to the number of people in the family," she said.
Kytes would not give the dollar amounts of the income guidelines but rather the actual income.
Kytos said receiving other state income, such as Aid to Dependent Children, did not disqualify a person from enrolling in the WIC program.
erty guidelines set by the federal government.
Kansas paid nearly $8 million to recipients of ADC in December 1980, according to the Social Security Administration's Office of Research and Statistics. There were nearly 72,000 recipients, and the average amount allotted to a family was $223 for the month.
KYTOS SAID income levels of WIC applicants were usually checked by asking them to bring two or three paycheck stubs to the WIC office.
CIA agents' 'Libyan dealings' lead to congressional inquiries
By United Press International
WASHINGTON—How much did the CIA know of, or condone, the activities of two of its former agents who worked their way into the terrorist headquarters of Libya's Col. Muammar Khadafy and then served him?
At least two parallel investigations are receiving renewed attention following the arrest in New York Tuesday of former CIA agent Edwin Wilson, accused of illegally exporting explosives to Libya, recruiting veteran U.S. Commands to train terrorists. American pilots also faced tech challenges and involvement in assassination plots against anti-Khadafy Libyan exiles.
Frank E. Terpil, another former CIA agent indicted in absenza with Wilson, is still at large. Terpil fired from the CIA after the war in war-devastated Berur, Lebanon.
The Justice Department had been pursuing other investigations of the case and a source suggested that any link they might have had were an aggravating in Libya could be something jurgison would want to explore.
The government's years-long inquiry into their activities was reorganized and intensified last fall. Participants at a meeting on the matter said there was
uncussion of the possibility that the CIA encouraged Wilson's and Terpii's Libyan ties to be better able to monitor Khadjah's activities.
About the same time, the House Intelligence Committee told CIA Director William Casey it would launch its own cyberattack. Casey prompt to cooperate fully.
A spokesman for the committee said yesterday the investigation was under way, but was unsure if there would be a report or hearings. The companion senate committee for now is leaving the investigative work to the house panel.
The department wants Wilson tried, but sources there acknowledge that his access to secret data and work as a team is not agent years ago might pose problems.
Since Wilson left the CIA in 1976 and he and Terdil came under suspicion for Libyan dealings, the CIA has denied any official connection. However, the CIA later released that had been "released" contacts between active agents and these two.
A spokesman for the agency said yesterday, "We categorically deny any involvement in those activities."
Last August, the CIA said any contacts Wills and other CIA employees had with the Libyan government in 700 were without its knowledge or confidence.
Bankers hold clinic
Money and preparing for the future are vital issues for bankers who are responsible for the public's finances, the executive branch and business association said yesterday.
Ann McMorris, the executive assistant, and nearly 650 Kansas bankers are at the University of Kansas, June 15-17, for their 4th annual Kansas Association Bank Management Clinic, to discuss the future of banking
maintained an open-door policy for bankers to do their own thing."
She said today's session would be on electronic funds transfer, or the ability of an individual to withdraw money or deposit checks with an electronic card.
STUDYING A FOREIGN LANGUAGE?
Study Skills Workshop
"The clinic has really been a success." McMorris said. "It has given bankers a chance to talk with each other. Really, it constitutes a rap session for the bankers to get together and find out what everyone else is doing."
Lyn Nolziger, former assistant for political affairs to President Reagan, spoke yesterday on the attitude the bankers had toward the banking community.
"He said the present status of the banking industry is a positive one," McMorris said. Reagan has really
Tuesday, June 22
1:30-3:30 p.m.
Pine Room, Kansas Union
Emphasis on developing your skills in learning another language
The Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong, 864-4064
The three bankers who will lead the discussion on the future of electronic banking are Dale Brown, president of the Rocky Mountain BankCard Co. Denver; Paul Coen, executive vice president of Financial Interchange Association Inc.; and Mike Burke, president of the Regional Interchange Association Inc., Milwaukee.
"This will be the first time three top people in the field will get together and pass along their what they know," McMorris said. "And it's the first time, where in the nation, such a well respected threesome will get together."
The future of interest rates also will be on the agenda today she said. Gary Smith, vice president of Merrill Lynch, will discuss how the future of the nation's economy will be affected by the current high interest rates.
ANY SIZE PIZZA $^1$ 00 OFF
And Reserve
Present This Coupon And Receive
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(Bring coupon)
Free pitcher of pop with the purchase of a large or medium pizza
VIDEO GAME CENTER
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TRON
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Campus Hideaway
11-1
11-1
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SUN. Noon-11:45 p.m.
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services #21-82
Sun-Thurs.
Fri. & Sat.
843-9111
Monday, June 21st
Be sure to pick up your copy
"SUMMER NIGHTLIFE IN LAWRENCE"
Special Kansan issue
No other
Coupons accepted
with this Offer
Sell it, too.Call 864-4358.
Kansas Repertory Theatre summer '82
The Wizard of Oz
By L. Frank Baum/adapted by
Frank Gabrielson/with music and
lyrics of the screen version by
Harold Arlen and E.Y. Harburg
July 8,17,23,25 8:00pm
July 11,18 2:30pm
Blithe Spirit
By Noel Coward
July 9,15,18,24
8:00pm
How The Other Half Loves
By Alan Ayckbourn
July 10,16,22 8:00pm
July 25 2:30pm
All performances in the University Theatre-Murphy Hall/All seats are reserved/call (913) 864-3982/Tickets go on sale June 14 in the Murphy Hall Box Office
Presented by the University of Kansas Theatre
The Arts
罕
Page 10 University Daily Kansan, June 17, 1982
Davis moves Raiders to Los Angeles in '82
By United Press International
LOS ANGELES—The Oakland Raiders will play in Los Angeles in 1982 under an agreement that team owner Al Davis should reach with the Coliseum Commission by the end of the week, a negotiator predicted yesterday.
Bill Robertson, one of three members of the commission's negotiating team, told reporters was "nothing I can see out there" in prevent the Raiders from quickly making the move approved by a federal court just last month.
"My feeling now is both parties want to see this happen, and we're going to make it happen." Robertson said. "I have no doubt that there are 10 points that have to be dealt with."
Robertson said talks with Davis centered on how to finance the transfer and improvements at the Coliseum, which was left without a professional team in 1980 when the Los Angeles Rams moved to suburban Anaheim.
Davis won a key victory in his bid to move the Raiders when U.S. District Judge Harry Pregerson refused on Monday a National Football League request to delay the move pending a decision from the league rule forcing Davis to gain the approval of fellow owners violated federal antitrust laws.
Robertson disclosed few specifics about the negotiations that began Tuesday, but said the panel was seeking a lengthy lease from Davis in exchange for costly improvements at the Coliseum to be the main site for the 1984 Olympics.
Robertson said the city of Oakland "has been working" on Davis to persuade him to stay in the Bay area, and, although their overtures seem serious," he is convinced David "warned us to Los Angeles. detention."
Houston's Malone basketball MVP
By United Press International
SAN DIEGO - Center Moses Malone of the Houston Rockets received the National Basketball Association's Most Valuable Player award for the 1981-82 season at the NBA's meeting in San Diego yesterday.
It was also announced that Seattle guard Gus Williams was voted the Comeback Player of the Year
Buck Williams of the New Jersey Nets was named the Rookie of the Year and Gene Shue won the Coach Award in a season with the Washington Bullets.
Malone was the top rebounder and second leading scorer in the NBA last season. He averaged 31.1 points per game while hauling down an average of 14.7 rebounds. He gathered 507 votes from a panel of media representatives to win the honor.
The runnerup in the voting was
Larry Bird of the Boston Celtics with 506 votes. Philadelphia's julius Erving followed with 203.
Williams collected more than 1,000 rebounds in his first year as a pro, the first rookie in a decade with that statistic. He won with 33 votes, over the rest of the team. Pistons, who had 22 votes. Jay Vincent of the Dallas Mavericks had 19.
Shue received 34 votes. Doug Moe of the Denver Nuggets was a distant second with 13.
It is the second time that Shue, the fourth-winning coach in the NBA, had won Coach of the Year honors. The first time was in 1969 when he coached the Baltimore Bullets to the Eastern Division title.
Gus Williams narrowly passed Spencer Haywood for the "Come-back Player of the Year" *in* 2010. Williams sat out the 1980-81 season with the Tampa Bay Lightning and came back to play well for the Supersonics last season.
Twins beat Kansas City, 5-2
KANSAS CITY, MO—Rookie first baseman Kirk Hendrk of the Minnesota Twins continued to devastate Kansas City pitching this season with a single and a double last night, knocking in two runs and scoring one other, to propel the Twins to a 5-2 victory over the Royals at Royals Stadium.
By United Press International
Hrnek, who hit four home runs in the four-game series with the Royals in Minneapolis last week, reached base seven times during the recently completed three-game series in Kansas City on for walks, two doubles and a single.
He knocked in two runs and scored twice.
For the Royals, designated hitter Mia McRae went 3-for-4 to raise his batting average to .349. McRae, now the American League runner-up in batting average, pitched a single for Viola. He also knocked in the fourth Kansas City run in the ninth.
Pitcher Vida Blue took the loss for the Royals.
The Royals are off today before embarking on their longest road trip of the season, a 10-day, 10-game affair through Seattle, Oakland and California.
Campus Hideaway
Pasta 2 for 1
Order one Pasta Dinner get one FREE
All day Sunday 11-11
Mon. thru Thurs. 5-11
843-9111
EAT IN ONLY With Coupon Expires June 30
The University Daily
KANSAN WANT ADS
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ERRORS
Monday Thursday 2 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 2 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 2 p.m.
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Friday Wednesday 2 p.m.
The Kanan will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
If found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be
KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE
118 Flint Hall 864-4238
ANNOUNCEMENTS
ICE CREAM CONES One drip plus 2 two-dip cups
three dips 4.16 oz. CHOCOLATE UNLIMITED
Southern Hills Center 13:08 p.m. Tues-Sat, 12:48 p.m.
7.5
Leave Message at 841-3835
CINDY BUTLER
Formerly of IBM
Starting Business
Conducting Service on:
• Selectrics
• Mag-cards
• Memory typewriters
COMPETITIVE RATES
• Service Agreement
• Per Hour
Zen Master
Seung K宴
Public talk
Jayhawk Room
Kansas Union
Monday, June 21
7:30
Sponsored by
KU Zen Group
--for reservations call 864-3948 by Thursday, June 17
Tie In WithUs
RECREATION SERVICES
Play begins
Sunday, June 20
1:30 p.m.
Tennis Singles Tournament
Entry Deadline
Thursday, June 17
5:00 p.m. 208 Robinson
9R
Robinson Tennis Courts
K.U.
Hillel
1.
Friday, June 18
invites you to a SHABBAT DINNER
6:00 p.m. at the Lawrence Jewish Community Center 917 Highland Dr
FOR RENT
PRINCETON PLACE PAKTO APARTMENTS. New features wood burning fireplace, 2 car garage with covered parking space, equipped kitchen, quiet surroundings, $40 per month for a year. Bldg. phone: 856-2379 for additional information.
SOUTHERN PARKWAY TOWNHOUSES, 8th & Kaskade. If you tired of the noisy or cramped apartments, you should head to Bainbridge Island, all appliances, unisex pool, pool & lids of privacy. We have openings, for August 15th. Craig Levra (owenings) and we will be here with information about mildly priced townhouses.
SPACIOUS STUDIOS
One two, and three bedrooms.
Check note for summer availability.
Beautiful gardens, swimming pool,
lighted tennis courts.
A GOOD PLACE TO LIVE
meadowbrook
15th A Crestline
843-4200
live in the CRISTIAN CAPUS HOOSE this summer & fail! Become a part of a growing campus ministry. Call Alan Rosenak, campus minister tf 48-6929.
AVAILABLE AUGUST Spacius exclusive 4
room, family room, pool, table, FP, appliances, 2 car
garages, Starkford Road KU has line. Accept
garages 807-6135 907-6235. $60 app to
utilities.
One phone call will solve your housing needs. Completely furnished studios, 1BR, 18B with balcony, 2BR, 3BR furnished apartments.
STUDENTS
Woman: Furnished room in shared house. Total rent (Now-Aug.) $200 + deposit. 1 bik. from Union. 6-28
30-Feb, 2019, 30-Mar, 2019, 30-Feb, 2019, 30-Mar, 2019
HANOVER PLACE
Between 14th and 15th on
weekdays. Rentals from 250/m.
84-11-212 84-42-445
84-11-213 84-42-446
TIBURON
9th and ENERY Rd.
Rentals from 250/m.
841-5255 842-4455
Furnished Apt., Grad Students. Utilities paid. A/C,
furnished $120/80. 1335 Vermont, 843-691. 2-61
TRAILRIDGE
1 bedroom semi-furnished. Near campus. 843-9094 or
842-707. No pets.
7-1
7th and Florida
(On KU Bus Line)
Rentals from 205/mo.
841-5255 842-4455
SUNDANCE
SUMMIT HOUSE
1105 Louisiana
Rentals from 285/m.
441.8298 842.4455
919 Indiana
916 Indiana
822 Tennessee
All 3BP, Bath, Rentals at 426room.com
919 Indiana
916 Indiana
822 Tennessee
All 3BP, Bath, Rentals at 426room.com
2, 3, and 4 bedroom townhouses still available for fall.
COLDWATER FLATS
413 W. 14th St.
Rentals from 280/mo.
841-121-78
842-445-96
NEW 4-PLEXES
MED CENTER BOUND? Newly refurbished 2 BER
Departures available now. Carpet, A/C, Appliances,
parking Call (153) 381-2878.
7-29
All offered by Mastercraft Management. Professional Maintenance and Management Company
3 pools, tennis court, and
---
842-4455
2500 West 6th 843-7333
On KU bus line.
Room in large quiet house one bk. from Union. Must have clean habits and no pets. See at 1290 Abbey, before noon, $110.90.
G-17
New 2 bedroom apartment in fourplex. 1 block from campus, 3 blocks from town. Central Air, carpet and drays, fully equipped kitchen, at 1341 Ohio. Call 842-4324.
FOR SALE
"THE SUMMER PLACE!" NAISMITH HALL
1800 Naimshir Dr.
"Just Across The Drive From Campus"
842-8599
* Private Baths
* Private Sleeping Study Areas
* Gymnasium
* Fourteen Meals Per Week
* Air Conditioning
* Free Villas
* A Lease Agreement for your Summer Plans
* Plan in-unit Payment Plans
* High Rise Living With A Swimming Pool
And An Active Social Calendar
---
MASTER BEDROOM. I need one person now (summer session) with the option to stay longer. Call Matthew at 841-164-144 for details.
Sleeping rooms. 1, 2 & 3 6 bedroom apartments and
houses, no pets. Days #431-1601. Evenings #842-8971 &
841-3321.
7-8
EXTRA nice apartments, large and small. Next to campus. Utilities paid, reasonable rent. 842-145-81.
Western Civilization Notes. Now on sale! Make sure you have them—1) as an study guide, 2) for P class preparation. 3) for exam preparation. *New Analysis of Western Civilization* available now at Town Creek.
Bookcase, stereo cabinet, cedar chest, benches,
tablets, desks, etc. custom built to your needs in solid
wood. Call Michael Stupp 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Monday
through Saturday. 843-8802.
Front wheel drive, am/fm, 5-speed. Low mileage.
Great economy. 842-613S. 6-24
*Save Money* Do you love to find bargains or forget treasures? Do you live arts & crafts, artisan goods, or vintage items at the lawrence Flea Mart. Saturday June 18th, 9-4 and Sunday June 20th, 8-4 Buy sell, trade in our climate-controlled buildings 746,060 or trade in our climate-controlled Hills Shop 627,047 Outdahl.
Women's sample clothes: Calvin Klein jeans ($22);
T-Shirts, Polos & Shorts ($10); Skirts ($15). Size
5-13. Call 842-1583. 6-24
78 Buck Regal, PB, PS, AC, AM-FM, Cruise & TUI.
6-24
Büge 842-468.
CAR SYSTEM—Pace In-Dash cassette AM/FM
system, JENSEN 4 ½ coax, all new, must sell $150.
81-96899.
Men's Speedcycle, very good condition. Royal
manual typewriter; excellent condition. 842-3213-611
Fair or sale or offer with option to buy. Only arrangement place in the college town with ice cream, cold drinks, coffee, milk, and desserts for room for $35,000 include all real estate; "large apartment update"; 843-160-8321; 7-343-987-8321.
Moving, have to sell double bed, Sealy brand, new $130 for mattress, boxsprings and frame. Brown vinyl couch, excellent condition $50. Call 845-675/4 anytime.
6-21
Cycle. 73 Hearson 125,10,000 miles. Excellent condition,
inspected $300,842-6490. Faring and helmet
free.
6-21
Yard Sale-hang laundry, rocking chair, food processor, plant stand, small appliances, silver dishware, stainless steel microwave, micromax W. 256, Fri.-Sat, 18-19, 9 a.m to 9 p.m
early calfers.
11 Chevy Impala Conv, white over yellow. Inspected. Good looking car $1400; 843-6529
MOPED-Honda Express. Good condition $250. Call
814-8542.
Must sell! 1978 Chevy Monza. Clean, low mileage,
good mail. Appl # 6, 842-7546. 6-24
HELP WANTED
Residence Hall Director (Joseph R. Pearson Hall), The University of Kansas, M.S. and previous experience required in student personnel or related activities. Residence Hall received approximately 400 male students. Applications received by June 18, 2012, will be first priority. Applicants must be residents of Office, Department of Residences, 125 Grass Street, Office of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas 68043 (81) 644-6127 or Equal Opportunity Action Employer: 617
Flexible hours. No experience necessary. Job in is in the East Seattle area, Center, Leavenworth, Kansas. Must be a Veteran and in school full time. For more information, contact Bentley F. Bennett, F. Bennett 1-813-492-8000, Exc. 223
ACADEMIC COMPUTER COORDINATOR: University of Kansas Regents Center, Evening work. Coordination evening event—specify, design, develop, execute and present a computer consulting an ended. Through knowledge of PORTMAN or PASCAL required, submit a letter of recommendation for position offered by Director, University of Kansas Regents Center, 900 Mission Rd., Overland Park, Kansas 60686, before applying for Opportunity Affirmative Action Employer.
HARDWARE, COMMUNICATIONS ANALYST,
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS KANAMICS; B.S. IN
TECHNOLOGY AND TECHNICIAN EXPERIENCE in
technomic technician experience in documentation and
data communications technique. Ability manage
project and staff;够经验 expertise on design of
granming and working knowledge of data com-
munication techniques. Resume June 18, 1982 to Lyon Modrykny, Academic
Centre of University, University of Paskowitz, Post Office Drive 207, Lawrence, KS. 69043 Additional In-
formation: contact David Needlton, (913) 944-2642
EKEOAW
LOST
Lost: glasses. Left lens thick. Physical frame—charac-
ter top, clear bottom. Reward. Professor Lansberg,
English Department, KU. Please call 642 420
and leave a message.
PERSONALS
SPECIAL RATES, HAIRCUTS $6, PERMS-
"ONLY" $20. Charme Hair Fashions (103%
Meada — Decena 843, Saarlein) 6-28
Come visit our new shop, BARB'S VINTAGE ROSE,
918 lbs. Mass (above Davis Paints) Mon-Sat, 10-4.
841-2651.
Stop and see Doc at Bath Paint, Rose Vault, 918% (above Davis Park) Mantsv: Sat. 104-551-2451. 6-17
TATTOWON—Clyde's Tattoo Parlor, 147. W. 1021. K.C. Mo. KI 800-563-5335.
West Coast Saloon
West Coast Saloon
The Tradition Continues
25' Draws
NOON-6 p.m.
EVERY FRIDAY
2222 IOWA
PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTHRIGHT,
843-4821
tf
Skillet's liquor more serving U-D since 1949. Come in and compare. Willedford Skillet Eudaly. 1906 Mass. 843-8186.
COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATE: Free pregnancy testing; early and advanced outpatient abortion; contraception; 1-435 & Roe, Overland Park, KS (912) 643-1000.
The Keeper - Weekly Specials on Kegs!! Call
841-9450 - 1610 W.23rd
LEASE-
A
LEMON
Daily, Weekly, Monthly All Cars One Rate
S995 A Dav
$995 A Day
FIRST 50 MILES FREE
THEN 8$ A MILE
CALL US AT
Small, intermediate and large cars and trucks available. All mechanically sound, state insured, clean and ready to rent.
9th & Miss. 24th & Iowa
749-4225 841-0188
Welcome back! Photos for any occasion. Bernstein
Bernstein Photography. Call Sean at 749-161. 6-24
LOST at enraiment. Silver Mont Blanc ballpoint pen with gold clip. Sentimental value. Reward. Laura - 841-6988. 6-17
Say it on a shirt. Custom silk screen printing. T-shirts, baseball shirts and caps. Shirtart by Swella. 745-1611. 7-823
DARE TO GO BARE The American Subheading association has a FAMILY club member close near you. Advise marital status, TRAV-A-TANS, Inc. R1 1 BOX 18A Scraunt, Ks. 6657 20st bend 32am.
Need riders and/or drivers to share expenses from Overland Park area to Lawrence daily. Call 341-6738, leave a message please. 6-17
Instant passport, portfolio, resume, immigration, naturalization, visa, ID and of course fine portraits.
Swella Studio 749-1611. 7-29
Community Center Center, Headstart, is accepting new children ages 3 through 5. There are 3 requirements for those families accepted into this program. 1.) Child must be at least 3 years old; 2.) Must attend school; 3.) Must meet Federal Grade Laws. 4.) Must be a parent of a child.
Why cook? ... We now deliver. The Pizza Shoppe
842-0600
7-1
Craving pizza but on a tight budget? Call us. The Pizza Shoppe 842-0600. 7-1
SERVICES OFFERED
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 842-3001. 250-729 or Iowa.
MONEY, WEALTH, CAN BE YOURS IF YOU
FOLLOW A PROVEN PLAN, SEND LARGE SASE,
FOR DETAILS. RONALD ATWATER. M 80GRAHN
ST. APT. 21. STAMFDAT C. 00006.
6-21
Photoscreening
PROCEEDING
For 50° we can screen photographs they can be printed or copied
THE GLOBAL INSTITUTE FOR FOOTWEAR
Encore Copy Corps
25th & Iowa
842-2001
Schneider Wine & Keg Shop—The finest selection of wines in Lawrence—largest supplier of strong wines. 1610 W. Lawrence, 843-3212. **tf**
*WARNING/PSEUDOBNOMICS* will find your natural expression--editing, tutoring, library research, science writing. Graphonomyst Analyst 7:39
Caturi: 842-8240
KU Freshman woman would like to live with a single mother, would like to work on household work and cooking for room and call please contact at 418-253-5464 or写情人: Rousse Hernandez, 301 Calderon, Independence, 9-27-14
Have your own personalized bumpersticker! Deluxe
Vinyl. Any message. $3.00, K. Gill, 12 Geranium
Place, Orion, California, 95208.
7-15
25% OFF
Entire Stock of New and Used Clothing and Household Item
INFLATION
TOWER
FIGHTER
8 East Seventh
Open 10 a.m.-5;30 p.m.
If you haven't tried the original Round Table, you
will be in for a treat. $49.00 round table 7.1
Who's delivering great pizzas in town for low prices?
Call 842-6000 The Pizza Shoppe. 7-1
Sunday, June 7th: Saturday, July 3rd - SUMMER
weekend; Sunday, July 4th - Easter weekend.
stock sale every 30-90% discount on many books
and patterns, notecards & patticed cards. Expensive items are
now within range! 7-11
TYPING
TIP TOP TYPING—Experienced Typists—IBM Correcting Selective II, Royal Correcting SE3000CD; #546-5875.
Sakespeare could write. Elvis could wiggle, my
talent, calling. Call B 942 004 after 5 and weekends
KANSAN
CLASSIFIEDS
It's a Fact, Fast, Affordable, Clean Typing 843-5820.
Experienced typist. Typet. Term papers, these, all miscellaneous. IBM Correcting Selective. Elite or Pica, and will correct spelling. 843-854 Mrn. Wright.
Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms,
graphics, editing, self-correcting Selectric. Call
Elen B141-2172.
For PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myra. 841-4000.
OVERNIGHT EXPRESS Editing-Typep. IBM
Selectric. Victor Clark: 842-8240
7-29
AFORDABLE QUALITY for all your typing needs, themes, dissertations, charts, memoirs, musc. Call Jody 862-7945 after 6 p.m.
tf
TYPING PLUS: Thess. dissertations, papers, letters, applications, resumes. Assistance with composition, grammar, spelling, etc. English tutoring for foreign students—Americans 841-4544.
Experienced typist will type term papers, games, books, databases, books, etc. Have IBM well correcting Seifert II, Call Terry 467494 anytime or 3673-8711.
Have Selective, will type. Professional, fast, affordable.
Have Betty, 842-6667 and weekends.
Experienced typat—theses, dissertations, term papers, misc. IBM correcting selectic. Barb, after $f p. m. 842-2310.
Students: I will take care of all your typing needs.
am fast and very reasonable. Please call April during the day at 843-6110; events and weeks: 843-6064.
6-28
---
Typing for all occasions; for dessertations, themes,
term papers, letters, etc. Call Edyah at 748-4738
or info@vacationbrokers.com
Former medical research secretary will type books, theses and term papers. Call Nani 861-728-7:22
Roommate. Wanted for summer. Nice 4-BR home near Avarah. Washer/dryer, AC $150 + U utilities. 769-894-3800
Housemate Wanted. 3 BR—833.SJ/month + 128
liters. Fireplace, screeched porch. Close to campus
and downtown. Call 463-5458 after 5.
Roommate wanted. Unfurnished house close to school. Garage or building shop. Prefer grad. studies or workperson. Phil, eve. 843.3222. 0-9
ONE ROOMMATE to live in the master bedroom of a large 3 bedroom mobile home. AC, washer (dryer) etc. Contact Matthew @ 814-1434 for details.
Near female dormitory for house near campus on bus route. $15 including utilities. Call 841-8906 - 806
Novice D and D player hopes to find DM. Objects Monster hunt. 843-2811 after 5 p.m.
6-21
Substitute Sister to take care of a bright, charming maid. Must have good communication skills. Must be living and reliable, a non-smoker with good references, have own transportation to Central New York and must remain retainer to right person. 604-814-0190 or phone 604-814-0190.
SARTEDS
Don't want to drive across town in the summer heat to send in your classified ad? Take advantage of this form and save yourself time and money while still receiving the satisfaction of placing your ad in the Kansan. Just mail this form with a check or money order payable to the Kansan to: University Daily Kansan, 111 Flint Hall, Lawrence, Ks 66045. Use rates below to figure costs.
Classified Heading:
Write Ad Here:
Name: Classified Display:
Address: 1 col. x 1 inch—$4.06
Phone:
Dates to run:
1 time
2 times
3 times
4 times
5 times
15 words
$2.25
$2.50
$2.75
$3.00
$3.25
5 words
03
04
08
Ad Deadline to run Monday
Thursday 3 p.m.
Thursday 3 p.m.
---
University Daily Kansan, June 17, 1982
Page 11
2 and scored
batter Hal iis bating he Ameri batting her Frank the second
1-SUMMER
largest over
many books &
five items are
7-1
or low prices?
7-1
4-BR home
1500 + 1600
677
to campus
1 to campus
to choose
to campustudent
bedroom/
dry/air/
li. 71
campus on
6800 - 694
OM. Object
cloak up in
charming
up on central
Central de
on 8-3, Eber
experience
For men & women...
TOUGH TRAIL
HIKER
COME
TRY ON
A PAIR!
10
For men & women . . .
TOUGH TRAIL
HIKER
COME
TRY ON
A PAIR!
RED WING
Gordon's SHOE
CENTER
815 Mass.
843-7628
THE WOLF GIRL
$19.95 Frame Sale
Get the Designer Frames you want when you purchase the lens you need.
Hurry—sale ends June 26, 1982. Save $33\%$ to $69\%$.
This week Hutton Optical can fill your new prescription or copy your present one and fit you with a pair of designer frames just right for your eyes! Come in Monday and select from Anne Klein, Perrier Caronde, Zsa Gabor, Oleg Cassini, Anthony Martin, Arnold Palmer, and more.
Boutique frames excluded. Frames on sale with purchase of lenses. Sale ends June 26, 1982
This ad cannot be used in conjunction with any other ad.
HUTTON
842-5208
OPTICAL CO.
742 Mass.
Mon.-Fri. 10-5
Sat. 10-2
SATURDAY, JUNE 19th ONLY
One FREE cup of coffee or iced tea with each purchase of $3 or more by presenting this ad. (Coffee refills not included. One cup per ad.)
Goshah Bells
803 Massachusetts
Lawrence, Kansas
ADD THE PERFECT TOUCH 40% OFF DIAMOND SALE at McQueen Jewelers, Inc.
A selected group of McQueen Jewelers regularly low priced diamond rings are now on sale in a super diamond value sale!
Where Happy Decisions Are Made
MOODY'S
MOODY'S IS COMING TO LAWRENCE!
"Look for opening soon"
Moody's is an exciting new 21 club that specializes in great drinks, ranging from ice cream specialties to fruit daiquiries. Moody's offers a relaxed atmosphere with a large dance floor and a plush interior. Come downtown and check us out. Moody's is a private establishment with memberships available soon. Located at 7th and Mass. underneath the Eldridge House.
H and J Corp.
WE LOVE
DOWNTOWN
LAWRENCE
BUY 3...
GET 1
FREE
No Negative? No Problem!
Have a special picture from your instant camera? Why not get a copy of it with our special Copyprint Service. It's a quick and intensive way to make color prints from snapshots, without a negative. And to keep make your copies look good, we'll print them on quality Kodak color paper.
Pay for three, the fourth is free.
Copyprints—Up to 3½ X 5
ZERCHEP
PHOTO
Downtown
1107 17 Massachusetts
M-8 902-20
Hitchcott
919 Iowa
M-F 10-8 Sat 10-6 Sun 1-5
ZERCHER
Downtown
1107 Massachusetts
PHOTO
Hillcrest
919 Ivy Lane
M.F.I. Health Care
927 Mass
842-3963
Swimsuit Sale
Teeny Bikini 9.99
Req. $20-$22
Two-Piece 15.99
Req. $22-$29
One-Piece 21.99
Req. $28-$37
THE ATTIC
927 Mass
842-3963
I LOVE LAWRENCE SALE
DRESSES 1/2 OFF
GAUZE TOPS $2
JOGGER SHORTS $3
BETTER T-SHIRTS $10-$12
DRESS PANTS $15-$20
SALE PRICES THRU THIS WEEKEND.
FADS - FASHIONS
TOPEAK
FABLLAWN MALL 272-3429
Md 10 8:30 Sat, mth 5:00
Sun, 1-5
LATAWAY
TOWN MALL
(168) 210-0000
DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE)
777 Main, 643-9988
Md Sat, 10 8:30 5:00
Park, mth 5:00
-At the back of the store a gourmet Cheese & Salami Shoppe featuring a large selection of foreign domestic cheeses and meats.
YOUR ONE STOP FULL-LINE DRUG STORE.
ND CORNER DRUGS
Full service pharmacy accepting student insurance with free delivery. Phone answered 24 hours a day.
COME IN-
YOU WON'T BELIEVE IT.
801 MASS. 843-0200
-Featuring a full line of quality name brand natural vitamins and health foods.
KING Jeans "I Love Lawrence"
SALE
Today thru Sunday
All Levi's Movin' On Brittania & Paradise Jeans reg. to $33
$1699
All Calvin Klein & Jordache Jeans reg. to $44
$2995
All Men's Short Sleeve Shirts reg. to $24 $399 Levi's Recycled Jeans $1199 Levi's Recycled Cords $599 long sleeve Levi's Shirts reg. to $23 $799
KING of Jeans
745 Massachusetts
---
Page 12 University Daily Kansan, June 17, 1982
32
Photo by S'JSAN PAGE
Students register in Hoch Auditorium during enrollment last Monday. This summer's enrollment was 8,697, an increase of seven over last summer's total.
Enrollment
classes because they have not been able to find jobs, he added.
David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said yesterday that he was concerned about the use of student data.
"I but I worry that students' lack of summer jobs, may have a reverse and negative effect on them."
"It tend to agree with a statement made by Gil Dyck that the increased summer enrollment is really no indication of how fall enrollment will turn out." Ambler said.
MANY STUDENTS may have counted on salaries from summer jobs to pay their fall wages.
Although the number of students at the Lawrence campus increased, Med Center enrollment declined. Fifty-two more students enrolled at Lawrence than last year, but the Med Center had 45 less students than in the summer of 1980.
Walt Geghibh, director of student admissions and records at the Med center, said yesterday that the official end-of-summer figure showed a Med Center enrollment of 1,777.
END-OF-SUMMER figures are usually higher than those the first day because of late weather.
Classified
From page one
said. Last year KU requested $1.2 million, but received $900,000.
"I DON'T EVEN KNOW if we are going to have enough in the budget for a cost-of-living increase."
The University is having these problems because of the state of the economy, Hamilton said.
"The legislature was left between a rock and the hard place. They felt that a 1.5 percent increase wasn't enough, so they went with a larger cost-of-living allocation."
Murder
From page one
"BUT WE ARE still uncertain whether a gunshot wound was the cause of death," he said.
Lack of publicity doesn't bother Brett
Police are waiting for carbon monoxide tests to determine whether Hatchell had sufficed, Malone said. Hatchell was taken in a car trunk to the bridge where police later found him.
The juveniles are in custody without bond until their formal hearings, in accordance with juvenile statutes, Malone said.
The hearing for the female is scheduled for June 25, and the hearing for the male will be June 29, he said.
KANSAS CITY, MO. - His face has not graced the cover of any national magazines recently, and his national television commercials have all long since run their course.
By United Press International
George Brett, whose bandwagon was hurriedly constructed in 1880 and then smashed to siotherneens in 1981, has moved from the public spotlight back into the private sector. The third member of the Browns City Royals is once again a member of the human race, who a good deal is a demon any longer.
"It's more peaceful compared to 1890 and 1891." Brett said of his current summer. "There are no hectic problems, no heavy schedules, no great
Two years removed from immense amounts of positive publicity generated by his unsuccessful run at 400 in 1960, and one year removed from a rash of negative publicity stemming from a breach of the university's code and a scuffle with a reporter in 1981. Brett has stayed to stay out of the headlines thus far in 1982.
Brett is still one of the first Royals to arrive at the park ball every day. He still scratches with the reserves for spots in the cage for extra batting practice hours before game time. But no player gets a shot on a bat. You swale in a fish bowl; he's back in the baseball ocean where he can enjoy freedom of movement.
Brett has found that .298 hitters (his batting plateau as of June 15) aren't much in demand. He is no longer what can be labeled a hot property. He's no longer viewed as a celebrity, as someone to be possessed by him, and that's just fine for the baseball player, wanted to be was a baseball player, anyway.
"I'd like to say George is glad he he's not getting the press," said Jamie Quirk, Brent's Kansas teammate and longtime friend. "But that was wrong." The publicity is something every ball player wants."
"I've got everything in perspective now. I think my life is in order. I'm happy with myself.
The expectations are still there but your whole life isn't under scrutiny anymore. All the public was nice . . . but you find that anonymity is nice, too."
expectations. I have the chance once again to do whatever I want, when I want, for whatever reason I want.
"I was always the type who wanted to be around people, even if I didn't like them. People meant acceptance. But after 1980, I became an introvert; there were just too many people. Now there are little girls in the dumps. But I find I'd rather be by myself, even if it means being lonely."
"I don't get calls from radio stations every morning at eight or nine o'clock. I don't do (television) mini-cams from the park every day. I can go out, have lunch with the guys or with a date and really enjoy it. I'm getting to live my schedule again, not someone else's."
Avoiding car air conditioning may not necessarily save fuel
By United Press International
MANHATTAN, Kan. - It's a summer driving habit for many Americans: start the engine, roll up the windows and turn on the air conditioner.
But is it worth it? It wouldn't rolling down the windows be considerably cheaper and perhaps just as cool?
Until fuel prices increased, most people thought very little about the effect of the air conditioner on gas mileage. But Demis Mattenson, an extension small-business energy specialist at Kansas State University, says drivers can benefit from their habits and still stay cool in the summer.
"First of all, find out if your car's cooling system is a cycling or non-cycling type." Matte
The cycling type is preferred because it only runs when it is needed. It cools the car to a desired temperature, turns the compressor off and stops it from working when the temperature rises above the set level.
According to Matteson, most new cars are equipped with cycling systems. If your car is equipped with a cycling air conditioner, Matteson said, then choose a high setting.
Many people think that rolling down the windows is a good alternative to using the air conditioner, Mattheson said. However, at highway drives speeds, open windows may create a wind drag equivalent in engine work load to that created by running the air conditioner.
According to Mattheson, for around-town or low-speed driving, not using the air conditioner definitely will save fuel. For highway driving, driving on highways or renting vents to circulate the air whenever possible.
JUNIOR & SENIOR
History and Meteorology Masters to participate in a
$4 for 45 minutes work.
Come to S38 Fraser Hall or call 844-1313 Ext. 69
904 VERMONT
843-8019
Copies while you wait
FAST
4 1/2¢
ART4U
MISS. STREET DLL
MAASSACHUSETTS
Bring Dad in for a HOT OR MILD SMOKED SAUSAGE SANDWICH served with potato chips & dill pickle spear $1.95 reg.2.35
No coupons accepted with this offer.
Wed. thru Sun., June 16 thru Father's Day
W. C.Frank "A Frank We Can All Afford"
W.C. Frank COUpon
Soft Serve
Sundaes 23¢
Reg. 59¢ Choice of Topping...
HOT FUDGE — MARSHMALLOW — BUTTERSCOTCH — STRAWBERRY
Offer good only with coupon
Expires June 20
Present these coupons and save a total of 60c!
sm
Copyright 1982
W. C. Frank
Inc. Inc.
COUPON
Liter of
Coke Reg. 694
Value...
with purchase of W.C. Frank* Footlong, Polish or Fifth*
Offer good only with coupon
Expires June 20
DELICIOUS
Coca-Cola
Everly
Coke
W.C.Frank
23rd & Iowa
Next to Food Barn—Phone 842-9672
---
A full spectrum of optical services
SPECTRUM
OPTICAL
4 East 7th 841-1113 Free adjustments Expires 6/30/82
$20 off all Prescription Eyewear 50% off all Tinting 20% off all Sunglasses
One-day service on most prescriptions and repairs. Coupon must be presented with purchase.
星空海洋
Moonlight
Madness Sale
THURSDAY, JUNE 17th
DOOR OPEN 3-11 p.m.
Tank Tops
3'99
reg. to 20.00
Skirts
9'99
reg. to 20.00
T-Shirts
5'99
reg. to 25.00
Summer Pants
7'99
reg. to 25.00
Shorts
5'99
reg. to 20.00
Dresses
5'99
reg. to 20.00
10% off all Regular Price Fashions
Carousel Charge
Mastercharge
Visa
Malls Shopping Center
711 W. 23rd
Acres of
Free Parking
Carousel Charge
Mastercharge
Visa
Malls Shopping Center
711 W. 23rd
carousel
Acres of Free Parking
nillion, but
e going to st-of-living
problems Hamilton
whether a. "he said.
a rock and
.5 percent
ment with a
oxide tests
sulfocated
air trunk to
m.
use it only
to be car to a
pressor off
when the
door is open.
v cars are your car is mer, Matte-
wn the win
e air condi-
tive highway
create a wind
road to that
ter.
nond until with juve-
duled for life will be
and-town or conditioner may driving, take the air
--working day and night. "Begin said, 'We discover a store of weapons around Sion that discovered the remains of an enemy.'"
Monday, June 21, 1982 Vol. 92, No. 149 USPS 650-640
KANSAN
The University Daily
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
Regents elect chair appoint new officer
By CANDICE SACKUVICH Staff Reporter
TOPEKA-The Kansas Board of Regents elected a new chairman and appointed a new executive officer at its regular monthly meeting Friday.
James Pickert, Emporia regent, was unanimously elected as chairman to replace Sandra McMullen. Hutchinson regent, for fiscal year 1983, beginning July of this year. McMullen, who has been a regent for four years, will become vice chairman.
Stanley Kopilk replaced John Conard as executive Officer Friday. Kopilk was commissioned on April 27, 1994, and is the first of three to become chairman of the board.
Conard resigned as the Regent's executive officer to become an assistant to the president of the Higher Education Assistance Foundation, which is the guarantee agency for college student loan programs in Kansas and five other states.
BEFORE FRIDAY'S ELECTION and appointment of officers, the Regents agreed Thursday to apply to the state director of the Division of
Accounts and Reports for authority to write off nearly $2.1 million as uncollectible and delinquent accounts at the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan.
"The $2.1 million in uncollectible accounts receivable was approximately 3 percent of the hospital's gross charges," said Keith Nicher, president and fiscal affairs at the Lawrence campus.
Those charges include hospital rooms, X-rays, pharmacy items, blood and other special supplies for patients, he said.
Tom Greeson, associate director of business affairs at the Med Center, said the 3 percent was lower than at most hospitals.
"The national average for bad debt write-off at other medical colleges is 5 percent to 6 percent," Gresson said. "So we feel the 3 percent is reasonable and within the levels of other heps."
SOME ACCOUNTS have been carried for or more years, Greeseon said. Most of the unpaid debts were from self-pay patients who were not covered by insurance, Medicare or Medicaid.
"I assume that the number of self-pay patients
See Records page 10
Begin says no desire to take Arafat prisoner
LONG LIVE
ANTI-ZIONIST
ISLAMIC
CONFESCAT
PRIVATE
Transferring the arms back to Israel "will take us six weeks if we use to big mack trucks
By United Press International
NEW YORK—Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin, predicting peace between Israel and Lebanon "in a very short time," said yesterday that his country had no intention of seizing Beirut and no desire to take PLO chief Yasser Arafat prisoner.
"We don't want to capture Mr. Arafat. We don't want to deal with him at all." Begin said in a television interview, "I think it would be trouble for us. Let him go where he wants to."
Speaking on the CBS program "Face the Nation," Begin said the Israelis were surprised at the amount of Soviet arms they discovered in Syria and did a service free world" by seizing them.
Begin said he had received a note from the Soviet Union before leaving last week for the United States asking for assurances for the Soviet Embassy in Beirut would not be attacked.
Begin said he responded that Israeli troops would respect the embassy's "absolute immunity," and also "used the opportunity" of his campaign to help Lebanon in a response to PLO aggression.
Began he said he was eager to 'recall our men from Lebanon as soon as possible', but declined to speak.
sured that the PLO would never See Mideast page 10
"Our problem is not measured by days. It may be two weeks, it may be several weeks," he said.
He added that Israel would withdraw only when it could be assured that the PLO would never be
Seasonal temperatures and little or no precipitation are expected for the rest of the week. Highs will be in the 80s, lows in the 60s.
Today is the longest day of the year and marks the beginning of summer. It will be sunny with temperatures in the low 80s and southerly winds from 5 to 15 mph, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka.
Tomorrow will be partly cloudy with a high in the mid-80s.
Tonight will be fair with temperatures in the low 60s.
Weather
KU
Protesters marched down Jayhawk Boulevard Friday afternoon, demonstrating against the Israeli aggressions in Lebanon.
Protesters condemn Israeli invasion, denounce U.S. participation in dispute
By NEAL McCHRISTY
Staff Reporter
About 50 chanting, placard-carrying demonstrators marched down Jayhawk Boulevard Friday protesting the Israeli invasion of Lebanon.
Sponsored by the Muslim Student Organization, the demonstrators marched from the Kansas Union to the front of Strong Hall and chanted "Stand With Them." Arm in arm, they "Arms from Reagan—soldiers from Begin."
The marchers paused at noon with placards above their heads and silently stood near Strong Bridge.
of arms and a well-trained army to do this massacre.
Although most of the demonstrators were male, two women led the march and carried a black banner with "There Is No God But Allah" written in white Arabic and English lettering. A woman marched with her four children near the back of the demonstration.
Mohammad Asgarian, Iran. graduate student and leader of the demonstration, said, "We are condaining Israel aggression toward Lebanon. We do believe that it takes a tremendous amount
"This means Reagan is furnishing arms to the Israeli and Britain is furnishing the soldiers."
"This means Reagan is furnishing arms to the Israelis and Begin is furnishing the soldiers." Reactions varied among observers of the demonstration.
Bruce Beckum, Dallas senior, after passing the process said, "I agree with him, if that's what he wanted."
Beckum said he did not think the demonstration would accomplish much.
"If they had the power to lobby, they would be doing that instead of demonstrating." Beekum
Luis Mata, B20 Vermont St., said, "I sympathize with what's happening with the Palestinian people. I understand the frustration the people who are Palestinian have—or those in sympathy with the Palestinian people—and I think they have a right to their opinion."
OTHER PASSERS-BY said they were con-
cerned with potential violence.
I believed with patience what I learned.
"I think that they have a right to demonstrate
as much as anyone else, but I'm going to stay away from it in case it does not appeal to "peaceful".
Tom Probasco, Lawrence senior, was watching the demonstration from the steps of Lippincott Hall. He said that another group had been paired with him to send messages opposing the demonstrators.
"I think some trouble is brewing on this campus," Probusca said.
David Dougherty, Garnett senior, watched the demonstration from north of Wescock Hall.
He said he thought what Israel was doing was similar to the recent British invasion of the Iraqis.
I had heard a man say, "In a way, what Israel is doing—if they pull out—is a defensive move, rather than an offensive move." Dougherty said.
Asgarian addressed the group after it returned to the sidewalk in front of the Kansas Union.
"The thousands of women and children killed by the Israelis were bombed by the heavy
See Demonstration page 10
Mariachi
Members of the Nuevo Mariachi Estrella de Topeka performed Saturday night at the Mexican Fiesta sponsored by St. John's Catholic Church.
The musicians, from right to left, are: Darren Kahler, Kim Peyton, Rachel Galvan, Isabel Gonzolez and Teresa Cueves.
Photo by SUSAN PAGE
Food, fun highlight fiesta
By KATE DUFFY Staff Reporter
It was Mexican Fiesta Night at St. John's Catholic Church, 229 Vermont St.
A brightly colored banner waved "Fiesta" at passing motorists on Kentucky Street while strains of mariachi music floated above the burn of voices.
The approximately 60 Mexican-American families in the parish organized the Fiesta to raise funds for the church and to have some fun.
AT THE HORSE RACE game, kids watch breathtaking as colored marbles representing Big Eight universities raced through a maze, finally dropping to the bottom.
"The Mexican people are, by and large, a fun community, a joyful community," said Bertha Bernules, one of the faestas' main organizers. "You can see to see all these people enjoying themselves."
But the Dunk Tank seemed to be the most popular game.
By 7:30 p.m., 700 people had poured into the fenced playground at St. John's School to eat tacos, tamales, tostados and burritos by the plateful.
"We made 2,000 of everything," said Bermudez. "And it's going fast."
SHE SAID organizers had been planning the fund-raiser since April and the cooks started preparing the mountains of food two weeks ago.
St. John's pastor, the Rev Ai Rockers, said local businesses contributed money to cover much of the church's expenses. He said thought they might come close to their $5,000
"The money we raise won't be for anything exotic like paying off a mortgage," Rockers said. "It will be used for the basic bills."
Games also provided a source of funds and fun for everyone. Children ran from Ring Toss to Star Wars to Horse Race, clutching back yoyo-yos, airplanes rings and stuffed足球s.
"With the economy the way it is, you have to go on beyond the collection plate."
boy standing at the toss line. The kid obeyed,
and Riley plunged into the cold water.
Eight-year-old Patrick Riley, 420 Country Club Terrace, taunted the crowd and induced people to throw a ball at the white circle connected to his seat above the converted staircase.
Sputtering, his mouth full of water, Riley explained how his cousin had told him to try
"Come on. Hit me, hit me," he yelled at the
Monday Morning
"I'll never listen to her again," he said just before he dropped into the tank for the second one.
IN THE SCHOOL, GYM, young dancers from Our Lady of Guadalupe School, Topeka, and St. John's School performed traditional Mexican dances.
As the evening wore on, helium balloons escaped from their booth and floated among the blue and yellow paper parrots swinging on their crepe-paper perches in the breeze.
By 9 p.m., the cooks had run out of beans, and the arts-and-crafts booth looked a little depleted, but the beer and pop stands were still gone. The band and the Wise-Man's legal band, tuned up.
SUNDAY MORNING, Bermuda said the last diners had left shortly after 11 p.m. she said everybody in the Mexican community was happy; "everyone we're very happy about the turnout."
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, June 21, 1982
News Briefs From United Press International
Hinckley jurors retire early to celebrate Father's Day
WASHINGTON - A jury, in its third day of deliberation on whether John W. Hinkley Jr. was sane when he shot President Reagan, failed to reach a verdict yesterday and retired early for a Father's Day dinner monitored by U.S. marshals.
The session was also shortened to allow a few jurors to attend church yesterday morning.
pestitious microbes.
There was no indication whether the jury was deeply divided or simply convened to review of the case. The trial was dominated by the divergent testimony of experts for the defense and prosecution about Hewlett's state of mind.
Frankly, a waiter in town said the jury had sent no notes to the judge. Sandwiches, potato salad and chocolate cake were sent in to the jurors at
The jury of seven women and five men has been sequestered at an unidentified hotel.
Hinckley had pleaded innocent by reason of insanity to charges that he tried to assassinate Reagan and wounded the president and three other men on March 30, 1983. He faces possible life imprisonment if convicted of the most serious charges.
Rebels say they have army officer
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador — Rebels claimed yesterday that they had killed or seriously wounded 500 government soldiers and captured El Salvador's deputy defense minister in the heaviest fighting of the three-year civil war.
The clandestine radio Venceremos said its forces captured Col. Adolfo Castillo, the deputy defense minister, contracting its earlier reports that a Russian air base had been struck.
If the guerrilla claim is correct, it would be the first time in the war that rebels captured a ranking officer.
Vencerores said its forces killed or seriously wounded 550 scliers, including 12 officers, during the rebel offensive against about 5,000 government
It was the highest casuallity figure ever reported by the guerrilla radio, which touts itself as the only Salvadoran press outlet that is not controlled by
Brezhney walks unaided to polls
MOSCOW—Soviet President Leonid Brezhnev walked slowly but unaided yesterday to the polls to vote in nationwide elections for local government representatives.
The Kremlin leader, escorted by Viktor Grishin, Moscow Communist party chief, walked slowly and stiffly but by himself into the neighborhood polling station at Kutuzovsky 26, a school on one of the main boulevards of Moscow and near Breznev's residence.
The 75-year-old president showed his passport to a secretary and dropped his ballot into a wooden box. A crowd of several hundred people on the street watched.
Brehmzha dropped out of sight for a month at the end of March and was said to have suffered an unspecified illness. Unofficial reports were contra-
mittent.
he reappeared at celebrations for the birthday of Lenin on April 22. Lenin is the founder of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics.
Summer job prospects to be poor
WASHINGTON—Americans seeking employment face poor prospects this summer, the nation's largest temporary job placement firm. Manpower
In a report issued in Milwaukee and distributed in Washington, Man-power said that of the 10,700 employees in more than 35 U.S. cities, only BJC had a full-time job.
The report said 13 percent expected to reduce their staff, 65 percent planned no staff changes and four percent said their hiring plans were
Employment conditions from July through September will be worse than those of last quarter, the report said.
Western and Southern regions, which had offered good job opportunities, now reflect the downtown in employment already affecting the Northeast.
Manpower annually provides employment to more than 600,000 people through its more than 950 offices in 4 countries.
Carrier pigeons fly for Lockheed
FELTON, Calif.—When it absolutely, positively has to be there tomorrow, Lockheed, the nation's most sophisticated space and computer facility, is ready.
Lockheed uses the pigeons to fly daily microfilled prints of graphic design projects over mountains from Lockheed headquarters in Sumynev to the Fellton test base. The birds have a strong homing sense and fly only one way, from Sumynev to Deegn. Deegn said.
The graphic design system allows designers in Felton to draft directly onto a video screen, automatically storing the information in the Sunnyville computer. But there was no fast, economical way for Felton designers to retrieve daily work comes. Dee said.
The first person to seriously suggest the use of pigeons was a Lockheed scientist, Bob Nelson, who had seen a television program about a hospital using carrier pigeons to transport blood samples over busy city streets. It could carry blood samples they could carry microfilm. Nelson suggested.
Ouake iars Guatemala, Salvador
A sharp afterschock yesterday morning jarred San Salvador, but it seemingly caused no additional damage in the capital, where three people were killed and dozens of buildings, including the U.S. Embassy, were damaged by the original unake.
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador—Relief workers distributed emergency tools yesterday to hundreds of peaceless left homeless by an earthquake in southern Guatemala.
Guatemalan officials in the town of Jalpatagua, where three people were reported dead and 40 injured, said workers were still searching through the debris.
Joffrey Ballet may move to L.A.
NEW YORK—The Joffrey Ballet, one of the country's top dance companies, is considering moving from New York to Los Angeles, the Saturday
The magazine said the company was negotiating to become the resident dance公司 of Los Angeles' Dorothy Chandler Pavilion, which is part of
Both sides have previously confirmed that negotiations were taking place, but sources claimed a contract had already been signed, the maga-
The Joffrey Ballet, which has experienced chronic financial problems, has not had a permanent home in New York.
If the dance troupe moves to the West Coast, it would perform two lengthy engagements in Los Angeles and engagements in San Francisco and Seattle.
Argentine isle taken by British
PORT STANLEY, Falkland Islands—Argentines on the barren, icebound Falkland Islands dependency of Thule surrendered peacefully yesterday to British troops, but a government member said Argentina would press ahead "on all fronts" with the war for the islands.
By Unitd Press International
The Argentine military command said two British helicopter gunships fired at an Argentine navy research station, the first of which by 10 unarmed scientists, and
Thule Island, about 1,400 miles east of the southern tip of South America, is part of the Sandwich Islands, a vast archipelago in the South Atlantic that Argentina claims in addition to the Falkland Islands.
Except for the scientists, Thule is uninhabited and surrounded most of the year by pack-ice. It was claimed by Britain in the 8th Century and has been administered by the Falklands. There are no British subjects on Thule.
surrounded it with troops late Saturday.
Brig. Gen. Basilio Lami Dozo, Argentine air force commander and government member, said yesterday that Argentina "has lost a battle but it has lost the war" for the Falklands.
The fight for the islands "should be waged in the future on all fronts, including the military front" he said.
Meanwhile the ruling government of Argentina, mired in the worst leadership crisis of its six-year military rule, remained locked in disagreement yesterday on whom to name as the nation's president.
reportedly pressuring the air force and navy representatives to resign, clearing the way for a new government by military defeat in the Falklands.
The army, weakened by last week's ouster of Gen. Leonoldo Galtieri, is
Top air force and navy sources, however, said their representatives had no reason to resign and that they would have resigned to the president than an army general.
Political sources said the army's insistence that the new president be an army general was complicated by the fact that it consisted of a solid candidate within its ranks.
Candidates filing for U.S., state elections
By STACEY LANE Staff Reporter
The filing deadline for candidates for governor, Kansas House of Representatives and Senate is April 1.
Most candidates have already made their trip to the secretary of state's office, either by filing a petition or by paying a fee.
The Kansas gubernatorial race is the most crowded, with six men contending for the office. The incumbent, Democrat John Carlin, filed for the office on Thursday, with Tom Docking as his running mate for Lieutenant Governor
Stanley banker Dave Owen has been on the campaign trail for months, visiting all 105 Kansas counties in 1981. Owen is running with Tony Casado, Wichita, on the Republican ticket. Formerly, Casado served as a state representative, a state senator and mayor of Wichita.
OWEN HAS TAKEN a strong stand against the severance tax and says that Carlin his not lived up to his campaign promises during his term.
or announced a running mate yet,
or announced the plane is a pilot for
Trane Airlines.
Another Republican, Ron Ibetsbon,
Colby, has announced his intention to file but has not announced a running mate either. Ibetsbon is a farmer and has concentrated his campaign efforts in western Kansas.
Sam Hardage, Wichita, also has filed for governor. Hardage lost the 1979 race for the U.S. Senate to Nancy Landon Kassebaum.
THIS YEAR'S U.S. congressional race has been affected by the redistricting of Kansas, which drew new district boundaries that did not separate major cities as the older boundaries had. Douglas County was moved from the south to the north by the district earlier this month by the decision of three federal judges.
The 2nd district incumbent, Jim Jefferies, R-Atchison, announced last Friday that he would not seek re-election. He said that much of his decision not to run was based on the redistricting of Douglas County, which moved most of his political backing outside of the 2nd district.
Republicans Morris Kay, Lawrence, and Dennis Taylor, Topeka, are campaigning for his seat.
KAY IS THE state Republican chairman and has served in the Kansas House. He ran for governor against one of his opponents by less than one-third of the vote.
Taylor is a Topeka attorney and a Shawnee County commissioner. The Aug. 3rd primary election will decide who will run in November's general election.
Democrat Jim Stattery is also vying for the 2nd district seat, after representing a Topkea district in the Kansas Legislature for six years.
Most candidates for the 22 seats in the Kansas House of Representatives have filed the necessary paperwork and are on the campaign trail.
RUNNING FOR THE 43rd district seat are incumbent Republican David Miller and De Soto Mayor Larry Davis, a Democrat. The 43rd district covers the southeast portion of Douglas County and part of Johnson County. Miller is finishing his first term in the Kansas legislature.
The 44th district, which includes the KU campus and most of northwest Lawrence, has two candidates. Democratic incumbent jessie Branson has won a seat added to the f9# legislature. Her opponent is Republican Bob Schulze, a
local radio announcer and carpenter
The search for more revenue to finance higher education in the state has made her a strong supporter of the severance tax, Branson said.
SCHULTEL SAID he was motivated to run for the House of Representatives because he felt unrepresented in state government.
on one 45th district, incumbent Democrat John Solobha unimposed for re-election. The 45th district was dominated by Lawrence Awkesen and western Douglas county
Incumbent Democrat Betty Jo Chaston, will be running against Republican Doug Lambert in the 46th district, which includes Lawrence east of Massachusetts. Street and several precincts close to the KU camus.
Campus Hideaway
CHARLTON. A member of the House Committee on Energy and Natural Resources, said she planned to re-initiate a bill that would require for necessary utility services.
Lambert, a local painting contractor,
said "one of the main reasons I'm running is that I felt that the people of the district deserved someone who would work hard on their behalf. I wasn't that aware of substantial effort being made on the behalf of the people in the district."
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University Daily Kansan, June 21, 1982 Page 3
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan, June 21, 1982
Opinion
What about the people?
During the past few days the media has been flooded with facts and figures concerning Britain and Argentina's recent power play in the South Atlantic. The news consumer has had available to him everything he ever wanted to know about British and Argentine interests in the Falkland Islands, as if he really cared.
We all know all about the losses suffered by the Royal Navy, the trials and tribulations of Margaret Thatcher, the frustrations of Argentina's foreign minister Nicanor Costa Mendez and the protestors rioting in the streets of Buenos Aires.
What we don't know anything about is the suffering, trials and tribulations, frustrations and fears of the native Falkland Islanders. What has happened to the compassionate, human interest side of journalism?
This lack of information concerning the inhabitants of the 4,700 square miles of rocky, barren South Atlantic archipelago is not the fault of hometown newspapers and radio stations. Rather, the big-time, multi-million dollar news organizations who have
correspondents in the field are the perceptrators of this editorial blunder.
Among the lengthy diary-type stories of one wire reporter's tale was the earth-shattering news that London police arrested a man for sealing himself in his auto with glue outside Number 10 Downing St. in protest against Argentina. In a much briefer report our wire machine rat-tatted out the sketty facts of soldiers looting the homes of Island civilians, taking food and destroying personal property.
With the open hostility resolved, the story of the colonized Islanders, who's homeland has been ravaged by their "fearless" leaders of both Argentine and British origin off and on since their beginnings, will probably remain an overlooked sidebar to lead news stories concerning their worth to their particular sovereign of the day.
Granted, the scenes of Vietnamese boat people and Cambodian refugees were not the loveliest sights to go along with dinner-time conversation, but at least they were there to remind us of the human side of war, as opposed to the impersonal, strategically planned, "official" dollars and cents side.
NEW MAGAZINE
Hot summer weather raises KU temperatures
Normal life at the University of Kansas has been disrupted!
Faculty members are rushing to the Kenneth Spencer Research Library. Employees are leaving work in the middle of the day or huddling together in dingy basement rooms and circulating petitions criticizing the KU administration. WHAT ON THE Hill could have caused such an
Why, the loss of Kansans' most valuable summer resource: the air conditioner.
Already hot temperatures grew even hotter when a June 14 Lawrence Journal-World articles published in *Journal of Environmental Science*
John Scarffe
activities. According to the article, a heated discussion is warming up between red-faced librarians and cool-headed KU administrators in air conditioning in most buildings until July 1.
The librarians say this policy squanders the productivity of the staff and shows a lack of planning. They argue that utility dollars should be used for air conditioning instead of excessive winter heating. The temperature settings in buildings last winter were at 75 to 85 degrees.
KU's administrators say it isn't their fault. They would not have allowed last winter's temperature settings to be placed so high if they had known the Legislature was not going to pick up $180,000 of KU's unexpectedly high $757,56 utility bill. When funding fell through, they had no option but to shut down the air conditioning until July.
THEN CAME THE 30-signature petition from the librarians and the ensuing newspaper article. It is almost as if the Kansas Legislature had taken over with a request before the Jayhawks noticed summer.
The librarians must face a summer of high temperature settings in stuffy buildings, as well as facing stewing administrators. Students, suffering through smelly classes full of sweaty bodies, must keep awake through the increasingly muggy Kansas heat.
The administrators must face heat from steaming students, employees, legislators and alumni because of uncomfortable rooms and the high cost of keeping everyone cool and calm.
Although it's questionable whether KU's spring into summer has really been much of a disruption, after all of this hubbub, everyone at the University is surely in for a roast.
THIS ALREADY swelling scene smells even worse when snuffing in KU's future. It looks as if the University has joined the rest of the state in its summer over for good. Robert Cobb, executive director of the International World article that KU employees should brace for more sacrilege in years to come.
While "sacrifice in years to come" sounds pretty oppressive, it might not be all that foretold. It is a real test of the heart.
in switching on air conditioning or heating. In the face of overwhelming energy costs, it doesn't seem to be asking too much, especially for Watson's librarians, who know that money is needed for cataloguing 350,000 books, as well as running the air conditioner.
Unfortunately, this kind of sacrifice will not totally solve the budget problems. To ease the heat, some energy-conscious planning might also be necessary. For example, closely watched temperature settings could make everyone more comfortable and save money, too.
Air conditioner temperature settings should also be watched. For example, temperature settings have already been to low this summer in Flint Hall, where a new air conditioning system was being tested. One day the girl sitting next to me had even put on her jacket. Such practices are bad and costly. More reasonable temperature settings could knock a few backs of the energy bill.
AS THE LIBRIARIANS pointed out, a room at 75-85 degrees is too warm in the winter because most students wear warm clothing. An 80 degree classroom full of sweaty students, each dressed in two pairs of socks, two t-shirts, thermal underwear and a sweater, is kind of silly. It also promotes illness when the soaked students are exposed to the cold.
Energy expenses could also be cut by concentrating air conditioned summer activity in a smaller area. Since the number of students and staff at each campus is much higher in all the buildings on campus are not needed.
Summer activity could be primarily confined to buildings and areas such as Spencer Research Library that contain rare books, art objects, animal colonies, computers and certain chemicals. These areas have to be maintained at a constant temperature anyway.
MOVING SUMMER activities from their traditional areas, however, would not be popular. Some faculty members might be uprooted from their classrooms and moved to audio-visual materials halfway across camas.
Then, during the hottest part of the day, KU employees and students could run their own air conditioners rather than the University's, and those who needed to, could return around 7 or 8 in the evening. Although air conditioning would still be needed in the hottest part of the summer, energy costs would be slashed by decreased use during peak hours.
This upsetting factor would have to be softened somewhat by other changes and accommodations, such as hiring more student assistants to aid in temporary moves. Summertime schedules could be encouraged. Employees could be encouraged to start work earlier in the day and go home by 8 a.m. or noon.
THESE KINDS OF schedule changes could also be implemented in the Timetable. Students might grip about having a 7 or 8 a.m. class, but it's certainly preferable to class at 2 p.m., when the temperature could be above 100 degrees. With the decreased number of summer classes, most could be held between 7 and 1 a.m. and 7 and 10 p.m.
These suggestions might sound a bit radical, but now that KU is jumping into the summer fire, some quick cooling measures need to be taken. If you want to keep it well, be cool alternative rather than hot debates.
"AND I, VASSER ARAFAI, SAY TO YOU MY FELLOW ARABS. NOW IS THE TIME TO UNITE! NOW IS THE TIME TO CRUSH THE ISRAELI INVADERS! RIGHT? RIGHT, MY ARAB BROTHERS?
RIGHT?"
Israel defends her right to exist
Although Israel's withdrawal from Sinai was a powerful affirmation of the possibility of peace in the Middle East, the subsequent invasion of Lebanon stands as a grim reminder to the Arab world that it must also undergo lingering suspicions of Israel "softness" in the wake of Camp David have been thoroughly laid
Patric Quinn
P. S. HOWARD
to rest by the brisk and businesslike manner in which the Begin government has carried out the long-overdue thrashing of the Palestine Liberation Organization.
the right to maintain Soviet missiles on the island of Wight. The laircause must be excused by the government.
ISRAEL'S CONTINUOUS conflict with the PLO leads many observers to the mistaken conclusion that the key obstacle to peace in the Middle East is the thorny issue of Palestine self-determination. In fact, Arab subsidy of the PLO has less to do with the lofties of Palestinian autonomy than with the Arab community's pledge to annihilate Israel. A commitment to nation-building is that limited to the financing of terrorism is a curious commitment indeed.
The United Nations, that absurd organization so continually dismayed by Israel's persistent survival, has wasted no time in issuing the standard condemnations of "Israel aggression." It would seem the United Nations is adhering to the idea that a state can maintain Syrian-made missiles in Lebanon the Bakka Valley, a contention logically equivalent to insisting that the Irish Republican army has
The Camp David agreements clearly demonstrate the extraordinary lengths to which Israel will go to obtain peace once its opponents concede its right to exist as a state. The current conflict in Lebanon demonstrates equally clearly the inevitable Israeli response to any organization dedicated to the extermination of the Jewish people. It is astonishing that any segment of world opinion can expect Israel to accept genocide as a necessary price for peace.
ANY EVENTUAL solution of the present crisis must include provisions ensuring that the PLO will be denied renewed control over southern Lebanon. Nothing less will serve to guarantee that a PLO would remain thereby avoid a recurrence of the existing situation. The United States should join with Israel in
demanding a strong United Nations peacekeeping force in the region.
The United States should also publicly reaffirm its commitment to Israel's security, a commitment that has received scant attention from our government in recent years. In a time when allies are becoming increasingly hard to find, we can hardly afford to ignore our only stable partner in the Middle East. It is time to stop the spread of the ination fiction that the Arab nations are doing us some sort of favor by selling us oil at obscenely inflated prices.
FINALLY, THE United States and the rest of the world must exercise every possible diplomatic effort to force the Arab community to publicly accept the fact of Israel's existence. No negotiation can take place between two sides when one party expresses its intent that progress will be made in the Middle East until negotiations begin between Israel and her opponents.
As we pursue peace in that troubled part of the world, we must use as our model the Camp David accords. We cannot allow the administrative nightmare of United Nations negotiations to impede the peace process begin when two committed leaders sat down and started to talk. They were armed and lurged of the modern Middle East, Egypt alone is serene. That serenity is the direct product of the vision of Amar Sadat, and we must not allow that vision to die.
The University Daily Kansan welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten, double-spaced and should not exceed 500 words. They should include the writer's name, address and phone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, the letter should include his class and home town or faculty or staff position. The Kansan reserves the right to edit or reject letters.
The University Daily
Letters Policy
KANSAN
USPS 650-440. Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Monday and Thursday in The Kansas State Journal, by the University of Kansas Student Services Department, 6604. Subscriptions are by $1 for six months or $2 for year in Douglas County and for six or eight months or $4 a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $3 a semester, paid through the student activity fee. Postmaster: send changes to address the University of Kansas Daily. Fint Hulh. The University of Kansas
Editor Business Manager
Coral Beach Sharon Roben
Managing Editor Martha Brook
Campus Editor Jane Murphy
Assistant Campus Editor Catherdine Robert
Assistant Campus Editor Cynthia Henriche
Editorial Editor Joe Hartman
Sales and Marketing Adviser John Ottoman
General Manager and News Adviser Paul Jess
PEACE ON EARTH
University Daily Kansan, June 21, 1982
Page 5
acekeep-
publicly a security, an attention in a time hard to our only time to the Arab selling
re st of le diplo-
unility to unity
No violence. No
two sides
truction.
Eidle East.
and her
of the Lee Camp ministra-
tations to two com-
militaries to talk
modern
ie. That vision
of at vision
Theatres
STEVEN SPIELMANN'S
"POLTERGEIST!"
IT KNOWS WHAT
SCARES YOU!
BILLY HOGERTY
& GLADIE BROOKES
CART LUNCHING FRENZI
Photo by SUSAN PAGE
THEATRE TIME
FRONTROW
Movie-goers wait in line to buy tickets to the late-night showing of Steven Spielberg's "Poltergeist" at the Hillcrest Theatre, Ninth and Iowa Streets.
Lawrence movie-goers face long lines in rush to season's new blockbusters
By CAROL MILLS Staff Reporter
Film distributors and theater managers in Lawrence say that the large number of quality films released this summer has caused a box office boom.
"Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan," set a box office record in the movie industry. Carole Rosenkoetter, for Richard Lane Associates, said
"Khan' had the biggest three-day gross in film history," she said. "Khan was released on Friday, June 7, and June 10, it had grossed $4,347,227."
"Star Trek II' s sold the first week it opened," she said, "but it has leveled on
Pam Olmstead, manager of the Cinema Twine Theatres, 31st and Iowa streets, said "E.T." was sold out every evening.
"Summers are usually good because all ages of kids are out of school. Even though the enrollment drops at KU in the summer, we still do well. But the quality of the films this summer has really made the difference."
The district manager of the Commonwealth Theatres in Lawrence. Elden
Harwood, said that more people were going to the movies this summer than
"People are going to the movies because the films are blockbusters," he said. "I've never, never seen such a movie." He added that as we have had this summer."
LAWRENCE IS NOT the only city having long movie lines. Harwood, who supervises distribution in the eastern half of Kansas as well, said he had been noticing the same high box office sales and that the big films have been released.
Sellout crowds have become the rule, not the exception
Olmstead said, "If I say that we sell out every evening, and Cinema Twin sets 300 people, you can figure out for yourself just how big the box office is." The film companies are benefiting from the selftouts too.
"Poltergeist" and "Rocky III," two of the many hit films this summer, made up their production costs shortly after release.
Dorobon said the 17-day gross for "Rocky III" was $43,743.40. Newman estimated the production cost of "Rocky III" to be about $15.5 million.
A spokesman for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer's stock holders relations, Madelyn Dorbon, said the 10-day total of highest," released June 4, was $8,140.40.
ing office, would not say exactly how high production costs were for "Poorterigest," but he did say costs were about $11 million.
In the first four days after "E.T."
was released, it grossed $11,991,000, an
accounting spokesman for Universal
Studios said.
Both Rosenkoeetter and Harwood said the office had a continued success at the box office.
"ANNIE" WILL OPEN later. "The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas" and "Bladenerun" will open soon, too, "Harwood said." That's a real line-up, and I'm sure the theater business will continue to boom."
AL NEWMAN. OF MGM's account-
Rosenkoetter said "Annie" grossed $35 million just in its preview opening.
Although the quality of the films has been praised by cities, and they have all been advertised heavily, one of the reasons for the big box office sales is that the films are drawing a wide range of viewers.
"The B-18 to 22-year-olds have the most money." Olmstead said. "And they like to go on dates. But this summer I'm taking kids and adults in here to see movies."
Summer activities provide fun, variety to alleviate boredom
By SARA KEMPIN
Staff Reporter
Whether a person's pockets are empty or full, he can fight boredom in a variety of ways this summer in Lawrence. So, the next time someone says, "I'll go," you know what to say.
Fun-seekers in Lawrence can fight summer boredom on land, in the air and in the water.
On land, physical fitness enthusiasts can lift weights, swim or play basketball, volleyball, racquetball, badminton and table tennis at Robinson Gymnasium.
Tom Wilkinson, KU director of recreation services, said the building closed at 8:30 p.m. The swimming pool closes at 8 p.m., and the tennis courts are lit until 11 p.m. If current students, facility, or other facilities, which are free of charge,
FOR THOSE WHO would rather watch others play sports. Holcom Sports Complex, 24th St. Terrace and Lawrence Avenue, has city league softball and baseball evening games, which are free of charge.
Blake Morgan, owner-operator of River City Rollers, said outdoor roller skating was "the cheapest thrill in town."
Morgan, who rents skates from a van parked in the 1000 block of Massachusetts Street, said skate rental was $1.50 an hour. He rents skes every
night except Thursday or when it's raining. Morgan said people liked to skate on the KU campus. Morgan also offers free skating lessons.
Wheels of Fun Skating Rink, 3220 Iowa St., offers indoor skating. Wednesday is the rink's bargain night. The rink has three lanes, and 20 pcs for each additional session.
PEOPLE CAN spend Wednesday evenings this summer listening to concerts in South Park, 11th and Massachusetts streets. The concerts, which run through July 28, start at 8 p.m and end at 10 p.m. It is rescheduled for the next night.
The Lawrence Symphony Orchestra will play a summer pop concert at 7:30 p.m., Saturday, June 26 at South Park. The rain date is June 27.
The Summer Youth Theatre, which involves young people 10 to 18, will present the play "L'Ili Amire" at 7:30 p.m. June 24, 26, at the Lawrence Arts Center, Ninth and Vermont streets. Tickets for children 12 and under, and 2 for adults.
FOR RAINY DAYS, the Kansas Union Jay Bowl is open weekdays from no to 5 p.m. except on Wednesdays. The bowling alley is open until 10:30 p.m. Wednesday. The cost is 75 cents a game or three games for $2.
Joma Hillcrest Bowl, Ninth and Iowa streets, and Royal Bowling Lanes, 3300 Iowa St., are open every evening.
For those seeking fun in the air this
summer, Lawrence Municipal Airport offers evening chartered plane rides. Charles Wilson, director of operations at the airport, said the ride lasted a little more than 30 minutes and cost $25 to $30 depending on the type of aircraft the airport has four and six-seat planes that can hold three or five passengers.
Wilson said business picked up on summer evenings because people took advantage of the cool temperatures and the views over Perry and Clinton lakes.
ANOTHER WAY TO have summer fun in the sky is to take a hot-air-balloon ride at the Lawrence Balloon Port. RF 2. Evening rides usually start at 6:30 or 7 p.m, and last for one and one-hour ride. You can also rent a ticket for $75 for two people. They their passengers over the countryside or the city of Lawrence
There is also fun to be found in the water. Clinton Marina reefs fishing boats with motors for $5 an hour or $25 an hour. The boat has a row boat for $5 an hour and pontoon boat for $2.50 an hour. A pontoon boat holds eight people. Sunlit sailboats will be available for rental in two weeks. All boats must be used on Clinton Lake.
If people want to go swimming in the evenings, the Lawrence Municipal Pool is open until 8 p.m. The cost is 50 cents per person. The past 60 and $1 for people 15 and older.
Bars lose students' business
Staff Reporter
By JENNIFER YALE Staff Reporter
On that special day last May when the last final was completed, most of the 25,000 students who attended the University of Kansas last year left, changing many things but leaving others hardly affected at all.
Some of the change and consistency that can be found in Lawrence in the summer is best reflected in the bars and private clubs.
"Things haven't changed that much."
Business has picked up since school let out, said Shaun Trenholm, Lawrence senior and owner-manager of the West Coast Saloon, 2222 Iowa St. A lot of the local people learn it when the students leave, he said.
"there was a slack period of about a week after school let out, but it wasn't a killer.
The Clubhouse has the same clientele all year long, Wiles said.
"LOCAL PEOPLE pay the rent. KU students are just the gravy," he said.
Jeff Wiles, manager of the Clubhouse, 530 Wisconsin St., said.
Kathy Miller, manager of Sgt. Presion's of the North, 815 New Hampshire, said a few thought sales people were coming to the private club.
INSTEAD OF SMALL groups and couples, more large groups, such as softball teams, have been coming in, she said. That added to the greater number of townpeople coming in, making up for the lack of students.
Miller also said that more faculty members came in during the summer.
Dave Wood, manager of Mr. Bill's tavern, 20 W. Eighth St., said that business had become more constant. It was a bigger good on.
The ages of his clientele are much more dispersed now, he added.
weekends, business is good all week long and better on weekends." Wood said.
Instead of only being good on
While the bar and clubs frequented by the local people seem to be flourishing this summer, trade agents like a lost great deal of their business.
"IF WE STAY open the whole summer, this will be the first time in five years," said Will Resn. Prairie Gauge Cabot Caldwell Wagon Gauge Cabot Caldwell W. Sh. St.
Rees said since the Wheel opened again for the summer last Wednesday, he had noticed that attendance was down by about three-44$^{41}$
"We are going to give it until the Fourth of July." he said.
Tim Ontkow, manager of the Hawk's Crossing, 68 W, 12th St., said business had gone down by half since school let out.
THE PEUGEOT P-8
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- 12 Speed
STUDYING A FOREIGN LANGUAGE? Study Skills Workshop
Tuesday, June 22
1:30-3:30 p.m.
Pine Room, Kansas Union
Emphasis on developing your skills in learning another language
The Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong, 864-4064
6th & Kasold Westridge Shopping Center
PIZZA
Shoppe
Carry-Out Available
819 Massachusetts
Mon.-Sat. 9:30-5:30 * Thurs. til 8:30
Arensberg's
= Shoes
SEMI-
ANNUAL
WOMEN'S
SHOE
SALE
819 Massachusetts
Mon.-Sat. 9:30-5:30 * Thurs. 9:30
Arensberg's
= Shoes
SEMI-
ANNUAL
WOMEN'S
842-0600
Bass-Bare-Connie-Joyce-Famolare-Naturalizer
-Nina-Etraignaigner-Zodiac-9. West-Trotters
SHOE SALE
WE DELIVER 842-0600
Double Topping DELIVERED
ieels & Wedgies in High, Mid & Low Heels
KINGSIZE $6.95
WOMEN'S DRESS &
CASUAL SANDALS
NOW $1790 $2190 $2790
One Large Group Few of a Kind NOW $990
Were to $ 40
Purses 1/2 Price NO Refund or Exchange Entire Stock Not Included No Phone Calls Please
WOMEN'S FLAT SANDALS
NOW $14^{90} & $19^{90}
MOMMY
TULIPA
NAISMITH HALL would like to remind you that IT'S TIME TO GET READY FOR FALL!
It's not too early to plan your fall se nester living arrangements. Get your new school year off to a gr at start by living in Naismith Hall.
Begin your fall semester by enjoying Naismith's full-sized swimming pool and fully air-conditioned indoor facilities. Plus, Naismith offers you year-round maid service, dining plans and a full schedule of social activities.
Don't wait!! Get a head start on fall by checking into Naismith Hall.
Phone 843-8559 or drop by 1800 Naismith Dr.
Page 6
University Daily Kansan, June 21, 1982
Nightlife Nightlife Nightlife
Ballet
Minsky's
PIZZA
MONDAY IS MINSKY'S HILL NIGHT
$1.00 pitchers of soda $1.50 pitchers of beer (with the purchase of a medium or large pizza)
23rd and Iowa 842-0154
We deliver after 5:00 p.m.
THE ONE, THE ONLY:
FRIDAY JUNE
25th
MINERAL KNICK
BATTLE OF THE BANDS
RIGHTS OF SPRING
B.C.R.
9:30-2:00
FIRST WEEKEND OF SUMMER
NO COVER!
HAPPY HOUR
8-10
NO COVER!
7th Spirit
BALCONY
642 MAS 892-9539
NO COVER!
WESTRIDGE Shopping Center
Hird LIQUOR STORE
One of the largest
selections
WINES—CHAMPAGNES—BEER
6th & Kasold
Next to Rusty's
843-0354
COMPLETE KEG
SERVICE
One of the largest selections
A
LYNCH & M'BEE
SPECIAL APPEARANCE
WED JUNE 23 9:30-1:30
Cuervo Gold Tequila Night:
75° Shots $1.35 Drinks $1.90 Margaritas
642 Mass.
842-9549
Watson's
7TH SPIRIT
The Finest in Pocket Billards Electronic Games
★ 33 Pool & Snooker Tables
34 of the Latest Electronic Games
★ 7' Color TV
★ For Your Drinking Enjoyment
Budweiser • Busch • Michelob • Miller Coors • Coors Light
N O
C O W E R
Mon.-Sat. 7-3am Sun. 12-midnight
925 Iowa/Hillcrest Shopping Center 841-2337
Peloton
A PROTECTOR OF OUR SENSES
CLUB HOURS:
BACKSTAGE LOUNGE
OPENING June 28th Ramada Inn Memberships Available
- Happy Hour 6 days a week
- Sunday Brunch
- Wed. Nite is Disco Nite
- Great New Food
where the right people go
BE BACKSTAGE . .
Summer Specials
BOTTOMS UP!
a serious drinking establishment
715 mass.
at
Monday—
$1.50 pitchers
Friday—
Tuesday— 50 $ ^{4}$ bottles
$1 pitchers 1-2pm
TGIF
Wednesday—
Ladies' Nite
25* draws
Thursday—
25£ draws
$1 cover charge
(prices from 7-Midnight)
Softball players
in uniform
$1.50 pitchers
Time
Out
$1.75 Pitchers
11 a.m.-6 p.m.
Come in hungry! We've got hot hamburgers and cheeseburgers fresh off the grill!
Grill hours: 11 a.m.-11:30 p.m.
Time Out
11 a.m.-12 p.m.
Mon. thru Sat.
Phone
842-9533
The Place to Party!
MOODY'S
MOODY'S IS COMING TO LAWRENCE!
Moody's is an exciting new 21 club that specializes in great drinks, ranging from ice cream specialties to fruit daiquiries. Moody's offers a relaxed atmosphere with a large dance floor and a plush interior. Come downtown and check us out. Moody's is a private establishment with membership available soon. Located at 7th and Mass. underneath the Eldridge House.
“Look for opening soon”
H & J Corp.
BUM STEEKS
Everyday low prices for lunch Featuring 11-5 daily:
Texas Lunch
Sliced Meat, French Fries,
Beans & Bread ... $3.00
Beef, Ham or Pork
Hours:
Tue-Thur 11-9
Fri-Sat 11-10
Sun 12-9
CLOSED MONDAYS
COUPON
FREE 16 oz. drink
with lunch
thru 6-27
Value $5^{g}$
Lunch Special
Small Sandwich, French Fries &
Cole Slaw or Beans .. $3.25
Beam, Ham or Pork
THE BUM STEER
BAR-B-O
2554 Iowa Phone 841-1060
SUMMER SPECIALS ARE AT
MONDAYS - $1 Watermelons All Night Long
GAMMONS
SNOWMONS
TUESDAYS - (shorts night) 75c drinks and 50c draws
and 50c draws
Watch for Gammons other regularly advertised specials!
University Daily Kansan, June 21, 1982
Page 7
J
DANCE
Nightlife Nightlife Nightlife
Baking
Grinder Man
FREE
Medium drink and 50 $ ^{e} $ off any Maxi sandwich
SGT PRESTORS
OF THE MONTH
24 varieties of sandwiches
WED. - Ladies night $1 highballs 50c draws 7-2
Offer good thru 6/25/82 Limit one per coupon
MON. - Pitchers $1.50 7-2
TUES. - Weekly drink specials 7-2
THURS. - $1 shots 25ᵃ draws 7-2
SGT. PRESTON'S OF THE NORTH BAR - RESTAURANT
MON. - Pitchers $1.50 7-2
842-2480
SAT. - Happy Hour 11 p.m.-1 a.m.
CIN. 2 for 1 9 p.m. 11 p.m.
27th and Iowa
SUN. - 2-for-1 9p.m.-11a.m.
All you can eat food specials all day
W
WEST COAST SALOON
2222 Iowa
841-BREW
Happy Hours: Mon-Thurs 4-7, Fri 3:30-7:30, Sat 11-1a.m.
Bar Hours: Mon-Sat 11-3a.m. Sun 12p.-1a.m.
Food Hours: Mon-Thurs 11a.m.-10p.m. Fri-Sat 11a.m.-11p.m. Sun 12p.m.-10)
Great Summer Fun at Great Summer Prices!!
Watch for upcoming tan contests and other attractions!
1116 West 23rd St.
TWISTERS
RESTAURANT CABERNET & TERROIR GUYS
749-5305
DID YOU KNOW?
A Mini Twist
Twister Fries and a
Soft Drink
Costs Less Than $2.50
At Twisters
The Wheel
We also have 23 Video Games Eat In or Carry-Out Service 1116 West 23rd St.—Phone 749-5305
SUMMER AT THE WHEEL THE WHEEL WILL BE OPEN 7 p.m. TO MIDNIGHT ALL SUMMER LONG.
25c draws every night from 7-10 p.m.
THE SANCTUARY HOME OF THE BEST SPECIALS IN TOWN
Thursday-Men's Night 25c Draws Friday-75c Pitchers 6-9 Saturday-$1 House Drinks 10-12 Sunday-75c Pitchers 1-5
HAPPY HOUR
]
4-7 Every Day of the Week with Blended Fruit Drinks for Ladies, $1.50 1401 West 7th 843-0540
2
the
SANCTUARY
A NEW PLACE IN TOWN?
Look in Thursday's Kansan for more details on the new place to be!
WESTERN CALIFORNIA
BEAR TEE
Great Lunches 11-2pm
Superb Dinners 5-10pm
Sunday Brunch 10-2pm
Sunday Dinner 5-9pm
Memberships Available
BRAHMA HOUSE
6th & Kasold 841-5646
HAPPY
HOUR
4 - 7pm
2 for 1's!!!
(Beer, wine & blended
drinks not included)
Bucky's
Bocky's
50¢ off
Purchase Price of any Regular
Priced Sandwich at BUCKY'S
coupon good thru June 29
Bocky's
2120 WEST NINTH come as you are hungry 2120 WEST NINTH
Bocky's
e ... hungry 212D WEST NINTH
RETAIL EAGAN BARRAND LIQUOR
From "A" (Asti Spumante)
To "Z" (Zinfandel & White
Zinfandel), we've got
the selection to
make your evening perfect.
MOMO KABBADI
Eagan-Barrand Retail Liquor
A New Concept That's Long Overdue
Southwest Plaza Shopping Center
Located behind Hendee's
and next to Foodbarn
1344 & 1854
842-6999
9:00 a.m. - 11:00 p.m.
Page 8 University Daily Kansan, June 21, 1982
Says aim is peace
Zen master visiting Lawrence
By KATHLEEN J. FEIST Staff Reporter
Zen Master Seung Sahn sat with his legs crossed on a flat pillow in the middle of the floor and began his lesson on the correct way to live.
one must learn the correct way to sit, and the correct way to breathe in order to have the correct mind," said Ibrahim as he read the manuscript as he took a long, deep breath.
Sahn, now visiting Lawrence, is celebrating his 60th year in the United States. His stay in Lawrence is being supported by the Lawrence Cheye Zion Group.
"Young people need meditation to find true human nature," Sahn said in his cliped, Korean accent, which at times he used from his traveling secretary, Mau Sang.
THE ZEN MASTER has been busy with retreats this weekend in Lawrence. Tonight he will give a speech at 7:30 in the Jawkay Room of the Kansas Union. He said he would answer any question on any subject.
Sahn said he was here to teach
searching souls the way to find one's true self through Zen.
"If you understand your true self, it's everything," he said.
The Oriental teachings achieve this understanding because they direct their work toward the person's inner beings, Sahn said. The Western teachings are directed more toward an outer being.
"The Bible says, 'I am the Way,
Truth, and Correct Life' Buddhism says if you obtain true self, you obtain the Way, Truth, and Correct Life."
SAIN COMPARED the two religions to a mountain with roads on the east and west sides of it but still ending at the same point.
"To depend or not depend on God doesn't matter," Sahn said. "They have the same point."
Christianity depends only on God.
Zen doesn't depend on God, or Buddha,
or anything. It's independent," Sahn
said, emphasizing the last word.
Sahn himself was brought up in a Christian home in Korea, according to "Dropping Ashes on the Budda," a book about Sahn's teachings.
In 1948 Sahn was ordained a Buddhist
A FIRE CAUSED $15,000 worth of damage to a trailer home in 89th E. 19th St. Saturday night (Ma). Bob Coleman is the fire Service Fire Department said yesterday.
The fire started at 11:34 p.m. when an extension cord that was plugged into two or three items short-curcured.
On the record
THIEVES STOLE miscellaneous items valued at $790 at about 3:30 Saturday afternoon from a house on the 1600 block of Harper, police said.
An air conditioner, swing set, tent, wedding dress and blender were taken from the premises, police said.
Nobody was injured in the fire, Coleman said.
Police say they have a suspect in the case, but no arrests have been made.
AN UNIDENTIFIED MAN stole $480
worth of room furnished Saturday
from the Virginia Inn Hotel, 2907 W.
Sixth St., police said.
CARDS & CLIETS Russell Stover CANDIES
- for all occasions
BARNOTHUTTS
Southport Plaza 23% & above
801.786.700
10-9 Mon.Fri. 10-5 Sat.
MILLER
SUPER SAVINGS
$20
OFF
All Prescription
Eyewear
for the month of June
VISIONS
806 Mass.
841-7421
Mon.-Sat.
10 a.m.-5 p.m.
The man rented a room and paid for it in advance, police said. He left with a电视 television, two table lamps, a bed, a rug, and several bowls, several lamps and a bathroom mat.
Police say they have no suspects in the case.
mok after learning the Buddhist philosophy that all things are transient and that by treating things as if they were, you find your true self, the book said.
THERE ARE NOW six Zen centers and five affiliate centers in the United States.
The 55-year-old monk came to the United States in 1972 and was the first Korean Zen master to teach in the West.
He recently visited West Berlin, he said, where he taught the Zen teachings to new and interested students.
One of the affiliate centers is in Lawrence.
COMMONWEALTH THEATRES
GRANADA TELPHONE 843-555-6222
Annie
POWERING WEST BROADWAY
10AM (Saturday)
Daily: 7:15, 9:45 MONDAY
MASDRU
Zen centers are also in other parts of the Western world, with the majority in Poland. he said.
Sahn works at the Providence Zen Center in Cumberland, R.I.
THE MADAME CHOW'S FIRST BASEBALL
"ROCKY III
WINNER AND STILL CHAMPION"
Eye. 7:35-3:30
Mat. Sat., Sun. 2:15
COMMONWEALTH THEATRES
GRANADA DOWNSTREAM
PO Box 1275 WESTERN AVE.
Daily 2, 7:15, 9:45 RASPUN
ANNIE DOWNSTREAM
PO Box 1275 WESTERN AVE.
Daily 2, 7:15, 9:45 RASPUN
VARSITY DOWNSTREAM
TELEPHONE 806-2398
THE MAGICIAN GOLD STORY UNITED
"ROCKY III"
WINNER AND STILL CHAMPION!
Eve. 7:35, 9:30 Mon. Sat., Sun. 2:15
HILLCREST 1 WITH IOWA
FIREFOX
CLINT EASTWOOD
the most devastating
killing machine
ever built.
PG
HILLCREST 2 WITH IOWA
Daily 2-15, 7:40, 9:15
Walt Disney's Bambi
HILLCREST 3 WITH IOWA
TELEPHONE 806-2398
POLTERGEIST
It knows what scares you.
Daily 2-15, 7, 9:30
CINEMA 1 TELEPHONE RADIO
E.T.
THE EXTRA FURRIERIAL PG
Daily 2, 7:30, 9:45 No Advance Tickets
FIREFOX
CLINT EASTWOOD
...the most devastating
killing machine
Daily 2-15, 7-18, 9-35
TELEPHONE 822-8600
By riding yourself of preconceived opinions and thinking bases on your self, he can find a solution exist in connection with everyone else. Sahn calls this a "dont know mind."
Sahn said he hoped to achieve universal peace and harmony by teaching the Zen philosophy to foreign groups.
MESSAGE
Daily-2-15, 7/4, 9/15
Walt Disney's
Bambi
HILLCREST 3
NEW YORK
POLTERGEIST
It knows what causes you.
Dustin J. Kirk, 7-15
"Such togetherness is possible," Sahn said.
HILLCREST 3
TICKET AND TOWNS
POLTERGEIST
It knows what scares you.
Daily-2:15, 7, 9:35
CINEMA 1
TICKET AND TOWNS
E.T.
THE EXTRATURBRIAL PG
Daily-2:7, 9:45
No Advance Tickets
"It is only when you keep a 'don't know mind' that at that time you and become one自己," Sahn said.
CINEMA 2
TEL 843-756-9000
TELEPHONE 843-756-9000
START TREK II
THE WRATH
KHAN
No Advance
Tickets
Daily-2.
7-10, 9:15
SUNSET 2
DIVE IN THE HOUSE
JOHN TRAVATO
GREASE 9:20
Upton 11:30
(Tuesday)
open at 8:45
URBAN
COWBOY
CINEMA 2
STAR TREK II
THE WRATH
KHAN
Daily 2.
7:10, 9:15
No Advance
Tickets
By dropping your opinions and keeping a clear mind, you become one with the universe and thus find your true self. he said.
JOHN TRAVOLT
GREASE Grease 9:20
Upon 11:30
(Tuesday)
open at 8:45
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"If everyone obtains their true self, then soon world peace is possible," Sahn said. "That's the Zen mind."
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Yamahopi
1982 Yamahopper
ONLY
$395
Features full 90-day unlimited mileage
warranty, shaft drive, built-in oil warning
light, and over 100 MPG
New HorizonS
1400 N. 3rd
Lawrence
749-0001
SUZUKI-YAMAHA-RHW
New Horizons
SUZUKI-YAMAHA-8MW
Watson wins Open title
New Horizons
1400 N. 3rd
Lawrence
749-0001
SUZUKI-YAMAHA-BHW
By United Press International
PEBLE BEACH, Calif. —Tom Watson, labeled a "choker" early in his career because he twice let the U.S. Open Championship title slip away, made a spectacular chip shot for a birdie on the 10th hole yesterday to win a stirring duel with Jack Nicklaus and capture for the first time the most prestigious championship in American golf.
Rolling in putts on the back nine that week made for the drama of the Open, including a 35-footer for a birdie from the fringe of the 14th green, Watson opened a two-shot lead over Nicklaus down the stretch.
But that lead melted away on the always treacherous closing holes of the Pebble Beach Golf Links when
Nicklaus birdied the 15th and Watson bogeyed the 16th.
Then, in championship style. Watson birdied the dangerous 81 with a 5-foot birdie put that gave him a final-day score of 70 and a 282 total
Using a pitching wedge, Watson popped the ball over the six feet of rough he had to carry to reach the ground. The ball ran straight for the flaistck.
Then, with Nicklaus already in the clubhouse after having holed a nervy three-footer at the home floor for a par and a round of 69 for a 72-hole total of 284. Watson hooked up to the righthand side 17th into the rough alongside the green rough that is a trademark of an Open course.
Kansas Repertory Theatre summer '82
The Wizard of Oz
The Wizard of Oz
By L. Frank Baum/adapted by
Frank Gabrielson/with music and
lyrics of the screen version by
Harold Arlen and E.Y. Harburg
July 8,17,23,25 8:00pm
July 11,18 2:30pm
8:00pm
Blithe Spirit
By Noel Coward
July 9,15,18,24
How The Other Half Loves
By Alan Ayckbower
July 10,16,22 8:00pm
July 25 2:30pm
The Arts
All performances in the University Theatre-Murphy Hall/All seats are reserved/call (913) 864-3982/Tickets go on sale June 14 in the Murphy Hall Box Office
KR
Presented by the University of Kansas Theatre
PIPINGS FROM THE PARK
I am, alas, one of those genetically deficient individuals who lack initiative. Indeed, my fear of honest endearment is so great that I often try to avoid even marginal contact with its results which leaves me unable to enjoy, for example, television, movies, cigarettes, sugar-laden soft drinks, video games, pornography, massage parlers and trastisy tabbies. Lately, however, those of us consigned to the park have gained some distinguished company.
Why it was just the other day that several Health and Human Services employees—probable victims of Secretary Richard Schweiker's inspired attempt to economize now under consideration—came wandering in. Granted, Texas Representative Jim Malton said that if Secretary Schweiker's proposal surveys he (Secretary Schweiker) 'probably has signed the death warrants of thunders and pernuls a nursing (home) patients,' but, well, you can't believe everything you read.
Not long ago some former bus drivers convened here and clearly demonstrated their relative inflexibility by admitting to an inability to see the benefits derived from teenagers owning cars. While admitted that this phenomenon created jobs in the auto industry, they kept talking about how it also resulted in more traffic, accidents, and air pollution, along with higher gasoline prices and increased fuel costs. They also pointed out that the number of thousands of young children, especially those living in what are called "urban load belts," in large cities
(suffer) from what worried physicians describe as a silent epidemic of lead poisoning. As a result they are grown up with impaired intelligence and health and are often unable to work.
The Reagan Administration, already committed to ignoring such information, has instead encouraged the Environmental Protection Agency to relax the regulations which limit lead in gasoline. This administration appears to be viewing, with no small amount of admiration, President Eisenhower's Secretary of Defense, Charles Wilson, who thought that "What is good for the country is good for General Motors, and what's good for General Motors is good for the country."
Then there were several persona non grata Taiwanese agents who produced newspaper clippings which described how the Reagan Administration "had begun talks with China on the possibility of an agreement on nuclear cooperation that would enable American companies to help develop China's nuclear power industry." According to Deputy Secretary of State Walter J. Steessel, President Reagan "in a recent directive . . . reaffirmed a policy of 'sustential liberalization' in the export of technology to China." Yes, there do remain a few problems such as: China's retusa to sign the treaty between Taiwan and China; China's attempt to join the Interim Authority and abide by its safeguards." Here, perhaps, we could learn a lesson from the dynamic Nixon-Kissinger due who, in a magnificent display of willpower, overlooked the thousands of American deaths in Korea and Vietnam for which Communist China was responsible, and signed the Shanghai Communicate which incorrectly classified Taiwan as part of China.
A new less unpopularized trips to China like the one last taken by James L. Malone, Assistant Secretary for Oceans and International, Environmental and Scientific Affairs, could lead to some kind of agreement. Oh, it might be necessary to lork over, in addition to Taiwan, a small part of the Philippines; but please keep in mind both the nuclear power industry's need for stimulation, and the accolades Mr. Nixon still receives for betraying Taiwan.
In the past year we park people have been mixing with a growing segment of the citizenry. There's been a veritable invasion of nurses, social workers, school teachers, and farmers—all here, of course, because they lack initiative. A few years ago, one of our students was interviewed by Pendleton, chairman of the U. S. C. Civil Rights Commission, who after examining his commissional colleagues the 1980 riot in Miami, told the problems which underlay the prolonged violence—"high unemployment, an inadequate educational system, deflorating and limited affordable housing, crime, an insensitive criminal justice system, and blacks from the economic and social basis—extent in most American cities."
The aforementioned spoisports claim that these are national problems which are beyond the capacity of the private sector to solve. To them nothing is sacred! What will be their next target? The now highly regarded balm of Darwinism? Needless to say, we rabble ignore these blasphemeres and continue to patiently await Sprog Agnew's rumored copyright entitled "A Boor Wield. His Burdgeon in Feigned High Dugue" and subtitled "You Can Do It If You Lie." Mr. Agnew's effort will probably serve to reassure us that in these seemingly troubled times there still exists realm in which one has the will one can find a way.
William Dann
2702 W. 24th St. Terr
---
University Daily Kansan, June 21, 1982
Page 9
City Commission to decide on police officers' proposals
Lawrence city commissioners will decide between two contract proposals for police officers at Tuesday night's meeting.
The city and police have been negotiating a work agreement since mid-April. A federal mediator was reached and the settlement reached an impasse in early June.
Police voted down the city's last offer on June 15. Both negotiating teams have completed their final proposals for commissioners to vote on
The commission will examine both proposals at a study session Monday afternoon but will not vote until the regular commission meeting.
The Lawrence Police Officers
Association, representing the
officers, corporals and detective
ranks, wants a 16 percent raise. It is asking for a 2.5 percent raise each
month; the offer is the 11 percent
offered by the city
The city is offering the police an 11 percent raise, with 6 percent in January 1983 and a 5 percent raise at the beginning of 1984.
Both sides also disagree on insurance for dependents and LPOA representation on a departmental policy-making board.
The commission meeting will begin at 7 p.m. on the first floor of City Hall, Sixth and Massachusetts streets.
By CAROL MILLS Staff Reporter
Seminars give tips on running for office
THE MIDWESTERN MUSIC CAMPERS will give a recital at 8 p.m. in the Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall.
TOPEKA—Only after 10 years in office does a politician really know how to campaign, said former speaker of the Kansas House, Pete McGinn, Saturday at a political campaign workshop on three kui political science professors.
--been offered to potential candidates and incumbents.
"Once someone wins a race, they think that they know all about running for office," McGill said. "But they don't."
WEDNESDAY
Thirteen potential candidates for state and local offices paid $7 to attend the two-day workshop Friday and Saturday at the KNEA Building here.
SUSAN WILSON will give a senior bassoon recital at 8 p.m. in the Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall.
TOMORROW
Russell Gettle, associate professor,
Alan Giger, associate professor, and
Marvin Harder, professor, all of the
University of California laboratories
with people from the legislative and
"Fund raising is the most delicate and fundamental issue in running for office,"McGill said. "You have to be positive and convince the people that you are worth the money they may spend."
TODAY
on campus
Getter, who developed and helped organize the workshop, said he had thought about creating a workshop for some time.
"Our department offered a class at the University for credit last fall, and in this spring, Marvin Harder, Alan Coghill began to reapply the aln. Corp concept."
HARDER, THE DIRECTOR OF KU's Capital Complex Center in Topeka, said that the workshop was the first time a non-partisan campaign workshop had
"The KU faculty was outstanding, as were all the other speakers," she said. "I was impressed with their enthusiasm and informality."
business communities, provided seminars and political talk
McGILL AND OTHER speakers at the workshop discussed the ins and outs of campaigning for public office.
JUDY RUNNELS, Topeka, attended the two-day seminar and was impressed with the down-to-earth presentation campaigning provided by the speakers.
ALL-DAY ORIENTATION AND EARLY ENROLLMENT sessions for new and transfer students will be in the Kansas Union.
"This program was highly innovative," he said. "And we feel good about it. We do expect to do it again next election year."
THE KU SAILING CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in Parlor A of the Kansas Union. ALBERT GENEKN *, University Carlier College, Northampton recital at 8 p.m. at the Campanile.
State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, said she was primarily interested in the scientific aspects of campaigning.
"It has really been a how-to," she said. "I have an expected academic approach from the professors but they have been informal and informative."
"The whole experience has been great."
Runnels said she intended to file for candidacy for the state legislature.
"Many people see political campaigns as horse races," he said. "These seminars have given me additional information to analyze campaigns, as well as the insight to predict the races better."
FOUR KU PROFESSORS lectured on the various aspects of campaigning. On Saturday, Ellen Reid Gold, associate professor of speech and drama, discussed the personal campaigning and speaking to small groups. Cigar producers talked on engaging with tight budget, and Getter told the group how money from individual contributors and political action committees should be spent.
A reporter for the Kansas City Star, Jim Sullinger, wsa one of two reporters who attended the seminar.
GQ
The University Daily
-CLIP 'N' SAVE -
Gentleman's Quarters
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Call 864-4358
CUT, PERM & STYLE
KANSAN WANT ADS Call 864-4358
I will be in the CHRISTIAN CAMPUS HOUSE this summer & fall. Become a part of a growing campus ministry. Call Alan Rosenak, campus minister tf 645-6929.
1 bedroom semi-furnished. Near campus. 843-8094 or
843-8707. No pets.
Furnished Apt. Grad Students Utilities paid A/C/ C/C
paint $125,011; 9135 Vermont $643,130
tuition $72,851
CLASSIFIED RATES
SOUTHERN PARKWAY TOWNHOUSES, 30th & Kool. If you need the tug of the noise or cramped apartments, call us at (855) 674-1234. Hookups, all appliances, attached garage, swimming pool, & lids privacy. We have opening now for August. Call Craig Levrens (evenings and weekends) to reserve a room. About midpriced townhouses. if
CLIP 'N' SAVE expires July 17, 1982
FOR RENT
PRINCETON PLACE PATCH APARTMENTS. Now Available. 1 bedroom, 1 bath, perfect for renters. Electric heater, water/winter heater, fully equipped electric speaker. Water and electricity open house. Open house 9:30 am to daily at 2:58 PM.
Play begins Sunday, June 27 1:30 p.m.
SPACIOUS STUDIOS
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$40
ERRORS
Robinson Tennis Courts
Tennis Doubles Tournament
AD DEADLINES
Entry Deadline
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5 p.m. 208 Robinson
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
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Tie In WithUs
14
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 the callant Banshan business office at 843-158.
99
--for sale or lease with option to buy. Only attainment place in the college town with ice cream, cold drinks, sandwiches. Hi video machine and room for 10 people. Large apartment openings. 843-1691, 843-1692, 843-1734.
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The Kanana will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allocates will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of this ad.
Tie In WithUs RECREATION SERVICES
KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE
118 Flint Ha2 864-4358
--for sale or lease with option to buy. Only attainment place in the college town with ice cream, cold drinks, sandwiches. Hi video machine and room for 10 people. Large apartment openings. 843-1691, 843-1692, 843-1734.
One, two, and three bedrooms.
Check now for summer availability.
Beautiful grounds, swimming pool,
lighted gymnasium.
A GOOD PLACE TO LIVE
meadowbrook
15th & Crestline
843-8200
ICE CREAM CONES. One dip just tp. Two dip's Tp.
Southern Hills Center 12:00 p.m. Tp. Tuesday, 12:48 p.m.
Southern Hills Center 12:00 p.m. Tp. Sunday, 12:48 p.m.
Zen Master
Seung Sahn
Public talk
Jayhawk Room
Kansas Union
Monday, June 21
7:30
Sponsored by
KU Zen Group
AVAILABLE AUGUST Spacious exclusive 4
room, 2% bath. Furnished or unfurnished
1 room with 1 bathroom. Garage.
798 Sharaf Road on KU Bui Access. Accept
vehicles from 750-870-6200. Enjoy $100
spare room. 750-870-6200.
Woman: Furnished room in shared house. Total rent (Nov-Aug). $200 + deposit. 1 bik. from Union. 8-628
84540-14, 50-12, 9-M, F.
Two bedroom furnished mobile home. $185.00 per month. Clean, quiet location. No pets, Jayhawk Court #424-8707. 7-29
New 2-bed apartment in four-plot. 1 block from campus, 3 blocks from town. Central Air. Airdryer, fully equipped kitchen, at 1341 Ohio. Call 842-4242.
Racquetball club.
3 pools, tennis court, and
TRAILRIDGE
HANOVER PLACE
2, 3, and 4 bedroom townhouses still available for fall
STUDENTS
9th and Emery Rd.
Rentals from $250/mo.
841-5255 841-4455
Between 14th and 15th on
Massachusetts
mountainous
841-1211 862-4455
SUNDANCE
$3.50 value
2500 West 6th 843-7333
NEW 4-PLEXES
MASTER BEDROOM of a large 3 bedroom mobile home. I need one person during session with the doctor last longer. Call Matthew at 418-434-764.
details
EXTRA nice apartments, large and small. Next to campus. Utilities paid, reasonable bills. 842-145-178.
Coupon (clip out)
TIBURON
Sleeping rooms. 1, 2 & 3 bedroom apartments and houses, no pets. Days 843-1691. Evenings 842-87/7. & 841-3232.
SUMMIT HOUSE
1105 Louisiana
Rentals from $285/mo.
841-8260 842-4455
All offered by Mastercraft Management. Professional Maintenance and Management Company
919 Indiana
919 Indiana
916 Tennessee
All 38R, 2 Bain Remittals from $426/mo.
841-5255 842-4455
7th and Florida
(On KU Bus Line)
Rentals from $205/mo
841-5255 842-4455
SUNDANCE
Mon.-Fri.11-2
Campus Hideaway
TRY COOPERATIVE LIVING. Close to campus and downtown. Individual bedrooms. Even meals. Not a religious organization. $90 to $130 including utilities. Sunflower House. 842-9421. tt
$3 with coupon
SUMMIT HOUSE
COLDWATER FLATS
413 W. 14th St.
Rentals from $280/mo.
841-121-126
842-4455
C3 bedroom unfurnished apartment in an older home, 314 W. 14th (14th & Tennessee). Available now, only $75 a month with $600 deposit, all utilities insured, no monthly call. Call 794-232-8000; 7-299
Thinking of Next Year?
FOR SALE
Luncheon Buffet Special
$3 with Coupon
Pizza Pasta Soup Salad & Fruit Bar
Naismith Hall is the Place to Live. . .
*Private Sleeping Study areas*
*Carpeting*
*Private Bathta & Showers*
*Private Meal Plans*
*Parties*
*Pool*
*Neat Service*
*Great Location*
Front wheel drive, am/am. 5-speed. Low mileage.
Great economy. 842-613-6.
Western Civilization Notes. Now on sale! Make sense
with these notes—you'll be able to them!
—1 as Study Guide. 2 for class preparation.
For exam preparation. "New Analysis of Western
Civilization." From Town, or Towner,
Bookmark, and Ordnance Books.
Check Us Out This Fall
We Think You Will Like Us:
Applications are now available
Applications are now available
Call 843-8559 or Stop By
1800 Naismith Drive
MOPED-Honda Express. Good condition $230. Call
811-542-5542
Men's sweep bicycle, very good condition. 842-3213. 6-21 manual typewriter; excellent condition. 842-3213. 6-21
Apartment available July 1 at 945 Missouri. Living room, kitchen, bath, Carpet and bay window in living room. R49-0106. 7-5
very nice i-bedroom unfurnished in older home at 140 Tennessee. Available now, only $175 monthly with $200 deposit, utilities paid. Absolutely no call. Call 794-4144 for showing images. 7-29
small big box 1/3-bedroom unfurnished apartment
large inside bag at 1018th Grade; Only 17% a
month with $200 deposit, gas and water paid.
Also no pets. Call 764-1944 for information
at 764-1944.
76 Buck Regal. FB, PS, AC, AM-FM, Cruise & Till.
842-848-6086
**6-24**
Must sell: 1976 Chevy Monza, Chean, low mileage,
good mpg. Call 842-7546. 6-24
Moving, have to sell double bed, Sealy brand, new $139 for mattress, boxsprings and frame. Brown vinyl couch, excellent condition $0. Call 854-6719
| | |
| :--- | :--- |
| Mattress | $0 |
| Boxsprings | $0 |
| Frame | $0 |
| Vinyl couch | $0 |
New leasing for August 1, SPANISH CREAT AMSTERDAM; 2-bedroom unfurnished apartment, fully equipped kitchen with dishwasher, garbage disposal, oven and refrigerator. Kitchen available. Laundry facilities and pool. Call 503-499-6744.
Cycle, 73 Honda 125 120,000 miles. Excellent condition.
Insurance $200, 842-659. Fax and helmet
inspection.
MED CENTER BOUND? Newly refurbished 2-bedroom duplexes available now. Carpet, A/C, appliances. Calling. Park (913) 381-2878. 7-29
Women's sample clothes: Calvin Klein jeans (22); T-Shirts, Polos & Shorts ($10); Skirts ($15). Sizes 5-13. Call 842-1580. 6-24
Alternator, starter and generator specialists. Parts,
service and exchange units. BELL AUTOMOTIVE
ELECTRIC, 843-069-3000 W. 80 h.
tf
71 Chevy Impala Conve, white over yellow. 8-21
Good-looking book car $140, 843-460-621
Combination bumper pool-card tank. Nest 14ft.
Habitat 7 ft. totally equipped. Call Rick at 745-836-
$100
RECORDS, RECORDS, RECORDS. Many more.
Wide selection. Rock, jazz, blues, etc. Don't
miss it! Sat, June 26, at 9:28 & Connecticut.
Flexible hours. No experience necessary. Job is in the medical and general libraries at the University of California, Santa Barbara, be a Veteran and in school full time. For more information, contact the Financial Aid Office or Benefit F. Lawnard.
HELP WANTED
1981 Honda Express Moped $250. 842-7960 Evenings.
HONDA 125L X125X (1921). Perfect condition $500. Must
call. Calleeper: 814-4650. 7-19
Blauspunkt AM-FM in-dash cassette radio. $125.
749-264. 6-24
HARDWARE, COMMUNICATIONS ANALYST
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS. KANALISTS: B.S.
Engineering or equivalent subject; experience as ele-
tric communications technician or data com-
munication technology. Ability to manage
project and staff. prefer experience in design
realistic grinding and working knowledge of data com-
munication. Submit resume June 28, 1982 to Jmyn Molyrkayan,
Computer Center, University of Kansas, Park Office
Drone 2007, Lawrence, KA. 6644. Additional in-
troduction: David Contact Lindwall, 913-864-1220
EE/AA/
Program Assistant unclassified position in chemistry department 20 lbs. per hour, to begin in the following positions: editing, writing and organizational and record keeping duties; will serve as assistant to Prof. R. L. Schoenow in the Department of Chemistry at American Chemical Society. Applicants must have experience in the seven areas and must be at least a Master's degree. Minimum requirements include typing speed at least 40 wpm and two years of clinical experience. A Bachelor's degree is required on the mandatory. It is expected that the person filling this position will have experience in professional management. It is expected that the person filling this position will have experience in qualifications and experience with the Chemistry Department, Room 2018 Mall Hall, University of Kansas or call 644-7637 before June 30. Program Assistant will accept a Familiar Action Employer Offer.
LOST
Lost: glasses. Left lens touch. Plastic frame-charcoal top, clear top back. Reward. Professor Larson english, English Department, KU. Please call 841-620 and leave a message.
PERSONALS
SPECIAL RATES, HAIRCUTS $4, PERMS-
"ONLY" $20. Charm Hair Fashions 103%
Mess- Dewnaena 843/586. 6-28
TATTOOING—Clyde's Tattoo Parlor, 1417 W. 38th
St., KC, Mo. 816-601-5335.
6-21
PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTHRIGHT.
845-4821
tf
Skillet's liquor store serving U-Daily since 1949. Come in and compare. Willfred Skillet Eudaly. 1906 Mass. 843-8186. tf
The Keeper - Weekly Specials on Kegs!! Call
841-9450 - 81W.13rd.28
tf
Say it on a shirt. Custom silk screen printing. T-shirts, baseball shirts and caps. Shirtart by Swains. 748-1631
COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIates. Free pregnancy testing; early and advanced outpatient abortion; gynecology; contraception; 1-435 & Hoe, Overland Park, KS (913) 625-1030
LEASE-
A
LEMON
Daily, Weekly, Monthly All Cars One Rate $995 A Day NILMES FREE
FIRST 50 MILES FREE
THEN 8° A MILE
Small, intermediate and large cars and trucks available. All mechanically sound, statured, clean and ready to rent.
CALL US AT
9th & Miss. 24th & Iowa
749-4225 841-0188
Welcome back! Photos for any occasion. David
Bernstein Photography. Call Sean 749-1636.
210 E. 15th Street, NYC.
DARE TO GO RBRE THE American Sanitizing
Association has a FAMILY club mum close you, aim
advance maternal status. TRA-V-AHNS. Inc. Iq. 1
1844 Scribner. K6,6637 93rd St screw kit.
6-24
Community Children Center, Headstart, is accepting new three year-old students. There are 3 requirements for those families accepted into this free program. 1. Child must be between 5 and 6 years old. 2. Must meet Mettler to Meet Ponder Guide Line. 3. Must have completed kindergarten.
Instant passport, portfolio, resume, immigration,
naturalization, visa, ID and of course fine portrait.
Swells Studio 749-1611 7-29
Why cook? .. We now deliver. The Pitra Shoppe
842-7600
7-1
Come in & see the Lindas at The Etc. Shop 10 West
8th for fun clothes for fun people. We have all kinds of
party accessories to wear on your evening out- 6-21
Free baby golden hamsters! The perfect apartment pet. They're cuddly and caudy. Call Laurie 740-5368
Craving pizza but on a tight budget? Call us. The Pizza Place 852-6000.
During the third week of June our pool was filled and opened for swimming. For this, some gaslight Apartments residents at 1510 West Nuthall wish to rent a house. The Fife Shop, 189 Worth 909 has a new supply of bowling shoes in many colors. They're light & cool for summer winter.
Put your best foot forward with a professionally printed resume from Encore. We can write it, use it, and print it for you. Call Encore 842-2001, 2620 & Iowa.
SERVICES OFFERED
MONEY, WEALTH, CAN BE YOURS TO
FOLLOW A PROVEN PLAN SEND LARGE SASE
FOR DETAILS. RNADATAL ATWATER 9 MORGAN
ST. APT. 12, STAMPDATE C0985
6-21
The Etc Shop
Vintage & Classic
Contemporary Clothing
Linda & Linda
10 West 9th St.
813-843-9708
Mon. Sat. 11:5
O O
Schnieder Wine & Keg Shop—The finest selection of wines in Lawrence—largest supplier of strong kgs. 1610 W 2rd, 845-3212. tf
**Writing/PSECHONYADICS** will find your natural expression -editing, tutoring, library research, science writing, Graphoanalyst Victor Clark; 842-84240 7:29
KU Freshman woman would like to live with a single wife, a working houseman and a teenage boy. Please call her for coding for room and board. Please call collect at 141-825-3489 or写 Rosanne Hernandez. 101 Clarence. Independence MO. 607-241-1322
Another Encore exclusive:
ENLARGEMENTS
كويت المملكة العربية السعودية
جامعة كويت المملكة العربية السعودية
Encore Copy Corps
25th & Iowa
842-2001
Have your own personalized bumpersticker! Deluxe
Vary. Any message. $3.00. K. Gill. $2.91
Place. Ornax, California 98030
7-15
*suunay* June 7th Saturday; July 3rd -SUMMER
SALE! Spencer Museum Bookshop the largest over-
mount bookstore, 30-80% discounts on many books &
posters, note cards & postcards. Expand item 1
with now range!
If you haven’t tried the original Round Table, you haven’t lived. The T pizza Shop 842-6000. 7-1
haven't lived in the Pizza Shoppe. 82,000-7-4
It's delivering great pizzas in town for low prices!
Call 842.000 8400 - 7-1
Lessons for 9% of hour: 842.003 - 7-8
SLIDES DEVELOPED overnight or by appointment. EXTRACHROME 35mm; 20 ex. $6, 36 ex. Call Kenny Knowles events at 841-546-7. 4-8
TYPING
Shakespeare could write; Elvis could wiggle; my
talent, typing. Call 842-6034 after 5 and weekends.
7:12
Experienced typist. Term papers, there, all museums. IECM IBM Correction Selector, ELC仪, Pica and will correct spelling. Phone 843-6546 Mrs. Wright.
TIP TOP TYPING—Experienced Typists—IBM Correcting Selective II, Royal Correcting 59000CD, 456-9675
if
It's a Fact, Fast, Affordable. Clean Typing 843-5820.
ORNIGHTING EXPRESS Editing-Typing. IBM
Selective. Victor Clark: 841-8240. 7-29
For PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myra. 841-4980.
Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms,
graphics, editing, self-correcting Selectic. Call
Ellen 841-2172.
Experienced typist will type term papers,thesis,
dissertations, books, etc. HM will自编 correcting
Selective II. Call Terry 841-4794 anytime or 843-8711
TLN
TYPNING PLIES. THUES, dissertations, papers, letters, applications, resumes. Assistance with composition, grammar, spelling, etc. English tutoring for foreign students - or Americans. B41-8254
AFPORLDIC QUALITY for all your typing needs,
themes, dictionaries, resumes, charts, mailings,
misc. Call Judy 842-7945 after 6 p.m.
tf
Have Selective, will type. Professional, fast, affordable. Betty, 842&6869 Everyday and weekends.
Professional, accurate and fast typing. Dissertations, Theses, term papers, etc. Call Allison; 841-759-1290; after 5:00.
Experienced typat—theses, dissertations, term papers, misc. IBM correcting selectric. Barb, after ff. p. n42. m30:213. tf
Students: I will take care of all your typing needs fast and very reasonable. Please call April during the day at 843-5101; evenings and weekends: 843-5064.
KANSAN
Typing for all occasions; for dissertations, theses,
term papers, letters, etc. Caliby Deb at 748-736.
*thesis*
Former medical research secretary will type books,
theses and term papers. Call Nani 681-7225. 7-22
WANTED
Housemate Wanted. 3 BR—$83.33/month + 1/2
fireplace. Fireplace, screened porch. Close to campus
and downtown. Call 642-5858 after 5.
Roommate wanted. Unfurnished house close to campus. Garage, Baseball + basement shop. Prefer grad, student or working person. Eve, phil. eavl. 842-3700. 6-21
ONE ROOMMATE to live in the master bedroom of a 3 large bedroom mobile home. AC, washer/dryer, etc. Contact Matthew B. 61-4-14-M4 7-1
Neat female roommate for house near campus on bus route. $185 including utilities. Call 841-8006. 6-24
bus route. $418 including utilities. Call 841-4006 - 624
Monroe D and D player hopes to find DM. Object:
Monroe守夜. $841-3831 after 5 p.m. - 621
---
Substitute Sitter to take care of a bright, charming 3-year old when he is sick or when Hillary is spending time with friends and relatives. He has own transportation to Central Jamaica and will have access to public transportation. He will pay rent to right person.
SIFIEDS
Don't want to drive across town in the summer heat to send in your classified ad? Take advantage of this form and save yourself time and money while still receiving the satisfaction of placing your ad in the Kansan. Just mail this form with a check or money order payable to the Kansan to: University Daily Kansan, 118 Flint Hall, Lawrence, Ks 66045. Use rates below to figure costs.
Classified Heading:
Write Ad Here:
Classified Display:
1 col. x 1 inch—$4.00
| | 1 time | 2 times | 3 times | 4 times | 5 times |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 15 words on Additional | $2.25 | $2.50 | $2.75 | $3.00 | $3.25 |
| | .02 | .03 | .04 | .05 | .06 |
Ad Deadline to run Monday Thursday 3 p.m.
---
Page 10 University Daily Kansan, June 21, 1982
5.1.4
Regents
From page one
will grow. It has already grown this year because a lot of people are unemployed1 he
Greisson cited the example of an unpaid medical bill of $22 000 incurred by a 29-year old man for a broken toe.
"His guardian was supposed to apply for medical assistance, but he didn't. 'Gleeson said. 'He told me it was just a simple mistake.'"
After trying to collect on an unpaid bill, he said, the Med Center turns it over to a collection center.
IN ANOTHER FINANCIAL matter, the Regents elaborated on the 9 percent student wage increases that were part of their fiscal 1984 legislative budget requests.
The Regents requested the increase to provide additional student employment at KU, not to provide wage increases to existing student employment. The budget committee is in the budget and finance committee chairman.
The jobs program, which will begin July 18th,
could help offset the tuition increase scheduled
for August.
Nichter said that by the fall of 1983, more teachers may need to work help for their pupils.
"The tuition increase isn't the only reason more student jobs are needed. If federal loans for work study are down, and jobs are tighter, students may be less available than wares for those jobs," he said.
The Regents also voted to change the name of the Regents Press of Kansas to the University Press.
"The name was changed because the University Press has a much broader national significance and is considerably easier to understand." The chairwoman, an agent, who is the academic committee chairman.
Haines not every state had a Board of Reections for its universities.
"The former name might not have any meaning for someone from Iowa, for example."
It was called the University Press years ago when KU, Kansas State University and Wichita State University were the only state-supported schools he said.
"We have just, by this action, renamed it what it was originally," Haines said.
IN OTHER ACTIONs at their Thursday and Friday meetings, the Regents:
- authorized KU to enter into an agreement with the Technical University of Berlin to develop activities that are of interest to both university partners; does not include the exchange of students.
- amended the comprehensive fee schedule, which would go into effect this fall, for students who were enrolled in a course offered at the university.
- received a preliminary report concerning accreditation for speech-language pathology and audiology, an intercampus program at both Lawrence and the Med Center.
- authorized KU to amend its major repairs, special maintenance and remodeling allocation for fiscal 1982 as follows: replacing the floor in Robinson Gymnasium amended from $3,100 to $6,120 installing smoke detectors, fire alarms and emergency lighting systems in Bailey Hall amended from $45,000 to $41,000. The total amount of $58,000 did not change.
By United Press International
Workers ready Columbia plans
CAPE CANALERAL, Fla. (UPI)—Spaceport workers worked up yesterday for a week of frantle activity to get read for the space on June 27 from the NASA's schumach mission on its fourth visit to the mission.
While most of the ground crew had a rare day off, a skeleton team of about 100 workers made last minute preparations for the start of a mission downsit, set to begin at four p.m. tomorrow.
Demonstration
From page one
artillery sent by the U.S. government," Asgarian said.
He also asked people in the United States to
He also asked people in the United States to denounce government support of Israel action. Some people thought the demonstration was a religious one.
"I came out when I heard them hollowing, and I thought, "A little religious fanaticism is always fun," Alden Winer, Pierre, S.D., senior, said. "When they were annoyed at having to dote the protester,
"A lot of this goes on around here, and it's a nuisance to have to walk around it, in my opinion." Rick Angelo, Kansas City, Mo., graduate student, said.
ACADEMY
CAR RENTAL
prices as low
as $8.95 per day
808 w 24th 841 0101
able to resume its attacks on Israeli settlements near the Lebanese border.
Mideast
Begin predicted Israel and Lebanon would sign a peace treaty, but said the Syrians and the PLO could not be part of the negotiations.
From page one
He also said that Israelis troops had no intention of moving into Beirut, and that Israel accomplished its goals when it pushed PLO forces more than 25 miles away from the border.
President Reagan prepared intensely for today's meeting with Begin as part of his attempt to re-weave the United States into the fabric of a Middle East peace.
More specifically, he had the chance to emphatically state his position on the recent Iraq war by telling the audience that it
After absorbing months of criticism about a lack of any Middle East policy, Reagan had the opportunity today to conclusively outline the U.S. position with regard to the troubled region.
KC beats Mariners, 7-4
by United Press International
SEATTLE—George Brett hit a three-run home and scored twice and Paul Splittorff won his fifth consecutive decision last night, helping the Cayman City Royals defeat the Mariners.
Brett hit his ninth homer of the year in the third inning. The Royals' third baseman went 3-for-5.
Splittor 7-4, went 6 and 1/2 innings to gain credit for the victory. Dan Quisneeff finished the game for Kansas City to record his league-leading 9th save.
e Gaylord Perry, 5-6, to give Kansas City a 40 lead.
The Royals took a 1-0 lead in the second when Hal McRae doubled to right and went to third on a single by Willie Aikens. McRae scored on a double play. In the third, U.L. Washington and Wille Wilson singled and scored on both Briton's homer off Seattle pitch-
Doubles by AI Cowens and Dave Henderson in the Seattle fourth made it 4-1, but Washington doubled, advanced to third on a single pitch. The final victory by John Wathan to make it 5-1 in the fifth.
Bruce Bochte hit a two-run homer in the Seattle half of the fifth and singled in a run in the seventh. Manny Castillo drove in a run with a ninth-inning ground out.
In the bottom of the eighth, Mariner stop Paul Serna was ejected from the game by home plate umpire John Shulock for arguing a called third strike. Third base coach Chuck Cottier was then ejected by Shulock for arguing the call.
The Royals scored twice in the eighth when Brett led off with a walk, Amos Ots singled. McRae belted his second double of the night to score Brett and Martin singled home Ots.
JUNIOR & SENIOR
History and Metrology Masters to participate in a
$4 for 45 minutes work
$4 for 60 minutes work
Campus Hideaway
Pasta 2 for 1
All day Sunday 11-11
Mon. thru Thurs. 5-11
Order one Pasta Dinner get one FREE
EAT IN ONLY 843-39117 With Coupon Expires June 30
NOW LEASING
fall & summer
1 and 2 Bedroom Apartments
Our Community Offers:
- Indoor/Outdoor pool w/sundeck—enjoy year-round
- 2 Laundry facilities
Presents TONIGHT
swimming
- 6-12 month lease option
- Free Shuttle Bus to Campus
COME BY TODAY AND LOOK!
- Summer Storage Plan
Jayhawk West APARTMENTS
HAT
Open 7 days a week
842-4444
524 Frontier Road
“One of the four great comedies”
—Woody Allen
Buster Keaton THE NAVIGATOR
SNA FILMS
Laurel & Hardy
---
WAY OUT WEST
7 p.m. Woodruff $1.50
WEDNESDAY
Ingmar Bergman's HOUR OF THE WOLF
Liv Ullmann Max von Sydow 7 p.m. Woodruff $1.50
Warehouse Closeout Sale 1981 NA50 Express II WAS $498
Express* II
NOW
$395
Features full warranty, 2 speed automatic transmission, front luggage rack,
and extra large bucket seat—OVER 100 MPG
IT'S A GAS, NOT A GUZZLER!
Horizons
HONDA - HARLEY-DAVIDSON
1811 W. 6th
Lawrence
843-3333
Subman Special
Hawk's Crossing
just 1 block N. of the Union
843-6660
12 delicious subs to choose from
We pile on the freshest vegetables, finest quality meats and cheeses. Each sub is oven toasted, not microwaved.
We bake our whole wheat bread from scratch every day,
---
C'mon bite the big one!
Yello Sub across from Wendy's on 23rd 841-3268
$100
ALL 6" SUBS
w/coupon
Expires 6/27/82
$100
only
1 coupon/person • 1 sub/coupon
Yello Sub • Hawk's Crossing
$19.95 Frame Sale
MARY LOVE AND JOHN BORRELL
Get the Designer Frames you want when you pur chase the lens you need.
This week Hutton Optical can fill your new prescription or copy your present one and fit you with a pair of designer frames just right for your eyes! Come in Monday and select from AnneKlein, Pierre Cardin, Zsa Gabor, Oleg Cassini, Anthony Martin, Arnold Palmer, and more.
Hurry—sale ends June 26, 1982. Save $33 \%$ to $69\%$.
This ad cannot be used in conjunction with any other ad.
Boutique frames excluded. Frames on sale with purchase of lenses. Sale ends June 26, 1983
HUTTON
842-5208 OPTICAL CO.
742 Mass.
Mon.-Fri. 10-5
Sat. 10-2
= 88
South Africa
Department of Environment and
Forestry
RRACK
Miller
TRADITIONAL LIME
12 RACK
TWO & ONE BAG
If you've got the time, we've got the beer.
Miller
HIGH LOCAL
Lite
VINCI
VALLEY
MILITARY
Everything you always wanted in a beer.
And less.
Jitc
lite
KANSAN
The University Daily
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
Thursday, June 24, 1982 Vol. 92, No. 150 USPS 650-640
Police not happy with city contract
By ANDREW DeVALPINE Staff Reporter
Lawrence police officers are angry.
Tuesday night the Lawrence City Commission chose the city's contract proposal over that of the Lawrence Police Officers Association.
Failure to compromise indicated a total lack of support for the police force, Gary Sampson, chairman of the LPOA, said yesterday.
"We've got a lot of officers who are proud of this department. They've chosen to make a career of it. But the commission in essence is much more likely to appreciate the department," Sampson said.
MONEY WAS NOT the main issue. Sampson said.
"the differences between our offer and their offer were negligible."
While there is a lot of frustration in the department in the wake of the negotiations, it is important to note that
"We have more pride than that," Sampson said. "A strike is an ultimate movement, and so far the professionalism within the department has kept the officers from it. We don't."
But, he said, if a strike does occur, it will only happen because the police officers were not trained to handle such an event.
One of the plans submitted by the LFOA, and received by the commissioners, was a development plan.
This kind of program is needed, he said, to keep good, experienced police officers on the job.
The idea behind the plan was that further career development was needed to keep a paired team together.
AS THE SYSTEM works now, a police officer can earn the maximum salary paid after six years on the force. The only way to obtain a salary increase after the first six years is to move up in the hierarchy, he said. That means to desk jobs and technical service jobs.
Now there are not enough officers patrolling the streets, according to Sampson, because so many of them have been moved inside.
With a career-development program, a patrol officer could keep on developing skills and, as he met certain criteria, he would earn salary increases.
"That way, after 20 years, he'd be making more money as a patrol officer, and we could keep good officers on the streets," Sampson said.
The number of officers on the streets was another bone of contention for Sampson.
POLICE
We have enough people but they're not on
Bullet police
Gary Sampson chief negotiator for the Lawrence Police Officers Association, listens to city commissioners during a study session Monday afternoon
Commissioners accept city contract for police
By KATE DUFFY Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
City negotiators won out over police in a 4-1 vote by city commissioners Tuesday.
City commissioners voted to accept the city negotiating team's contract proposal giving police officers an 11 percent raise during a two-year period.
Commissioners said lowered tax revenues and fear of future fiscal problems determined
The city's "last and best" offer called for a
six percent cost of living raise in January 1983 and a five percent raise in January 1984.
THE POLICE PROPOSAL called for the same cost of living wage adjustment, along with a 2.5 percent average increase in July of both years, for a 16 percent total wage in
After Monday's study session with commissioners, Gary Sampion, chief negotiator for the Lawrence Police Officers Association, said their request was not exorbitant.
"The 2.5 percent a year would take into consideration the police officer's merit and commitment," said Jeffrey Hunt.
not asking for big bucks. We just want to be appreciated."
But after Tuesday's vote, Sampson he said he was not surprised.
"It was a loaded situation," he said.
"Everything went toward the city staff."
SAMPSON, WHO SAD this was his last year as chief interrogator, accused the city of punishing the LPOA for taking the labor dispute to the City Commission
Under a 1975 resolution, commissioners select a proposal after an impassance occurs between the two groups.
The resolution is supposed to keep us moving forward," Sampson said. "McClain took
inyong call," the contract. There's no
may they can follow it.
Jackie McClain, Lawrence's employee relations director, was the chief negotiator for the company.
The city offered the police a 13.5 percent wage increase in mid June after a federal mediator talked with the two sides, LPOA officials said. The dispute was thrown in the commission's lap.
BUT McCLAIN DISAGREED, saying that the proposal was 'fair, equitable and facially consistent'.
always make the best proposal. She also said the city had not made promises that the salary hike would remain the same after mediation.
Both sides agreed the resolution outlining the city's relationship with employee associations needed clarifying and possibly some reworking.
Sampion said an arbitration system would be the most efficient and equitable way to resolve contract disputes. Under arbitration, a neutral third party would be called in negotiations, a neutral third party would be called in
If a party would be called in
See City page 8
Weather
KU
Today will be partly cloudy with high temperatures in the mid-80s and a 30 percent chance of thunderstorms, according to the Weather Service in Topeka. Winds will be 10 to 20 mph.
The low tonight will be in the upper 60s, with a 50 percent chance of thunderstorms.
Tomorrow will be partly cloudy with a high in the mid-70s.
THE TRIANGLE
Scrubbing in the Rain:
Saughtown, Charming Chang and Gloria Schutzle, 2001 Vermont. St. found trash bags to be best rest beds. Carmen Rains, during this weeks heavy rains.
Photo by J. SHARP SMITH
Hinckley tests begin
By United Press International
WASHINGTON-Presidential assailant John W. Hinickley Jr. began a new round of mental evaluations yesterday at a heavily guarded federal hospital to determine whether he has "recovered his sanity" and is eligible for release.
Hinckley was transferred late Tuesday to St. Elizabeth's Hospital, where psychiatrist will serve as a consultant.
On Tuesday, U.S. District Judge Barrington Parker ordered the 27-year-old loon committed
Although Swaggerty had been one of the people interviewed by an investigative team sent to Texas, Olim said that he did not become a suspect in the ease issue and questioned Monday after being knocked in lower car doors in lower car doors.
for a psychiatric evaluation and told psychiatrist to file a report on his condition by Aug. 2.
Hinckley's acquittal shocked many Americans and sparked a new drive to reform the insanity plea, called the "rich man's defense" by at least one lawmaker.
A SENATE subcommittee announced it would hold a hearing today on whether the law allowing the insanity defense should be changed. The witnesses include at least three members of the Hickley jury—foreman Lawrence Coffey, Nathalia Brown and Maryland Copelin—who have said they bowed to pressure from the other jurors to favor acquittal.
Richard V. Swaggerty, Waskom, Texas, came to Lawrence on his own accord about a car theft he was accused of, Mike Malone. Douglas County district attorney, said yesterday.
Police arrest suspect in Swanson shooting
Police arrested a 25-year-old man Monday for the Memorial Day murder of Mark Swanson, a longtime inmate.
But numbers will grow
Heavv rains delay breeding of insects
By ANDREW DEVALPINE Staff Reporter
Alas, nothing short of Armageddon will relieve us of their nuisance.
Mosquitos, ticks and chiggers are on the threshold of a major assault, and the heavy rains of this spring ensure a burgeoning population of all of these pest enemies. BEU. K professor of entomology Dr. Frid Friday.
But, true to a world that thrives on iron, the heavy rains experienced thus far have actually delayed breeding of these pests. Beer said. And it is that we don't need it much, according to the National Weather Service in Topoka.
"Normally, we'd have a big population of mosquitos now." Beer said.
THE BREEDING has only been delayed, however not canceled. Beer said.
But because mosquito larvae need stagnant water to mature in the persistence of the rains ensures constant run-off, which denies the mosquito ideal breeding grounds. Beer said.
"Look for a big mosquito problem. We'll be hit harder later," he said.
Dick Hack, director of environmental health for the city of Lawrence, is doing his best to stem
Hack is in charge of a larvaeac program that is designed to nip the mosquito population in the
He and an assistant go to known breeding areas around town, such as ponds and large areas of standing water in city parks, and they dump green, gelatin-in covered tablets called
The capsule disintegrates when it hits the water and the larvicide is dispersed
"We need two to three days, preferably a
BUT THE EFFORT has been hampered so far by the constant rain, Hack said.
week, for this larvae to take effect. As it is, it's washed away with the new rains," he said.
Hack said he would treat 30 to 40 areas around town. But the program only helps control breeding. Once the larva matures into an adult, there is not much anyone can do, he said.
Years ago Lawrence had a fogging program to combat adult mosquitoes. Trucks would go up and down alleys distributing a residual spray. Hackers discontinued about 10 years ago for two reasons.
FIRST, THE SPRAY was hard to control. The city received complaints of the pesticide on cars and clothes and drifting into houses. Hack said
Second, he said, was the concern for the environment.
"I lots of people are against spraying chemi-
cals period. My Mike Wilden, assistant city man-
Starting a new spraying program is unlikely, he said.
Wilden pointed out that such a program would not be cost-effective when considering the manpower involved and the equipment needed for a city the size of Lawrence.
"With the river just north of us you may be able to kill some, but the mosquitoes would come
Because of their affinity to moist soil, and the extent of its saturation this year, ticks and chiggers will enjoy ideal breeding grounds for weeks to come. Beer said.
BUT TICKS AND chiggers, both of which are mites, prefer moist soil. Bee said. So their chances of being washed away are negligible compared to those of the mosquito.
Mosquito control is done best by neighborly cooperation, Hack said.
"But if you do all of these things and your neighbor doesn't, then it does not any good."
If mosquitoes are already a problem, he said, people should trim vegetation so the living adult does not get overworked.
back hall.
Hack's office so far has been concerned only
with mosquitoes. Ticks, he said, are a concern only from time to time. Usually a case of Rocky Mountain spotted fever has to be reported before he will deal with the mites.
TO INHIBIT THE breeding of mosquitoes, he said, people should keep the downspouts on houses clear, fill in holes in the yard and make sure there is no place where water can stagnate.
"Right now I wouldn't say it's anything to
obey," he said.
"Traditionally, old-timers believed that if we made it past July 4 without much rain, then chickgers not be a problem," Beer said.
But this year there is so much soil wetness that the chigger population will be out en masse. Beer
This concept was based on the fact that the soil would be too dry for chippers to breed in.
As with mosquitoes, the chigger and tick problem has been delayed by the rains.
Fortunately for the mosquito, maturation time from larva to adult is only two weeks. Those that survive flood runoff can rapidly repopulate, and with an exponential increase, Beer said.
"This way they can explosively increase their populations," he said.
Beer foresees even bigger problems for next year.
"With higher populations this year, more will be around to sustain themselves against catalysmic events next year." Beer said. "And if those events don't occur, the bugs and mites will be able to start earlier and with larger populations.
Only torrential rains all summer or repeated freezes and thaws well into next spring offer us any hope, Beer said. For now, either seems possible.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, June 24, 1982
News Briefs From United Press International
New fighting strikes Mideast as Syria pummels Israelis
TEL. AVIV, Israel—Israel said Syrian artillery opened up at dawn today in a new outbreak of fighting east of Beirut. The United States closed its embassy and ordered an emergency evacuation of Americans from Lebanon.
After a quiet night following a day of savage exchanges, the Israeli army said Syrian artillery began pounding Israeli forces in the central sector and the southern sector.
of presentness; a technician leaders had made a last-ditch effort yesterday through U.S. mechanic Phil Habib to spare Briret from an Israeli assault as Israel launched a huge air and ground assault against the Syrian army east of Beirut.
Lebanese officials said the Palestine Liberation Organization accepted Habib's suggestion that it give control of West Beirut to the Lebanese army, but added that PLO leaders wanted a U.S. guarantee that Israel would not invade the capital.
The officials who met with Habib were pessimistic.
"Irael is still determined to do what we fear, an catastrophic as that may be," said Saah Salam, former Lebanese prime minister, who is an interlocutor for the UN.
State-run Damascus radio said, "Syria will continue to fight Israeli forces until airborne from Lebanon."
Youth rape trials opened to press
WASHINGTON - The Supreme Court ruled 6-3 yesterday that states could not judge judges to automatically shut court doors to the press
Settling a sensitive conflict of constitutional rights, the justices struck down a Massachusetts law that had ordered criminal court judges to close their courtrooms whenever victims of sexual assault under 18 were on the witness stand.
The ruling was a victory for the Boston Globe, the newspaper that challenged the statute as an unconstitutional restriction on First Amendment rights.
In dissent, Chief Justice Warren Burger wrote that rulings could result in a television audience* watching young rape victims in states where rape laws are unenforced.
U.S. may lift Argentine sanctions
WASHINGTON—A White House official said yesterday that Argentina's position on a formal end to fighting in the Falkland Islands would be a determining element in the decision to lift U.S. sanctions against Buenos Aires.
Larry Speakes, deputy White House press secretary, said there was a thorough review under way on the economic and military sanctions imposed on Argentina by Washington April 30 in the wake of the South Atlantic dispute. But, he said, no decision has been made.
"Obviously, one element in our review is the position taken by the Argentine government following the Falklands crisis," he said.
Argentina has not formally announced an end to the battle for the Falklands.
A senior American official said the United States was firmly in support of U.N. resolution 922, which calls for a cessation of hostilities in the Falklands.
Voting Rights Act sent to Reagan
WASHINGTON—About 100 civil rights marchers rallied at the foot of Capitol Hill yesterday, while Congress passed and sent to President Reagan a 25-year extension of the Voting Rights Act, the civil law rights credited with opening the polls to millions of minority citizens.
Final action came when the House accepted State amendments to a bill that the House earlier had passed.
The marchers, pushing for the extension, ended a 3,000-mile trek through five states to rally in Washington just as the House was approving the bill.
The marchers were welcomed on the outskirts of town by 100 more people, and were greeted at the Capitol by Del. Walter Faintroy, D-D.C., who told them, "Your marching feet have set the cadences for the whole nation . . . There are many, many miles to go." Faintroy is board chairman of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, the group that sponsored the march.
President Reagan has strongly endorsed the final version of the bill and is expected to sign it next week.
Fire in Amtrak sleeper car kills 2
GIBSON, Calif. — A sleeper ear caught fire on an Amrak train carrying 288 passengers through the Cascade Mountains of northern California early yesterday, killing two people and sending 57 others to a hospital for treatment of smoke inhalation.
The pre-dawn sleeper on the Seattle-to-Los Angeles coast Starlighter destroyed one sleeper and damaged three other cars on the 10-car train. The
Passengers removed from the train's two sleepsers were taken to Mercy Hospital in Redding, Calif., where five people were admitted and 32 others.
Both victims who were killed in the fire had been in the sleeper, which was already engulfed in flames when rescue crews arrived at the Sacramento station.
Man gets award for rescue effort
WASHINGTON—A government sheet metal worker who dived into the icpy Potomac River in an attempt to save survivors of January's Air Florida plane crash received the Health and Human Services Department's highest award yesterday.
Roger Olian, the worker, wore his customary green cap and workman's clothes as he accepted the $5,000 Distinguished Award and gold medal from HIHS Secretary Richard Schweiker at departmental ceremonies. The seven-year government veteran got a standing ovation.
Oilan, acting sheet metal shop foreman at St. Elizabeth's Mental Hospital, witnessed the crash of the jet while driving home across Washington's
The crash, which occurred shortly after takeoff from National Airport, killed 74 people on the plane and four on the bridge. Four passengers and a
The citation on Olian's award read: "In recognition of his immediate need in needed an emergency situation and his valor in performing that action."
Ollan, then 34, tied a rope around his waste and headed toward the wreckage in the ice waters of the Potomac, swimming within five feet.
Burglars steal French tapestries
NEW YORK—Burglaries stole two 17th century French tapestries valued at $200,000 that were on loan to New York University from the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
John Ross, a spokesman for the Metropolitan Museum, said the tapestries were worth $100,000 each. One is 9 feet by 7 feet and the other is 9 feet by
The tapespires were removed from the NYU Institute of Fine Arts at 1E, 78th st, sometime late Tuesday or early yesterday.
"These can be positively identified rather easily." Toss said, "so even though there is generally a market for tapestries, these will be almost
Police said they had no suspects.
City takes step to halt builders
By KATE DUFFY Staff Reporter
City commissioners took the first step toward downzoning two-thirds of the East Lawrence Neighborhood when they voted 5.9 Tuesday to place the issue on the agenda of the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission.
Staff Reporter
The downzoning, which would lower the number of housing units built in the area, would put the neighborhood in more stable shape. The Neighborhood Plan, prepared in 1979.
Mark Kaplan, East Lawrence Improvement Association president, said Sunday that the group was proposing the downzoning to ensure that the city would not become more crowded and "to deter purely speculative redevelopment."
KAPLAN SAID that as the economy grew tighter, land developers began to build more rental houses in the older woodlands, where taxes were generally lower.
Some developers have even begun to put two houses on one lot or to build one
Ed Dicksondismon, a local builder and real estate developer, said yesterday he was appealed to the downward because "it would reduce the value of the lots by about 10 percent."
"The issue is density, as far as I'm concerned," Kaplan said. "Our people want a little breathing space."
in the back yard of an existing home, he said.
"I'm not going to buy old houses to tear them down and then build a single-family house on the lot," he said. "It costs too much."
Edmondson has built 10 rental units, including duplexes and four-plexes, in the past few years in East Lawrence.
He said downzoning would reduce the value of the neighborhood's older homes, many of which should be razed.
Harry and Mildred Tryon, 1334 Pennsylvania St., are East Lawrence residents upset by the increasing number of lots with two houses built on them.
Last April, when they saw a Caterpillar tractor digging up the neighboring house's back yard and workers laying a foundation, they became worried.
When the tractor left a pile of rubble
and rock in front of their back gate, preventing them from getting out of their back yard, they became furious.
So the Tryons called the city building inspector, Gene Shaughnessy, who told them the building was legal.
Even more furious after that, the drove to Commissioner Don Binn's home and brought him over to see the house. Mrs. Tryon said Bins, equally shocked, asked the staff to recheck the answer, but the answer was still the same.
"It really irritates me that you can build two houses on one lot," Mr Tryon said. "The zoning needs to be changed. You don't see this in West Lawrence."
The Tryons pointed out six duplexes and houses in a one-block area around their house that Edmundson had built in the past few years.
The Tryons, who have lived in their home for almost 40 years, fear that Edmondson is trying to get control of more lots around them.
"He told our neighbor she wouldn't have to mow her lawn anymore if she sold her property to him," Mrs. Tryon said.
BUT EDMONDSON said he had not
bought any new property in the neighborhood for some time and would not be interested in any if the downzoning passes.
Edmondson also said he had improved the part of the neighborhood he had built in.
"I've taken down dilapidated property and replaced it with nice, clean rentals," he said. "I've always taken over the documentation the other people in the area."
The Tryons took their concerns to the ELIA's May meeting. The group appointed a committee to study the issue. At the June meeting, they recommended rezoning the area south of Ninth Street from RM1, multiple family zoning, and M-2, industrial zoning, to RS-2, a single-family designation.
THE NEW ZONING would allow existing duplexes and apartments to remain but would prevent the building of new ones. Only single-family houses
Kuplan said he felt fairly positive the planning commission would agree to the downsizing, he said many of the members of the commission were ready rezoned for single-family housing.
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The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Summer Concert Series Presents EEL LORIMER
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University Daily Kansan, June 24; 1982
Page 3
neigh-
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anzoning
FACE IDOYAMAIDA LAWRENCE TOYOTAIMADA LAWRENCE TOYOTAIMADA
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---
Photo by JILL M. YATES
d prop hee, clean es taken people in
Despite the great amount of rain in Lawrence this season, last weekend's sunny weather enabled boating enthusiasts to enjoy sailing on Clinton Lake.
Started in 1979
Bookstore caters to feminists
By JENNIFER YALE Staff Reporter
In the fall of 1979, the idea of Spinsters Books began when three Lawrence women wanted to start a feminist bookstore.
They organized a collective and began selling books from members' homes with $250 they had raised through two dances.
With the money made from book sales, the group bought more books. Today they have $5,000 worth of merchandise, twice the number of books they began with and a store at 101% Massachusetts St.
"A feminist bookstore is really unusual for such a small town," said, Katherine Harris, a collective member.
THE BOOKSTORE is rooted in feminist politics.
"With few exceptions, all the books in the store are written by women," Harris said.
"We try not to carry books written by men," said Jeanne Neath, another member
"Men have always had access to education and printing." Harris said. "We are providing a space for women who have broken into those fields.
"It feels really good to a woman's soul to be able to find books written by women on such things as carpentry and poetry."
The bookstore has the best selection of books on lesbianism in a four-state area. Harris said.
Many of the books that Spinisters offers are not carried by other bookstores, especially lesbian novels, but many titles are not produced by any big publishing house.
SPINSTERS TRIES to buy books from feminist publishers and women publishing their own books, Harris said.
The store tries not to buy books from large publishing houses. Neath said, "but if important feminist literature is published by a major publisher, we will carry it."
The store is run by six collective members—women who own the shop and share in its expenses. They receive help from Friends of Spinisters, women who help in the store but have no part in its ownership.
None of the women are paid for their work in the bookstore.
"We would like to start paying ourselves." Harris said "There is something in validating one's work."
"A lot of women could really use the money." Neath added.
Harris said her work at the bookstore was much more important to her than her regular full-time job.
"We are a part of the alternative feminist culture," she said.
According to Neath, many women have "come out" as lesbians because of their association with the bookstore.
THE STORE is a cultural center and a meeting place for feminist women. Harris said.
Spinster also provides telephone counseling and information on gay and feminist activities.
"They are trying to find their piece of the world," Harris said.
Harris said they liked to think of the store as a place for women to gather
The store is trying to get couches and expand to include a lending library and reading room for women who cannot afford to buy the books.
The women also take the books to festivals to get feminist literature to women who normally would not have access to it.
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By KATHLEEN J. FEIST Staff Reporters
Senior citizens are educated through Elderhostel program
Thirty-nine elderly citizens are participating in Elderbethol, a continuing education program offered to those 60 years of age and older.
The program, being held this week at Gertrude S. Pearson Hall, is based on the idea of youth hostels, which house youthful travelers for a cheap price. In Bierlhostel, the hosts are for the elderly who still enjoy learning. It is being sponsored by the Adult Life Programs and Resource Center.
The program is also a means of socializing and vacationing for the senior citizens, said贝陆 Duncan, coordinator of Elderhostel.
"They're vital people," she said.
"They're not the rocking-chair type."
"It is an adventure, something out of the ordinary," Duncan said. "These people are energetic, fun-loving, and eager for new experiences."
THE ROCKING-CHAIR type is just a stereotype that the younger generation believes in, she said.
Lynn Osterkamp, a research assistant in the KU Gerontology Center who is helping to teach the communication course for the group, agreed.
"The idea that older people are bored is a myth," Ostkamp said. "They have as much to do as anyone else."
Most retired senior citizens keep busy with hobbies and visiting families, friends and relatives, she said.
One participant, Verna Epp, 65, Newton, lives up to that theory.
"This is particularly true for those who come to Elderhostel," Osterkamp said.
"I can't live long enough to do all my hobbies," she said.
Epp's hobby is carving faces in wooden spools and other types of wood.
"IVE TRIED MY wings in everything," she said, the Elderhostel being no exception.
"We don't have time to get bored," Gunn said.
Elizabeth and Charles Gunn, Great Bend, also lead a busy life.
The Guns said they enjoyed the Elderhostel as a new learning opportunity, and also a relaxing one.
"It reminds me of bean bag camp." Mrs. Gumm said, jokingly referring to the Peanut's comic strip character. She continued eating and sleeping in a bean bag chair.
Mrs. Gunn, a retired teacher, said she enjoyed going to a summer school that required no tests or credit hours
THE CLASSES THAT ARE being taught this summer for the group are: Intergenerational Communication, in which younger students mix with the older students in the motive Sensing, in which class members learn information about satellites at the Space Technology Center and Receive Information, in which students taught at the Spencer Museum of Art.
The students have a choice of how many classes they can take, Duncan said.
Bobby Patton, KU professor of speech and drama, teaches the communications course. He said the enjoyed lesson "had a big impact." Patton said the students were differ-
"They're excited about learning whereas I think college students take it for granted," he said.
Patton said the students were diffeent from regular college students.
"It's a satisfying situation to work with."
FOR SOME, THE enthusiasm for learning goes beyond one week at the Elderhotel. Some elderly couples travel to other Elderhostels that stagger throughout the summer in all 50 states, Duncan said.
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She said that she knew of one person who was traveling to Hawaii to participate in another Elderhostel program.
Duncan said because room and board cost only $150 for the entire week for any Elderhostel, the person was getting a "darn good" vacation.
Most of the vacationers staying at GSP are from Kansas. However, Duncan said, a few come from states such as New York, Missouri and Oklahoma.
Other Kansas colleges and universities that are sponsoring the program are: Bethany College, St. Mary of the Plains College, Dodge City Community College, and Northwestern University. Burn University, Pittsburgh State University and Kansas State University.
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Duncan said colleges and universities were used because during the summer the campuses were not being used intensely by students.
THE IDEA OF using colleges and universities for Elderhostel is credited to Martin Knowlton and David Bianco, founders of the 8-year-old organization. They organized the first Elderhostel in New Hampshire.
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Student Housing
Page 4 University Daily Kansan, June 24, 1982
Moving into a new apartment can be dangerous to your health
By JOHN SCARFFE
Columnist
This dreaded process, called moving in, is a traumatic experience surpassed only by essay finals in its ability to cause students permanent damage. Those who move into dorms or fraternal housing must haul belongings up never-ending flights of stairs and cram them into half a room, while roommate and hallmate problems lurk in the future.
BUT, STUDENTS who move into privately owned housing must face even greater problems in finding a place to live.
A man running up stairs. He is carrying a briefcase and has an alarm on his head. The background consists of stacks of books.
A man is trying to push a cart filled with money. The cart is falling down the stairs. There are many coins and banknotes falling from the top of the staircase.
Moving out of your old apartment can be deadly for your wallet
By PAT QUINN
Columnist
Changing residences is a game of many mishaps. With planning, however, many of the hassles associated with moving can be avoided or eliminated. By following a few common sense rules you will find it is possible to expedite your move and keep the mistakes to a minimum.
IT IS IMPORTANT to remember that moving out of a rental property represents the termination of a legal relationship between you and your landlord. Several weeks before moving day, inform your landlord of your intention to leave and determine what is expected of you before vacating the premises. Arrange for the manager or landlord to pre-inspect your apartment and provide you with a written list itemizing necessary work and repairs.
If you need the services of a professional mover, start to shop around early. Call several companies and obtain cost estimates. Compare the levels of liability each company will assume for the value of your goods, and what they charge to assume additional liability. Finally, compare the costs you will be able to pick up and deliver your goods in accordance with your moving schedule.
START TO MAIL change-of-address cards about a month before you move. In particular, make sure that you provide all your creditors with your new address. A week or so before moving day file a change-of-address form with the local post office. As a last step, ask a neighbor to forward any mail that arrives at your old address.
Being at that makes it very easy for people to find you, so it is a good idea to start setting accounts at the same time. Call all the local utilities and set a date for termination of services. Pay off any outstanding balances and ensure that they know where to mail any deposited checks or money orders. Ensure all your local debts are settled, such as doctor or dentist bills.
IT IS PARTICULARLY important that you settle up with your landlord. Do not assume that you can use your security deposit for your last month's rent. You cannot. And if you try, the landlord can keep the deposit and sue you for the rent.
Once you have settled your finances, it is time to visit the bank. Close out your accounts and make certain the bank knows where to send your last statement. Use excess cash to purchase traveler’s checks. It is an excellent way to protect your funds until you can get another bank account. If you have a bank credit card such as Visa or Mastercard, be aware of the fact that moving out of state can change the interest rate you are charged on your balance.
CLEANING THE old apartment is no fun, but there isn't any way to get around it. Do as much housecleaning as possible before the movers arrive. Pay any attention to the kitchen and bathroom. In the future you may need a reference from that soon-to-be-ex-landlord.
Collect all the items you intend to transport yourself in a central location. Pack light, but do not forget that you may be living out of your suitcase at your new residence until the moving van can attach to you. Keeping that in mind, when you arrive at home, come pots, pans and tableware with the clothes.
DON'T LEET the movers leave until you have obtained a signed copy of the inventory, which is essential to any claim you may later file in the event of damage to your belongings. If you are moving a washing machine, make sure that the movers service it before loading it. If they fail to load, the movers will throw their clothes below freezing, it will reduce your Maytag to $800 worth of scrap metal.
THE INSPECTION should be the last thing you need to do before departure. Once it is completed the landlord should either refund your deposit or provide you with a signed statement indicating the amount due you. In the event you are liable for damage to the property he should provide you with a statement of the amount involved. You should be sure you obtain the inspection results in writing. With any luck you should now be able to throw the cat in the trunk and hit the road.
When the movers arrive, make absolutely certain that your goods are inspected and delivered on time.
signing a lease or taking possession of a rental, they enter into a specific, legally binding relationship with a landlord. Because this is a serious matter, they should be made long before actually moving.
The once movers are gone you can finish the housecleaning. Clean the floors, remove all trash from the premises and pack your personal belongings in the car. Make sure you have completed all the items on your landlord's list before you call him for the final inspection.
Secondly, be aware of the fact that there is a helping hand available to you. The Lawrence Consumer Affairs Association publishes several handbooks that can make the job of arranging a home service easier. "The Rental Housing Handbook" and the "Student Guide to Law" are all loaded with information that can help you organize your time and understand your rights and responsibilities when dealing with landlords and moving companies. The association's office is at 100 Vernon St. The association's free馆. Pick them up when start to plan. They make getting out of a town a little easier.
Believe it or not, there are a couple of bright spots amid all this trial and tribulation. The first is the fact that in many cases the cost of a move is tax-deductible. For this reason it is a good idea to have the driver walk away even remotely related to the move. This includes the cost of gas and lodging during your trip.
Realistic housing must be selected thoughtfully and carefully instead of taking the first apartment available or depending on friends' advice. Long-range finances should be considered to ensure that the rent can be paid all year. Monthly expenses usually are for utilities, telephone, food, medical expenses, books, supplies, clothing and entertainment.
DEPENDABLE ROOMMATES also should be carefully selected. If some tenants sharing an apartment fail to pay their rent, the other tenants are liable for the entire rental amount. Also, two students who "get along pretty well" are not necessarily capable when living together. Discuss studying, sleeping, smoking and dating habits thoroughly with all prospective roommates and make arrangements about cooking and household chores.
After settling these matters and finding a prospective apartment, examine it thoroughly. Check outside door locks, electrical wiring and outlets, fire exits, storm windows and screens. Flush the toilet and check kitchen and bathroom plumbing to be sure the water is hot and flowing freely. Next, carefully examine the condition of any appliances or furniture and look in cupboards and dark corners and around baseboards for evidence of cockroaches.
THEN FIND OUT who is responsible for paying the utilities and the average monthly cost of gas, electricity and water. Check heating and air conditioning for control within the apartment. Also check for adequate ventilation and circulation.
If the condition of the place seems excellent, read and agree to the lease and house rules. Whether a lease is oral or written, it is legally binding and both landlord and tenant are subject to state laws. It is best to have the lease in writing so less confusion results later over details. A lease is also generally easy to understaff if it is in person at the landlord or the Consumer Affairs Office, 89 Vermont St., to explain difficult or unusual statements.
IF ANY of these rules or provisions seem unfair or impossible to abide by, the tenants should not move in unless changes are negotiated. In such cases,ude, be sure they appear in writing in the lease.
WHEN READING the lease, make sure it specifies when the tenant must move out, and then plan to stay until that date. Penalties for breaking a lease are costly. The name and address of landlord and manager should also appear on the lease as well as a clear description of the premises, amount of rent, penalties for breaking the lease, subleasing arrangements, a description of utility responsibilities and responsibilities for maintaining the premises.
The lease must also include a list of any special house rules or regulations applied equally to all tenants. The landlord has the legal right to such regulations as long as the tenant can understand them and comply. They also must be designed to protect the landlord's property or benefit the tenants.
The amount and refounding conditions of any required deposits also should be mentioned in the lease. Cleaning deposits, which some landlords have, are included in the lease for cleaning and re-painting between tenants. On the
AFTER THE LEASE has been signed and the tenants are ready to move, place all occupants' names on the mail box. The mailman won't notify the address to the tenant until this has been done.
other hand, security deposits are refundable when the housing has not been damaged apart from normal wear and tear and when all obligations under the terms of the lease have been met.
While doing the inventory, if things are found that need repair, write the landlord's repair list and when it will be completed on the inventory. Then both the landlord and the tenant should sign
on ms ms243 arrange for the utilities. Contact Southwestern Bell as soon as possible to set up an installation date for a phone so phone service will be available when needed. Then have the gas hooked up, the meter read and billing put in the tenants' names by calling Kansas Public Service. For electricity service and billing, call the Kansas Power and Light Co., and for water billing, call the Lawrence Water and Sewer Office.
THE NEXT STEP is a detailed, written inventory that Kansas law requires within five days after moving. This list describing the condition of the premises prevents the landlord from withholding damage for damages that are nonexistent or made by previous tenants. Don't sign a checklist compiled solely by the landlord. The tenants should check themselves.
WHEN THE INVENTORY is finished, the only business left is lugging the boxes, sacks, suitcases, brooms and wastebaskets into the rooms. Then the students can fit everything in and finally relax in their haven away from the hassles and exams of college life.
Tenant rights and responsibilities
Bv JOE BARTOS
Editorial Editor
Although rental terms are mainly defined by a lease, they are still subject to state laws. In Kansas, the landlord tenant relationship is primarily governed by the Residential Landlord and Tenant Act. No terms of a lease may violate this act.
TENANT DUTIES
The first duty of a tenant, of course, is to pay rent on time. If rent is not paid when due, the landlord may deliver a three-day notice to evict. If the tenant makes payment within three days, the landlord accepts payment after that period without reservation, the lease continues.
The tenant must keep the rental area as clean and as safe as the condition of the premises allows. This includes removal of clutter, maintenance of plumbing and other facilities.
The tenant must use the rental areas in a proper manner, or be liable for damages. This means reasonable use of all electrical, plumbing, heating and cooling systems, and other parts of the premises by any person, animal or pet in the rental area with the permission of the tenant. It also means that tenants are not allowed to work in his dwelling such as attaching shelves to a wall or tacking down a carpet with the landlord's permission.
The tenant must not engage in conduct that disturbs the quiet and peaceful enjoyment of life.
LANDLORD DUTIES
The first duty of a landlord, obviously, is to
deliver possession of the premises to the tenant as agreed in the lease. If the landlord fails to do so, no rent is due until the premises are delivered, and upon five days written notice, the tenant may terminate the lease and recover the security deposit. In addition, the tenant may claim damages and receive one and one-half month's rent payment or one and one-half times actual damages, whichever is greater.
The landlord must maintain your dwelling in compliance with city housing codes affecting health and safety. The Lawrence housing code includes standards for the condition and use of dwellings, as well as briefly defining the duties of the occupant.
There are specific standards for each room of the dwelling, as well as the general condition of the rental area. A copy of the City of Lawrence Housing Code is available at the city offices, or at the Lawrence Consumer Affairs Association.
The landlord must maintain in good condition all common areas such as parking lots, laundry rooms and all electrical, plumbing and heating units. The landlord must also ensure that the ground-bases trash receptacles and running hot and cold water NONCOMPLIANCE
If a tenant feels that his or her rights according to state law or a lease have been violated, then he or she has a number of possible responses.
The first option, which should always be used before all others, is to contact the landlord and give written notice of noncompliance with the lease or state law. If there is no other complaint, he or she fails to either remedy the problem or make a good faith effort to do so, then the
lease will terminate on the rent due date 30 days after the notice was first received.
If damages occurred, the tenant may call the landlord to court. Claims for actual damages up to $300 will be handled by small businesses but higher damages go to the district level.
A third course of action available to a tenant when a violation has occurred is to ask for an inspection by the City's Minimum Structures Inspector. If the inspection reveals a violation of City code, then the Inspector will notify the landlord and request a remedy. If the landlord does not notify the Inspector of plans to take action to solve the problem and then do so within 14 days, the landlord can be fined and the building may be condemned.
While this is usually an effective means to initiate repairs, it should be used with care, because if the Inspector condemns the building or fences, or the paint, the tenant must leave within three days.
FOR MORE INFORMATION
A less risky method for resolving a landlord tenant dispute would be to bring your grievance to the attention of the Consumer Affairs office.
While the Kansas's report on Student Housing covers a few important areas of the topic, it should by no means be taken as legal advice nor as a comprehensive picture of all matters pertaining to housing and the law. For more information about your rights and responsibilities as a landlord or tenant, or other matters related to student housing, visit the Consumer Affairs Office at 819 Vermont or at Room 104 of the Kansas Union should be contacted.
---
A car is crashing.
Roaches make a pest of themselves
By ALVIN A. REID
Columnist
YECH! Those people have roaches! How disgusting!
Can't you just hear your friends saying these words after their visit to your home was repeatly interrupted by six dirty walls and waving hands crazy, there are possible solutions.
Preventing roach entry is the first step to controlling infestation. Roaches may enter from outdoors, in infested containers from other buildings or from adjoining homes or apartments. To prevent them in cracks in floors and walls and cracks leading to spaces behind the baseboard and door frames.
Because cockroaches develop in large numbers in dirt and filth, through cleaning reduces the chance of infestation. Always check baskets, covers, surfaces for roachs and kill the bugs immediately.
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There are a number of commonly used sprays and dusts that can be prepared and used by simply following the instructions on the label. They can be purchased at home and garden stores, Dishon, Ask for Olphryps (Dursan) Dishon, Malathion, Preparox (Baygon) or Ronnel.
roaches are abundant, difficult to control or firmly established.
whether a spray or dust is used, treatment should be limited to baseboards, cracks and places where roaches hide. Spray around the baseboards and walls inside, especially in upper corners, and in the
cracks. Also spray around the refrigerator, behind window and door, frames and on the cabinet doors.
Fifty-five species of cockroach live in America, but only seven varieties enter homes and buildings and continue to prosper. The most common variety is the American cockroach, which is *V*₁ to *V*₂ longest and is reddish-brown to dark brown. The other six varieties that plague households are the Australian cockroach, brown cockroach, brown-banded cockroach, German cockroach, Oriental cockroach and the smokeybrown cockroach.
SPENDING MONEY for professional fumigation may not be worth the expense. Fumigation immediately destroys a cockroach infestation, but it is dangerous in congested areas, and it is expensive. Because buildings often become infested again quickly and effective residual insecticides have become available, fumigation is often unnecessary.
These roaches grow slowly where food, moisture and temperature conditions are not satisfactory. Thus, conditions for roach growth are not ideal where good sanitation is practiced.
The female lays her eggs in a leather capsule, which forms at the end of her body. All species, except the German, carry the egg capsules for a period before glue them to some object in a protected place.
IN ADDITION TO roaches, some other pests may be invading Lawrence homes. At this time of year ants begin making tracks through homes, but it is nothing a blast of spray insecticide can't handle. Spray directly on ants and on paths they commonly use.
If you have mice, get a cat. Seriously, folks, this really works. Word spreads fast on the mouse grapevine that a feline is around, and they don't reappear. For those who are allergic to cats or hate cats more than mice, use mousetrap or poison. These should be handled with extreme caution, especially if small children are near.
If you have rats, move! There is nothing you can do to defeat rats. They can chew through cinder blocks, open any food container in a kitchen and will inflict a painful bite on anyone who tries. You can offer you can’t refuse. Either move or watch them slowly take over. They mean business.
PESTS ARE NO FUN. They carry filth on the legs and backs and spread disease from them. They destroy. They damage and other household items while leaving an of fessional odor. So, the sooner you take steps to get rid of them, the sooner you can keep them off.
University Daily Kansan, June 24, 1982
Page 5
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Supervisor Katie Dwyer, E13 Missouri St., instructs Lisa Logan, 8, U23 Connecticut St., on the finer points of crayon drawing at one of South Park Recreational Center's summer classes.
Photo by J. SHARP SMITH
Summer activities open
For Lawrence youth
By JENNIFER YALE Staff Reporter
Thanks to the city of Lawrence and the University of Kansas, many children are participating in special education and recreational programs this summer.
The KU Museum of Natural History is offering 40 workshops on different aspects of the natural sciences for children 5 to 13.
The workshops cost $7 for children 5 to 7 of museum association members and $20 for those of non-members. For children 8 to 13, the cost is $22 for association members and $25 for non-members.
The workshops last for five days and are five hours long each day.
THE AREA 684 opens in the program and 650 of those are filled, said Ruth Gennrich, director of public education for the Museum of Natural History, but because each child is allowed to take up three workshops, there actually are probably only 500 participants.
The children are taught by using different things, said Germich. "We teach through activities, films, slides, and live and dead specimens. The younger children, the 5- to 7-year-olds, take an art home every day."
we are. "Growing to make a difference out of our data will be. "We just want to increase their awareness. The more they know about the natural world, the better able they will be to make a difference."
THE WORKSHOPS try to include
FRANK CROSS, professor of systematics and ecology, started the children's summer program in 1967. At that time it was only a two-week class on aquatic and terrestrial animals for children more than 8-years-old.
field trips whenever appropriate, Gennich said.
For example, the astrology class takes optional visits to an observatory.
"There must be a desire or need for it
or we wouldn't have grown from one to
one."
“It’s a lot of work for us but it’s worth it. Just having the kids come back year after year says something.”
Gennrich cited the longevity of the program as a sign of its worth.
There are openings in only three classes now, but Genrich encouraged people interested in the workshops to put their names on a waiting list.
The program costs $1 for members of Friends of the Art Museum and $2 for non-members. The one-day program will be on July 6.
The Spencer Museum of Art also has a program for children called "A Step Back in Time." It is designed to teach 8-to-12-year-olds about architecture.
THE CHILDREN are taken on a walking tour of old west Lawrence and are given information about the architecture.
Linda Bailey, membership coordinator, called it a "mystery history tour."
tor, called it a "mystery history tour.
The last day to sign up for this program is July 2.
While the University is teaching youngsters about biology and art, the Lawrence Parks and Recreation Dept. offers a variety of activities involving 10 playgrounds in the city.
The supervisors at each playground set up their own schedule of games and activities.
Gary Scott, recreation supervisor,
said an art instructor went to the playgrounds and taught the children crafts.
A nature guide takes the children on a hike and the bookmobile lends books to children to help them gain interest in reading.
Friday mornings the children are based from their specific playground to the municipal pool where they can swim for free, he said.
On the record
The summer program is financed by the city through tax allocations.
FIRE INVESTIGATORS HAVE determined that the fire that did $200 damage to the Boys' Achievement Center, 1320 Haskell, June 3, was the result of arson, Fire Chief Jim McSwain said yesterday.
A resident of the home is believed to have caused the fire, said Mike Malone, Douglas County district attorney, yesterday.
The program began on June 7 and lasts for six weeks. Parents can sign up their children at any of the playgrounds when supervisors are there.
The playground areas are open weekdays from 9 a.m. to noon, and from 1 p.m.
Neither Malone nor McSwain would comment on the cause of the fire.
"We don't know whether it was accidental or intentional, but a juvenile is believed to have caused the fire," he said.
CARDS & GIFTS Russell Stover CANDIES
KU POLICE REPORTED that $1,840 worth of audio-visual equipment did not show up during inventory at the end of last semester.
According to the police report, either people checking out equipment from audio-visual failed to return it, or theives stole the equipment.
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The appointment of Mike Malone, Douglas County district attorney, as the new associate district judge has kicked into gear the process to choose a temporary and, ultimately, a permanent district attorney.
Gov. John Carlin announced Malone's appointment Tuesday.
The 7th Judicial District, which includes Douglas County, is administered by one district judge and two associate judges.
The state Judicial Administration Office decided to create a new division of the court because the district's case load has been so heavy,
District Judge James W. Paddock said.
THE KANSAS Legislature approved the addition of the division, Paddock said, so Carlin needed to add a new judge to fill the post.
role until July 15." Paddock said. Because Malone's position will be vacated, the three district judges and a county副公事副 district attorney, Paddock said.
Two qualifications will be required of whoever fills the temporary position. Paddock said.
First. the appointee must be a
Second, he or she must have practiced law in Kansas for five years preceding the appointment, or have been assistant district attorney or county attorney three years, Paddock said.
member of the same political party as the outgoing district attorney.
David Berkowitz, chairman of the Democratic Central Committee, said Tuesday that he expected a race for the vacancy. Three people are already openly vying for the position, he said, with another eight possible.
AFTER THE TEMPORARY appointment is made, the Democratic Central Committee will meet to choose the candidate it wants to present to Carlin for the permanent position.
pointment of the new district attorney, Paddock said.
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The law requires a majority vote by the committee for the candidate to be elected. Berkowis said. There are five votes on the committee, he said.
Carlin has to make the final apo-
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University Daily Kansan, June 24, 1982
Summer theater offers varietyv
By JEFF TAYLOR Staff Reporter
The stage is set this summer for performing arts at the University of Kansas. A variety of entertainment may be available through June and July.
The Kansas Repertory Theatre will present three plays, and the Summer Concert Series, sponsored by the School of Fine Arts, will present two works by Jacqueline and a brass quartet. Jacqueline is director of the programs.
The Repertory Theatre's three plays will be produced simultaneously, creating quite a strain on company members who are building the sets, working with the sound and rehearsing up to 15 hours a day.
L. FRANK BAUM'S "The Wizard of Oz" will open July 8. "Bilthe Spirit" by Noel Coward will first be presented July 9 and Alan Acckyburr's "How the Other Half Lives" will open July 10.
The plays will be in the University Theatre in Murphy Hall. Evening performances Thursday and Friday will begin at 7:00 p.m., and Saturday afternoon performances will begin at 2:00 p.m. and Sunday matinees will begin at 1:00 p.m. The summer season will run through July 25.
The "Wizard of Oz" has been chosen as the community production. A cast of 55, includes the people from the community, the repertory company and the KU faculty. Twelve students will play in 8 will play the parts of Munchkins.
CHARLA JENKINS, director of public relations for the University Theatre and the Summer Concert Theater will be entertaining and very bicec.
"The community show is a good experience for all of us," Jenkins said. "Company members become engaged with community members."
Stacey Warner, 14, 945 Sunset Dr. will play the part of Dorothy.
"She's got a voice and poise on the stage that a Broadway performer would envy, " Jenkins said.
There are in company members who will be acting and running backstage crests for "Oz" and the other plays. Jenkins described "Bilthe Spirit" and "How The Other Half is as funny, contemporary plays."
THE SUMMER THEATER season, Jenkins said, is designed for family entertainment.
The Summer Concert Series is not as heavily toned as the regular school term programs are, Jenkins said. The summer programs are lighter because the atmosphere on campus is different.
"It's not nearly on the scope that the regular series is," Jenkins said.
"It's got more of a general appeal. Much of the series is planned to appeal to KU summer students and school students attending camps."
Performers who come to KU during the fall and spring are generally more established and well known, Jenkins said.
Michael Lorimer, a guitarist, will appear June 12. The Aspen Solosolo, a piano trio, will be at KU July 8 and the Chicago Brass Quintet will perform July 13. All performances will be 8:00 p.m. in Swarovitch Recital Hall.
Tickets for the Kansas Repertory Theatre productions and the Concert Series went on sale June 14. All seats for the plays are reserved. Concert seats can be reserved, but general tickets and information about play times can be obtained in the Murphy Hall Box Office.
SPECIAL DISCOUNTS for the plays are available to KU students, senior citizens, children and groups of 15 or more. Tickets for the general public for the summer concerts are $5.
KU students with a summer ID will be admitted for $2.50, and senior citizens and other students will be admitted for $4. Music campers attending the Midwestern Music Camp will be admitted for $1.
MU courting Brinkman for dean's job
COLUMBIA, Mo.—Del Brinkman,
dean of the KU William Allen White
School of Journalism and Mass Communications, is being considered as a prime candidate for a similar position at the University of Missouri.
Only one of five finalists being considered for the post of dean of the MU School of Journalism has been scheduled for a second interview. Sharon Yoder, MU director of university relations, will meet Tuesday—and that finalist is Brinkman.
"What I have to decide now is whether or not I want to go to the next interview. I don't know enough about the job to make a final decision."
From Staff and Wire Reports
YODER SAID that this was still preliminary to mention a new dean because the chancellor and provost would make the final decision.
"I don't know that I'm the top choice," Brinkman said last night.
"Yesterday, the provost said he intended to explore further Dean Drinkman's interest in the opposition." Yoder said.
Brinkman said the search committee contacted him first.
Russ Dorrer, associate professor of journalism at MU and a member of the search committee, said the committee has reviewed candidates several months ago.
Uehling and Provost Ron Bunn by the search committee.
"I did not apply for the job," he said.
"I am in a good job now that I like."
"We've heard nothing but good things about him," Doyer said about Brinkman. "He's said as a rock, not flashy, and asks all the right questions."
The sign in the window of Tom Amya's barber shop at 842% Mass. St. said, "Willard's Water Exclusively Sold Here."
Wonder water called cure-all
"We sell Willard's Water as a plant food and fertilizer," Mike Amyx said, a barber in Amyx's shop.
By CAROL MILLS Staff Reporter
But Tom said that he used it for burns and that he liked to recount the stories told him by people who use the water.
"People say the water will cure anything." Amyx said. "Some people use it for headaches, burns, curing cataracts, you name it.
The man who sells it in the Lawrence area is Bob North, Linwood. He said it might do some good.
"But the guy who sells it guarantees nothing."
"There's no guarantee. I can't say it will do anything," North said. "It's not cleared by the FDA for internal use."
THIS ELINIR CALLED Willard's Water may be a placebo, or it may just work. For $7.75, one can buy an ounce of Willard's Water, dilute it in a gallon of water and use it for anything he can think of.
Willard's Water has been said to cure farm animals, domesticated pets, and human ailments such as emphysema, headaches, insomnia, nervousness, even a hangover. The water is used as plant fertilizer, too.
"My wife is a real houseplant nut," North said. "And I noticed that one of the plants looked neglected, so I poured it in and planted it. The next day it had perked right up.
North said that the effects of using Willard's Water might be psychological, but that he was not sure.
"She spilled some grease on one of her pantsuits, and she threw it in the washer with some Willard's Water and it took out all the grease spots. Some of the spots had been in there for a few wishings."
THE MIXTURE CONTAINS 99.34 percent water. The rest of the mixture consists of: rock salt or normal table salt; sodium metallicase, used in fireproofing textiles and petroleum refining; calcium chloride, which is used as a flammable dust agent; and magnesium sulfate, used in fireproofing and fertilizers.
THE WILLARD'S WATER story started in 1968. Dr. John Wesley
Reports by the Federal Drug Administration show that Willard applied to the administration for a drug exemption to do clinical studies with the water in 1971. The administration reported that no records were made of information for the administration to respond, and no further records exist of Willard pursuing the exemption.
Willard last added lignite to the mixture and decided to sell it as a fertilizer. But cattlemen in South Dakota found it so much valuable and steers of all kinds of problems.
So, in 1973, Willard formed his own company, CAW Industries Inc. This company now sells and manufactures Dr. Willard's Water with lignite.
So Willard's Water was born.
Willard, professor of chemistry at the South Dakota School of Mines and Technology in Rapid City, S.D., developed an engine cleaner at the request of his son.
North said that 200 to 300 people used the water in Lawrence.
"I heard about it on the Jack Tobin show on 61 radio." North said.
"So I looked into it and found a guy in Kansas City who markets it. I've been selling it since February.
"I don't sell anything that I don't believe in myself. I've always had trouble sleeping, and I still do, but I sleep better now than I used to. I drink about 6 ounces a day. Three or four in the morning, and that many ounces again at night."
But North will not guarantee anything, nor will the man who markets Willard's Water in Kansas City, Kan., guarantee it.
"TESTS HAVE BEEN done on birds and animals," said Don Hendrickson of
Solvent Inc., which markets the water,
"Birds get a natural calmness, and I think people have a better mental calmness." But I don't have any physical problems.
Hendrickson, who has sold the water since 1980, said that he had talked with people who have been cured of pain from arthritis and residual pain from chemotherapy. One opiometrist, he said, had been hospitalized for glaucoma and cataract victims.
"Not because the water actually has properties that do cure ills," he said, "but because the people who take the elixir believe the tonic works. And consequently, they build up their own defenses against the nain or discomfort."
Schwering said an example of this kind of self-curing process was found in studies regarding the body's own pain-killing system.
But a former consultant for the National Institute on Drug Abuse, Randy Schwering, said that elixirs like Nitrous Water should not be taken lightly.
Hendrickson would not admit that the water might be nothing more than a placebo. He said that he would not sell anything that he did not believe in.
NEARLY 100 candidates' names were submitted to MU Cancellor Barbara
"RECENT RESEARCH has shown that one's expectations can actually produce natural pain killing substances called endorphins." he said.
These endorphins are continually giving the brain information that moderates the sensation of pain. Schwering said.
"Placebos in some people do actually create a biochemical reaction," he said. "There is a 'real' vs. 'mental effect."
How Willard's Water works, if it in fact does, remains to be seen. THE FDA has distributed advertisements telling consumers that any representations of spurious services as beneficial for any medical purpose with illegal and without scientific merit.
But in spite of the FDA's advice, Hendrickson said, "thousands of people have had their tonsils removed."
Campus Hideaway
Luncheon Buffet Special
$3 with coupon
Pizza Pasta Soup Salad & Fruit Bar
Món.-Fri. 11-2
$3.50 value
Coupon (clip out)
Expires June 30
TEST RIDE and COMPARE
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RICK'S BIKE SHOP
1033 VERMONT • LAWRENCE, KS. 66044 • (913) 841-6642
THE ONE, THE ONLY;
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fall & summer
1 and 2-Bedroom Apartments
1-and 2-Bedroom Apartments
Our Community Offers:
Our Community Offers: Cable TV available
- Cable TV available
- 2 Laundry facilities
- Free Shuttle Bus to Campus
- Indoor/Outdoor pool w/sundeck—enjoy year-round
- swimming
- 6-12 month lease option
- Summer Storage Plan
COME BY TODAY AND LOOK!
Jayhawk West APARTMENTS
Open 7 days a week
842-4444
524 Frontier Road
THE SANCTUARY'S UNIVERSITY STAFF LUNCH 20% off with faculty ID
Featuring a variety of cold soups, such as asparagus and zucchini, and gazpacho. Meals are served on the spacious deck or in our cozy indoor restaurant and bar.
Lunch served:
11-on, Mon.-Sat.
Happy hour:
4-7 Every Day of the Week
Offer expires July 15, 1982
1401 West 7th
843-0540
the
SANCTUARY
SPECTRUM OPTICAL
4 East 7th 841-1113 Free adjustments Expires 6/30/82
$20 off all Prescription Eyewear 50% off all Tinting 20% off all Sunglasses
One-day service on most prescriptions and repairs. Coupon must be presented with purchase.
Watch for Gammons' other regularly advertised specials!
SUMMER SPECIALS ARE AT GAMMONS SNOWFLA
THURSDAYS - 75c bar drinks and 15c draws ('til 10:30)
$1.25 bar drinks and 50c draws
(10:30 'til close)
WEEKENDS - No cover charge.
]
plan now to spend next year at
Beat the Rat Race
M
NAISMITH HALL
It's not too early to plan your fall living arrangements, and there's no better way to begin your fall semester than by enjoying Naismith's full-sized swimming pool and air-conditioned indoor facilities. Plus, Naismith offers you year-round maid service, dining plans and a full schedule of social activities.
Don't wait!! Get a head start on fall by checking into Naismith Hall.
Phone 843-8559 1800 Naismith Dr.
y
University Daily Kansan, June 24, 1982
Page 7
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The University Daily KANSAN
Kansan Telephone Numbers
Newsroom--684-4810
Business Office--684-4338
for the Nasee, Randyairs likee taken so
uit that the more than a old not sell leave in.
(US$ 565-40) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Monday and November July and August please email back your holiday and holidays. Second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas 60453. Donations to the University of Kansas for six months are $1 a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $1 a semester, paid through the student activity and changes of address to the University Daily Kansas. Flint Hall, The University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas 75062.
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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.
Edward Zeller, professor of geology, physics and astronomy, said that because of rains and sunspot activity, he would be cooler than this summer would be cooler.
The simplest explanation for this summer's weather is that "we've had a very large amount of precipitation to the south and west of here." Zeller said.
A KU geophysicist said Tuesday that he had predicted in April that this summer would be cooler than usual in the Midwest.
By CANDICE SACKUVICH Staff Reporter
"Winds from those areas are usually hotter in summer, especially if the areas are dried out." Zeller said.
Winds from the south and west reaching the Midwest are cooler than usual because of the rain, he said, causing lower temperatures in Kansas.
Another explanation is that a broad, unclear correlation exists between high sunspot activity and cool weather, he said.
"We go through an 11-year cycle of solar activity, from only three or four sunspots some years to peaks of approximately 200 in other years. We've just gone through one of those peaks," he said.
Sunspots are relatively dark spots that appear on the surface of the sun.
Cooler summer predicted
Sunspot activity linked to weather trends
Although Midwesterners are experiencing a relatively cool summer, Zeller said he had a penchant for colder weather—much colder.
He is preparing to go on his mission expiratory expedition to Antarctica. He first went in 1968 as part of the Interna- tional Geophysical Year expedition, he said.
"I would guess that the mean value is below 140 now. Nevertheless, that is high. Maybe in the next four or five years we'll have a mean value about half for the month of June." Zeller said "Periods like that are usually dry."
"That was a period of intense sunspot activity. Geophysicists from all over the world came to take measurements of all kinds of things—the thickness of the earth's crust, magnetic fields, earthquakes, atmosphere, tempera
Sunspots are counted daily and averaged to get the mean value for the month.
In February, the mean value was 115 sunspots and in March it was 153, Zeller said.
Only general weather trends can be predicted by measuring sunspot activity, he said.
Since 1976, Zeller and Gisela Dreschoff, KU courtesy professor of physics and astronomy, have beer, part of an annual graduation tradition from the University of Kansas.
"You're looking down into the sun. You'd think it it's hot, but it isn't," he said. "Sunspots are actually cooler regions on the sun."
The research expeditions are part of two programs financed by the Division of Polar Programs of the National Science Foundation, a federal agency.
The Resource Evaluation Program involves "flying around in helicopters and using gamma ray detectors to measure the thorium mineral deposits," Zeller said.
Zeller and Dresshoff's next expedition is planned to coincide with the Antarctic summer, from November to January. This year, the expedition team will be
This year, the expedition team will be doing research at Scott Glacier in southern Antarctica. It will not work on the nitrate program much this year because the glacier is in an area where snow does not accumulate. Zeller said.
"We're actually examining the resource potential of the continent. There are large amounts of iron and coal there."
fairly well clothed. I won't say you don't get cold sometimes, but there's no problem sleeping in temperatures of 20 below zero," he said.
Zeller said they were holes in the sun's atmosphere.
The highest temperature ever recorded at South Pole Station on the Antarctic Plateau was 12 below zero, Zeller said.
The other program was designed to determine nitrate levels in the snow of the Antarctic Plateau, which is more acidic than temperate rain. High nitrate levels are correlated
Thirty degrees below zero is a warm summer day there, and winter temperatures can dip as low as 100 degrees below zero, he added.
He said he predicted an uncertain future for Antarctica because of the international scramble for resources
tures and relative humidity," Zeller said.
"You get used to sleeping in these intensely cold temperatures, and then you become more aware of higher temperatures as uncomfortable." Zeller said.
"I suspect that of the reasons Argentina invaded the Falklands was to gain more resources. And I think countries that have laid claim to portions of the land they them more seriously in the future of the resources," Zeller said.
It would be unfortunate and ridiculous for nations to go to war over Antarctica, he said, "but I am afraid it will eventually happen."
"Right now, Antarctica is a delightful place with scientists from all over the world united against the common enemy," said Dr. Robertsaid."I'd like to see this continue."
The University Daily
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1:2 CREAM GONES One dip just 4d+ Two dips #8e
3:10 dips #10.0 CHOICE COOLER UNLIIMITED
Southern Hills Center 124 p.m. Tues.Sat., 124 p.m.
Sun.
Leave Message at 841-3835
CINDY BUTLER
Formerly of IBM
Starting Business
Conducting Service on:
• Selectrics
• Mag-cards
• Memory typewriters
COMPETITIVE RATES
• Service Agreement
• Per Hour
Tie In With Us
RECREATION SERVICES
Tennis Doubles Tournament
RECREATION SERVICES
Entry Deadline
Thursday, June 24
5 p.m. 208 Robinson
Play begins Sunday, June 27 1:30 p.m.
THE FOOD
★THE SOCIAL LIFE★
Robinson Tennis Courts
9E
1800 Natsmith Drive 943-8588
FOR RENT
PRINCETON PLACE PACIT APARTMENTS. Newly furnished 2-bedroom apartment for rentals, features wood burning fireplace, electric stove, equipped kitchen, quiet surroundings. Rm per person, 1800 sq ft. Bldg or apartment for additional information. IB, or phone 925-2730 for additional information.
SOUTHERN PARKWAY TOWNHouses, 30th & Kadok. If you need the tioy of the banyo & cramped apartments in Houghton Lake, Hoopsku, all appliances, attached garage, swimming pool, & lids of privacy. We have opening now, for August. Call Gail Levine (evenings and weekends) at 212-874-6528 for information about modest价居 townhouses.
Are Just Three Of
The Many Reasons
People Come To Nalsmith Hall
Summer Or Fall/Spring
Individual Leases
NAISMITH HALL
THE MAID SERVICE
SPACIOUS STUDIOS
One, two, and three bedrooms.
Check now for summer availability.
Beautiful grounds, swimming pool,
little tennis courts.
A GOOD PLACE TO LIVE
meadowbrook
1504 & Creation
842-4200
Live in the CHISTIAN CAMPUS HOUSE this summer. Call Alan Rocasca, campus manager, Call Alan Rocasca, campus manager.
AVAILABLE AUGUST Spacious exclusive 4
room student room, unfurnished,
Family room, table pool, FP, all appl
garage. 274 Stratford R on KU Bus line. Accept
students. 267-741 or 149-707. Students $300 ap-
reciable.
STUDENTS
One phone call will solve your housing needs. Complete furnished studios, 1BR, 1BH with furniture, and 2BR furnished apartments
HANOVER PLACE
Between 14th and 15th on
Massachusetts
Plymouth
841-1212 842-4455
841-1212 842-4455
7th and Florida
(On KU Bus Line)
Rentals from $205/mo.
41.195E 80.446E
9th and Emery Rd.
Rentals from $250/mo.
841-5255 842-4455
TIBURON
919 Indiana
919 Indiana
922 Tennessee
Riverside from
841-5255
842-4455
Warmair: Furnished room in shared house. Total rent (Nov.-Aug.) $200 + deposit. 1 blk. from Union.
842-5440, 10:12:30, M-F. 6-28
COLDWATER FLATS
SUMMIT HOUSE
3 new bedrooms apartment in four-plex. 1 block from campus, 2 blocks from town. Central Air, carpeted, fully equipped kitchen, at 1341 Ohio. Call 804-5424.
EXTRA nice apartments, large and small. Next to campus. Utilities paid, reasonabled price. 125-135 if-credit.
All offered by Mastercraft Management, Professional Maintenance and Management Company
841-1212 842-4455
1 bedroom semi-furnished. Near campus. 843-9094 or
842-6707. No pets. 7-1
NEW 4-PLEXES
Two bedroom furnished mobile home. $185.00 per month. Clean, quiet location. No pets. Jayhawk Court #8247807. 7:29
Rentals from $260/mo.
MASTER BEDROOM of a large 3 bed mobile house
with the option to stay longer. Call Matthew M-14-M4 for
information.
Sleeping room(s) 1 & 2 & bedroom apartments and
pet days: 84/53/169. Eighties 84/70/17
4-81/3235
TREO COOPERATIVE LIVING. Close to campus and downtown. Individual bedrooms. Even meals. Not a religious organization. $0 to $13 in including utilities. Sunflower Bed, 824-9217. tf
TRAILRIDGE
2. 3, and 4 bedroom townhouses still available for fall
3 pools, tennis court, and
On KU bus line
Racquetball club.
Cabernet 328-bedroom apartment in an older home. 314 W. 14th (14th & Tentacle). Available now only $279 a month with $309 deposit, all utilities absolutely免修. You call: 614-744-1238 for details.
2500 West 6th 843-7333
very nice 1-bedroom unfurnished apartment in older home at 140 Tennessee. Available now, only $125 per month with $200 deposit, utilities paid. Absolutely no call. Call 784-414 for showing images. 7-29
小 but coy 1-bedroom unfurnished apartment above garage at 10187ile Rhode Island. Only $75 a month with $200 deposit, water and water paid. Also no pets. Call 644-4444 for showing time. 7:39
New leaving for August 15, SPANCH CREAT CRESHPART
carped with tapered, central air, beak, hairy
carpets and a detached leather boot. Arrive
on KU bus route. Plenty of off-street parking.
Launched available. Laundry facilities and pool.
Call (416) 783-2500.
MED CENTER BOUND? Newly refurbished 2-bedroom duplexes available now. A carp, A/C, appliances. Parking. Call (913) 381-2878.
Apartment for rent to quit student. Third floor wakeup in private residence. First floor on the KU bus route. Furnished with large bedrooms, living room, kitchen and dining room. No money. No per month. Available July 1, 842-3366.
ONE-bedroom house adjacent to O-Zone. Available
August 1, 843-8605. 7-12
Leasing now for fall 1. and 2-bedroom apartments.
Dick Edmonds Real Estate. 7-8
2-BEDROOM--older duplex, A/C, 8 blocks to campus. Available July 15. No toys or kids $275 or 815 with utilities 74-3651. keep trying.
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Notes. Now Take on Make sense of Western Civilization (2). As study guide 1. To an 1st Study Guide. 2. For class preparation 3. For exam preparation. - New Analysis of Western Civilization. Now Take on Town Civic The Bookmark, and Oread Bookstore.
Alternator, starter and generator specialists. Parts,
service and exchange units. BELL AUTOMOTIVE
ELECTRIC, 845-909, 3000 W. 6th.
tf
For sale or lease with option to buy. Only amusement park in the college town with ice cream, cold drinks, sandwiches. Has 9 video machines and room for 10 people. Large apartment building. 843-1601-8431. 7-321-
Front wheel drive, am/fm. 5-speed. Low mileage.
Great economy. 842-6135. 6-24
MOPED-Honda Express. Good condition $250. Call 614-
..+5542.
Combination bumper pool-card table. Real inb.
120. totally equipped. Total back at 76-453.
$100.
76 Buck Regal, PB, PS, AC, AM-FM, Cruise & TUL.
842, 842-6068.
Women's sample clothes. Calvin Klein jeans ($22);
T-shirts, Polos & Shorts ($10); Skirts ($15)
5-13. Call 842-1533.
6-24
RECORDS, RECORDS, RECORDS, Many more
addiced. Wide release. Rock, jazz, blue, etc.
don't miss! Sat., June 26, 9:4 at 10th & Connecticut. 6-34
Must sell: 1976 Chevy Montea, Clean, low mileage,
good mail: appl. 82; 645-7546.
6-24
HONDA 350 XL. Excellent condition, accessories,
$500, Matt 749-1968.
6-28
TENNIS RACKETS—Head, Wilson, Dunlap, Prince,
Yones—Good selection, new/award. Will buy yours
if condition: 84/437 8:23 after 6:08 pm.
Film certificate book for sale 100 certificates only
415.30 $ Each certificate for sale of a Kindle or
Kodak card. 89.15 $ Each envelope 125, 185, 162,
24, 36, 41 Cary Teller, 841.18/$481.18 to order
in a transferable.
1981 Honda Express Moped $250. 842-7959 Evenings.
624
1977 PUCH "Mari"* mazi* 2,500 miles—$225—Calli
Paul at 842-3437.
1976 Nova, 4 cyl, excellent condition, AM-FM cassette store,午后. 749-6280. 7-1
Full-size bed, desk and chair, bookcase. Call 749-0293.
FOUND
Found-Contact lens and case. Call Debbi Rhoton at 864-3598 7-1
Found—Male kitten in vicinity of the Exchange, 2406
Eau. Sandy color, medium length hair with green
eyes. 8417779, 8452633.
7-1
HELP WANTED
HARDWARE, COMMUNICATIONS ANALYST,
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS' KAISANANCE; B.S.
E. Engineering or equivalent subject; experience as elec-
tric engineer in the field of data com-
munications technique. Ability to manage
project and staff; prefer experience in design real
data communications systems; knowl of
granming and working knowledge of data
communications. Salary $15,000 minimum. Submit
resume by April 28, 2007. Graduate Compound, University of Kansai, Post Office Drive 2007, Lawrence, KA. 60043. Additional in-
troduction: Contact Direct Neural Lending, (913) - 844-2700
EOEA/AA.
Program Assistant unclassified position in chemistry department at University of Kansas. 181 Chemical, typing, editing, organizational and record keeping responsibilities; will serve as assistant to Prof. R. L. Schoenwil in the American Chemical Society. Applicants must have a bachelor's degree in American Chemical Society and must capable of working responsibility and must complete minimum requirements including type speed at a pace of 25 mph, travel time between college or business school degree is desirable but not mandatory. It is expected that the person filling this position must have a bachelor's degree in two years and preferably 3. annual salary $250,000 plus benefits. Qualified persons should apply to Sony Tape Chemistry Department, Room 200 Mail Hall, University of Kansas at 864-646-742 before June 30. Please refer to www.sonytape.com/Qualifications for Action Employer.
Liquor store clerk—part-time; call 843-6632 for interview.
6-28
LOST
Lost: glasses. Leaf lench test. Plastic frame -charcoal top, clear back. Reward. Professor Landsberg, English Department, KU. Please call 84-420 and leave a message.
PERSONALS
SPECIAL RATES, HAIRCUTS $6, PERMS-
*ONLY* $20. Charm Hair Fashions 103%!
Mass- Dena Fein, 843-538-6300
6-08
PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTHRIGHT,
843-4821
tf
LEASE-
A
LEMON
$995 A Day
FIRST 50 MILES FREE
THEN 8 A MILE
Daily, Weekly, Monthly All Cars One Rate
Small, intermediate and large cars and trucks available. All mechanically sound, state inundated, clean and ready to rent.
CALL US AT
9th & Miss. 24th & Iowa
749-4225 841-0188
Skillie's liquor store serving U-Day since 1940. Come in and compare. Willed Skillet Endaly. 1908 Mass. 843-8186.
The Keeger - Weekly Specials on Kega!! Call
841-4400 - 1610 W. 23rd. tf
COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATE. Free pregnancy testing; early and advanced outpatient abortion; gynecology; contraception; 1-435 & Roe; Overland, Park IS (913) 623-1030.
Say it in a shirt. Custom silk screen printing, T-shirts, baseball shirts and caps. Shirtart by Swella. 749-1611. 7-29
Welcome back! Photos for any occasion. 6-24
Bernstein Photograph. Call Seen at 749-161-64
**Dear**
I would like to extend my gratitude to you for your kindness and thoughtful guidance. I am very thankful for the opportunity to share your experiences with my students. Your help has made a big difference in our lives, and I will always be grateful for your support.
Sincerely,
[Name]
DARE TO GO BARE The American Star
Association has a FAMILY stadium club near you.
Advise marital status TRA-V AANS, Inc. Rt. 1
1049 Scarlett, Ks. 6557 Send 39 stems.
LEARN TO BOARDSAIL!
Instant passport, portfolio, resume, immigration,
naturalization, visit, ID and of course fine portrait
Sunrise Sail 842-2366
1705 St. Andrews Dr.
Boardraising is the excitement of hanging on the fence while racing off the top of a wave, or the simple enjoyment of good people to sail with. Whether you're taking a race or speed racing excitement, Salinler will take you there! It takes only a couple of hours to complete the lesson is only $9.95 with this coupon. So don't miss it.
1705 St. Andrews Dr.
Why cook? .. We now deliver. The Pitra Shoppe
842-0000.
7-1
Craving pizza but on a tight budget? Call us. The Piza-
Shoppe 824-0600
Community Children Center. Headstart, is accept-
ance based on enrollment. There are 3 requirements for those families accepted into this free program. 1. Child must be between 3 to 5 years of age. 2. Income must meet the Guideline Line. 3. Income must meet the Guideline Line.
Free baby golden hamsters! The perfect apartment pet. They're rame and cuddly. Call Laurie 749-2066.
6.24
SERVICES OFFERED
Schenider Wine & Keg Shop - The finest selection of wines in Lawrence - largest supplier of strong kegs. 1610 W. 22nd, 843-3223. tf
Put your best foot forward with a professionally printed resume from展会. We can write it, type it, and print it for you. Call Encore 842-2001, 2520 & Iowa.
Oo
The Etc Shop
Vintage & Classic
Contemporary Clothing
Linda & Linda
10 West 9th St.
913-643-708
Mon-Sat 10:18
WRITINGGSYPSCHDYNAMICS will find your
resources to research. Graphing. Graphaphrase. Visual
graphs. Research.
KR Freshman woman would like to live with a single wife, have a home, and equip an elderly couple to do household work and cook on their own. Please call collect at 418-253-4848 or write. Rohanna Schoenberg 301 Clement University, Independence, MO 60719.
Have your own personalized bumpersticker! Deluxe
invoice. Any message. $30, K. Gill, $21, Geranium
Place, Oxnard, California 89300. 7-15
Sunday, June 7th-Saturday, July 3rd—SUMMER
SALE! Spencer Museum Bookshop's largest overstock sale ever. 30% discounts on many books &
pockets and postcards. Expenses item 12
now within range!
Photoscreening
so they can be printed or copied.
Crown Capital
Aviation
Invitation to Join Us
Encore Copy Corps
25th & Iowa
842-2001
SLIDES DEVELOPED overnight or by appoint-
ment. ETHRACHOME 50mm; 20 ex. 36, 36 ex.
Call Kenton Knowles evenings at M14-S46. 7-8
Beaver Cleaver sacks! Yes, indeed, and they're going fast. Don't miss on the latest in footwear. They're at The Ele Shop 10 West 9th. 6-24
If you haven't tasted the original Round Table, you haven't lived. The Prize Shoppe. 842-6000.
The Ete Shop 10 West 10th had formal white dinner jacket, cuffs, bown, ties, tuxedo & black tux pants. Did you forget the formal wear and the shoes? We have those too! 6-24
INDEPENDENCE DAY ARTS & CRAFTS PAIR * Earn extra money selling your hand crafted items in air conditioned comfort Planting. Woodcrafts, kites, rock art, murals. Weddings, Birthdays, Succes, Saturdays & July 5-8, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Come one or both days, for reservations call 814-782-7400. Southern Hills Shopping Center 21 & 2nd & Cudson.
Musician Wanted bring your favorite instrument to improvisation 101 every Thursday, 7th Spirit Club. Sign up at 9 p.m.
6-24
All you can drink is the lucky winner of our special drawing this Friday night. Come in and celebrate with us at our First Year Home party on Saturday, June 27 from 7:00 to 7:31! The Exchange, 400 Iowa Street, 6-24
BARGAIN HUNTERS Find what you need to hunt in your area. Purchase a durable future space furniture, housewares, goods to trade. Save gas running to garage sales. shop in one of our 18 new shops. 9 a.m., 6 p.m. on Monday, Elm Hills Shops. Call (212) 457-3400; Lauren Lachman.
Hi FARLEE, How is my favorite press secretary?
What is this I hear, you don't want to meet my friends? D.Q.
6-28
The Ete Shop 18-9. WB has bow-ling shirts, Hawaiian
shorts, bermuda shorts & pedal pushers. Also,
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6-28
MAKE MONEY, RAIN OR SHINE! Sell your home items, furniture, electronics etc in our warehouse. Get a discount on MARIT! No reservation necessary, come one or both of us at our store. Shop 21 & 2nd &奥斯特劳, Lawrence Shopping Center,
Voice lessons. $6 for 1/2 hour. 842-0038.
Who's delivering great pizza in town for low prices?
Call 812-4000 The Pizza Shop.
7-1
2-days workshops on how to learn to program in BASIC. Every Friday & Saturday 10-14, Fee $100. No background knowledge and hands-on experience. Call 841-4623; Email at Computer Land (841) 2-wrd. 726
LEARN TENNIS from experienced instructor in small groups with other KU students or private lessons. 824713 by 6 p.m. tf
Workshops on how to learn word processing and
computerized accounting. 1:30-4:30 MTW or
unlimited fee. $100. Call 641-4612. Enroll at
Computer Land W4K. Wed, 2:25.
Math Homework? CS Projects? Physics Problems?
Good tutoring at reasonable rates. Call Pat 749-2515.
7.15
Workshops on how to learn to use a microcomputer: the operating system, word processing, data processing and programming. Course ID: 4018; call 841-2347 MTRW # 4018, Email: catlwar@csun.edu At computer E大陆 1400 W.23rd St. 7:00
Tennis Players! I'll string your racket fast and cheap,
(in 2 hrs, or less) $1 labor + string cost (only
$2.50 for nylon string). Call 749-1417 any time.
Shakespeare could write. Elvis could wiggle; my talent, typing. Call 842-4043 after $ and weekends.
7-12
TYPING
TIP TOP TYPING—Experienced Typists—IBM Correcting Selective II, Royal Correcting SE5000CD. 843-5675. tf
Experienced typist will type term papers, theses,
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Experienced typist. Term papers, these, all miscellaneous. IBM Correcting Selseite. Elite or Pica, and will correct spelling. Phone 843-6546 Mrs. Wright.
Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms,
graphics, editing, self-correcting Selective. Call
Tellen 841-2172.
It's a Fact, Fast, Affordable, Clean Typing 843-5820
TYPNING PLUS: Thess. discussions, papers, letters, applications, resumes. Assistance with composition, grammar, spelling, etc. English tutoring for foreign students: 841-6544.
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Selective, Victor Clark: 842-849-729
7-29
AFFORDABLE QUALITY for all your typing needs:
thermess, dissertations, resumes, charts, mailings,
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Professional, accurate and fast typing. Dissertations. Theses, term papers, etc. Call Alison, 842-7198; after 5:00.
For PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myra. 841-4980.
Have Selective, will type. Professional, fast,
affordable. Batey, 842-6597 and weekends.
Experienced typet—theses, dissertations, term papers, mice. misc. IM correcting selectic. Barb, after 12 p.m. 942-2310. tf
Students: I will take care of all your needing needs
am fast and very reasonable. Please call April during the day at 645-0130; evenings and weekends:
845-0064.
6-28
Typing for all occasions; for desserts, theses,
term papers, letters, etc. Call Debby at 748-3728,
if you need help.
Former medical research secretary will type books,
theses and term papers. Call Nancy 841-3602. 7-22
Experienced typist—term papers, theses,
dissertations—also graphs, charts, call Jane 84-4801
mornings, 84-4922 afternoons. 7:12
Typing seem expensive? For all your typing needs, 7-12 quickly & cheaply, call Mary 841-8873.
Housemate Wanted. 3 BR-$83.33/month + 1/2
utilities. Fireplace, screen porch. Close to campus
and downown. Call 824 5087 after 5.
ONE ROOMMATE to live in the master bedroom of a large 3 bedroom mobile home. Acct. weather/dryer, ct. Contact Matthew B. 481-650-1646. 7-1
Near female campus on bus route, 1615 including utilities. Call 841-3820. 9-24
Substitute Sitter to take care of a bright, charming Barking Dog. Ensure that he is must be living and reliable, a n-numerous with good training. Have own transportation to Centerville, High area. Sumner's address: 2150 3rd Ave. High area. Pay monthly rent to right person. Call Barking Dog for details.
Page 8
University Daily Kansan, June 24, 1982
Police
the street. For instance, we have just one car for each district," he said.
LAWRENCE IS DIVIDED into four districts, be said.
Sampson said that the department had 78 commissioned officers, but that the number was far lower than in the Army.
portion iampersip
ICAP represented one-half million dollars
*"Since ICAP (Integrated Crime Apprehension Program) has gone in, we've lost street watchers."*
in federal money distributed from 1977 to 1981. Ron Olin, assistant police chief, said.
ICAP was a federally financed program involving 42 cities across the country, ranging in size from San Francisco to Lawrence, Olin said. The individual cities used the money to study specific problems and exchange information.
Much of the money was used to make a detailed study of manpower and police work
Aid, oh. Oh said.
"At the present time, I think we have adequate manpower,"Olin said, basing his state on the report done by ICAP.
"Roughly 60 percent of an officer's time on the street is allocated in that there is some activity that he is doing." Olin said.
HE SAID THAT 92 percent of all activity is not crime-related.
With the help of the ICAP study, the police department was able to predict fairly accurately the number of calls they would receive in blocks of months. Olin said.
Sampson disagreed and it all looked fine on paper, but in reality the ICAP findings were more alarming.
Sampson said there was no real way to predict calls or patterns.
Olin said, "Obviously we'd like to have 20 more people, but whether we could find a solution is still a mystery."
"We're just trying to maintain the attitude that we have to do the best we can with what we know."
Murder
From page one
"Things developed so rapidly after that that leads are still being investigated." Olmstead said.
Mark Swanson, 28, 1015 Kentucky St. Was found shot to death outside his apartment late night.
Citv
Police found tiu pounds of high-grade migrants in swanson's apartment with an estimated value of $1 million.
From page one
1. In progress
to act as arbitrators to present the
recommendations to the City Commis-
sions and to recommend them to
Olin said police had withheld the precise amount of marijuana seized by investigators.
"But it didn't turn out to be part of the motive," he sid.
"The current system is more like collective begging than bargaining." Sampson said.
COMMISSIONERS SAID the shaky economy was the main factor in choosing the president.
"The financial situation of the city is not as good as it has been in the past," Commissioner Bankley Clark said. "We're losing the property we owned and have a flattened, property tax this year."
The assessed property valuation for 1982 will probably be only 3 percent higher than in 1962. (See table 4.)
money above last year's collection, Mike Wilden_ assistant city manager, said.
WILDGEN SAID only part of the $160,000 could be used for salaries because it would also be used for expenditures such as street lighting and water system and bond and interest payments.
At points in the discussion, the two sides disputed each other's budget estimates. McClain estimated the police budget to be $100,000 higher than LPOA's predicted $188,759. The city's budget estimate was $186,391 for the same two-year period.
Mayor Marci Francisco said that there was not much difference between the two proposals but that it would be difficult to predict the inflation rate during the two-year period.
"The city can always make an additional to cover the inflation rate, but it can't cover the rise in gas prices."
The LPOA wanted more representation on the board of its investment bank, which considers various non-monetary issuers.
COMMISSIONER NANCY SHONTZ agreed that the tight economy influenced her decision but also said the commission was not in a good position to make the decision.
Besides wages, two other issues separated the city and police negotiating teams.
"I would have preferred the employee relations to make the choice," she said, noting the commission's lack of training in labor relations.
sues. The police included an officer slot on the committee makeup in their proposal, but the city contended the committee had six LPOA members already. But the city negotiators did include a position on the committee for a corporal, also represented by the LPOA.
THE NUMBER of personal leave days was also in dispute. City negotiators offered police an extra day off each year if they reached an agreement on a medical fitness through a KU fitness program.
But Sampson said many of the police officers found the KU training to be irrelevant to their job performance and asked for the KU training had been with the force four consecutive years.
Sampson said he was not sure about possible job actions by police but did say that many of the officers were ready to drop job-related information so that knowing that they had been paving for themselves.
The police proposal said lack of concrete训
ture in career development for officers w
ere problem.
In past years, the police have staged job actions and work speed ups and slow downs to protest the city's rejection of their contract proposals.
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July 9, 15, 18, 24
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July 10,16,22 8:00pm
July 25 2:30pm
All performances in the University Theatre-Murphy Hall/All seats are reserved/call (3) 864-3982/Tickets (3) 864-3982 in the Murphy Hall Box Office
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estimated
said to the
recipe
investigative
of the motion I had from the previous employee relations director," McClain said.
KANSAN
The University Daily
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
Monday, June 28, 1982 Vol. 92, No. 151 USPS 650-640
Police vote no to city's offer
By KATE DUFFY Staff Reporter
After a unanimous no vote to the city's contract proposal last night, Lawrence Police Officers Association members authorized their cooperation to hire legal counsel for a possible dispute over it.
The LPOA is disputing the contract's validity because it does not represent the city's 'last and final best offer,' said Gary Sampson, LPOA chairman and chief negotiator.
"The commission didn't follow the resolution." Sampson said. "They didn't see the city's last action."
Under a 1979 resolution governing the city's relationship with employee organizations, after an impasse has been reached in the discussion procedure, the two negotiating teams send their "last and final best offers" to the commission, recommending a resolution, commissioners select one proposal
Earlier in the month, the city offered a wage increase of 1.5 percent over a two-year work period.
Although the LPOA rejected the offer, Sampson maintained that under the resolution, the city negotiation team, headed by Jackie McClain, employee relations director, should have kept the 2.5 percent salary increase in its final proposal to the commission.
But McClain disagreed with the claim that she had broken the resolution
"I was operating on good faith from information I had from the previous employee relations director," McClain said.
McClain said she had continually told the police negotiating team that the final proposal might be different from the one constructed during the mediation process.
"My team had strong feelings about adding the 2.5 percent," McClain said Friday. "They felt it was a financial burden, but I wanted to go as far as I could during negotiations."
The LPOA's final proposal called for a 12 per cent raise by the end of the twenty year period.
At least two city commissioners were upset with the LPOA's decision.
"As far as I'm concerned, they can work without an agreement," Commissioner Don Bimbs said Sunday night. "They've already turned down the city's best offers."
Bimns said the city should fire the officers who refused to sign their contracts.
"There are enough of them who would stay on to form a nucleus, and we can hire the extra," he said.
"They're not considering the other problems we're facing as a community." Shontz said.
Commissioner Nancy Shontz said she was disappointed the police voted the proposal down.
At last week's commission meeting, commissioners cited Lawrence's lower tax base and fear of future fiscal problems as the determining factors in choosing the city's proposal.
Tom Gleason, the only commissioner to vote for the police proposal, said he was sorry to hear that he was not commissioned.
"We have enjoyed pretty good relations with the police before," Glenn said. "I don't want to be bullied."
Moural Marck Francisco was out of town Sunday and Commissioner Barkley Clark could not be re-elected.
Sampson said the LP0A's "main consideration now is to come up with an agreement." He accused the city of adding about $70,000 to the grants at last Tuesday's commission meeting.
He said the city added $1,000 in salary costs for the 20-minute roll call at the beginning of each shift, "which we didn't even ask for," as we had already learned of the days that were already figured in the budget.
"The figures brought to the commission were not true figures." Sampson said
Sampoon also disputed the comparative salary
that commissioners were given at Tuesday
day, Jan. 17.
He said comparing Lawrence police salaries with those in western Kansas and Arkansas towns was not accurate because Lawrence was a larger county and should be compared to Johnson County townships.
The city resolution does not say what will happen to the agreement if one party does not sign it, but it does say the commission's decision is final and binding.
McClain said yesterday that the city was "adopting a wait-and-see attitude."
Sampson said no other job actions were being considered by police officers at this time.
Police
LAWRENCE
Police
Although Lawrence Police Officers Association members unanimously voted down the city's contract proposal on Monday on the street last night. Steve Aubrey, patrolman, writes a speeding petition on Massachusetts Street.
Photo by J. SHARP SMITH
Juvenile delinquency petitions were filed Friday against two youths being held in connection with the June 9 slaying of Donald Gayle, 26, Douglas County district attorney, Friday.
Lisa Dawn Bigenwalt, 17, daughter of Joseph and Lisa Bigenwalt, Route 4, and William McTaggart III, 15, son of William McTaggart, 427 Elm St., were charged with the adult court equivalent of first-degree assault and attempted kidnaping, Malone said.
MALONE SAID HE was still deciding whether to ask that Associate District Judge Mike Elwell try Bigenwall as an adult. Bigenwall will turn 18 August 26.
Because McTaggart is less than 16, he must be tried in juvenile court. Malone said.
BOTH JUVENILES were originally taken into custody on petitions alleging that they ran away from court-ordered placement homes. Elwell said.
Bignewall was also charged with a miscreancy, which, for an adult, would have been unlawful.
Although the petitions charged both juveniles with the murder of Hatchell, only Bigenwalt was indicated to have been armed with a 22-caliber rifle used in the killing.
MALONE SAID Friday that the cause of a gunshot was a gunshot wound to the head.
HATCHELL'S BODY was found partially June it under a bridge in southwestern Douglass County.
Hatchell was Bigenwalt's great-uncle and lived at the Bigenwalt residence.
Judge Elwell has scheduled a hearing in juvenile court for July 23 for Bigenwal in the
McTagnett will appear in court tomorrow for a hearing on the original juvenile petition. No date has been set for a hearing on the petition regarding the Hatchell case.
Photo by SUSAN PAGE
>>
Despite last week's cloudy skies, two Lawrence boys tried their luck at fishing in Potter Lake. The boys are (left) Jonathan Siler, 7, 70 Maine St., and (right) Kenny Terry, 11, 71 Alabama St.
Gone Fishing—
Israeli policy Haig's downfall
But, surprise that it was, aides noted pressure for the change had been building for some time. Hagi was widely reported to have threatened to cancel several times. This time Reagan took him at his own speed.
By United Press International
WASHINGTON—A crucial factor in the resignation of Secretary of State Alexander Haig was a disagreement over whether the United States should let Israel "finish the job" in Lebanon, White House aides said yesterday.
HAIG MOST RECENTLY had been stewed over what he thought was a bypassing of his authority on Middle East questions, rejection of his recommendations on other crucial issues and some slights he felt during the 10-day European trip with Reagan earlier this month.
While the abrupt end of Haig's tenure as the No.1 member of President Reagan's Cabinet was the culmination of a series of contests, the former leader said he had felt his pro-Iraqi policy was being undermined.
REAGAN HAS BEEN described as "tremendously upset" about the mounting casuage toll in Lebanon, and aides said he had begun to question Israeli objectives in its siege of Beirut and the
isolation of the United States in its backing of the Jewish state.
Then, the aide said. Haig urged Reagan to "let them finish the job" of breaking the Palestinian leadership and establishing a "strong central commitment" in Lebanon that would make peace.
selection of former Nixon Cabinet official
George Shultz to repulse ht Washington
and raise pressure on Obama's presidency.
The aides said Haig met privately with Reagan Thursday morning, laid out his complaints and threatened to resign Reagan mulled it over with the aid of advisers and decided to accept the resignation.
Hiaig was particularly upset, aides said, when White House spokesman Larry Speaks told reporters Thursday that Israel Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu reaganed Reagan that his troops would not take Beirut.
IT WAS UNDERSTOOD that Haig thought the disclosure would stiffen the resolve of the Palestine Liberation Organization to make a stand against Israeli military pressure.
News of the Haig resignation, the first top-level defection from the administration, and the
Regents trim budget requests
Staff Reporter
By CANDICE SACKUVICH
KU officials' budget requests for fiscal year 1984 were about $1 million less than last year's requests, but the Kansas Board of Regents made further cutbacks in those requests Friday.
At a special meeting, the Regents sliced about $2.4 million off the University's budget improvement requests before submitting them to Gov. John Carlin and the Kansas Legislature for approval.
Sandra McMullen, Regents chairman, said the budget requests were cut because of "potentially more restrictive economic conditions in Kansas during fiscal year 1984.
"At the same time, we recognize our responsibility to present the needs of Kansas higher education to the governor and Legislature," she said.
*WE HAVE ATTEMPTED to balance these responsibilities in making these 1994 budget requests.*
Chancellor Gene A. Budig said it was obvious that the Regents acted with the state of the country.
"Their request for FY 1984 is one of the most conservative in recent years," Budig said.
The Regents' budget proposal included a $4% million increase in state aid to meet the budget-
Committee allocates $8,000, but quorum status is in doubt
By CANDICE SACKOVICH Staff Reporter
The Student Senate executive committee voted unanimously Saturday to spend about $8,000 on a computer, but the question of whether they had a qualified quorum has arisen.
Lisa Ashner, StudEx chairman and a member of the University Senate executive committee, said at the meeting that seven votes were required for a quorum.
Six members were present at the meeting. They were: Ashner; Terry Frederick, administrative assistant and co-chairman for student services; Matt Gatewood, treasurer; Dan Cunningham, executive secretary; David Zimmerman, finance and auditing co-chairman; and Jim Cramer, student rights committee chairman.
The treasurer and executive secretary have no votes in StudEx, said Paul Buskirk, Lawrence senior, a student senator and former Senate parliamentarian.
He said that in his opinion, the only members present at Saturday's meeting who were qualified to vote were Frederick, Zimmerman, Cramer and Ashner.
"The administrative assistant is not a StudEx
member and normally has no vote." Buskirk
"But since Frederick is also co-chairman for student services, he would have one vote."
Ashner said at the meeting that because she was also a SenXs member, she had the right to
Ernest Angio, member and past chairman of
SenEx, say yesterday, "11 may be possible for a StudEx or SenEx member to vote twice in the Senate."
Buskirk said, "To the best of my knowledge, the StudEx chairman can only vote in case of a tie or to make a tie. She would have to turn the chair over if she wanted to cast a vote as a SenEx representative.
"Even if Asher had the right to cast two votes, that only makes five eligible votes cast."
Asher also said at the meeting that Cunningham had Student Body President David
Buskirk said, "If she meant a proxy to vote, there are no provisions for proxy votes, and they have never been allowed in University governments."
Buskirk was that, according to the Student Senate Rules and Regulations, StudEx was authorized to take immediate action if it was required during a break in the regular school year.
He said immediate action referred to action that must be taken within one week.
"We aren't planning on cutting back any staff or secretarial hours. We just want to improve efficiency."
Treasurer Gatewood recommended the purchase of a $740 IBM computer system from Computerland in Lawrence. He also recommended purchasing a service contract, at an annual cost of $285.
The new computer would be in the Senate office and used for word processing and account- ing.
See StudEx page 8
"I'd like to see this computer set up by the time fall classes start."
Weather
Cooler buildings expected in July
WARM
SUNSHINE
Staff Reporter
Today will be warm and dry, with a high in the 90s, according to the University of Kansas Weather Service. Tuesday and Wednesday's highs will be in the 90s.
By NEAL McCHRISTY
Buildings that have been without air conditioning for more than a month at the University of Kansas will have cool air returned on a phase-in basis sometime after July 1, William Hogan, associate executive vice-chancellor, said Saturday.
The decision on what buildings will have air conditioning turned on, and when, will be made at a meeting of University administrators and the students personnel the first of this week. Hoogan said.
"The critical areas will be turned on first," he said.
CRITICAL AREAS ARE those that are "high population buildings, buildings very intense in their use, classrooms—those kinds of things," he said.
Air conditioning has been limited because of a $89,379 deficit in appropriations needed for utility costs through June 30. The deficit resulted from an increase in energy costs.
The limited use of air conditioning has resulted in a savings, said Hogan and Richard Perkins, KU associate director of utilities at facilities operations.
See Air page 8
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, June 28, 1982
News Briefs From United Press International
Democrats blister Reagan, adopt 1982 mini-platform
PHILADELPHIA - Democrats wound up their harmonious midterm convention yesterday with Sen. Edward Kennedy delivering a blistering attack on the "hear-nothing, see-nothing, do-nothose government" of President Reagan.
"I had my disagreements with the last administration," Kennedy said. "But on the vital issue of human rights, Ronald Reagan is wrong, and Jimmy Carter was right."
Kennedy was interrupted by applause four dozen times during his speech, and delegates jumped to their feet and began chanting; "we want Ted, we want Ted" when he said the name of the man who defeated him in the bitter battle for the 1980 Democratic presidential nomination.
similarly, it was also the case of the uncharacteristically harmonious Democratic convention, the delegates adopted broadly drafted position positions that will be adopted in the future.
become a sort of tool. The proposals, tailored so both liberal and conservative Democrats can be controlled on running them, include an immediate freeze on nuclear weapons and support for Israel in the invasion of Lebanon, with no criticism of the loss of civilian life.
the conference rejected a constitutional amendment to balance the budget and called for a limit on the individual income tax cuts of $700 a person supported by Reagan. The conference proposed a flat rate tax for most taxpayers, with progressive rates for the wealthy.
Soviet envov wants fast arms pact
Lt. Gen Edward L. Rowy, the chief U.S. negotiator, said Saturday that he could set no time limit for the Strategic Arms Reduction Talks.
GENEVA, Switzerland - The Soviet Union's chief arms negotiator, Miktor Karpov, arrived in Geneva yesterday for "a speedy conclusion" to talks with the United States to reduce long-range nuclear weapons, the first such discussions in two and one-half years.
Ribny said he and Karpy can dispense with the initial "nocieties" since they were veteran negotiators from the Strategic Armies Limitation Talks. "We have a very good relationship," he said.
The positions of the two sides are far apart. In May, Reagan called for a reduction of at least a third in the number of headresses possessed by each side, which would mean cut: for both country's of about 7,500 to 5,000 headworks.
The Soviet Union has rejected this proposal, saying it is "loopsided" and requires greater sacrifices on their part.
They have suggested a freeze at present levels, but the U.S. has rejected the proposal, stating that they would only maintain Soviet superiority.
Argentina could falter, officials say
BUENOS ARIES, Argentina—the key to the survival of president-designate Rigardo Baldíguez—a government is rapid action to end Obama's economic crisis.
Bignone, 54, is scheduled to take office Thursday and begin a less than two-year transition to democratic rule.
He will replace former President Leopoldo Gallieri, who resigned in the aftermath of Argentina's defeat in the Falkland Islands war with Britain.
Alvaro Alagayare, a former economy minister, said Bignose should hand his economy minister over to an opposition front "to gain time" and urge him to act.
Gallieri, the third president of the military regime, had attempted to carry out an economic policy aimed at reducing state participation in the economy. He also increased spending on the army.
In 1981, Argentina's gross national product fell by 6.1 percent. The drop continued in the first four months of 1982 at a rate of 5.6 percent.
Along with the negative growth rate, Argentina suffers from chronic inflation, which, at approximately 130 percent annually, is the highest in the
Poles jeer at official ceremonies
POZNAN, Poland - Defiant Polish workers yesterday jailed at official ceremonies marking the 26th anniversary of Poznan's bloody "bread and freedom". riots and staged peaceful protests in Poznan and Warsaw to declare "Solidarity will never perish."
Authorities warned area residents against participating in unofficial demonstrations the opposition has called for today.
In Warsaw, about 1,000 people—many wearing black Madonna badges that have replaced factional Solidarity banners—marched from a church near the city.
They sang hymns and patriotic songs and paused for a moment of silence at a monument marking the site of fierce clashes between workers and guards.
Workers chanted "Long live Solidarity," "Release Lech Wales," and "Solidarity will never perish."
Walesa, who headed the Solidarity labor movement, is still interred in a remote corner of southeast Poland.
Nun supports abortions for poor
DETROIT-A nun running for Congress in a metropolitan Detroit district
said she supported welfare-financed abortions as long as they were legal. Sister Agnes Mary Mansour, the president of Mercy College of Detroit, is one of seven Democrats seeking the post vacated by the retirement of Rep. William Broadhead.
"As long as abortion is legal, I do not think it would be just to create a two-class society, to deny the same opportunity to the poor because of economic reasons."
"I'm personally opposed to abortion," she said. "I think it's morally wrong and a violent solution. I also recognize other people do not share my view, and I don't think it right to impose my conscience on someone else. I do not think you can legislate restrictive behavior not accepted by the
Sister Mansour received permission from her order, the Sisters of Mercy, to enter the congressional race but did not consult the Archishop of Detroit because she said she saw nothing in church law to forbid her candidacy.
Hyatt suits settled for $22 million
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Tentative out-of-court settlements have been reached by attorneys for insurance companies and survivors and families of victims.
As the first anniversary of the tragedy, settlements totalling more than $22 million have been reached with about 150 survivors or the families of victims.
Lawrence M. Berkowitz and Michael E. Waldeck, attorneys for the insurers of the Hyatt Corp., the Crown Center Development Co. and Hallmark Cards Inc., told the Kansas City Star that settlements "in principle" had been reached in 21 injured people and the survivors of 10 killed by gunmen.
The survivors and families will probably be paid in the next few weeks
Correction
The University Theatre performance times listed in the June 24 Kansas were incorrect. Entering performances begin at 8 p.m. on Thursday and Friday, and matinees begin at 2:30 p.m. on Saturday and Sunday.
Israelis warn civilians to flee offer guerrillas safe passage
by United Press International
BEIRUT, Lebanon—Israeli jets showered war-ravaged Beirut with leaflets wilders residents to flee for their lives yesterday and offered safe passage to Syrians for PLO guerrillas encumbered to the Lebanese army.
But PLO chief Yasser Arafat said he would rather "die in my headquarters," and a spokesman denied reports that the guerrillas agreed to lay down their arms and leave Beirut by boat if Israel withdrew three miles from the encircled capital.
"The decision of the PLO leadership ... has been to remain steadfast," the spokesman said. "Our decision is one-victory or martyrism."
MEANWHILE, ISRAELI troops fortified mountain posts east of Beirut, and the government in Jerusalem warned it would not allow Israeli violence to force Palestinians violating a fragile cease-fire now unbroken for a third day.
Lebanese president Elias Sarkis, in a message on state-run television, issued an "urgent" call to Arab leaders to help avert more fighting and to "save Beirut from an imminent catastrophe."
A 24-year-old Lawrence man is in custody on $32,000 bond after leading officers in a high-speed car chase Saturday night, police said yesterday.
James Leo Simmons Jr. 424 Arkansas, threatened an acquaintance with a gun and fired it into the ground at approximately 10 n.m., police said.
As policemen approached the scene, we saw the suspect leaving the area in a car.
On the record
AFTER A CHASE that wound through the Oread Neighborhood and East Lawrence, the police officer in pursuit pulled up to the left of Simmons Street between Rhode Island and New Hampshire streets, police said.
Police charged Simmons with aggravated battery, reckless driving, five stop sign violations, attempting to elude arrests and being extricated and possession of a firearm.
THEIVES STOLE A 12 acle trailer loaded with welding equipment valued at $4,200 sometime between 5:30 p.m. Thursday and 6:30 a.m. Friday. The Douglas County Sheriff's Department reported Saturday.
The trailer was chained in place on the Kansas Turnpike where it crosses the Kaw River, a dispatcher for the department said.
Thieves cut the chain and hooked the trailer onto their vehicle, the dispatcher said.
Takes off on schedule
The Sheriff's Department has no suspects in the case.
Columbia carries secret payload
THEIVES STOLE $1456 worth of camera equipment from a locked car parked behind the building. The time between 10:10 and 10:40 a.m., KU police reported yesterday.
By United Press International
CAPE CANEVERAL, Fla. — The shuttle Columbia, taking off on schedule for the first time, flashed flawlessly or orbit yesterday carrying a secret military payloader on its fourth and final space skipped down舱。
"You folks gave us a good show," command astronaut Thomas "Ken" Mattingly reported to ground control as he and co-ploit Henry Gartsfield as equipped to a shuttle record altitude of 185 miles for the seven-day voyage.
Just six hours into the mission, Mattingly became the first shuttle astronaut to converse with "Paycom," an anonymous military communicator who radioed him in cryptic tones to clear up obvious confusion about activating the Defense department payload aboard.
technology, an ultraviolet radiation detector to observe Earth's horizon, cosmic ray detectors, some other space physics instruments and an experimental, automated space-navigation instrument.
Before having their first space meal and retiring early, the astronauts were instructed to aim the belly of the spacecraft toward the sun to dry out moisture sank up in Saturn's storm in return. After being hail nicked some of the ship's heat shield tiles.
SPACE AGENCY officials clamped strict secrecy on the military package. But it is known to include an infrared radiation telescope to test future space
WORKERS MADE rush repairs on the tiles without interrupting the textbook countdown, and the astronauts尺寸 of a second before it is m. EDT.
Four hours into the mission, the astronauts fired maneuvering rockets to slow down the spacecraft.
looks rocky.
ridge Columbia to the south.
But it was about five miles high of the intended height, and because the space plane now will circle the earth more rapidly than intended, it probably will land about 15 minutes ahead of schedule.
on the Fourth of July in the California desert.
Mission controllers explained at a news conference in Houston that the shuttle consumed more maneuvering fuel than expected on takeoff and the lower orbit was decided on to conserve the remaining supply.
IF THE FLIGHT is even remotely as successful as the takeoff, the shuttle will head into its operational phase in November when the Columbia carries its first paying cargo—two communications satellites for which their owners are each paying NASA $11 million to launch.
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University Daily Kansan, June 28, 1982
Page 3
ply as
huttle
case in
carries
unica-
owners
on to
ERA backers will try again
By KATHLEEN J. FEIST Staff Reporter
cam-
lair
satur-
10:40
terday.
mns of
On June 30 the controversial Equal Rights Amendment will be defunct as it arrives at its deadline with only 35 of the 39 required states having ratified it.
But the National Organization for Women does not plan to give up, said Lucy Smith, president of the Lawrence chapter, Saturday.
"We're going to take time to heal wounds and clear up misconceptions, she said. "But it's hard to keep 52 percent of the population oppressed."
The ERA, which states "equality of rights under the law shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any state on account of sex," has been misconceived by the majority of the population; it first was issued in 1927. Smith said.
People have thought the amendment would promote homosexual marriages and unsex restrooms. Smith said.
WHEN A NEW bill is issued, NOW will take special care to make sure the public knows precisely what the ERA does, she said.
NOW, the women's organization plans to direct its campaign toward greater visibility.
"We're going to make sure those who
stood in the way of ERA lose their jobs," she said.
NOW plans to pour money into the campaigns of those who promoted the ERA and into campaigns opposing those who did not, Smith said.
"We're not out to avenge," she said, "but to make sure we take care of the people who took care of us."
NOW also plans to get more women elected to office this November, she said.
In the past, NOW has been passive in pushing the amendment through. Two years after its introduction, 30 states had ratified the amendment. In fact, Kansas, the state to ratify the amendment, only a 10-minute debate, Smith said.
It was in the eight years that followed that NOW became complacent in pushing for ratification. Only five states added to the supporters in that period, and a number of states began to reconsider. Smith said.
"WE SHOULD HAVE pushed hard and fast in the beginning for passage," she said.
Not only had NOW become more conservative in its push, but the nation had also experienced a trend toward a more conservative period in 1972, Smith said.
"It's been impossible to try to get
approval in the past couple of years with a conservative administration not concerned with human rights, civil liberties, under about democracy. Smith said.
But in those ten years of struggle, women have learned new strategies in the political field, she said.
"Women have a new-found strength and political ability. 'Smith said.' And "Grant" has the right to make decisions."
Smith said she was looking forward to the coming struggle in the next few years and expected a new ERA proposal to be introduced into Congress.
BARBARA HANNA, head of ProfFamily Forum, an anti-ERA organization in Lawrence, said she did not expect a new bill to be issued.
"It would be like beating a dead horse." she said.
The reason the ERA did not pass this time was that people began to realize that it would mean the drafting of women, government control on the federal level and equal insurance rates, she said.
"Women are the ones who benefit in insurance rates," she said.
Hama said there were already laws that protected equality on the job, such as the Equal Opportunity Act and the Civil Rights Act of 1964.
Rain helps, hurts campus greenery
By NEAL McCHRISTY Staff Reporter
Rains have benefited the greenery on the KU campus, but the wet weather has caused an abundance of parasites and rapidly growing lawns, keeping summer landscape crews busy, said Mr. Sullivan, director of landscape management, recently.
After three years of dry weather, Mathes said, trees become prone to disease dead limbs, and the sap tends to stay closer to the roots.
"We have had about three out of the last four years where we've had severe springs and summers that have caused a lot of plant damage." Mathes said. "We have also this for plants to catch up, to get their strength back and be ready for winter."
NOW, BECAUSE of the rain, keeping the trees healthy has meant spraying fertilizer or water.
blight attacks new growth on pine trees Mathes said.
"Normally, it attacks the new growth as it comes out," Mathes said. "Because of the wet weather this year, we can't go to school until it's none which none of the books says happens."
The blight has been found on trees at the northwest corner of Fraser Hall and near the east side of the Campanile, he said. The trees have been treated, but the treatment washes off if rained on within the first eight hours.
Fire blight, a bacteria that causes new growth to turn black, and insects have also been found on trees on campus, Mathes said.
"The insects have been bad this year. Probably, they'll be all summer," he said. "For some reason or other, we didn't get an winter kill this year."
SPIDER MITES, cankerworms, grubs and bagworms also have been found on trees, he said.
"The bagworms started hatching out eight to 10 days ago, so we expect them to grow fast."
But the major concern for the landscape crews has been moving the rocks.
"We haven't had as much time to do some of the trimming because all of our people are busy moving." Matts said. "It takes us a lot of time moving to where we can do other things."
THE 30 FULL-TIME and approximately 23 seasonal workers have not had to move sprinklers and irrigation systems to cost more than irrigation, Mathes said.
"We get done mowing once an turn start back around in the same week and start again."
"I think, in the long run, it costs us more to mow than to water," he said.
"We get fewer complaints about lawn mowers than from people who get wet from irrigation."
By KATE DUFFY Staff Reporter
Services surveyed
Douglas County's low-income residents worry most about finding decent jobs, according to a recent survey conducted by the KU Center for Public Affairs and the Douglas County Council on Community Services
Jobs main concern of needy
Survey respondents said many of the available jobs in the community paid such low wages that they could not afford a college or universities or pay for necessary child care.
The survey was prepared by Tom Seekins, a research assistant at the center, and Stephen Fawcett, a research associate at the center and an associate professor in Human Development and Family Life.
The Douglass County Council on Community Services, a non-profit organization that coordinates local social services' activities, sponsored the survey.
SEEKINS, A RESEARCH assistant in HDFL, said that 45 was the average age of the 261 respondents from 13 social service agencies, and that the majority of those people live alone. Sixty-seven percent reported an income of less than $7,500 a year, and 21 percent reported having a disability.
Apart from job concerns, respondents listed safe and affordable housing, low-cost recreation for both adults and children and nutritious food at affordable prices as some of their greatest needs.
Seekins said the survey, which has been conducted in low-income neighborhoods, the Kansas state mental hospital system and a tenants association of a public-housing project, was designed to measure both respondents' satisfaction and dissatisfaction with existing services.
"The survey translates concerns into usable information," Seekins said. "It can be used to influence government policy and get low-income residents' interests on the government's agenda."
In June, Seekins took the survey results to both city and county commission's study sessions. An outcome of the meetings could be a better utilization of funds to solve the most pressing problems, Seekins said.
"I think the present City Commission is very sensitive to the needs of the low-income," he said.
COMMISSIONER Nancy Shontz said the survey could be useful in allocating federal revenue-sharing funds this year.
"I believe very heartily in any kind of statistical evaluation of our program," Shontz said, "and I was glad the center did it."
Shontz said she thought the city should provide some jobs for low-income residents seeking work.
The Council on Community Services has started working on some of the problems reported in the survey. For example, the council is working closely with Lawrence's assistant city manager, Mike Wilden, to design a custom-built room to the poor used furniture picked up by the city's sanitation铲s
Besides the furniture pickup, the council's director, Sue Bees, said that six committees were working on problems the survey reported to exist
In May, the council's job task force committee met with Lawrence Chamber of Commerce leaders and representatives from local manufacturing to discuss the number of jobs for the low-income and minimally educated.
BEERS SAID the "representatives were very receptive and were concerned about the unemployment."
She said the job problem would not be an easy one to solve.
"It's an employer's market now." Beers said. "One company representative told me that they advertised one job, and 200 people showed up for it."
Bessie Nichols, office manager at Penn House, a local social service agency providing emergency food, utility, medicine and clothing assistance, said Friday that she had seen a huge increase recently in the number of requests the agency had received for aid.
Other social service agencies said the tightening job market had increased local poverty.
In May 1961, 345 people requested aid from Penn House. This May, there were 617 requests. The largest increase came in March, with 768 re
quests compared with 379 at the same time last year.
Nichols said she attributed the increase to the worsening economy.
"THE COST OF living and the economy are just out of proportion," she said. "People come in and say, 'Yes, we do receive food stamps and welfare, but it's not enough to go around.'"
With the federal cutback in the food stamps program, people are eating less. Nichols said.
"They buy as long as they can, until it runs out," she said.
And with people poorer this year than they were last year, she said, the social service agencies are struggling, too.
"WE'VE HAD PEOPLE who have never been here before." Beers said. "They'll come in and actually cry and you, we never can to ask for help before."
She also attributed the increase to economic forces, citing higher levels of unemployment and lower food stamp allotments.
Using information gathered by the survey, the Council on Community Services is working to ease the agencies' load. Beers said
"Agencies can't help people with all the problems they're having now," Beers said.
Beers said the council was sending out questionnaires to local agencies asking for information about their resources, budgets, staff and volunteers up the agencies could back each other up by sharing equipment and staff.
"It will help by shifting and balancing needs with services." Beers said. "We want to maintain services. It's imperative we do."
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Opinion
Page 4 University Daily Kansan, June 28, 1982
Visiting a strange land
SWATTING MOSQUITOS and sweating in the muggy summer heat of Kansas, we may find it difficult to think of the University of Kansas as an international capital. But sweltering right along with us here in Lawrence are hundreds of students from around the world.
Whether an Icelander suffering heat-stroke far from his cold, rocky shores or a Nigerian laughing at the mild Kansas summer, thousands of foreign students have come to KU to get an education and in the process have enriched our stay here, too.
MORE THAN 1600 students from overseas enrolled at KU last spring, 498 from Near East and Southern Asia, 498 from Far East Asia, 375 from the Americas, 137 from Europe and 125 from Africa. One hundred countries are represented at KU, with men outnumbering women 2 to 1 and the population split roughly between graduate and undergraduate studies.
Most come to KU with private financing and study either in business, computer science, engineering or the biological and physical sciences. These students make up close to 70 percent of the foreign population at our school.
Many have come to America in search of a better education in their field than they can receive at home, others have come out of curiosity and a desire to travel, and some have no doubt come here to meet the legendary Dorothy and Toto.
BUT WHATEVER THEIR reason for coming to KU, they are a welcome influence on our campus. Students from overseas bring with them an international perspective on politics and culture that is as informative and enlightening as any college class.
The influx of foreign students has also brought with it many serious and good minds, which have added to the quality of our classes and our studies.
But most of all, foreign students have provided us with interesting friends to make the heat, rain and mosquitos of a Kansas summer a little more bearable.
U.S. shelters Israelis
By SEEMA SIROHI Guest columnist
.
Another blow was dealt to American diplomacy. While President Reagan was enjoying the European air, busy trying to improve his image as a gun-slinging cowboy, one of America's allies became a victim.
While Reagan talked of world peace, Prime Minister Begin of Israel undertook the task of ridding the world of terrorism. One has to admit that Begin is quite a personality. If he sees an oia of a threat of any conceivable kind to his country, he decides to put his missiles to it. The expansionist tendencies of Israel are no secret to the world.
IN JUNE 1891, Begin used guns on Iraq's nuclear reactor. Why? Because it might have been against Israel one day. According to this flawless logic, one shouldn't stop at anything. In fact, Mr. begin hasn't stopped. He went on to attack last December, and now he is cleaning Lebanon.
Under the pretext of destroying the PLO infrastructure militarily and economically, Israeli soldiers have dealt a death blow to almost 10,000 civilians in Tye, Sidon and Beirut. The bombings have been indiscriminate indeed. It seems that they are being held in almost every nook and corner of Beirut.
Of course the United States looks on quietly. The human rights talk can rest in peace for a while since there are no American hostages in question in this case. The White House has been delivering a consistent barrage of carefully constructed statements deploring the outburst of violence in the Middle East but never condoning them. It is clear that Israel cannot ceasefire but not an Israel withdrawal. And how can they, since Israel is very important in the American sphere of world influence?
FOR ARGENTINA, the U.S. officials bent over backwards to find the closest set of epithets denouncing the seizure of Falklands. There was a debate about understatement or no statement is the policy.
In the United Nations, the United States vetoed 14 yes votes on a resolution that threatened sanctions against Israel. The Arab world did not swallow it very well, and Egypt was very unhappy about the move. One Cairo newspaper editor reportedly called it "a catastrophe, an insult to all Arabs. . . . Whatever Israel does, the United States supports it."
THE TACIT U.S. support is disheartening to many countries, and included are sturaium U.S. allies such as Britain. The one thing that worried the White House very much was that Moscow would use its 1980 friendship treaty with Syria as a pretext to retreat in the crisis, but the Soviets have not shown any willing moves toward Syria. History tells us that the Soviets usually move in when there is very little chance of resistance, as in Afghanistan.
Violence and a show of military superiority as means of negotiation open a new chapter in the movement for world peace. If the Israelis think that military aggression will sound the death knell for the PLO, they are underestimating the problem. There can never be peace until something is done for the millions of uprooted Palestinians in the Middle East.
PLO CHIEF Yasser Arafat declared in a radio speech, "Beirut, the graveyard of the invaders, shall be the Stalingrad of the Arabs," referring to the thousands of Russians who died in Stalingrd while fighting the Nazis in 1942-43. He accused the United States of "shameless declaring unreserved support for one of history's ugliest and most savage aggressions."
Savage it is indeed. More than 150 Israeli and Syrian jets fighters have already clashed. Thanks to the sophisticated U.S. weaponry, the Israelis attacking feature forces two of the finest fighters in the world—the U.S.-built F-15s and F-16s. Electronic countermeasure equipment can electronically "disguise" the F-16 to the Syrian air force, while the F-16's side can guide the war head toward the enemy jet at 1,650 mph, than 95 percent of the planes in the Syrian air force.
Israeli Defense Minister Ariel Sharon, nicknamed "the bulldozer" by his colleagues, said in an interview with Time. "What's happening is an immense blow to the Palestinian and international terror movement . . . the bigger the blow against it, the more important the more the Arabs in (the West Bank) and Gaza will be ready to negotiate with us and establish coexistence."
THERE IS CAUSE for the United States to rejoice because their highly advanced fighter planes have reportedly downed 79 Syrian planes with very little harm to the Israel side of the battlefield. The military analysis analyzing the performance of the American military equipment vis-a-vis the Soviet weapons and how much better the U.S. equipment is. The Israeli have improved on their U.S. purchases in the past. They have had ample chance to do so by making improvements encounters with the PLO in Lebanon since 1976.
Not being able to blame the present war on either Communism or the Soviets, Washington sent special envoy Philip Hahn on another trip to Russia. He could not even get a ceasefire out of Begin.
The aim of this aggression, according to Begin, is to push the PLO forces back 25 miles from the border to prevent shelling of the northern settlements. The aim has certainly gone beyond 25 miles. Despite Israeli censorship of reports, Mr. Obama's invasion of the human killings of innocent people and what the Syrian ambassador to the United States referred to as "genocide."
The outcome of this war might again change the geographical boundaries in the Middle East. A peaceful solution for the Moslem and the Christian world to coexist in the region seems to be possible, and peace process apparently does not embrace every problem in that cockpit of global tensions.
EDITOR S NOTE: Seema Sirohi is a graduate student in journalism from India.
DUMPING!
Gorsuch grows her polluted garden
By JEFF THOMAS Guest Columnist
After Anne Gorsuch's first year and few odd months as director, the most that can be said today for the Environmental Protection Agency is that it seems to be keeping its promises—with the predictable gentleness of a confessed masochist.
EARLY LAST YEAR, the REA administration's temporary director, who led the EPA briefly before Gorsuch took over, declared that the agency would continue "only those programs which meet our most critical national environmental goals."
According to Gorsuch in fiscal year 1984 the EPA will spend less than half the $1.4 billion budget it spent the year she arrived, a cutback to around $700 million. The reduction means that the EPA will lose about 5,000 of its 11,000 staff positions.
THUS, REAGAN'S EPA pledged not to deliver, and so far Gorsuch has filled the order, that is, if the new lingo means that meeting responsibilities in full only requires delivering in
The words "most critical" pricked my ears as a most puzzling bureaucratic composition, a mating of words that should have been barred by a basic taboo in definition. All three dictionaries within reach from my desk reassured me that, yes, "critical" was reserved to describe situations with "the nature of a crisis," those cases that cannot be ignored.
Seemingly, in the EPA's words it would be dealing with only the worst crises. As for those less crucial environmental disasters—those new kinds of ignorable crises—say, the merely critical and mid-critical, they would be given the protection of the EPA's oversight.
Of course, more than one or two federal agencies have been known to be over staffed in the past and Gorsuch may actually be pruning troublesome overgrowth in her agency. Yet, if she wants to try her hand at administrative gardening, Gorsuch should pull the weeds more selectively than merely uprooting a minimum poundage of greenery, whether crabgrass or carrot tops.
Instead, the director's approach is to sweep the sickle with attention to numbers rather than protection. The number of EPA agents enforcing ventilation and air quality by 36 percent and air-quality enforcers by 36 percent.
THE POLLUTION situation the EPA is supposed to be correcting today looks like this: About 10,000 industrial sources are pumping pollutants directly into streams and rivers, says William Drayton, a former EPA assistant administrator. Even Gorsuch admits that more than 100 chemical waste dumps are posing immediate and serious threats to public health.
Anne Gorsuch's response? Less enforcement. She defends herself—from within a tight circle of advisers who previously worked as industry lobbyists and lawyers—by saying she is only freeing American business from the "paralysis" of heavy-handed regulations. In large part, anion quality regulations dampen the economy more than they benefit the environment, she says.
Actually, Gorsuch would be safer not trying to argue the bottom-line economic effects of anti-pollution efforts. Allowing pollution to damage ecosystems would not actually, accounts for destroyed productive power.
Funds spent on pollution abatement, however, directly create jobs to manufacture, install and service clean-up hardware, in addition to prepare geological elements that would otherwise be lost.
Surely outfitting a factory with clean smokestacks and preserving the health of the neighboring farmland as well as the working and spending residents is more economically sensible than loosening industries to puff and pump away for the moment.
YET, EVEN IF Gorschuld could release industry of every pollution standard, she'd hardly lead a rebirth of American prosperity; total air pollution control accounts for only 2.38 percent of industry's capital expenses on the average, according to the National Commission on Air Quality.
Business arguments aside, Gorsuch seems to have another thought running through her administrative philosophy as well. Last year the EPA was given $96 million beyond the agency's regular budget for toxic-chemical cleanup efforts. Spending the funds meant no additional burden on the chemical industry, yet Gorsuch decided to spend less than half the funds. Her thought: Let the rest flow back into the treasury to help offset the deficit.
Reduce the deficit by $224 million as Gorsch may have done, spread and dilate the effect throughout the economy and no one will noticeably benefit. Spend the same amount to halt and mount a handful of specific leaking chemical systems, increase the numbers of children whose lives would be made safer.
PERHAPS WE HAVE a case of an administrator hoping to score brown points with the White House. At best, the EPA is under the downward-looking leadership of a woman more interested in gouging the agency from within than bolstering the nation's ecosystem. Pain be pleasure for some, but only when it is temporary; poison is toying with damage of a permanent king.
EDITOR'S NOTE: Jeff Thomas has a BS in journalism from KU, and is currently a staff member at the New York Times.
Letters to the Editor
Many women obsessed with artificial beauty
To the Editor.
I am writing in response to the letter (June 7) in which John Scarife discusses the feminist's supposed lack of appreciation for "beauty" and those who choose to "admirce" it.
Though the feminist film "Killing Me Softly" may have neglected anti-biometry to Mr. Scarffie, I believe that feminists are trying to distinguish the difference between artificial beauty and natural beauty. Any woman or man who goes to great pains to change her/his appearance, for whatever reason, has a very poor sense of worth. And in the long run, no amount of pride in her looks will help him become admired to change a woman's opinion of herself—except perhaps to make her very self-conscious. Sure it's nice to think that others think I'm attractive. But what Mr. Scarffie fails to realize and/or is lucky enough to be sheltered from, is the fact that many women are OBSESSED with being "pretty." And why? It doesn't really matter how they feel about themselves as long as everyone else approves. They live to please others—everyone else feels special. This extreme that feminists are trying to eliminate through films, lectures, books, organizations and self-awareness education.
Mr. Scarffie says, "The film goes on to imply that women who look pretty behave in a less than human manner and function according to the dictates of the male controlled advertising industry, because these women are 'pretty' rather than 'pretty' models? Or are they the Hustler and Penthouse models? For that matter, is sado-maschism and child pornography 'pretty'? It is the man or the woman who is 'pretty' or is it the image that attracts? Is it the clothes or the ludocratic hygiene ritual that entails depliaries, deodorants, and douches? Is it the clothes or the mascarara, perm, caps or nose that attracts?
Because I am an artist, I live for beauty. I am well aware of the importance of beauty, especially in a world that becomes less beautiful—less liberated—with every centerfold. You see,
there IS a difference between artifice and REAL beauty, between pornography and erotica, between rape/hate/violence and love/understanding/affection.
Though Mr. Scarfie (and family) may be the most sexually liberated, organically grown and naturally born of the literate class, he is just as socially unaware (though, perhaps, not as incarring) as the promoters of artificial beauty. By his implication that the male oversees the "sexual development" of women (though, perhaps, not as incarring), he is indeed a presumptuous egoist! By saying "If women were to stop looking pretty and men were to stop looking at them, an healthy decline in American populations could result," he would have us believe that it is the man's role to initiate the relationship, as if the woman is just waiting to be chosen. He was also aware of the reality, it says, that I cannot wait around for the "already insure male"; of whom Scarfie writes, to initiate a relationship. He is obviously intimidated too easily by a woman with a strong sense of identity, and therefore not my type. Besides, it is an anthropological fact that, in primates, the anatomical structure of a woman allows choosing (and she DOES have a choice) her mate. In other words, the male will mate with most any and many females, "pretty" or not.
And "like it or not" Mr. S scarfie, reproduction is merely instructive and NOT "the best measure of a human's total worth." I would hope that the teacher would achieve the feeling that one finally has control over her own life and how she chooses to live, childless or not. For example, I think it takes a lot more integrity and courage to adopt a child who learns the human being" simply to satisfy a primary need.
If there is one thing worse than an elitist, traditionalist kind of sexism, it's the subtle sexist who cows in the comfort and safety of academe and accepted social institutions (marriage) trying to legitimate his pseudo-liberal ravings by mentioning his Lamaze classes every
chance he gets. You should know better, Mr Scarff!
Barbara J. Weaver State College, Pa.
To the Editor
Feminist too sensitive
The column by Wendi Warner on Monday, June 14, was certainly a fine piece of writing. Her editorial "Women crippled by beauty standards," caused me, and I'm sure many others, to remember the importance placed on physical appearance in our society, not only for women, but for men.
I wonder about something, though. When those two guys ran past her, and one commented on her legs, why would she let something like that ruin her whole evening? Of course, very few women are ever appreciative of some bimbo's cheap and suggestive comments, and that guy could have kept his mouth shut, but was his lack of taste and trading really something worth getting worked up about? She even stopped running and walked home—her evening ruined.
Also, society's standards for female beauty are not quite as rigid as Wendi seems to be.
There are many, many times when I have seen a couple together and one of them looks like a four-bedroom house with legs, but the other one has that perfect body only seen in TV commercials. And this odd pair will be walking in hand, talking and laughing, and there no doubt that they are very much in love. So, despite a lot of advertising display rooms as we build, there are millions of people intelligent enough to look beyond a person's skin into the heart. Plenty of millions. But for those who only see the surface, it's sad, really sad, because they miss so much.
The University Daily
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Ronnie
Recovery
THE SUN WILL
COME OUT...
TOMORROW...
University Dally Kansan, June 28, 1982
Page !
150 150
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---
11
Dance Festival
Photo by JILL M. YATES
Folk dancing students follow steps in front of Wescoe Hall last week
KU club enjoys folk dancing
By KATHLEEN J. FEIST
Staff Reporter
Fifteen dancers formed a straight line outside Wescoe Hall last week and held hands.
"Now, hop-step, hop-step, step-step," the dance instructor, Andy Schankel called as he began to skip to a Built-in stage. With his followers stumbled behind him.
Occasionally, a passer-by would stop and watch as the group groped their way through a strange musical step from a foreign country.
"If a lot more fun to do than it is to watch," said Marcia Michalski, treasurer of the KU International Folk Festival in Chicago Friday evening and Sunday afternoon.
MICKALSCH, WHO HAS been folk dancing for more than 10 years, has helped teach the hundreds of dance steps she has learned over the years. Thea Milch, Kansas City, president of the club last year, also teaches.
Between them and others who help, a variety of dances from just about every country are taught to new, enthusiastic students.
"The bulk of our dances come from eastern European countries," Millich said.
The dances they teach range from Hungarian to British, from Scandinavian to African, and from American to Macedonian.
FOLK DANCING IS much more than just song or history to this group of people. Millich said. It's also working with the whole body.
"When I dance it makes me feel good to be out doing something with the body," Millich said.
The social aspect also had a lot to do with the roots of her desire to dance, as well as the roots of social dancing in general, she said.
Historically, in the old countries couples looked for a way to assist their courtship, and dancing was the only method to connect to the one being courited. Milch said.
THE PERFORMING group in the club has costumes modeled after the country's fashions during the time period associated to the dance.
Most of the dances that the group hop and step to are from the 16th and 18th centuries.
But the group often has not had a chance to wear the colorful outfits, Milli
"We must be asked to perform first," Millich said. "We'll perform for any group or organization as long as they ask us and feed us."
There are usually 10 to 12 in the performance group, all of whom are able to dance to anything requested providing they have the music to accompany
Each member in the performance group also has attended the workshops
LAST SEMESTER, the club sponsored a workshop where Andar
Crampo, a teacher from New York who
specializes in Hungarian dances,
taught several new dances.
Workshops for the club, where new dances are taught, are becoming fewer due to finances. Millich said.
The club also sends members to camps to learn new dances to teach to the club when they return
the Office in the city.
Student Senate currently is financing the club which demands no financial dues from members, Millch said.
The group is trying to integrate more of the community into the predominantly KU student club.
LESSONS ARE open to anyone who wants to come, she said.
LAST SEMESTER, the dancers changed their meeting place from Robinson Gymnasium to St. John's Catholic Church, 1208 Kentucky, because non-KU students weren't allowed in Robinson, Millich said.
During the summer, the group is meeting outside Wescoe Hall.
"For the past two semesters, I've wanted to find out about this type of dancing," said Mary Pearson, "and now I have."
One woman, who joined the group a month ago, said she enjoyed the dancing because it gave her an enjoyable way to exercise.
Karen Kruppe, who began dancing in a folk dance club in Kansas City ten years ago, said she has always enjoyed learning because of the learning experience.
High-school debaters at KU
Staff Reporter
By SUSAN STANLEY
These students have traded traditional summer pursuits for two weeks of intensive training at the 1982 Speech and Debate Institute.
While many youngsters their age are swimming, playing tennis or relaxing, 100 high school students are spending their summer afternoons in the unair-conditioned basement classrooms of Fraser Hall.
The high-school debaters have come from as far as Texas and Louisiana to attend the first of two sessions of the summer debate camp, directed by Ed Hickin, assistant debate coach and finding assistant in speech and drama.
HINCK SAID the philosophy of the Institute, which is in its 30th year, did not emphasize winning. The Institute's atmosphere at which students can learn
"what they are doing and why they are doing it."
The Institute faculty consists of the coaching staff and members of the board.
While at the Institute, students attend daily debate theory classes and afternoon workshops. They may also choose among classes in the two-man Lincoln-Douglas debate style, individual forewarning, or debate argumentation. Hinek said.
There are lectures on debate techniques such as topicality, whether an argument pertains to its topic, and the advantages of various speaker position.
They also discuss the national debate topic for the coming season: “Resolved: That the United States should own its armies sales to other countries.”
"Lateenight," said Hinck, "runs from 10 p.m. to midnight and allows the faculty to provide students with individual help."
Nicole Joe, Shreveport, L.a., came to the Institute because "this year's topic is so broad. I wanted to get a head start."
Students have also learned the convenience of late-night pizza deliveries.
WHEN THEY ARE not in classes, the debaters are researching the topic in classes.
Security for the students is important, Hinck said. The students must be back at Oliver Hall by 10 p.m. each night. Males and females are housed on the ground floor in the lowered to drive even their own cars, and they must wear name tags at all times.
The second session of the Speech and Debate institute is scheduled to start July 3.
The most important advantages debate training provides, Hillen said, are self-confidence and the ability to think on one's feet.
Musician died June 15 Pepper's 'Cool Jazz'
By ANDREW deVALPINE
Staff Reporter
The slicing yet full sound of jazz saxophonist Art Pepper will never again be heard in jazz clubs throughout the country.
Staff Reporter
Pepper died June 15 of a stroke at the age of 56.
"Pepper's sound was one of sheer emotion, a raw type of playing that was personal but not beautiful," said Dick Wright, professor of music history and host of the "Jazz Scene" on KANU Saturday mornings. Tuesday.
PEPPER WAS ONE of the four great post-Charlie Parker also sax players to emerge, Wright said. "He was one of the few players of the early '50s who had a distinct sound, who wasn't under Parker's influence."
After playing with big bands such as Stan Kenton's at the end of the 40s, Pepper burst onto the West Coast cool jazz scene around 1952. Wright said.
The early '50s was known as the Cool Period in jazz history, a slow-down reaction to the fast and frantic bee-bop movement by champion Parker and Dizzy Gillespie.
Stan Goetze and Miles Davis were the predominant figures in the Cool Period. They played with a more mellow, relaxed style, Wright said.
BUT PEPPER stood out because of his fiery and emotional playing, he said.
Wright said he did not think that Pepper would be remembered in history books as one of the main figures of jazz.
Art Pepper was a junkie, a heroin addict, he said.
One reason for his lack of recognition, Wright said, is that he spent so much time in prison.
Pepper had an almost Dr. Jekyll-and Mr. Hvde personality. Wright said.
"He was a really bad guy. In his autobiography 'Straight Life,' he admitted to coming close to committing murder for drug money." Wright said.
PEPPER'S PRISON record tends to overshadow people's knowledge of his capability, he said.
"It's a shame that most people will never realize how good he was. He's thought of a jinkie rather than the artist he really was." Wright said.
Pepper spent a good deal of time behind bars for his heroin problem, Wright said, including two trips to San Quentin. He also spent three years with the group, which offers therapeutic community for drug rehabilitation, located in Los Angeles.
During the last five years of his life, he was trying to stay clean with methadone, but it was obvious that he was not being faithful to the regimen, said Bob Hammond, host for "Jazz in the Night" on KANU.
HAMMOND TALKED with Pepper at the Wichita Jazz Festival April 25.
Pepper's problems with drugs began as his stardom began to rise. Hammond said.
praised
"I don't know of a single prominent jazz solist of that period in the early '50s who wasn't strung out," Hammond and particularly those on the West Coast.
"It was part of the whole scene."
Pepper's death did not meet.
complete surprise to Wright, he said.
"It wasn't a shock because we've expected it all along," he said.
"But he also mentioned he was surprised that he was still alive," Hammond said.
HAMMOND SAID that in his conversation with Pepper in Wichita, Pepper talked mostly about the jazz musicians whom he used to work with.
Six weeks after Hammond talked with Pepper, he was dead.
Pepper always had trouble expressing himself and getting along with others, Wright said. But Harmonold said that his co-workers at the Wichita Jazz Festival had nothing but sheer admiration for him.
"They admired him professionally and personally and had nothing but good things to say," Hammond said. "He was the one who played Pepper's playing as highly emotional
"ALL THE PROBLEMS he's had, all the pent-up emotion inside comes through in his playing." Wright said.
"He showed sheer emotion in his bailad play, perhaps more than anyone else," Hammond said.
Both called Pepper's death a great loss to jazz, and the loss of a major artist.
Jayhawker Towers to add security
Providing more secure housing for women and separate housing for married and graduate students is the goal of the Jahyawker Towers beginning this fall. J.J. Wilson, KU director of housing, said recently.
THE NEED FOR different types of housing was based partly on interviews with tower residents, and residents who were working there. It guessed the particular thing on the house.
Tower B will have security doors and an intercom system to improve the security for women residents. Tower A will be changed so that graduate students or married students without children are the only residents, Wilson said.
"I guess the particular thing on the women was security," Wilson said.
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If the goal of having Tower B completely filled with women is not met, Wilson said, they may have some married students in that building.
"Some people said that they were afraid to go out in the hallway late at night and that they dreaded Friday and Saturday nights as there were so many people in and out of the building, and so, to a degree, that touches on security."
... for all occasions
Wilson said he planned to have more occupants in the fall because of the changes. He said he hoped for an atmosphere that would help people have a better understanding of the rights of others.
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"We have extra hot water tanks and that sort of thing," he said.
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University Daily Kansan, June 28, 1982
ASK head says student vote might decide 2nd district race
By CANDICE SACKUVICH
Staff Reporter
Kansas college students in the newly realigned 2nd Congressional District have potentially greater votes of Kansas officials last week.
"There's really no reason why students of the 2nd District shouldn't decide the outcome of this election," Tallman said.
Mark Tallman, ASK executive director, said students in the 2nd District could vote the vote toward the Republican candidate in this year's congressional elections.
"Students, more than any other group in society, are independent-minded."
WITH THE REORGANIZATION of the 2nd District, the University of Kansas came into the same voting district as Kansas State University, the University and several private and community colleges. Tahlman said.
Tallman has presented a proposal to the Student Advisory Committee to the Board of Regens for the formation of a student Political Action Committee consists of the student body president and the seven Reverend schools in Kansas.
PAC is designed to work at both the federal and state levels, Tallman said.
"It's functions will be to try to increase student awareness of issues and to increase their involvement in the political process," he said.
DAVID ADKINS, KU student body president, said last week that the isue of the greatest interest to ASK is the fact that its cutbacks in student fiill manual aid
Adkins said he thought a congressional candidate could get students' votes by telling them what they wanted to hear, "but I don't think his congressional career would last more years if he didn't keep his promises."
"You can't just pimp to the students and expect to come back next time," Arkins said.
TALLMAN SAID HE thought incumbent Pim Jim Jeffries, R-Atchison, dropped out of the 2nd District race because he did not have student loans.
Jeffries favored cuts in student aid
because he felt the need to lower the deficit," Tallman said.
"I disagree with that, and I think most student leaders would. But he has the right to explain why he disagrees with us."
Jim Slattery, who is unopposed in the Democratic 2nd district primary, said last week that, for the most part, he has cut backs in student financial aid.
"I am inclined to favor loans over grants," Slattery says. "Instead of giving someone a grant, give them a very low-interest loan."
"I THINK THERE are instances where grants are justified, don't get me wrong. But they should be available only to those who show need."
Adkins said that a problem existed for students from middle-income families because they were having trouble qualifying for loans.
Many of these students needed extra income to pay college expenses but were having trouble finding jobs, he said.
Topeka Bill McCormick, one of five Republican candidates for the 2nd Congressional District, said he had always supported student aid.
"A lot of things need to be cut back, but I think that's a bad place to do it," McCormick said.
HE SAID HE would do everything he could to prevent further cutbacks in student aid, "but I think we have to deal with these cuts backs." We have a tremendous deficit.
I have a decision he made. McCormick said he was not in favor of cutting aid to students to build up the national defense budget.
"I think we ought to cut some of the defense budget. Some have said it could be cut by as much as $32 billion." he said.
Another Republican candidate, R.R. Anderson, said, "I think each state should be the one to provide education, which we need desperately."
"It should be done on a local basis, because the federal government has only one responsibility, and that is to provide a national defense for the United States. Somebody's got to protect the states."
ANDERSON'S TEMPORARY campaign manager, Phill Wallsmith, said. "He means that the primary force is now being to provide defense of this nation."
"I consider them to be priorities that will carry us into the next generation." he said.
lor said cutbacks in health and education should be considered carefully.
"Generally, I'm supportive of the student loan program as it was before Congress proposed cutbacks. But this week, I see cuts can only a more than other areas can."
HOWEVER, HE DID not list student aid as a priority. His two principal priorities are more jobs and lowering of interest rates, he said.
Harold Haun, Republican candidate from Council Grove, said, "Basically, I would not support cutting student aid."
Morris Kay, a Lawrence Republican candidate for the 2nd Congressional District, was not available for comment.
Tallman said that ASK did not endorse political candidates.
Republican candidate Dennis Tay
"We'll try to get them to respond to our list of student issues, but we recognize their right to disagree with us." he said.
Even if no political action committee is formed, Tallman said, ASK will still be involved in dispensing information about the 1982 congressional election.
"If a student goes to the polls, we want him to know where the candidates stand and why the issues are important," Tallman said.
MARIA McDOUGAL, LAWRENCE senior and a former KU representative to ASK said, "I don't know how ASK is going to distinguish between supporting platforms and just distributing information."
McDougal is a supporter of the U.S. Student Association, a national organization that lobbies for student issues.
USSA priorities are financial aid, voter registration and extension of the Civil Rights Voting Act, McDougal said.
"USSA has acquired a bad name in the eyes of the KU Student Senate and ASK because its members are considered to be far too liberal," she said.
"Conservative students feel that lobbyists should only work for financial issues, not social ones."
Tallman said ASK had proposed forming a national political force called Associated Students for Higher Education.
Sunscreens necessary
By CAROL MILLS Staff Reporter
Suntans may look and feel good, but being tan might not be as healthy as it seems.
贝 Leeittenbender, Lawrence dermatologist, said spending time in the sun to get a tan was not good for a person's skin.
"Anybody who spends time in the sun should use some sort of sunscreen." Bittenbender said. "Some people, however, with darker complexions are less susceptible to skin damage than those with fair complexions."
Biltenbender said that there were two categories of skin damage. One was an acute problem such as sunburn, and other diseases including lupus, skin rashes and blisters that were first manifested by sun exposure.
The chronic problems are the second category," he said. "These are pigment changes, age spots, aging of the skin."
The problem with tanning is ultraviolet radiation, with ultraviolet-A and ultraviolet-B being the culprits rays.
A recent Food and Drug Administration report said that skin aging may be the result of UV-A Radiation. These rays go deep into the skin and attack the skin cells normally keep the skin resilient. The result is sagging skin or wrinkles.
ULTRAVOLEIT-B CAN cause skin cancer. The FDA reports that 500,000 cases a year make skin cancer the number one cancer.
Culprit rays harm unprotected skin
Although during the summer months most people find the time to sit or work outdoors, others use tanning salons to keep their tans the entire year.
The FDA issued specific warnings about moderation in tanning booth use. The reason is that tanning salome uses a lot ofamps to give their clients an even tan.
O AN OPERATOR AT THE Sun Salon in Overland Park, Cindy Burgkegraff, said that the advantage of tanning is that they did not dry the skin as the sun did.
'We have about 200 clients who come
back regularly," Burgraf said. "They start out every day for 10 days, then the client must come back three times a week."
The salon provides tanning beds where the client can lie down, she said. These booths provide UV-B-rays. The maximum time for tanning under these lights is 30 minutes. The salon also provides tanning booths where the client can wash of UV-A eyes for maximum of one and a half minutes, she said.
"We don't provide any lotions, that's up to the client." Burggraf said. "We haven't had any problems at all with burning.
"Really, the boots are safer than being in the sun."
BITTENBENDER SAID the tanning booths were not as safe as the operators might claim.
"It doesn't make any difference where the ultraviolet rays come from, the sun or artificial light," he said. "If anybody goes to a taming salon or just outdoors in the sun, they should use a sunscreen."
The FDA report cited an article on tanning booths in a 1980 New England Journal of Medicine. The article noted that the light source in tanning booths may provide 10 times the irradiance of noon summer sunlight; enough radiation, the FDA report said, to generate skin cancer in animals.
"Skin cancers usually don't show up until the person is in his forties or fifties." Bittenbender said. "But I have developed in their early twenties."
BITTENBENDER SAID both the acute and chronic manifestations of sun exposure could be prevented by simple skin protection with lotions or sun-
"One of the rarest forms of skin cancer is malignant melanoma," he said. "It is thought to be related to sun exposure."
Bittenden said the longer the patient waited to see a doctor about abnormalities in the skin, the worse the condition could get.
"Any symptoms should be treated immediately," he said. "If a pigment or
City commissioners plan study session
Campus Hideaway
The Lawrence City Commission will not have its regular meeting tomorrow. On July 6, the commission will have a
On July 6, the commission will have a session to study the 1983 budget. Tb-
session, which is open to the public, will be at 2 p.m. in the first-floor chambers at City Hall, Sixth and Massachusetts streets.
Campus Hideaway
Luncheon Buffet Special
$3 with coupon
Pizza Pasta Soup Salad & Fruit Bar
Mon.-Fri. 11-2
$3.50,value
Out! Expires June 3
Coupon (clip out)
Rac
Tie In With Us Recreation Services
Racquetball Singles Tournament
Entry Deadline: Thurs., July 1st 5 p.m. 208 Robinson
Play Begins: Tues., July 6th 5:30 p.m.
Robinson Racquetball Courts
The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Summer Concert Series Presents LORIMER
Superb tech inc New York Flines 8:00 pm. Tuesdy June 29 in Swarthout Rectory Hall. Tickets an sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office, 913-864-3982. All years general admission for $5 public. $2.50 KU students. $4 senior citizens and other students.
2116 W. 25th • 842-9355
Holiday Plaza
(next to Suda & Duda)
BEEF KABOB
Kabob Shop
have a taste of our treats this summer
CHICKEN KABOB
served with rice and choice of French fries or salad
$275 complete
$275 complete
bebak kabo meal
$225 complete
chicken kabo meal
98
plus
DON'T FORGET
Golf Wednesday, June 30th at the Orchards.
FREE BEER
at Stuada & Dude w/other meal
Complete menu including Hamburgers,
Hot Dogs and Polish Sauage'
HOURS: 11 a.m., 10 p.m. Morning thru
lesion changes in size, or color, particularly if a mole becomes darker or lighter or becomes inflamed, a doctor should be consulted."
SERVING THE UNIVERSITY COMMUNITY
Main Store — June 28 & 29, July 1.
Oread Bookshop — July 1,2 & 3.
THE SANCTUARY'S
KU
Satellite Shop — July 1, 2 & 3.
Kansas Union BOOKSTORES
UNIVERSITY FACULTY/STAFF LUNCH 20% off with faculty or staff ID
The K.U. Bookstores will be CLOSED for inventory on the following dates:
Featuring a variety of cold soups, such as asparagus and zucchini, and gazpacho. Meals are served on the spacious deck or in our cozy indoor bar and grill.
Lunch served:
11-on, Mon.-Sat.
Happy hour:
4-7 Every Day of the Week
Offer expires July 15,1982
HE ALSO SAID any rashes, or itching bleeding or tenderness in moles that are red or purple.
"People should realize what they are doing to their skin." Bittencader said. "I don't want to sound like an alarmist, but skin damage is irreversible. Even though the effects take years to be no effect on emotional effects are indeed damaging."
The FDA, like Bittenbender, warns
sumbathers to watch out for problems
that may develop from prescription
drugs the person may be using.
the
SANCTUARY
1401 West 7th
843-0540
"Drugs like tetracycline, a diuretic, even a drug called griseaflorin, a pill prescribed for athlete's foot, can make a person burn more easily." Bitten.
CERTAIN CHEMICALS may increase a person's sensitivity to the sun's rays. Topical acne lotions, antibiotics, antidepressants and antidiabetic drugs are cited by the FDA as likely to damage the damage done to a person's skin.
Sunburns also can be classed as first and second-degree burns.
$$
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"No matter what you're doing in the sun, use a sunscreen. If you're going out to bake in the sun, use some protection. If you're going out to play cards and talk with your friends, use a sunscreen."
What is a Birkenstock?
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetuer adipiscing elit. Suspendisse ut leo. Curabitur ut urna. Donec viverra et malesuada fringilla eu placerat. Morbi eget a purus.
Mabushak
Mabushak
Mabushak
Mabushak
Mic
842-3131
1339 Mass.
Mick's
GRANADA DOWNTON
The Movie of 'Tomorrow'
Annie
A COLUMBIA PICTURE
PEE
Evie. 7:15. 9:45
MAT SAT. SUN 2
BOWTOWN TELEPHONE 215-837-2900
VARSITY
The Greatest Challenge
ROCKY II
MAT. SUN, JAN. 215
Even 7:35, 9:25
HILLCREST 1 ST AND IOWA TELEPHONE 842-8400
HILLCHEST 1-866-523-9400
FIREFOX
CLINT EASTWOOD
...the most devastating
killing machine
we built.
Daily 2:15, 7:15, 9:35
HILLCREST 2
MAIN HAS MADS 19
MANHAS HAS MADS 19
NEW'S ITS THIS PROBLEM
HARRISON FORD
BLACE RUNNER
Daily 2/15, 7, 9:35
HILLCREST 3
POLTERGEIST
It knows what scares you.
ay 7:20, 9:30, 2:15
CINEMA 1 TEXT AND LAND
TELFONE NORWAY
CINEMA 1
3050 AND IOWA
TELEPHONE 872-4911
E.T.
THE EXTRA-TURISTRIAL PG
Path# 1 7:29 8:44
No Airplane Routes
E.T.
EXTRA TERREST
CINEMA 2 2151 AND IOWA
TELERONNE RAY KADJAG
CINEMA 2
TELEPHONES SAT/DAY
STAR TREK II
IN THE
WRATH
KHAN
Daily 2.
7/10 - 9/14
No Advance
Tickets
SUNSET DRIVE IN THEATRE WEST PACIFIC
MEGAFORCE
ПРО СЛУБНОЙ АКТИВИЗИЮ
2019
The Greenpeace Show
University Daily Kansan, June 28,1982
Page
in
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es, or itch in moles aa.
order, warns problems descriptioning.
may in-ty to the ons, antibi- intidiabetic is likely to a person's
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when the tenbender eventable one protec-
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a alarmist,
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being in the going out protection. cards and see a sun-
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emselves
's
2-3131
842-8400
D I O W A
BEST BOOK
nce Tickets
12. 540
io Advance Tickets
force 9:30
inball 11:45
ults $3
Larry Rowe
Ford Motor Company
Franklin Foods
THE
CAMPAIGN
BOOK
NO.1232-BM
jay-ki
Summer Fun-
Photo by SUSAN PAGE
Kurt Ruf. Olathe senior, enioved his Saturday afternoon jet-skiing out on Clinton Lake
HARRISON N.Y.-Bob Gilder fell short of a PGA record but fired a 1-under-pair 69 yesterday to win the $400,000 Westchester Classic by five strokes over Peter Jacobsen and Tom Kite with a 19-up total of 26.1
By United Press International
Gilder was chasing the record total of 257 set by Mike Souchak at the 1955 Texas Open. He needed a 5-under 6 yesterday to tie the mark and still had a chance after sinking birdies at holes 5, 6 and 7 to go 21-under.
But he parried the next seven holes and lost his chance at the record on
PERSONNEL SERVICES NEW EMPLOYEES ORIENTATION will begin at 8:15 a.m. in 102 Carruth- O'Leary Hall
TODAY
Gilder wins Westchester Classic by five
SUMMER ORIENTATION and early enrollment sessions for new students will be all day in the Kansas City area, with simultaneous programs for parents.
on campus
WEDNESDAY
THE KU SCIENCE FICTION SOCIETY will have informational meetings for prospective members at 4:30 and 7:30 on the Pine Room of the Kansas Union
THE KU SAILING CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in the parlors in the Kansas Union.
THURSDAY
the 470-yard, par-4 15th, which he bogeyed after missing a 26-foot putt.
A CARILLON RECITAL will be performed at 8 p.m. by Albert Gerken, University Carillonneur, at the Memorial Campanile.
That was the same moth on which he suffered his only bogy of his second round. He had five bogeys during the tournament.
DEADLINE FOR ENTRIES in the recreation sports racquetball singles series is at 5 p.m. in 208 Mainland. Play for the series begins July.
"I started thinking about the record a little after the seventh hole," said
Gilder, who said earlier he'dn't care about the records and just wanted to win the $72,000 first prize. "But the back nine holes here are very tough, and I was just playing to survive after a while."
Jacobsen and Kite, who had a 68 yesterday, each collected $35,200.
ANAHEM, Calif.—Dave Goltz, making his first American League start since 1979, allowed only one run and three hits through seven innings, and Brian Downing led a power-packed attack with three extra base hits yesterday to pace the California Angels to a 9-1 rout of the Kansas City Royals.
Angels roll over Royals
The Angles made short work of Royals' starter Burd Black, tagging for six runs on six hits in the first three innings. Bland, 2:2; allow four runs in
Juan Beniquez, Doug DeCinces, Don Baylor and Downing each hit home runs as the Angels pounded out 14 hits despite a starting lineup that did not include five regulars. Bobby Clark, subbing in center field for Fred Lynn, also had three hits, including an RBI single in the seventh.
By United Press International
the first, including a two-run homer to Benquívez, who was filling in for Reggie Miller.
Goltz didn't allow a run until the sixth, when George Brett's triple with two out delivered U.L. Washington. Goltz had signed with the Angels as a free agent on May 24 after being released by the Los Angeles Dodgers.
The Royals start a three-game series with the Oakland A's tonight at Royals Stadium.
DeCines blasted his ninth homer of the season off Black in the third, to make it 6-0, and Baylor smashed his 200th career home and 10 of the season to open the fifth inning off he Royals' Keith Creel. Downing capped the Angels' scoring with his 11th homer in the eighth.
For the Royals, Brett went 3-for-4 with one RBI.
Westhead back in NBA
CHICAGO—Former Los Angeles Laker coach Paul Westhead will be named the new head coach of the Chicago Bulls at a news conference this morning, team officials confirmed yesterday.
By United Press International
Westhead will sign a contract today to replace Rod Thorn, Bullen's general manager, who served as interim coach last season after Jerry Sloan was fired on Feb. 17. Thorn, who insisted he did not want to leave, will stay on as general manager.
"All that remains is to settle some minor legal matters," said a Bulls spokesman. "There are no hangups explained. Paul Westhead will be at the news conference and will be introduced as the new coach."
Westhead, a former English professor who coached the Lakers to the NBA title in the 1979-80 season, was a unpopularized player with a much-publicized dispute with his Lakers guard Earvin "Magic" Johnson.
Johnson reportedly did not like Westhead's slower-paced offensive coaching style, something Westhead insisted was an inaccurate tag.
"He likes to run the ball, and he isn't coming to Chicago to be a simply patterned coach," said a Bulls' official.
Sloan, who had taken Chicago to the playoffs the previous season, was fired with the team out of the playoff picture last season. The team wound up 34-48.
Westhead emerged as the leading candidate after the Bulls had seemingly decided to go with an experienced head coach rather than an assistant. The other leading candidate was Atlanta Hawks assistant Mike Fratello.
The University Daily
KANSAN WANT ADS Call 864-4358
CLASSIFIED RATES
| | two three four five six seven eight nine ten eleven十二十三十四十五十六十七十八十九二十九三十四五十六七十八九十一
ERRORS
AD DEADLINES
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Saturday 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 placed in person or simply by calling the Kansas business office at 864-4358.
The Kasana 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 this ad.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
KANSAS BUSINESS OFFICE
118 Flint Hall 864-4158
FOR RENT
ICE CREAM CONES. One dip just 45¢! Two dips 80¢!
Three dip $1.05! CHOCOLATE UNLIMITED
Southern Hills Center 12 p.m. Tues.-Sat, 12-4 p.
Sun. 7-4
PRINCETON PLACE PATIO APARTMENTS. Now Available in a wood burning fireplace, 2 car garage with wood burning fireplace, 2 car garage with wood burning fireplace, quiet surrounding $420 per month, kitchen, quiet surrounding $420 per month, laundry room, 14'hvlp., or phone # 257-8239 for additional information. If interested call: (612) 257-8239.
SOUTHERN PARKWAY TOWNHOUSES, 20th & Kasidol. If you're tired the noisy and cramped apartement in our duplex feature is a NEW Hookahs pool, an outdoor swimming pool, & lots of privacy. We have openings now, for August. Call Craig Leavin (evenings and weekdays) at 618-357-1494 for information about most modestly priced townhouses.
Live in the CHRISTIAN CAMPUS HOUSE this夏
mornings. Call Alan Rosenk, campus muni-
tary. Call Alan Roskenak, campus muni-
tary.
STUDENTS
One phone call will solve your housing needs. Completely furnished studios, 1BR, 1BR with a bath, 2BR furnished apartments.
HANOVER PLACE
7th and Florida
(On KU Bus Lau)
Rentals from $205.00
841-1255 842-1455
Between 14th and 15th on
Massachusetts
Rentals from $250/mo
441-121-121
842-445-45
9th and Emery Rd.
Rentals from $250/mo.
841-5255 842-4455
SUNDANCE
NEW 4-PLEXES
COLDWATER FLATS
413 W, 14th St.
Rentals from $280/mo
841.1219 849.4455
841-8280 842-4455
COLDWATER FLATS
SUMMIT HOU
1105 Louisiana
Rentals from $285/ml.
841.8280 842.4455
919 Indiana
919 Indiana
922 Yokosuka
Rental from
841-5255
842-4455
All offered by Mastercraft
Management. Professional
Maintenance and Management
Company
642-4455
AVAILABLE AUCTION Spacious exclusive 4
Family room, family table, FP, all appliances, 2 car
garage. 720r Straford on R U Bus line. Accept
students. 870r 619 or 769r. Students $300 ap-
tributed. 870r 619 or 769r.
Woman: Furnished room in shared house. Total rent for 1 bed, 1 bath. 1 bik. from $76,540-440, 12:30-$9, M-F.
1 bedroom semi-furnished. Near campus. 843-9094 or
842-6707. No pets.
TRAILRIDGE
2, 3, and 4 bedroom townhouses still available for fall.
3 pools, tennis court, and
On KU bus line
2500 West 6th 843-7333
Sleeping rooms: 1, 2 & 3 bedroom apartments and
bother pets. Daya 40-84-167. Evening 40-87-167.
Monday through Friday.
1 new bedroom in four-pers. 1 block from library. 2 new bedroom fully equipped kitchen, at 1441 Oak Canyon Drive. 3 new bathroom, at 1441 Oak Canyon Drive.
Two bedroom furnished mobile home. $185.00 per month. Clean, quiet location. No pets, Jayhawk Court #823-8707. 7-29
EXTRA nice apartments, large and small. Next to campus. Utility paid,疲惫报价, MB4-1458 MASTER BEDROOM of a large 3 bedroom mobile home. The option to stay longer. Call MB4-1434 for the option to stay longer. Call MB4-1434
SPACIOUS STUDIOS
TRY COFREE LIVING. Close to campus and
beach for overnight stay. Not a religious organization $80 to $130 Includes
free meals, drinks, camping, etc.
Cory 3-bedroom unfurnished apartment in an older house 3-120W. (14th) & Tennessee.) Available now, only £75 a month with 6months of alltuition. Absolutely no pet. Call 18-494-4411 for details. - 7-29
Very nice 1-bedroom unimproved apartment in older home at 1600 Tennessee. Available now, only $75 a month with $200 deposit, utilities paid. Absolutely no calls. Call 749-4414 for showing times.
One, two, and three bedrooms.
Check now for summer availability.
Beautiful grounds, swimming pool,
lawn tights courts.
A GOOD PLACE TO LIVE
meadowbrook
Now leasing for August 1, SPANISH CREEP ART-MATTE carpets with drapery, central air, heat, fully insulated carpets on KU bus route. Fifty off of street parking, with garages available. Laundry facilities and pool CAMPSITE.
Small bat cox $1.35; bedroom upstairs apartment
$280; guest suite $469 with £150/month with £650/month, gas and water price. Ab-
sence of furnishings. 2 Bedroom Flat. Call 800-723-3222.
meadowbrook
18th & Crestline 842-4200
MED CENTER BOUND? Newly refurbished 2-bedroom duplexes available now. Carpet, A/C, parking, parking. Call (313) 85-2878. 7-29
Apartment for rent to quit student. Third floor walkway. Large bedroom, large kitchen. In old West Lawrence on the KU ban route. Furnished with large bedroom, living room, kitchen and balcony. All income paid $30 per month. No pet. Address: 5700 W. Briarwood Blvd.
NONE-bedroom house adjacent to O-Zone. Available
August 1, 843-8605. 7-12
3-BEDROOM - double duplex, AC 6 board to cam-
panels, 76-80, keep crying, ETSK 7-6
and 76-90, 76-90, keep crying
Leasing now for fall, 1- and 3-bedroom apartments.
Dick Edmond Real Estate. 7-8
Clean, attractive one-bedroom apartment for July sub-basement. Between KU and downtown. Apt. 102. 685-794-5300.
Duplex, 817 Connectus, 2-bedroom, store,
refrigerator, D/W.货车, A/C deposit, lease,
references. Available now $275/month. 1-796-6833
FOR SALE
Alternator, starter and generator specialists. Parts,
service and exchange units. BELL AUTOMOTIVE
ELECTRIC, 843-969-3000. W 900. H 6th.
tf
For sale or lease with option to buy. Only amendment place in the college room with ice cream, cold drinks, sandwiches. Has 9 video machines and room for 14 people. Space for three people. Large apartment upstairs. 643-101-8431. 7-32-91
Combination bumper pool-card table. Real felt, round table, totally equipped. Call Rick at 749-4215 $150 7-1
film certificate books for sale. 100 certificates on
$15.50. Each certificate good for a 1 roll of Kodak or
film coat (uses 110, 128, 138). Exposures 12, 26,
42 and 72. Each book 418-488 to order if certificates are
tradable).
Western Civilization Notes. Now a Make date. Make sure the materials are in good condition. Then—1-1 as Study guide. 1-2 for Class preparation. For exam preparation. *New Analysis of Western Civilization*. Town Crie. Town Crie. Bookmark, and Oradaw Bookstore.
HONDA 125X (178L). Perfect condition $500. Must
call. Call Peter. 841-4065. 7-19
HONDA 350 XL, Excellent condition, accessories,
$500, Matt 749-1956.
6-28
1976 Nova, 6 cyl., excellent condition, AM-FM cassette stereo. tape number 749-0293. 7-1
Full-size bed, desk and chair, bookcase. Call 749-0293.
TENNIS RACKETS—Head, Wilson, Dunlap, Prince,
Yonex —Good selection, new/used. Will buy yours in
good condition. 842-7531 at 0:00 p.m. **tf**
1977 PUCH "Maxi" moped—2,500 miles—$225 Call-611
Paul 842-$2573.
FOUND
Bookcases, stereo cabinets, cedar chests,
*Custom built to your needs in solid wood*
30" x 34"
cases starting at $30. Michael Stough, 9 a.m.-7 p.m.
843-8622
USED BICYCLE SALE. Women's & men's >
speeds, 5-speed and 3-speed. Very good condition.
8243446
7-1
Found - Male kitten in vicinity of the Exchange, 2600
lowa. Iowa, color, medium length hair with green
glands. 841-7779, 842-6663. 7-1
Found -Contact lens and case. Call Debbi Rhoton at 7-1
864-369-360
HARDWARE, COMMUNICATIONS ANALYST,
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS. Qualifications: B.S.
Engineering or equivalent subject; experience as elec-
tric computer technician; knowledge of data
communication techniques. Ability to manage
project and prefer experience in design or real
testing of complex systems. Proficient
gramming and working knowledge of data com-
munication skills. 80% minimum. Submit
computer skills to University of Kansas Post
Computing Center, University of Kansas, Post
Office Driver 2007, Lawrence, Ks. 60404. Additional In-
formation contact David Narlandi, (913) 824-EEOA
HELP WANTED
Found-a Sarnamonie allouette key in front of Robinson. Call 841-3135. 7-8
Liquor store clerk—part-time, call 843-6832 for inter-
view
6-28
Flexibular bones. No experience necessary. Job is in
instructional, research and teaching positions.
Lacewright, Louisiana. Must be a Veteran
and in school full time. For more information,
contact F. Benson Lewis *F.* 1134-748-2000, Ext. 233
LOST
Lost: gasket. Left lens kit. Plastic frame- charcoal top, clear top. Brownd. Reward. Professor兰德曼, English Department, KU. Please call 841-6230 and leave a message.
PERSONALS
SPECIAL RATES. HAIRCUTS $4, PERMS-
"ONLY" $10. $30. Carmire Hair Fashions 103-28
Mass.-Dena Saile, 843-3600) 6:38
PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTHRIGHT,
843-4821 tf
Skillet's liquor store serving U-D since 1949. Come in and compare. Wilfred Skillet Eudaly. 1906 Mass. #831-836.
The Kegger-Weekly Specials on Kega!! Call
841-9456 - 1610 W.23rd.
COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES Free pregnancy testing; early and appointed abortion; gynecology; 1435 & Roe, Overland Park, KS (913) 624-3010.
Say it on a shirt. Custom silk screen printing, T-shirts, baseball shirts and caps. Shirtart by Swells. 7-29 148-161.
LEASE A LEMON
Daily, Weekly, Monthly All Cars One Rate $995 A Day FIRST 50 MILES FREE THEN 8' A MILE
Small, intermediate and large cars and trucks available. All mechanically sound, stat inertied, clean and read to rent.
CALL US AT
9th & Miss. 24th & Iowa
749-4225 841-0188
Instant passport, portfolio, resume, immigration, naturalization, visa, ID and of course fine portraits: 7-29
Swells Studio 749-1811
Why cook? .. We now deliver. The Pizza Shopper
842-6000. 71
Craving pizza but on a tight budget? Call us. The Pizza Shoppe 912-6600. 7-1
From dresses, hot pots, gowns, lingerie (slippers, toilets, footwear), and other fabrics. From cutlery (gadgets, crochards-cuts) away. And dickens, and more. Dress up for dinner tonight! Potato dishes: Rise, 90%. Wheat, (almost) above 84%. B41, 84-24.
INDEPENDENCE DAY AIRTS & CRAFTS FAIR:
Earn extra money selling your hand crafted items in air conditioned comfort furniture, woodcrafts, rugs, and more. For $125 a day, 7 a.m.-5 p.m. come one or both days, for reservations call 614-7842-7490.
The Hallowell Shopping Center, 319 W. Hallowell Street, Lawrence.
BARGAIN HUNTERS: Find what you need to购 your apartment at the Lawrence Fla. Maxwell Mall, 1085 West 62nd Street, save gas running to garage sales, shop in one of the stores, Shop in Hitchcock Store, 2002 & Museum, Lawrence, 7-43.
The Etc Shop 10 W. 90h has bowing shirt, Hawaiian shirts, bermuda shorts & pedal puffers. Also, antique & costume jewelry. 6-38
Hi PARKLE, How is my favorite press secretary?
What is this I hear, you don't want to meet my friends? D.Q.
6-28
MAKE MONEY, RAIN OR SHINE! Sell you, furniture, toiletries, furniture and accessories. MAKE MONEY! No reservation necessary; come one or both times. $109 Shopping Center, 3rd and Ousaidah; Lawnware,
Tennis Lessons, taught by KU tennis team member.
Expert instruction at reasonable prices. Café 74
10am-5pm.
SERVICES OFFERED
Don't forget to stop by Barb's Second Hand Rose. 315
Iidian, 842-476-479
**
Schneider Wine & Keg Shop—The finest selection of wines in Lawrence—largest supplier of strong wines. 1610 W 2rd, 845-302. tf
Oo
Vintage & Classic
Clothing Contemporary
Linda & Lisa
10 West 9th St.
913-843-7108
Mon-Sat 10:15
Put your best foot forward with a professionally priced resume from Enore. We can write it, type it, and print it for you. Call Enore 842-2001, 2020 & lowa.
The Etc Shop
If you haven't tried the original Round Table, you haven't lived. The Pizza Shop 642-8000. 7-1
KU Freshman woman would like to live with a singer in her household and to work in the household and cooking for room and board. Please call contact 1-416-2534-346 or写信: Wrossen Herander, 160 Carrereen, Independence, Kansas.
Have your own personalized bumpersticker! Deluxe
Vinyl. Any message. $2.00. K. Gill. 521 Geranium
Place, Oxnard. California 93000. 7-15
Another Encore exclusive:
Sunday, June 17th: Saturday, July 3rd - SUMMER SALE! SPCenner Museum Bookshop a larger overall over-38+Kids discounts on many books and postcards. Express fares: 74% within now range!
ENLARGEMENTS
حسن النجف التربوي
Encore Copy Corps
25th & Iowa
842-2001
Who's delivering great pizza in town for low prices?
Call 842-6008 The Pizza Shop.
7-1
SLIDES DEVELOPED overnight or by appointment. ETRACRIOHME Stimm; 20 ex. 36, 38 ex. 48 (all Keaton Kouwies at evening 8:45 am) 7:48
Voice lessons. $6 for 1/2 hour. 842-0038. 7-8
**2 day workshops on how to learn to program in**
**BASIC Every Friday & Saturday 10-44 Fee, $100. No background needed, hands on experience. Call**
*M14-482. At Computer at Laborum W1.2Wrd Z2*
Workshops on how to learn wizard processing and
computerized accounting. 1:30-4:00 WTN on alternate
weeks. Fee $100. Call 841-4612. Enroll at
Landlord LAND 123rd B. 7:08
---
TANIME
1 FREE VISIT
LOOK YOUR BRONZED &
BEAUTIFUL BEST
Also
20% OFF
Call 841-6232 North Side Court
For Appointment Holiday Plaza
MUSICAL AEROBIC FITNESS CLASSES
New Memberships Guaranteed Safe & Effective: UVA Tan Beds
Math Homework? CS Projects? Physics Problems?
Good tutoring at reasonable rates. Call Pat 749-2515.
7.15
LEARN TENNIS from experienced instructor in small groups with other KU students or private lessons. 842-6713 after 9 p.m. tf
Workshops on how to learn to use a microcomputer: the operating system, word processing, data processing and programming. Each runs 1-8AM (Saturday) from 9:30AM to 5:30PM. At Computer at Leeland W4, 275-756. At Computer at Leeland W2, 275-756.
Tennis Players! I'll string your racket fast and cheap.
(in 2 hrs, or less) $1 loan + string cost (only)
$2.50 for nylon string). Call 749-1491 anytime. 749-1491
WRITE WITHOUT FELTURE: Psychodynamic analysis of your personality's natural expression. Tutoring, Graphoanalyst Victor Clark: 842-8240. 7-29
Shakespeare could write; Elvis could wiggle; my talent, typing. Call 842-1043 after 5 and weekends.
7.19
TYPING
TIP TOP TYPING—Experienced Typists—IBM Correcting Selectic II, Royal Correcting SES0000D, 845-675.
Experienced typist. Term papers, thesis, all慕
immanent IBM IEM Selective Correction. Eite
or Pica, and will correct spelling. Phone 845-9634 Mrs.
Wright.
Experienced typist will type term papers, thesis,
discussions, books, etc. Have IBM self-correcting
Selectir II, Call Terry 842-4754 anytime or 843-3871 ii
It's a Fact, Fast, Affordable, Clean Typing 843-5820
Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms,
graphics, editing, self-correcting Selectic. Call
Ellen B41:2172.
Professional, accurate and fast typing. Disseertas
Theses, term papers, etc. Call Allison, 842-759,
after 5:00. 7-29
TYPING PLUS: Theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications. resumes. Assistance with composition, grammar, spelling, etc. English tutoring for foreign students—Americans 84-1244. f
OVERNIGHT EXPRESS Editing-Typing. IBM
Electronic. Victor Clark 841-824-8107
7-25
APPORDABLE QUALITY for all your typing needs:
themes, dissertations, resumes, mailings,
misc. Call Judy 842-7945 after 6 p.m.
tf
For PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myra. 841-4980.
Have Selecive, will type. Professional, fast, affordable.
Bette, 842-6967 weeks and weekends.
Typing for all occasions; for desserts, theses,
term papers, letters, etc. Call Debby at 147836 or
718
Experienced typist—theses, dissertations, term papers, maps. IBM correcting seiclectr. Barb, after 5 p.m. m48-2310
Students: *I will take care of all your typing needs.* I am fast and very reasonable. Please call April during the day at 843-6110; events and weekends: 843-5064.
Formal medical research secretary will type books,
theses and term papers. Call Nancy 841-802-722
***
Experienced typist—term papers, theses,
dissertations—also graphs, charts, call Jane 641-8001
mornings, 841-8022 afternoons. 7-12
Typping seem expensive? For all your typing needs,
quickly & cheaply, call Mary 814-6873.
WANTED
ONE ROOMMAT to live in the master bedroom of a large 3 bedroom home mobile. A, air cleaner, dryer.乙. Contact Matthew at M1-14-64 for details.
Substitute Sita to take care of a bright, charming Bathroom. A separate sink must be available. Must be loving and reliable, a non-smoker with good references, have been transportation to Central New York, monthly return to rental person, and monthly return to租客.
B.V.I. SAIL, LTD.
BVILS, COUNTY OF DUBLIN of amphibian species and of amphibian populations made up in淋水 with boiled water or milk used in the preparation of canned beverages. University Dayton, Kentucky. 1.80 Ft. x 4.5 Ft. x 7 Ft. 6''. Mail proof. University Dayton, Kentucky. 1.80 Ft. x 4.5 Ft. x 7 Ft. 6''. Mail proof.
Classified Heading
Date of Birth
Name Classified Dealer
Address 1234 Street # 1234
Phone (718) 567-8900
Date Time Rate Wt.
1 hour 2 hours 3 hours 4 hours
$8.75 $8.75 $8.75 $8.75 $8.75
10 minute break
$8.75 $8.75 $8.75 $8.75
1 hour 2 hours 3 hours 4 hours
All classes in the room:
Thursday 9:45 a.m.
Thursday 10:45 a.m.
Page 8
University Daily Kansan, June 28; 1982
THE FIELD OF HOPE
THE FIELD OF HOPE
Student Senate executive committee members listen in earnest to Lisa Ashner (center), StudEx committee chairman, who presided over the meeting. Also seated around the table are: Terry Frederick, administrative assistant; Matt Gatewood, treasurer: David Zimmerman, finance and auditing co-chairman; and Jim Cramer, students rights chairman. Also present at the meeting but not pictured here was Dan Cunningham, executive secretary.
Photo by J. SHARP SMITH
StudEx
From page one
Cramer raised the question of whether the full Senate would resent the nearly $8,000 allocation. Gatewood said, "We can go ahead and spend that amount," he added. The Senate's approval, but that's not necessary.
"Anything allocated by budget hearings has to be spent a certain way, but money from the budget doesn't."
The unallocated account is actually a reserve account. Gatewood said it was established from
student fee money to allow for allocations to student groups during the year, he said.
Gatewood said the reserve account contained more than $40,000. He said he couldn't give the exact amount because "money is still coming in."
"At the end of the fiscal year, which is June 30, any money allocated in the previous year that wasn't spent reverts back to the Senate reserve account," he explained.
Actor Jack Mullaney dies
By United Press International
An associate of Mullaney's, Seymour Rosen, said Mullaney also appeared in numerous of Elvis Presley's films, as well as other movies like "Mr. Roberts," and "Seven Days in May."
Budget
From nave one
The budget increase is an 11.3 percent increase above current budget levels but is about $10 million less than the Regents' recommendation for fiscal year 1983, McMullen said.
ary needs of the six state universities and the Kansas Technical Institute at Salina.
KU officials had requested a total of $3,062,350 for fiscal 1994 for improvement in instruction, research and service. The Regents decided to recommend $654,993 for improvements.
THE HIGHEST AMOUNTS requested were
1 million for instrument 002 equipment, $1,034,907 for
instrument 004 equipment.
Stanley Kopil, Regents executive officer who recently replaced John Conard, said Friday that the Regents decided to recommend $73,000 for equipment and $100,000 for library acquisitions.
The Regents also approved the lowest request,
$28, $32 for a new degree program in atmospheric
A 876.061 fire service training allure was not requested by the University it was recommended to attend.
HOLLYWOOD—Veteran television actor Jack Mullaney, who appeared in such 1960s comedy series as "It's About Time" and "My Living Doll," died yesterday of a stroke. He was 51.
The Regents did not make changes in their basic percentage increase recommendations, which included: a 10 percent salary package for unclassified employees; a 7 percent wage increase for classified employees, although their salaries are set by state guidelines; a 9 percent increase to provide for student employment at the University of Kansas; a 10 percent increase for other operating expenditures; and a 20 percent increase for utilities.
THE REGENTS decided not to recommend requests for the office of general counsel, facilities operations, the Institute for Economic and Business Research, the Center for Biomedical Research the Gerontology Center, the Transparency Center and management of accounts receivable.
The Regents will continue to support areas that provide quality in higher education, Mountain View.
"We have set our priorities in the areas of faculty libraries and equipment for teaching and research."
Budd said he was convinced the board would be a strong and effective advocate for higher education.
"It is encouraging to note that the Regents did respect our institutional priorities. Like each of them, I do wish the total request could have been higher," he said.
The Regents did approve a $407,687 special request to cover costs of utilities, maintenance supplies and personnel for additions to Marvin Hall and Moore Hall, which is on West Campus, and utility costs for additions at Haworth and Summerfield hills.
PROGRAM IMPROVEMENT requests for the University of Kansas Medical Center were also cut by more than $1.2 million.
The Regents decided to recommend $100,000 of the $415,000 priority request for replacement and maintenance for shared equipment and biomedical research.
They approved the full requests of $249,482 for core support for children's rehabilitation and $37,670 to support the doctorate program in nursing.
Requests of $382,239 for a nursing retention program and $156,065 for a retina patient care program were also supported by the Regents recommendation that they be financed with hospice benefits.
The Regents did not recommend requests for funds in nine areas, including emergency medical training in the state, dental care for Med students and patients and a physical therapy education PORTER.
They did approve a special request of $267,712 for support services for the Dykes Library of the Health Sciences, now under construction at the Med Center.
"It IS A STATE expense to provide heat and light during such building construction," said Keith Nichter, university director of business and fiscal affairs.
The Regents also approved a supplemental request of $146,856 for fiscal 1983 for utilities at 450 Madison Avenue.
The Dykes Library is scheduled to be ready for use July 1 next year.
The Regents' budget recommendations are not the final step to be taken before the governor makes a decision.
"The legislative fiscal office will visit in late summer early fall to review our requests." *NASA*
"The chancellor will then have the opportunity to address the budget before the government this fall."
Air
From page one
Comparing May, 1980, with May of this year, Perkins said there was an 10.3 percent decrease in kilowatt-hours used this year. Because some of the buildings use natural gas for air conditioning, there was also an 11.3 percent savings in cubic feet of natural gas.
BOTH FIGURES for this year are for a portion of the month, because air conditioning was cut back May 10 and meters are read near the end of the month. Parkins said.
"We feel that it's our obligation to cut back on energy wherever we can," he said, "but not to the detention of the operation of the University, not to the detirement of research projects that are integral to the university or to the comfort of faculty, staff and students."
SOME OF THE decisions will be based on providing necessary cooling to vital equipment and research animals that cannot stand extreme temperatures still limiting energy use on campus, Hogan said.
Both petitions will be considered at the meeting this week by the chancellor, executive vice chancellor. Hogan and facilities operations representatives.
"Jume figures will really give us more of an accurate savings figure; because it will be for the year 2016."
One petition is from library personnel and the other is from the office of financial aid in Strong County.
Limiting air conditioning was only part of the plan to meet the utility costs, Hogan said.
TWO PETITIONS have been received by the administration concerning the limiting of air pressure in the system.
TO SAVE on costs, Hogan said, they also had to pre-empt some University budgets and redirect funds that might have been used elsewhere.
There are 34 buildings, either on campus or owned by the University in other parts of Lawrence, that have had air conditioning shut off, Perkins said. Of the 28 buildings in which air conditioning has stayed on, five have thermostats set at 60 degrees.
Funds re-directed could have been used for salaries, other operating expenditures, supplies and services.
"We've just done the best we can under the situation," he said.
Most of the buildings on campus will have had air conditioning turned on by the beginning of the month.
Campus Hideaway
$2 off Large or Medium Pizza
Delivery only with coupon
Delivery hours Sun.Thurs. 5-11
Fri. & Sat. 5-1
Free Delivery
843-9111 Expires June-30 843-9111
THE PEUGEOT P-8 AFFORDABLE EUROPEAN QUALITY FOR $ 199^{95}
- 28 lbs. light
* Sun Tour Dureau leasers
* Michelin Tires
* 19 Seconds
Lion
France's Finest
CYCLES PEUGEOT
BICYCLE
- 12 Speed
RICK'S BIKE SHOP
1033 VERMONT LAWRENCE KS 66044 (913) 841-6642
Leaving Town?
Airline Tickets
At airline counter prices no extra service charge
1033 VERMONT LAWRENCE, KS. 66044 (913) 841-6642
Make your travel arrangements on campus
[Airplane nose]
See Maupintour Travel Service for:
- Eurail and Japan Rail Passes
- The lowest airfares — Complete travel arrangements
- Car rental — Hotel confirmations
- Student semester break holidays
- Travel Insurance
Maupintour travel service
900 Massachusetts
749-0700
KU Union
w/coupon
Expires 7/3/82
only $100
--only $100
1 coupon/person 1 sub/coupon
Yelio Seto • Hawk's Crossing
300
SUPER SONY SPECIALS
Reg.
$6988
Hand held cassette-corder with great features, clear sound and at a very affordable price. Instant edit feature lets you make deletions while you record. Automatic shut-off.
SONY M-9 MICRO-CASSETTE
ALL 6" SUBS
ROVING REPORTER
ONE HAND CASSETTE RECORDING WITH INSTANT EDIT
across from Wendy's on 23rd
841 9269
SONY MICRO-CASSETTE TAPES ALSO AVAILABLE'
OTHER SONY CASSETTE-CORDERS AVAILABLE TOO!
OPEN 10.6 MON - SAT WED AUGUST 27TH TO JUNE 5TH ALL AVAILABLE
NOW JUST
$4988
ONY TCM131
$4988
C'mon bite the big one!
AUDIOTRONICS 928 MASS DOWNLOAD
OPEN 10-6 MON.-SAT. VISA * MC * CASH * CHECK * LAYAWAYS ACCEPTED
OPEN 10-6 MON.-SAT.
Subman Special
NOW JUST
We pile on the freshest vegetables, finest quality meats and cheeses. Each sub is oven toasted, not microwaved.
SONY MICROCASSETTE-CORDER
Hawk's Crossing just 1 block N of the Union 843-6660 12 delicious subs to choose from
We bake our whole wheat bread from scratch every day,
Yello Sub
Small enough to take to school, office or meetings, but large enough for easy operation. Two speeds allow up to 2
ALEXANDRA CABRERA
$49.95 SALE
Pick your favorite Designer Frame and purchase a complete pair of lenses and frames for only $49.95, regularly $65-$130. Purchase a complete pair of single vision lenses; any frame, any prescription, glass or plastic, with or without tint, for $49.95. Bifocals $10, trifocales and cataracts $20 extra. It only happens once a season, so save now. Photochromatic $20 and $27, oversize lenses $8.75 and $12 additional charge.
- Oleg Cassini
- Zsa Zsa Gabor
742 Mass.
- Anne Klein
OPTICAL CO.
- Anthony Martin
- Arnold Palmer
842-5208
OPTICAL CO.
Anthony Martin
Boutique frames, invisible and executive bifocals excluded.
- Arnold Palmer
HUTTON
H massive brain
Sale Ends July 10, 1982
Mon.-Fri. 10-5
UNICEF
UNHCR
The Kansan's ad number is 864-4358.
Do the Wise Thing!
plan now to spend next year at NAISMITH HALL!
It's time to plan your fall living arrangements. At Naismith Hall, you'll get your new school year off to a great start by enjoying the full-sized swimming pool and air-conditioned indoor facilities.
Plus, at Naismith, you'll love the year-round maid service, dining plans, and full schedule of social activities.
Be smart! Start your fall semester at Naismith Hall Phone 843-8559 1800 Naismith Dr
1800 Naismith Dr.
M
m