University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
KANSAN
Monday, November 1, 1982
Vol. 93, No. 51 USPS 650-640
Old rehab center loses patients
By VICKY WILT Staff Reporter
KANSAS CITY, Kan.-Outmoded equipment and run-down facilities in the University of Kansas Medical Center's rehabilitation department are causing patients to seek treatment at other hospitals and creating a morale problem for employees, the department's chairman said recently.
Employees' attitudes also are affected by the lack of modern equipment and depressing work conditions.
Patients are unhappy with the unattractive surroundings, said John Redford, department chairman, and the department has lost patients to hospitals with more modern facilities.
"I think it affects the morale and we have recruits requiring nurses." Reedford said.
After nurses see better conditions in other hospitals' rehabilitation departments, they seek additional staff to help.
BUT WITH the help of Eugene Staples, hospital administrator, the department is one step closer to renovating the rehabilitation ward, Redford said.
Staples said he was waiting for the facility's operation department to finish renovation plans.
About $200,000 is needed to finance renovation of the department's facilities. That money will have to come from private sources, however, and Redford said that did not please him.
He said he was upset about having to spend his time recruiting companies to help finance his business.
"I don't want to do that," he said. "Besides, going out and recruiting funds is not what I've been trained to do."
JACK ENGLISH, vice president of the Med Center branch of the Kansas University Endowment Association, said the association endowed the department raise funds for the renovation.
"It's just a terrific department. It is one of the oldest and they do a tremendous job. The needed equipment is very expensive so we intend to go all out to help them." English said.
New equipment would go in the department's treatment rooms. But Redford said he was placing more importance on renovating the rehabilitation ward than the treatment rooms. Patients' families do not like to leave them in the ward because of the surroundings, he said.
The rehabilitation department is in the basement of the oldest building at the Med Center and the rehabilitation ward is on the second floor of the same building.
Surveying the ward upstairs, Redford said,
"It's pretty darn dismal."
THE ONLY shower in the ward is inadequate for patients' needs, Redford said. The pea green room has a shower curtain for a door and is cluttered with equipment.
"It's just the pits, isn't it?" Reddor said. He said it would not take much to improve the area, but he said the pits were "very sharp."
“It’s obvious to us, but not to others, about the paint on the wall. In some areas of the hospital, carpet is put up on halfway on the walls. If they would put up carpet here, the paint would not be chipped off from wheelchairs bumping the walls.” he said.
Redford said the appearance of the department's treatment rooms also bothered him.
"WE WEERE told we'd move into a new area when the new hospital was built. Here we are, and when you look out the windows you see brick walls," he said.
Redford stood in one of the treatment rooms partitioned by curtains and looked around at its appearance. The ceiling tiles were yellowing and the area around the vents were black from dirt. He sighed and turned his attention to the only bright spot in the room — the curtains.
"We put up new curtains but they are getting old. They are better than the ones we had before. I think they were dark brown," he said.
The last major renovation of either area was 36 years ago, Refford said, although the administration has repeatedly told him that his department was a priority.
In 1981, $700,000 was appropriated to the Med Center for renovation projects, but the rehabilitation department did not receive any money. Redford and Staples both said they did not know why that department was excluded, and Redford said he could not find anyone willing to tell him.
CHARLES HARTMAN, vice chancellor for clinical affairs, said the $700,000 was for refurbishment of the psychiatry department in the old hospital.
The rehabilitation ward and physical therapy treatment rooms were going to be moved to the fifth floor, Redford said. But administrative teams at the clinic resisted the rest of the room remains, Redford said.
"Now it just sits up there half full of junk and much of it empty," he said. "Some of it is being put to use. Somewhere they found the money but put some nice clean, neat looking offices up there."
Reford said David Waxman, executive vice chancellor of the Med Center, told him the
KU
Hertman said the department had not been intentionally ignored.
The KU Marching Band was in the Halloween spirit during its halftime show Saturday. The band put on masks after playing the final song of the show, and marched off the field in costume. KU lost to Nebraska, 52-0.
State budget base gives false view, KU director says
By DIRK MILLER Staff Reporter
The director of KU's budget said Friday that basing the state's future revenue collections on an upturn in the national economy had not proved realistic.
State revenue projections were $6 million more than revenue collections in October and $18 million more than revenue collections in September.
"They were not realistic estimates if they miss by that much," said Ward Zimmerman, the director. "The job of the revenue estimators is to identify all the revenues — not rotate them in wishes."
Darwin Daicoff, professor of economics and a member of the committee that made the estimates, said they had hinged on a projected rise in the national economy.
Dalefoot said the estimates were in trouble "because Kansas" economy is somewhat like the national economy.
ZIMMERMAN SAID, "That is not a legitimate reason for missing the estimates."
Harley Duncan, chief analyst for the state Division of the Budget, said the state's revenue collections were about $29 million below estimates for the first four months of the fiscal
He said the estimates would be revised next month. The budget division makes official statements.
Keith Nitcher, KU's director of business affairs, said the meeting was a critical time when the state assessed what it had spent and what it would be able to spend for the next year
Last month, Gov. John Carlin said he would consider initiating an allotment system in November for the fiscal year, which ends July 30.
Mike Swenson, Carlin's assistant press secretary, said the allotment system was ready to be initiated if needed. The system would take into account the 4 percent voluntary cut made this summer by about 38 percent of the state agencies, including KU.
UNDER AN allotment system, the state would review all appropriations from the general fund to state agencies and award the money as it was needed. The allotment system could be initiated if revenue projections showed the state $^6$ general funding out of money for the year, Duncan said.
KU officials said last month that further reductions would severely hurt the University.
A bird is running through the clouds.
Weather
Today will be cloudy and cooler with a 30 percent chance of thundershowers and a high between 60 and 65, according to the Weather Channel. Will it be from the northwest at 10 to 15 mph?
It will be mostly sunny tomorrow. The high will be between 55 and 60.
It will be mostly cloudy tonight with a low between 40 and 45.
Editor of weekly puts life into paper
By MATTHEW SCHOFIELD
Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
Before the cock first crowns, and long after most businesses have locked their doors for the night, men labor with hot wax and strips of type paper, often called the lifeblood of the Kansas small town.
For these men, the day is not marked by something as mundane as a time clock, but by how fast the blue-lined pages fill before them.
Since the first Weekly Kansan Herald was published in 1854, weekly newspaper editors have written, printed, set type, struggled and worked hours most people would not believe.
"I worked 22 hours last Tuesday," said Loren Litee, editor of the Telenews, Douglas County's only remaining small town weekly newspaper.
Litterer said recently that he was the Telenews only full-time reporter. With two part-time reporters and no wire service, the Telenews staff puts out a newspaper that
WITH 24 pages and a circulation of about
2,400. Littere said, the Teleunes, like many
weeklies, is not a financial winner on its own.
He said his company published a weekly shopper and a monthly magazine to bolster its income.
The Telenews, published in Baldwin, is a combination of three old newspapers: the
Monday Morning
Baldwin Ledger, the Wellsville Globe and the Eudora Enterprise.
Combining the three created some animosity in the communities, Litterte said, because people had been comfortable with the old newspapers.
Jane Richards, editor of the Ledger until it was purchased and combined with the other two newspapers by Monte Miller in 1971, said her paper had been the lifeblood of Baldwin. She said it reflected what was important to the city without going outside those bounds.
"We had lots of local news," she said. "Some of the Baker students used to laugh at the correspondents' columns, because it was all 'Mr. and Mrs. Smith ate dinner with Mr. and
Mrs. Jones, but that's what the paper was, and it meant something to the people."
THE TELENEWS was not as oriented toward Baldwin during its first few years, but it did have a long-standing rivalry.
She said that the Ledger had reacted well to what its town wanted.
"We took out one liquor ad and, boy, did we hear about it. We didn't take out another," she
RICHARDS SAID she raised three of her six children at the newspaper office. Aside from putting 80 hours a week into producing the paper, she left the business with many good
Society has changed considerably, even in the small town, she said. The small town is not as much like a family as it used to be, she said.
"They were great, great years," she said.
"But the paper couldn't have stayed the same."
"When I ran the paper I knew everybody in town," she said. "Now there are so many new faces, even if I still was running the paper I couldn't know everybody."
Merlin Ford, Baldwin mayor and a longtime
See EDITOR page 5.
Bricker receives fourth HOPE award
MARTIN HANCOCK
Clark Bricker, professor of chemistry, sang the Crimson and the Blue after receiving the 1982 HOPE award before Saturday's football game. It was the fourth HOPE award Bricker has received.
By JEANNE FOY Staff Reporter
Alabama KU's football team lost to Nebraska
saturday. Clark Brickler, professes chemistry,
but is not available for admissions.
Before the football game, Bricker was announced as the 1982 HOPE award winner. This is Bricker's fourth Honor for The Outstanding Athlete or award. He also won in 1966, 1970 and 1979.
"I was just as elated as I was the first time. Because the students give the award, the recognition doesn't get old," said Bricker, who taught 28 years and after 38 years of teaching, 20 of them at KU.
He said winning the award four times was a little embarrassing.
Lindsey Welch, HOPE committee co-chairman, said about 50 seniors took part in the final HOPE vote on Oct. 15, 19 and 20. She said the turn-out was average.
THE OTHER HOPE finalists were: Joe Jones, associate professor of occupational therapy; Louis Michel, professor of architecture; Edward McBride, professor of mechanical engineering; and Timothy Bengtson, associate professor of journalism.
Only seniors may vote for the HOPE winner.
Last year, Gene Martin, professor of pharmacy,
won the election.
Bricker, whose name will once again be inscribed upon the permanent plaque in the Kansas Union listing the names of former HOPE and other teachers to what say made him such a nounual teacher.
"We have some great teachers here at KU. Lots of faculty are devoted to their students. I really don't know what I do that seems to be attractive to students," he said, "I take a definite interest in students without becoming involved in personal lives, but other teachers do that, too."
Bricker said he tried to inspire his students by showing him his enthusiasm for chemistry.
"ANY STUDENT who has taken my class realizes that I'm really interested in what I'm doing. I think that's the biggest thing a teacher sees. HOPE goes 5."
Heat, operations to be curtailed during vacation
By STEVE CUSICK Staff Reporter
William Hogan, associate executive vice chancellor, said that some KU employees would have to take compensatory time or vacation for time off for a (4) work day period Dec. 27-30.
Officials will turn the thermostats down for the week of Dec. 24 to Jan. 20, Hoean said.
Officials at the University of Kansas have decided to turn down the heat and curtail operations in some campus buildings for a week during winter break, a KU official said.
The temperature will be 45 degrees in the buildings with reduced activities, he said. Other campus buildings will have their thermostats set at 60 degrees, but the University libraries and buildings housing critical research, animals and buildings will be kept at normal temperatures, he said.
HOGAN SAID the move was designed to help reduce the University's utility bill and he said that the university would be able to
Classified employees affected by the move can use a combination of compensatory time, vacation leave, one-day discretionary vacation and without pay to make up the time, officials said.
Unclassified workers affected by the reduced activity can take the time from their annual
Faculty members planning to do research may find their plans altered. Some professors may be asked not to use their offices that week, officials said.
Richard Cole, president of the KU chapter of the American Association of University Professors, said the period of reduced activity could hurt some faculty grant writing.
"I KNOW there are a lot of people who are unhappy about it and I know that there is a lot of work that goes on then," he said. Cole said faculty members often were scrambling at time to finish research grants before early January deadlines.
"I guess people will just have to work around it," he said. "I know that we have to take some measures. I sure hope they save enough money to make it worthwhile."
"One would also wish they would turn off the sneakiness when it rains."
Cole said he could not say whether the reduced activity was the best step to take, but he did not. "It's hard to tell," he said.
Some members of the Classified Senate said they were not opposed to curtailing operations in the city.
"I think everyone pretty much is willing to make sacrifices," said Gall Hamilton, president of the Senate. "I think basically the decision was a fair decision."
FRANK BAILEY, a member of the Classified Senate and assistant director for communication and transportation in facilities operations, also said the decision was fair.
Bailey said he was pleased the decision had been made far enough in advance to allow people the time and space to do so.
Hogan said about one-fourth of the space in campus buildings would be affected by the rain.
Officials have not yet selected all of the buildings that will have the heat turned down, Hogan said. But he said Flint, Marvin and some halls would be operating at a reduced level.
University officials have been studying the proposal for three months, Hogan said.
5
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Page 2
University Daily Kansan, November 1, 1982
News Briefs From United Press International
Pope canonizes two nuns in All Saints Eve ceremony
VATICAN CITY—Pope John Paul II yesterday elevated to sainthood two 17th century women — a French nun and a French-Canadian nun who founded religious orders.
In an elaborate ceremony in St. Peter's Basilica on All Saints Eve, John Paul declared Marguerite Bourgeois and Jeanne Delanoie saints of the Roman Catholic Church. They became two of the church's more than 2,500 saints.
John Paul counted the curing of Lise Gauthier, who was allegedly cured of terminal cancer after her parents prayed to Matter Bourgeois and his wife, François.
Saints are believed to be able to intercede with God to perform miracles and answer prayers.
Bourgeois spent much of her life in Montreal, Canada, educating the daughters of French colonialists and Indigenous Indians. She founded the first women's college in Montreal.
Delanoue, known as the "sister of the poor," opened a home called the "House of Providence" where she cared for the poverty-streken and the aged. From this work, sprung her order of the Sisters of the Poor and Emarginated.
El Salvador in danger of losing aid
SAN SALVADOR, EI Salvador — The Salvadoran government, on the other hand, collapses and a military stalemate, may have been triggered in dengue outbreaks. It also abuses a
American military hardware and training as well as economic assistance are pegged to a certification process, a monitoring of human rights that the Reagan administration by law must complete every six months.
The government is desperate for continued U.S. aid because the nation's economy has suffered three years of rebel sabotage against ISIS.
The guerrillas launched their strongest offensive of the year Oct. 10. They claimed to have seized a 500-square-mile "arc of liberty."
Bomb detonates at U.S. Army base
GIESSEN, West Germany—A bomb planted under a U.S. Army sergeant's automobile ripped through a U.S. military housing area yesterday, wrecking 20 cars and hurting metal, roof and tile windows apartment windows in the fourth anti-American attack in a month.
A U.S. army spokesman said no one was injured in the blast at 3:25 a.m. local time. West German police estimated the damage at more than $200,000 and immediately tightened security around American installations.
No one claimed responsibility for the bomb, detonated with an automatic timing device, but the army said it resembled a bomb the Baader-Meinhof gang exploded at Ramstein U.S. Air Force Headquarters last year, which injured 15 people. They said anti-American terrorists had changed tactics since the Ramstein attack and now seek to frighten the families of U.S. forces.
Peasant mob hangs Mexican official
VALLADOLID, Mexico — A mob of 40 to 50 passants abducted, trapped and hanged a commercial farm official in a land dispute in Mexico.
Newspapers in Mexico City reported the peasants Saturday lynched Mamal Jesus Janu because he refused to resign from his post and was beaten to death.
Valladolid police spokesman Gaspar Aguilar said a mob of 40 to 50 peasants bound and killed Chan in a dispute over local politics.
The reports said the peasants abducted Chan, the local communal farming official, in the town of Valladolid and took him to nearby Kanxoc, where they tortured and hanged him.
He refused to give comments on Chan's death because the body was taken to Merida, the capital of Yucatan, 700 miles east of Mexico City.
Government blocks aid, Bhutto says
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — The widow of executed Pakistani Prime Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto accused the government yesterday of stalling on her request to seek medical treatment abroad for suspected lung cancer.
Mrs. Bhutto, 55, was ordered to appear yesterday before a six-member board at Karachi's Jinnah Post-Graduate Medical Center with results of previous medical tests and x-rays.
After a 10-minute meeting, the government-controlled board told her more tests were necessary and she then underwent an additional six
Bhutto was hanged April 4, 1979, about two years after a coup led by President Mohammad Zia ul-Aqbai toppled him from power.
Mrs. Bhutto leads the People's Democratic Party, which her husband founded and which is banned under Zia's rule. She is under house arrest.
Weinberger meets with Asian allies
SINGAPORE — Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger began an 11-day, five-nation tour of Asia and the Pacific yesterday to examine what the United States and its Asian allies can do to counter growing Soviet naval strength in the region.
Weinberger declined to meet with reporters after arriving yesterday aboard a U.S. Air Force plane on what officials say is a trip underlining the challenges of the war in Afghanistan.
Officials said his talks in Singapore would center on increased Soviet naval activity in Southeast Asia, a development that reportedly has prompted Singapore to request that another U.S. aircraft carrier be stationed in the region.
Another stop in Weinberger's Asian tour will be Thailand, which is having problems with Communist insurgents.
Sadat's brother, 3 nephews jailed
CAIRO, Egypt—Cairo newspapers disclosed yesterday that the late President Anwar Sadat's brother and three nephews have been jailed on charges of political corruption and illegal acquisition of wealth.
The detention order was the latest in a series of measures against Esmat Sadat, 57, and his family.
Opponents of the late president, slain by Moslem extremists a year ago, have seized on the case to condemn his administration.
Less than two weeks earlier, government prosecutors ordered the sequestration of $150 million in assets and that of his two children in 2013 in children and banned them from
The prosecutor's aides said Esmat Sadat's wealth was estimated at
State-owned newspapers tried to show that the late president was furious at his brother's conduct.
Israeli army chief refutes Sharon's claim
JERUSALEM — The commander of Israeli forces in Lebanon contradicted Defense Minister Ariel Sharon in open testimony yesterday, saying the army feared Christian militiamen would invade Christians in two Beirut refuge camps.
Bv United Press International
camps, told the commission on Oct. 25: "Not one of us imagined, even in our worst dreams, the horrors that emerged in (the camps)."
"Everyone, somewhere in his mind, thought about this possibility," Maj. Gen. Amir Driori told a hearing of the Israeli commission probing the slaughter of up to 1,700 civilians at the Sabra and Chattila camps.
Two doctors — a man and a woman who worked at a hospital in one of the camps and witnessed the Sept. 16-18 slaughter — will testify today in an open session, the government press office said. The doctors were not identified, but they are the first non-Iraealis to go before the panel.
Sharon, who ordered the Israeli-coordinated Christian assault on the
Secret testimony released Saturday also showed that an Israeli lieutenant reported seeing Phalangist fighters near the site of the siege and dragging others from the camp nearly
24 hours before Israel moved to halt the army.
DORRI SAID U.S. officials in Beirut knew about the killings before the Israeli army did and apparently Christian militiamen to get out of the camps.
Also on Saturday, Syria fired two Soviet-built SAM missiles at Israeli reconnaissance jets over Lebanon's Beka'a Valley in what the Israeli military command called a "serious" cease-fire violation.
THE MISILES missed their mark, but the attack heightened fear of an Israeli retaliatory strike before U.S. envoy Morris Draper could arrange a
withdrawal of the estimated 70,000 Israeli, 39,000 Syrian and 10,000 Palestinian fighters squared off in the volatile eastern Beka.
Draper reportedly made progress toward a withdrawal during five days of shuttle negotiations between Israel and Beirut but a pro-Syrian Palestinian official in Damascus vowed Saturday never to pull out.
"We are planning to reorganize our forces in Lebanon and strengthen them with more units, "Samar Ghoka, leader of the People's Struggle, said.
"The sources of our weapons will be various and we will supply our fighters with sophisticated arms," he said.
GOP predicted to retain Senate majority
By United Press International
WASHINGTON—Politicians and pollsters predicted yesterday the Republicans will retain control of the Senate in tomorrow's elections, losing one or perhaps two seats from their current majority.
Despite such surprises, and barring a last-minute Democratic surge, there was a general consensus that the Republican main intact, or face a modest reduction.
"I think it's going to be a wash." Republican political analyst Lyn Nolziger said. Former Democratic National Chairman Robert Strauss said he thought the Democrats would win "two or more Senate seats."
Both appeared on ABC's "This Week with David Brinkley."
Richards predicted in a Cable News Network interview that the GOP will enjoy a net gain of one Senate seat — in Virginia where Republican Rep. Paul Trible and Lt. Gov. Richard Davis are in a close race.
But Democratic Chairman Charles Manant said the Democrats would gain two Senate seats. He predicted a political victory in the Virginia contest.
REPUBLICAN CHAIRMAN Richard
Of the 33 Senate terms that expire in January, 19 are held by Democrats seeking re-election and 11 are held by Republicans seeking re-election. Three are open due to retirements — two Republicans and one independent.
To gain control of the Senate, Democrats would have to hold on to their present number and win five additional seats.
The only Republican incumbent trailing in the polls is first-term Sen.
John Danforth of Missouri, who was 4 percentage points behind Democrat Harriett Woods in a St. Louis Globe-Democrat poll released Friday.
THE ONLY Democratic incumbents in close races are four-term Sen. Howard Cannon of Nevada and Sen. John Melcher of Montana, who is facing investment counselor-author Larry McClure and Melcher are given a slight edge.
In addition to Missouri, New Jersey, Nevada and Montana, other Senate members of the House voted to approve the bill.
—Virginia, where a poll by the Richmond Times-Dispatch gave trible a 3-point edge over Davis in the race to succeed retiring Independent Harry Byrd Jr., who is counted as a Democrat.
—Minnesota, where GOP Sen. David Durenberger is a slight favorite to beat Mark Dayton, a department store heir
who has spent $3.7 million in his attempt to defeat the first-term Republ
—New Mexico, where the latest independent statewide poll showed first-term Republican Sen. Harrison Schmitt with a shaky 7-point lead over Democratic State Attorney General Jeff Bingaman.
-California, where Democratic Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. was within 6 points of San Diego Mayor Pete Wilson and 10 points of retiring Republican S. I. Hayakawa.
MANY PROJECTIONS and predictions showed Democrats picking up more than 20 House seats — a gain that would make it harder for Reagan to forge the kind of coalition that won approval for heavy cuts in social programs and greatly increased defense spending.
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University Daily Kansan, November 1, 1982 Page 3
Candidates push stadium beer sales
By DON KNOX Staff Reporter
The sale of beer at the University of Kansas continues to be an issue in student elections, and this year's candidates for student body president and vice president both support the idea.
Although every year candidates for student body president and vice president support the sale of beer at Kansas football games, this year's presidential differ greatly in the way they say they will approach stadium beer sales.
"I think they have studied it too long and now it's time to get something concrete done about it," Kevin Walker, St. Louis, Mo., junior, and Momentum Coalition presidential candidate, said yesterday.
Walker said the Senate needed someone outside the University to promote and lobby for stadium beer sales. And he said that the world's largest breery, Anheuser-Busch, Inc., may be just the driving force needed to convince KU officials that beer sales could actually be healthy for the athletic department and the University.
'WE'VE BEEN taking to the marketing department at Anheuser-
Bush about it," Walker said, "and they can't promise us anything, but they said they'd sure like to sell beer here."
But Jim Cramer, Prairie Village junior and Consensus Coalition vice presidential candidate, said yesterday that a task force of students, faculty, alumni and administrators should meet to discuss the possibility of stadium beer sales.
"We support the idea of beer in the stadium," Cramer said, "but there is a definite and proper procedure to get something like this through."
Cramer said that his experience with the University governance system allowed him a different perspective of the beer issue.
Cramer has been a member of the University Council.
"YOU LEARN very quickly that getting things through to the chancellor and the Board of Regents is not by screaming, yelling and getting press," Cramer said. "You have to sit down calmly and look at the issue
Cramer called Walker's plan to get a brewery to lobby for stadium beer sales
"The whole idea of lobbying the councellor and the Board of Regents was to prevent any misappropriation."
But Walker said it was necessary to
bring the issue to Chancellor Gene A. Budig.
"The chancellor of this University is an employee of the students and people of the state of Kansas," Walker said. "He is a public servant and if the students want something, then he should be forced to do it."
David Teporten, Momentum vice presidential candidate, said the issue of beer sales had been "committeed to death."
"AS IVE said before, I know absolutely nothing about the business of selling beer," he said. "We think it's only right to talk to someone who knows how to approach it properly."
Walker agreed.
"We're taking the angle that there are people who know how to sell beer, those who do it for a living," Walker said. "I can see a brewery coming to Lawrence and talking with administration and alumni about beer sales and the bottom line. And that bottom line is a dollar bill."
But while Walker and Teoporton think stadium beer sales is this election's priority issue, Cramer thinks other issues are more important.
"It's an issue in that the students support it," Cramer said, "but it's not realistic to say that it's going to happen next year."
Schol hall fights food cost increase
Men at Grace Pearson Scholarship Hall do not eat as much as men in the other scholarship halls, and those who do eat participate in the approval of 1983-84 contracts.
The Housing and Contracts Committee proposed an 8.2 percent increase in food costs for the men's scholarship halls. The men of Pearson earned a $65 rebate from their food budget last year, so they do not need to increase the amount spent for food, said Perry Frederick, Lenexa junior.
About 20 concerned residents attended the All Scholarship Hall Council meeting in Douthart Hall last night to try to reach a compromise on next year's contract.
The group decided to let each hall choose to accept a compromise increase of 5.5 percent or to let the managers decide what the contracts would say.
THE GROUP will meet again at 10 tonight in Douthart.
Pearson spends an average of $1.99 a day on food, and the other men's halls spend about $2.44 a day, said Joyce Murray, director of the office of residential programs.
The director of Pearson, Beulah Harding, has 10 years of experience as
a director and she is very careful with students' money. Cliff said.
If a hall does not spend all of the money in its food budget, the money can be spent on hall improvements. Brenda Stockman, ASHC president
In previous years, scholarship hall residents have received a rebate for spending less money than was budgeted for food because the amount spent on food varied from hall to hall. The average rebate was about $30, and residents often voted to return the money to the hall. Cliff said
The scholarship hall contract for next year was supposed to be presented to RPAB last Thursday, but ASHC had not agreed on a proposal.
Kansas Halloween free from tricks
Ghosts and goblins that wandered the streets of Lawrence last night did not encounter the horrre stories of poisoned candy that had been anticipated, Lawrence law enforcement and hospital officials said last night.
Several cities in the country banned trick-or-treating because of the recent deaths from Tylenol capsules laced with cyanide.
But trick-or-treaters in Lawrence turned out in droves because of the nice
weather, said Jack Elder, Lawrence police evidence officer.
KU police said Halloween was
previously quiet and not many prank
called.
OFFICIALS FROM Lawrence Memorial and Watkins hospitals said there had been no incidents directly related to the holiday.
Halloween for other Kansas residents was not the same as previous years, although no incidents of tampered candy were reported in the state.
Fewer children walk the streets in福州,kaka, a "topka police officer said, incidentally," says Ms. Wang.
The officer said there was no facility for inspecting candy in Topeka because liquid or poison in candy could not be detected. Fearing the worst, officials in Kansas City provided metal detection for trick-or-treaters' candy,
Wichita authorities said they received numerous calls asking whether trick-or-treating should be done on Oct. 30th or 31st.
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Haig was Deep Throat book says
By United Press International
NEW YORK-Former White House Counsel John Dean, in a forcoming book, singles out Alexander Haig as "Deep Throat," the shadowy Watergate snitch who told all at dead-of-night rendezvous in Washington garages, Time magazine said vesterday.
Dean says in "Lost Honor," scheduled for mid-November, that Haig had access to all the information Deep Threat fed or confirmed to Washington Post reporter Bo Woodward.
However, Haig said, "I wasn't even at the White House until after that time." When asked if he was married, Haig said, "I don't even know if there was one."
Woodward was not available for comment on Dean's report, and Washington Post Editor Ben Bradlee said, "You're as sure as hell not to get a comment from me."
Hiaig was the No. 2 man on the National Security Council during the Watergate era and also served briefly as White House chief of staff.
DEAN SAID Haig would have been available for the meetings with Woodward and that Haig's "character" fits that of Deep Throat — a shadowy individual who arranged late-night meetings in Capital Hill garages and supplied clues and confirmed suspicions about White House involvement in the Watergate fiasco.
Dean also says Haig was probably acquainted with Woodward because the reporter served as a counter-bet on the magician and the White House in 1969.
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BETTY JO CHARLTON
REPRESENTATIVE FORITY DISTRICT
DOUGLAS COUNTY
1024 INDIANA STREET
LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044
913-843-5024
STATE OF KANSAS
10264
ROOM 281-W
STATE CAPITOL BUILDING
TOPEAK, KANSAK 66612
913-206-7539
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
Betty Jo Charlton, 1624 Indiana St., Incumbent State Representative, 46th District. Education:
B. A.and M.A., Political Science, University of Kansas
Phi Beta Kappa and Pi Sigma Alpha (national political science honor society). Experience.
Experience:
Business - Charlton Insurance Agency (now Charlton-Manley).
Business - Charton Insurance Agency (now Charton-Manley
Teaching - Assistant Instructor. University of Kansas.
Western Civilization Staff 1970-1973. Eight classes each semester for six semesters; one class each semester (as a volunteer) fall 1973 through fall 1982.
Government - Legislative Services two years, Governor's office one year, member of the House of Representatives three years.
I have lived in Lawrence 37 years. For more than half of those years, I have spent at least some time on the campus each semester. I have considerable knowledge of the university and its relationship with the state government. I am devoted to the cause of higher education. I have worked conscientiously for increases in faculty salaries, student and classified employees wages, other operating expenses, and capital improvements.
I have consistently supported a severance tax. On the House Energy and Natural Resources Committee I have been working on problems such as utility rate structure, hazardous waste, pollution, conservation, and energy alternatives to petroleum and nuclear power.
I support a mutual, verifiable freeze, between the U.S. and the U.S.S.R., on the development, production, and deployment of nuclear weapons as the first step in the reduction of nuclear arms.
I keep in touch with University administrators, faculty members and students; the residents of the district; and the community at large. I help groups and individuals who have problems with state and national government.
My husband and both our sons are also K.U. alumni. For three years I have been a full time legislator. I am seeking re-election to a second full term.
Paid for by the committee to ReElect Betty Jo Charlton, Bill Craven, Treasurer
Page 4
Opinion
University Daily Kansan November 1, 1982
KU needs Carlin plan
The races for governor, state House of Representatives and Congress this year are crucial not only to the University of Kansas but to all Regents schools.
Generating more money while curbing government spending and at the same time finding the money to finance education has been the issue upon which these races seem to hinge.
The tax is not a cure-all for the state's problems. But it would generate $120 million a year — money that Carlin has dedicated to primary and secondary education. He says the severance tax would free general fund money that could be spent on higher education.
In the gubernatorial race, incumbent Democrat John Carlin has been charged with mismanaging the state's money surplus, ordering painful budget cuts and alienating the oil and gas industry by proposing a minerals severance tax.
Carlin's opponent, Republican Sam Hardage, has proposed no plan to finance higher education, other than to cut waste from the state Department of Education and other departments. His plan to increase revenues is to increase the gasoline tax that consumers pay by 4 cents a gallon. He has pledged that money, $55 million a year, to the state highway system.
The Kansan sees things differently
The severance tax would come out of the profits of large producers. Carlin has said that 80 percent of any gas tax rise would be paid by Kansas consumers, whereas only 2 percent of a severance tax would be paid by them.
The state's budget crisis illustrates the need for a tax increase next year — if the state plans to remain solvent. He is correct to maintain that Kansas should follow other mineral- and
oil-producing states and put some of the tax burden on the companies that have been exploiting resources that cannot be replaced.
Morris Kay, Republican candidate for the 2nd District congressional seat being vacated by Jim Jeffries, has tried to make that race a referendum on Reaganomics. He has assumed the role of the incumbent, choosing not to be as vocal as his opponent, Democrat Jim Slattery.
Both have served in the Kansas House. Kay gained name recognition as a gubernatorial candidate and chairman of the state GOP.
Kay supports the third phase of the federal tax cut, but Slattery says that implementing it while the government wrangles with inflation and a deficit would be unwise. The debate is a microcosm of national concerns. Kay's argument assumes that the cut will be offset by more personal spending. Slattery's is rooted in the reality of a deficit that already needs all the help it can get.
That business-like approach to running government is mirrored in the campaign of Bob Schulte, Republican candidate for the 44th District state representative seat. He thinks the University must prepare to shoulder its share of further cuts. His opponent, incumbent Democrat Jessie Branson, has been faithful to the University in opposing further cuts. But Schulte's attitude emphasizes that the state must stay on its feet before it can provide money for services.
In the 46th District, incumbent Democrat Betty Jo Charlton has built the foundation of a good relationship between the University and the Legislature. Republican Doug Lamborn lacks that experience, and would have to begin anew that essential link.
Band can do without abuse
This is an open letter to Kansas State University fans:
To the Editor:
What's red, white and blue? No, it's not an American flag, nor a bouncing ball. It's a KU band member. And underneath the dazzling red and blue uniform is a person lust like you and me
— a person who has feelings, pain and pride, a person who works hard to achieve excellence for the sole purpose of wearing a KU band uniform and performing for football fans.
The KU band sometimes travels with the football team to give the team needed support and spirit. The band doesn't have to go to other schools, but it does because its members are good at what they do and enjoy sharing the experience of a well-done half-time show with the audience.
The one thing that is obvious about the KU band is that, win or lose, the 250-piece band is still behind the football team and is continually showing the football players that someone cares about them, even when the final score is 36-7 against them.
Melissa McIntyre
Too bad the K-State fans can't make the same claim. The nationally televised Oct. 22 football
game between the Jayhawks and the Wildcats was evidence of that fact.
But it's hard to perform to your potential when you are afraid of being hit with oranges, bars of soap, ice and bottles. It's hard to raise the football team's spirit when your own spirits are dampened, when equipment and uniforms are stolen, broken or damaged and people physically and mentally injured. Harassment any kind is that it's even less fun when there is no place to hide.
Sure, the KU band is from Lawrence, the home of the Jayhawks, but is that any reason to verbally and physically assault the members of the KU band? They aren't responsible for what is happening on the field, so whyaint them with obscentes and hit them with oranges?
Melissa McIntyre Raytown, Mo., senior
That's news in Beirut
To the Editor:
I am presently in the Navy and assigned as the communications officer aboard the US Guam, which is now on station off the coast of Beirut, Lebanon. I am also a 1979 graduate of KU. I hope to do what I hope will be as amusing to you as the circumstances surrounding it were to me.
As an avid supporter of KU and a fan of its daily newspaper, I have subscribed to the Kansan to keep up with the alma mater. We all know that mail sometimes takes a while to reach its destination, particularly when that destination is in the Eastern Mediterranean. The ironic twist to this story is that I received the pictured Kansan the same day we landed our Marines in Lebanon. (The city in the picture's background is, of course, Beirut.) It is obvious that the headline was certainly overcome by events.
Another slight inaccuracy about us here at "Bagel Station" that appeared in the Sept. 22 Kansan indicates that the Guam is carrying the Harrier "jump jet" and Sea King helicopter. Neither the Guam nor the other amphibious aircraft are equipped with the UH-1 Huey, The Guam, however, is carrying the UH-1 Huey, AH-1 Cobra, CH-46 Sea Knight and CH-53 Sea Station helicopters.
In closing, I wish to thank you for publishing a fine paper and helping at least one "Gator" keep up with KU.
David Gannon
Lieutenant, U.S. Navy
LAKESIDE
THE DETROIT FREE PRESS
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ECONOMY
Campaign darts distract voters
When political candidates provide information, it's supposed to make voters' decisions easier. But candidates tend to sling a lot of mud over them. "We want the voters, and it is the voters" eyes that become clouded.
This year's elections feature the usual battles between die-hard Democrats and Republicans, all of whom seem willing to fight to the death for every vote. Each candidate spends thousands of dollars to finance these wars of words in hopes of getting office and the glory and prestige that goes with it.
Most candidates, at least in races expected to be close, do not limit their campaigns to spen- ding time.
The possibility that the opposition might be hiding some deep, dark secret is always a vote-grabbing element on which to lean. It doesn't matter whether the opposition is a church elder, president of the local Eagle's club and a member of every charitable organization imaginable — he's probably done something that could be used against him by a crafty opponent. And if nothing substantial can be found, candidates can always resort to unfounded name-calling.
This year's campaigns seemed unusually full of politics' muckraking tradition.
Gov. John Carlin's campaign aides managed to find evidence that Republican candidate Sam Hardage had defaulted on a business deal years ago.
Hardage countered with commercials implying that important decisions were being made in smoke-filled rooms rather than at the Capitol. Mud-slinging wasn't limited to this year's gubernatorial candidates. It seemed to affect candidates for every office.
Morris. Kay's irrelevant accusations and refusal to shake opponent Jim Slattery's hand
during a recently televised debate make perfect examples.
Somehow, I thought I was witnessing a new wave of disgustingly biased campaign strategies by this year's candidates. I mistakenly thought I had seen an example of how and that candidates had stooped to new lows.
Maybe it was my inexperience at the voting booth that led me to think this election was different from others. Maybe I was just naive. Seeing a few back issues of the University Daily Kansan quickly opened my eyes to the realities of gutter politics.
The 1974 election, when the governor, attorney general and secretary of state, were first elected
N. M. A. R. S.
TOM HUTTON
to four-year terms, provided lots of examples of name- calling and muckraking.
What surprised me were the similarities of the charges being made then and now; many of the candidates involved remain in the public's interest.
In that election, which came in the middle of the Watergate proceedings, collaboration charges against Republicans were common. The other parties were attempting to connect every Republican to Richard Nixon and Watergate, no matter what the merits of the candidates were. But it was a bed of deadness of the Republican Party in 1974 and was accused by his opponent of being part of Watergate.
"Bob Dole is a symbol of a type of politics, a
type of politics that should disappear from the face of the earth." Bill Roy. Dole's unsuccessful attempt to dissuade a public from voting.
Watergate was a common campaign jab mentioned in Democratic challenges for Republican-held positions in 1974. But, at least in Kansas, it proved an ineffective weapon for the Democrats.
Apparently, the endorsements of Republican President Gerald Ford weighed heavier in voters' minds at the polls in 1974. Republicans are using similar tactics in the 1982
Dole, now considered one of the most prominent U.S. senators by many analysts, campaigned for fellow Republican Hardage in Wichita at a recent $10-a-plate fundraising dinner.
It didn't matter that Hardage had no prior government experience. Dole said he thought Hardage was the man to be governor of Kansas. The senator's words were probably taken as an explanation of why he went out the money for dinner — the issues of qualification, experience and education were ignored.
No matter what the endorsements and commercials say, voters should look at the issues and vote for the candidates they think best represent their beliefs. Politics must be looked at more deeply than than the 30-second television yelling matches allow. Those short sound-offs are paid announcements by the candidates and have little bearing on the true issues
It's much harder to be a qualified, informed voter than to blindly flip switches in the election booth. And elections analysts predict that this year's elections will have the lowest turnout in
Maybe the value of disgrazing the opposition is becoming apparent. Voters really don't know who to believe; instead of trying to figure it out, they just stay home.
Time to accept non-smokers' rights
Smokers beware, this column could be dangerous to your habit.
The Kansas Department of Health and Environment unveiled a plan last week to keep non-smokers away from the deadly fumes of co-workers' cigarettes.
The plan would allow employees, with the consent of management, to vote on whether there will be separate areas for smoking and non-smoking workers to work.
Well, that's great for non-smokers. There is probably nothing more disagreasing to a non-smoker than that.
The KDHE has come up with a reasonable plan that gives smokers a place to light up at work and non-smokers a place to breathe untainted air.
And a recent court ruling stated that people who are made sick by other people's smoke are entitled to compensation if a smoke-free environment is unavailable.
It can be distracting for people hard at work to be assaulted suddenly by the strong fumes of gas.
Secondary smoke has been proven to be as bad, if not worse, for people that the smoke that is emitted from a vehicle
The difficulty of the KDHE plan is that if non-smokers outnumber smokers in an office, the office is likely to vote to separate smokers from non-smokers. Either the smoker would have to move to another area, or he could not smoke.
Some smokers cannot give up smoking under any circumstances, much less when he is hard at work; consequently, the worker will probably move.
But what if he cannot move? What if, like me,
he must work in the area he is assigned to, or if,
like a secretary, he must work near his boss?
Too bad? You bet. Smokers have a right to the habit that they enjoy. But non-smokers have not had the chance, until now, to assert their right to air that is as clean as possible.
The key phrase in the plan, of course, is "after approval of management." Therefore, if man
agreement does not want the vote, then there will be no vote.
And no non-smoking areas.
Cigarette smoke has long been known to be harmful to health. It is also a harmful habit that it causes.
Aversion therapy might work. Have you ever been in a smoking car of a train? There is nothing more revolting than such a smoke-filled, enclosed area. But people who choose to be in those areas continue to smoke, despite the adverse conditions.
Similarly, a smoking area set up by a vote the kind proposed would also become a revolving room.
The smoke concentration would make working in the area difficult, but it probably wouldn't 'stop'
CATHERINE BEHAN
people from smoking there. It might, however, keep clients and co-workers from going there.
I have worked in places with separate smoking areas, which almost became unofficial break rooms. Smokers could volunteer to do work that would require them to be in that area. If no such work was available, they would simply go there for a smoke anyway.
Big help for productivity.
If the KDHE plan is meant, in the long run, to help employees who do smoke to quit, it probably will not work.
Because smokers will not give up smoking so easily, it will probably be necessary to build a special work section for smokers. That might
To quit smoking, smokers need more than a nasty work area for incentive. Being forced to smoke in a particular area would not be necessary, but was what a smoker had to do to get his nicotine.
mean adding expensive room dividers and,
possibly, requiring that there be more desks.
A company could decide to simply fire people who smoke or to require that people who do smoke not do so in the building. Either would be rather extreme.
Logically, the kind of vote being proposed would be the only way to offset two rights — the right to smoke and the right not to have to breathe other people's smoke.
If there is no such vote, then it is the responsibility of the smoker to make sure that his smoke does not bother anyone around him. Unfortunately, this basic politeness is often forgotten by smokers who light up anywhere, without asking whether it others people nearby
Smokers have the right to beofluid the air that they breathe, but they do not have the right to beofluid the air that they breathe.
To refrain from smoking can be difficult for a smoker who, either by a vote such as the one the KDIE is proposing or by basic politeness, is outraged at out his light, but it is the only fair thing to do.
I know, I smoke.
The University Daily KANSAN
The University Daily Kannan (USP$ 60-640) is published at the University of Kannan, 118 Floor Hall, Lawrence, Kannan. The University Daily Kannan school year and Monday and Thursday during the summer is paid a $25 per day Sunday, holidays and final periods. Second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kannan 6044. Subscriptions by mail are $15 per month or $4 a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $1 a semester, paid through the student activity fee. Subscription to the University Daily Kannan, 118 Floor Hall, Lawrence, Kannan.
Editor Business Manager Susan Cookey Susan George George Managing Editor Behance McGee Editorial Editor Retail Sales Representative Larry Allison, John Clark Katie Duggan, Jill Hittman, Jay Jackman Ted Mantley, Bill HIllen, Steve Larkin, Ann Tucker Ted Mantley, Dave Moore, Bill Neat, Tim Schaffer Scott Willemman, Tod Zedger General Manager and News Advisor Paid Jean Advertising Advisor
University Daily Kansan, November 1, 1982
Page 5
HOPE nominee leaves bed to participate in ceremony
When HOPE finalist Joyce Jones came to the HOPE ceremony before Saturday's game, she did not leave from her home. She sat in her bed in Lawrence Memorial Hospital.
Jones has been in the hospital for about a week with what she said doctors thought was a herniated disc. When something is herniated, it is protruding through a natural or accidental opening in the walls of its natural cavity.
Jones said she went to the HOPE ceremony for the students who had voted for her and because being a HOPE finalist was a great honor. She was in the second time she had been a HOPE finalist.
Jones said she had managed to get to the ceremony after she had been allowed to leave the hospital and after her sister, Alleen
Nesmith, had made arrangements to get her to Memorial Stadium.
"THEY GAVE me a two-hour pass and doped me up," she said.
Lindsey Welch, HOPE committee co-chairman, said she had not learned that Jones was coming to the ceremony until Saturday morning.
"That morning her sister called and told me she could come. We were very excited," she said.
If Jones had not been able to come to the ceremony, her sister would have stood in for her, Welch said.
Welch said a chair and a box for Jones' feet to rest on had been provided for her at the stadium because of her bad back
Jones said she was glad she had been able to attend the ceremony.
can do. You don't get that excitement from reading the book. It has to be pointed out," he
From page one
Hope
He said he never kept his lecture notes; rather, he writes new lectures every year.
"I like to think I go into class fresh everytime. I'm not using notes I wrote two or three or 10 years ago. I'm always keeping my eyes and ears open for things I can use in my case," he said.
"It tends to relieve the monotony. The students aren't quite sure what's going to happen any one day. It shouldn't be the same thing everyday," he said.
Over the years, he said, he has learned different techniques and tricks to teach students better and to capture their attention. For instance, he asked his students up and down the aisles, asking students questions.
BRICKER SAID teaching large classes was a disadvantage, but he tried to work around that. Chemistry 184, for example, usually has about 800 students.
names of his students, and 'then their faces. He records grades himself to help him remember names and to keep track of how students are doing, he said.
He said he tried to become familiar with the
A standard practice is his photography all the students so he can become familiar with the techniques.
"The big difficulty is treating the student who comes to see me at 5:30 in the aftermoon with the same courtesy and understanding I have for the person who comes at 8:30 in the morning." he said.
"I seldom lose my temper with a student. I try very hard to t. realize students should have sense of humor."
EACH STUDENT needs something different from a teacher, Bricker said.
"Students come in to see me all the time. I never treat two students the same." he said.
never let two students the same. he said.
Some students, he said, need to be bawled out in order to motivate them, and others need to be patted on the back.
Bricker said teaching was harder now than
when he started because more of a gap existed between the abilities of each student.
"Today, a lot of students have never learned the basics of writing, arithmetic and listening to a lecture and being able to pick out what is important," he said.
"You cannot teach just for the top 25 percent, and you can't teach just for the lower 25 percent. I try to adjust my teaching so that everybody gets something."
HE SAID he still remained in touch with many students, including one he had taught 30 years ago. a colleague in the chemistry department, a graduate of Bricker University, is a former student of his. Bricker said.
"There's no greater satisfaction than to see one of my students excel." he said.
Bricker said he would miss the daily instruction his students when he retired, but he wore socks and was sorry.
"I feel very strongly that we ought to let some people younger take over and get some new ideas, new blood. Let someone else take the daily strain of teaching," he said.
Revenue
From page one
Nitcher said KU could only wait and hope that it would not have to face any more reductions.
ROBERT COBB, executive vice chancellor, said he hoped the national and state economies would turn around before an allotment system became necessary.
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Dalcoff said he anticipated an increase in the nation's economic activity early next year because of falling interest rates.
Revenue collections for October have shown improvement from the past three months, Duncan said, and collections for the month were $4.5 million above collections for last October.
"That's encouraging, but it certainly doesn't mean the problems are over." Duncan said.
The biggest drop for the state has been in corporate income taxes, which were down about 27 percent from the October estimates.
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Editor
From page one
"The old Ledger did a very good service to the community, but it didn't do me much good as an advertiser," he said. "The Telenews is more business-minded."
"People were upset for quite a little while. Some people are upset, he said." "Those people would not subscribe to it, but they would have a time to find out what was going on in town."
BE THERE WHEN THEY BURN THE MORTGAGE NOVEMBER 1,1982
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Page 6
University Dally Kansan, November 1, 1982
Poles pray for release of activists
By United Press International
WARSAW, Poland—About 5,000 Poles with crucifixes raised afoot gathered in the center of Warsaw yesterday and prayed for the release of former leader Lech Walesa and hundreds of other detained union activists.
"October was full of tragic events," a local priest said during a mass at St. Joseph's Church on the eve of All Saints Day, a religious holiday expected to kindle memorial ceremonies today for Poles slain in battles with state police.
Wreath-laying ceremonies were planned at the monument to the victims of the 1970 Gdansk riots, at the symbolic tomb for seven coal miners killed by riot police in Silesia last week. A 20-year-old Bogdan Wiosk, who was shot to death Oct. 13 in a street clash with police in Nowa Huta.
Church sources estimate between 500 and 700 union leaders are still interned.
On campus
BURGLAR'S STOLE $1,474 worth of stereo equipment and other items sometime between 3 and 4 a.m. Saturday from an apartment in the 2400 block of West 24th Street, police said yesterday.
BURGLARS STOLE $2,995 worth of items sometime last week from a home in the 1900 block of burglar's stole. eight handguns and a Japanese sword.
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Commission to discuss redevelopment contract
By DOUG CUNNINGHAM Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
The Lawrence City Commission tomorrow night will consider an agreement that outlines the responsibilities of the city and a Louisiana developer in working on the proposed downtown redevelopment project.
Representatives of the developer,
Sizerale Realty Co. Inc., Kenner, La.,
were in Lawrence two weeks ago to
support the agreement with city officials.
The proposed agreement, which city officials said was preliminary and discussion only, was made public Friday.
The agreement calls for Sizer to prepare a basic design plan and a financing proposal for the redevelopment project, said Dean Palos, a planer in the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning office.
"BASICALLY, THE document was one that was submitted by Sizer to us and we have made some changes in it," Palos said.
Mayor Marci Francisco said the commission would discuss the agreement tomorrow night and hear comments from members of the Downtown Improvement Committee, which assisted the commission in its search for a developer.
If the agreement needs to be changed, the commission may recess its meeting until a study session on the agreement further, she said.
Francisco said she hoped the commission could reach an agreement with Sizeler as soon as possible.
The agreement to be considered by the commission calls for Sizeler, which was designated developer of record management proposal for the redevelopment project.
THE PROPOSAL, according to the agreement, is to include a basic project design, a tiretble and plan for the city. It also includes responsibilities of the city and Sizer.
According to the agreement, the proposal is to be "of such quality as to attract major department store users and nationally recognized retailers."
The proposal is to be prepared at Sizeler's expense, according to the agreement, and the city has final authority to accept or reject Sizeler's proposal.
The agreement also states that if the city rejects Sizerel's proposal and does not choose another developer of record within six months, Sizerel must give to the city all reports and studies it has designed for the redevelopment project.
PALOS SAID that once an agreement was reached, Sizeler would have 90 working days to submit a formal proposal.
proposal.
The agreement also calls for Sizerel to hold two public meetings before it presents its proposal to the city.
perform.
The first of these meetings is to be a listening session where comments from the public will be sought, according to the agreement.
The city must pay for the reports and studies if another developer is chosen within six months.
City Commissioner Tom Gleason said the provision for two public meetings was approved.
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Student Senate and the Associated Students of Kansas encourage all students to attend tonight's debate between the candidates for Second District Congress.
Congress.
The Last Debate
JIM SLATTERY vs. MORRIS KAY Democrat Republican
TONIGHT: 7:30 pm ALDERSON AUDITORIUM, KANSAS UNION
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Group urges evaluation thrift
By DIRK MILLER Staff Reporter
Any review of academic programs at Kansas Board of Regents institutions should use existing methods of evaluation to avoid wasting money, members of the Council of Chief Academic officers said recently.
COCAO plans to draft an outline for a review of academic programs at Regents schools. The council met last week to discuss possible recommendations to the Council of Presidents and to the Regents staff.
Jim McFarland, Regents academic officer, said the review would increase the Regens' knowledge of programs offered by the universities
Deanell Tacha, KU's vice-chairman for academic affairs and chairman of COCAO, said the council's recommendations would incorporate procedures used for reports to accreting agencies such as the North Carolina College of Colleges and Schools, the agency that accredits all Regents schools.
and help them make the best use of the schools' resources.
JIM GILBERT, Pittsburg State University's vice president for academic affairs, said, "One of our concerns was that we didn't have to duplicate program reviews, such as the nursing school accreditations."
These accreditations were done for nursing schools on most campuses over the past two years, he said.
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The Regents are expected to consider COCAO's recommendations at their November meeting, and probably will consider adopting the review at the December meeting, Tacha said.
She said reviewing academic programs was a time-consuming process, because the data must be collected over a 10-year period to be accredited by the North Central Association.
McFarland said the Regents would not use the review to cut programs to cover immediate reductions in state appropriations. But in the future the Regents would be used as a way of tightening the whole Regents educational system.
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It's a Fact Representative Betty Jo Charlton wants the best for The University of Kansas
Representative Betty Jo Charlton has both a personal stake and a political cause in supporting the University of Kansas.
Having received a Masters Degree in Political Science from KU, and having served in the Navy for ten years, Representative Charity is an education program at the University of education programs at the University of
Representative Betty Jo Chanton is proud of her record of consistently supporting pay increases for K.I.L. faculty and civil service employees.
And as a leader, Representative Chatham
worked with our students to help me.
She taught me how we spend for education today will repel itself
in the economic and social well-being of our children.
Let's Re-Elect YOUR State Representative
(1)
BettyJo Charlton
The University of Kansas HOMECOMING DANCE
THE TEMPEST
Tex Beneke
and his Orchestra
KM's Fabulous Forties
with
"Music in the Miller Mood"
Saturday, November 6, 1982
8 p.m. to midnight
Kansas Union Ballroom
Dance to the music of Tex Beneke and his 15-s琴 orchestra as they offer the Big Band sound made popular by Glenn Miller and other famous band leaders during the Fabulous Forties.
Beneke and his orchestra bring back memories for those who grew misty-eyed as they heard "Moonlight Serenade," "String of Pearls," or "in the Mood"—and introduce music of the Forties to those too young to remember.
Other Homecoming Highlights
Friday, November 5
Homecoming Parade: 2:30 p.m. Floats, bands, drill and flag units, 1940s cars and other reminders or The Fabulous Forties. Chi Omega Fountain, west on Jawahk Boulevard to Mississippi Street and Memorial Stadium. Float display from 7 to 9 p.m. at X zone parking lot near stadium. Free.
Saturday, November 6
All-University Homecoming Luncheon and Ellsworth Medallion presentation. 11 a.m. Union Ballroom
Football. KU vs. Iowa State: 1:30 p.m. Memorial Stadium.
Music by the Crimson and Blues Brothers jazz band, alumni musicians from popular local groups of '40s. After game, Main Lobby, Kansas Union. Free.
Ticket Information:
Luncheon: $6.50. Call KU Alumni Association, (913) 864-4760.
Football: $6 general admission; 11 reserved. Call KU Athletic Ticket Office, (913) 864-3141.
Tex Beneke Dance: $10 public; $8.50 students with KU-JD. Call KU Student Union Activities, (913)
864-3477, or KU Alumni Association.
KU Homecoming Weekend is sponsored by the KU Alumni Association, Student Union Activities and the KU Homecoming Committee.
Public Welcome
University Daily Kansan, November 1. 1982
Page 7
Candidates' views stated before Election Day
Editor's note: The following is a list of candidates running for local, state and national office and a brief summary of their positions on the boards in this campaign.
Election day is tomorrow. The polls will be open from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m.
By JULIE HEABERLIN Staff Reporter
Governor race
Incumbent Democratic Gov. John Carlin is facing Republican Sam Hardage, a Wichita
The primary issue in the race is how each plans to restore economic prosperity to Kansas. Carlin, a 42-year-old Smolan dairy farmer, proposes a severance tax on the oil and gas industry, which is projected to bring in $120 annually for highways and education. Carlin, an avid supporter of the federal by the Republican-controlled Kansas Senate after narrowly passing the Kansas House.
Hardage strongly opposes Carlin's severance tax because he says it unfairly singles out one industry. He maintains that it would discourage new businesses to settle in Kansas.
He also says that the Legislature would be likely to again veto the tax proposal because the Senate membership will remain intact because senators are not up for re-election until 1984.
Hardge propose, instead, a nine-point economic plan that focuses on a long-term incentive program to bring industry to Kansas and increase the number of the Department of Economic Development.
The plan features a 4-cent-per-gallon gasoline tax increase, although Carlin officials have
charged Hardage with softening his position on the tax. The gasoline tax proposal is projected to be 20 cents per gallon.
Hardage says he will finance education by reducing bureaucratic waste in most government departments, including the Department of Education.
TO STIMULATE a greater business base, Hardage says he or his running mate, State Sen. Dan Thiessen, will visit nearly every business in the business to encourage expansion in the state.
Hardage supports the death penalty, but Carlin opposes capital punishment and has vetoed three death penalty bills during his term.
Carlin supports a strong community-based corrections program, while Hardage has been hesitant to continue the program on a larger scale for his work for its continuation on a much smaller scale.
Hardage opposes the new medium security prison under construction at Lansing State Penitentiary because it is scheduled to be attached to the present facility. He maintains that the prison, approved under Carlin's administration, is a security hazard. Hardage supports a new medium security prison detached from the facility.
Carlin accuses Hardage, who has never held public office, of no real understanding of the governmental process, and says the Republi-
cans must pay for financing any programs other than highways.
Carlin has repeatedly accused his opponent of changing his positions on the issues, particularly natural gas deregulation, a severance tax and his proposed 4-cent increase in federal income taxes. The severance tax the method to economic recovery that will least hurt the Kansas consumer.
Hardage, a multimillionaire businessman with a graduate degree in business from Harvard, denounces Carlin for mis management of government funds. He also accuses Carlin of misleading Kansas voters by saying his tax is a cure for the state's economic woes.
Hardage says the severance tax will raise both utility rates and property taxes. Throughout the campaign, he has repeatedly said that he had not in any way had no alternative to a severance tax.
2nd District Congress
This is another close race in which Republican Morris Kay and Democrat Jim Slattery areying for the retiring Jim Jenkins' seat.
Kay, 50, is an insurance salesman from Louisiana who served six years in the Kansas State.
Slattery, 34, is a Topaea attorney and a real estate executive who also served six years in
One of the primary issues in the race is their differing views on the third leg of President Reagan's tax reduction plan scheduled for next year. Kay supports the tax cut, while Slattery says it is ridiculous to consider another tax cut in the face of the ballooning national deficit.
Kay accuses Slattery of supporting tax increases, and Slattery says Kay only supports the proposed tax reduction because of its popularity with voters. Kay proposes curing government through tax incentives, and this said in turn lower interest rates and create jobs.
Slattery says the deficit must be eliminated before interest rates will decrease, and
proposes massive waste reductions in the defense budget and foreign aid.
Slattery proposes altering the methods for computing future benefit increases in entitlement programs, such as Social Security.
BOTH KAY AND SLATTER stress support and Social Security System and social programs.
Slattery supports an immediate, mutually verifiable freeze on nuclear weapons and a halt to increased funding for the Department of Defense.
Kay favors a continued build-up of defense before negotiations between the United States and the Soviet Union. Both Kay and Slattery have received $25 million in the national defense budget by $25 billion.
Both candidates support the federal student loan program. Kay supports continued financial assistance, but he also stresses the need for greater participation by the private sector through cooperative programs with the government.
Slattery opposes both an anti-abortion amendment and a school prayer amendment. Kay has said he would vote for both amendments.
Guttery has said he would oppose any budget reductions for the Environmental Protection Agency, while Kay favors more local support and control over environmental matters.
46th District
Charlton, 59, has served three years in the House and has a master's degree in political science from the University of Kansas.
Republican Doug Lamborn is opposing incumbent Democrat Betty J. Charlton
Lamborn, 28, is a Lawrence paint contractor and has a bachelor's degree in journalism from Ohio.
Both candidates support a severance tax and programs for the elderly. Both candidates oppose further reductions in the Board of Regents budgets.
44th District
Republican Bob Schulte is opposing incumbent Democrat Jessie Branson. Branson, 61, has served one term in the House. She has a nursing degree from the University of Kansas.
Schulte, 30. is a radio announcer and carpenter. He has a bachelor's degree in journalism.
Both candidates support a severance tax. Branson says she opposes any further reductions in the Board of Regents budget, while Schultz, although maintaining education is a first item, says any further budget reductions should be across-the-board for all state agencies.
Republican Hank Booth and Democrat Nancy Hiebert have consistently agreed on the issues in this race, but each maintains that they are more experienced than their opponent.
County commissioner
Booth, a long-time resident of Douglas County, was a member of the Douglas County Planning Commission for six years. Hiebert and his staff provided counsel to a doctor's degree in psychology and research.
Both have expressed concern about the future effect of rising utility rates.
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Page 8 University Daily Kansan, November 1, 1982
Bell fails to do work, will stand trial Nov.17
A University of Kansas football player will be tried for consuming alcohol as a minor, a Douglas County District Court judge ruled Friday.
Kerwin Bell, Huntington Beach, Calif., junior, will be tried Nov. 17 because he failed to complete 20 hours of community service — the punishment agreed upon with the prosecution for the minor offense.
Bell, 20, KU running back, was arrested in March for drinking at the Mad Hatter, 700 New Hampshire St., a private club.
Harry Warren, assistant district attorney, requested a trial on the charge because Bell had had more than 10 years of work and had not completed any hours.
The maximum sentence for drinking as a minor is 30 days in jail and a $200 fine.
BELL'S ATTORNEY, Halley Kampschreuer, asked for an additional two weeks for Bell to do the work. He said Bell had delayed doing it and was too busy to complete it after football season started.
Rather than granting a time extension, Judge Mike Elwell set a trial date for the original charge.
In other court matters, a preliminary hearing for the former director of the KU on Wheels bus program was scheduled for today. Steve McMurry, the director of the program charged with six counts of theft involving $20,425 stolen from bus pass funds.
Warren said recently that more than $50,000 might be involved. He said the preliminary hearing scheduled for him in January would be waived or continued.
On campus
TODAY
KU COLLEGE REPUBLICANS will have a reception for Morris Kay at 6:30 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room of the Union.
CATHOLIC CENTER WORSHIP will be at 12:30 p.m. in Danforth Chanel.
JIM SLATTERY and Morris Kay will debate on questions of national security and foreign policy at 7:30 the Anderson Auditorium of the Union.
MARANATHA MINISTRIES will meet at 7 p.m. in the Pine Room of the Union.
DISCUSSION on the severance tax will be at 12:30 p.m. in the Conference Room of the Satellite Union.
CAMPUS CRUSade FOR CHRIST will meet at 7 p.m. in the Big Eight Room in the Kansas Union.
FACULTY RECITAL SERIES,
featuring Alice Downs, assistant
professor of piano music, and Rita
Sloan on pianos, will be at 8 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall.
MARANATHA MINISTRIES will meet at 7 p.m. in the Kansas Room of the Union.
TOMORROW
BLOOD PRESSURE SCREENING will be from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. in Parlor A of the Union
KU GUN CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in the Conference Room of the Satellite Union.
CAMPUS CHRISTIAN FELLOW-SHIP'S Bible study and fellowship will be at 7:30 p.m. in the Union.
ARNOLD AIR SOCIETY will meet at 6 p.m. in the International Room of the Union.
As Thanksgiving draws near, the office of foreign student services is looking for families to house 55 foreign students during Thanksgiving break.
Program needs families to host foreign students
In the program, foreign students stay as guests with American families during either Thanksgiving or spring break.
Ten families have agreed to participate in the Homestay Program, said Diane Stewart, assistant director of the program to 20 families usually participate.
"We can place 30 students for sure. After that, it's touch and go. Some will drop out because they have other plans," she said.
Stewart said she contacted those families who had been previous hosts to foreign students. She would like to see about 50 to 60 families in the program.
don't know why. Maybe they've planned other things to do for the party.
Most of the families in the program lived in Topeka, Kansas City and Whitewater, which is near Wichita, St. Louis and the same families have participated in the program.
Foreign students must apply for the program six weeks in advance. Stewart said she would like to know by Friday how many families were participating and students could be notified whether a home had been found for them.
"IT'S HARD to recruit families. I
However, she said, she will not turn down a family if it joins the program and has no money.
Students have to pay for only the cost of transportation to and from the facility.
KU has been involved in the Homestay Program for 14 years.
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University Daily Kansan, November 1. 1982
Page 9
Local 1596 joins computer age
By MATTHEW SCHOFIELD Staff Reporter
Progressive fire protection and a desire to help the Lawrence Fire Department remain the best in the state have prompted the local fire department to put the department into the company age, the union's president said Friday.
Jerry Karr, local 1586 president, said during a special donation ceremony that brought the computer for about $1,100 and his ownership but would but the city use it.
The only other fire department in the state that has a computer system is the
"As far as I know we are the first union to donate something like this," he said.
THE UNION decided to buy the computer system partially because they saw a need to increase the speed with which they could find information, and partially because it would help the union in contract negotiations.
"We need data," he said. "We need to justify, our existence. This gives us more accurate records of our productivity."
Now, the computer stores only data, but within five years the union would like to expand its use to create a computerized central dispatch, he said.
Karr said the purchase was made quickly because the firemen wanted to
THE SYSTEM cost each of the approximately 50 members of Local 1596 about $100. Even with such a high cost, the union voted 46 to three for the purchase.
Russel Brickell, member of the union and night operator of the computer, said the computer would greatly improve find finding speed and overall efficiency.
"Some of the small details, such as who buys the paper, have yet to be worked out," he said. "We're hoping that the city will want to take care of the incidental expenses after seeing what took care of buying the system."
"Paper files are too slow," he said.
"With the computer, if I wanted to know all the places that had had over-occupancy violations in the last month, the information would be right at my fingerprints. And we will have both bodies when we are making inspections."
"We were not able to come up with the money in the budget," she said. "From the city's point of view, this is great. It's still the union's machine, but if they decide at some time that they don't want to lend it to us anymore, we would have an idea of whether such a system would be worth it to us to buy."
She said the union's initiative could influence the city when the time comes to determine its role in the city.
"The cost will be less," she said. "They've already taken some of the burden upon themselves and that makes it much less expensive for us."
NOT MANY firemen know how to operate the computer yet, he said, but the department hopes that eventually every fireman will be able to use it.
Pi Kappa Phi pushes for donations
By DARRELL PRESTON Staff Reporter
Mayor Marcel Francisco said she was happy to see citizens take control of a fire.
As the sun's early-morning rays peeked between clouds and trees to cast finger-like shadows on the streets of downtown Lawrence, members of Kappa Phi fraternity mounted wheels and embarked on a 40-mile route.
Staff Reporter
Amidst hooking horns and Massachusetts Street traffic, they pushed wheelchairs back and forth through a two-block area of downtown, soliciting donations from Saturday morning shoppers.
R. Scott Dorman, Overland Park junior and member of the fraternity, said the money would go to the Pi Kappa Phi national fraternity, which provide Play Units for the Severely Handicapped, or PUSH.
"Pennies for PUSH," chanted James Tusten, Lawrence junior, as he passed roving shoppers. "Help hand- in laundry from wasting away in institutions."
DORMAN, THE fraternity's PUSH chairman, said the PUSH units, which cost $10,000, provided touch, sound and visual stimulation for blind, deaf or severely retarded children in institutions.
"The units help the children to develop their senses," Dorman said. "It stimulates and motivates them to know whom they aware of their surroundings."
A typical PUSH unit is 16 feet wide, 16 feet long and seven feet high, and has nine alcoves where children can respond to different stimuli, including light and sound, air currents, textured surfaces and a walking course.
The purpose of PUSH, he said, is to help handicapped people have an opportunity to develop and enrich their lives.
He said the fraternity collected about $500 Saturday for PUSH.
LAST YEAR, Dorman said, the group went the 40 miles on the Lawrence High School track, but this year they made more because they
could solicit monev while pushing.
saturday the fraternity members passed out pamphlets about PUSH and asked shoppers for their change.
Jon Bair, San Diego, Calif., junior,
said the Nebraska fans, who were in
town for Saturday's football game,
gave more than he expected.
At times during the day, the members got out of their wheelchairs to solicit money from motorists at Ninth and Massachusetts streets.
Tusten said PUSH was one of the reasons he joined Pi Kappa Phl.
"We ARE one of the only fraternities that has its own charity," Tusten said. "Most raise money to give a charity, but we have one of our own. It means a lot to me in being a member." The capped kids a new lease on life."
Homecoming to reunite Kansas alumni of '40s
Dorman agreed: "I think it's kind of a neat thing. We have one — and only one," he said. "We are the only national fraternity that has its own philanthropy."
By DAN PARELMAN Staff Reporter
KU alumni of the 1940s who will return to the University of Kansas this weekend said yesterday that they were among those with friends they had not seen in years.
The alumni will have plenty of opportunities to find each other throughout the "Fabulous Forties" homecoming weekend, which will include a full schedule of activities for KU graduates from 1940 to 1951.
Geneva Hempill, class of '42, said, "I'll really be disappointed if people demand that I serve."
Hemphill, in her senior year, was president of the Jayhawk James, the
"THEY THINK that their football said now — it was worse then," she said.
That year, KU beat Kansas State University, which she said was an important event for a school with a shaky football team.
The students thought the victory was such a great event that they wanted the day off, she said. And, to her surprise, a rumor began circulating that the students should not go to classes. Hemphill said she thought the men's
pep club, the KuKus, had started the rumor.
"The next thing I knew, we on the carpet in the chancellor's office," she said.
But it was too late
"It was on. No one went to class," she said.
Homecoming events will kick off
Friday afternoon at 2:30, when four
homecoming queens of the '40s will be
in the homecoming parade.
THE FRIDAY night homecoming warm-up dance and the Saturday night dance will be open to everyone.
Clyde Bysom, Lawrence, class of '40, is a co-organizer of the Crimson and Blues Swing Band, which will perform both nights. Clinton Harbur, Kansas City, Mo., and Jim Knox, St. Louis, both class of '43, also are band organizers.
STEAMBOAT - $189.00
The band is composed of about 20 alumni from across the country, Bysom said. Bysom said he, Knox and Harbur led Lawrence bands during the '40s.
"Every Wednesday night at the student center, a midweek student," Ryan said.
The Fabulous Forties welcome dinner will be at 7:30 p.m. Friday at the Regency Ballroom in the Holiday Inn Holdome, 200 W. Turnip Access-Rd.
January 3 - 8
C
COMPLETE PACKAGE INCLUDES:
- 5 Nights Deluxe Condo Lodging
- 3 Nights Deluxe Co.
* 4 Days Lift Tickets
- Mountain Picnic
- Ski Races with Prizes
* Ski Jamboree Party
- Optional Air and Motorcoach Transportation
OTHER 82/83 DESTINATIONS:
Aspen * Winter Park * Breckenridge
Steamboat * Crested Butte * Vail
Coats SKITEAM
For Information Call
Summit Tours 749-0132
SUMMIT
or (800) 325-0439.
Will man destroy in six minutes what it took God six days to create?
they raised in verse in the life and death hours of our age
worship and fellowship of the Episcopal Church,
their faith.
CANTERBURY HOUSE: 1116 LOUISIANA
THE EPISCOPAL CHURCH ON CAMPUS
"KU on Wheels"
The University of Kansas
Student Senate Transportation Board Announces New Night Bus Route Effective Nov.1 through Dec.16
Leave Union to Trailridge Apts.
45 minutes past hour
First bus 5:45; last bus 9:45
Leave Lawrence Avenue and Sixth to campus
55 minutes past hour
First bus 5:55; last bus 9:45
Leave Union to Stewart Avenue, 24th & Ridgecourt via Malls 10 minutes past hour First bus 6:10; last bus 10:10
Leave Trailridge Apts. to campus
57 minutes past hour
First bus 5:57; last bus 9:57
Leave Seventh and Maine to campus
5 minutes past hour
First bus 6:05; last bus 10:05
Leave Seventh & Florida to campus
3 minutes past hour
First bus 6:03; last bus 10:03
Leave Trailridge Apts. (second stop) to campus On the hour First bus 6:00; last bus 10:00
Leave 21st & Stewart to 24th & Ridgecourt via Malls 16 minutes past hour First bus 6:16; last bus 10:16
Leave 23rd & Louisiana (Malls) to 24th & Ridgecourt and campus 20 minutes past hour First bus 6:20; last bus 10:20
Leave Park 25 Apts. to campus via Stewart Avenue 30 minutes past hour First bus 6:30; last bus 10:30
Leave 24th & Ridgecourt to campus via Stewart Avenue
35 minutes past hour
First bus 6:35; last bus 10:35
Leave 21st & Stewart to campus
38 minutes past hour
First bus 6:38, last bus 10:38
Funded by Student Activity Fee
1
Page 10 University Daily Kansan, November 1; 1982
Policies important but confusing, agents warn
By DONNA KELLER Staff Reporter
Insurance companies make sales pitches annually to college seniors, but consumer advocates and insurance company representatives. wonder whether college students understand most life insurance policies.
"Students have no problem in understanding the need and value of life insurance," Chris Williams, sales manager for Prudential Life Insurance, 2500 W. 6th St., said recently.
Williams said companies were selling more life insurance than in previous years because people were more educated, they learned to protect their families, home and businesses.
John Chaney, general agent for American Health and Life Insurance, 8th and Vermont streets, said he did not think many students were experienced enough to understand the terms of an insurance policy, and that they should
take a "buyer beware" attitude when having life insurance.
He said students were ready to buy insurance after they had acquired work experience and developed financial judgment.
BARB JOHNSON, of the state insurance commissioner's office, said everyone should evaluate his insurance needs and consider what his financial
"One of the keys is that there isn't one particular thing that would do for it."
There are basically two kinds of life insurance policies. Term insurance offers protection for a period of one or more years, and insurance paid if death occurs within that time.
Whole life offers death protection for as long as the individual lives, and the premiums may be more expensive, but it may than renewing a term insurance policy.
Johnson said that life insurance was often rated on the basis of age, and thus
gave better rates to younger individuals.
She said policies frequently were marketed to college seniors who did not have the money to pay for the premiums, so they believed in the insurance company, and thus had borrowed the money to pay for the policy.
"WHIEN IT comes to the payback, they find they have bargained for more than they can afford or need," she said. "They no such thing as free insurance."
Johnson said anyone who bought a Johnson in Kansas had, by law, 10 days from the date the policy was received to receive it. He decided whether he wanted to keep it.
"I'd encourage anyone returning a policy to make the request in writing so
there is a record of wanting the policy terminated," she said.
John Carland, special agent for Northwestern Mutual Life, said questions students should ask of themselves and the life insurance agent included whether a student needed life insurance and, if so, how much, what advantages they would get in a policy while in college and what kinds of insurance policies were available.
He said many companies had turned to a new plan often called universal life insurance that offered the individual a return on the money paid into the policy.
CARLAND SAID there were two advantages to buying term insurance: cost and a guarantee for future insurance.
The individual later can convert the term insurance to a more permanent plan that would build cash value, he said.
BOBY BELL'S
BAR-B-QUE
COUPON SPECIAL!
PURCHASE A "CHICKEN DINNER SPECAL-Only $3.09" AND GET
FREE
One order of FRENCH FRIES and
One Medium-Size Soft Drink!
Limit One Per Customer With Coupon
2214 YALE ST.
JAMMERCE KAUFMAN VILLAGE
UNIVERSITY CAFE GRANT
Offer Expires 11/8/82
VALUABLE COUPON
BORDER
BANDIDO
MONDAY MANIA
NO.1 REGULAR 99¢ MONDAYS
11 A.M.-10 P.M.
REG. $1.49
BURRITO
1528 W. 23RD.
Video Games
Across from Post Office 842-8861
LAWRENCE TOYOTA/MAZDA LAWRENCE TOYOTA/MAZDA
LAWRENCE TOYOTA/MAZDA
KEEP THE
TOYOTA
FEELING.
LAWRENCE TOYOTA MAYDA LAWRENCE TOYOTA MAYDA LAWRENCE TOYOTA
WE KEEP YOUR TOYOTA
CHEAP 2 KEEP
PARTS AND SERVICE
COOLING SYSTEM SPECIAL
We'll
• inspect belts and hoses
• flush radiator
• install new anti-freeze (up to 1 gallon)
• pressure test cooling system and test radiator cap
TOYOTA LAWRENCE
$24.95
LAWRENCE AUTO PLAZA
842 2191
Coupons must be presented
at time of write-up
muster charge
Includee parts and labor (Additional parts and labor extra)
Electronic ignition
(Included all parts and labor-6 cyl)
models slightly higher.)
We'll
- install new spark plugs
* set engine to recommended manufacturer's specifications
* inspect operation of choke
* install new fuel filter/Mazda and Toyota only
TOYOTA
LAWRENCE
MAZDA
LAWRENCE AUTO PLAZA
842 1291
Coupons must be presented
at time of write-up
$36.95
LAWRENCE TOYOTA/MAZDA
Standard Ignition
(included all parts and labor-6-cyl).
models slightly higher!
We'll
• install new spark plugs
• replace points and cond.
• set engine to recommended
manufacturer's specifications
• adjust carburation
• inspect装配 of choke
• install new fuel filter/Mazdas
and Toyotas only
• rotary engines not included
LAWRENCE TOYOTA/MAZDA
Mary A. Hickman
JESSIE BRANSON has lived in Lawrence for 28 years. She is married to Dr. Vernon Branson, a pediatrician. Their children attended Lawrence schools and two of them, Martha and Rosemary, are currently students at the KU Medical Center. Johanna is Professor of Art History at Massachusetts College of Art, and Sam is a client of Cottonwood, Inc.
She has served as president for both the Douglas County and the Kansas Associations for Retarded Citizens.
A PROVEN COMMITMENT TO THE COMMUNITY
FIDELITY UNION caters primarily to the college market. Downing said...
Conrad Downing, state director for Fidelity Union, 901 Kentucky St., said one of the advantages of having a life insurance program was that it provided
JESSIE BRANSON has represented the 44th District full time for the past two years. She has been accessible to her constituents. She has taught hard for the interests of the people of the 44th District, and she will continue to do so.
JESSEI BRANSON has been active in the community for 28 years. She serves on the Board of Directors for; the Salvation Army, Kansans for the Improvement of Nursing Homes, and Women's Transitional Care Services.
She is a volunteer nurse for the Red Cross Bloodmobile and a member of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce, the KU Alumni Association, the League of Women Voters, and Trinity Episcopal Church.
She has served as president for both the Douglas County and the Kansas Associations
JESSIE BRANSON has served on Governor's Committees on Health Planning, Mental Retardation and Mental Health, and Nursing Homes. She was recently appointed to the Governor's Committee on Child Passenger Safety.
JESSIE BRANSON founded and coordinated the Lawrence Chamber Players from 1972-1980. She serves as Vice President of Local 512 of the American Federation of Musicians which distributes trust funds to music groups.
Representing YOU Full-Time in Topeka
Gooley said approximately 99 percent of all group employers offered a life insurance package as an employment benefit, and that this should be a consideration when an individual was considering his insurance needs.
Jessie BRANSON REPRESENTATIVE 44th
Barbara Gooley, group service representative for Banker's Life Insurance Company of Des Moines, Iowa, said the need for life insurance depended on the type of needs, such as marital status, children and the financial plan of the family.
POL. ADV. —Paid by Committee to Re-Elect Jessie Branson, Ben Zimmerman-Treat
He said that although students were covered under their parents' life insurance policies, it was generally for them to pay the insurance all a person's expenses in case of death.
a good collateral base for loans.
He said his company was among those that have begun offering a financial investment plan to their insurance clients so that the individuals got a cash return on their policies in later years.
"I just can't see anything negative in planning your financial future."
FIGHT INFLATION
NightHawk
944 MASSACHUSETTS
BUY A DRAUGHT CARD
JY A DRAUGHT CAL
11 15oz. draws $5.00
23 15oz. draws $10.00
or
47 15oz. draws $20.00
HAWK'S NEST 9:00 am-3:30 pm M/F KANSAS UNION LEVEL 2
PUMPKIN
NOVEMBER SPECIALS
MONDAY Chicken Fried Steak Potato Chips 12 oz Fountain Drink 1.80
TUESDAY
Chili Dog
French Fries
6 oz Shake 1.60
WEDNESDAY Double Cheese Burger French Fries 12 oz Fountain Drink 2.55
THURSDAY
B.B.Q. Sandwich
Potato Chips
12 oz Fountain Drink 1.90
FRIDAY
Fish Sandwich French Fries 12 oz Fountain Drink 1.70
Also featuring our own Bakery Buns.
1
University of California, Berkeley, November 1, 1982
Univertity Dalry Kansan, November 1, 1982
Page 11
Stauffer, Baugh enter Kansas editors hall of fame
By VERONICA JONGENELEN Staff Reporter
This year's Kansas Editor's Day was a time for honoring two Kansas newspaper giants and for looking at the future of KU's school of journalism.
About 150 journalists from across Kansas inducted Oscar S. Stauffer and Jay B. Baugh into the Kansas Newsaparal and Farsee Saturday in the Kansas Union.
Stauffer, former head of Stauffer Communications Inc., died Feb. 23 at the age of 96. The KU alumnus began his career with the Emporia Gazette in 1906, and went on to compile a number of 20 newspapers, two TV stations, nine radio stations, and several affiliated properties in 11 states.
Baugh worked in the tradition of the
small-town Kansas press, said David Dary, professor of journalism who wrote the book.
BAUGH, WHO died in early 1973, was the youngest editor in Kansas when he bought the Montezuma Press in 1923. He later purchased the Johnson Pioneer, selling it in 1960 after he had two heart attacks.
Speakers at the Editor's Day ceremony took a look forward and offered advice about the future of journalism education.
Bill Meyer, president of the Kansas Press Association, called for a reemphasis on community journalism, which was extremely important to Kansas.
for journals in该 area, 'he said.
Meyer compared community jour
"I'm a strong advocate of community journalism and continuing education for teachers."
ed aloud whether William Allen White would have ended up in Emporia he had attended the KU journalism school today.
MEYER ALSO spoke of the lessons he had learned from Leon "Daddy" Flint, after whom the journalism school's building was named.
is in contact for information, he said.
CUTS WILL be necessary, he said.
"He taught me what an ampersand was after I'd been called on to recite and been found lacking. I'll never forget that lesson." he said.
Another speaker, Neale Coppie, dean of journalism and acting vice chancellor for academic affairs at the University of Nebraska, also stressed the importance of community journalism, and the importance of newspapers could be found there.
"Are we going to say, 'Well, it’s too bad about journalism, but we’d better save the liberal arts department?' " he said.
"There are tough days ahead, as you keep hearing — but tough, tough days are ahead for academia," he said. "WILM HIM, he warned, he said."
but should not be made on the basis of either practical or academic tradition.
Beer drinkers in Lawrence soon may have another option than the usual use of a beer bottle.
"I hope you all realize what you have at the William Allen White School of Journalism. It's a good school; only one, and four best in the country." he said.
Instead, those in the media today should strongly support journalism schools to prevent cuts in those departments, he said.
Two former editors, instead of one, were inducted into the hall of fame this year so that Stauffer could be honored, who Del Brinkman, dean of the School of Journalism, inductees are usually not chosen until three years after their death.
He said domestic beer was not yet available in home kegs, although the idea was popular. The idea failed because it was too expensive to produce and market the kegs.
Home kegs to give drinkers extra options
John Webb, manager of Green's Fine Wines, 802 W. 32rd St., said his store had been contacted recently by an Anheuser-Busch representative about marketing home refrigerator beer kegs in the area.
"I've heard that some will come out," Webb said. "I think by spring you'll see them in the stores."
Webb said he did not know whether home kegs were available on the East coast.
LON MILLS, clerk at Green's, said the store stocked five-liter kegs of imported beer and sold to six a month.
The keg is equivalent to about two six-packs of beer, and has a comparative price per ounce. Mills said.
Keith DeBerry, clerk at Owens
Liquor Store, 910 N Second St., said his store also stocked the imported beer from the brewery.
He said if they were available, home home kebabs probably would sell well.
KU students gave mixed reactions to the idea of domestic beer in home keeps.
Abbit Ellicott, Baltimore, Md., graduate student, said she did not dink enough beer to justify buying a home kee
KEITH Winslow, Colorado Springs,
Colo., freshman, said the cost would not
matter, and he would buy home kegs if they were available.
Bryan Wadsworth, Chicago, Ill. senior, said he would not buy a home keg.
"How many students have the money to do that?" Wadsworth said. "It's too much of an investment."
Toluene find prompts waste site examination
Pat Treft, Eudora junior, and Kise Larimore, Liberal senior, said they felt that
By BRET WALLACE
Staff Reporter
By BRET WALLACE
Discovery of toxic chemicals in a creek near the KU hazardous waste burial site has prompted an investigation by the Kansas Geological Survey. The university vice chancellor of research, graduate studies and public service.
Bearse said the University had asked the geological survey to investigate possible leakage after a borehole was opened. Two found traces of toluene in the creek.
Tolene is an organic compound used to break down materials with low-level radiation amounts so the radiation can be measured. said Javier Gonzalez, assistant scientist for the geological survey. It is not radioactive.
The geological survey would be working in conjunction with the Kansas Department of Health and Environment, which discovered the toluene during a routine check of the site last April, Bearse said.
IT IS the first time since the site was opened in 1984 that any evidence of leakage had been found on the site, a 2.2-acre tract located immediately west of the Sunflower Army Ammunition Plant. he said.
The discovery of toluene prompted an investigation because it is classified as a carcinogen, although no evidence had been found to link it to cancer, said Larry Kroche, chief of the environmental geology division of the department of health and environment.
He said the amount of toluene found in the water — 3.6 parts per billion — was just a trace.
Bearse said that although the discovery was not a serious problem, the University had stopped using the site for waste disposal.
SINCE THE site was closed, toluene was being burned and other types of waste were being stored in laboratories, he said. The University is studying two options for disposing of the waste.
The first was to ship it to a disposal site in Washington, and the second was to pour the materials down the drain, he said. The University has permission from the city to dispose of waste water this way.
"With all the waste-water the University disposes of, the amount of radioactivity would be minuscule." Bearse said.
The University Daily
Call 864-4358
CLASSIFIED RATES
one time two times three times four times five times six times seven eight times nine ten times
15 words or fewer .25.25 .25.50 .27.75 .30.05 .32.35 .39.90 .45.58 .52.09 .58.15 .65.50
Each additional word .02 .03 .04 .07 .06 .08 .08 .08 .08 .08 .11
AD DEADLINES
ERRORS
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
The Kanan will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can placed in person or simply by calling the Kansan business office at 844-4358.
KANSAS BUSINESS OFFICE
118 Flint Hall 964-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Bat Girls. The KU Basketball Team will soon be seen举行 189 Bat Girls. All interested women should attend an organizational meeting at 4:30 on Wed., Nov 3 in Rm. 217 Allen Fieldhouse.
FOR RENT
Sacred Formation miniature expedition exploring permafrost in the Arctic and Southern European Christian Ministerium Center, 104 Crewmen from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.
1 Bedroom, house for rent for $75/month. Walking distance from campus $275/month. Resident支付
SURROGATE MOTHERS needed for Hugar institute for infertile couples. Artificial examination of patients is required to ensure residents, must have given birth to healthy child or elderly mother. Call 911-235-1344, Hugar institute, cell phone number.
*1 bedroom Apartment*, 1 bedroom $250-$350, 2 bedroom
$450-$600, 3 bedroom $750-$900, Sun. Aug.
1-4 2007 Bedroom, Apartment $1000-$1500,
2008 Bedroom, Apartment $250-$350.
2 IRR ipv4 available 1st floor large, quiet, compact. Grad students prefer the best & warmest rooms.
EXTRA x2 nice apartments, large and small. Next to
the library, there is a spacious FREE PHONE in
HUNTING FREE PHONE. Variable length leases available on energy efficient 2 & 3 bedrooms. Reverently constructed with all appliance options. Free WiFi. Bedroom 2 & 3 bedrooms from $30-$50. Call and ask about our low heating bills. Call 843-4754.
LIVE IN THE WOODS near Long Star, share house, two mustwest. guest grade, or art students, 2 sound technicians.
prepared bedroom, $80, to utilities, even 748-6565.
Live in the CHRISTIAN CAMPUS HOUSE this fall and spring. Become a part of a growing campus.
Call Alain Rocena, campus minister
449-6522
MEADOWBOOK Furnished studio available on sublease now through May 31st. Stat. cable, electric kitchens, fairly carpeted. Enjoy the quality of Mendowbrook at affordable prices. Call 682-400-7500.
One & two bedroom girls, available immediately and at a reasonable rate. 24-hour laundry facility. Laundry facility. *Senior* teacher, available immediately.
Oval room studio home (converted apartment) in N. Lawrence, 842-3075 for 9 a.m. & 5 p.m.
PRINCIPAL PLACE PATIO APARTMENTS. Now Available, 2 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms for roommates, features wood burning fireplaces, $2 car garage with windows, kitchenette, laundry space, kitchen, cuckoo nooks. No pet please $45 per month. Open house 9:30-5:00 daily at 8:00pm. Priestly ilum, or phone 876-2287 for additional information.
FOR SALE
SOUTHERN PARKWAY TOWNHOUSES, Bith. & Rasulah are not invited to race or cheer & cramped apartments. Racers will be housed in Hodgkins, all appliances, attached garage, swimming pool, pool table, and 160-second weeks for more information. Call 484-1567 (events and weekends) for more info.
181.3FORD Van.W.S.R.B - a.4x1 , 5 speed, 18-16 mp, 6-
shade slot : 120 . Call B281 8280 between 5-9 p.m.
NICELY DECORATED space room. Pursued by
parents, teachers, friends and students.
Male students, male only. no pblds. 300-420.
Three unhilbered sleeping rooms near downtown.
Share large kitchen & bath. 860. 600 phone deposit
$1000 minimum.
Sublimine 2 br. lag at Park 35. Move in Dec. 8 not start paying 11. Jan. 31 Sublimine from Jan. to Oct. 31. Oct. 31 to Nov. 17. Nov. 17 to Dec. 31.
VIRIFY nice @ HI DUPLA, fully carpeted, new paint.
CUA. W/ WAIS disposal, penn. petty, $25.95
Tired of doing all the housework? Check out Sunflower secure. Clean, clean and keep it.
1973 Toyota pick-up, 4-ended, 4-pipe, Pb, am/fm,
goat, horse, goat milk, pretail, sell $128.16.
Call (800) 254-7966.
180 Chevette, b 4.25m, wire wheels, excellent
tracking. 300 GMC, wire wheels, excellent
Canon AE-1 w/ lens and autoroute, Vivitar zoom
Denver turnable, Son of Ampulla amgi; AGL Pre-
Amak; Nakamichi cassette; 842-3530.
Everything to furnish and decorate your apartment at The Swap Shop. 600 Mass.
Tie the Swap Shop, @ 604 Mass.
For Sale, Custom Electric Guitar Amplifier. Like
Hellrair Deluxe. Dioneer CPT580 CSBA desk. Makes great tapes. Must sell $1,490. Negotiable.
Nokia 7300e/7500e/7600e/7700e/7800e/7900e
VJC stereo compartment with hardly used,
Cost new $990. Will sell for $490 or best offer, Call
(811) 242-3500.
KEYBOARD - Yamaha CF-30 electronic piano. Plays
Cell Call Mark at 748-2367.
842-8005 between 5 p.m.
KEYBOARD > Yamaha CP-30 piano.
KWALITY COMICS GRAND BRAND November 16th & 4th. We have the "Spirit" by Eisner, block #3.
MG Convertible 1972 Good shape. Excellent buy at $1900.00 - 1631-8032
Men's medium Northface down jacket, new $130, 65,
modern chair, ottoman $135, 84/407.9
Mervea solid state starcue, console. AM-FM stereo band, 8-track, phone and headphone hook. 800. In excellent condition. We need the space. 841-341. Nobel Lehfau clarinet, young, old. Excelent condition.
Odubane 1 Computer. Include text editor, supercalc,
basic CPM, games, and software. $1500
www.odubane.com
Noblet Le Blanc clairant, 3 yrs old. Excellent condi-
tion. Net worth $125.00 per month. Call Becky
800-745-2929.
TENNIS RACKETS Receently received selection newhead Head Comps, Wilson Advantage, Kramer Pro Staff. Djunop Maxiply, Davis Classic, Prince Pro Staff. If you it in good condition, 844-9731 @ 6:09 p.m.
good condition. $100, $64-104 after 3:50 pm.
Wrought iron couch with leather cushions $60. Zenith console color T. V. $150, large velvet picture books $85. T. V. $125, living room lamp $14. Call $39 on 6:38 a.m. after 8:00pm.
FOUND
Found: Buttercuptears colored beanie burgly mixed
of 6 months old & round around 8/11
79238 109218
Technics SA 303 AM /FM receiver 64 watts,2 years old. Good condition. SA 801-184 10a-5 over 5:00 m
Found buttercotch-colored beige Brittany Mixed puppy. Appre. 6 months, found around 9th and 10th floors.
HELP WANTED
DO YOU RUN OUT OF MONEY BEFORE YOU DO RUN OUT OF MONEY BEFORE YOU do work with extra money, from interesting girl-time or a walkway distractor trains you for splendid opportunity. Send name and phone to Route 2, Box 158A.
LAST: Gold-diamond ring on Taunus 26 between Halle and Wineau. Extremely sentimental piece.
Found - digital watch near compartment stadium even though it was on the balcony. Found keys in parking lot near of stadium. Even, too.
Reward - Lost. deep orange male tailbat. Squirrel on sides. Stippled. Wrapped. same arm. sizing.
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1
Page 12
University Daily Kansan, November 1. 1982
Sports
Nebraska rolls, 52-0 Jayhawks continue to slide
The theme for this year's Kansas football team was "Breakin" Through in "82."
The 1962 season was supposed to be the year the Jayhawks finally made the turn and became an elite team. The 1970s were not really the best.
On Saturday, the Nebraska Cornhuskers showed Kansas just how far it has to go.
The Cornhuskers, using the one-two punch of Roger Craig and Mike Rozier, rolled over the out-manned Jaywhacks. 52-0, before a near-complete win of 59,190 fans, most of whom were clad in red
THE FIRST drive went as most people in_instances expected that Nebraska went 80 yards in 14 plays to take the lead, 7-0. The Cornhuskers twice bypassed a field goal attempt to go for a down, which showed the confidence Nebraska head coach Tom Osborne had in his offense.
"I think we played against one of the better teams in the country," Coach Dumfambrough said. "Their offensive line is the best we've faced in 10 years."
The first time, Nebraska gained 3 yards and got the first down. The second time, senior Mark Moravek, Nebraska's third team fullback, broke up a kick and went 18 yards for Nebraska's opening score.
It was just a small taste of things to come.
Kansas was unable to mount a serious drive all afternoon, while Nebraska rolled up 426 yards rushing and 546 yards of total offense.
The domination was so complete that the Cornhuskers did not punt until the 10-41 mark of the final period. That was the only punt for Nebraska on the afternoon.
IF THERE was a bright spot for the Jayhawks, it was the play of the defense in the first half.
Of the 25 defensive players who took the team for Kansas, only five were seniors, and although the Cornhuskers did score 17 first-half points, 17 better than the 35 they scored in the second half.
"In the first half, our defense battled as tough as they could." Fambrough said. "We ended up playing a lot of freshmen and that's not really fair. But in the long run, it will help them."
The first half, however, just proved to be a 6-minute wait for the offensive explosion that began.
When Kansas failed to move the ball after the opening kickoff, it took the Cornhuskers only four plays to go 56 yards to increase the score to 24-0. One minute, 29 seconds later, it was 31-10, as Nebraska took advantage of Robert Mimbs' fumble, which Nebraska recovered on the KU 13-yard line. Once again it took Nebraska only four plays, and the rout was on.
Before it was over, the Corhuskers would score three more touchdowns, one coming on a 65-yard punt return by Jeff Smith of Wichita.
"I HAVE to compliment our defense on the most part," defensive coordinator Tom Batta said. "They gave an outstanding effort. The freshman in the game are trying to learn and they were out there against one of the finest teams in the nation.
"We have 17- and 18-year-old kids playing against a bunch of seniors and the maturity
For the Jayhawk's offense, however, there were no bright spots. Kansas gained only 69 yards of total offenses — a melee of net yards on both ends and failed to score for the second week in a row.
"We tried everything in the book against them," Fambrough said. "We dropped some passes and our protection was not holding up."
The offensive line did not give senior Mike Bohn, starting his first game ever at Kansas.
10
GINO
STRIPPOLI
Sports Editor
much time to throw the ball. He was sacked six times for 54 yards in losses, while completing just 4 of 13 passes for 63 yards and one touchdown. The last time he was completed was to a Kansas wide receiver.
"MIKE DIDN'T play that bad," Fambrough said. "He hasn't seen that much action, but I am very proud of him."
"He did the best job he could do and that is all I could ask."
If anyone could be considered an offensive star, it would have been Mimbs. Although he fumbled the ball twice, Mimbs rushed for 34 yards on 12 carries to lead Kansas runs backs. In contrast, six Nebraska runners rushed for 30 or more yards.
"Mimbs was able to run," Fambrough said. "It was encouraging to see someone run as hard as he did.
"If he had been behind Nebraska's offensive line, you don't know how much yardage he could have made."
The only Jayhawk who had a good day was punter Bucky Scribner, who punted 10 times for an average of 47.8 yards a kick. But even Scribner's day was married due to Smith's punt
KANSAS NOW must rebound from three brutal defeats over the past three weekends. The 'Hawks have lost the last three games by a single point, and the Cavaliers in the last three games does not seem certain.
return. It was the first time in Scribner's three-year career that a punt was returned for a touchdown.
Fambrough has used more and more freshmen as the season has worn on and you can be assured that we will see more of them in the last few years.
There has been a lack of enthusiasm on the Jayhawk squad, so Fambrough has turned to those players who want to play.
"The first prerequisite is for a player to give 100 percent and work hard in practice all week and that will continue to be my policy." Fambrough said. "I don't care who they are."
"We are not going to quit. We have three tough football games left with good teams, but I feel that all three of these are within our reach if we play up to our ability."
BUT PLAYING up to its ability is something KU has lacked all year. The Jayhawks were a preseason pick to finish in the top division of the Big Eight and although many people said that finishing 8-3, as the 1892 team, did was not hard, most people thought they would be close.
The Jayhawks now stand at 1-5, 2-0-3 in the Big Eight. If Kansas fails to win a game in the Big Eight, it would mark the first time this has occurred. Bud Moore's last year as head coach in 1978.
The Jayhawks must turn it around in these final three games to save face. They have had relatively good success against the final three teams, but there are exceptions that even those三 can't be considered easy.
It all starts Saturday with Iowa State, the Jayhawks' final home game of the season.
"It's time for the seniors to put everything on the line," defensive co-captain Coleman Goleman said.
JAYHAWK NOTES--Punter Bucy Scribner continues to lead the Big Eight in punting with an average of 44.9 yards on a hit on 58 punts, his net batting average is .297. He scored a Jeff Smith hit 65 vards for a touchdown.
Turner Gill, Nebraska's quarterback, commented on the business-like attitude of the Cornbushers: "It's hard to get motivated for a game against KU."
Quarterback Frank Searn is expected back for Saturday's contest after sitting out the NU in a back-to-back loss.
The 6 yards rushing and 60 yards of total offense were season lows for the Jayhawks. a whitewash was the ninth worst defeat the Jayhawks. a 52-8 shut out of Kansas by Notre Dame in 1988.
KANSAS 32
All-Big Eight tight end Jamie Williams of Nebraska tries to snaag a Turnell Gill pass, with KU defensive back Elvis Patterson in
Rich Sugo/KANSAN
pursuit, Williams managed to make the catch for a 32-yard gain in the third quarter of Saturday's contest.
KANSAS 20 KANSAS HERMAN 62
Don DelhieiKAi
Kansas' Garfield Taylor is stopped for no gain by Nebraska linebacker Mark Daum in the final quarter of Saturday's game. The Cornhuskers won, 52-6. The Jayhawks managed just 69 yards of total offense in the game, only 6 of which were on the ground.
Owners make new proposal; talks continue through night
NEW YORK-With the NFL player representatives armed with copies of the first new management proposal in nearly two months, both sides in the 41-day strike appeared headed toward a compromise on Halloween yesterday on the hobgoblin issue of warge distribution.
Union spokesman Dave Sheridan said the NFL's Management Council submitted a nine-page revised offer to the Players Association at 3 p.m. on Friday, May 21, of resumed negotiations at a midnight hotel.
By United Press International
"We're working on a counter-proposal," Sheridan said. "Our player reps will reconvene at 8:30. We will put our counter-offer on the table and give the resumption of negotiation at 11:00."
"WE KNOW what the loopholes in their proposal would be before they submitted it," he said. "The arrogance that was at Hunt Valley for '12 days has completely disappeared."
New York Gianas' player representative Beasley Reece said the talks were not marked by any agreement.
Washington Redskins' player rep Mark Murphy was also upbeat as he left for a dinner match.
"their proposal is a good beginning for further negotiations," he said. "It could provide a basis
"We will be working on it tonight. We have taken the proposal and Xeroxed it and the player repers all have copies and are now cucasing. There are some copies here at this time, including 2 player repers."
A source within the Management Council confirmed details of the first management proposal since Sept. 8 — a $1.28 billion over four years beginning in 1983.
"However," the source said, "contrary to published reports, it is incorrect that the union has unilateral control over the distribution of any money, including and especially a fund.
"UNION SOURCES keep insisting that they have been given control of a fund and this is
Although the NFLPA and the management Council still publicly bickered over the key impasses over how money will be distributed to players, there was little evidence of the rancor in arguments that characterized the 12 days of fruitless bargaining in Hunt Valley, MD, that ended Oct. 23.
incorrect. There are areas, though, of joint distribution and joint bargained money."
Like those sessions, the new New York negotiations have been presided over by private mediator Sam Kagel, who spent yesterday trying to bridge the remaining gaps between the parties following the submission of the new proposal.
Jim Miller, director of information for the Council, addressed the media at 3:40 p.m. but his presentation took less than a minute. He said he had been meeting and the news blackout was still in effect.
Talks were originally scheduled to resume yesterday at 9 a.m., but management asked for a three-hour delay in order to complete its new work. The task would last until six hours after the original starting time.
SIX WEEKS of the 1982 season have already been called off by the NFL, which is struggling through the first regular-season strike in its 63-year history.
NFL owners have clung to a demand for continuance of individual player negotiations, while the NLPA has been equally adamant in backing the team's scale based on seniority tied to a central fund
The league has stated only two of the six weekends that have been scrubbed can be made up by eliminating a second wildcard playoff game, and eliminating the idle week before the Basket-Bowl.
The NFL also has maintained the Super Bowl, scheduled for Pasadena, Calif., on Jan. 30, cannot be moved to accommodate an extended season. The union has challenged that assertion of the NFLA, with executive director of the NFLA, has said this conference is intent on playing a full 16-game season.
Football player dies during game
By United Press International
Kelly, a junior from Southern Dines, died at Moses Cone Hospital Saturday after walking off the football field during the Aggies' homecoming game against Morgan State.
GREENSBORO, N.C.-North Carolina A&T punter Travis Kelly died of an apparent cerebral hemorrhage, the state medical examiner said yesterday.
An autopsy was conducted yesterday and Page
Hudson, the state medical examiner, said the death appeared to have been from natural causes.
"At this time it appears to be natural and not related to injury," he said.
Kelly, 21, was not bit during the game.
"We have additional studies going that will take two or three days. I think it had nothing to do with his being a football player at all," Hudson said.
Sooners beat 'Hawk volleyball team; KU record falls to 1-7 in Big Eight
But he said a cerebral hemorrhage was "unusual" in a person of Kell's age.
The Kansas volleyball team was defeated 3-0 by the Oklahoma Sooners in a match on Sunday.
In the first game, Kansas rallied to tie the score at 4-4 and 5-5 early in the game. The Jayhawks took a four-point lead, 11-7, before OU came from behind to win, 15-12.
"Volleyball is a very emotional game," said KU volleyball coach Rob Lockwood. "There just wasn't any enthusiasm in the game against Oklahoma.
Kansas took an early 4-1 lead in the second game, but was defeated as Oklahoma took the second game, 15-11. In the third game, Kansas led the Sooners, 7-1. OU came back to tie the Jayhawks at 7- and 4-8. Oklahoma then took the Jayhawks, 7-3, to win the final game, 15-11.
"That alone could have given us the additional points, we needed to win: We couldn't take
advantage of the various opportunities that we were presented with even if jl lay at our feet.
"We know how well we can play in practice." Lockwood said. "We were essentially even when suddenly Oklahoma would catch the momentum the game and then they would pull ahead to win.
According to Lockwood, Kansas should have won the game. The dayhawks have no injuries in the game.
"Even if the girls fake enthusiasm, they couldn't pull out on top. We did a better job blocking, but our concentration on soft-tips wasn't as good. At different times throughout the match, there was a noticeable change from quicker defense to a wider one."
Kansas travels to Athens tonight, where the
Jayhawks will play Benedictine and Missouri
Cross Country teams place sixth, seventh
By DAVE MCQUEEN
and EVELYN SEDLACEK
Sports Writers
The KU men's cross country team, led by Brent Steiner's 30-46 fifth-fplace score, scored 123 points to place sixth while the women's team finished seventh with 191 at the Big Eight Conference Championships, held Saturday in Lincoln, Neb.
In the men's race, Mark Scratch of Colorado won his third straight individual conference title, running the 10,000-meter course in 30:05. The Buffalo scored 35 points to win their sixth title in the past seven years. Defending champion Jake Anderson second and third took second with 81 points.
"Colorado was just magnificent," KU cross country coach Bob Timmons said. "It was no problem."
State's third man. They'll be contending for a high place at nationals.
"I think Steiner ran very well," Timmons said. "It was his first conference race"
"We were trying to finish in the top four and the only way we were going to do that was if we could keep our guys as close to Steiner and (Greg) Leibert as we could. We did about as good as we could do. I don't know what we could've done better. We just don't have enough runners who can run at the tempo needed for the conference."
In the women's 5,000-meter race, Sabrina Dornheimer of Minnesota took first in 17:06. The second placed Jillian Cobb.
While Timmons was disappointed about not finishing in the conference's upper bracket, he wasn't disappointed in the performance of the Javahiers and 16th overall at 31.53 for the Javahiers and 16th overall at 31.53.
placing four runners in the top ten and scoring 41 points.
Anne Johannesen came in first for the Jayhawks, placing 33rd overall at 19:08, while teammate Caryne Finlay placed 34th in 19:12.
Although KU finished next-to-last in the conference, KU women's cross country coach Theo Hamilton didn't seem too upset about his team's effort.
"They all ran well," Hamilton said. "We could have run a lot better, but that's not our problem."
Hamilton said that four-year veteran Gretchen Bajema, one of the strongest rumblers on the team, didn't place as well as expected for a major injury. Bajema ran a 20-10 and finished 49th.
"She's a lot better, but she's going to have to rebuild her stamina and endurance," Hamilton said. "Everyday off for a distance runner would be losing a lot."
1
The University Daily
KANSAN
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
Tuesday, November 2, 1982 Vol. 93, No. 52 USPS 650-640
I will not be responsible for any damage caused by the use of this image.
Don Delphia/KANSAM
Phil Roger, Kansas City, Kan., freshman, fulfilled his duties as a pledge yesterday by cleaning the rain gutters of the Sigma Alpha Epidaurum fraternity at 130 West Campus Road.
Candidates battle,woo last minute supporters
By BRUCE SCHREINER
Staff Reporter
Gubernatorial and congressional candidates yesterday continued back-breaking campaign schedules during intense last-ditch efforts to drum up support for today's election.
Both major gubernatorial candidates, Democratic Gov. John Carlin and Republican Sam Hardage, made cross-state trips in a flurry of campaigning in a race many expect to be close.
In the bitterly contested 2nd District congressional race, Democrat Jim Slattery and Republican Harris Kary attempted to solidify their key area in another election expected to be close.
HARDAGE, A Wichita businessman, concentrated on highly populated northern Kansas, with campaign appearances in Topeka, Lawrence and Kansas City. Kan.
Northeast Kansas has become a chief battleground between Hardage and Carlin, with strong Republican partisanship threatened by强 pro-severance tax sentiments.
Carlin, who is seeking a second four-year term, has placed his political future on a severance tax on production of oil and natural gas. He also faces an alluring economy. Hardage opposes the measure.
Later in the day, Hardge traveled to southeast Kansas, where he hoped to receive
broad support behind the help of his running mate, State Sen. Dan Thiesen, an Independence
THE REPUBLICAN challenger ended his final day on the campaign trail by speaking to a group of doctors in Wichita.
"It is a very important area, and Sam went up there because we felt some areas needed bolstering, and in other areas we needed to shore up." Durrell Day, Hardgage's press secretary, said.
Hardage has struggled furiously to maintain the large Republican coalition in Johnson County. Day's job was complicated when Overland Park resident Wendell Lady, speaker of the Kansas House, refused to endorse Hardage.
"ITS HARD TO tell right now in Johnson County," Day said. "But I think we have done a good job in explaining the myths of the severance tax, that it's not the miracle cure all."
See VOTE page 5
Poll will be open in Lawrence until 7 p.m. today for the local state and national election, providing information on where to vote may call the Douglas County Clerk's office, at 841-7700.
Polls open till 7
Grad students may lose aid
By STEVE CUSICK Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
A student political action group announced in Washington yesterday that the Reagan administration would seek small reductions in the 1984 budget for federal aid to college students.
According to KU officials, such cuts would make it harder for graduate students and students from poor families to attend the University of Kansas.
The Student Alliance of Voters for Education said the administration was planning to reduce the federal student financial aid budget by 20 percent, from $5 billion to $4 billion.
TIMOTHY MILLS, director of the group, said that sources in the Department of Education told him that she had been stung by a mosquito.
A department apokemian declined to comment on the matter but said the 1984 budget had not been released.
Mills said the proposed reductions would eliminate such financial aid as Guaranteed Student Loans for graduate students, special funding for minorities seeking post-graduate degrees and the Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grant program.
Jerry Rogers, director of financial aid, said that many KU graduate students relied on the faculty to get information.
ROGERS SAID that 450 to 600 students could
"If the graduate students lose their Guar-
anteed Student Loans that's going to put a lot of
them out on the street," he said. "If would cut
the number of graduate students at KU."
This is not the first time KU graduate students have faced the prospect of losing loan money. Last spring, talk of such reductions was spurred by a similar administration proposal.
be affected if the loans were made off-limits to graduate students.
THOMAS BERGER, executive coordinator of the Graduate Student Council and a KU graduate student, said he would not be surprised if the administration sought the reductions.
“It’s an outrage,” he said. “It should offend the sensibility of any interested in higher education in this country. If they do that, who in the hell is going to pick that money up?”
The state, with its latest fiscal crunch, and private business are not likely to foot the bill for the graduate student loans, he said.
BERGER SAID the possibility of further reductions showed how out of touch the administration was with higher education in the United States.
"When you're talking about cutting at the aid you're talking about cutting at the very edge of this country. It's simply making it easier for the poor to go to school, and harder for the poor to go to school," he said.
David Cannatella, chairman of the graduate
executive committee, said elimination of the GSLs for graduate students would make his life harder.
He receives loan money along with the money, he gets for his 20 hours of work as a graduate assistant, but he will have to get another job if the loan money runs drv. he said.
"It would really be difficult to get by without the loan," he said. "As it is now, I think I live a faraway place."
Rogers said a reduction in the SEOG program would affect about 900 KU students.
"IT'S THAT cut that's going to be tragic," he said, especially because the SEOG program was helped."
The average size of the SEOG is $500, he said, and it is given as a supplement to other aid to the SEOG.
Because students have other aid, they are not dependent solely on the SEOG so they may not have to drop out, but they will have a harder time attending college. Rogers said
The Student Alliance of Voters for Education, a new political action committee, announced the proposed cuts at a National Press Club News Conference in Washington.
MILLS DECLINED to name the sources in the department who provided the information.
Closing of Ward's to leave 50 jobless
"We're told they would lose their jobs at the Education Department if we identify them," he said.
By MATTHEW SCHOFIELD
Staff Reporter
Fifty full and part-time employees of Lawrence's Montgomery Ward store will join the nation's growing ranks of the unemployed at about the same time most people start celebrating the holiday season, a company spokesman said yesterday.
Charles Thorne, a public relations official for the chain's Chicago office, said the store, 23rd Street and Ousdahl Road, would close Dec. 19. He said the store had been open since 1989 as a full service store and since last October as a catalog store.
"THE REASON is glitly economical," he said of the closing. "the store was simply not large enough to handle it."
Ed Mills, manager of the Lawrence branch of Kansas Job Service, said that the store's 50 employees would have a tough time finding work this winter because of a tight job market.
National unemployment reached 10.1 percent in September.
When Douglas County's unemployment fig.
ures came out in September, 4 percent of Lawrence area residents—1,400 people—were unemployed. But in winter, Mills said, the job situation in Lawrence usually gets tighter.
"There just aren't many full-time jobs available, he said, can't see the unemployment rate."
As poor as Lawrence's job market is, the employment situation outside of town is not any better.
"The problem is that the unemployment rate in Kansas is higher than in Douglas County," he said. "There's no relief in going somewhere else; the situation is bad everywhere."
A LAWRENCE CHAMBER of Commerce official said Lawrence's downtown development plans could be adversely affected by the loss of Montgomery Ward.
"Losing Montgomery Ward will cause some of the department stores that we are considering to close."
Toebben said other businesses in town probably would be able to absorb Ward's cause.
about coming to Lawrence," said Gary Toobben,
executive vice president of the chamber.
He said that other businesses would probably question the store's operators on the reasons for the shutdown, but that Ward was probably different from stores that would consider becoming part of Lawrence's downtown development plan.
He said that the community was losing a good employer but he hoped another retail store would take its place.
"GENERALLY SPEAKING. it's a good business area. The streets around it are well traveled." Toebben said.
"Nationalize we've been in a money-losing situation for the last few years," he said. "But we're really optimistic for the fourth quarter this year with the holiday season coming up."
Therne said that Montgomery Ward had closed other stores in cities close to Lawrence's size, but that it was not trying to pull out of smaller markets.
Turnout is key, parties say
Staff Reporter
By BRUCE SCHREINER
Thousands of campaign workers throughout the state will man phones and offer rides to the polls as both major parties urge their faithful to vote today.
Democrats, who traditionally benefit from high voter turnouts in Kansas, are projecting a larger turnout than was predicted by the secretary of state's office yesterday.
But a Kansas Republican Party executive expects low voter participation, boosting the chances of GOP candidates because Republican voters are more likely to vote than their Democratic counterparts.
JIM PLOGER, executive director of the Kansas Democratic Party, said that there had been "a tremendous amount of attention given to the governor's race and to the 2nd District race.
Ploger said, "Anytime you have two candidates like Sam Hardage, who has spent $1.5 million, and John Carlin, who has spent $900,000, that shows the intensity of a race and will bring out the voters."
PLOGER ALSO pointed to expected dry weather and a flood of voter registrants as indications that the turnout would exceed Secretary of State Jack Brier's predictions.
Brier has predicted that 743,100 of Kansas' 1.23 million registered voters would go to the polls.
Merlyn Brown, executive director of the Kansas Republican Party, agreed with Brier's estimate and said voters were hesitant to motivated in this non-presidential election.
"I EXPECT IT to be low because of the dramatic changes that came in the 1980 election," he said. "I've sensed that it is harder to generate excitement this year, and I think that
See POLL page 5
Weather
Frog Jumping
Today will be partly cloudy, windy and cool, with a high between 50 and 55. Winds will be from the northwest at 15 to 25 mph and will be clear, with a low between 25 and 30.
rought will be clear, with a low between 25 and 30.
KU zoologist likes the idea
Tomorrow will be mostly sunny with a high between 40 and 45.
Nessie's just a log, new theory says
By BONAR MENNINGER
Staff Reporter
Recently, however, a new theory has shed some light on the Scottish creature. It states that the monster could be nothing more than pine logs that pop to the surface of the water after being pressurized at the bottom of the lake, 823 feet down.
The Loch Ness Monster, affectionately known as "Nessie" to residents around the Scottish lake where it supposedly dwells, remains an enigma 1,400 years after sightings of the beast were first reported.
Joseph Collins, a KU zoologist who specializes in amphibians and reptiles, said yesterday that he thought the new theory was plausible.
"It is a perfectly reasonable hypothesis," he said. "To be honest, I have always had concerns over whether such a creature exists."
COLLINS, WHO is also the editor for publications at the Museum of Natural History, has presented lectures on the Loch Ness phenomenon.
engineer, said that Scotch Pine trees, which surround the lake, may be made buoyant by the 360 pounds of pressure per square inch at the lake bottom.
GASES FROM the decaying wood are encapsulated in the log, forming pockets which eventually force the log to float. As it nears the surface, the log is close to bursting because its internal pressure is much higher than that of the water around it, the article said.
In an article in a british magazine, New Scientist, Robert P. Craig, a british electronics
The Scotch Pine is a very strong type of wood, and Craig said that after the tree had become waterlogged, it would gradually sink to the bottom.
The log then explodes up out of the lake, before the buoyancy pockets deplete. Craig noted that many observers say that the object they believed was floating above poles or logs, and went down in a boiling froth.
He contended that no large aquatic beast could *brash* the water vigorously enough to cause more than splashing, and that the frothing had to be caused by escaping gases.
Craig proposes that the pressure would then squeeze the wood and, with the resin of the tree, form a waterproof seal around the log.
The new theory would support other recent evidence that the monster does not exist.
IN THE LATE '70S, several important scientific attempts were made to find the creature. Although some interesting photographs were taken, Collins said, all the collected data was inconclusive.
"I think that the phenomenon at Loch Ness has been exposed to public and scientific scrutiny long enough that if there were Loch Ness monsters, they would be found by now," he said.
"Of course, taking this stance gets rid of all the romance," he said.
Indeed, much romance has surrounded the creature since the first sighting was made in 1865 by S. Columbia, who met a "water beast" at the dawn of the world and granted it "perpetual freedom of the loch."
SINCE THEN, thousands of people have reported seeing the creature, in varying degrees of detail. Some scientists are firmly convinced of its existence, although the hard facts have yet to surface.
A KU STUDENT from Britain, Gareth Tweese, recently that he camped on the shores of the island.
"It was pretty spooky," he said. "There is something out there."
Twose said he hoped the monster would be found someday.
TOMMY ROBIN
Don Delphia/KANSAN
Morris Kay checked his notes while Jim Slattery answered a question yesterday in a debate on foreign policy. The debate, which was sponsored by the KU political science department, was held in the Kansas Union. See story page 2.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, November 2. 1982
News Briefs From United Press International
Fenwick, Brown do battle in close Senate races today
WASHINGTON- Two-time Democratic presidential contender Edmund Brown Jr. and Republican grande dame Millicent Fenwick battle for political survival in today's Senate elections.
Brown and Fenwick fight in two of nine critical Senate contests rated as tossups based on the latest polls and a survey of political writers and UPI statehouse reporters.
There are 19 Democratic and 11 Republican incumbents facing challenges today, and three open seats, two held by Republicans.
he has faced it not garner the FE seats to regain control of the Senate after two years in the cold. The GOP now controls the Senate, 54-46. California's Governor Brown, 44, trailed San Diego Mayor Pete Wilson by 5 points in late polls.
Rep. Fenwick, 72, was in a race "too close to call" with businessman Frank Lautenberg.
Republican Sens. John Danforth of Missouri and Harrison Schmitt of New Mexico were believed to be in trouble on the eve of the election, as were Democratic incumbents Howard Cannon in Nevada and John Melcher in Montana.
Marines told to head for East Beirut
WASHINGTON—President Reagan yesterday authorized U.S. Marine peace-keeping troops to move from the airport south of Beirut into the city's Christian-dominated eastern section.
State Department spokesman John Hughes said no increase in the 1,200 U.S. troops was expected for the new assignment, part of the Lebanese government's effort to reassert control over the city following the evacuation of Palestinian fighters from West Beirut in August.
A Pentagon spokesman said the Marines would send out "limited patrols" from Beirut International Airport to East Earh, probably on Saturday.
Hughes also said there was no indication that the Marines were the target of a car bombing in Beirut yesterday. One Marine suffered a slight wrist injury in the explosion.
Police seek man in Tylenol case
CHICAGO—Authorities yesterday issued an all points bulletin for an Illinois man wanted for questioning in the deaths of seven people who took cyanide-laced Tylenol, officials said.
Mort Friedman, a spokesman for Illinois Attorney General Tyrone Fahner, said Kentucky officials issued the bulletin for a man identified as Kevin Masterson, believed to be visiting a friend near Murray, Ky. Friedman stressed that Masterson, who was described as having a
history or friend's illness, was only wanted for questioning at this point. Investigators searched Masterson's Chicago apartment Friday and recovered items which Friedman refused to identify, but said included certain substances.
In Newark, N.J., a worker was jailed in lieu of $50,000 bail yesterday in a copycat plot to extort $100,000 from the makers of Tylenol by threatening to spike the pain killer with cyanide.
Dioxin testing called political plov
WASHINGTON—In what some agency officials called a blatant election-eve political ploy, the Environmental Protection Agency announced yesterday that it would test a "promising new technique" for cleaning up deadly dioxins in soil in Missouri.
EPA Administrator Anne Gorsuch said the agency would begin testing the treatment method within a week at a contaminated horse site.
But one agency official said the announcement appeared to be "made out of whole cloth as an election-eve press release" timed to boost the re-election chances of Sen. John Danforth, R-Mo., who is locked in a race that will determine Mitt Romney Jeff Woods. One source said the treatment had never been tried on diapers.
The EPA has found the cancer-causing chemical at 14 confirmed sites in Missouri and has a list of 41 other potential sites.
DeLorean Motors settles out of court
DETROIT—DeLorean Motor Co. agreed yesterday to sell virtually its entire United States' assets plus the right to distribute 1,094 stainless steel components.
In an out-of-court settlement, DeLorean Motor Co. gave up its battle for the rights to 649 of the gull-winged autos to which Consolidated, based in Columbus, Ohio, holds title.
A final ruling on the settlement will be made Nov. 8 in federal bankruptcy court.
6,750 left jobless after Fair closing
KNOXVILLE, Tenn.—Workmen began tearing down fast food stands, restrooms and amusement rides at the World's Fair site yesterday while some of the 6,750 people left unemployed by the fair's close lined up for government aid.
The 22-nation event ended Sunday night after a six-month run. Promoters said it attracted 11,127,786 visitors and probably made a small profit.
Most buildings on the fairgrounds will be torn down, but a few structures, like the 262-foot-tall Sunshine tower, and the $23.8-million building at Pinecrest Park, will be preserved.
Unemployed fair workers reported to a National Guard Armory yesterday to begin filling out job applications and signing up for uniforms.
The first World's Fair ever in the South achieved its two main goals by paying back 43 banks that loaned it $30 million and by attracting a projected 11 million visitors.
Correction
Because of a reporting error, Pearson Scholarship Hall was incorrectly identified as Grace Pearson Scholarship Hall in an article in yesterday's Kansan.
Slattery, Kay split on use of foreign aid
By JULIE HEABERLIN Staff Reporter
In last night's final round of the 2nd Congressional District race, Republican Morris Kay and Democrat Jim Slattery denounced U.S. foreign aid used by underdeveloped countries to suppress internal conflicts.
"One of the problems with the aid we give now is that the citizens are not educated enough to utilize it correctly, and we are just throwing it away for no purpose," Kay said, during a debate at the Kansas Union.
Slattery, who has advocated massive cuts in foreign aid throughout the campaign, agreed, and expressed concern for a post-conflict world underdeveloped world that would have repercussions in the U.S. economy.
DURING THE DEBATE sponsored by the KU political science department, the candidates were questioned by a professional faculty specialist including KU professors.
Key and Slatter stress the importance of U.S. economic viability in maintaining a strong defense policy against geopolitical negotiations with Central and Latin America.
But while Slattery supported recognition of three Third World countries — Nicaragua, Angola, and Vietnam — Kay said he was hesitant to recognize Vietnam until all U.S. war casualties were accounted for.
The candidates differed on their views of the Reagan administration's buildup of the defense department, with
Slattery calling for a halt to massive defense expenditures.
Slattery also maintained that it was
KAY SUPPORTED the Republican administration's policies and said that a secure arms agreement would be feasible only after the United States balanced nuclear weaponry between the two superpowers.
In Slattery's remarks, he stressed the superiority of U.S. military equipment in comparison with that of the Soviet forces, and that the actual number of nuclear missiles.
now possible for a mutually verifiable nuclear arms agreement with the Soviet Union.
Because of recent difficulty in trade negotiations with Japan, Slattery said he favored a tougher trade policy with that country.
Kay, however, said that the United States should be careful in trade negotiations with Japan, a primary importer of U.S. wheat. He said that a
restrictive policy now could economically hurt the United States, particularly Kansas farmers.
BOTH CANDIDATES also said they supported open communication lines with communist countries concerning social, social and economic exchanges.
Slattery admitted difficulty resolving the conflict of the two U.S. interests.
One member of the audience stirred a controversy by asking the candidates how they would balance their support of the U.S. economy with their interest in suppressing human rights violations abroad.
Kay's answer to the question, which brought laughter from the audience because of its directness, was that he knew everyone on what was best for the 2nd District.
Police disperse rioting youths in Britian
By United Press International
LONDON—Special police riot squads waded with truncheons into crowds of stone and bottle-throwing youths yesterday in the south London suburb of Brixton — the scene of bloody rioting last year that injured dozens of officers.
One policeman was slightly injured in the fracas, and a press photographer was stabbed in the hand, a Scotland
Yard spokesman said. Police maize four arrests on charges of threatening behavior and possession of gas bombs and a sword.
CLOTHED IN fireproof suits and crash helmets, the police units — out in strength for the first time since being retrained and re-equipped after last year's unrest — succeeded in dispersing the crowds late yesterday.
The disturbances followed the evic
tier earlier yesterday by police and
sheriff's officers of squatters, mostly
black, from eight houses on Railon
Road that authorities believed were
used in illegal gambling and drug
dealing.
The eviction took place without incident, after which the old houses were bulldozed. But crowds began to gather at dusk and the trouble faded.
waited on side streets read to back up the riot sisters, who ran forward after main black crowds three up barricade across the street and set fire to them.
HUNDREDS OF OTHER police
Two gasoline bombs were thrown and exploded in the street as police came under fire from a hail of rocks, empty bottles, garbage and even a sledge hammer head, police said.
Steve McMurray
McMurry preliminary waived
A Douglas County associate district court judge yesterday waived a preliminary hearing for Steve McMurry, a student coordinator of KU on Wheels.
Judge Mike Elwell waived the hearing after McMurry's lawyer, Wes Norwood, requested that the preliminary hearing not be held.
The judge scheduled McMurray's next court appearance for Dec. 3, at which time a trial date will be set for a year-old Lawrence special student.
McMurry is charged with five feline counts of theft involving $9,425. He was arrested Sept. 15 by KU police after David Ambler, vice charger for
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Norwood declined to say why he requested that the preliminary hearing be waived.
NOVEMBER 6,1982
student affairs, initiated an investigation into the bus system, which is operated by the Student Senate.
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"Really, there is no question about what has happened." Warren said; mesuring would have taken a lot of time, but knowing already know what the case is all about.
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BUT HARRY WARREN, assistant district attorney, said the hearing probably was waived because it was unnecessary.
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A PROVEN COMMITMENT TO THE COMMUNITY
JESSE BRANSON has lived in Lawrence for 28 years. She is married to Dr. Vernon Branson, a pediatrician. Their children attended Lawrence schools and two of them. Martha and Rosemary, are currently students at the KU Medical Center. Johanna is Professor of Art History at Massachusetts College of Art, and Sam is a client of Cottonwood, Inc.
JESSIE BRANSON has been active in the community for 28 years. She serves on the Board of Directors for; the Salvation Army, Kansans for the Improvement of Nursing Homes, and Women's Transitional Care Services.
She is a volunteer nurse for the Red Cross Bloodmobile and a member of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce, the KU Alumni Association, the League of Women Voters, and Trinity Episcopal Church.
She has served as president for both the Douglas County and the Kansas Associations for Retarded Citizens.
1975
JESSIE BRANSON founded and coordinated the Lawrence Chamber Players from 1972-1980. She serves as Vice President of Local 512 of the American Federation of Musicians which distributes trust funds to music groups.
JESSE BRANSON has served on Governor's Committees on Health Planning, Mental Retardation and Mental Health, and Nursing Homes. She was recently appointed to the Governor's Committee on Child Passenger Safety.
JESSIE BRANSON has represented the 44th District full time for the past two years. She has been accessible to her constituents. She has fought hard for the interests of the people of the 44th District, and she will continue to do so.
Representing YOU Full-Time in Topeka
Jessie BRANSON REPRESENTATIVE 44th
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University Daily Kansan, November 2, 1982
Page 3
Critics say treatment often very painful Rolfing treatment is debatable
By LINDA LANG Staff Reporter
Doris Henton has "a couple of curtures and a twist" in her back, which have caused her discomfort and made her movement as long as she can remember.
"There is no way it can ever be cured. I have learned to live with it," the 64-year-old Lawrence resident said recently.
She obtained some relief through manipulation of her back by Forrest "Phog" Allen, a KU basketball coach who was a registered osteoplast. After his death in the early 1970s, she could not find help anywhere else.
Four years ago she heard about Rolff through a friend at work. Larry Redding was setting up a Roff. Rolff had always been, and Henton became his first client.
Redding said he used his fingers, open palm, fists, wrists and an occasional elbow to manipulate the soft connective tissue under the skin. This tissue, called fascia, envelopes the muscles and gives the body shape.
Rolfers apply pressure to the fascia to get the hardened, stuck places to
move and glide, Redding said. It is a technique to reorder the body toward vertical alignment and make movement simpler and more direct.
Henton said she thought Rolfing was one of the best things people could do for themselves.
"IT MADE ME stand straighter, sit
straighther and walk better," she said.
There was an expansion of my diary,
later strained, and I still have good breathing.
About 300 Rolfers have been trained since the founding of the Rolf Institute in Boulder, Colo., in 1972, according to statistics from the institute.
THE INSTITUTE is named for Ida Rolf, who the last years of her life perfecting and teaching the technique. She held a doctorate in biological chemistry from the College of Surgery and Surgeons of Columbia University.
Advocates of Roffing say it relieves aches and pains that traditional medicine cannot. They also say that they can relieve breathing, circulation and posture.
Critics of the practice say Rolfing is painful, often intensely so.
A poll of 10 doctors and instructors of physical therapy failed to turn up the results.
the benefits and drawbacks of Rolfing.
Redding was a school psychologist for the Topeka public schools at the time he decided to study Rolfing. He said he studied biology, chemistry, anatomy and massage therapy to be admitted to the institute.
AT THE INSTITUTE, he learned the Rofing sequence, which "is a systematic way of freeing up stuck places," he said. The sequence consists of 10 sessions lasting from 60 to 90 minutes each.
Redding said some of his clients had persistent headaches, joint dysfunctions or chronic pain. Others have conditions commonly diagnosed by doctors as bursitis, tendonitis, whiplash or tennis elbow.
"In the beginning, when a patient would shed an ache or pain they had for one year or 10 years, it seemed like a miracle," Reddling said. "The more I work with the body, the more natural it seems."
Rolfers believe the body becomes unbalanced through accidents or through habits of walking, sitting or sleeping that may have been caused by the unbalance occurs because applied force can remold the fascia.
HE SAID Rolters believe the technique not only promotes physical well-being, but also promotes balanced emotional growth as well.
"But I still think it can be beneficial, and I still consider going back," she said.
Susan Hogle Stahl, an occupational therapist in Kansas City, Kan., said she decided to be Rofled to make some personal changes.
She quit after seven sessions. She said she already had received many of the benefits she wanted from Rolf. "I remember they quoted a bit of pain during her sessions."
Redding acknowledged that many people associated Rolfing with pain, and he acknowledged that some of his experienced pain during the sessions.
"MOST PEOPLE realize that for the most part, the Rolfer has not created the pain. It has been there all along," he said.
Redding said that before he rolled a client, he made certain they were prepared for pain during the session.
"I tell them it is best to relax as much as they can," he said.
Reaction to Rolfing varies, Redding said, but most people are surprised that it does not hurt as much as they had expected.
Reason for fatal house fire still unknown
By CAROL LICHTI Staff Reporter
The state fire marshal and other area firefighting officials are still investigating the cause of a house fire that killed a former KU employee and two of his colleagues on night, a Jefferson County Sheriff's Department official said last night.
Shirley Larison, 40, a former custodian at Strong Hall, Donald Larison Jr., 15, and Gina Larison, 13, died in the fire at their rural home six weeks ago. The Fire Department officials removed the bodies from the house four hours after
the first trucks arrived at the house at 1 a.m. Sunday.
DONALD LARISON, 45, and Glenda Larison, 16, were released from Lawrence Memorial Hospital yesterday morning, a hospital official said.
Glenda Larison suffered from a fractured arm and smoke inhalation. Donald Larison also suffered from smoke inhalation, the official said.
Funeral services for Mrs. Larison and the two children will be at 2 p.m. tomorrow at the First United Methodist Church in Osakalao.
Wilford Ousdahl, owner of the house,
said Mrs. Larson had worked about a
year before she was born.
of housekeeping, said Mrs. Larison resigned from her job two weeks ago because of her health.
Richard C. Bivens, associate director
"I was shocked to hear she died so violently, so miserably," Bivens said.
FIREFIGHTERS FROM Lawrence, McLouth, Oksaloake, Grant and Sarcoxie responded to the alarm. In all, 12 fire trucks responded
The Jefferson and Douglas county sheriff's departments, the Kansas Highway Patrol and the Jefferson and Hamilton ambulance services were also there.
The amount of damage to the house has not been determined, but the amount of damage to the roof is unknown.
official said the house was destroyed by the fire.
The official said 75 firefighters helped to extinguish the fire.
The two survivors crawled onto the roof from a second-story window and jumped to the ground, the official said. "The others were probably overcome by shock."
THE OCCUPANTS of the home were in a room on the second floor in the southwest corner of the house during the fire. The sheriff's department official said the survivors told them where the others were in the house.
Oudahl said Glenda Larison called him from the barna after she escaped from the house.
An organizer said the cigarette was made in protest against police who last week confiscated a standard-sized marijuana dispensary and smoking it on the steps of City Hall.
THE MEMBERS of a pro-legalization movement called Free Stuff first offered their unwieldy joint to police.
When it was refused, they moved to City Hall, where officials thwarted their attempts to give it to the mayor.
Pot smokers try to offer longest joint as present
The group finally left it on a gifts table at the City Hall marriage office, asking an official to give it to the next couple to emerge.
"A happy hash smoker causes no one any trouble so we'll leave now," a pull.
"It it took 350 cigarette papers, 10 packets of tobacco and a pound of marjuana and the whole thing was rolled on a long table with a wire spiral built in to make it manageable," said Hans de Preter, a local journalist who was among the 200 spectators on Groningen's Market Square.
Police took away the cigarette before anyone emerged from the marriage office, de Preter said.
By United Press International
"IT WAS ALL done in fun and since it was a demonstration of sorts we thought it best not to interfere," a police official said. "We could not be sure that it was marijuana they were putting into it anyway."
G R O N I N G E N . T he Netherlands--Sixty confirmed marijuna smokers, watched by smiling police, yesterday rolled what was probably the world's longest marijuna cigarette and tried to give it away as a wedding present -- all 15 feet 10 inches of it.
According to the organizer, the joint was made from rare home-grown chickens.
Although marijuana is illegal in the Netherlands, police turn a blind eye to cigarettes containing up to 30 grams of the drug, assuming it is for personal use.
AND THE CITY council in Enschede two weeks ago authorized the town's youth center to sell government-tested toys to youngsters the youngsters would get a safe product.
Thief takes restaurant deposit
Lawrence police were still searching yesterday for an armed robber who stole an undisclosed amount of cash from a 20-year-old Lawrence woman yesterday morning in the parking lot of a Lawrence bank.
The robber was armed with a small brown handgun and was wearing a ski mask and an army jacket, police said. He entered the building away from the bank on 23rd Street.
THE ROBBERY occurred about 10 a.m. yesterday in the parking lot of the South First National Bank, 23rd Street and Ridge Court. The woman was about to enter the bank when the robber demanded that she give him money.
The woman, an employee of Perkins Cake and Steak, 171. 23rd St., was going to make a deposit for the restaurant, police said.
On the record
THEVES STOLE TWO FLAGS
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THEIVERS STOLE A $1,675 boat motor between Oct. 10 and Oct. 30 from the Clinton Lina Marina, a Douglas County sheriff's official said yesterday.
Lindley Hall about 4:15 p.m. Friday, KU police said. One was a KU flag and a gun.
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age 4
Opinion
University Daily Kansan, November 2. 1982
Time for rehabilitation
The University of Kansas Medical Center's rehabilitation department is losing patients to other hospitals and having general morale problems as a result of old and shoddy facilities.
It has been 36 years since the last significant renovation, despite hospital administrators' repeated promises to do something about the department. Charles Hartman, vice chancellor for clinical affairs, has said that a projected $1 million redevelopment for the rehabilitation department was outside the Med Center's means for now.
But the department is not asking for $1 million, at least not now. All they want is enough to make the department's rehabilitation ward and treatment rooms livable — to spruce up surroundings and equipment that now make patients' families hesitant to leave them at the center, according to John Redford, department chairman.
The department is in the oldest building at the Med Center. The ward's
single shower room, painted a distinguishing pea green, is littered with equipment and not adequate for patients. Wheelchairs and time have worn paint from the sides of walls. Department windows offer a lovely view — for those who like brick walls.
Redford says the department could get by with about $200,000, a meager amount by construction standards. It makes little sense for hospital administrators to hold out for $1 million that may never come when $200,000 could turn the department around. The cost might even pay for itself if the department's new look and improved equipment meant more patients and less expenses for continual recruitment and training of new nurses.
In the meantime, the department chairman is learning the hard way that professors and administrators will have to become PR-men and recruit private contributions if they hope to save their departments from the effects of steadily declining budgets.
Tuition fees based on majors could swell existing hassles
"Next!"
"Uh, hi. I'm here to enroll."
"Pete Jones."
"Number of hours enrolling in?"
"Well, that's just it. You see, if the section of English 101 that I want is — "
"Number, fella. I need a number."
"Okay, well." 15.4
major.
"What?"
"Major. C'mon, you've already used up one of your six minutes on the computer."
"But I'm a freshman. I don't have a major.I
P.
TRACEE HAMILTON
don't even have a purpose in life. I'm just here because it beats the Army."
"You don't understand. The University is experimenting with a new tuition scale. The cost of a major is now based on the cost of teaching classes in various fields or at different levels. If you're in an expensive major, you pay more than if you're in an inexpensive one."
"You've got to be joking. Isn't that a little unfair?"
"Look, kid, I just follow the rules. Now, what'll you have?"
"Well, gee, I don't know. I funked physics in high school, so I guess I can't be a nuclear educator."
"It is just as well; you probably couldn't afford it anyway. That kind of thing costs, oh, maybe $100."
"Just for tuition? You can't be serious."
"Do you know how much it costs to train a nuclear physicist? Disposing of the waste alone
"Doesn't that make it a little expensive for pre-med and pre-nursing students?" And they have to go on through more school after they graduate. "And the number of doctors, lab technicians..."
"My heart is bleeding. Listen, you've got five minutes. Use them well; if you screw up this time, you have to wait until drop-add week. Well, now, let's get you a major, OK? How do you feel when you're in the science is a growing field. Why, computer scientists can practically write their own ticket."
"Why are you so anxious for me to major in computer science? Do my ACT scores show I have attitude in that area?"
"It's aptitude, kid. And no, your ACT scores don't show attitude or aptitude in much of anything. However, if we can sign up 100 computer science majors today, the University will turn on the heat in Strong. The women in the twoing pool are putting a lot of pressure on us."
"Well, how much does it cost to major in computer science?"
"A mere $800. Shall I sign you up for CS 2007?"
"I don't think so. Look, do you have anything in it?"
Wait, the prompt says "Maintain original document structure." The image has a header and body text separated by vertical lines.
Let's re-examine the first line: "A mere $800. Shall I sign you up for CS 2007?"
Yes, that's correct.
The second line: "I don't think so. Look, do you have anything in it?"
Yes, that's correct.
Final check of the text:
"A mere $800. Shall I sign you up for CS 2007?"
"I don't think so. Look, do you have anything in it?"
Wait, is there a space between "and" and "you"?
No, there's no space between "and" and "you".
Maybe it's just one sentence with spaces.
"And you have anything in it?"
Actually, looking at the image again, it's:
"A mere $800. Shall I sign you up for CS 2007?"
"I don't think so. Look, do you have anything in it?"
Let's look at the first word again. "A". It's bold.
The next word is also bold.
The third word is not bold.
One more check on the font. It looks like a standard serif font, but the text is split into two lines.
So the first line is "A mere $800. Shall I sign you up for CS 2007?"
The second line is "I don't think so. Look, do you have anything in it?"
I will output:
"A mere $800. Shall I sign you up for CS 2007?"
"I don't think so. Look, do you have anything in it?"
"I could help you better if I had an idea of what you were willing to spend."
"I was counting on tuition being about what it was last year, so I guess I could go as high as $500. But if I get a cheap major, I'd have enough money left over to . . ."
"Whoa, don't forget books. Just because the major is cheap doesn't mean the books are. Take English. Very esoteric. Cheap to teach. Tuition's about $200. But the books are a good lit class could run you $100 easy. But, listen, why don't 'you' sign up as an English major, pay the cut-rate tuition and then take whatever classes you want. Who's to know?"
"Well, what about a major with cheap tuition and cheap books?"
"Kid, the line is getting restless. Hey, what about HDFL?"
"What the hell is that?"
"What the hell is that?"
"You know, Human Development and Family Life. A bargain at $6. Just a couple of books."
"Let me just punch this in . . . oh no, bad news.
We're all out of HDFLs."
'How can you be out of a major?'
"Well, we have to limit the number of students in the less expensive fields; the University would lose a bundle if we had 26,000 HDFL majors. We should afford to water the law or print syllabuses."
"Listen, I just want to get a degree, graduate in four years, settle down and make lots of
houses."
"I'd suggest a business major, but you said vour math was witty weak."
"I'll buy a calculator. How much is a business major?"
"Are you interested in the luxury model or the compact?"
"If you want to be a managerial position, that'd be the luxury model, which runs about $60. If you want to be an accountant, that'd be the best business model, if you have it at the low价, for low price just $60."
"You mean it's on sale?"
"It's our blue light special this hour. Congratulations, you've made an excellent choice. Next!"
KANSAN
The University Daily
The University Daily Kanneu (USP-650) is published at the University of Kansas, 113 First Hall, Lawrence, Kann 65025, daily during the regular annual school and Monday and Thursday during the summer months. Subscribers are $19 for six months or $24 in Douglas County at Lawrence, Kann 65024. Subscriptions by mail are $19 for six months or $24 in Douglas County through the student activities fee *POSTMESSY*. Send address changes to the University Daily Kanneu.
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Gene George
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Associate Campus Editors
Lewis Sports Editor
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Don Delphin, Jim Evans
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Digest cuts Bible down to the basics
The Gospel according to the Reader's Digest has come to Lawrence. And despite disparaging reviews from the likes of Time magazine and The New York Times, he made has made a relatively quiet appearance here.
At least three Lawrence bookstores are carrying the hardback, 799-page Bible that prompted the Christian Beacon to report that its pastor's Digest has done a good job for Satan.
Sales have been slow, store employees concurred. But they attributed that fact to the condensed Bible's recent appearance, rather than to the surrounding book in other parts of the country.
At the root of the hoopla is the absence of 40 percent, or 320,000 biblical words, that appear in the Protestant text of the Revised Standard Version, on which the condensed Bible is based. The Old Testament has been cut by half and the New Testament by one-fourth.
Uncalled-for jokes have stemmed from this product of the Reader's Digest characteristic condensing method. Time magazine, in a scathing editorial Oct. 4 that was palmed off as a news story, suggested that Psalms in the condensed version be named David's Greatest Hits. Half of the book of Psalms is gone in the Reader's Digest version.
The jokes, as Time put it, are inevitable. The Reader's Digest Bible features the Six Commandments; the 4.2 Days of Creation. The bars come easily — how Noah had room for only one book, the Ark and how Christ's followers have been edited to a paltry six. Less may not be more here.
1976 when Reader's Digest won the approval of the National Council of Churches. The Council holds the copyright to the Revised Standard
Version. The Digest recruited a qualified general editor — the Rev. Bruce M. Metzger of Princeton Theological Seminary, a distinguished Bible expert.
Metzger supervised the work of nine staff condensers, who put scissors to accounts they thought were parallel and redundant. For example, this passage from Isaiah, "He was wounded for our transgressions, he was bruised for his transgressions," which describes the reporter's sentence and has been edited to just the first half of the verse. Redundancy, saith the editors.
A
LISA GUTIERREZ
Gone, also, are some of the dozens of stories concerning Jesus Christ's appearances, accounts that appeared in more than one of the four Gospels. Whole sentences have been eliminated. Matthew 4:25, "And great crowds followed (Jesus) from Galilee and the Decapolis and Galilean and Judaea and from beyond the Jordans." does not appear in the condensed Bible at all.
Old Testament family trees and lists of kings and much of the ritual law in Leviticus have been meticulously cut. Whole narrative passages have been minimized, words snipped from the end of verses. Prophets' prophecies have been pruned. Chanter and verse numbers are gone.
Did Reader's Digest editors think God’s
did readers’ writers were verbose? Not really.
I find them too much.
Metzger said he hoped the shorter version would attract people who had been put off by the length of the Bible. He hopes that after those people are attracted to his 60 percent rendition, "a sizable proportion who have never cracked the cover of a Bible will go on to read the whole thing."
The Digest has contended that the Bible is too little read. Never mind about yearly prints that consistently show the Bible to be one of the most popular books in the country.
Still, many have praised the Digest's efforts. Norman Vincent Peale, Oral Roberts, John Mostert, executive director of the conservative American Association of Bible Colleges, and Donald Shriver, president of New York City's liberal Union Theological Seminary, have all given their seals of approval. Pat Boone has called it an "authentic Bible feast."
Seemingly, the only ones who have voiced heartfelt disapproval of Metzger's editing have been those who believe the Bible should be taken verbatim. It's rather hard to do so when much of the verbatim has been tampered with, they claim.
The Reader's Digest undoubtedly took on an enormous task, editing the Word of God in a manner satisfactory to all. Stand-up comedians have been taking pot shots at the project. But Lawrence bookstores have yet to feel the thrust of controversy surrounding the condensed Bible.
The choice to criticize or praise the Reader's Digest Bible may not be of death concern for many. Those who are offended by the thought of a condensed Bible, however, should remember this — at least the Bible wasn't reduced to pocketbook size.
Or featured as a Reader's Digest Drama in Real Life.
Letters to the Editor
Religious groups not stereotyped monoliths
To the Editor:
I am a Christian and a member of a Christian living group here at KU. Not many days ago, our president received a phone call from a representative of a local group that advocates a nuclear freeze. Our president was asked to organize members of our living group for a demonstration to include skull-painted faces, placards, etc.
Our president informed the man that there was not a consensus of opinion in our living group concerning the nuclear freeze idea, and that she, as president, could not act as an agent for another group in soliciting participants. The representative was shocked and retorted with something like "I thought all Christians felt the same way about the freeze." The connotation was that all Christians should automatically feel the same way his group feels about the freeze.
The fact is (i.e. reality) that Christians, like non-Christians, can usually be found in any camp for any particular issue at any given time. There are Christians who support a nuclear agreement, also Christians who do not. There are pro-life Christians, and, yes, even pro-choice Christians.
There are Christians in the ACLU and Christians in the Pentagon. There are Christians who vote Democrat and those who vote Republican. There are even some Christians who don't vote all. There are conservative Christians and liberal Christians, black Christians and white Christians, Jerry Falwells and John Pauls. We have Cindy Lassler and Billy Grahams in our numbers. Our ranks include doctors, lawyers, artists, plumbers, clerks and feminists, and we also have content homemakers and African-Caribbean pacifists, Christian militants, Christian activists and Christian selective. Some Christians are bearded; some are bald. Some wear Polo shirts and Topspins; some wish they could afford them. And on and on and on.
Randy Oswald Olathe senior
In view of the obvious pluralism that exists within that class of people called Christians, I
am surprised to find that there are still some who believe that Christianity is some stereotypical entity, ready-made for labels and propaganda, full of imbeciles who have sacrificed their reason to modern sacred cows. And when the cow worshipers find that some Christians are not inclined to jump on the band wagon, the legitimacy of those Christians' intentions came into question. But somehow, I think God will make His evaluation using some other criteria. History tends to show that He doesn't go in for sacred cows either.
News judgement poor
What are they teaching you people over there in Flint Hall? It seems that every time I open up the Kansas, there are numerous examples of your lack of journalistic judgment and expertise, from misspelled words (even the headlines are not spared) to sentences that make no sense. It makes me wonder whether the stuff is even edited before it goes to camera.
To the Editor:
Usually I ignore these irritations included in the Kansas; it's hard to justify taking time away from study to voice my opinion. But a story that ran on the front page of Monday's paper was just
The story makes us look like a bunch of jerks, seeing an ugly event with obviously myopic vision. From the headline, one would assume that a KU student was injured in an attack by K-State students. But that's not what happened at all, if we can trust the facts as revealed in the
story. Somebody yanked the hat off a KU student, and in her pursuit of that individual, she tripped and injured her ankle. From this event is derived Monday's distorted headline.
Who is responsible for the choice example of yellow journalism titled "Bowdy Wildcat fists pounce on KU band, injure member"? I guess the writer just couldn't resist the urge to libel the rival state university, even at the expense of a few facts.
Why couldn't the event simply have been covered as any other news story, objectively and accurately? If the writer can't avoid bending the facts to satisfy his personal need to throw stones, he should be delivering papers, not producing them.
While we're on the subject of misguided journalistic judgment, I might as well query as to the purpose of the mindless piece on shaving written by Hal Klopper that appeared on my blog yesterday. I read the reader to "backtrack with me to my 618th birthday, when I received my first electric shaver."
Apparently something happened at the K-State game that was worthy of a news story. K-State fans seem to have gotten carried away and are now worrying about their newsworthy without distorting the facts?
What enthralling reading! I don't know about you, but I couldn't put it down! Who is this character who thinks anyone is even remotely interested in the history behind his shaving career? Is there nothing on in the world more worthy of comment than his facial hair?
I understand that the shaving piece was intended as humor, but it failed so miserably that I wonder where the editor was when it was stuck down on the layout page.
I can just hear people screaming that I should be helping in the production of the paper instead of just complaining about it. Well, that makes a little sense (if you squint). Unfortunately, not all of us are so academically capable as to be able to devote time to producing a school paper and to an education as well. Hence, the job is left to the journalism students. I don't begrudge them a few mistakes. But daily, and in so great an abundance?
---
Keith Sessions Lawrence junior
University Daily Kansan, November 2, 1982
Page 5
Vote
From page one
and will cause higher utility rates and increased fuel costs."
While Hardidge focused his efforts on the northern, Carlin took his campaign message to New York.
Carlin started campaigning in the Kansas City area, then embarked on an ambitious statewide trip to Pittsburg, Wichita, Dodge City, Hays and Salina.
On the eve of the election, which could decide its long-term political future, Carlin spent a month in Manhattan.
AFTER VOTING at Smolon Grade School, Carlin, a 42-year-old dairy farmer, is scheduled to spend most of the morning tinkering about the cows. Bensonson, Carlin's assistant press secretary, said.
"There will be very little campaigning done on election day, though the governor may go to Kansas City, Kan., to give the workers there a boost." Swenson said.
Carlin will return to Cedar Crest, the governor's mansion, later this afternoon and will
appear at Kansas Democratic headquarters in Topeka this evening to await the result of the ballot.
Hardage is expected to continue his campaign throughout the day in Sedgwick County, another key area in the election.
HE IS SCHEDULED to greet workers at Boeing Aircraft early in the morning. After voting at about 9:30 a.m., Hardge intends to campain in downtown Wichita.
The two congressional candidates, who spent much of last week debating each other, set their sights yesterday on Topeka, the district's most populous area.
Slattery spoke at the Veterans of Foreign Wars headquarters in Topeka yesterday, then spent the remainder of the afternoon distributing leaflets throughout the city.
HE IS SCHEDULED to forge any further campaigning today and will spend a quiet day with his family, Kay Fernandez, Slattery's press secretary, said.
Faculty affiliates to recruit minority graduate students
To increase graduate minority enrollment, KU departments on the Lawrence and Kansas City, Kan. campuses have named faculty affiliates to serve as mentors for student students interested in graduate programs.
The Faculty Affiliates Program was initiated by the office of minority affairs this fall to show prospective students that KU officials really want them to attend the University of Kansas, said Vernell Spearman, acting director of minority affairs.
Spearman said that faculty affiliate contact with interested minority students emphasized that KU was interested in, and committed to the students.
THE PROGRAM HAS been financed by a $7,500 Endowment Association grant. The money will be used for operating expenses, and recruiting trips to regional schools and predominantly black and Mexican-American colleges in other regions.
DE-MIN WU, director of the economics department graduate program and faculty affiliate for the department, said he sent information to minority students selected from a list of those who had expressed interested in the graduate program.
He said the faculty affiliates program was an important method of contacting students.
Efforts to encourage high turnout, by calling registered voters to remind them to vote and lending rides to people without a means of transportation, not restricted to the county and state parties.
stems from people wanting to let the changes from 1980 work."
The campaign organizations of both major gubernatorial candidates, Carlin and Hardidge, also will concentrate on getting voters to the polls.
Poll
From page one
Darrall Day, Hardage's press secretary, said. "I think it is a sleeping giant in this election. Whoever gets their people out to the polls will be
DAY SAIK A great amount of preparation had gone into volunteer efforts in Sedgwick, Johnson and Shawne counties — three key counties in the race.
Mike Swenson, Carlin's assistant press secretary, said Carlin supporters also had a statewide organization designed to urge voters to grant Carlin another four-year term.
Today's efforts by campaign workers could be pivotal in the gubernatorial race. Day said, because of a large bloc of undecided voters.
in good shape, and we have a volunteer network of 10,000 strong to do that."
"Our last poll was showing 43 percent for each side with 14 percent undecided," he said.
"Basically, the workers who have been building the campaign to the momentum we now have will be calling people." Swenson said. "It's a Democratic tradition for organizations to offer rides to people and call people who we know will vote for the governor."
"That 43 to 43 figure has been around for a long time," he said. "Our latest poll showed the governor was in a strong position, while Hardage has not moved in the polls in the last two weeks."
SWENSON SAID the Hardage poll was intended to be a morale booster for Republican campaign workers.
"We are feeling good about the election, but the key is to get the voters out."
Continuing ed to sponsor programs
By DAN PARELMAN Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
A conference on U.S.-Japanese relations leads off three programs this weekend administered by the division of continuing education.
Sen. Nancy Landon Kassebaum, R-Kan, will give the keynote address Thursday in the Kansas Union's Alderson Auditorium for the "Third Amendment Relief for International Affairs" of U.S.-Japan Relations in the 1980s.
KASSEBAUM WILL SPEAK on agricultural trade relations with Japan, Marilyn Long, program manager for the division, said yesterday. He is a member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.
The conference is sponsored by Kassebaum and the University of Kansas.
The conference on U.S.-Japanese relations will discuss government-business relations in Japan, trends in Japan's economic policies, new U.S. opportunities and strategies for relations with Japan and the foundations of Japan's economic success.
business with Japan and this is a way of highlighting this particular emphasis," said George Woodyard, associate vice chancellor for international programs and a co-chairman of the
The United States and Japan did $33 billion dollars worth of trade in fiscal year 1982, according to U.S. News and World Report. But China also added a trade deficit of $17.2 billion dollars with Japan.
MARTIN BRONFENBRENNER, Kenan professor of economics and lecturer in Japanese history at Duke University, Durham, N.C., will be visiting the United States and its implications for the United States.
"IN GENERAL, WE obviously do a lot of
The Reagan administration has debated ways to improve the trade balance with Japan. Some politicians and economists have also discussed ways that the United States could incorporate the labor-management relations of the Japanese.
Byron Marshall, chairman of the East Asian Studies department at the University of Minnesota, will speak Friday morning on and historical aspects of U.S.-Japan relations.
Friday afternoon, Michio Mizoguchi, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary to the Japanese embassy in Washington, will address "U.S.-Japanese Economic Relations."
ROBERT HORMAT, assistant secretary of state, and Sumio Tanaka, chief executive director for the Japan Trade Center, Chicago, will talk, "New Opportunities for trade."
THE CAREER conference will be held Friday.
Rut. "Vorne Brathwaite Burke, D-Calf," will
address the topics of leadership and career
Other programs this weekend are the "Sixth Annual Black Student-Alumnus Career Conference," sponsored by the KU Black Alumni Committee and the University of Kansas Alumni Association, and a workshop on Alumniser's Disease, sponsored by the Adult Life Resource Center.
Students will be able to meet representatives from 25 businesses at the fair, said Michel Van, administrative assistant for minority-alumni relations at the Alumni Association.
Van said some of the companies were looking for students graduating this December.
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"Music in the Miller Mood" Saturday, November 6, 1982 8 p.m. to midnight Kansas Union Ballroom
Beneke and his orchestra bring back memories for those who grew misty-eyed as they heard "Moonlight Serenade." "String of Pearls," or "in the Mood"—and introduce music of the Forties to those too young to remember.
Dance to the music of Tex Beneke and his 15-piece orchestra as they offer the Big Band sound made popular by Glenn Miller and other famous band leaders during the Fabulous Forties.
Other Homecoming Highlights
Tuesday
Homecoming Parade. 2:30 p.m. Floats, bands, drill and flag units, 1940s cars and other reminders of The Fabulous Forties. Chi Omega Fountain, west on Jayhawk Boulevard to Mississippi Street and Memorial Stadium. Float display from 7 to 9 p.m. at X zone parking lot near stadium. Free.
All-University Homecoming Luncheon and Ellsworth Medallion presentation. 11 a.m. Union Ballroom.
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referral
Cherwell Park No. 16-463-2300
Music by the Crimson and Blues Brothers jazz band, alumni musicians from popular local groups of '40s. After game, Main Lobby, Kansas Union, Free.
Football. KU vs. Iowa State. 1:30 p.m. Memorial Stadium.
Friday, November 5
Saturday, November 6
Luncheon. $6.50; Call KU Alumni Association, (913) 864-4760.
Football. $6 general admission; $11 reserved. Call KU Athletic Ticket Office, (913) 864-3141.
Tex Beneke Dance. $10 public; $8.50 students with KU-ID. Call KU Student Union Activities, (913)
864-3477, or KU Alumni Association.
Ticket Information:
Ticket information.
Lunchroom 65.50 Call K11 Alumni Association /913) 864-4760
KU Homecoming Weekend is sponsored by the KU Alumni Association, Student Union Activities and the KU Homecoming Committee.
VALID ID CARDS
Instantly Laminated Color
available at
I. DENT SYSTEMS
com 1144 Ramada Inn
841-5905
Public Welcome
No Cover Charge
Kamikazes $1
tonight and every Tuesday night At
Appearing this Week
The Scat Band
is back
One Week
only
842-3977
GAMMONS
GAMMONS
Forsale: Hundred year-old boots.
TEXAS RANGER
FRYE
How can a boot that looks this good,this much in style,be over a hundred years old? It's a Frye boot. Benchcrafted by skilled
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Mon.-Sat. 9:30-5:30
Thurs. 8:30-1:30
So while the styles may change over the years, the quality always remains the same. The best.
Arensberg's = Shoes
---
Page 6
Entertainment
University Daliv Kansan, November 2, 1982
'Atomic Cafe'explodes myths
By MICHAEL GEBERT
Guest Reviewer
Nuclear war puts on its best face in "The Atomic Cafe," a horribly funny new documentary made up entirely of old archive footage. It opened Friday in Lawrence.
The film, cleverly edited by Kevin Rafferty,
Jayne Loader and Pierce Rafferty, is dedicated
Review
to the idea that nobody really knows what atomic war is about, least of all the government, whose duplicity is revealed time and time again.
Much of the most famous footage in the film comes from government-sponsored films of the 1950s. We see a cartoon turtle telling us to "duck and cover;" we see cartoon representations of a man's hair falling out and are reassured that it will grow back; we see families enjoying the new
spirit of togetherness that nuclear war brings; we even see Hugh Beaumont, Ward Cleaver from "Leave it to Beaver," in uniform, telling a friend not to panic because it's all in good hands.
THESE SCENES are very funny, but they raise interesting questions. Outside the theater that was showing the film there were people with nuclear freeze petitions that seemed to suggest that the Soviets were just dying to beat their bombs into plowshares. Are we really any less naive, as we sit drinking theatre soft drinks, with God knows what chemicals in them, than the poor dups who were exposed to these films the first time around?
For example, the audience laughed when Richard Nixon was shown, regardless of the fact that Nixon was one of the few presidents who reduced the chance of nuclear war. They laughed, too, when a typical military creed named Tibbets had been used to Tibbets, the pilot who dropped the bomb on Hiroshima, had suffered tremendous guilt over his part in the war.
It is scenes like the one with Tibbetts and those
that follow that are, to me, among the film's most powerful: Harry Truman unctuously invoking God, who in his Wisdom gave our side the bomb (Truman is reported not to have missed a bit of sleep over the decision to bomb Hirohima and Nagasaki); the rescue of a boy from a nuclear plant; the Pacific A-bomb test; and Bob Considine deciphering the execution of the Rosenberg.
TWO LONG SEQUENCES are shattering. The first shows a Nevada above-ground test where soldiers were placed in trenches a few miles away for experimental purposes; we watch in horror as the shock waves and the dust of the blast pass right over them.
And then, for the last quarter of the film, the film-makers take all that has gone before and edit it together. As the blast goes off, cartoon citizens "duck and cover," children leap off their bikes and hide their eyes, families reach for a boat to take them home, and overtakes them. That is the final joke of "The Atomic Cafe" — when there is no one left to laugh.
KU student sells comedienne jokes bases humor on insults, rudeness
By SUSAN O'CONNELL Staff Reporter
There is one in every grade school class - the class clown.
He is still a clown, but his audience has expanded beyond his classmates. Today, Schell writes some of the jokes that comedienne Jean Harper used to make or when hosting "The Tintow Show." he said.
Andy Schell, Wichita senior, was a jester in his classroom, he said yesterday.
"I contacted Rivers because my material is the same style as hers," he said.
Schell said he had begun his joke-selling campaign by trying to contact Rivers by telegram several times, but they finally answered him. Sell said Telegram Rivers 50 lakes, and she bought four of them.
"I'm the one who has gotten her started on the 'Wille Nelson being dirty' jokes," he said. "The last four times she has been on 'The Tonight Show', she has used my jokes."
He cannot release the jokes he sold to Rivers because of an agreement in his contract, Schell said.
SCHELL HAS recently sent Rivers 15 more jokes and he expects her to buy some of them.
He said most of his jokes were based on insults. One-liners about Marie Osmond's teeth and Liz Taylar's fat are among the jokes he has sold to Rivers.
Schell performed with nine other comedians in a comedy group, The Famous Potatoes, at a Talking Heads concert. The audience began laughing over beer bottles and hurling barbed wire, he said.
The Potatoes finally gestured rudely at the crowd, Schell said. For this, the audience gave them a standing ovation.
In Denver and Boulder, he and a woman from the group performed comedy skits at nightclubs, Schell said.
He performed with The Famous Potatoes going to the University of Colorado in Boulder.
"They loved us being rude back to them. It was the only thing that made them happy." Shell it.
AFTER THAT, he spent four months in Los Angeles. He was miserable there because the job market was tight. he said.
Schell is working on "A Little Night Music."
which is being produced by the KU Theatre Series. He said it would be his first major singing and dancing experience.
Schell said his singing was improving.
"Right now I sound a little like Anthony Newley caught in an animal trap, but by opening night I should be wonderful." he said.
In the play, he is one of five who comment in song and dance on what is happening on the stage. He also plays a small part.
"The role isn't too different for me because it's really funny. The audience sees 'A Little Night Music' through our eyes and we can poke fun at the songs and people in the show," he said.
SCHELL'S PLANS include finishing a novel that he started while living in California, he said. It is a humorous look at a Kansas family.
He said he would like to stay in comedy either as a vetter or a performer. He would also like to
The novel, "Kansas Plants," is about an atypical farm family that comes into a lot of money, he said. It shows how they spend their new wealth.
But he has more immediate plans. Schell plans to graduate in May.
"Knock on wood," he said.
Just as in the past, there are other factors that can affect the performance of a satellite. One of these factors is the weather conditions on the earth. In addition to the weather conditions, the satellite's own weather conditions also play a role. For example, if the satellite's antenna is damaged or covered by a layer of dust, it will not be able to receive signals from space. Another factor that can affect the performance of a satellite is the signal strength. If the satellite's signal strength is weak, it may not be able to transmit data accurately. Finally, the satellite's performance can also be affected by the time of day. If the satellite is not operating during the day, it will not be able to receive signals from space.
"Person Throwing a Stone at a Bird," by Spanish-born artist Joan Miro, is one of fifty paintings included in the exhibition, "Twentieth Century Painting from the Museum of Modern Art," which continues through Dec. 10 at the Nelson-Adkins Art Gallery, 43rd and Oak Park. Other works by such artists as Pablo Picasso, Henri Matisse, Piet Mondrian and Edward Hopper.
Students can use ID for KC ballet discount
KU students and faculty members can receive an 80 percent discount for performances of "Filling Station," presented this week by the Kansas City Batley, by presenting a University identification card at the Lyric Theater box office, 10th and Central streets, Kansas City, Mo.
The performances, which open the ballet's 1982-33 season, will be at 8 p.m. Nov. 4-6 and at 2 p.m. Nov. 7 at the Lvric Theater.
Ticket prices without the discount range from $5 to $16.
"Filling Station" is a period piece whose elements — its subject, scenery, costumes, music, and dances — were all drawn from America's culture.
It was first choreographed by Lew Christensen for Lincoln Kirsten'in "Ballet Caravan." Virgil Thomson, a composer from Kansas City, wrote the music score.
In the same program, the Ballet will perform the world premiere of "Galatée de peux," a Summer's Day," *Classical Symphony* and "Rhythm," a Tale. "All were choreographed by Todd Bolender."
On campus
TODAY
CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR CHRIST will meet at 7 p.m. in the Big Eight Room in the Kansas Union.
CAMPUS CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP'S
BIBLE study and fellowship will be held at 7:30 p.m. on Wednesday, January 28.
ARNOLD AIR SOCIETY will meet at p.6.m.
in the INTERNAL Room of the Union.
BLOOD PRESSURE SCREENING will be
BLOOD 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. in Parlor A of the
II馆
KU GUN CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in the Satellite Union Conference Room.
MARANATHA MINISTRIES will meet at 7 p.m. in the Kansas Room of the Union.
FITNESS AWARENESS TECHNQUES
seminar on athletic injuries will be at 12:10
MONDAY, JUNE 9TH FROM 12:30 TO 4:00 PM
TOMORROW
CATHOLIC CENTER WORSHIP will be at
12:30 p.m. in Danforth Chapel.
FRESHMEN
NAVAL ROTC
SCHOLARSHIPS
AVAILABLE
STOP BY 115 MILITARY SCIENCE
OR
CALL 864-3161
Academic Skill Enhancement Series via VIDEOTAPE
FREE
Textbook Reading and Preparing for Exams Friday, November 5
Call or come by the Student Assistance Center,
864-404-121, 121 Strong Hall for an appointment.
ST. STRONG MILITARY COLLEGE
DENVER, CO 80210
FAMILY PIC
Doug Lamborn cares about KU's future
- Doug Lamborn believes our representation should be doing much more to help KU. As a majority party member, Doug would work better with the legislative leadership.
- Doug Lamborn worked his way through KU after getting married. He understands the financial difficulties of students.
Doug Lamborn State Representative 46th
He's Working Now He'll work for you
POL ADV —Paid for by Doug Lamborn
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University Daily Kansan, November 2, 1982
Page 7
Hiebert says ad is misleading
By DOUG CUNNINGHAM
Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
A paid political advertisement for Hank Booth, a candidate for County Commissioner, has drawn fire from some people who say the ad implies a neighborhood association endorsement.
The advertisement, which appeared in Sunday's Lawrence Daily Journal-World, pictured two people, Ken and Martyn Lahm, who said they supported Booth because "when our neighborhood needed help getting organized to work for what we wanted to accomplish. Hank Booth was a big help."
They also said Booth, a Republican, had given them support in "in getting the West Prairie Park developed."
BOOTH'S OPPONENT, Democrat Nancy Hiebert, said the advertisement was an attempt by Booth to say that he had helped various neighborhoods in Lawrence, something she said was not the case.
But Booth said yesterday that the advertisement was not misleading and that the endorsement was from only one individual identified as Lawrence residents.
"I stand on my record of service to the neighborhoods with my work on the project."
However, James Pelham, treasurer of the West Perry Park Neighborhood Association, said there was no West Prairie Park. He said the ad must have been for the West Perry Park. After which the neighborhood association was named.
"We ARE NOT supporting him, not are we supporting Nance Hobert," Pew Press wrote.
Tables for nuclear poll to be moved
Pellham said the ad implied that the neighborhood association had endorsed Booth.
Hiebert said the ad was an attempt to discredit himself to the plohephism associated with him.
Locations for today's public opinion poll on the question of a nuclear weapons freeze with the Soviet Union have been changed after a visit from Secretary of State Jack Brier, a city official said yesterday.
Allen Loyd, a management analyst for the city, said that Brier was in Lawrence Friday to talk with supervi-
"I think it's another attempt of purporting to be a friend of the neighborhood," she said. "That's contradiction to his record of voting."
Loyd said that as a result of Brier's comments, tables for the opinion poll would be moved farther away from the election tables in several instances.
THE POLL, which was authorized by the Lawrence City Commission in August, is to take place at the same
The Lawrence Coition for Peace and Justice, which asked the city to allow the opinion poll, will pay for the court. The judge will provide its own workers for the polls.
BRIER'S CONCERN was that the poll might interfere with the general
Foreign student enrollment at the University of Kansas increased slightly this year despite a sharp decrease in the number of Iranian students according to statistics compiled by the Office of Foreign Student Services.
By VERONICA JONGENELEN Staff Reporter
Fewer Iranian are able to obtain visas to study in the United States because of broken diplomatic ties between the two countries, Clark Coan, foreign student services director, said yesterday.
Total foreign student enrollment also increased in the United States, according to a report released last month from the Institute of Internation-Edgery.
THIS FALL, 1,671 students from foreign countries enrolled at KU. In the fall of 1981, 1,642 foreign students graduated from KU with a degree dean of records and registration.
Iran has since been replaced by Taiwan as KU's largest source of foreign students, he said.
Foreign student enrollment goes up
ACCORDING TO that report, the decreasing number of Iranian students is slowing the growth rate of high school student enrollment in U.S. colleges.
Last year at KU, 196 Iranian students were enrolled, Coan said. This year, only 152 Iranian students are enrolled.
Foreign students were 2.8 percent of a total U.S. enrollment in higher education of 12.4 million, the report said.
Only two of those 123 are new students, Coan said. The two were living in Western European countries and were invited to visits to study in the United States.
IT WOULD HAVE been very difficult for them to have obtained visas from their own government, Coan said.
The remainder of the Iranian students transferred from other colleges or are returning students, he said.
Because of the devaluation of the peso, Coan said, the number of Mexican students attending KU also dropped, from 35 in 1981 to 26 this year.
However, increasing numbers of students from other countries have made up for the void left by these students, he said.
Malaysia has begun sending many of its students to U.S. schools, Coan said.
Previously, because Malaysia was a commonwealth of Great Britain,
Malaysian students can attend
British schools free. The British
government has since changed its
policy and now charges tuition, behe
THIS YEAR, 96 Malaysian students are enrolled at KU, Coan said, up from 33 last year.
e The numb r of students from Taiwan also has increased, from 149 last fall to 161 this fall. Coan said.
The number of Saudi Arabian students at KU has increased this year from 56 to 67, he said.
Only one major OPEC nation, Kuwait, increased by more than 10 percent its number of students in the United States, the report said.
Nationally, according to the IIE report, the number of students from the Middle East has doubled. Students from the Middle East now make up 29% foreign students, although this year the numbers did not increase dramatically.
"IF THIS PATTERN continues, it may indicate that the enormous expansion of foreign student numbers fueled by petrodollars has reached a plateau in the oil glut of the early '80s," Ms. Gardner said. "Nations are concerned." Wallace Edgerton, president of the IIE, said in the report.
The University Daily
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five six seven eight nine ten
15 words or fewer $2.25 $2.75 $2.75 $3.25 $3.25 $4.55 $5.85 $6.85
nine eleven twenty-three forty-four fifty-five sixty-seven seventy-eight
eighty-nine ninety-one ninetwenty-two ninetwenty-three ninetwenty-four ninetwenty-five ninetwenty-six ninetwenty-seven ninetwenty-eight ninetwenty-nine
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Monday ... Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday ... Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday ... Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday ... Friday 5 p.m.
Friday ... Wednesday 5 p.m.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
The Kannan will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of this ad.
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ad-
cents can be placed in person or simply by calling the Kakam business office at 864-4358.
KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE
118 West Business 664-4398
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Spiritual Formation mini retreat exploring personal spiritual formation of a young woman. Christian Education Ministration Center, 1049 Orland Ave., Brooklyn, NY 11205.
Hat Girl's - The ECU Baseball Form will now be held on Saturday, March 27 at 10 a.m. for an organizational meeting at 10 a.m. Wednesday at the University of Colorado.
NEED GRIDFIT Information on receiving Vase,
Mattercard, with no credit check. Other cards
available. Free brochure. Call Personal Credit
(602) 584-0307 ext. 3083.
FOR RENT
Cosmetics Assistant,
Bratfellow $25-$30.
Cosmetics Assistant,
Bratfellow $25-$30.
Cosmetics Assistant,
Bratfellow $25-$30.
1 Bedroom house for rent w/ fireplace. Walking distance. Must be a senior. Resident pays. Distance must be to appraisal.
2 BH iab, available now 3rd floor, locker quiet, comp. room, private bath, laundry & washaid. No pelt. Not close to campus. 849-3830
EXTRA nice apartments, large and small. Next to campus. Tuition paid, residence priced, 842-4185. Attendance required. Lease available on energy efficient 2 & 3 bedrooms, locally constructed with all apartment space. Call 617-609-1000 or 2 & 3 bedrooms from $200-$350. Call and ask about our low heating bills. Call 617-454-6784 between 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
LUXIRY LUXURY NEAR KUW M West Meadow Condo,
2B, BF, kitchen, refrig. U/A, carport, dishwashers
B, bedroom, en suite
LIVE IN THE WOOSS near Loos Star, share house,
want two guest, great, or any room; 3 sound
system; 1 large kitchen; 2 bedrooms.
Live in the CHRISTIAN CAMPUS HOUSE this fall
from 6:30 - 10:30 a.m. with a guest
ministry. Call Alan Resniks, campus minister
MADRONEWROOK. Furnished studio available on nibbles now through May 31st. Free cable, electric kitchens, fully carpeted. Enjoy the quality of rooms with affordable prices. Call 482-4200 at 18th Street.
One room studio house /converted garage] in N.
Lawrence. 842-705-2 between a 9, & p. 6m.
& two bedroom apts, available immediately and
Laundry facility, Semester leases available
Laundry facility, Semester leases available
PRINCETON PLACE PATIO APARTMENTS. Now Available. 2 bedroom, 2 bath. 8th room for rentments, features wood burning fireplace, 2 car garage with windows and balcony. New kitchen, new kitchen, quiet surroundings. No picea $435 per month. Open house 9:30-5:30 at daily 2pm. Live-in, or phone 842-3272 for additional information.
Honors for rent plus utilities. Kitchen privileges. No
petera. Referrals. Non-smokers. 843-1601.
*Siblausee 2 br. apt, at Park 25. Move in Dec 8 but
don't start work until Jan. 16. Move in Jan.
18 after 4pm.*
Sukhasee nice 1 BR apartment, completely furnished. Water paid, laundry facilities. Clear to campground.
SOUTHERN PARKWAY TOWNHOUSES, 90th & Kirkdale. If you're tired of nosedy & cramped apartments, Hookups all appliances, attached garage, swimming pool, all bathrooms (187-234) Call 787-1857 (evenings and weekends) for more information.
Three unfurnished bedrooms near downtown.
Three large kitchen and both 860, 900 plan deposit
on all apartments.
formation about our modern price newhouse:
STEVEN'S REAL ESTATE: studio space 3 BIRM apartment in Meadowbrook close to KIU. A furnished studio. Telephone: (847) 841-4500; email: b847.936.396.
VIRTUAL nice B BR Duplex, fully carpeted new paint,
A/C, W/D deck, disposal, no pets, EEPMs/max.
NECKLY DECORATED spacious room. Furnished
with 82' built-in sofas, 10' flat screen TV,
and a large dining area only, no pets. Bid:
910-300-5670.
Diring of doing all the housework? Check out Sunflower cooperative's online inexperienced help section.
1923 Toyota pick-up, burgundy, 4-speed, PJM, fifm.
storm, good snow, pretended to sell, $169.50
Cash.
FOR SALE
1. 40k Perd Van S.W.B. 8 c. 1. 35k Piped v
1972 Dodge Cal. Perfect condition. 39,000 miles. 2 dr., 4pd, radials. storey. Cali Door. 843-3394.
4-pd, radials, steree. Call Roy at 843-594-1800.
1880 Blue. chrome, wire-drawn, wheels excellent.
mileage, $30 or less
Hydraulic, Might, 845424
Hipower, 10 kip, aquarium, fan, air-conditioner, Call
Jerry's Furniture
Dionne turbable; Son of Ampulla amp; Agl Pt Pre-am
Nakamichi kacami妻; 842-2532
Everything to furnish and decorate your apartment at The Swap Shop. 608 Mass.
Fair Sale, Custom Electric Guitar Amplifier. Lake new; 40 watts. $753. 844-6923.
PWR shift. Adults 60+. Senior Amplifiers.
new 60. new 273. 864-6992.
*SCHEDULE ONLY BY OCTOBER 15.*
Your Job Now!
At the Tweep Shop, 608 Mass.
Susan Kaufman Electric Cellar Amplifier
1.75" x 2.75" x 3.25"
Electrical Equipment
Hellivael Dione. Piloner CF758S cassette deck. Makes great tapes. Must sell. B1-800, Negotable.
JVC stereo component set, 4 years old, hardy used. $900 will sell for $400 or better. Call: Caitlin Coughlin (312) 657-5222.
His men's medium Northface down jacket, new $130, $65,
modern chair, ottoman, $84, 81-97%.
KWALITY COMICS GRAND OPENING. NELLY
KWALITY (COMICS) GRAND OPENING. NELLY
KWALITY (COMICS) GRAND OPENING.
> block went Moss in the Browser. Bassett
radio, 8-track, phone and headphone mount. $90. In excellent condition. We need the space. 841-541-6728.
Nobel Lehmann chair, 3 yrs, old. Excellent condition.
Must sell $125.00 or less. Call Becky
Calkins 718-695-4332.
Oxhore 1 Computer. includes text editor, supervise,
CPCM, games, and software. $250
845-3281
Susanu GT550, 1975, 12,000 miles. Looks and runs great. @650 Must Sell. 749-1081.
TENNIS HACKETS - Recently selected reception newnamed Head Comp. Wilson Advantage, Kramer Pro Staff, Dunlap Maxply, Davis Classic, Prince Class will Buy yields if in good condition. 842-6213
Technics SA-303 AM / FM receiver 45-water, 2-year
good. Old condition. 618-164 183-163 after 5:00 pm
Corolla Torcia 1977-4 D/A/C, radio, great condition.
Must see in anurease. $2000-843-5644
Wrought iron trough with leather cushions 20x20x10 Zeenth
hardwood, finished hardwood, full cord cover, living room
hardwood, full cord cover, living room
FOUND
Yamaha Motor in 6 months old. Old 1,000 miles.
Excellent condition. $800.00 new, asking $450.
XK100. Excellent condition.
Found. Butterworth colored beige britain mixed
apple. April 6, 6 old ground Around 4th &
5th.
Found abandoned bicycle on campus, identify to claim. 842-647-878 for 3:50 all day.
LOST Gold-diamond ring on Tues. 26 between Hallamstone hall and the acetylene cornetal sentimental wall.
Found digital watch near compass & stadiun
Reward Lost, deep orange male tail ect. Nurt-
pattern on sleeves. Striped tail. Wearing name tag.
Found a pair of prescription glasses in a blue case in front of Hoot Audit. Identify at Hoot Audit &
HELP WANTED
Found keys in parking lot east of stadium Tum, even ww7
8215
DO YOU RUN OUT OF MONEY BEFORE YOU RUN OUT OF MONTH? Turn the values with extra spaces to avoid problems. Use a distributor train you for splendid opportunity. Send name and phone to Route 2, Box 135-A.
Send name and phone to Route 2, Box 135-A.
FORTRAN APPLICATIONS PROGRAMMER:
Half-time research assistance available for programs geographically or geographic information systems using LSI-11 microcomputers. FORTRAN background required, experience offered, preferred. KU graduate status required. Contact the Kansas Applied Remote Seminar Program, Boon 362 Nichols Hall, 844-0755 Application Equality Opportunity Employer. Equity Opportunity Affirmative Action Employer.
Catholic Center at Kansas University seeks experienced professional to direct external support programs with initial emphasis on ongoing state and national standards. Students experience in fund-raising or related profession. Salary based on experience. Send resume to Vince Ward, Director of Catholic Center. (612) 555-3780; gward@catholiccenter.edu; Lawrence, J.
home wanted by disabled man to do simple care
with his wife. The couple buys a new flat
near her home. Payment free of charge and board.
For more information, call 1-800-342-5767.
Earn up to $1,000.00 per semester. Representative
and counsel for students in the Tarrytown area.
Territory guaranteed. Must have camera.
Send name, age, Greek affiliation (if any,
year and address) to SILHOUETTE, 1454 hardcover
bookstore in Tarrytown, NY.
Write-in Candidate for Kansas Governor Lindsay Olsen Give KU a voice
Need someone in care for two lice babies in my home.
Hours are 4:00 p.m. to 1:00 a.m. Monday, then mri-7
thursday, friday and saturday.
Wanted. Dependency housekeeper for single parent &
19 yr. old, weekdays 2 hrs./day, cleaning, flushing,
washing.
Freecharge - Scholarship available. It's not too late
to email in: freecharge@mail.ru | ContactMe!
to enroll in ROWT ROCIT Call 844-316-161
KWALITY COMICS GRAND OPENING Friday and Saturday. Register for free prices. *block west of Mass, in the Browner's Basement.*
PERSONAL
A Special For Sale $10.00 - $7.99 - $82
Charles Invitre 10% Mass. 834-326. Ask for Deen Jensen.
ATTENTION - TRISHAIR, the gorgeous redhead that
looks like a Disney princess. You love us, so
blow off F. PFF. Happy 15th Birthday!
BATGIRLS. The KU篮球队 Team will soon be selecting 1985 Badgirls. All interested women should attend an organizational meeting at 4:30 on Wed., Nov. 3 in Rm. 217 Alen Fieldhouse.
IMPROVE YOUR GRADES!
IMPACTS
Research Catalog
- 306 pages - 10,278 topics
- Ruel: $1.00, Box 25097
Los Angeles, CA 90025, (213) 477-8226
D. H. - Give me a chance to show you just much I love you. Take me back. K. L.
Buffons, campaign style, custom made for any occasion, one to 1,000. Buffon Art by Swett 798-611-4850. **Travel and entertainment** and advanced outpatient abortion, quality medical care; confidentiality assured. Kansas City area. Call 212-634-1980.
does the DEM TIME HEALY HAVE
phone 1-800-725-3169, 7 am to 7 pm on Thursday, No.
month phone 1-800-725-3169, 7 am to 7 pm on Friday, No.
month phone 1-800-725-3169, 7 am to 7 pm on Saturday, No.
D. H I love you, and always will. Forget me. K. L.
Did you like you, CKEK, CEHK. If so, check on
Speleigh Film Society, 4126 E. 2nd St. Tuscon, AZ
85711. Membership available!
VANITY
1 Free Trial Session
50% Off New Memberships
For App: 841-8232 Holiday Plaza 25th & lower
Come out, enjoy our toasty fireplace and your favorite cocktail for only $1 from 8:00 a.m. to Friday & Saturday evening.
Also, remember our Schnapps
& Beer night Monday and our
night Tuesday. Only at the
Expo 406 103, Where
People Meet!
WEEKEND FIRESIDE SPECIAL!
THE EXCHANGE
EFFECTIVE LISTENING PROGRAM - four hours of instruction. Nine and a half hours am. The student will be taught by a dedicated Dance. Can be held if there is sufficient enrollment. Register and pay fees at the Student Assistance Center, 121
good quality, clean & affordable desktop
clubhouse. $450/month. Allows you to
New Hampshire in the Marketplace. Tues.
Sat.
ENCORE COPY CORPS. 2112 W. 25th. Full-color copies from slides or printers.
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University Daily Kansan, November 2, 1982
Page 8
Kuhn not re-elected by owners
By United Press International
CHICAGO—Major league owners failed to re-elect Bowie Kuh as baseball commissioner yesterday, but Kuh announced he would stay on to finish his term, which expires Aug. 12, 1983.
Kuhn agreed to complete his term after two members of the owners' executive committee — Los Angeles' Peter O'Malley and Pittsburgh's Dan Galbreath — asked the commissioner to stay on.
"As long as I have the support of the executive council," Kuhl said, "I'll stay with you."
However, Kuhn said he would not be part of a last-minute compromise that he said would have created a "dual commissionership."
"AFTER 14 years of doing what I thought was right, I wouldn't be a part of anything to water down the office," Kuhn said.
O'Malley and Galburee assures Kuhn they would do all they could to get Kahn
But at yesterday's meeting, the National League's vote doomed Kuhn's chances for another term.
The NL voted 7-5 in favor of Kuhn with only four negative votes required for his ouster. The AL voted 11-3 for Kuhn because he was the sole candidate because of the senior circuit's ballot.
BOTH FEENEY and AL President Lee MacPhill said the executive council would meet soon to determine who the next commissioner would be. In addition, owners will continue debate on the future role of the commissioner's office, including the commissioner's Operating Officer, Baseball Affairs."
M. E. R. S.
Bowie Kuhn
The compromise proposal designed to help re-elect Kuhn was offered by McKenna, who accompanied the plan with a motion for a vote to see how many NL owners were in favor of retaining Kuhn. Peter O'Malley, owner of the Dodgers, seconded the motion for the ballot, which was conducted by closed ballot.
Kuhn said he would consider serving in a re-defined role. "Obviously, I would consider it but I don't know whether or not I'd do it," he said.
when asked whether he would be amenable to accepting the post of interim commission until a new one could be elected. He said, "I'm 100 miles away." Interim Commission. His term goes to August. I would like to be any part of shortening his term."
MacPhail sidestepped the question
Several pro-Kuhn owners, who were unsuccessful in last-minute lobbying efforts to retain the commissioner, were angry about the vote.
"IT IS a sad situation where four negative votes turn around 22," said Eddie Einhorn, Chicago White Sox president. "That's the basic problem. If we can't solve the voting status, then we are in deep trouble."
Buzzie Bavasi of the California
Aspen predicted baseball would have
had a 5-0 record.
"We can't blame Bowie for things that we're responsible for," Bavasi told me, but Bowie has accomplished, I don't think if anyone would even want this job."
Kuh was not present at any of the meetings and was kept informed of the proceedings by telephone. The joint meeting of the two leagues lasted only 27 minutes.
Kansas junior varsity squad takes third straight victory
The Kansas junior varsity football squad ran its record to 3-0 with a 7-9 victory over William Jewell at Memorial Stadium yesterday.
The Jayhawks, who had previously beaten Baker and Oklahoma State, were again led by freshman walk-on Kenny "E.T." Martin, who had 91 yards on 28 carries and scored the Jayhawks love touchdown.
With the score tied at zero, the Jayhawks took control of the ball midway through the final period and moved the ball to William Jewell's two yard line. Martin, of Anniston, Ala., then took the handoff and scored. When sophomore Dodge Schwartzburg, Ocala, Fla., kicked the extra point, the Jayhawks had all they needed.
The big story for the Jayhawks was their defense. They held William Jewell to just 77 yards on 32 carries and 127 yards of total offense. The Kansas defensive secondary also played well, allowing the opposing quarterbacks to complete just six of 21 passes.
Also, Jeff Anderson, Evergreen,
Colo. freshman, picked off a pass
and returned it 33 yards.
big other players for the Kansas defense were sophomore Andy Fenlon, 10 inckles, freshman Dane Griffin and junior Pat Kelley, seven tackles each. Kelly also played against gassing 33 yards on nine carries.
Junior Jeff Needle led the Kansas quarterbacks, completing 6 of 15 passes for 92 yards. Freshman Tom Quick was the leading receiver of the day with five catches for 61 yards.
The Jayhawks will close out their junior varsity schedule with a rematch against Baker University. They had been scheduled to play two teams, but two teams cancelled the game and Baker was picked up in its place.
Blue side wins KU intrasquad
JAYHAWK NOTES—Basketball season is approaching rapidly. The Jayhawks will open their season on Nov. 10 at Allen Field House.
By RUSTY FABER Sports Writer
KU swim coach Gary Kempf is eagerly awaiting for Saturday afternoon, when the women's swimming team will meet Cornbushers in its 1982 season on offer.
Kemp's eagerness probably stems from the performances turned in at last Friday's annual intrasquad meet at Robinson Gymnasium.
The men are idle this weekend but will move into action against Oklahoma police.
Kempf, who is in his seventh year as the women's head coach and his second season as the men's head coach, called the utrasquad "a very successful meet."
"The kids turned in some good times and there was a lot of effort," he said. Overall, it was a real impressive moment. I missed it. I thought we should be at this time."
only memories of what might have been.
WHEN THE meet was over and the scores were tallied, it was the Blue squad, coached by assistant coaches in the spring of 2013, with 133,128, giving the Crimson team
The Blue team didn't take long to establish themselves as they swept both the men's and women's 400-yard medley relay to open the meet in a big way. Celine Cerny, Mary Kay Fitz- Warren, Tammy Thomas and Chris Wright won the women's heat with a time of 4:05.1 to edge the Crismon mark of 4:06.6.
Dave Lam, Ron Nelimann, Brad Wells and Doug Hiemstra captured the men's event for the Blue team with a time of 3:36.4 to defeat the Crimson Gardner Wright, John Fox, Ken Grey and Jimm Ammons, who swam a 3:38.8.
The Crimson team, under the direction of Kurt Anselmi and Rick Jenkins, captured the next two races, with victories in both the women's 1,500-yard freestyle relay and the men's 2,000-yard relay.
CHRIS HAYS, Michele Compton and Sue Schaefer recorded a time of 15:48.9 to defeat the Blue team's effort of 15:53.7 turned in by Stefanie Raney, Ben Fryer, Emma Stallone, Gent, Joe Brink and Cameron Dunn, 19:32. outswam Lam. Bob Vince and
Tjerdt Brink, 19;38.5, to give the Crimson team a sweep in the two distance relays.
The Blue swimmers won both the women's and men's 350-yard butterfly relays that followed, as Thomas, Stefanie Raney and Jenny Wagstaff recorded a 3:34.07 to win for the Blue. Vince, Brad Wells and Doug Lewis swam a 3:15.08 to seal a victory in the 350-yard butterfly.
The meet seasewed back and forth, with neither team able to maintain a lead for very long. After the one-meter leap, the team held a slight lead, 57-38. The Cricket team had few heats after a 79-77 advantage after the 100-yard breast stroke.
In one of the tightest races of the evening, Cernyey of the Blue team swam 10 byward freestyle in 1:03.33, behind Crimson team's teammB by 0:00.26.
THE THREE-METER dive proved to be the turning point in the meet as the Blue team raced from a 101-100 deficit to take a 121-107 lead. Mark Murphy won the men's division as he collected 297.15 points to defeat Mike Prangle's 242.05 total. Tana Price won the women's dive with 203.85 points.
NFL strike talks halted
By United Press International
NEW YORK — Just one hour after mediator Sam Kagel said parties involved in the 42-day National Football League players' strike were "making a real effort to reach agreement," player representatives stormed out of the negotiating session yesterday in disgust over the management's latest offer.
However, it was believed that bargaining among the key negotiators from both sides — Ed Garvey and Gene Raspail — played Players Association and Management executive director Jack Donlan and lawyer Karchen Garbach — was not disrupted.
Before the walkout, with the Management Council still re-writing parts of a response to the union's counter proposal, Kagel had sounded optimistic on the third day of resumed negotiations at a midtown hotel.
"Discussions are proceeding in depth between the parties on major issues and matters to be made that the parties are continuing to make, even though they reach an agreement," Kagel said.
player representatives filtered through the lobby and openly voiced their deep disappointment with a newly released offer from the Council.
The angry union response was directed at what the Players Association called a "loyalty bargaining tactic" to keep unions from management involving a key economic issue.
"All of a sudden, what we thought were salary minimums have become maximums," said Beasley Reece, player representative for the New York Giants. "Suddenly, bonuses, incentives and other increments have become part of our base pay with this latest offer.
"They'd been so cordial, so polite the last couple of days. Now all that has turned out to be merely a lousy bargaining tactic."
But just one hour later, disgruntled
Burgess Owens, player representative for the Los Angeles Raiders, went a step further.
"These are supposedly minimum bases," he said angrily. "But we find out it's a minimum compensation includes reporting bonuses and all the rest. Ninety-four percent of the players will not benefit from this offer."
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WOMEN'S SELF-EXAM WORKSHOP
Nov. 4,1982 GSP-Corbin 7:00 p.m.Cross-Bar Library
Nov.13,1982— Douthart Scholarship Hall
General Info. on Women's Health will be distributed Sponsored by River City Women's Health Collective B116 Kansas Union 864-4934
Funded by Student Activity Fee
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TRIP ALSO FEATURES SLEEPER BUS, SKI IN-SKO OUT LOODING WINE AND CHEEPS PARTY, REFRESHMENTS ON BUS
NOVEMBER 14, 1982
10K RUN / 5K RUN / 5K TEAM RUN
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Or request an entry form from Lawrence
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The University Daily
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
KANSAN
Wednesday, November 3, 1982 Vol.93,No.53 USPS 650-640
Democrats shine in state elections Carlin, Docking team revels in victory over Hardage
Oil, gas tax key to win. Carlin says
By JULIE HEABERLIN Staff Renorter
TOPEKA-Democratic Gov. John Carlin rode his severance tax to a sweeping victory last night and ended one of the most bitterly contested gubernatorial campaigns in Kansas history.
With 96 percent of the precincts reporting, Carlin had 390,725 votes and Hardage had 325,364 votes.
"Today's victory I recognize as the proudest day of my life." Carlin told a cheering crowd of supporters packed into Democratic headquarters in Topeka. "And there is no doubt our joy here tonight is shared by thousands of Republicans and unaffiliated voters."
Carlin entered headquarters about 10 p.m. jubilantly waving his arms in rhythm to the band music for several minutes before the noisy room silenced for his acceptance speech.
ENTHUSIASTIC crowd members held black-and-white banners above their heads that proclaimed Carlin's repeated promise made to Kansans and his Republican challenger: "I will not allow the oil industry to dictate the future of Kansas."
Although the final curtain had dropped on his campaign against Hardage, Carlin still pushed last night for support of his economic answer to the state's fiscal crisis.
Throughout the campaign, Hardage, a Wichita businessman, had denounced Carlin's tax proposal on the oil and gas industry as a tax on oil and gas industry tax that stigued out one industry.
Gov. John Carlin and Lt. Gov. Tom Decking rejoiced last night with their Topake campaign headquarters at the Holiday Inn Downtown, a traditional hands of raiding after they made victory sneezes in a Carlin made his victory sneeze shortly after 9:30 p.m.
Questioned by reporters after his speech, Carlin admitted he still faced a tough battle with the Kansas Legislature for passage of the severance tax.
THE TAX, projected to bring in $120 million annually for highways and education, has been rejected by the Legislature for the past two years.
"This election does make a difference," Carlin said. "The people of Kansas are clearly voting for the severance tax. It's a clear mandate when coupled with the House races."
Carlin attributed his early, and surprisingly easy, win over Hardage to the Republicans' negative campaign tactics and Hardage's lack of leadership in negotiations for proposals for financing education and highways.
BOTH REPUBLICAN and Democratic camps said yesterday that the race was too close to call, but Carlin swept all four key counties in the race, including Hardage's home base, Sedgwick County.
Three national television networks and the Associated Press declared Carlin the winner well before 9 p.m. Hardage conceded defeat about two hours later.
"I knew it was going to happen, I’ve just felt good all day," Carlin told reporters.
With 96 percent of vote the counted, the incumbent held a 54 percent to 45 percent margin over Hardage in Johnson, Shawnee and Wyandotte counties as well.
See CARLIN page 7
State returns
See local results page 6
96% complete Total %
John Carlin (D) 389,725 84
Sam Hartage (R) 325,364 45
Jason Kelvin (D) 325,364 45
Robert Stephan (R) 466,155 60
Lance Burr (D) 213,743 31
Jack Brier (R) 400, 955 69
Bill McCray (P) 27, 007 35
Joan Finney (D) 385,759 613
Douglas Hort (R) 270,613
Fletcher Bell (R) 529,766 87
Alan Weldon (L) 45,397 66
John Meyer 34,462
ADEIN·DOCKIN
8. House Kansa 1st District
Pat Roberts (R) 103,761 69
Kent Roth (D) 45,729 31
Jim Slattery (T) 61,671 58
Morris (K) 60,248 42
Larry Winn (R) ... 81,693
Bill Kostar (D) ... 53,047
... 39
Dan Glickman (D) 103,409 75
Jerry Caylow (R) 34,309 25
Bob Whittaker (R) 92,237 68
Lee Rowe (D) 42,905 32
Hardage loses, locks himself in room
By BRUCE SCHREINER
Staff Reporter
WICHTIA - Republican gubernatorial candidate Sam Hardage reacted to his loss last night by locking himself into a conference room in the office of his headquarters and refusing to talk to reporters.
The 43-year-old Wichita businessman was soundly defended by incumbent Gov. John Carlin in a race that may have been decided in Hardage's backyard, Sedgwick County.
The loss was accompanied by others in strategically important northeast Kansas, where support for Carlin's severance tax won out over traditional Republican partisanship.
HARDAGE REFUSED to conceive defeat until 45 minutes after Carlin proclaimed victory at 9:30 p.m., after Carlin had taken a significant lead that never diminished.
At 8:30 p.m., as the results began to turn against Hardage, he locked himself into the room. He remained there to watch the results with a few key aides until 10:15 p.m.
At about 8:30 p.m., Hardage already was running eight percent behind, with only 16 percent left.
When Hardage finally emerged from the room with his family and running mate, State Sen. Dan Thiessen, R-Independence, he was met with thunderous applause from his supporters.
After a three-minute standing ovation, Hard-ware delivered a brief concession speech.
"I sent a message to my opponent, Gov. John Carlin, which said, 'Congratulations! I wish you well.'"
About 10 minutes later, he quickly left his headquarters, repeatedly refusing to answer reporters' questions. Shortly after midnight, Hardage fired the headquarters.
Sam Hardage
The Republican challenger's entrance into his Wichita headquarters earlier in the evening had been much different. He arrived about 7:30 p.m., stopping to eat.
But by the time Thiessen joined the group at 8 p.m., the once jovial setting had been dampened by early tabulations showing Carlin pulling ahead.
A constant buzz of conversation hovered over the room until 9:30 p.m., when television screens flashed.
HARDAGE OFFICIALS had sensed a shaky showing in northeast Kansas, but the poor effort was slowing.
"I think the Democrats had a concerted effort to personallySam, and they did so," said Rochelle Huffman.
Another key Hardage aide blamed the Republican challenger's disappointing showing in Sedgwick County on the national economy and Democratic abilities to exploit the Republican
"I think the Sedgwick County vote was just a sign of the times," said Don Concannon, Hardage's state chairman and a 1974 gubernatorial candidate. "High unemployment was a definite factor, and the Democrats did an effective job of talking about unemployment."
in Hardage's side, as voters gave Carlin a decisive majority in an area concentration on by both candidates. Hardage aids pinpointed Carlin's intense lobbying for a severance tax on the production of oil and natural gas as the chief factor for Hardage's poor showing in northeast Kansas.
NORTHEAST KANSAS became another thorn
"I think the severance tax was the main reason for our loss there, because when Carlin began talking about a free lunch, there were no jobs and I didn't know someone else would pay for it," Concordan said.
"We don't offer a respectable alternative, and the allowed Carlin to tenor the campaign group."
ANOTHER WEAKNESS for Hardage, Concannon said, was the press coverage the Republican challenger received. Several apparently contradictory statements, especially on his proposed 4 cent a gallon increase in the gasoline tax and his opposition to the severance tax, caused Hardage problems during the two-month campaign.
Early in the campaign, Hardage said he favored a 4 cent gas tax increase, but later he said such a tax would be a last resort to solve revenue shortfalls. During a Pittsburgh State University appearance, Hardage said he could support a severance tax, although not Carlin's version. Many observers interpreted that as a reason Hardage on the controversial minerals tax.
The press was very instrumental in creating an image that Hardage was vacillating on several issues," Concannon said. "Probably the greatest deterrent to his campaign was that he was too honest. By admitting he would look at a severance tax that all sides agreed on, it was looked at as though he was vacilating on the issue."
Democrats increase House majority
By United Press International
Despite a bad scare along the eastern seaboard and some other parts of the nation, the GOP held the control of the Senate it seized two years ago for the first time in a quarter of a year.
WASHINGTON—Republicans retained control of the Senate yesterday, but Democrats gained an even bigger majority in the House and GOP gubernatorial candidates across the nation.
AT STAKE WERE 33 Senate races and 433
incontests in all. Two races in Georgia were
their own.
In Illinois, former Sen. Adalian Stevenson was in a virtual dead heat with GOP Gov. Jim Thompson. With 99 per cent of the votes counted, Stevenson had 1,658,811; Thompson had 1,658,120. Both Thompson and Stevenson retired for the evening saying it was too close to call.
There were 36 elections for governor. Twenty of the seats at stake are now held by Republicans.
In the California gubernatorial race, Democratic Los Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley lost to Republican Attorney General George Deukmejian. If he had been elected, Bradley would have become the nation's first elected black governor.
Democrats scored a stunning upset in Texas where Attorney General Mark White overcame Gov. Bill Clemente's $12 million campaign.
IN ALABAMA, George Wallace won his bid for unprecedented fourth term, despite his parachute bid.
But for Reagan, the worse news in the House, where he needed to minimize Democratic gains to maintain the kind of coalition that has been built under a conservative programs over the past two years.
The Republicans suffered their biggest losses in governorships with incumbents Clements and Charles Those of Nebraska. Also, GOP Rep. William McConnell from Ohio to Democratic candidate Richard Celeste.
Democrats easily won reentrol in the House and could double their current 25% vote margin.
Lt. Gov. Mario Cuomo, a Democrat, defeated millionaire Louis Lehrman for governor of New York, but the margin was so narrow the Republican challenger demanded a recount.
THE 97TH CONGRESS, which came into office with Reagan, was divided with Democraties controlling the House. 419-182, and the GOP in charge of the Senate. 54-46.
Democrats, with computer millionaire Frank Lautenberg, won the open seat in New Jersey by beating GOP incumbent Millicent Fenwick. But Republicans countered when Rep. Paul Trible took the bitterly fought Virginia seat held for a half-century by the Byrd dynasty.
Although the Democrats were certain to make gains in the House they already controlled, Reagan's chief of staff, James Baker, assessed the outcome of a Senate that will be only slightly
different: "We stay the course — you bet your life.
“It’s apparent now that our No.1 priority, which was retaining control of the Senate, will be
BARRETT IT was the first time since 1989 that Republicans had held the Senate in two consecutive elections. "If we lose no more than two seats net, we're under the average loss of the president's party in the last five senatorial election years," he said.
But UPI Senior Editor Arnold Sawiksl, in an election analysis, said the House gains made by the Democrats could spell stalemate in Congress for Reagan.
He also insisted that a needed coalition of House Democrats and Republicans could still be formed.
"There seems no chance that the results of this election will enable the Democrats to undo what Reagan was able to accomplish in the first two years of his term, but they might very well be able to stop him from doing more," Sawislak said.
AN INDICATION of the voter mood came from ABC exit polling which showed 56 percent disapproved of Reagan's handling of the economy, 64 percent disapproved of his handling of Social Security and 70 percent disapproved of the employment which stood at 10.1 percent.
"I think now this election calls for alteration in our economic policy," said Sen. Edward
See NATION page 7
Slattery wins early victory in 2nd district
By VICKY WILT and MATTHEW SCHOFIELD Staff Renorters
Slattery, a Topeka realtor, will take over from retiring incumbent Jim Jeeferies.
Slatteray defeated Republican Morris Kay by about 21,000 votes. With 90 percent of the precincts reporting, Slatteray had 88 percent of the vote, and Kay received 48 percent or 60,248 votes.
The 2nd District Congressional race that political observers predicted would not be decided until early this morning ended at 9 p.m. with an early victory for Democrat Jim Slattery.
Satire emphasized his gratitude to his volunteer workers in a short speech at 9:15 p.m.
AT 9 P.M. BALLOONS printed with "Jim Slattery Congressman" showered Slatterly well-wishers as the new congressman made his way to the podium to deliver his acceptance speech.
"The Bible says the greatest blessing that a man can have is a loving wife and I certainly have that," he said. "The next best friend can man have is great friend like I see here this evening. This friendship creates a great responsibility to me -- that is to go to'r
PASCAL SCHULZ
Jim Slattery
Washington and do the best job I can do for all of you.1
Kay made a brief announcement of his concession to his staff at his Topeka headquarters before driving to Republican headquarters to make it official.
Kay had said delaying Reagan's program would place a heavy burden on middle-class.
"We both worked hard, had a good game plan and executed it well," he said in an earlier interview. "Politics is like football, you never can tell what the outcome is to be going."
A GREAT controversy throughout the campaign had been the third leg of President Reagan's tax cut scheduled for next year. Slattery opposed the 10 percent tax decrease because he maintained it was ridiculous to reduce taxes with a soaring national deficit.
"Morris aligned them so closely with President Reagan," she said. "The main problem was that voters weren't happy with what Reagan has done."
Lori Clinstman, Kay's assistant campaign treasurer and Lawrence senior, said everyone in the Kay campaign knee the election would be very important. The Republican nation party to fare so poorly in national elections.
BEFORE SLATTERY'S VICTORY, certain Democrats were positive their candidate would carry other issues too, and scoffed at the thought that Kay could win.
Russell Getter, a KU professor of political science, had said Kay would carry the rural counties because they were more conservative. Getter said that because of the larger population
But returns showed last night that voters in the rural counties also were supporting Slattery.
Torie Clark, Kay's press secretary, said that she did not know why the campaign failed but that Kay had started his campaign six months after Shatterd did.
"Maybe we started just a little bit too late," Clark said.
As Kay prepared to leave for Republican head quarters, he turned back to his supporters, smiled and said, "Don't lock the doors, I'm back."
NATIONALLY, the election results did not bear good tidings for Republicans, Clark said.
"Looks bad nationwide," she said. "Reagan is going to have tough time in Congress the next week."
Weather
AUTIAMAN
Today will be partly cloudy and cold with a high of 40 to 45, according to the National Weather Service. Winds will be from the northwest and gusty at 15 to 25 mph.
---
Tonight will be fair with a low around 20
Tonight will be fair with a high in the
low to mid-30s.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, November 3, 1982
News Briefs From United Press International
Iran, Iraq resume warfare; both claim victory in battle
Iran said yesterday that it had launched its second major offensive in a month against Iraq, recapturing 100 square miles of territory, oil wells and strategic outposts seized by Iraq at the start of the 26-month-old Persian Gulf War.
Iraq said it crushed the assault and was punishing Iranian troops in dozens of air strikes.
Iraq said its fighter planes were controlling the skies and had run 187 raids without losing a plane. The air strikes were part of a counteroffensive that killed 4,660 Iranian soldiers, most of them in a battle west of the Iranian town of Doful, the Iraqi News Agency said.
Iraiq President Saddam Hussein accused of making "another desperate attempt to invade Iran."
In Washington, the State Department said the United States "continues to urge negotiated settlements based on each country's respect for the principles of territorial integrity and freedom from interference in internal affairs."
Guatemalan troops scatter refugees
MEXICO CITY—Guatemalan troops crossed into Mexico and raided a refugee camp, forcing terrified Guatemalan refugees to flee into the jungle, a Catholic priest said yesterday.
A group of immigration agents also accused their superiors of ordering them to harass Guatemalan refugees until they left the camps or the country, a violation of Mexico's official policy of harboring the refugees.
Guatemala has repeatedly charged that Guatemalan guerrillas use refugee camps in Mexico's southernmost Chapas state, about 500 miles from the capital.
The priest, who asked not to be identified, works with the local archbishop's refugee commission. He said refugee workers told all the Guatemalans in the Santiago El Vertico refugee camp to flee into the dense jungle when they learned that 100 Guatemalan soldiers were preparing to cross the border just three miles away.
Louisiana creation law battle begins
NEW ORLEANS—A legal battle over Louisiana's creation science law begins today and an American Civil Liberties Union spokesman said the decision might affect school curriculum policies in 34 states.
The Louisiana Board of Elementary and Secondary Education has asked U.S. District Judge Adrian Duplianter to throw out the law. The board, joining a suit filed by the ACLU, says the Legislature should have enforced when it ordered schools that teach evolution to also teach creation science.
However, in written arguments, state Attorney General William Guste Jr. said courts had previously ruled that legislators could prescribe courses of study.
Louisiana is the only state with a creation science law. A similar Arkansas law was declared unconstitutional earlier this year by a federal judge.
Hall wills most of estate to charity
KANSAS CITY, Mo.—Joyce C. Hall, who overcame poverty and lack of a formal education to become a millionaire and the most widely known figure in the greeting card industry, willed most of his estate to charity.
Hall, 91, founder and chairman of the board of Hallmark Cards Inc., died last week in his sleep at home in Leawood.
The will, filed yesterday in Johnson County District Court in Olathe, named Hall's son, Donald Hall, executor of the estate. Hallmark attorneys estimated that the estate was more than $100 million.
The will stipulates that most of the estate is to go to one or more nonprofit organizations selected by Donald Hall and preferably should be limited to the Hallmark Educational Foundation of Kansas, established in 1954.
Texas evangelist dies in plane crash
NORMANGEE, Texas - Evangelist Lester Roloff, who gained national attention in his battle against state licensing of his homes for girls, was killed yesterday with four other people in the crash of a light plane.
Leon County Justice of the Peace Tedy Rodell said Roloff and four women — a staff member and three residents of one of his homes — were killed when the plane crashed in a pasture three miles north of Normanlee, midway between Houston and Dallas.
Federal Aviation Administration spokesman George Burlage said that no cause had been established for the crash but that there had been thunderstorms in the area at the time of the crash.
Irene Patterson, a secretary at Roloff Evangelistic Enterprises of Corpus Christi, said Roloff, 68, was going to Kansas City, Mo., for a speaking engagement.
speaking engagements, Roloff, a fundamentalist preacher, drew national attention during an eight-year fight against state licensing of his three south Texas homes for delinquent children.
McDonald's recalls Playmobil toys
OAK BROOK, Ill. — McDonald's Corp. announced yesterday that it was recalling all Playmobil toys in its "Happy Meals" promotion because tests showed the toys could be dangerous to children less than 3 years old.
The recall followed a complaint last week from the Empire State Consumers Association that the Playmobil "sheriff" toy barely met federal standards.
recommended
Spokesman Judy Braiman-Lipson said the toy had a small part, a gun,
that met requirements by only one sixty-fourth of an inch and posed a
clear choking hazard to small children.
A McDonald's spokesman said last week that the toys had been tested extensively and were safe. He said samples were sent to the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission for further testing.
All Playmobil toys have been withdrawn from McDonald's, 5,700 restaurants across the nation, said McDonald's spokesman Bokey Sauer.
Correction
Because of a photographer's error, Phil Rogler, Kansas City, Kan., freshman, was incorrectly identified in a lineout in the Kansas as fulfilling pledge duties by cleaning the gutters of the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity. He volunteered to do the task.
Mayor to sign agreement with developer
By DOUG CUNNINGHAM Staff Reporter
The Lawrence City Commission last night authorized Mayor Marci Francisco to sign a memorandum of agreement with Sizerler Realty Co. Inc., Kenner, La., for work on the proposed downtown redevelopment project.
The commission approved, with several minor changes, an agreement that had been drafted earlier by city officials and representatives from
That preliminary agreement was made public Friday by city officials.
Sizer must reinforce development to the city by March 6, according to the agreement.
THE PROPOSAL is to be Sizeler's plan for redeveloping the downtown area and is to include a basic project that will provide an alternative, low-cost, preliminary timetable for the project.
COMMISSIONERS also discussed the provision in the agreement for two public meetings.
Commissioner Tom Gleason, however, said that Sizeler should be required to submit a formal proposal and agree to the commission more time to study it.
Sizer also is to specify the location of parking, traffic patterns and any public improvements that might be needed, according to the agreement.
He suggested that Sizeler prepare a proposal to present to the city in early summer.
The March 6 date gives the commission less time to study Sizer's proposal.
Dean Palos, a planner in the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning office, said the first public meeting was designed to be one where Sizer could explain its approach to the project and seek public comment.
The second public meeting, he said, probably will be a working session for Sizerel representatives, the City Commission and the Downtown Improvement Committee, which assisted the commission in its search for a developer.
PALOS SAID that representatives from Sizerle would be in Lawrence today, tomorrow and Friday to discuss and probably to sign the agreement. The changes proposed by the commission will be agreeable to Sizerle, he said.
Sizeel representatives are anxious to start work on the project, Palos said, and may hold the first public meeting Nov. 11.
Representatives of Sizer were in Lawrence several weeks ago to discuss
The commission designated Sizeer
developer of record for the project
DISCUSSIONS on changes in the agreement since then were conducted by telephone, according to city officials.
In other business, the commission authorized the city staff to find an
arbitrator to consider a 1.85 percent rate. The local Fabletic Company, Inc. offers Fabletic Services Co., Inc.
The arbitrating firm, which must be agreeable to both the city and the gas utility, will determine if the requested increase is reasonable.
Orthodox Christians on Campus
The commission has submitted past requests for rate increases to arbitration.
Olin Petish, an attorney representing KPS, said the requested increase would add an average of 93 cents a bill to each natural gas customer's bill.
A
Ω
The Episcopalian perception of Orthodoxy
speaker: Rev. Peter Casparian
Petefish said the increase was being requested solely because of increased food supply.
THE ARBIRTRATING firm generally has allowed rates to increase to cover operating expenses and to produce a 13 percent return for shareholders, said William Salome III, president and general manager of KPS.
"It isn't the most popular thing in the world to stand before any governing body and ask for an increase in rates for utilities," he said. "We have to ask
International Room Kansas Union Wed., Nov. 3, 8 pm
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The commission must act on the requested rate increase because KPS has a franchise agreement with the city.
for this increase because of our increased costs — it's that simple."
THE COMMISSION also agreed to consider the so-called "lifeline rates" in addition to the rate increase.
Divine Liturgy
The commission agreed to discuss some new information about lifeline rates at a study session 3 p.m. tomorrow at Clitz Hall.
A number of local people have appeared before the commission in recent weeks to request that lifeline teams be trained and handsapped, be instituted.
The commission also discussed the procedure for setting its agenda.
Last week's commission meeting did not end until 1:15 a.m., and commissioners said that was too late.
TO PREVENT such late meetings in the future, Francisco suggested that items the commission can only discuss, on be deferred until the next meeting.
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}
University Daily Kansan. November 3. 1982
Page 3
Changing Times names KU a bargain university
Changing Times magazine has recognized the University of Kansas and Kansas State University as two of the 50 pinniped colleges in the United States.
The monthly business magazine in its November issue cited the two universities as offering high academic standards at below-average costs.
"The article reaffirms our conviction that KU offers an outstanding education at a very reasonable cost," Chancellor Gene A. Budig said yesterday. "We are very pleased KU was included."
Schools were considered to have high academic standards if the average scores for incoming freshmen were above the national average of 18.4 on the American College Test and 893 on the Scholastic Aptitude Test, if admission was not made and if a large proportion of graduates continued their education.
ALL THE schools chosen cost less
than $7,475 per year, the national average of a four-year private college, according to the magazine. Changing Times estimated KU's cost at $4,003 per year for in-state students and K-State's at $4,238 per year.
Other universities chosen were the University of Wisconsin, Madison; the University of Illinois, Champaign-Urbana; and the University of Texas, Austin. The only other Big Eight university was Iowa State University, Ames.
Robin Eversole, KU director of University Relations, said she did not know whether KU would use the selection to promote the University. She said that after the New York Times Guide to College gave KU a four-star rating, the University put this fact in its admissions literature.
Area schools also listed in the magazine were Rockhurst College, Kansas City, Mo., and William Jewell, Liberty, Mo.
By DIRK MILLER Staff Reporter
Budget shortage may hurt KU
Staff Reporter
Shortfalls in the state's revenue collections for the past four months are a forewarning that the quality of Kansas higher education may be in jeopardy, a Kansas Board of Regents officer said yesterday.
Revenue collections were more than $29 million short of estimated levels from July to October.
Stan Kopik, Regents executive officer, said any further reductions in appropriations to the Regents schools would result in a higher degree of higher education in the state.
"It threatens our being able to meet our commitments to educate the people of Kansas," Koplik said.
John Carlin said last month that he would announce whether to initiate an allotment system when the revenue estimates were relied upon. He also said there under which the state would review all appropriations to state agencies.
could not be initiated until estimates show that the state is running out of money.
Glee Smith Jr., Regents budget and finance committee chairman, said the Regents budget had already been reduced to $48 million less than was originally requested from the state for this year.
Darwin Daicoff, KU professor of economics, said state estimates based on a projected upward trend in the U.S. unemployment contract reflected a greater increase for October.
But Duncan said he was encouraged by the state's October revenue collections, which showed almost a 5 percent growth from last year.
Despite the shortage in revenue, the needs of the Regents schools are still there, he said.
Regents schools. Some of the effects were increased class sizes and faculty loads. The over-worked faculty can no longer meet some of its responsibilities to students, such as counseling, he said.
Koplik said a 4 percent cut this summer had already hurt most of the
SCHOOLS are forced to use older and sometimes outdated equipment because equipment purchases by the schools have been reduced, he said.
"If all of our equipment was of 1982 vintage we wouldn't be concerned with replacing equipment," Kopik said. "We must have current, state-of-the-art equipment to keep the quality up."
Smith said the Regents had agreed to take the voluntary cuts this summer because of a shortage that came six months before the next legislative session. But now there will be no deadline to wait before the next session, he said.
A tax increase could be enacted by the Legislature in January to bring in revenue to cover the shortfall, Smith said.
Liberal arts dean's stamps still available
Students in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences can still get dean's stamps, which are necessary to complete pre-enrollment, until Friday, Michael Young, associate dean of the college, said yesterday.
Without the dean's stamp, students will not be allowed to participate in the meeting.
The resolution called for reserved and non-reserved seats to be sold the first week after spring break. Reserved seats would not be assigned until the fall semester, as in the past. Seniors would have priority.
Yesterday was to have been the last day to pick up the dean's stamp, but the deadline was extended because many students were slow about seeing their advisers and getting the stamps. Young said.
Senate ponders open seating
"We had a horrible rush today," Young said. "This is the only day we had a rush."
Holloway said he expected the Senate to approve the bill at its Nov. 17 meeting.
At one time, the line for the dean's stamps stretched from the second floor of the church.
"With the price breaks and seating flexibility, this bill would be in the student's interest," said Mark Holloway, co-chairman of the committee. He said the bill would also make ticket sales administratively easier.
The resolution recommended that non-reserved seats be priced about 10
The Student Senate Committee on Sports approved a resolution yesterday that would make open seating at the entire Senate last year if the entire Senate approves it.
Students picked up their folders at Nunemaker Center early, Young said, but waited to complete the rest of the process.
percent lower than reserved seats and that tickets for each section be of a different size. The resolution also allows all student seating on Parents Day to be non-reserved.
FOR ALL other games, seats in rows 1 to 42 in sections 34 to 40 would be sold as reserved seats, except for sections reserved for the band and for parents of athletes. Seats in rows 43 to 69 in sections would be sold as be sold non-reserved seats.
The machine would replace an old one that Holley said would cost too much.
In other business, the committee recommended that the Senate allocate an additional $10,894.83 to Recreation Services to pay for a new machine to mark yard lines and for salaries for additional employees.
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan, November 3, 1982
Opinion
Ratings are fine, but ...
Another national publication has given the University of Kansas high marks.
Changing Times magazine reported in its November edition that the University, as well as Kansas State University and Iowa State University, were among 50 universities that had "above average academic credentials" but had "below average costs."
Last year, the New York Times Guide to Colleges and Universities gave KU a four-star rating for its academic program, one of the best ratings given in the newspaper's survey.
The magazine ranked only those schools whose average scores by freshmen on entrance exams were above the national average. It compared the cost of each school to the 1982-83 national average for four-year private colleges, $7,475.
And those state-supported schools named on the list had to have an annual cost for both in-state and out-of-state students that was lower than that average.
Changing Times' endorsement of KU's academic program should be a source of pride for administrators —
especially today, when budget problems on the state and federal level have made it tough to provide many educational services.
Such endorsements soon may have a hollow ring to them, however.
President Reagan is planning deep cuts in the 1984 budget for federal aid for college students, which means fewer graduate students and students from poor families will be able to go to KU.
The Student Alliance of Voters for Education, a political action group for students, announced this week that Reagan was planning to slash $5 billion from the financial aid budget, leaving $4 billion. But a spokesman for the U.S. Department of Education said the 1984 budget had not been drawn up yet.
The group reported that the proposed cut would eliminate guaranteed student loans for graduate students, special grants for minority students seeking graduate degrees and the Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grant program.
with those programs gone, it won't matter to those students who no longer can pay for an education whether KU tops the list or not.
Reagan campaign speeches contain plenty of bafflegab'
By SUZANNE GREENE United Press International
United Press International
WASHINGTON—President Reagan sprinkled his 11th-hour campaign speeches liberally with homemade political epithets that linguists say may not make history, but nonetheless stir the emotions of voters.
In a campaign speech Thursday in Great Falls, Mont., Reagan blasted Washington's "bafflegabers." And a day earlier, in Casper, Wyo., he cautioned against "doom-criers and scare-mongers."
New York Times columnist and former presidential speech writer William Safire included bafflegab in "Safire's Political Dictionary," defining it as "jargon providing more obfuscation than enlightenment, as is often found in government reports and other official statements."
Safire does not list doom-crier and scaremonger, and none of the three terms appears in unabridged versions of Websters, Random House and other dictionaries.
But in a telephone interview, Safire called the terms perfectly respectable "political epithets" and offshoots of a phrase to which he lays at least partial claim — "nattering nabobs of negativism," made famous by former Vice President Spiro Agnew.
"The president can take words that are obscure and make them important," Safire said. But, nevertheless, the final judgment on their general usefulness passes to Safire and other lexicographers who decide whether they will last "or just flash and disappear."
Aram Bakshian, Reagan's chief speech writer, said the terms were "campaign," but he said that they were not part of any particular strategy for the campaign season.
Although Bakshian could not recall where he first heard the epithets, the speech writer said the words had been around since the 1970s and were "not cries from the heart" of the president-
Some of the terms came from a speech Reagan gave for Montana Senate candidate Larry Williams, in which Reagan said: "As you know, the source of our economic problems is even beginning to dawn on the bafflegabbers and fancy dudes in Washington (who think they can depend upon us of our money. You can't drink your own sober or spend yourself rich."
At a rally in Wyoming, Reagan warned,
"Don't let the doom-criers and scare-mongers
frighten our citizens and subvert recovery."
robert Fox, director of the graduate program in linguistics at American University in Washington, D.C., called Reagan's terms "very productive compound nouns" that aimed at adding emotional impact to off-repeated phrases.
"Unless these things are slips of the lips, they are combinations of words that are very useful," said Fox. "“Doom-crier” . . . is a little scarrier than “doom-sayer,” and scare-mongering rouses the emotions more than “rumor-mongering.”
There is no way to predict whether Reagan's political terms will become as popular as such time-honored expressions as "mudslinging"; used during the Civil War, or "mugwump"; used in 1884 to describe political turncocks who supported Democrat Grover Cleveland.
Safire reports that the Blue Earth Post, a Minnesota newspaper, defined mugwump in the early 1930s as "a sort of bird that sits on a fence with his mug on one side and his wump on the other."
"People who are trying to rouse emotions in speeches that have lost their impact come up with these," she added.
An alternative to mugwump is "dudes" coined by Theodore Rosevelt and also used by Reagan.
"He (Reagan) uses some strange language."
Suzanne Green is a political writer for United Press International.
REMEMBER THOSE U.S. MARINES IN LEBANON?
I WONDER, WHAT THEYRE DOING NOW...
C'MON GUYS- BREAK IT UP... PLEASE...
MOSLEM
UN
CHRISTIAN
UNIVERSITY DAILY
HALLERAN
82
Public's already tried Lewises
The horror of the Tylenol murders has caused another horror — the public conviction that James Lewis and his wife Leann are guilty of the murders.
A nanowritten note was sent to the Chicago Tribune last week. It was signed with the name Robert Richardson, one of Lewis's aides, and it denied that he had anything to do with the case.
The note was part of a thick package of material sent to the Tribute. The package was turned over to the FBI, which said Lewis probably had sent the material.
Lewis and his wife used the names Robert and Nancy Richardson while they lived in Chicago
The note read:
"As you have probably guessed, my wife and I have not committed the Chicago area Tyiolen murders. We do not go around killing people. We never have and we never shall."
Contrary to reports we are not armed, unless one means in the anatomical paraplegic sense. We shall never carry weapons no matter how bizarre the police & FBI reports.
"I hope the law finds whoever poisoned those capsules and I would demand capital punishment."
"Domestically, weapons are for two quite similar types of mentalities: (1) Criminals & (2) Police.
"We are neither."
we are not murdered.
It is unfortunate that Lewis thought the letter necessary. But he was right. The public has already tried and convicted him for the murders.
A web of circumstantial evidence surrounds Lewis. In a court of law, it is unusual that even a large amount of circumstantial evidence would be goughed to easily convict a man.
None of the material in the package sent to the Tribune refers directly to the extortion letter, but in one of the notes in the package, Lewis wrote:
The FBI began searching for the couple after Lewis was connected with an extortion letter sent to Johnson & Johnson, makers of Tylenol, demanding $1 million "to stop the killings."
The rest of the nation, especially Chicago authorities, could agree with him.
That is evident. But there is much real evidence directly linking Lewis to the Tylolen
FBI and Chicago authorities have looked into many, many leads, but they must find someone to tag for the crime unless they are willing to help. A police officer can sometimes less obvious leads may be being ignored.
We need to find it on who committed these murders. It is very likely that Lewis did put the gun into his mouth.
It is every bit as likely that he did not.
We cannot know a person's guilt or innocence in a crime until there is a trial. Sometimes it is hard to decide.
CATHERINE BEHAN
trial, but it is impossible before the trial, unless we are that person.
I remember many times when my mother would punish the wrong child for a crime. I clearly recall one incident when my dog had knocked over a vase and broken it.
over a vase and shoots.
The dog scampered off just as I started trying to pick up the pieces, and my mother walked in. Guess who got sent to bed without dinner.
A simple analogy, true, but in the same manner, we are not giving Lewis a chance. Simply because he might not be the all-American guy next door does not necessarily mean that he laced Tylenol capsules with cyanide.
cynicism.
Condemning people before trial is an obstruction of justice that we allow to occur often, far too often.
An Ohio physician, Susan Sheppard, was accused of killing his wife in 1954. There was a lot of very sensational publicity between the time of
the murder and Sheppard's trial. The trial itself was eventually overturned by the Supreme Court in 1966 on the basis that the extensive media coverage before and during the trial made it impossible for him to get a fair trial. But he was acquitted without the press, and Sheppard was acquitted.
In the trial of Bruno Hauptmann, accused kidnapper-murderer of the son of Charles Lindbergh, the press was again outrageous in its coverage the trial. Hauptmann was convicted, but the case prompted the rule that no cameras would be allowed in the courtroom.
In 1950, Julius Rosenberg and his wife, Ethel, were indicated for treason and accused of being members of a Soviet spy ring that passed information about atomic research in Los Alamos to the Soviet Union. Although many people thought it was the Russian government that the information allegedly given to the Russians was unimportant, the two were electrocuted in 1963 at Sing Sing.
When the public is afraid, the outcry for "justice" at all costs is greater than the outcry for real justice.
When a crime is really despicable, we want the perpetrator caught and punished. It almost doesn't matter who it is, just as long as someone likely to have been involved is punished.
But a crime like this is very anonymous that's why there have been so many copycat crimes. The Tylenol murderer has given crazies a method by which to perpetrate their madness.
It will, therefore, be extremely difficult to find and convict the person who killed eight people in Chicago. If it is Lewis, then I hope he is convicted.
But we cannot convict him before he is tried. We pride ourselves on our criminal justice system. But Lewis himself has shown that this becomes a mockery of our judicial system.
We would all rest easier if Lewis came forward, was tried, if there was a case against him, and found guilty.
Letters to the Editor
But I strongly doubt that this man could ever get a fair trial.
11-11-11 dates from WWI armistice, not WWII
To the Editor:
Ament the story about 11-11-11 there is no mystery to old enough one to have attended the public schools when Aristomie Day, Nov. 11, was observed as a patriotic holiday.
No, it was never a school holiday in Independence, Kau., but the junior high and senior high convocations that week always featured a speaker with a patriotic message. No, Professor Ketzel did not to let me in on the public secret; The Army sent Mr. Ketzel, supposedly signed by representatives of a defeated Germany at 11 a.m., Nov. 11, 1918, hence the 11-11-11.
No doubt there still survive some aged veterans who will admit how delighted they were that day, because their outfits were set to open an offensive to fight through the Argonne and other forests, which would have been fatal in which very high casualties were erected.
Nearly 18 years later, I was in the pipeline of replacements for one of the many thousands of casualties expected in the invasion of Japan. Several million men in uniform were delighted that President Truman had the courage to use the atomic bomb, for the Japanese had never given up without exacting a heavy toll on the attackers in the jungles and desolate islands, and no one expected them to do less in defense of their homeland.
their nominee.
Note that the Hiroshima bomb wasn't enough to convince the government immediately; it took a second one on Nagasaki. Many of us in uniform thought those bombs may have "saved my life." It is probable that in total, more lives would have
been lost and casualties greater (including those on both sides) than those suffered in Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
Tom Yoe
University Relations editor
This bit of history, of course, has little to do with what is considered the problem today of the job market. It concerns the
Helping out the rain?
To the Editor.
They complain about spending one extra dollar to cool buildings that are uncomfortable hot and heat buildings that are comfortable cold. (And I should know about the latter. As a residence hall tenant, I have spent far too many nights trying to get my feet warm.)
10. The Exam :
How could this University be so abusive?
Edward M. Graham Baltimore, Md., senior
Yet they find it necessary and prudent to spray volumetric quantities of water on lawns already wet from heavy rains, as on Thursday, Oct. 28.
When I am fighting frostbite in my own room every other night, and then I see something so insensitive from those responsible, it makes me wonder just how on the level this whole economy is doing.
Shutdown costs high To the Editor
This year the University of Kansas will reduce operations the last week of December to reduce energy usage. Buildings with temperatures sufficient equipment or animals will remain open
and kept at normal temperatures. Offices and buildings that can close have been asked to do so.
In other words, employees have been informed that they will bear the cost of the energy conservation efforts of the University. The University will accomplish its purpose, which is to save money through energy conservation. It also will save an additional week's salary or paid vacation for each employee who will not or cannot come up with compensatory time.
Closing offices and buildings necessitates time off for employees who work at these sites. In the Oct. 29 issue of the Oread, Vice Cancellor Charles Wynn said that his account for their time through a combination of vacation leave, discretionary day, compensatory time or leave without pay."
It would be an entirely different story if the University rallied the cooperation of employees to sacrifice their reasonable right to work for an agency that does not provide utility conservation savings — to the institution.
A question arising from this situation is whether it is fair or even necessary that employee bears the brunt of the institution's conservation effort. The University would have its usual salary funds available, as employees are paid for them. Those employees informed that their building or office is to be shut down will be without work for a given amount of days — not for personal reasons but as imposed upon them by the organization. It would seem only fair, therefore, that the University absorb the cost of salaries that were paid to those who would otherwise have worked.
Then an employee would decide whether he or
she would carve out a week of planned vacation and plump it into the end of December, or whether he or she would try to make due and meet the cost of living for one month of approximately $2000. Perhaps those who will pay should have the say. But, in this case . . . ?
Tamara L. Stam
Tamara L. Sullan
Clerk, Human Development and Family Life
Apologies to KU band
The KU band performed an excellent halftime show at the K-State-KU game. The band members, flag bearers and twirlers should all be proud of their performance.
To the Editor:
Please accept my regrets to those who were abused, mistreated or in any way taunted by those in attendance. I am proud to be a Kaman; however, as all of the schools and universities in the state offer youth opportunities for sports and academic incidents at the K-State game were unavailable.
Manhattan resident
KU, your band is excellent. Keep on representing Kansas in a fine musical tradition.
As a graduate of Wichita State University, I can say that the treatment accorded WSU students was the complete opposition of your treatment.
I have no solutions for future games except that as a former ticket taker at the University of California-Berkley and the University of Iowa, all containers, chairs, seat sacks, sacks, etc.
The University Daily KANSAN
The University Day Kaanan (USPS 600-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Floor Hall, Lawrence, Kane. Daily during the summer session, student subscriptions are paid to the summer session, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final periods. Second-class postage paid in Lawrence, Kan. 60044. Subscriptions by mail are $12.00 per person. Subscriptions to monthly or $3 a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $4 semester, paid through the student activity fee. Subscription prices vary according to location. The University Day Kaanan, 118 Floor Hall, Lawrence, Kane. 60045
editor Business Manager
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---
1.
University Daily Kansan, November 3, 1982
Page 5
Students must now petition class drops
By JEANNE FOY Staff Reporter
Students must now put a petition to withdraw from a class because Friday was the last day for most students to be enrolled and technically obtain a 'W' on their transcript.
All but four KU schools require students to submit a petition if they want to drop a course offered by that school. Classes in the schools of Journalism, Business, Journalism and Social Welfare can be dropped without petitioning.
Schools' policies vary, but most involve filling out a petition form with the reasons for dropping the course and obtaining the signatures of an adviser and the teacher or chairman of the school in which the course is offered.
AFTER THE FORM is completed,
the petition is sent to an academic
committee that decides whether to accept it.
"Many students don't understand what a legitimate reason for withdrawing from a course is. There is some confusion about that," said Michael Young, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
In order to withdraw from a class after the automatic drop period, students must have documentation to take place for dropping on a course. Young said.
The college's guidelines for late withdrawals state that poor academic performance, a loss of interest in a class, a change of major or a problem that has existed for most of the semester are not legitimate reasons for withdrawal. The College Committee on Undergraduate Studies and Advising reviews the student's petition and decides whether it will be accepted.
LAST SEMESTER, about 50 students
petitioned the School of Engineering, said Bob Zerwekh, associate dean of engineering. He said only a few were allowed to drop their classes.
"The majority of reasons were not very good." he said.
Such reasons as prolonged illness or family problems that required the student to leave school for a while are acceptable, he said.
He said a student's fear that he would not do as well as he wanted in a class was not an acceptable reason for dropping.
An engineering student should submit his petition in plenty of time for it to circulate through the various levels needed for approval, he said. He said students should be made to the Academic Standards Committee, usually took several days.
IF THE SCHOOLS of Allied Health.
Engineering, Fine Arts and Nursing approve a petition, a student will not necessarily get a "W" on his transcript. On his transcript, he will get an 'F' on his transcript
"Most students decide early on if their class load is too heavy," she said.
However, the school only gets about one to two petitions per year, she said.
Nick Lakins, a clerk in the School of Education's graduate student records office, said petitions from the School of Education had to be approved by the school board.
Doris Geis, assistant dean of nursing, said nursing petitions were usually granted, but because the school was tightening its petitioning process, it may be more difficult to drop a class in the future.
"Not a large percentage are ap-
proved unless they have a compelling
Doctor disputes study of nuclear fallout victims
By United Press International
quackery committee, I realize there are a great many doctors who make cancer diagnoses liberally," Charles Smart, chief surgeon at LDS Hospital in Salt Lake City, testified in U.S. District Court.
SALT LAKE CITY-A study that shows an unusually high rate of cancer among Mormons living downwind from atomic bomb tests is inaccurate because many cases were not documented, a physician testified yes-
Smart is a witness for the federal government, which is fighting a multimillion dollar damage claim by people who contend radioactive fallout from
atomic bomb tests caused cancer in their families.
THE SUIT has 24 plantiffs representing 1,200 people who lived Utah, Nevada and Arizona in the downwind zone of the Utah desert, home bomb blasts in the 1950s and 1960s.
The Johnson study keyed on Mormons because their religion requires them to avoid such cancer-linked items as tobacco and alcohol.
higher cancer rate than other Mormons not in the fallout path.
Smart said a study by Carl Johnson, a doctor from Denver, mistakenly concluded Mormons exposed to radioactive fallout in southern Utah had a
Smart said Johnson based his findings on questionnaires filled out by people who thought they or their relatives had cancer.
Vitamin sales thriving despite experts' views
By DONNA KELLER Staff Reporter
In spite of nutritionists advocating that a proper diet is the best source of vitamins, local retailers say sales are steady for vitamin supplements.
"If anything, there's been an increase." Rieth said.
"As chairman of the state's cancer
Jim Rieth, pharmacist at Super X Drugs, 1015 W. 23rd St., said he had not noticed a drop in sales.
Rieth said the reason for the increase could be attributed to people thinking they were not sure the proper nutrients in their diets.
Sheryl Robertson, volunteer at Community Mercantile Coop, 700 Maine St., said sales had continued to be regular in the three months she had been ordering vitamins for the store.
"Some people don't want to change their diets, so they supplement it with the pill," she said. "I recommend that they try to get the
ROBERTSON SAID people bought larger quantities of vitamin C during the fall and winter months to ward off colds.
The store also sells a lot of vitamin B supplement to people for stress control, she said.
proper food nutrition, but they think taking a pill is easier."
Pam Mangrum, registered dietitian at Watkins Hospital, said it was better for a person to get the vitamins naturally through a proper diet.
taking a vitamin pill doesn't supply the nutrients needed," she said. "I don't recommend them."
SHE SAID research had shown that large doses of vitamin supplements could be detrimental to the health of the individual taking them.
health of the individual taking them. "Mostly, people just don't know the effects yet," she said.
Gwen Kitos, registered dietitian at the Lawrence-Douglas County Health Department, said the averages of nutrition did not need a vitamin supplement.
"Food has the fiber and elements the body needs for its nutrition," she said.
An excess of vitamin supplements can be toxic, she said.
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"WITH VITAMIN C, 1,000 milligrams a day may be considered an excessive amount. I have heard that 300 milligrams is excessive. Reently I've come across information about the milligrams of the vitamin, which can easily come from the diet," Kitos said.
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THE HONEYWELL FUTURIST AWARDS COMPETITION
The Computer World
Election '82
Page 6 University Daily Kansan, November 3, 1982
Democrats may stymie Reagan
By United Press International
WASHINGTON -From the vantage point of 1980, the 1982 election was a disaster for the Republicans. Closer up, it doesn't look nearly as bad as it might have been.
Two years ago, fresh from a presidential landscape victory and heavy gains that gave them control of the Senate for the first time in a quarter-century, the Republicans were talking about a "sea change" in American politics of the 21st century. Their dominance for nearly 50 years after 1932.
Republicans spoke confidently of increasing their lock on the Senate and taking control of the House in 1882. And many Democrats believed them.
But by the spring of this year, the picture was looking dark for the GOP.
PRESIDENT REAGAN had succeeded in cutting federal budget outlays and reducing income taxes, but inflation and interest rates were rising. The public was unemployed and unemployment was rising to meet them.
When the leaves budded this year, the Democrats started talking about big gains in Congress, even perhaps regaining the Senate. Unemployment kept rising, hitting a 40-year price and interest rates did go down and the stock market suddenly did a giddy surge upward.
Except for a seemingly low estimate of Democratic crime in the House, the pundits seem to agree.
By last weekend, the political experts were saying the Democrats would gain in the mid-term elections, but not nearly enough to take effective control of Congress.
AS THE VOTES came in, the Republican margin in the Senate appeared to be safe and the Democrats, as predicted, were picking up a handful of governors.
But if looked as if the Democrats were going to win more than the 20 or more seats that most of them want, it would be true.
And that by itself could be trouble, not so much for the already outnumbered House Republicans as for the president, who has built his successes through a series of defections of 28 or so conservative Democrats.
If the Democrats come out of the 1982 elections with gains of 30 or more seats in the House, and if those new members are willing to follow the lead they desire (Neil Neill, Beagan may be stymoned on Capitol Hill).
And that could mean a stalemate, a condition that could last until November 1984.
THERE SEEMS to be no chance that the results of this election will enable the Democrats to undo what Reagan was able to accomplish in 1980. But because the real well able be will stop him from doing more.
The voters' was job finished, and the oracles of the airways last night set out to advise the electorate what it had done and why. They rolled up the door in front of their graphics that included a 140-square-foot boardroom.
There would be the possibility of compromise between the Republican White House and Senate and the Democratic House, but nothing that happened in 1981-82 indicated that the president has any taste for trimming his programs to suit the people he calls "the big spenders."
But never in 200 years of American politics have Americans known more about Americans than Mr. Trump did.
Before After Before After
HOUSE
Hiebert wins over Booth
By BRET WALLACE Staff Reporter
Five months of leg work paid off for Democrat Nancy Hiebert last night when she defeated Republican Hank Booth in the 1st District Douglas County Commission race.
SENATE
"We started going door to door in July," Hiebert said last night after Booth conceded the race. "Very few people gave us a chance at first."
Nancy Zimmerman, Hiebert's neighbor, said,
"Nancy walked all over town. There wasn't a
thing to do."
4.186 for Hiebert and 3.929 for Booth.
After all precisions reported, the totals were
Booth, who conceded the election with four of 14 precincts unreported, said, "I wish Nancy the best of luck. She is going to make an excellent county commissioner."
HEEBERT SAID she did not think she had won the election until the third-to-last precinct reported. The final four precincts were large ones that traditionally vote Republican, she said.
Hiebert ended up faring well in the larger precincts and won some that Booth had said strongly supported him. She said the door-to-door violence was very bad, but the large precincts as well as in the small ones.
Nancy Hiebert credited the victory to her large force of volunteers.
John Hiebert, her husband, said, "It was no accident that she won. She worked hard to make it happen."
HER GROUP of volunteers was composed of Democrats, independents and some Republican groups.
"So many people worked so hard for this election," she said. "We had a lot of really good candidates."
"I did feel it very necessary to put together a campaign organization with independent and Republican workers," she said.
Hiebert's Democratic affiliation played an important role in the campaign because the other two commissioners are Republicans, she said.
Throughout the campaign, Hiebert stressed the need to retain a bipartisan commission. She said many people shared her support of bipartisanship.
Booth said he thought bipartisanship was one of the biggest factors in the election.
HE SAID the other issue that swung the vote Hiebert's way was a literature distribution in
Nancy Hiebert
Mark Dohle
Hank Booth
some neighborhoods last weekend. The literature attacked five votes by Booth in his six years on the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission.
Hiebert will be filling the commission seat of Democrat Walt Craigan, who did not run for re-election. Craigan's endorsement of Hiebert was another important part of the victory, she said.
THE PRESERVATION of county farmland was one of the important issues of the campaign. Hiebert said she would follow the plan of the committee, which included farmers, realtors, builders and developers.
Hiebert said she decided to run for the county commission because it was going to be facing a tax increase.
Booth said the loss would not discourage him from continuing to work hard to help the city and the county in any way he could.
Solbach to begin third term
Rv TOM GRESS
Staff Reporter
While most political candidates spent yesterday in varying degrees of apprehension, State Rep. John Solbach made a few court appearances on behalf of clients and coordinated the local Democratic "Get Out the Vote" drive. Solbach, a Lawrence lawyer, was unopposed in his re-election bid, which he will hold for third term in the Kansas House in January. He has served since 1978.
"The Republicans tried very hard, from the state level on down, to find someone to run
"I would like to assume that they could not because I have done a good job, because I am a hard worker and because I have gained a reputation as a good state legislator. I don't know if that is true or not, but that is what I would like to believe."
ALTHOUGH HE had no opponent, Solbach
watched the election returns closely. A strong supporter of the severance tax, he said last night that the tax was an important reason, if not the reason, for Gov. John Carlin's re-election. Reworking the state's tax base now will be the top priority for the Legislature, he said.
But Solbach said it would take some time after the election to determine what the severance tax's fate would be in the next legislative session.
Democrats gained seats in the U.S. House of Representatives, where each man represents 25 members. Republicans maintained control of the Senate, however, where each man represents five members.
"In the next few weeks, people will be looking at the results and the interpretations will be made as to what the deciding factors were," she said. "If the Senate had not issued a if message has been sent to the Senate."
"I'm concerned that the Legislature will get too cowboyish," Solbach said, referring to the lawmakers who have been opposed to the legislation. "They are against justice; man does not live by 'Gunsmoke alone.'"
DURING LAST spring's legislative session,
he House passed a severance tax bill, but it did not
pass.
Douglas County totals
100% complete
Candidate Total %
Robert Stephan (B) 12,676 59
Lance Burr (D) 9,059 41
**Dennis Governor**
John Carlin (D) 14,634 69
Sum Hardware (R) 6,926 33
Joan Finney (D) 12,566 61
Douglas Hirt (R) 8,149 39
Jim Slattery 12,397 56
Morris Kay 9,525 44
Kansas Attorney General
**Consultant or Insurance**
Fletcher Bell (R) (L) 18,767 91
Alan Weldon (L) 1,348 07
Shields Glides (L) 523 02
U.S. House 9th District
Kansas House 44th District
Jesse Branson (D) 5,056 68
Bob Schulte (R) 2,402 39
Jack Brier (R) 11,911 60
Bill McCray (D) 8,056 40
Danforth beats Woods in race for Senate seat
45th District
John Solbach (D) 5,007
46th District
Betty Jo Charlton (D) 3,038 55
Doug Lamborn (R) 2,333 42
Pat Goodwin (L) 117 03
Douglas County Commission
1st District
Nancy Hiebert (D) 4,186 54
Hank Booth (R) 3,592 46
Lawrence Nuclear Freeze
Yes 6,541 74
No 2,298
State Supreme Court
Justice Robert Miller
To retain, yes 15,803 84
No 3,005 16
Court of Appeals
Judge Bob Abbott
To retain, yes 15,052 83
No 3,026 17
Judge Corwin C. Spencer
To retain, yes 14,855 83
No 2,956 17
Judge Joe Haley Swinehart
To retain, yes 14,656 82
No 3,189 16
Democrats
By United Press International
He spent $2 million to defeat his challenger, Docrel Woods, who has never before run a presidential race.
ST. LOUIS—Republican Sen. John Danforth of Missouri managed to hd.together what began earlier this year as a campaign with no apparent obstacles to his election, but with challenges.
Woods had hoped to raise $1 million in her campaign to unseat Danforth. By mid-October, she had raised $657,000.
Woods' campaign plan has been simple: criticize Danforth for supporting President Reagan's economic policies and blame the Republican Party and Republicans in general for unemployment, problems with Social Security and poor financial conditions.
Woods' rapid climb in public recognition as a candidate went higher as the result of two one-hour television debates on stations in the state and her appearance on Dandorah on a visit.
He seemed unsure of what kind of help he wanted from the administration. He acknowledged that he had not invited President Reagan to campaign for him in Missouri "because it probably would have cut both ways," but on Oct. 25, Interior Secretary James Watt appeared in St. Louis for Danforth.
Danforth held a substantial lead in early public opinion polls. But a few days before the election, a poll by the St. Louis Globe showed that voters who showed Woods with a slight lead over Danforth.
After Woods' gain in strength, Danforth began a series of strong personal attacks against his opponent, describing her as a "bullshitter" and describing his misrepresentation her views as well as his.
Before beginning his accusatory campaign depicting Woods as a political demagogue, Danforth had based his campaign mostly on only one issue.
PETER MCCALLEN
Betty Jo Charlton
Republicans
Charlton beats Lamborn in race for 46th District
she received more campaign contributions this year than she did in 1896. She spent about $8,500.
By DEBORAH BAEP
Staff Reporter
Democrat Betty Jo Charlton retained her seat in the 46th District of the Kansas House of Representatives last night, defeating Republican challenger Doug Lamborn by about 700
She attributed some of her success to her advertising, saving
With all precincts reporting, the totals were 3,038 for Charlton and 2,353 for Lamborn.
Liberitarian candidate Patrick Goodwin received 117 votes, earning a handful in almost
“She has a big edge at this point,” he said. “I was expecting to win (my precinct), but I was just going to let it go.”
Charlton was hesitant to cite causes for her victory, not sure if her incumbency helped in her case.
Charlton, who won all but two precincts, admitted about 9 p.m. that she expected to win but handled her victory quietly, answering questions from the crowd with congratulations with handshakes and thank-you's.
"I feel good about it," a smiling Charlton told well-wishers.
LAMBORN SEEMED almost sure of his own defeat by 8:45 p.m., when he learned he had won only 185 votes in his own precinct to Charlton's 274
"There are certain advantages with the incumbency because you have a record to run on, but on the other hand, your record to be attacked on, or to be misinterrupted," she said.
SHE ALSO credited helpful campaign workers for the victory.
Charlton, seemingly confident that Gov. John Carlin would win his bid for re-election, said she hoped the Legislature would pass the severance tax.
"This was an election day for Democrats." he said.
Staff Reporter
And, she said, there is the possibility that her victory was part of a general trend for Democrats to win this year.
"I'm keeping my options open," he said.
"What we've got to do is get it past the Senate," she said, noting that the Senate membership will not have changed since last year, when the severance tax was defeated.
SHE SAID the fact that Lamborn did not give unqualified support to the tax may have contributed to his loss.
By BONAR MENNINGER
Does she have plans for politics beyond serving another term in the House?
She began her career as a representative when she was appointed to Mike Glover's seat in January 1980. The next year she defeated Republican Willie Amison.
Schulte, a Republican, conceded defeat about 9:35 p.m. in the Douglas County clerk's crowded office. The tally at that point, with nine of the 13 precincts in the district reporting, was 4,061 for Branson, 1,840 for Schulte. The final vote was Branson, 5,056; Schulte, 2,402.
Charlton, a member of the House Energy and Natural Resources Committee, wants to establish "lifetime" utility rates that would distinguish between different users and use and make discretionary use more expensive.
"But the re-election of the governor and the rest of us who have supported the severance tax will send a message to the Senate that that's what the people want," she said.
She also is a member of the House Committee on Transportation and the Joint Committee on
Transportation.
LAMBORN ALSO is not sure of his future in politics.
Incumbent Democrat Jessie Branson soundly defeated challenger Bob Schulte in the race for the 44th District state representative seat last night.
"Lord, no," she laughed. "You don't start a political career at 59."
A 28-year-old painting contractor with a journalism degree from the University of Kansas, he probably will stick to contracting for now, said his wife, Jeanie.
Branson beats Schulte for 44th District seat
"I feel very honored" Branson said in her victory statement. "I have had enormous support from many, many friends, and I am supported me. It takes a lot of teamwork."
BRANSON SAID her hard work in the
"We have an extremely important institution here in Lawrence. We have much at stake, much to lose and much to gain, so this will be, of course, a priority for me," Branson said.
Branson said there would be many difficulties in the coming legislative term because of the tight revenue situation in the state but recommitted herself to the University of Kansas.
Legislature and her incumbency provided the key to victory. She said that during her first term she kept in close contact with her constituents and responded to their requests.
In her campaign, Branson supported the severance tax, which carried John Carlin into office.
DURING THE race, Schulte had stressed that as a working man he could represent a new perspective in government.
Schulte is a construction worker and radio announcer.
Citing his emphasis on being a working man, Schulte said, "I think it's a terrific line of work," and he continued, "there are different kinds of people get involved in politics, and this was my way of trying to do that."
"I've learned a lot in this campaign, and I don't know if I can say I'm a better person, but I do."
THIS WAS the first political venture for the 30-year-old Lawrence resident.
"By a better than two to one margin, I was turned down by the voters in the 44th District. There were a lot of factors that contributed to that."
Schulte said that his working allowed him less time than his opponent to campaign and that he had the biggest advantage.
"It was an opportunity for me to get in there and see what I could do," he said.
"It is very difficult to beat an incumbent, but again, it was worth the try," he said.
Area, state voter turnout less than predicted
By STEVE CUSICK Staff Reporter
Voter turnout in Douglas County for yesterday's election fell slightly short of county officials' predictions, according to unofficial vote results from the Douglas County Courthouse.
Patty Jaimes, Douglas County clerk, had predicted that 38 percent to 60 percent would vote in this election. She said she based her prediction on absentee ballots submitted before the election.
According to the figures, 56.7 percent or 22.04 of the 89,799 registered voters in the county went
The turnout this election also was lower than the turnout in the mid-term election four years ago.
Jaimes said 38 percent of the registered voters in the county went to the polls in 1978. In the 1980 presidential election, 76 percent of the registered voters cast ballots.
STATEWIDE, it appeared yesterday morning
that the turnout was slightly higher than expected because of reports of heavy tussles in urban areas.
However, Brier said, the turnout may have been affected by the campaign.
"THE NEGATIVE campaigns had an adverse effect. People would see the ads on TV and other media and people decided they wanted to take no part in the election."
But with 96 percent of the vote in at 12:26 a.m. today, only 58.7 percent or 722.31 of the state's 1.23 million registered voters had voted in the governor's race.
In 1978, 62 percent to 63 percent of the registered voters in Kansas cast ballots in the
Secretary of State Jack Brier had predicted last week that 60 percent of the state's 1.23 million registered voters would vote, but he said he expected 80 percent to 63 percent because of the metropolitan vote.
Jaimes said she was not disappointed by yesterday's turnout in Douglas County.
"I think it was a good turnout with this type of
an election," she said, referring to the fact that it was mid-term and not a presidential election.
"Considering there's supposed to be a decline in interest, I think that's pretty good." Jaimes said the official vote totals would not be available until Friday.
Voters in Douglas County lined up solidly behind the Democratic candidates for governor and U.S. Representative from the 2nd District.
DEMOCRATIC GOV. John Carlin carried all but one of the county's precincts. Clinton went to his Republican challenger, Sam Hardage.
Carlin received 14,843 votes in Douglas County, compared with 6,996 for Harday, according to the poll.
Democrat Jim Slatter received 12,37 votes in Douglas County in his successful bid for the 2nd District seat. His opponent, Morris Kay, received 9,25 votes and carried only 10 recounts.
The totals for precincts came in earlier this election than in previous elections, workers at the courthouse said. The totals for the last precinct came in shortly after 10 p.m.
V
University Daily Kansan, November 3, 1982
Page 7
Carlin
From page one
HIS WIFE, flushed and close to his side throughout the evening, said she was surprised at the early CBS announcement that projected Calgary almost immediately after the polls closed.
"It was 7:04 exactly, I remember, and John came up and grabbed my hand and said a national network had declared our victory. He was there, and when we said we won before Ted Kennedy," she said.
Carlin attributed his strong win in Republican-dominated Johnson County to a strong pro-severance tax sentiment and the openness of his leadership to the agricultural community throughout his term.
"The same with western Kansas." Carin sadd. I worked hard to communicate with them even though he didn't know it.
BEFORE CARLIN'S arrival, the exuberant crowd predicted an early victory for the governor and congressional candidate Jim Slattery.
"I always knew John would win," said Ann Ozegevce, Carlin's sister and field coordinator for his campaign. She left her home and husband to campaign full time for her brother in Kansas.
"This is where my prejudice comes in, but I think people wanted John Carlin rather than the
likes of Sam Hardgey, a multimillionaire with no record of public service," she said.
Another supporter described her theory that this election proved that traditionally Republican voters were not as strong.
"You just have to know Kansas before Robert Docking," said Cathy O'Hara, a campaign worker. "We've been coming to these things for 25 years and we still don't see that Democrat victory." That I was sure of a Democratic victory."
RUTH ANN SCHOONER, who headed the Carlin campaign in Barton County, which is intensely pro-oil, said many Republicans in that area supported Carlin although they publicly dislodged unleashed.
"A lot of people were afraid to come out for Carlin because of the anti-severance tax sentiment here. The media here was so biased and unfair," she said.
Student coitions from Fort Hays State University and Washburn University also arrived to celebrate Carlin's victory and push for a severance tax to finance education.
"AS STUDENTS, we've seen what Reaganism does to education, and that's what Sam Hardage was proposing for Kansas," said Bill Blankenship, executive board member of the Associated Students of Kansas and a Washburn University "Without the severance tax, what would we do?"
ALEXANDRIA MILLER
Briarly Hardage, 11, daughter of defeated gubernatorial candidate Sam Hardage; Kathryn Price, 10, his niece; and Kathy Leu, 17, a Hardage volunteer, react with disbelief as they watch Gov. John Carlin make his victory speech on a Hardage headquarters television set.
Lawrence voters favor nuclear freeze by 3-1 margin in public opinion poll
By DOUG CUNNINGHAM
Staff Reporter
Participants in a citywide public opinion poll yesterday recommended by a three-to-one margin that the United States and the Soviet Union will be engaged in the production and testing of nuclear weapons.
Although the locations for the freeze vote and the general election were the same, only 33 percent of those who voted in the general election voted in the freeze poll.
Tables for the opinion poll were hard to find at some voting places, said Tom Moore, a member of the Lawrence Coalition for Peace and Justice, which asked the city to allow the poll.
Secretary of State Jack Brier was in Lawrence last week to ensure that arrangements for the opinion poll would not interfere with the regular election.
SOME TABLES were moved farther away
from their planned locations as a result of his visit, but some were moved to better locations at the airport.
Some people also may have thought that participating in the poll was automatically approving of the freeze, he said.
But he said participation in the opinion poll was higher in those places where the freeze occurred.
Seventy-four percent of the 8,839 participants in the poll approved of the freeze and 26 percent opposed it.
The Lawrence City Commission decided Aug. 24 to allow the poll, which faced a court challenge, to take place.
Moore said the results probably were representative of opinion in Lawrence, and that view was mirrored by a spokeswoman for the national freeze movement.
"GENERALLY, what we seeing in most places is a two-to-one or three-to-one margin."
said Karin Fierke, a co-director of the National Clearinghouse for the Nuclear Weapons Freeze Campaign. "We're very encouraged by what happened in Lawrence.
"I think it will send a very clear message to Washington that a bilateral nuclear weapons freeze is something that the American people favor."
THE NUCLEAR FREEZE campaign, which included last-minute advertisements and yard signs in Lawrence, had been a non-partisan one, Moore said.
Moore said that about 145 coalition representatives worked at the polling places yesterday and that 62 people from the local League of Women Voters counted the ballots last night.
"It concerns all of us in a very profound sense — our lives are on the line," he said. "People who did not agree feel to get in and register the opinion, and I think that's a very good thing."
Incumbent Republicans' victories in Kansas boost party morale, lower GOP 'death toll'
By CAROL, LICHTI and VINCE HESS Staff Reporters
TOPEKA-It was not all tears and disappointment for Kansas Republicans yesterday thanks to victories by incumbents Attorney Robert Stephan and Secretary of State Jack Brinker.
And at the Democratic campaign headquarter- esuccessful and unsuccessful candidate listes.
At Republican campaign headquarters, Merlyn Brown, executive director of the Kansas Republican Party, said of Stephen Brier and Brieer's victories, "It shows the Republican Party is strong in Kansas. We've lost the attention-getter, nor have it not taken a death toll on the Republican Party."
"I'm very proud and I thank the Lord Jesus Christ for this victory. And in spite of my faults, I will try to do my best. My heart is with the people of this state.
"TO ME, it's everybody's duty to get involved," said Burr, a former assistant attorney general who lost a 1974 bid for the Democratic nomination for attorney general.
STEPHAN TRAVELLED here from Wichita to the delight of an enthusiastic crowd of Republican voters.
Burr, a Lawrence attorney, said he enjoyed running for office nonetheless.
Burr, a graduate of the KU School of Law, said he would continue to promote the issues of his campaign, especially pulvinar reform and nuclear power. Mr. Burr also spoke at Creek Nuclear Power Plant near Burlington.
"I figured I'd probably get beat unless the incumbent messed up or somehow violated the statute," she said.
He said he was scheduled to appear on several radio and television programs to discuss nuclear
Stephan said his office was conducting a study of nuclear power and Wolf Creek.
BRIER, JUBILANT about his re-election as secretary of state, brought feelings of success to a party headquarters that was grieving about the loss of a presidential race and 2nd Congressional District race.
"Let me make one thing clear. This has not been a funeral for the Republican Party." Brier said. "There'll be another election, another day, another week, and the award as the state of Kansas and as Republicans."
Democrat Billy McCray, who lost in his bid for secretary of state but has two years left in his term as a state senator, stayed in his homeown of Wichita to watch the election results.
MCRAY SAID that organized labor's endorsement of incumbent Brier had hurt his campaign.
However, McCray said he was pleased by the
"I think it's a great victory for the Democrats in the state of Kansas," he said.
McCray, a real estate agent, said he had no plans for the future other than to serve out his business.
But, he said, if the severance tax, a major issue in Carlin's campaign, was not passed by the Legislature by 1984, he would run again and work for its passage in the new Legislature.
DEMOCRAT JOAN Finney will continue her political involvement in her office as state treasurer after winning the election yesterday to her fifth consecutive two-year term.
Finney described her win as "a victory for the office," which proved public support despite criticism from her opponent, Republican Doug Holt.
During the campaign Holt criticized her for mismanagement of state funds, but Finney said she did not want to rebut what she called "unfounded" charges.
IN AN INTERVIEW from his home in Overland Park, Holt said, "I'm not very happy. I expected that I wouldn't do well in Sedgwick County and Shawnee County."
But Holt said he was happy with the campaign.
"We tried our best," he said.
Holt resigned his House seat to run for the election but still serves on several committees.
Nation
From page one
Kennedy, D-Mass., a leading Democratic prospect for president in 1984.
Third parties get few votes in gubernatorial race
MANY OF THE SENATE's best known Democra-
ratic names easily won re-election.
In Nebraska, Robert Kerrey, a Vietnam veteran who won the Medal of Honor, unseated Thone. Democrats came close in neighboring Iowa, but GOP LL. Gov. Terry Branstad finally defeated Roxanne Conlin in her bid to become the state's first woman governor.
One of them, Edmund G. Brown JR., governor since taking over from Ronald Reagan in 1975 and now the Democratic Senate candidate, lost to San Diego Mayor Pete Wilson for the Senate spot currently held by Republican S.I. Hayakawa.
Others included Kennedy in Massachusetts, Senate Democratic leader Robert Byrd of West Virginia, Patrick Moynihan of New York Howard Metzenbaum of Ohio, Henry Jacobson of Texas, Daniel F. Wheeler of Lawton Chiles, D-Fla., Daniel Moynihan, D-N.Y., and S. Lloyd Bentsen, D-Texas.
Staff Reporter
By DON KNOX
Frank Shelton Jr. lay in a hospital bed in Bartlesville, Oklaw., last night, listening closely to Kansas' gubernatorial election returns on a portable radio.
The broadcasts were fuzzy and infrequent. But the 75-year-old Shelton, hospitalized with pneumonia, had more than a passive interest in the matter.
Shelton was the American Party's gubernatorial candidate in Kansas. He ran a distant third behind Democratic Gov. John Carlin and Republican Sand Hardage.
"I have no intentions of running for governor again," said Shelton, who ran against Carlin and former Gov. Robert Bennett in 1978. "But I do have plans for the next 40 years."
SHELTON, a rancher from Cherryvale,
garnered 1 percent of the state vote. But last night the candidate, a Republican for nearly five decades, endorsed Carlin, a Democrat.
"I have no respect for Hardage's industrialization," Shelton said. "That's going to kill Kansas."
ALMOST 300 MILES away, 20-year-old George Williams spent election night at home in Junction City. Williams is a Kansas State University student and the Republican Party candidate for lieutenant governor.
"I'm praying for divine intervention from god," Williams said of the election. "I think the people are going to be very excited."
Williams, who ran with the Prohibitionist's gubernatorial candidate, Warren Martin, said he was the most conservative in his district.
"I never intended to run," Williams said, "but a few other candidates were unable to enter. My nomination was Mr. Martin's chance to bring some young blood into the party."
Martin watched election returns with his family at his Junction City home. But the 72-year candidate, who also ran for Kansas in the 1983 election, finished with no percentage of the vote.
"I think we do some good," he said, "even if we don't get elected."
MARTIN SAID he thought that the Prohibitionists developed many ideas that both the Democratic and Republican parties adopted in later years. The Social Security program, he said, was originally part of the Prohibition Party platform.
Still, Martin said, the 1982 campaign probably would be his last as a Prohibition candidate.
"I own some apartments," Martin said, "but I think I'm going to sell them and go fishing."
think I'm going to sell them and go nissin'.
But James Ward, the Libertarian Party candidate, said last night that, despite his finish with no percentage of the vote, he would definitely consider a second try in the Kansas governor's race.
"I haven't even tried to see how we did this," said Ward, who was attending a meeting at Garnett's City Hall. "But the Libertarian Party is going to win in Kansas. There no way I can just quit."
ALL THREE of the third-party candidates said they were glad they entered theubernato-
riale race. But two of the candidates, Martin and Shelton, criticized their Republican and Democratic opponents for spending too much money in the election.
"We're the penny-and-nickel people," said Martin, who estimated his total campaign expenditures would be less than $600. "I think we should limit campaign spending in some other way. I don't think it's right to spend $1.5 million in a governor's race."
Mrs. Shelton, who served as campaign treasurer for her husband, said Shelton spent about $500 on his campaign.
"Frank thinks it's pretty bad when it comes to this spending," she said. "But that's just like him — he's looking at the future for the state of Kansas and the state of the country."
Shelton agreed.
"I think I'm going to write some books after I get out of the hospital," he said. "I'd like to tell about some of the things big business does that is detrimental to our country.
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan, November 3, 1982
Pencil story draws local Democrats' ire
By DOUG CUNNINGHAM and CAROL LICHTI Staff Reporters
The county chairman of the Democratic party said yesterday that he would file a complaint with the Federal Communications Commission because of radio station KLW-NAM's coverage of an election story.
David Berkowitz, the chairman, objected to the station's coverage of a story about pencils placed in voting boots yesterday. A voter had complained that the pencils might influence in favor of a local candidate.
The pencils were marked Booth General Pencil Company, a New Jersey pencil company.
After a voter called a Douglas County District Court judge to complain that county commission candidate Michael W. Kemp advantage because of the name on the
pencils, the county clerk's office worked quickly to switch the pencils or conceal the name.
BOOTH WHO was a county commission candidate for the 1st District in Douglas County, is the general manager at KLWN-KLZR radio.
ratty Jaimes, Douglas County clerk, said there was no connection between the candidate and the pencil company.
Berkowitz said the station's news
censures mentioned the peninsula, Hank
Booth's name and the county com-
mission seat, but made no mention of
his Democratic opponent, Nancy
Hiebert.
"I think it was a clear violation of the fairness doctrine, Herkowitz said. "It is my intention to file a complaint to the communications Commission about it."
Berkowitz said the coverage of the story by KLWN was similar to free advertizing for Booth.
However, Joe Vaughan, news director for KLWN-KLZR, said the story was not written by anyone at KLWN-KLZR.
"IT WAS not a story originating or written at this station," he said. "It was from the Associated Press broadcast news wire."
Jaimes said switching the pencils or concealing the name did not cause any delay in voting.
Vaughan said the story had been handled in the station's customary manner for wire service copy. He would not comment on the way the Associated Press distributed the story.
Election officials could not see the name of the pencil company because the string used to attach the pencils to the pen was wrapped around the pencil. James said.
The strings were unwrapped when the pencils were placed in the booths.
Jaimes said only one voter complained about the pencils.
"I TWAS a complete surprise to me," Booth said. "I doubt if it will have much of a sway. The pencils were found early this morning and they were doing everything -- even scraping the name off.
"I don't think it will help," he said.
"I've never read what was on a pencil in a polling booth."
Harper said she doubled the pencils would make any difference in the election.
Nan Harper, campaign director for Hiebert, said, "It's kind of ludicrous that this type of thing would happen at the last minute. But I'm glad we've got some sharp-eyed voters out there who noticed it."
"I think most of the voters who noticed it just laughed. I voted early this morning and I didn't notice it," she said.
Jaimes said, "This is probably just a once-in-a-lifetime thing."
Traffic board hears old and new appeals
By DEBORAH BAER Staff Renorter
When the Parking and Traffic Appeals Board changed hands in May, more than 800 cases were yet to be heard and some of them were eight
This year's appeals board has been chipping away at the backlog since last summer, and the number of cases has shrunk to about 250, Scott Stockwell, law student and chairman of the appeals board, said recently.
Three second-year law students serve as judges on the appeals board to hear students who appeal parking violations.
The judges all served as student attorneys for the appeals board during their first year at law school, Stockwell said.
Stockwell said that by the end of this month, he expected to be caught up on cases dating from September 1861 to February 1982 and also to be on schedule for cases that come in during the semester.
Don Kearns, director of parking,
said, "I think they're doing a real fine
job. They're addressing the problem."
Victor Nelson, vice chairman of the appeals board, said the board was meeting 150 percent more times than it last year and handling 39 cases a week.
BUT NELSON and Stockwell do not blame the backlog on last year's annual board, they said.
"The reason that they had fallen behind in the past is that there were not
enough resources committed to the job." Stockwell said.
Last year, some appeals board members gave up some of their administrative duties to protest a governance decision not to pay them.
But last spring, the Parking and Traffic Board decided to pay the chairman and vice chairman of the appeals board that took over in May, and when the faculty group heard "all the facts," it agreed, Kearns said.
"My polling place always gets a great vote turnout, because people don't like voting in smelly garages and basements. The Mansion receives voters as honored guests. So far, the turnout's been tremendous."
under crystal chandeliers to the soft strains of Bach and Mozart.
SAN FRANCISCO—San Francisco voters casting their votes at the plush Mansion Hotel yesterday were greeted by a raucous crowd to soft music and gifted delicacies.
"This year I've pulled out all stops," said hotel Bob Pritikin.
Frisco citizens vote in style
By United Press International
The imposing figure stood amidst 100 American flags adorning the luxury landmark hotel. A huge banner reading, "Cast Your Fate - Vote Here," was placed across the front of the ornate building.
Because no other cause of the fire was found, it was ruled accidental.
Mansion master chef David Coyle, former personal chef to the Duke and Duchess of Bedford, decorated the patriotic donut cake and provided a snack of venison and juniper berry pate.
A red, white and blue cake was served to the voters casting ballots
"We're satisfied," the sheriff said.
"That's the end of the investigation."
Cigarettes possibly started the fire, the sheriff said. Two survivors of the fire told officials that cigarettes were smoked before the family went to bed.
The value of the house destroyed in the fire was $70.00, the sheriff said.
Fatal fire called accidental
The state fire marshal has determined that a fire that killed three people north of Lawrence Saturday afternoon Jefferson County sheriff said yesterday.
Funeral services will be held today at 2:30 p.m. for Shirley Larson, 40, Donna Jernigan, 15, and Gina Jernigan, 13, to the First Methodist Church in Oskalozae.
Ousaidh and his wife have started a fund at the Douglas County Bank for the Larison family. A donation, with an indication that it is for the Larison fund, may be to Box 429 in care of the bank.
DONALD LARISON, 45, and Glenda Larison, 16, survived the fire. They escaped from the house by crawling on the roof and to the ground from the second story.
The surviving family members are
Wilford Gassall, owner of the house.
Memorial Hospital after treatment for smoke inhalation, hospital officials
The Lawrence chapter of the American Red Cross has provided the family with emergency needs such as clothing and food, a Red Cross official said.
Shirley Larsion was a former custodian for the University of Kansas. She resigned recently from her job at the university's computer problems, a housekeeping official said.
KWALITY COMICS
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The Red Cross helped by providing the family needs until they are able to go home.
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The Red Cross is also helping to pay for the funeral arrangements, the office.
They were released from Lawrence
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University Daily Kansan, November 3, 1982
Page 9
The University of Kansas has reached 84 percent of its goal for the 1983 Lawrence United Fund Drive, a United Fund official said yesterday.
As of yesterday, members of the University community had contributed $42,118 to the fund, said Jo Bryant, director of Lawrence United Foundation. Our work is
The drive in Lawrence has netted a
On the record
total of $305,711, which is 79 percent of
the city's total of $284,799
Bryant said she was pleased with the progress of the drive.
"I think it's going pretty much as planned," she said. "We're really hoping the University will go ahead and go over the top."
United Fund officials hope to reach their goal by Nov. 12, she said.
THEIVES STOLE FIRE extinguishers worth $300 between Saturday afternoon and Sunday from Ellsworth after the fire said three extinguishers were stolen
BURGLARS STOLE A $1,000 1973 station wagon between 6 and 8 p.m. Monday from the 1400 block of Tenant street, Lawrence police said yesterday
BURGLARS STOLE A stereo cassette, radio worth $450 during the
weekend from a car parked at Dale Willey Pontiac, 2840 Iowa St., police said.
BURGLARS STOLE $505 worth of tools and spray-paint equipment between Oct. 19 and 20 from Quality automotive, 126 E. Eardr. St. police said.
BURGLARS STOLE A car cassette stereo worth $300 Sunday night from a car parked in the 1300 block of Ohio Street, police said.
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The University of Kansas Theatre and School of Fine Arts present
A LITTLE NIGHT MUSIC
The Tony Award-Winning Musical
November 4, 5, 6, 11, 12, 13, 1982
8:00 p.m. nightly
University Theatre Murphy Hall
Music and Lyrics by Stephen Sondheim
Book by Hugh Wheeler
Based on a long time Beloved Biennial
A LITTLE NIGHT MUSIC The Tony Award-Winning Musical
November 4. 5. 6. 11. 12. 13. 1982
8:00 p.m. nightly
University Theatre Murphy Hall
The University of Kansas Theatre and School of Fine Arts present
A LITTLE NIGHT MUSIC
The Tony Award-Winning Musical
November 4, 5, 6, 11, 12, 13, 1982
8:00 p.m. nightly
University Theatre Murphy Hall
Music and Lyrics by Stephen Sandhem
Book by Hugh Wheeler
Based on a film by Ingmar Bergman
"This is close to being the perfect romantic musical comedy..."
Brenden Giff/ The New Yorker
Tickets on sale at the Murray Hall Box Office
All Macy's stores
Call 1-800-744-3199
Hospital records for students
interlibrary gift room
This is close to being the perfect romantic musical comedy.
Bronx City! The New Yorker
Holdings are now in the Murphy Hall Bus Office
All Mass Churches
For Public Outreach Call 912-304-2722
Special guests for students
with special needs
would try to switch from the TIAACREF plan to a private pension plan not covered under Title VII
Mortality rates determine court rulings
By DIRK MILLER Staff Reporter
A KU professor said recently that the A. U. 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals had used unusual mortality rates when it ruled that the retirement plan used by Kansas Board of Regents was discriminatory toward women.
Hanne Christiansen, mortality researcher for the KU Medical Center and professor of business, said the 2nd Circuit Court's ruling had not taken into account any differences between the lifespans of men and women.
Harold Krogh, a professor of business who specializes in insurance, agreed that there was reason to trust his judgment in assumption that women had the power.
The Teachers Insurance and Annuity Association-College Retirement Equities Fund, the Regents retirement plan, has been the subject of two separate contradictory court decisions.
The 2ND Circuit Court ruled that the plan violated Title VII, the 1964 Civil Rights Act, which states that employers must come out of an employer relationship.
The 2nd Circuit Court ruled Sept. 29 that the plan was discriminatory because it assumed that women lived longer than men and, as a result, reduced women's payments to spread out the benefits. But the U.S. 6th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled Oct. 14 that the plan was not discriminatory.
Christiansen said that using the 84 percent figure to determine a payment plan would not take into account actuarial evidence of death trends. A payment plan based on this percentage make equal payments to all members.
The 2nd Circuit Court accepted evidence that 84 percent of women in the United States had the same lifespan as men.
But the 6th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that the practice of using sex-based mortality tables was legal, Slater said. TIAA-CREW was granted a waiver from the first decision and expects to appeal it to the Supreme Court, he said.
But Christians said the 84 percent figure had astounded her. She said her own calculations of Kansas death rates, from the 1970 census, had shown that women's average lifespan is about four years longer than men's.
Christiansan said the current TIAA-CREF method using sex-based mortality tables gave the same total amount of benefits to men and women, the number of payments made to women was greater and the amount of money less.
WILLIAM SLATER, senior vice president of the TIAA-CREF plan, said it had used mortality tables that would live four years longer than men.
Slater said TIAA-CREF had disputed the 2nd Circuit Court's findings.
"Females are expected to live longer, and therefore draw smaller payments," Slater said.
With a sex-neutral mortality table women would end up getting more than their male colleagues, she said, because women live longer and would draw their balanced payments for a longer period of time.
He said if the discrimination charges held, payments to men would be cut to balance them with payments to women.
Christiansen said men probably
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INTERNATIONAL MUSEUM OF ARCHITECTURE
The international museum of architecture is a world-wide institution dedicated to the study and preservation of architectural history. It was established in 1978 and is located in Dublin, Ireland.
The museum's collection includes over 50,000 archaeological artifacts from around the world, including pottery, stone tools, wooden carvings, and other artifact types. The museum also features a vast array of building materials such as brick, stone, wood, and glass.
In addition to its archaeological collections, the museum offers educational programs, exhibitions, and events that explore the relationship between architecture and culture. Visitors can explore the museum's diverse exhibits and gain insights into the history of architecture through interactive displays and lectures.
The international museum of architecture is a must-visit destination for anyone interested in architecture and cultural history.
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Under The Wheel
I
Page 10 University Daily Kansan, November 3, 1982
Director hopes to prevent violations
By VERONICA JONGENELEN Staff Reporter
Department heads at the University of Kansas should have more information on affirmative action programs in order to prevent violations of federal regulations, the new director of the office of affirmative action said yesterday.
Robbie Ferron, who will assume her post Jan. 11, said the affirmative action office should not be seen as a departant because people to do what they did did not want to do.
The office should tell departments how to meet the guidelines before finding them in non-compliance, she said.
"How I'm going to do that, I don't know," Ferron said.
The U.S. Department of Labor last spring found KU in violation of several affirmative action guidelines. In the spring 1981, KU was cited for violations
of Title IX, which prohibits federal aid to colleges that practice sex, discrimination in athletic programs.
BECAUSE THE University is working to remedy these problems, it is considered to be in compliance with the guidelines.
Ferron said the federal government's conclusions were based on availability figures that had not been updited in recent years.
"What is happening is that we're not really sure how many people are there."
Besides detailing violations of hiring guidelines, last spring's report said the University did not have a visible affirmative action director.
Ferron said she intended to be very visible in her new position. Her plans include meeting with people in both academic and administrative departments, as well as possibly meeting with students during orientation sessions.
"The first thing I need to do is assess
what other people have done before," she said.
Then, Ferron said, she will find out what went wrong and correct it.
Departments have now established hiring goals and timetables for meeting them, she said.
FERRON SAID THAT being visible as a director would help students and employees with complaints to know where to go for help.
Ferron visited Lawrence earlier this week and said she was impressed with both the University and the town.
"I love it," she said. "I went to the football game and I think you have some real talent on your team. I think the KU fans were very hospitable."
On campus
Ferron, who is part Indian, now lives in Billings, Mont. and is an assistant professor and coordinator of native American studies at Eastern Montana College. The position is partly academic and partly administrative, she said.
TODAY
STUDENT SENATE will meet at 6:30 p.m. in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union.
CATHOLIC CENTER WORSHIP will be at 12:30 p.m. in Danforth Chapel.
DUNGEONS AND DRAGONS CLUB
have a games meet at 7 p.m. in
the museum.
NON-TRADITIONAL STUDENT
Organization lunchmeet will be at
10 a.m.
GERMAN CLUB will have a program on Summer Institute in Germany at the University of Washington.
ORTHODOX CHRISTIANS ON CAMPUS will discuss the Episcopalian Perception of Orthodoxy at 8 p.m. in the International Room of the Union.
UNITED NATIONS ASSOCIATION will have a talk, "The Palestinian
Question," at 7:30 p.m. in the Pine Room of the Union.
MARANATHA MINISTRIES will meet at 8 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room of the Union.
SCHOOL OF BUSINESS Executive Lecture Series, featuring William Wail, chairman and chief executive officer of the company. It will be at 1:30 p.m. in the Satellite Union.
"TALKABOUT", with Seamus Han-
oe, will be at 7:30 p.m. on KANU
poet,
TOMORROW
GERMAN CLJB will have lunch at
the Cottonwood Room of the
Dug
KU SWORD AND SHIELD will meet at p.m. in the Oread Room of the Ua
SEN. NANCY LANDON KA-
SSEBAUM will speak at 12:30 p.m. in 104 Green Hall.
WOMEN'S SELF-EXAM WORK-
SHOP will be at 7 p.m. at GAP-Corbin's
hospital.
PRE-PHYSICAL THERAPY CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. at Watkins Hospital Cafeteria.
KU MOUNTAINEERING ASSOCIATION will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the International Room of the Union.
KU CREW will have an invitational meeting at 4:30 p.m. in 202 Robinson Center.
UNIVERSITY COUNCIL will meet at 3:30 p.m. in 108 Blake.
"THE AMERICAN PAST" with Calder Pickett, featuring "Some American Popular Singers — Part II," will be at 7 p.m. on KANU 92 FM.
Razor blade discovered in Halloween taffy pop
A razor blade was discovered in a piece of candy given to a 12-year-old trick-or-treater on Halloween, Lawrence police said yesterday.
Loveland said Robinson was not sure where her son had received the tampered candy because three or four had given vanilla taffy pops as treats.
The child's mother, Claudia Robinson, 323 Minnesota St., discovered a singly-edged razor blade in a vanilla taffy pop, Lawrence Police Sgt. Larry Loveland said. The piece of candy was 3 inches by 1 inch.
ROBINSON SAID the razor had been discovered when the candy could not be broken in half. She said she had told her children to break their candy before eating it in case anyone had tampered with it.
She said her children had trick-or-treated only in their neighborhood and at a Lawrence skating rink.
A Lawrence Memorial Hospital official said there had been no cases related to trick-or-treating at the hospital.
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GPAs affect financial aid eligibility
KU students who have not met academic standards for certain financial aid programs this semester will be ineligible for aid in the spring, officials at the office of student financial aid said last week.
Jerry Rogers, director, said that under the federal regulations of Title IV aid programs, students must have demonstrated reasonable academic progress in order to participate in aid programs the next semester.
number of credit hours he has earned and his cumulative grade point average, he said.
The academic requirements for an undergraduate student are based on course credit.
HE SAID most students should be familiar enough with their records to know whether they met the minimum requirements for academic progress. Any student who has questions about the requirements should request a copy of his transcript and see a financial aid counselor, he said
Rogers said that last year several hundred students did not meet the standards.
The requirements also apply to the State of Kansas Scholarship program, Rogers said.
Title IV programs include National Direct Student Loan, Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grant, College Work-Study, Health Professions Student Loan, Basic Educational Opportunity Grant, Guaranteed Student Loan and Auxiliary Loans to Assist Students.
"We don't want people disappointed mid-year because we don't have a check for them," he said.
Rock music evil, minister says
3y BONAR MENNINGER
Brooks also attacked abortion, calling it "genocide," and said that more than 400 people died in one year in America than all the lives lost during Hitler's Germany.
His response to critics, he said, was,
"Don't argue with me, I didn't write the
bible."
By BONAR MENNINGER Staff Reporter
Condemning homosexuality, Brooks said, "God didn't create Adam and Steve."
A Christian minister preached to an audience in the Kansas University day about the decadence of American society and the evils of rock 'n' roll.
"The imagination of all men's hearts is only evil — continually," said Rice Brooks, a minister with the Maranatha Ministries, as he fired with emphatic force. Ten strident tones at abortionists, homosexuals, rock music and youth culture.
Using slides and recorded songs to drive home his point to an audience of approximately 30 people, Brooks said, is either for the Lord or against Him."
Maranatha Ministries is an international organization of campus ministries.
"backward masking," in which purported messages of the devs were
He quoted a Biblical proverb that referred to dogs choking on their own vomit, and noted that the lead singer of Alicia Keys had died in this way.
Brooks asked members of the audience whether they could hear the messages, including one that he said in his words, "start to smoke marijuana."
Brooks also played several songs backward to reveal a process called
Several members of the audience who left the presentation after an hour and a half commented on the message of the fundamentalist Christian
The minister showed album covers of bands such as Black Sabbath, AC/DC, and Earth, Wind and Fire, and explained that many satanic messages and symbols were visible, both on the album covers and in the music.
BROOKS SAID that according to Christian dogma, the devil was originally a musician in heaven before he battled against God. He said this explained why he was musically and its rebellious nature because it was directly controlled by the devil.
"The wages of sin is death," Brooks said.
Brooks played several songs by the Australian group AC/DC, including cuts from a record titled "Highway to Hell."
"I thought it was great," said Rob Swirbul, Overland Park senior.
HE SAID he had recently converted a gay to Christianity.
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1
University Daily Kansan, November 3, 1982
Page 11
KU golf teams learn, mature during season
By BILL HORNER Sports Writer
If success is measured by tall trophies and sparkling headlines, then the Kansas men's and women's golf teams' fall season was disappointing.
But if success is measured, instead, by growth and maturity, by lessons learned the hard way and by an increased desire to excel and to produce, then perhaps the moments of frustration and disappointment were well worth the agony of a season in which almost nothing went as planned.
The only thing that Kansas Coaches Ross Bass and Kent Weiser can do is fly a ball.
"We're not there yet," said Randall, the squash's head coach. "We've got a
Both of the men's and women's teams had some degree of success during the course of the season, but the potentially larger play that was expected was not achieved.
The men's team finished in third place at the Northern Iowa event, took eighth place at the All-College Classic in Oklahoma and finished 14th at the Tucker Invitational in Albuquerque, N.M.
lot of work to do. It's really hard to find out where the problem is, but we've got to work on being mentally sharper on the golf course."
Rob Wilkin and Boo Bevoor both had impressive individual showings during the season, Wilkin, Arkansas City senior, won medalist honors by six strokes at the men's season opener at the UNI Classic in Iowa.
Boozer, Lawrence senior, finished second individually in the KU Women's Invitational after leading the field for most of the tournament. But, as any coach knows, the key to winning is a team effort.
The women opened the season with a last place finish at the women's All-College Classic and finished in the lower half of the standings in tournaments in Iowa, Missouri and the team's host event in Lawrence.
As far as the men's team is concerned, Weiser, the team's assistant coach, said, "In the short run, we weren't really pleased. Our finishes were all right, but not really high, as high as they could have been.
"But in the long run, if you look what it did for the players and for the players' teams," he said.
"The guys saw how important every shot is and how vital every move you make is because of the times we missed," he said. "It doesn't matter respect, we got a lot out of the season."
Randall said, "You've got to remember that we're playing against much better competition now, and a fifth- or a seventh place finish in each tournment as well as many some of the four tournaments we used to play in."
versity of Kansas represented and noticed, I think that in that way it was a bigger success than in that meets the eye.
The women's team featured youth. Four new recruits came in and almost immediately established themselves on the队, Still, the inexperience of
"They are all making good swing changes, and they're going to work with the time we have now to work," he said. He said the four recruits, Solveig Thorsteindotttir, Lee Ann Loeffelhoehl, Brenda Sanders and Maureen Kelly, were talented but just needed a little help.
those women cost the team in competition. However, Randall said that with some work and dedication, the team could be as competitive as any team.
"When they get the changes completed, we're going to be a good team," he said.
Randall said that the golfers' attitudes made success possible and that hard work and true desire to succeed should measure up to his expectations.
The University Daily
KANSAN WANT ADS
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The Kanana will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Fund items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be
acced in person or simply by calling the Kansan business office at 864-358.
KANASAS BUSINESS OFFICE
118 Fifth Street
660-1928
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Bat Girls. The KU Baseball队 soon will be seein' 1983 Bat Girls. All intermed women should attend an organizational meeting at 4:30 on Wed., Nov. 3 in MHP. 217 Allen Fieldhouse.
Do you need cash? Bring your unwanted merchandise to the Lawrence Community Auction. Every Wednesday at 7 p.m. Commitments accepted Tuesday through Friday, p.m., 900 NW Hawkshire, Call 842-212 for info
Sartorius Facility multi-intensive engagering personnel and staff to support the development of Eminent Christian Ministries Center, 104 Oread Road, Washington, DC 20005.
FOR RENT
1 Bedroom house for rent £75 / fireplace, Walking distance from campground £70/mo. resident付款
B2 apt. available now *jet* floor, large, quiet, com-
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EXTRA nice apartments, large and small. Next to campus. Utilities paid, reasonably priced. 942-418-0
FIRST $1 MONTH RENT FREE. Variable length
Available on energy efficient 2 & 3 bedroom apartments in the San Fernando Valley. free planes, free covered parking and quiet SW location. 2 & 3 bedrooms from $80-$350. Call and ask about booking bills. Call 434-7474 between 8 a.m. - 6 p.m.
LEXURY LIVING NEARKEI W West Meadows Condo,
Lexurys PARK range, C/A,衣篱, dishwashers,
Park range, C/A,衣篱, dishwashers
LIVE IN THE WOOSM near Love Star, share home,
live 2 quiet foreign, graat or class 2, sound
conservatory, kids' room, private room
Live in the CHRISTIAN CAMPUS HOUSE this fall and spring. Be a part of a growing campus ministry. Call Alan Rosenak, campus minister 842-4592.
MADBROWOCK Furnished studio available on sublease now through May 31st. Free cable, electric kitchens fully carpeted Enjoy the quality of new furnishings at affordable prices. Call 892-460-1811 at Alcremite Ltd
Kasandi, if you’re tired of news & cramped apartment patients, you’ll find our duplexes 3'W, 8'D and 10'D, all with private pool & lots of privacy. We are openings now. Call 212-765-1111 for evening and weekends for more information.
Two and two bedroom apart, available immediately and
One room Apartment, One room Apartment,
Laundry Facilities, Seasoner lease available.
Room for rent plus utilities. Kitchen privileges. No pet. References. Non-smokers. 843-1601.
PRINCETON PLACE PATIO APARTMENTS. Now Available, 2 bedroom, 3 bath. perfect for roommates, features wood burning fireplace. 4 our garage with stainless steel appliances. 5 microwave, 6 kitchen, quiet surroundings. No pet please. $45 per month. Upon house 9:30-5:30 daily at $280 per month. or phone 842-8257 for additional information.
4th floor apartment. 1146 N. Milwaukee St.
gallery apartment. 1146 N. Milwaukee St.
gallery apartment. 1146 N. Milwaukee St.
Meadowbrook apartments 309 West 87th Street,
8W/month plan, call Thelma
Thelma Thelma
Sublease 2 br. apt at Park 25 | Dec in bct 18 |
Sublease 3 br. apt at Park 25 | Sublease from Jan,
to Mar | Call 610-349-1493 after 6 a.m.
Sublease n. 1 BHI apartment, completely furnished.
Water paid, laundry facilities. Close to campus
Bassineh 1 Bedroom apartment; $23,000/month, close
to Istanbul. Apartment number: KD-8462 or Ordered Apartments
Kapalli 8-6452
Three unfurnished sleeping rooms near downtown,
Share kitchen & kitchen 890. 890 plus month deposit
Tired of doing all the housework? Check out Skippy cooperative. Secure, clean and inexpensiv
with a free estimate.
Two HR Traitidge touchscreen for sub-
ineted immediately. Hire reduced: 641.8141 before 9
mons.
GREELY DECORATED spacious room. Pursued
bill application. New university and office-office.
New campus location. 250 sq ft.
FOR SALE
VERVE nice 2 BR Dapster, fully carpeted, new beds,
bathrooms, disposal, no pets. F27/mm².
phone 841-309-6524
10 yr. paid for, unpaid, 4-speed, PLI, am/an,
name time, good gift, up料 to sell, $12.50
Call 618-759-1316
(91) Ford Vaux S.W.B. b.c.y 1,2 speed 16-15 mm, ipg
(92) Ford Vaux S.W.B. b.c.y 1,2 speed 16-15 mm, ipg
jrm Chew Impel AT AC FM/AM radio 4-Dre Must see
phone 748-100-61
Jorge Pereira Café
1480 Fitzgerald St.
Washington, DC 20006
1232 Judge Café. Perfired condition. 900 points. 2-dr.
Carbonated water. 8 oz. (225 mL). ID # 4839594.
108g bdge Col. Perfect condition 900w, three, or
four 900w. Not recommended.
thickness than 4mm, wire length excellent
180 Chevette, blue 4-speed, wire wheels - excellent
gas mileage $3500 or offer. Miles: 841-6701
70 DAS Delta 80, power steering, power brakes,
power windows, good condition, low mileage
851-409-8497
AM/M Maternal, turntable, 8 track all in one unit with
7 jackplugs, NSSSEN 105mm.
Haken, to speed, aquarium, fan, air-conditioner Call 841-256-7900
Aceo AE-1 w/lens and autowinder, Vivitar zoom,
wide angle lens, tripod, i multiplier! $495.70 - 618.07
den turbante; Son of Ampolla amd AGI Pre Am
Nakamichi cassette, 842-2522
Everything to furnish and decorate your apartment at The Swap Shop. 608 Mass.
Holmes . Misstiisset bluesmaster guitar amp. 20W, 4-10" speakers, 820, 923-843
--found a pair of prescription glasses in a blue case in Hoch Audchort. Identify it host loos and rest.
Mouse Sale! KLIPSC3H La Seasal 104 db efficiency $100; Bumble Tommy bore/case, great shape $135; Ducking Tommy bore/case, great shape $295; Ceresoire $135; I PRELIER S11R4*14' Italian Racing Tires great shape $149; Call Gary at 864-1120.
JVC stereo component set, 4 years old, hardly used. Call 840-805 or 840-807 for offer. Call 840-805 between 6 p.m.
KWALYLI COMICS one-fourth of扛挂头袋
Browse Internet. We have Marvel Graphic
Books. We have Marvel Graphic
KWALTY COMICS GRAND OPENING
BEST-SELLER by Eminor is block
of Mags in the Brooklyn
Box.
Obsorne I Computer, includes editor, supervise,
bursary, CPM, games, and other software. $1500
PRE 1100 (190 lm) Snookie Skis. Brand new - best offer.
49-82.
$95.95 kong $109.00 Call after 6:00 - 841-1956
GTSUNS 7500, 12.9 million Looks and runs
kong 12.9 million Looks and runs
Tuskegee A30-300 MFM receive at 32-year, 8-foot
turbation. Tuskegee A30-300 MFM receive at 32-year,
8-foot
TENNIS RACKETS. Recently received selection newsheet Head Compa, Wilton Advantage, Kramer Pro Shaf, Dunlop Maxxip, Davis Classic, Prince Clamp. Will buy it if in good condition. 842-6731
Vintage Instruments: Gilman Humberson Guitar,
$400; Gilman ESS30 Guitar, $300; old black-front
Fender Deluxe Reverb Amp with JBL speaker,
additional Alderhack, A excellent condition.
852 4717
Wrought iron trough with leather cannibals 60z. Zenith
hardwood $25; hardwood $40; felt cardboard $15; living
wood $20; hardwood $40; felt cardboard $15; living wood $20;
Yamaha Champ. 6 months old. Only 1,600 miles.
*Excellent condition.* $600.00 now. asking 1450.
**NISSAN**
30,000 km on 2017 model. Only 1,800 miles.
Found lambicured coltage beige brittle mixed pupa. Apprex 6 months old. Found around 5 and a half inches deep.
LOST. 6 month old tabby baby with black skin
stripe. Last seen Friday wearing black foul coat;
11th & New Jersey. Please call 842-5997. She's
desperately missed
LOST A pair of glasses, rimless, plastic case. Lost behind Welcome on Bell 2. Call 855-321-6211
LOST Gold-diamond ring on Tues. 26, between
sentinel data and large value. Large reward. Calib 844-8580.
LASIT: Black and ten doberman. 9 mos., old, female.
LARRING: Lab log on coll. Answers to name: Kathy K.
LARRING: Lab log on coll. Answers to name: Kathy K.
We are looking for our pup. She is all black & not very big. Call Dave 841-4607.
Catholic Center at Kansas University seeks experienced professional to direct external support programs with initial emphasis on ongoing statewide and national leadership experience in funding or related profession. Salary based on experience. Send resume to Father Vivek Krishna, St. Lawrence Catholic Center, 701 W. 45th Street, Kansas City, MO 64103.
Green Decatur Macaw - Loved vicinity 79-418 & Arena.
Rental room at rooftops or lawns roofs. Rarely reward offered: 749-3133.
Heward - Low, deep orange male tatub cat. Sword
in tail. Adjacent. Warned name tarot 811-6811.
DO YOU RUN OUT OF MONEY BEFORE YOU RUN OUT OF MONTH? Turn the tables with extra cash. Send a text message to your distributor who will spend your opportunity. Send name and phone to Route 2, Box 19A-8.
HELP WANTED
Earn up to $1,000.00 per semester. Representative needed to sell gift items to Greek organizers; create marketing materials; send name, age, Greek affiliation (if any); student and address in SHLOUETTE, 1454 hardwood street.
FORTRAN APPLICATIONS PROGRAMMER:
Half-time research assistance available for program adaptation and development in remote sensing applications. ForTRAN and microcomputers, FORTRAN background required, microcomputer and remote sensing experience. Contact the Kansas Applied Remote Sensing Program, Room 290 Nichols Hall, 864-7475. Application http://www.fortran.org/Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer.
Female wanted by disabled man to do simple care
and wash clothes. Can sit on a chair,
board a desk, wear a wak, Payment free on board,
and have a phone.
Kewalia Comics' GRAND OPENING one-fourth of bagged back issues sale: Friday and Saturday Nov.
18 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., need someone to care for two little kids in my room. Hours are 4:00 p.m. to 1:00 a.m. three fridays.
U. CIVIL SERVICE, 89,768, $48,532, Job Security.
Excellent Benefit Honey Time, the U. Civil SERVICE,
Department of Defense Occupations. How many of these jobs do You qualify?
For? See for yourself! Now you can get the current
job category and occupation in Kansas and Nationwide. The Civil? Only $0.00 And
have you a lot to gain and nothing to lose but a 3.00 GBP?
You have a lot to gain and nothing to lose but a 3.00 GBP. We've ever made in your future. Send $0.00 to: Federal Job Announcements. Jerry R. Bose Service. 443
1261 W. 27th St. New York, NY 10019
Wanted. Dependente housekeeper for single parent &
19, old, weekday & 8, daycare, cleaning
& laundry.
Freshmen - Scholarships available, i17 not too late to enroll in Naval HOTC. Batch # 664-3161.
PERSONAL
KWALITY COMICS GRAND PRIEST Friday
& Saturday. Register for free preschool | $3 black wet of
the day | 5:30-7:30
A Special For Students, Hull - £79, $22.
A Special For Students, Hull - £79, $22.
BATGILTS The KU Bailbone Team will soon be selecting 188 batgilts. All interested women should see www.batgilts.com on Wed. 9.30 in Nov. 31 to 217 Alfie Fieldhouse.
EVERYTHING BUT ICE
Battons, campaign style, custom made for any occasion, one to 1,000. Buffon Art by Swells. 749-611.
COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES: early & advanced outpatient abortion; quality medical care; conditional eligibility assured. Kansas City Area. Call 817-549-3200 or visit www.kansascityarea.com. H.-Give a chance to show you just how much
HAMMERED
DRAWN
FREIGHT STORE
USED FURNITURE
D. H. - Give me a chance to show you just how much I love you. Take me back. K. L.
you take the car. K. L.
D. H. I love you, and always will. Forgive me. K. L.
RESEARCH PAPERS
TOLL-FREE HOTLINE
6th & Vermont St.
805-621-3745
IN ILINOIS CALL 312-922-0300
AUTHORS' RESEARCH, ROOM 800
401 S.Dearman, Chicago. IU 8005
Do you like Jake, CESK, ETT? It too, check on screen Speelberg Film Association, 416th E. 2dstr. Tusca AZ
Speelberg Film Association, 416th E. 2dstr. Tusca AZ
Does the DCM TIME WINDOW REALLY HAVE SECRET POINTS? Find out at KIEF's GRAMophone shop at 3.0, 9.0, 10.0, Thursday. Now, 4th ECKANAR, a way of life leading to greater spiritual awareness and freedom will hold an open door to many opportunities for "Fitness: A Holistic and Spiritual Approach" topics in herbal Herbs. The Magic Healer, Health Instructor at KIEF, has total Coaching knowledge. Governors Roan, KSU盟
Don's Automotive Center
TOWING
SPECIALIZING IN IMPORT AUTO SERVICE & REPAIR
501 Michigan M-F 8-6 p.m. 841.4833
- Bosch Electric & Ignition Parts
Elizabeta 1 miss you. Please call or write. I miss you very much - 143.
ENCORE COPY CORPS. 2112 W. 25th. Full color copies from slides or prints.
Footlights will now be open till 8:00 p.m. every Thursday, Footlights, 20th & 11th
For good quality, clean, affordable, next-to-nothing
768 New Hampshire in the Marketplace. Tues., Sat.
7-9am. $140-$199. 355-525-1200.
CALLERED'S
GAMMA PHIL GHBLS (朵 Diane FO, KU-KRASTE)
GAMMA PHIL GHBLS (朵 Diane FO, KU-KRASTE)
interfacing. Thanks from the BlueBottle gas
interfacing. Thanks from the BlueBottle gas
CALL FRED'S
BOOST YOUR BUSINESS WITH
LOGO'S, SIGNS + DESIGNS
841-0732
GILENJO invites you to a Palm Beach Conference Thursday morning. The event features the Guest speaker seminar: "Handcuffed Speakers" at 10 a.m. at Palm Beach Convention Center.
HARVEST HOLIDAY MART Shop for Christmas gifts, wreaths, quilt dolls, edits, & excellent oppor-tions from a new collection of holiday items! Start shopping now online! PN: No. 7- p.p. 9:30 a.m. Tuesday through Saturday. Carside & Store: Center & Store: Call 842-1800 or 842-1800.
Greg: I love you more! Angie.
CALL FRED'S
PORTRAT ILLUSTRATIONS
PLUS, PERFECT X MASGIFT
X41-0732
HEADACH, BACKACH, STFFP NECK, LENK PAINT Find and correct the Cause of the problem! Call Mr. Johnson for modern chirurgical care. Accepting Ailing Crusts and Lone Star insurance
Have land in rear? Find out at 7:00 p.m. at Kirk Grumman Shops Shop and Waterfaxes of Kirk Grumman Shops Shop
KWALITI COMICS* - The offensive tackled baggage he wielded in a fight with a police officer. We also have Spanish Campeones.* 167 West 7th in the city.
Instant passport, portfolio, rename, naturalization,
institute H. and of course fine portraits.
Studio Video 80
LAST CHANCE TO SKI CREATED BUTT WITH SUA. Sign up deadline NO. 5, 10 m.p. $79. Also allow trip to Steamboat Springs and Patrol Caye, Mexico to see Santa Barbara and Cancun, Mexico too. Call SAU Office #86452.
--men, Women, Children
For appointment or Information Cal
1 Free Trial Session
50% Off New Memberships
For Appt, 841-6232 Holiday Plaza 25th & lower
NOW INVIEWING ON CAMPUS • Juniors and seniors maturing in math, physics, chemistry, or engineering position now in the pre-engineering management position now in the pre-engineering management 1000 time graduation. We offer post-graduate training in the pre-engineering package. We require U.S. citizenship, strong aptitude and physics. For details see Abie Engineering Program Placement Office November 3, 4 and 5. PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTHHUGHT!
041-7117
AIRLINE TICKETS
Buy At AIRLINE COUNTER Prices Without The Hassel.
LOWEST FARES BEST CONNECTIONS
Computerized Reservations
Domestic or Around the World
841-7117
TRAVEL CENTER
Southern Hills Center
1601 West 23rd
M-F 9:5-30; Sat. 9:30-2
PSYCHE AWARENESS FAIR Consultations available from 8:00 a.m. B.C. area parks. Free lectures on *Mindfulness* and *Cognitive Resilience*. Sat, Nov 6, 12 noon "Dream," 2 p.m. "Palm Reading" - Southern Hills shopping Center, 3rd & 4th floor.
Pente is now 20% at foultails when you mention this ad. PENTE AND FOOTLIGHTS.
IBM
NEW Standard IBM Correcting Selective III typewriters. $850.25. Volume discounts available. Please, call IBM at
1-295-1372
Portraits drawn from photos. gift Matsings giving. Photographs previously printed. Cecil David at 481-6500 after 6:00. Keep it on your wall. Say it on a shirt, copy silk-screen printing. T-shirts, jeans and capes. Swirl by Sewllens 749-1831.
TV and Siereo Repair on most major brands.
842-4473 1104 West 23rd
Home Electronics
Gigi Gigi
Schulner Wine & Keg Shop. The finest selection of wines in Lawrence - largest supplier of strong kegs. 50% off on orders over $200.
Skillet's liqueur store serving UDaily since 1949. Compare and compare. Skillet's Wilted Skillet. 100g. Mass.
U. S. Pat. No. 4,133,533
- You can paddle or kick back and forth, even invent your own name.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,133,533
* A new solution to boredom.
* Great inexpensive Christmas gift.
* Safe for all ages.
For information call:
Debbie at 841-5410
after 5, until 10 pm.
*Borrow*
*Telephones*
*Television Recorders*
*Name
of person*
*What is the phone number in tha*
*in the card*
*What gift best your need, then call T*
*helpline*
*What job are you looking for?
TRANSLATOR IS COMING! Great rock and roll
Wednesday, November 31
Lewisance Opera House
The Kegger-Wekly Specials on Kega! Call 841-9450/
/1610% W. 3rd
DEAR FRIEND... WE CAN INTRODUCE, YOU TO SPECIE
PERSONS FOR FRIENDSHIP OR MARRIAGE
NE Valentine Club KS MO
FREE DETAILS -
VALENTINE
BOX 28394
K.C. MO41118
Videoclasses of Academic Skill Enhancement Series;
Textbook Reading and Preparing for Exams; Fri.
Mornings; Writing Assistants; Assistance
Assistance Center; 844-644-123. Strong Hall for an
appointment. FREE!
Want to buy science fiction and fantasy paperbacks?
Call 843-7298 between 9-5.
West Coast Saloon
Manager's Special
every Wednesday
This week
Pitchers & Draws
2 for 1
7pm - 9:30 pm
2222 Iowa 841-BREW
841-BREW
Wednesday • Live music from 8-7 HAPPY HOUR 2 for 1, 5-7 Up & Under above Johnson's Tavern
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Make sure to see them in person or come somewhere to see them. 1) As study guide. 2) For class preparation.
For exam preparation. "New Analysis of Western Civilization" from Town Citer, The Bookmark, and Oread Bookshelf
The Ultimate Skin Care Therapy
Derma Care
---
- Deep Port Organizing *
* Deep Port Emptying *
* Deep Port Filing *
* Dry Oily Blemished Skin *
* Men, Women, Children *
Genne's 842-8500
**Women's Self-Exam College sponsored by River City Women's Health Collective. General information on Women's Health Collective. GSP-Corp, Cross-Bar Library Nov. 4; 7:00 p.m. and Southeast School Hall Nov. 13; 1:30 p.m. For more information, call (828) 956-6480. What makes the birthday boy happen on his birthday? Send him a strip-a-gram and see. 842-9890.
WEDNESDAY NIGHT IS
LADIES NIGHT!
25¢
DRAWS
ALL NIGHT LONG!
BOTTOMS UP!
a new way of driving convenience
715 MASS.
World Class Hifi will can cost no more than a department store store system. Find out at Kirk Gram School, 215 E. 9th St., Minneapolis, MN 56304. KWALYT COMICS GRAND OPENING One-friday, 9th & 10th, westwest of Main on 11th Street. KWALYT COMICS GRAND OPENING Friday and Saturday. Hopper for free prizes. Black west of Main on 11th Street.
She's gorgeous, witty, and vibrant.
Give Jan "Moose" your vote for Homecoming Queen!!
SERVICES OFFERED
LIVE from LOUIS' WEST it's it's PHILBO'S Back by popular demand tonight. They'll rock and roll beginning 9 p.m. 187. West 7th behind 6th Street. McDonald's.
SKI etc., present all skips every weekend. Skier
etc., present all group rate and bus charter
calls. Call 811-246-7000.
Afterimages, baking and dressmaking. Experienced
smessin. No job too small or large; 382-564.
Alternator, starter and generator specials. Fiat-
AUTOMOTIVE
ELECTRIC 843-509, 900 W. 6th
CS TUTOR, CS 200, 300, 410 and other U.G. courses.
$10 an hour: CALL BN A81 74244
Email mail!」 Lawrence Driving School, receive
the information that you have passed the
drive new, pay later, transportation provided.
FRENCH TUTOR. If you need a tutor, I need a student. Pam 845-637-911
MATH TUTOR, Bob Meara, patient professional M.A., 64 for M.T. group, discount 809-3291
STATISTICS. Expert Tutor. Math
formula for statistics & peych. math.
statistics. Call Jobb. 824-6000
Students call April to have all your needs定点 fast and very reasonable. Day 83-0110 Evenings
Your portrait to someone with everything - refined, harmonious. Holiday special now $30. 30 Christmas cards.
TUTOR with good teaching experience in MATRIX
(tutor at UNIVERSITY OF MALTA, Engr., Ernst (NATUR)
(Spalken), Speaker)
ENCORE COPY CORPS. We offer professional training. Moist job 2 day maximum. 843-2001.
TYPING
APPROACHED QUALITY for all your typing needs.
Call Judy. 8749-245 at 6 p.m.
Absolutely LETTER PERPECT typing - editing
experienced Joan, Linda, Sandy,
463-6189 mailto:linda@us.edu
TYFING PLUS: Thess. dimentaration, papers, letter writing, grammar spelling.
TYFING PLUS: the grammar spelling, e.g. English tatling, grammar spelling, e.g. English tatling.
ENCORE COPY CORPS, 2112 W. 25th. We can make sure your margins are right just with one set of lines.
ATTENTION TOPPER COMMUNITIES. 10 years experience in memory technology. Student residence Call Paula Memory Systems.
Experienced typist will type, distortations, theses,
term papers etc. Call 843-509.
Excellent typing done quickly. Will help you with the
tables or graphs in your lab report. Books on
brasers or tools. C% to % 10/196 maximum. Call
C% 10/196 maximum.
Experienced typists. Term papers, thesis, all
theses and dissertations. Send proofs for the
papers and will correct spelling. Phone 634-8534
www.paperpro.com
Experienced typist + these dissertations, term papers, mice, mhc IB correcting表格, Barb, after B. W.
Experienced typist will type letters, theses, and dissertations. IBM Correcting Selective Call Dona menu.
Experimented cystipil will type term paper theories, theses and dissertations. To do this, you should H call C: Hellip 843-745-4743 or 843-745-4742 a.m. in 10:00am, Monday to Friday.
Experienced typist for all your typing needs. Call 814-6423. Overnight保管 under 25
Experienced typing for all your typing needs. Call Mary, 841-8737. Oversight guarantees under 25
FOR PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myra 841/4900.
For a good call diebble 749-4736.
FAST, ACCURATE, AFFORDABLE TYPING, ALL
experience. Fax 843-9651 a. p. g.
and wedding.
Have Selective, will type. Professional, fast, after-
affordable. Fast, Affordable, Clean Typing 853-8200.
Professional Typing: Dissertationases, briefs, term
papers, resumes, letter, legal etc. IH Correcting
Techniques.
Shakespeare could write. Elvis could wiggle; my talent, typing. Call 847-048-004 and 5 weekends.
TOP TYPING 1200 Iowa. Experienced Typists IB, IBM Correcting, Selective II, Royal
**Reports**, dissertation, resumes, legal forms graphics, edits, self-corrected **Call**. Cite
PING-3105 lowway. Experienced Fypatma-
HI Current Carrier Hijes. II, Royal Corre-
ving SCEDEN 8000 CD, M44
MAGIC FINGERS TYPING SERVICE, 843-6129.
WANTED
Female roommate 2 bd/mem apartment sent furnished item $10 plus tax. Close to campus.
*roommate home entertainment to share three bedroom
roommates.* *preferred $160/month plus one third billing.* *preferred $160/month plus one third billing.* Call
Ferrure roommate to share one bedroom, apt. $150 plus electricity, 843-3676
Housemates wanted; one immediately and one for
January. Small house close campus. Call Phil.
MALE HOOMATEM need to share furnished apartment on bus route. $140/month plus one room. Rentals are 15% off the price.
Roommate Needed for a BR house on bus route,
near downtown, all util. paid, cable TV, and
TV.
phone in room. New kitchen, w/7 WD-1341-209
Take my place in newly recreated 4BR
townhouse. Share with 3 girls. No deposit req.
$140; MAIL $843-9248
Wanted - Female to share home shared new 4-bedroom with her husband. Must have a Bachelor's degree from campus and from deweyowns. Kim at Lansing, NY. Contact info: wc@deweyowns.edu
81. mL/L or 3.50% PPM in cold water of gold powder (1.25% PPM) for 40 min to form the yellow film on the surface of the gold powder. The film is then transferred onto a polyester fabric. Dollars, Sundays, 11.18. Fiber optic cable. Silicone rubber
Chandafil Display.
1cm x 1cm - 34.50
Week 1 Week 2 Week 3 Week 4 Week 5 Week 6 Week 7 Week 8 Week 9 Week 10
1. 10.55 8.65 8.65 8.75 8.65 8.65 8.15
2. 65 65 65 64 64 64 64
3. All scheduled 10 hours Thursday 7-9pm
4.
1
Page 12 University Daily Kansan, November 3, 1982
2
2
Iowa State running back Tommy Davis will lead the Cyclones against the Kansas Jayhawks at 1:30 p.m. Saturday at Memorial Stadium. Davis, the Big Eight's third-leading rusher, has gained 620 yards on 149 carries. The Cyclones, 4-3-1, also are ranked No. 6 in the country in total defense.
Cyclones counting on defense
This week's foe
By TOM COOK Associate Sports Editor
Rv TOM COOK
Iowa State running back Tommy Davis has found that showering can be more difficult than playing football.
The 5-foot-8-inch, 179-pound sophomore from East St. Louis, III, fell while leaving the shower after the Kansas State game and suffered a foot injury. But the injury is not bad in the Cycle backfield Saturday against Kansas
Kansas has won the last three games, including a 24-11 victory last year, while Iowa State won three straight from 1976 to 1978.
"We'll just have to keep him from bathing," said Iowa State coach Donnie Dombrowski.
The Cyclones are cruising along at 4-3-1 this season because of a strong defense. The Jayhawks, meanwhile, have been unable to wolf off opponents haven't helped matters.
THE CYCLONES are the top-ranked defensive team in the Big Eight and the sixth best in the country. They have
Davis, the Big Eight's 3.0usher
davis, 62 yards on 149 carries, will be ready to help the Cyclones try to break
the rear losing streak against the Jayhawk.
game, 10.0 points and 10.5 passing
Iowa State also ranks 11th in the
NCAA in scoring defense, allowing just
12.5 points a game.
given up an average of 234.9 yards a
game. 100.3 yards and 106.8 yards
Osborne, a 5-foot-10-inch, 186-pound senior, leads the Big Eight with four interceptions, and he has broken up 10 passes. McDonough, a 6-foot-4-inch, 276-pound senior, is the conference's top tackler for interior linemen with 78 stops. He also has blocked five passes and intercepted one.
The Cyclones have eight returning starters on defense, anchored by free safety McOsborne and left tackle Shamus McDonough, both second team starter and fifth returning starter, Rodney Hutchison is out for the season with a knee injury.
The Cyclones' kicking game appears to have improved from last year. Punter Kyle Goodburn had an average of 39.9 yards a kick before retiring to the sidelines with a broken leg in the Missouri game. But Doug Myers has
"Iowa State is a good football team," said KU coach Don Fambrough. "The strength of their team is in their ability to hit it tough on you to move the football."
CHRIS WASHINGTON, a 6-foot-3-inch, 121-pound senior middle linebacker, leads Iowa State with 101 tackles.
stepped in to average 47.3 yards a kick in the last two games.
A'ex Giffords, an all-conference place kicker in 1980, has enjoyed a successful senior campaign. Giffords leads Iowa State in scoring with 53 points on 20-of-20 PATs and 11-of-15 field goals.
Giffords has connected on 39 of 19 field goals in his career and needs just one more to tie the Rig Eight record. He kicked foricks for Iowa State from 1972 to 1974.
The Cyclones, while relying on a single defense, have diversified their rosters.
"Besides having a good defense, they're doing more offensively, too," said Fambrough. "Last year, if you stopped (bullback Dwayne) Crutchfield, them. Now they're running the shotgun, split backs and an in-formation."
Davis has been Iowa State's most productive weapon. Harold Brown, a 6-foot-2-inch, 210-pound senior, has shared time with Davis at the tailback position and has gained 464 yards on 15 carries. He has gained 242 yards against Kent State.
IOWA STATE ranks fourth in the Big Eight in every offensive category, including 213.6 yards per game rushing; 148 passing; 363 total offense and 21.6 rushing yards.
206-pound senior, starts at fullback but has rushed for just 63 yards on 23 carries. Meanwhile, Jason Jacobs, a 6-foot-2-inch, 225-pound junior, has carried the ball 70 times for 361 yards in a substitute role.
Quarterback Dave Archer, a 6-foot-1-inch, 196-pound junior, ranks fifth in the league in passing and total offense with 88 completions in 168 attempts for 1,112 yards, five touchdowns and 10 interceptions.
Jerry Lorenzen, a 6-foot-2-inch.
Frankie Leaks, a 5-foot-11-inch,
165-pound senior flanker, has caught
passes for 367 yards and two touch-
to lead the Cyclones' receiving
CODES.
Split end Michael Wade, a 5-foot-10-inch, 186-pound junior, has caught 10 passes for 176 yards and one touchdown. He punt returns with a 10.6 yard average.
On the offensive line, four starters returned, led by right tackle Karl Nelson, the 6-foot-6-inch, 271-pound senior who earned All-Bie Eight honors in 1981.
"Iowa State is a much better football team than a year ago because they're healthy." Fambrough said. "They've been in the league, and they raved rather than on the infield list."
"I'm discounting Kansas' record," Duncan said. "My assessment is essentially the same as the writers' before the season — this is the same team that won eight games a year ago."
Panthers regain top spot in rankings
By United Press International
NEW YORK—Pittsburgh is back on too and with a flourish.
Following a 63-14 romp over Louisville and Washington's loss to Stanford, the Panthers returned to the top of the college football ratings yesterday in voting by the United Press International board of coaches.
Pittsburgh held the top spot for the
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that three weeks of the season before giving way to Washington. The unbeatens Panthers lost the top spot because of a blown-out ticket, produced several unimpressive victories.
Pittsburgh coach "Foge" Fazio said he was more concerned with his players' health than being No. 1. The Panthers host Notre Dame on Saturday.
bama, UCLA, Washington and Louisiana State.
Rounding out the top 10, in order, were Georgia, Southern Methodist, Arkansas, Nebraska, Penn State, Ala-
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Saturday, November 6, 1982
8 p.m. to midnight
Kansas Union Ballroom
Dance to the music of Tex Beneke and his 15-piece orchestra as they offer the Big Band sound made popular by Glenn Miller and other famous band leaders during the Fabulous Forties.
Beneke and his orchestra bring back memories for those who grew misty-eyed as they heard "Moonlight Serenade," "String of Pearls," or "in the Mood"—and introduce music of the Forties to those too young to remember.
Other Homecoming Highlights
Friday, November 5
Friday, November 3
Homecoming Parade. 2:30 p.m. Floats, bands, drill and flag units, 1940s cars and other reminders of The Fabulous Forties. Chi Omega Fountain, west on jayhawk Boulevard to Mississippi Street and Memorial Stadium. Float display from 7 to 9 p.m. at X zone parking lot near stadium. Free.
Saturday, November 6
All-University Homecoming Luncheon and Ellsworth Medallion presentation. 11 a.m. Union Ballroom.
Football: KU vs. Iowa State..1:30 p.m.Memorial Stadium.
Music by the Crimson and Blues Brothers jazz band, alumni musicians from popular local groups of '40s, after game, Main Lobby, Kansas Union, Free.
Ticket Information:
Luncheon, $6.50. Call KU Alumni Association, (913) 864-4760.
Football, $6 general admission; $11 reserved. Call KU Athletic Ticket Office, (913) 864-3141.
Tex Beneke Dance, $10 public; $8.50 students with KU-ID. Call KU Student Union Activities, (913)
864-3477, or KU Alumni Association.
KU Homecoming Weekend is sponsored by the KU Alumni Association, Student Union Activities and the KU Homecoming Committee.
Public Welcome
1
The University Daily
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
KANSAN
Thursday, November 4, 1982 Vol.93,No.54 USPS 650-640
OR
FROR
OVEN
Deve HornBack/KANEAM
Sam and Allison Hardge and their son Adam, 7, faced a group of conceded defeat in Wichita. Hardge supporters as the Republican gubernatorial candidate
Hardage aides reflect on defeat
By BRUCE SCHREINER Staff Reporter
WICHTHA-Aides of Republican Sam Hardage returned to an empty headquarters yesterday to pick up both the debris scattered throughout the building, and pieces of a campaign that once predicted victory.
Republican hopes for an upset over Democrat Gov. John Carlin on Tuesday faded into the dark November night when Carlin notched a victory in Sedgwick County and northwest Kansas.
Carlin dominated the four most populous
counties in the state, which offset any Hardge advantages in conservative western Kansas.
THE 42-YEAR-OLD SMOLAN dairy farmer Wendy Sedgwick and Johnson counties by a solid 55 to 24 percent margin, Shawnee County by a 57 to 21 percent margin, County by a resounding 73 to 23 percent margin.
During their clean-up work at the morgue-like headquarters in the heart of the state's largest city, a room which 12 hours earlier had rocked with noise as 300 supporters anxiously awaited the first returns, the aides had a chance to reflect on the campaign.
Both Hardage and his running mate, State Sen. Dan Thiessen, refused to speak with reporters
AN OBVIOUSLY DEJECTED Dave Matthews, Hardage's campaign manager, refused to single out any one reason that led to Hardage's downfall in the polls.
But Matthews, who said he needed more time to determine exactly why voters abandoned Hardage, did list a few issues he said contributed to Carlin's connection to another four-year term.
about Carlin's easy victory, and aides yesterday still were trapped to piece together all the reasons.
"Carlin managed to make people think the severance tax was a cure-all and a free lunch," he said in his office, which a few hours earlier served as a refuge for Heritage to escape the
re refuge for harriage to escape the
See HARDAGE page 5
Senators deny mandate for Carlin, severance tax
BY JULIE HEABERLIN
Staff Reporter
Several oil lobbyists and Republican senators yesterday denied that Gov. John Carlin's re-election to a second term Tuesday was the result from fear for a severance tax on the oil and gas industry.
Carlin told reporters after his win against Wichita businessman Sam Hardage that he was confident the Senate would reconsider its two-year rejection of his tax proposal.
Throughout Carlin's campaign, which Hardayden denounced as misleading and single-minded, the governor said that senators were anxious to "clarify" for constituents their position on the severance tax in upcoming sessions. The Senate is up for re-election next year.
BUT JOSEPH HARDER, R-Moundridge, who has voted consistently against severance tax proposals, said the governor's victory hinged on more than a pro-severance tax sentiment.
"I still oppose a severance tax, and I don't see this election as a clear mandate," Harder said. "The state is in dire fiscal condition and we might have to consider several alternatives.
"I would vote for a severance tax only if it was part of a tax package. We already have a severance tax, and most people don't know that. To add a tax on top of a tax is grossly unfair."
"I really think it was an exercise in futility." Schnake said. "The only thing that has really changed is that Wendel Lady will no longer be speaker of the house, and that a plus for us."
The oil industry in Kansas already pays an ad valorem severance tax.
But two anti-severance tax senators said Hardage's sound defeat could stimulate some legislators to re-analyze their constituents' wishes.
DONALD SCHNACK, lobbyist for Kansas Independent Oil and Gas Association, agreed, and said the balance maintained in the House elections disproved Carlin's theory.
"First I want to say 'boo' to Carlin's victory," said Ben Vidrickson, R-Salina. "I don't necessarily see it as a mundate but I do think it will work." He would stick again to find out what my constituents want."
VIDRICKSON SAID he philosophically opposed the severance tax because it transferred revenue from western Kausas into low industry
areas in eastern Kansas, such as Johnson County.
In the west part of the state, Salina County and Ellsworth County together receive about $900,000 in ad valorem revenue from the oil industry to finance education, Vidrickson said. He said constituents feared that this tax base, which is used instead of state aid to finance schools, would deteriorate if an additional tax on the oil industry stimulated lower production
"THIS IS REALLY a political thing," Vidrickson said. "Johnson County is the 15th richest county (for personal income in the United States, but its property tax base is high because there is no industry. That's why they are hot on the severance tax."
Vidrickson said he also opposed Carlin's severance tax because it exempted royalty owners, who receive one-eighth of the revenue from the oil on their land.
He said that revenues from the severance tax, if it passed the Legislature, would not flow in for several years because the oil industry would lose its revenue against the state for unfair additional taxation.
"If Carlin got everybody up in arms about the severance税, I would have to bite my lip and vote for it," Vidrickson said. "But it would bother me now. I don't believe it is in the best case."
Senate Majority Leader Robert Talkington, R-Iola, also said Carlin's victory might cause senators to be more flexible about taxing the oil industry.
"ITS UNCONSICIONABLE and unforgivable for the chief executive of the state to mislead the voters and attack the oil industry as bad guys when they provide between 25,000 and 30,000 jobs
SEN. AUGUST BOGINA, R-Lenexa, expressed his surprise that Carlin had defeated Hardage in Sedgwick County, the Republican candidate's base home.
"Even Carolin said that the severance tax was the only issue in the campaign." Talkington said. "but I don't think the Legislature can ignore the majority of voters are supporting a severance tax."
"I don't know what that happened," Bogina said. "It was why my understanding from legislators that Sedgwick was anti-severance tax. But I think he had plenty of money, I think was the severance tax speaking."
AUTUMNY
Weather
Tenight will be clear and cold with a low of 15 to 29.
Tomorrow will be sunny and not as cool with a high of 45 to 50.
Today will be sunny and continued cool, with a high in the low 45s, according to the National Weather Service. Winds will be from the southwest at 5 to 15 mph.
Senate OKs $17,000 budget; women's shelter to get funds
By DON KNOX Staff Reporter
The Student Senate overwhelmingly passed a supplementary finance budget last night that will ultimately give more than $17,000 to about 20 student groups at the University of Kansas.
But the approval came after more than 10 supporters from a Lawrence shelter home for battered women argued against a Senate committee's recommendation that they not be financed.
The Senate then voted 20-16 to restore $3,010 in financing to the group, Women's Transitional Care Services Inc.
BUT THE BUDGET restoration came after a half-hour debate by several senators, including Loren Busby, co-chairman of the Student Senate Committee on Finance and Auditing, the committee that recommended the group's finance request be dropped.
Busby said after the meeting that he was disappointed by the Senate's action.
THE APPROVAL OF funds for WTCS tailed the total supplementary budget to $17,272, after the Finance Committee had recommended a total budget of $14,262. Busby and finance co-chairman Jill Eddy said they had hoped the budget would be kept under $16,000.
"I am upset that the Finance and Auditing Committee exercised fiscal responsibility in the budget hearings and then the Student Senate did not budget considerations into concern." Bussy said.
Robert Walker, Liberal Arts and Science senator, said last night that WTCS provided a valuable service, but he argued that the group's scope of activities was limited.
"It's too bad that these type of groups even need to fund." Walker said. "But I can't see us funding this group the total amount. It's not fair to the other organizations we have cut."
But Kris Falle, a volunteer for WTCS, said
SEVENTH NAME
Reagan satisfied despite GOP losses
By United Press International
WASHINGTON—Despite House Republican losses, President Reagan told reporters yesterday that he was "very pleased" with the results in which the GOP retained control of the Senate and the Democrats picked up 26 seats in the House.
"We feel very good about what has happened," he said.
According to a UPI count yesterday, Democrats had won 267 seats in the 435-member House. 26 more than they now hold. Republicans held 166 seats with all races called. The election in two Georgia districts was delayed because of reapportionment problems.
THE ADMINISTRATION official said the Republicans will have a pool of 248 Republicans and conservative Democrats to pull together as a team "from time to time" to pass Reagan programs.
But Thomas "Tip" O'Neill, Democratic Speaker of the House and the outcome was "a victory," said he would not aid for the TPP.
Senate Republican leader Howard Baker was worried about the added Democratic strength in his backbenchers.
"We will not compromise on principle — on what we absolutely believe is essential to the process."
Reagan said he looked forward "to working with this Congress now in a bipartisan fashion to solve the major problems that still have to be solved."
"The one thing we mustn't permit to happen is for the two parties to be in conflict to the point that the Congress will be immobilized," Baker told CRS News.
REAGAN SAID the economy will be the
The Novosti news agency added that the election results were a "serious warning to the Reagan administration" to stop cutting social programs and to revise its military strategy.
WASHINGTON'S COMMITMENT to military spending has "made it see a military threat where none exists," Novosti said. "This has led Washington to invaded Washington's relations with Moscow."
The official Tass news agency said the results were "a public vote of no-confidence in Reaganism, the anti-people foreign policy of the Reagan administration, the policy of economic crisis, of slashing social welfare and of an increase in extravagant military appropriations."
Tass concentrated on the economic aspects of the Republican setback.
The White House, "following persistently its cannons- instead-of-batter policy, has slashed again social welfare spending which was the result of subsistence for many Americans," Tass said.
The Dow Jones industrial average soared a record 43.41 points and closed at an all-time high of 1,065.49 yesterday in a huge post-election stock crash that ended in a trade war era. Trading was the fifth heaviest in history.
One trader yelled: "Reaconomics works!"
ANALYSTS SAID the breathtaking surge indicated Wall Street felt President Reagan's economic programs would not be crushed by the
dominant domestic issue and his policy will be
"to continue doing the things that will reduce
The Soviet Union said yesterday that Americans dissatisfied with President Reagan's economic and foreign policies gave Republics an "awake" in congressional and gubernatorial elections.
THERE WERE MORE state referendums decided Tuesday than in any election since 1932.
Geese heading south for the winter
California voters overwhelmingly rejected the gun control initiative, with 4,688,272 voting
election results in which Republicans retained control of the Senate and lost ground in the House.
In Maine, voters decided against closing the state's only nuclear power plant.
decided Tuesday than in any election since 1932. California voters defeated a handgun registration referendum and the vote signaled a nationwide repudiation of gun control efforts.
Several analysts and Standard & Poor's Outlook publication pointed out that since the 1980s the market had scored impressive gains in the manpower mid-term elections regardless of the outcome
The bond market also staged a dramatic rally because of investor belief the mid-term election returns will prod the Federal Reserve Board to cut its discount rate soon.
District of Columbia residents approved an amendment that could pave the way toward a new state law.
In Oklahoma, Love County voters approved operation of a pari-mutual race track. The vote marked the first effort to legalize horse race betting at the county level.
And in Berkeley, Calif., voters banned electroshock psychiatric treatment in their schools.
Davtime temperatures below normal
By BONAR MENNINGER
Staff Reporter
Black crystal nights with temperatures plummeting into the upper teens are expected through the weekend as the last leaves of autumn fall, and the first snow geese from Canada ride cold air waves down over the state.
Gary Aless, meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Topkapi, said temperatures were running 20 degrees below the normal daytime average for this time of year of 61
Meteorologists said daytime temperatures will hover in the mid-40s through the weekend.
He said the snow storm was a fluke and no accumulation was recorded.
"IF EVEN SNOWED in Concordia for about 15 minutes today," Alaset said yesterday.
accumulation was recorded.
A high pressure system centered over
The past several days of cold weather have carried the first wave of migrating gees across the state, according to Marvin Kraft of the Kansas Fish and Game Commission.
Stoddard said no precipitation was expected for the next several days, however a storm was located off the coast of Oregon and Washington yesterday morning, heading east. He said the system could bring rain or snow flurries to the area by Monday or Tuesday.
Colorado and Wyoming was responsible for pulling the cold, aircid air down over Kansas, according to Greg Stoddard, staff meteorologist with the KU Weather Service.
A flock of white snow geese was spotted Tuesday night, making their way over the University heading for winter grounds to the south.
"I THINK WE have seen the end of the really nice weather, for a while at least." Stoddard
"Snow geese are generally the first to come down. Their nesting areas are up along the Artic Circle in the James Bay area." Kraft said.
KRAFT IS THE waterflow project leader for the Fish and Game Commission in Pratt. He said that the birds follow the major river systems as they come across the Midwest.
Kraft estimated at least 300,000 snow geees would fly over Kansas in the next two months.
He said the state is located under the Central highway, which is a main migration route for wary residents.
ACROSS THE REST of the country yesterday,
3 to 6 inches of driving snow blinded motorists in Minnesota's Iron Range and intense thunderstorms and damage in the Rio Grande valley of Texas.
Thunderstorms were scattered yesterday from the southern tip of Texas into eastern Tennessee and Kentucky ahead of a sharp cold front moving toward the east coast.
IQRID ACCOUNTING
Clouds roll gently across the sky above the KU campus on a recent fall day.
Page 2 University Daily Kansan, November 4, 1982
News Briefs From United Press International
Leftist Turks take hostages in consulate, give up later
Fifty-nine hostages had been released in groups earlier. The Married gunman of the "Bunditania"LIFEGUN
COLOGNE, West Germany-Masked Turkish leftists seized the Turkish consulate and 72 hostages yesterday but surrendered it hours later when police promised to review their bid for political asylum. The hostages were unarmed.
With hands in the air, the nine extremists and their last 13 hostages walked out of the building at 1:50 a.m. local time.
we are immediately driven to downtown police headquarters for questioning. The "Revolutionary Left" is opposed to the right-wing military alliance.
The gunmen, who fired 50 gunshots, swarmed into the building at 3:50 a.m. CST.
Government officials said they rejected all demands the terrorists made during the ordeal.
Police sources said the terrorists had demanded safe passage out of the country. They also demanded that a statement attacking the Ankara government be read on West German television and published in newspapers.
Salvadoran rebels assault key city
SAN SALVADOR, EI Salvador—Brebels firing rockets and automatic weapons fought their way through the streets of a key northern city yesterday, leaving 78 soldiers dead, wounded or missing in action, military officials said.
They said that by afternoon rebelds had retreated to the outskirts of Sushiitto, and were poised for a possible new attack on the city.
Suchitoto, located 30 miles north of San Salvador, was the largest city yet attacked by rebels in their fall offensive, now in its fourth week.
Meanwhile, U.S. Ambassador Deane R. Hinton released a statement yesterday saying he welcomed a harsh attack against him by the Salvadoran Chamber of Commerce and Industry for remarks he made last Friday. Hinton had said the prosecution of those who killed six Americans in El Salvador in the past two years was necessary for continued U.S. assistance to El Salvador.
Iran claims recapture of borderland
Iran said yesterday it shot down five Iraqi planes, killed or wounded 900 people and reconquered pockets of borderland in the second full day of a new offensive in the 26-month-old Persian Gulf war.
Iran said its troops, on an offensive launched late Monday night, had reconquered 115 square miles of territory occupied by Iraq late in the early days of the war in 1980.
Iran's claims, issued after Iraqi said its planes and helicopters had been successfully striking Iranian troop concentrations since dawn, were not confirmed by independent sources. The Iraqi news agency later set the Iranian death toll at 1,345, and accused Iran of bombarding the southern Iraqi town of Basra, wounding civilians and damaging buildings.
As has so often been the case in the conflict, the two sides disagreed on the progress, aims and even the location of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini's third offensive since July.
Italians hope for end to sanctions
WASHINGTON-Italian Prime Minister Giovanni Spadolini, after meeting with President Reagan, expressed hope yesterday that the U.S. sanctions against the Soviet pipeline to Europe would be lifted "within a few days."
"On the Italian side, we very much hope that within a few days the sanctions will be lifted," he told a press conference.
But a senior White House official said "nothing new" was discussed about lifting the sanctions, although "a number of new ideas are being introduced all the time."
After a visit of almost two hours with Reagan, Spadolini said, "The United States has made a further step forward toward the solution of this problem through a formula" to be presented "to the ambassadors of the countries concerned."
Reagan called Spadolini a close friend of the United States.
S. African elections test mixed plan
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa—Prime Minister Pieter Botha's plans to grant limited power to some of South Africa's non-whitees were tested for the first time yesterday in seven regional elections.
The elections cannot erase Botha's ruling National Party's 97-seat majority in Parliament, but will be a barometer of the nation's attitude to his plans to include those of mixed race and Asians in government.
in polities to include those of mixed race and Asians in government.
Conservative Africaners are opposed to any attempt to grant even limited power to non-whitees in Africa's only remaining white-ruled country.
In Washington, the International Monetary Fund yesterday agreed to lend South Africa more than $1 billion, a loan which has raised controversy in the United Nations and the U.S. Congress.
Recently, 31 members of Congress wrote President Reagan, urging that the United States oppose the new loan because of South Africa's racial policies.
Automakers report increased sales
During the last 10 days of October, domestic automakers sold 189,188 autos, up 7.7 percent from last year. For the month, sales were 487,499, up 3.1 percent.
DETROIT—Domestic automakers started the 1983 model year with a 3.1 percent sales increase for October and a 7.7 percent hike for the final 10 days of the month, they reported yesterday.
Year-to-date domestic sales totaled 4,750,094 autos, down 12 percent from 5,416,550.
Every domestic automaker except Volkswagen of America posted increases for the final 10 days of October.
American Motors Corp. posted the industry's most impressive increases for the 10-day period and the month. Boosted by the early success of the new Renault Alliance model, AMC sales jumped 107.6 percent in the final 10 days to 6,822 from 3,547 last year.
Philippine army tests coconut bomb
MANILA, Philippines—There is coconut candy and coconut cookies, coconut soap and coconut oil. Now the Philippines has announced a 100 percent coconut bomb.
The official Philippines News Agency said yesterday that the army Saturday "successfully exploded a coco-bomb whose charge consisted of 100 percent residues of coconut oil."
The island nation, the world's biggest coconut producer, came up with the idea while trying to find new uses for the coconut.
The report said detonating wires were attached to the 6.6-pound bomb, which was set off by current from a 12-volt battery.
"Debris from the explosion were blown up to 656 feet away, while the gravel bags were ripped apart and scattered to some 20 feet from their approach," the agency said.
The explosive force was described as "stronger than ordinary dynamite."
Commission predicts more opinion polls
Tuesday's opinion poll on the question of a nuclear weapons freeze with the Soviet Union is over, but other polls might come before the public in the future, several city commissioners said yesterday.
BY DOUG CUNNINGHAM Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
ever, dissented when the policy was approved. He said yesterday that a 5-0 vote of the commission should have been required head of the 4-1 vote now in the policy.
However, they also said that the City Commission must act carefully when issuing fines.
Earlier this year, the commission approved a policy under which it could allow opinion polls to take place. The policy provides that the vote of the commission to authorize an opinion poll should be at least 4-1.
"I just thought it would be a better safeguard to make it unanimous," he said.
COMMISSIONER DON BINNS, how-
Binns said any future opinion polls that the commission allowed to take place should be not only of local, but also of national concern.
TUESDAY'S POLL, which recommended a nuclear weapons freeze by a three-to-one margin, was an example of such an issue, he said.
But the commission should not authorize polls on volatile social issues, such as school prayer or abortion, Binns said.
Randy Makin, 836 Kentucky St., filed suit in Douglas County District Court to block the nuclear freeze poll, but he was unsuccessful.
He said yesterday that an opinion poul could affect almost any election, because the poll would place another issue before the voters.
Some voters may not have thought of that issue before, he said, but the possible effects of presenting such a new issue would be difficult to measure.
TWO OTHER commissioners also said a 4-1 vote should be sufficient to ensure that any opinion polls would be considered carefully.
Commissioner Nancy Shontz predic
ted that the commission would not approve another poll for some time.
"My guess is that it's going to be a long time before we approve another one, simply because we don't want to take this lightly," she said. "We do want to protect the regular election process as much as possible."
"I'm quite sure that if an issue came up that was a moral issue or a religious issue, I doubt that we would consider it at all."
But although the commission should consider future polls carefully, a poll would not be expected to work well.
Marines to stay in Beirut, Pentagon says
COMMISSIONER TOM GLEASON said, "I really felt that the super-ordinator of four votes being required would ensure that it was not done trivially."
By United Press International
BEIRUT, Lebanon—French peacekeeping troops began patrolling East Beirut yesterday but deployment of U.S. Marines into the heavily armed base of Abu Dhabi's Phalange was put off for a day because of a "procedural" problem.
The Pentagon later said that the Marines would probably remain in Lebanon through the winter as part of a military training exercise to train and rearm the Lebanese army.
Sixty American military trainers, 36 older M-48 tanks, 12 pieces of 155mm artillery and 24 armored personnel carriers will soon be shipped to Lebanon to help the Lebanese police effectively power their territory without aid from foreign peace-keeping forces, the Pentagon said.
OFFICIALS ADDED that the complexity of the program almost certainly
meant that the Marines would remain on duty through the winter.
In Tel Aviv, Israel's Foreign Minister Yitzhak Hamir criticized Lebanese President Amin Gemayel and his government for using "negative tones" when talking about Lebanon's relationship with Israel.
Shamir said that statements made by the Lebanese leaders "show ignorance of the immense change that, thanks to openness, Galilee, has taken place in Lebanon."
Operation Peace for Gallilee is Israel's term for its June 6 invasion of Israel.
In the Israel-occupied Shof mountains, Druze Moslems and Christian rightists fought new battles and Druze leader Wald Jumball flew home from Iran to participate in high-level negotiations. The Islamic State had killed conflicts. Fourteen people have been killed and 15 more wounded in four days of fighting.
U. S. MARINES who were scheduled to move into East Beirut postponed their deployment after a Marine commission in the inspection tour of Beirut's Christian schools.
Christopher Ross, a U.S. State Department official, described the delay as "procedural" but gave no further details.
Lt. Col. Jon Abel, Marine Public Affairs Officer, said that the Marines would move into East Beirut today, "Optimism is running higher now." he said, attributing the delay to only a "complex decision-making process."
The 1,200 Marines in the tri-national peacekeeping force have been based solely in the relatively secure area around Beirut's airport since arriving Sept. 29.
TOGETHER WITH French and Italian peace-keepers, the Marines were to patrol East Beirut while the Lebanese army began disarming right-
ist Lebanese forces in a crucial test of credibility for Gamayel.
Official Beirut radio said that Gemayel himself was leading top-level efforts to check the violence.
In Tel Aviv, Ariel Sharon's top aide testified yesterday that he transcribed the defense minister's order allowing Christian Phalange militiamen into two Palestinian refugee camps in Beirut, Israel Television reported.
The aide, Avi Dudai, told the Israeli commission investigating the Beirut massacre that he transcribed Sharon's order on the morning of Sept. 15 in a brief Israeli command post in the Lebanese capital, the television reported.
IN PREVIOUS testimony before the commission, Sharon said the decision to let the Phalange into the camps Sept. 16 to clear out an estimated 2,000 Palestinian fighters was a "military implementation" of long-standing government policy.
Israeli life is improving despite inflation
By United Press International
TEL. AV1V, Israel—It may cost Israelis 8 percent more each month to pursue the good life, but that hasn't stopped them from living in a cornucopia, new government statistics showed yesterday.
"There is no question the figures show a remarkable percentage in sales."
David Newman, of the Central Bureau of Statistics, about a new government statistical yearbook compiled for 1981.
Take the family car. In 1982, ony one family in 25 could afford one. Last year, one in three families owned a car despite annual inflation well over 100 percent and car taxes that can triple if prices rise.
NEWMAN SAID that in 1981 only 9 percent of Israeli households lacked television sets compared with more
than twice than many seven years earlier.
In 1960, only 15.8 percent of Israeli households had washing machines. By 1981, that figures had increased to 78.5 percent.
"There have been considerable increases in the standard of living over the past 20 years," Newman said. "All those who are living on the hundreds of percent that over
period, except for telephones, which are lagging badly."
But the telephone problem is one more of the inability of the Communications Ministry to provide telephones than of low demand. Newman said there were 220,000 outstanding applications for telephones in a nation whose latest population estimate is 4.04 million.
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University Dally Kansan, November 4. 1982
Page 3
Huge reserves of grain depress wheat market
By MATTHEW SCHOFIELD Staff Reporter
A bountiful harvest has left Kansas with more than a year's worth of wheat in storage, and has driven grain prices to rock bottom, a Douglas County extension agent said yesterday.
Earl Van Meter, the agent, said that farmers face an almost desperate situation.
"Farmers can't make any money," he said. "We've either got to get exports rolling pretty quick or cut production."
VAN METER SAID that before farmers could afford to cut production, a program in which the government would pay farmers for not planting would have to be approved.
If such a program is not adopted, the wheat carry-over will continue tc grow and prices will stay low, he said.
Robert Vossen, crop statistician for the Kansas Crop and Livestock Reporting Service, said the wheat carry-over as of Oct. 1 was about 520 million bushels, which was 100 million bushels more than the carry-over at the same time last year.
VOSSEN SAID THE wheat crop was exceptionally large, but was still not as large as the wheat carry-over, only totalling about 460 tons of grain. But it was extremely unusual for the carry-over to exceed the harvest.
David Fry, president of the Kansas Wheat Commission, said that when wheat production was up, the prices came down.
"What we've got is a dynamic situation," he said. "If you have large crops, you've got to have large sales. We've got a very depressed
market in wheat right now. The price in 1948 wasn't very far off what some farmers are getting this year."
FRY SAY the wheat prices in 1948 were about $$ a bushel. Tuesday, in Colby, wheat was selling for $3.00 a bushel, he said.
Wheat, like any commodity, sells on a supply and demand basis, he said.
BUT EXPORTS have not kept up with production. Fry said.
in ramsas wheat prices are low," he said. "But with the strength of the dollar most developing countries will invest in ramsas for wheat than they did last year."
He said Mexico was a good example, because the value of the peso has decreased much more than the dollar in wheat prices since last year.
AN OFFER BY by President Reagan to sell up to 23 million metric tons of wheat to the Soviet Union, Mr. Reagan said he much relief to the market. Frv said.
"The offer stated that the Russians had to buy the wheat by Nov. 30." he said. "You don't usually dictate terms to a friendly buyer."
He also said that the Soviets could handle only 46 million metric tons of imported wheat this year, and that they would have to import even other countries for much of that.
VAN METER SAID the price of wheat would not find immediate relief, but it could not get much worse.
"Prices can't go anywhere but up," he said. "But if I had grain, I would just sell it and take my money. I couldn't afford the storage costs."
By STEVE CUSICK Staff Reporter
Workers tally election early
It was quick, but it wasn't easy.
The vote totals came like machine-gun fire after the first abstract arrived at the Douglas County Courthouse about 7:30 p.m. Tuesday.
Forty-five precincts later, at 10:10 p.m., the ritual was complete — the election workers had ended another election in what may have been record time.
Every election year, whether midterm or presidential, the courthouse becomes the place to be for reporters and candidates who want to get the paw first.
AT TIMES TUESDAY night, more than 100 people packed the courthouse to watch workers write the latest totals for the day. The staff calls as "Slattery 289, Kav 154."
The election workers, comprised of workers in the county clerk's office and people who shed their regular titles for one night to become election helpers,
Delbert Mathia, an election night veteran and former county clerk, said
were prepared to stay late, but they got to go home early.
"It was smooth, yes, very good," said Mathia, who worked his first election night in the 1940s.
She said that much of the credit goes to the poll workers, who must count the votes and put the totals on an abstract form submitting the results to the court.
PATTY JAIMES, county clerk, said of the early finish, "I bet this is a record achievement."
There are 46 precincts in Douglas County and each pelling place submits an abstract to the courthouse after the polls close at 7 a.m. James said.
AFTER THE results hit the courthouse, they are read aloud and written on a chalkboard for the press and public to see.
Although the time was short, the pace was fast Tuesday night.
Carol Nulfer, one of those reading the totals said. "I couldn't believe it. It was
terrible for a while, they came in so fast."
But she enjoys the work.
"It is fun, it is exciting, it just really gets you going," she said.
It's that element of excitement and a sense of itty bits that hurries Barbara Coppie to the bottom of the room.
"This is where it's at," said Cople, who has been working election nights since the mid-1960s.
COPPLE IS A legal secretary — except on election night — and she said she sees her fellow election workers two or three times a year.
In 1980, all the totals weren't in until about 2 a.m., but that wasn't the longest evening she has spent in the courthouse on election night, she said.
She went home as the sun came up, in 1968, she said.
"I met my husband going to work." The 65-year-old Mathia said the separate elections blend into one another with the passage of time, obscuring the finer points of this or that election.
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Page 4
Opinion
University Daily Kansan, November 4, 1982
Election night tantrum
Elections are over and much of the fervor has died down. But one has to wonder about the effects Tuesday's outcome may have on events in 1984. Democrats took over a good many seats in the House, but in all, the Republicans held their ground as well as could be expected under the economic circumstances.
Here in Kansas, Sam Hardage, a prime Republican candidate, lost his gubernatorial bid.
Yet it is not his loss, but his post-election behavior that threatens to place a stigma on the party that could be difficult to escape during the next two years.
After watching Democratic Gov. John Carlin take the lead in the race,
Hardage responded by locking himself away in a conference room and refusing to speak with reporters and campaign supporters. It became obvious that Hardage knew little about dealing with the press or, more importantly, with the public. Candidates and elected officials rarely gain public confidence by shutting themselves away when things do not go as planned.
I've found that there are two kinds of dieters in the world, and very little gray area between the classes. The first group is the I-have-to-lose 5-pounds-to-wear-those-Vanderbilt-jeans group. They need to lose just a little, which is the most difficult thing to do.
Reflecting on the race, Hardage's press secretary, Darrell Day, later said, "We thought that leadership . . . was the most important issue." Given Hardage's behavior Tuesday night, Hardage's idea of leadership is something Kansans and Republicans could well do without.
A bit of practical know-how helps ensure successful diet
It's diet time on the Hill — time to squeeze into plaid wool skirts and pants without ripping them out.
The second group is composed of those who have a lot to lose, and I mean a lot. El gordo, if
P
TRACEE HAMILTON
you get my drift. The networks hire these to overload stadium shots during the Super Bowl.
Two summers ago I was in my Gordo Phase I had to drop a ton, and fast. Well, not that fast. I was just an average runner.
Where do I get off, talking this way? Cause, baby. I've been there. Both groups.
During a humid summer in Springfield, Mo., losing weight can be fun, something to while away long hours of Bible Belt boredom. I had material motivations: The only clothes I could fit into were my sweats. Period. I bought a pair of jeans after convincing the salesman that I did not need to see Abdul the Tentmaker for alterations. And that was it.
It's important, when embarking on a losing venture of this magnitude, to have a few essentials:
1. A good diet. Make it something healthy, not a quick fix from a can. I chose the Diet Center. I don't have any exercise equipment.
2. A list of goals. Not weight goals; the Diet Center took care of that. Make an honest list of reasons why you want to lose weight (not the reasons you tell other people; the real ones). If you are a chubby in the midst of a thin family, put 'em down. My mother (size 3) and sister (size 7) topped the list. When your clothes are too big for mom and me, I like my own clothes, followed closely by a few ex-boyfriends and friends who had been a little too honest with me during my Fat Phase.
Revenge, despite what the old saying dictates, is a wonderful motive for dieting and should not be overlooked. It's wonderful to stand before an oil flame or nenesis and say, "Ha!" Believe me.
As for losing just a little weight — well, I not quite an expert here, but as for methods, I've tipped them all. For a quick fix, the Cambridge expert said that you should be about that is supposed to kill you, but it won't.
But me warn you about liquid diets. The burger pans of the first few days are incredible.
the telephone, the carpet and most assuredly the cat will begin to look appetizing. You hurt, folks, and there's no way around that.
I tried the Scarsdale Diet, too, and you upper-crust dieters might like it. Frankly, it was difficult for me to find lamb's meat and whole breast back in the sticks, so I finally save me.
Once you've decided what kind of diet to attempt, go for it. Weigh in every morning, and record your weight faithfully. It'll make a nice wall post or Christmas card when you're finished. Above all, follow these few simple behavior rules:
1. Be honest. Don't try to pretend you're not on a diet out of embarrassment. Walking into Joe's with your friends and saying, "I'm really not hungry; I just had hot homemade glazed doughnuts at home," probably won't convince them. And when you hear someone with the body of Cherry, they may not recognize you more than "I've just got to lose another 2 pounds!" much more, it's good exercise.
2. Be tough. Don't take any crap from anyone. First of all, you'll be starving. You have a right to be surly. You don't have to tell people how much you weigh. You also have the right to a little respect. I had a roommate who, whenever I was dieting, would bake chocolate chip cookies and milk. We'd just need to do her bodily harm with a Sunbeam mixer; she ceased and desired immediately.
3. Be smart. Don't go on any diet, from grapefruit to water, without checking with a doctor. If you have a special health problem, a doctor can give you a diet that won't aggravate your condition. I have always been as healthy as a plow mule, so I didn't have any problems here. And by all means, if you begin feeling sick, getting indigestion or nausea, vomiting or suffering any other horrors of the diet war, stop immediately and see a physician.
4. Be yourself. If you don't want to lose weight.
4. Be yourself. If you don't want to lose weight — if you're happy with yourself the way you are — by all means stay that way. The only time I would ever suggest dieting for anyone would be for health reasons. And don't let other people eat it. Look a book at all, by all means, but if you're 3 pounds short of your "assigned" weight, don't turn into something from "Night of the Living Dead" trying to attain it. Everyone has a "plateau" weight that they seem to stick at every time they diet.
5. Be active, or lazy. If you're not into a Jane Fonda workout or that squeaky Simmons fellow, don't worry about it. Exercise is helpful in any diet, but I'm living proof that it isn't a necessity. The summer I dropped my tomato my biggest hotout was lifting a can of diet pop to my mouth.
6. Be polite. Don't come to the newsroom to see whether I look like Twiggy, because I don't. And L. I don't. I'll probably just ignore you now — I won't be able to hear the phone over the churning noise of Cambridge in the blender.
Beer-in-stadium a dead horse
The issue of whether to sell beer at KU football games has gotten a lot of mileage since first proposed. To this day, the issue remains solved. It's time to let it die a peaceful death.
No one has been able to either secure adoption of the resolution or deliver it a resounding defeat. The majority of KU students seem to want the privilege of buying 3.2 beer while watching home games in Memorial Stadium. This year's candidates for student body president are trying to make it a saleable issue — as did their predecessors.
Think of how badly behaved the crowd would be if beer was sold here...
Despite able, indeed!
P. B. KANDAN
LISA GUTIERREZ
Welch and Adkins tried. Welch created a task force last January whose function was to gather information from other universities that sold beer in their stadiums. Copies of correspondence from administrators at schools such as Syracuse University, San Diego State University and Colorado State were sent to Chancellor Gene A. Budig.
Then. silence.
Looking back on some of the campus coverage given the suds issue, it is apparent that the old pass-the-buck-routine has definitively hindered its adoption. On one hand, we had
Even the president of the Alumun Association had said he is willing to discuss the proposal.
With all this apparent support, why hasn't any definite action been taken? Have all these people been beating a dead horse? In this issue they have been beating a dead horse with which to grab student voters' attention?
Despite all this, credit is due to David Adkins, student body president, and David Welch, vice president. Trying to live up to their campaign promise of a year ago, these two made a legitimate attempt to secure the resolution's adoption. That campaign promise, made by their Perspective Coalition in 1981, was to convince administration, alumni and other KU officials that beer sales were not only profitable, but healthy, for KU.
I don't think this issue will ever be solved here at the University of Kansas. It is destined to eternal limbo. Hence, the beer saffey issue should be labeled unviable, and student office candidates and Alumun Association members should not be allowed to pursue it any further in the future. I don't think they'd bother tackling the issue — once again — in print. But someone had to be the last.
This is a sad commentary on effective leadership at KU. But beyond that, I suspect, are miles of red, bureaucratic tape that has made it much more convenient to bandy the issue about like a badminton birdie than to make it an operable resolution.
an Alumni Association member from Hutchinson saying, "I don't think a board of 15 people deciding on something like that and speaking out for the whole Alumni Association would be
Another board member from Topea said the Alumni Association should not take a stand at all because it really had no say in making the decision to sell beer.
On the other hand, we had Rolert Cobb, executive vice chancellor, saying that the Board of Regents was really the group that would decide whether beer would be sold in the stadium.
And it went on and on
Cobb said that beer sales was not one of his priorities and that the Alumni Association did not always influence the administration's decisions. And Adkins said alumni and faculty members from the University Athletic Corporation board would have to be swayed to vote in favor of the beer sales.
Everyone was interested. But few did anything but talk.
Fine, case closed. But seven months later, Dolphim Simons Jr., president of the Alumni Association, said he was interested in dis- ties to the project and with students to "bear the pros and cons."
Double-talk has killed the issue. In February, the 15-member Alumni Association executive board voted unanimously that it did not "favor" the debate in Memorial Stadium or Allen Field House."
We've all heard the pros and cons, over and over and over again. And I, for one, would rather not hear any more — unless someone is willing to do something more than talk.
One of the fummiest objections to spring up over this beer sales issue is that some people actually think that should 3.2 be allowed in Memorial, the stadium would turn into one wild and crazy keg party. Do these people realize what kinds of liquor now have their way into that stadium under blankets, in huge purses or backpacks? Some alumni and students have been forced to be inventive in sneaking booze into Memorial because 3.2 is not sold outright.
Sure, KU fans can get rowdy under the influence. Yes, they do pass people, precariously, from bottom to top rows hand-over-hand. Yes, they do turn plastic tumblers into missiles at halftime. But their rowiness is hardly likely to be increased by beer sales.
David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, has been quoted as saying that the beer issue hinged on whether the University would be ingesting and abetting" the use of alcohol by students.
Aiding and abetting? Sounds like he's worried about turning 12-year-olds into alcoholics.
"We're not here to show students that they should or should not use alcoholic beverages." Amber went on to say. Thanks for that vote of confidence.
It has been hinted that selling beer might have a damaging effect on the University's reputation. Besides, only one other Big Eight school, the University of Colorado, sells beer in their football stadium. And KU certainly does not want to emulate Colorado.
Then again, we've already proved that we don't want to be a leader in this issue.
Letters to the Editor
To the Editor:
K-State student president extends apologies
It has been noted that some K-State fans were genuinely quite intoxicated. The underlying problem, in my opinion, is not the use of alcohol or even the excessive consumption of it. The problem stems from the idea that getting drunk clears a person of any wrongdoing. "Having one drink allows you to achieve success, is the fact that this is one of the most intense rivalries in college athletics.
In regard to the Oct. 23 K-State-KU football game in Manhattan and as a representative of the K-State student body, I would like to apologize for the obnoxious and irresponsible behavior of some of the K-State fans. It was obvious that a number of K-State fans got away by the river on a campus building behavior that the majority of the fans haven't condone.
As a result of the K-State-KU game, student
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leaders here are stressing responsible drinking and trying to keep this game and others in perspective.
Bill Rogenmoser
On a positive note, let us be thankful that this football game is capable of generating such
Good luck on a successful and injury-free completion of the 1982 football season. I hope you accept my apology on behalf of many, many students and fans at Kansas State University.
Bill Rogenmoseb
Student body president
Kansas State University
Broadcast neglected
To the Editor:
I am a senior majoring in broadcast news in the School of Journalism. Throughout my four years at the University of Kansas it has become increasingly evident to me that the broadcast and production fields at KU are viewed negatively by the School of Journalism itself.
Many other students in the school cannot see my point, for they are not tucked away in Jollife Hall, Blake Annex or Lippincott Hall. They have all of their classes conveniently located in Flint Hall. I am not complaining about Jollife. I am grateful that KU has television labs and a radio station where I can learn my major. My complaint lies with the J-school administration and its treatment of broadcast and production majors.
Examples of this neglect are frightfully evident. Having no heat in Jollife has damaged the old and outdated equipment and caused damage to the building's insulation. The warmer to protect the newly remodeled building
Let's face it. We're neglected by the people in 200 Flint.
and the new computers and other equipment used by the Kansan and in other J-school fields. Old and outdated equipment abounds in Jolliffe while the Kansan newsroom is full of new, top-of-the-ling equipment. Finally, Jolliffe is stuck far off campus, where access is quite difficult. I invite you to try to run from Jollife to Strong in 10 minutes.
Overall, I must say that I am happy with my television education here at KU, but I am far from happy with the way I am treated by the people in Flint Hall.
Recently there was a placement office meeting and an intersession internship meeting, both very important sessions. Although there were signs all over Flint advertising the sessions, there was not even one in Jolliffe. This is just another example of how the school views interdisciplinary collaboration in many hindrances rather than the assets that they are to the University.
Like the Kansan, KJHK has won many state and local awards, but the station is barely recognized. KJHK must still plead with the school for more allowances just to buy copy paper and tape, while the Kansan gets a whole new, computerized newsroom.
There are plans for a new communications building that I will only see as an alum. My heartfelt thanks go out to Mr. and Mrs. Bud Weir for donating the money to build the new building on West Campus. Once again we will be isolated, but our community to work with more up-to-date equipment.
Again, my complaint is not with the Kanas but with the School of Journalism. Jolifie Hall exists, and I will freeze in it to learn my major because I think it is worth it. It is high time that we in Jolifie are recognized as members of the School of Journalism and treated as such.
Chip Davis Evanston, Ill. senior
The University Daily
KANSAN
The University Dalian Kanman (UDS) 680-646 is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Pint Hall, Dalian, China. Subscriptions to UDS are free for summer sessions, exclusive Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final periods. Second class postage at Livestock, Kann, 600-539. Subscriptions by mail are $25 each and $45 per year in Dalguanyi University. Subscription by phone is $15 each and $25 per year through the student activity fee. POSTMARKED: Send address changes to the University Dalian Kanman.
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Steve Robbahn
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Colleen Cacy, Ann Lowry
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University Dally Kansan, November 4; 1982
Page 5
Hardage
media and supporters when results showed him losing.
'1 DUBT THE severance tax will pass during the next legislative session. Sam was always opposed to the severance tax because he would not do everything Carlin said it would.
Carlin has made a severance tax on the production of oil and natural gas, estimated to raise about $120 million annually, the center's largest source for finance education and highway construction.
Hardage called a severance tax unfair and a deterrent to businesses considering a move to Kansas. But in early October, Hardage said he could support a severance tax agreed on by all sides of the issue, which many interpreted as an attempt to soften his position.
ANOTHER AIDE also pinned much of Hardage's loss on the severance tax and Carlin's.
intense efforts to persuade voters that opposition to the severance tax was an endorsement of higher property taxes.
HARDAGE ALIGNED himself closely with President Reagan, which may have been political suicide in Sedgwick County because of traditional Democratic leanings and heavy layoffs in the ailing aircraft industry, Matthews said.
"But you have to give the devil his due — he ran a good campaign. I think we might have been better to have answered the severance tax in language that people could understand."
Turning to Shawne County, which includes Topeka, Matthews said a letter Carolin campaign officials distributed to state employees dampened Hardage's chances. The letter warned state workers that Hardage would eliminate their jobs if he was elected.
DARRELL DAY, Hardage's press secretary, already was sensing the severance tax's effect on the race when he said late last week that his team initiated underestimated its clout with voters.
DESPITE FEELINGS of disappointment, the aides still enjoyed a fewer moment with each other while cleaning up the remnants of that was cut short by Carlin's early victory.
One assistant walked around with a deflated Hardage balloon in his mouth, which another side compared to the outcome of Hardage's campaign.
the money was necessary to keep the shelter home in operation.
"We perhaps should have realized that Carlin would ride the severance tax as the only issue and then could have addressed it earlier," he said.
Senate
From page one
"But early in the campaign, we didn't think it was the only issue facing the state. We thought that leadership . . . was the most important issue."
"FOR JANUARY AND February, we don't know where our money is coming from," Failey said, noting that all federal grants to the organization were scheduled to be cut next year. The group once received 70 percent of its financing from the government.
"WTCs has the quality," Houston said, "and it has the dire need of an emergency situation."
The Senate's approval of funds for WTCS drew sharp criticism from one Senate committee
Another volunteer, Pam Houston, told the Senate that if WTCS closed, the only place for battered women to go would be either "the morgues or the hospitals."
"I get really irritated when groups that go through the formal budget hearings come back
to the Senate and appeal for more funds — and then get them," said Sarahuck, chairman of the Student Senate Committee on Academic Records. "They had their time in court, so to speak.
The rest of the Senate budget was approved as recommended by the Finance Committee.
DUCKERS SAID SHE thought all groups should be given a chance to appeal the committee's recommendations before the Senate. The groups should also be given notification of the Senate meeting in which final budgetary decisions are made, she said.
In other business, the Senate approved a bill that combined the 85 student transportation (ec) programs.
David Adkins, student body president and author of the bill, said the bill would make it necessary for the Senate to review the budget of KU on Wheels, the campus bus system.
Fall tornado surprises Padre Island; 28 hurt
By United Press International
PORT ISABEL, Texas—High winds and a stormado hurled across scenic South Padre Island early yesterday morning, injuring at least 28 people, destroying nearly 50 trailer homes and ripping out power and telephone lines, officials said.
Authorities the storm bleed in without warning, bringing wind gusts as high as 145 mph. The Coast Guard reported that some campers were aboard the boat to a resort, but a helicopter search allied earlier
fears that some people might have been swept out to sea.
"WE KNEW THAT there was a northerng in coming and in a 20 to 30 percent chance of showers, but we didn't expect what like this. It could have been any county. County sheriff's nookmate Johnny Castillo.
Castillo said that a Coast Guard helicopter from Corpus Christi had surveyed the beach yesterday afternoon and found no debris, so he said that no one was missing as a result of the storm.
Coast Guard Chief Petty Officer Bob Sawyer
said the storm brought high water at Port Manfield that stranded some campers.
"There are a few stranded tourists camped out at the inlet going into Port Mansfield, but they do not require any assistance," Sawyer said.
Winds of 91 mph hit the nearby Harlingen airport, where the Confederate Air Force aviation club reported damage to vintage World War II airplanes.
CASTILLO SAID 28 injuries were reported after the storm, which hit the island between 12:45 and 1:00 a.m.
Child first victim of unusual kidney disease
said yesterday 3-month-old Liana Clark, who died last summer, apparently was a victim of hemolytic uremic syndrome — a disease that affects the brain and Argentina, the Netherlands and South Africa.
By United Press International
Election
KIRSON SAID THE incidence of the disease was about 30 times the normal in the Sacramento area and said the outbreak was "definitely of epidemic proportions."
But Ian Kirson, a children's kidney specialist who treats children suffering from the sometimes fatal aliment, called for further investigation into the Clark child's case.
SACRAMENTO, Calif. — The first confirmed death attributed to a kidney disease a doctor says has reached epidemic proportions in the Sacramento area was confirmed yesterday by doctors.
The disease destroys red blood cells, causing acute anemia and kidney failure. But Kirson said that, while the disease is sometimes fatal, the vast majority of victims recover.
Thomas Readley
P
Edmund Brown
community. Supporters said it was the first time such a law had been established in the nation.
From page one
Republicans took their worst battering in governorships, losing nine statehouses to the Democrats. And the day after elections, GOP Gov. Jim Thompson chung to the narrowest of states in Illinois, where television in Illinois, with some soggy uncounted ballots in Chicago delaying a final call.
THROUGH THE BAD news on other fronts, Republicans tenaciously held on to their Senate seats, losing only Son. Harrison Schmitt in New Mexico and an open seat in New Jersey.
George Wallace
Fading from the national political scene were Gee, Edmund G. Brown Jr., defeated for a Senate seat.
Edward Kennedy
Republican Mayor Pete Wilson, and Millicent Fenwick, New Jersey's aristocratic pipe-smoking congresswoman beaten for the Senate by Democratic millionaire Frank Lautenberg.
Los Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley had his dream of becoming the nation's first black governor thwarted narrowly by George DeMario, California's Republican attorney general.
ENDURING WERE Edward Kennedy of Massachusetts, who easy re-election boosted his presidential candidacy, Democrat John Stennis, the dean of the Senate at 81, and George Wallace, the reformed segregationist who won an unprecedented fourth term as governor of Alabama and picked up 85 percent of the black vote.
THE SACRAMENTO County coroner's office
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan, November 4. 1982
Justice details history of Kansas court system
By VERONICA JONGENELEN Staff Reporter
The unification of the Kansas court system in 1976 helped eliminate disorganization that was common in the state's courts, Kansas Supreme Court Justice David Prager said last night.
Prager spoke to about 20 people in Green Hall as part of a lecture series sponsored by the University of Kansas and the Kansas Trial Lawyers Association. His speech, titled "The Kansas Court System — Where We Are and Where We Came From," detailed the development of Kansas courts from the time of the state's birth in 1861 up to now.
He outlined four characteristics common in early Kansas courts.
HE SAID that some areas of the state were little judicial kingdoms where judges operated according to their own interpretations of the law, and that laws often differed from county to county.
Another characteristic was what he called "hometowning." This happened when a judge showed bliss over a case that court's jurisdiction. Praiser said
Judges who worked in the early Kansas courts also lacked judicial education, which often led to judicial inefficiency, he said.
Many judges also were far-ers who were too busy to properly manage their caseloads, he said.
THE CONCEPT of a court system at that time, he said, was one main district court, with many smaller, specialized courts beneath it. These often were divided into areas such as probate, justice of the peace, juvenile, and magistrate courts, he said.
The result was that many cases went to trial twice, once in the lower court and again in the district court, he said.
Inappropriate judicial districting caused further inefficiency, Prager said. Several districts in northwest Kansas were drawn according to the county codes and were not redrawn into more compact areas until 1982, he said.
In the more populated areas of the state, large caseloads also were a problem, Prager said. Now, one Supreme Court justice oversees dockets in each of six separate areas, helping to ease caseloads by assigning other judges to hear cases.
STILL, MANY people complained that it took too long to dispense cases, he said. In 1800, the Kansas Supreme Court adopted a general policy on principles and guidelines for speedy dispensation, he said.
The result has been that from June 30, 1981, to June 30, 1982, the average civil case was disposed of in 124 days. Only 3.9 percent of all civil cases in Kansas are more than two years old, and only 6.1 percent of all criminal cases are more than one year old, he said.
"Of course, that's an assembly line," he said.
IN THE FUTURE, Prager said, more cases should be mediated instead of brought to court.
In such mediation, arbitrators who are knowledgeable on the subject matter in dispute can hear arguments and help the two parties reach an agreement, instead of taking the case before a tury.
On campus
TODAY
GERIAM CLUB will have a table reserved for lunch at 14:45 a.m. in the gymnasium.
KU SWORD AND SHIELD will meet
at p.m. in the Oream Room of the
u.P.
KU MOUNTANEERING ASSOCIATION will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the internationalist Room of the Union.
MARANATHA MINISTRIES will
MARANATIA MINISTRIES will
meet 2 p.m. in the Pine Room of
the United.
PRE-PHYSICAL THERAPY CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in Watkins Hospital Cafeteria.
WOMEN'S SELF-EXAM WORK-
SHOP will be at 7 p.m. in GSP-Corbin
Cross-Bar Library.
KU CREW will have an invitational meeting at 4:30 p.m. in 202 Robinson Gymnasium.
ECKANKAR DISCUSSION, "Fitness, a Wholistic and Spiritual Approach," will be at 7:30 p.m. in the Governor's Room of the Union.
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CATHOLIC CENTER WORKSHIP will be at 12:30 p.m. in Danfort Chapel.
ASTHONDYM CLUB will meet at 8 a.m. in 500 Lindley Hall if the sky is clear.
CATHOLIC CENTER WORSHIP will
be held 10:00 a.m. in Defense Church.
BIOLOGY CLUB will meet at 4 p.m. in the Sunflower Room of the Union.
THE CASTLE
TEA ROOM
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MARANATHA MN:STRIRES will meet at 7 p.m. in the Pine Room of the Museum.
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Women say economy is key factor Money problems increase abortion rate
By KIESA ASCUE Staff Reporter
Student Appreciation Night,$1 cover
This year, twice as many women as last year's cited financial reasons as the most important factor in their decision to get married. In 2016, the center for women reported recently
Fifty-three percent of the 200 women surveyed said financial reasons affected their choices more than any other factor this year, as compared to 28 percent last year, according to reports by United Press International.
In certain emergency situations, KU students can get short-term loans for abortions on the recommendation of a licensed physician or the office of student financial aid.
The study was done for CHOICES center in conjunction with Adelphi University and Health Insurance Plan of Greater New York.
Economists have estimated that today raising a child from birth to age 18 can cost up to $250,000.
"BECAUSE OF THE REALITY of the economy, many women are sacrificing their desire for children," said Merle Hoffman, social psychologist and director of CHOICES. "The Reagan administration's economic policies must be balanced with the need to abortions in this country, now more than 1.5 million a year."
The cost of an abortion ranges from $185 to $740, depending on how far along the pregnancy is, as said Adele Hughey, special projects coordinator for Comprehensive Health Associates, an abortion clinic in Overland Park.
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"It WOULD have to be in the realm of educationally related expenses."
Rogers said, "It would not be an ordinary request."
Fischer said any woman in the first 12 weeks of pregnancy could have an abortion in less than 20 minutes.
Fischer assists Dale Clinton, a physician in Lawrence who performs abortions. Fischer said a woman should see a doctor within two weeks after missing her menstrual period to determine whether she is pregnant.
Most clinics demand payment at the time of the service, and few will accept insurance forms in lieu of money, said D.J. Fischer, a clinical assistant.
In Kansas, abortions are legal until the 24th week of pregnancy. The longer a woman waits to have an abortion, the greater health risks may be, but they are still less than those incurred by childbirth, Hughey said.
"We had a lady in her last week — a smart lady — a college student who thought she was only 11 weeks pregnant. It was 15 weeks," Fischer said. "She had a period after she'd gotten pregnant.
"UNFORTUNATELY, IT IS not uncommon to have one or even two periods after getting pregnant. I would say the most important moment that the miss one period."
In a vacuum aspiration abortion, the physician administers a local anaesthetic and dilates the cervical opening to eight millimeters, about the size of a pencil's width, Fischer said. An instrument shaped like a drinking
Women usually have abortions under a local anaesthetic. They can be in and out of the physician's office within an hour if they decide to have an abortion by the vacuum aspiration method in the first 12 weeks.
straw and closed at one end is placed in the cervix, under vacuum pressure.
Lisa, an 18-year-old KU sophomore,
had an abortion last year and she never
would have been able to walk.
"No permanent tissue is removed, and there's little chance of hemorrhaging or internal damage," Fischer said. "The whole procedure is as serious as having a wisdom tooth removed, without the aftereffects."
THE PHYSICIAN gently rotates the instrument, removing the embryo.
Most college students choose abortion because they cannot afford to have a baby and stay in school, said Lorna Zimmer, member of the Human Sexuality Network, a group affiliated with 10 Headquarters, 1602 Massachusetts St.
AFTER THE Surgical procedure, the patient may experience mild cramps to menstrual cramps as the cervix turns its normal shape. Fischer said.
"Social agencies give the same services to students that they would provide to anyone. They can get food stamps and medical cards." she said.
Other options are adoption, raising the baby alone, or keeping the baby with help from its father or other family members.
"THE FIRST choice a woman makes is whether to have an abortion." Zimmer said. "The second is what to do during the pregnancy."
The only adoption services in Lawrence is through Social Rehabilitation Services.
The Human Sexuality Network can refer women to a variety of social programs and adoption agencies to defray the cost of having a child.
"I still think it was the best thing I could have done," Lisa said. "But if it happened again, I don't think I would have another one, mostly because it's a strange thing to put your body through. I wouldn't want to do it twice."
Lisa said she chose to have an abortion because she did not know of her doctor.
Lisa said the emotional strain of deciding to have an abortion was much more painful than the physical process.
A recent report by the Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta, estimated that less than 1 percent of abortions involved physical complications that could be detrimental to the health of the woman, Hughey said.
ANNA FENDER, the adoption social worker for SRS, said both parents had to relinquish their parental rights; the child would be adopted, regardless of marital status.
IF A WOMAN waits past the 24th week of pregnancy, she can have a dilation and evacuation abortion. The process is more expensive because it involves two or three days of treatment, Hughev said.
"Mothers change their minds so much that it's not legal to accept consent to adopt prior to the birth of the child," she said.
"I didn't want to take time out of my schedule for a pregnancy," she said.
However, Zimmer said, financial arrangements can be made in which the adoptive parents pay pre-natal insurance and maternals vary among agencies, she said.
Once parental rights are severed, the biological parents cannot change their birth date.
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University Daily Kansan, November 4, 1982
Page 7
Aid forms expected in January
The University of Kansas' office of student financial aid is still waiting for financial aid forms for the 1983-84 year. The office, a director of the office, said yesterday.
Rogers says the forms were generally available mid-semmeter, but that a legal dispute between the Department of Education and a national student group had caused the two-month delay in writing and distribution of the forms.
He said an official from the American College Testing Program office, which prints and distributes the forms to the schools, told him that KU's financial aid office could expect delivery of the forms the first week of January.
"THEY'RE BEHIND as it is," Rogers said. "So far, I don't think it will hurt us."
The lawsuit was filed in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia by the National Coalition of College and University Students.
The group has challenged the legality of fees charged to federal aid applicants last year for applications printed and processed by private companies, and is seeking to stop the Testing Program and the College School Service under a government contract.
MORE THAN three-quarters of students applying for aid use the forms supplied by the private companies, according to information provided by the Federal government and ACT and CSS process most of the applications. The federal government prints a similar application for which there is no processing fee.
The organization contends that students applying for federal aid only should not be charged a processing fee for using the ACT and CSS forms.
Students using those forms to apply for federal aid last year were charged $6 or more because the Department of Education would not subsidize a fee waiver.
ROGERS SAID he was told that if the ruling was in favor of the student coalition, ACT would seek an injunction could print and distribute their forms.
Caffeine can hurt finals, doctor says
By JEANNE FOY Staff Reporter
Officials at the National Association of Student Financial Aid Administrators office in Washington, D.C., expect a decision on printing the forms from Education Secretary Terrel Bell toorrow, with or without a court ruling.
Students who drink coffee and colas to stay up all night during finals may be hurting their grades instead of helping them, a local physician said recently.
Caffeine can be taken in liquid form, as a coffee, or in pills, such as Neo-Bo.
Martin Wollman, a physician and director of Watkins Memorial Hospital, said a student could hurt his health and be injured by using caffeine to stay up all night.
"The body needs rest, the mind needs rest," he said.
HE SAID THE combination of lack of rest and overuse of caffeine could be a person's reasoning, and therefore prevent him from doing well on a test.
Caffeine pills tend to be more dangerous than coffee or cola, he said, because students do not need to drink a cup of liquid to feel the effects of the caffeine.
Caffeine can cause a person to be more sensitive to such outside stimuli as noises. When a student takes a test, that extra sensitivity could distract him and break his concentration, Wolman said.
A strong cup of coffee or tea contains 100 to 150 milligrams of caffeine, and a caffeine pill contains about 100 milligrams.
"Caffeine can be considered as a drug that has effects on body functions. In small doses, it is an accepted mild dose. If the doses, it can be toxic," he said.
NO ABSOLUTE GUIDE exists for determining how much caffeine is dangerous, because only one-tenth the
amount of caffeine that would affect another might be needed for another, he said.
Wolman said the only way to determine how much caffeine was too much was to look out for its possible side effects on each person.
Some people merely feel empty and hollow after taking a large amount of caffeine, he said, but others feel shaky, nervous and unable to relax. He said larger doses would result in marked shakiness, sweating, rapid breathing and pulse, dilated pupils and an upset stomach.
Students have come to Watkins complaining of exhaustion, low resistance to colds and upset stomachs making too much coffee or cola, he said.
HE SAID THE side effects would vanish when caffeine use was stopped.
The convicts, among them six murders and 22 drug traffickers, slipped into their cells Tuesday in the penitentiary at Mazatlan, Sinaloa.
MAZATLAN, Mexico—A group of 32 convicts killed one man, wounded two other people and later fled into Mexico's rugged Pacific mountains in a well organized escaped bid, a Red Cross spokesman said yesterday.
a Pacific resort about 540 miles south of the U.S. border.
Genaro Aztorga, the prison warden,
told authorities 10 of the convicts
overcome three prison guards and
forced them to open cell doors, while
another prisoner distracted Aztorga
in the break.
The 32 convicts飞了 in two waiting pickup trucks, which indicated the prison break was well-planned and had outside help.
unidentified woman in a shootout with police as the fugitives were making their getaway, a Mazatlan Red Cross official said.
The convicts killed a bystander, Salome Mendez, and wounded an
By United Press International
Thirtv-two escape Mexican prison
On the outskirts of Mazatlan, they also shot an unidentified man when they tried to steal his car.
A SPOKESMAN at the Sinaia District Attorney's office said police helicopters were combing the foothills in Sinaia and the surrounding mountains and of Noviht, Durango and Chihuahua in the mountains above the resort.
Grad programs get low ratings
By JENNIFER FINE Staff Reporter
GEORGE WOODYARD, associate vice chancellor for research, graduate studies and public service and dean of the graduate school, said he did not
Some graduate programs at the University of Kansas received below average ratings in a recent nationwide program at 228 universities.
The KU office of graduate studies has received ratings of programs in mathematics and physical sciences and humanities, two reports in a series of graduate programs in 51 fields. The remaining reports are expected this month.
The assessment contains a survey which rates how faculty respondents perceive the quality of the program's faculty, the effectiveness of the program in educating research scholars and students, its improvement in the last five years, the family involvement survey respondents with the work of the program's faculty.
want to comment on the ratings until all reviews were received.
He said it was not fair to compare KU with East and West coast schools.
"Harrard will be Harvard and Berkeley will be Berkley," he said. "It's important to look at how well KU fared with schools around here."
the mathematics and computer science ratings were in the mid-40s, except for a score of 36 in computer science and 39 in mathematics for the program's improvement in the last five years.
Among the ratings in the mathematics and physical science evaluation, the physics program was given scores of 45 or greater for one of one to 100, with 50 being average.
The chemistry department rated slightly higher, with a score of 50 in faculty quality and 53 in the program's effectiveness in educating researchers.
John Davidson, chairman of the physics and astronomy department, said he did not think the survey was a good indication of the physics graduate program because of factors that could not be included in the survey.
Davidson said the difference in size and methods of funding in the nation's physics programs made comparison among them unfair.
The report also rated KU humanities programs in the mid-40s, except for the department of Spanish and Portuguese, which received scores in the 60s.
THE HUMANITIES assessment included English language and literature, music, philosophy, linguistics, German, French, Spanish and French programs.
Robert Bearse, associate vice chancellor for research, graduate studies and public service and professor of physics and astronomy, said there was a need for further information in the assessment, but that he couldn't make too much of this report."
The study is sponsored by the Conference Board of the Associative Research Council, which includes the American Council of Learned Societies; the National Research Council; the National Research Council and the Social Science Research Council.
He said the ratings should not be used to compare programs.
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7:30, 9:20 Mat. Sat. Sun, 2:19
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RICHARD GERE 'DEBRA WINGER
AN OFFICER
AND A
GENTLEMAN
A PARANORMAL PICTURE
7:15, 9:30 Mat. Sat. Sun, 2:15
HILLCREST 3
THE ATOMIC CARE
"A STUNNER!
MUSIC BY SOUNDWAVE
AND BOOKSLEY"
7:40, 9:25 Mat. Sat. Sun, 2:15
CINEMA 1
DOWNSTREAM
TELLESTRON ST. STERLING
MONSIGNOR
CHRISTOPHER SHEV
7:30, 9:40
Mat. Sat. Sun,
2:00
CINEMA 2
CLASS REUNION
DOWNSTREAM
TELLESTRON ST. STERLING
COMMONWEALTH THEATRES
GRANADA TELEPHONE 801-51748
DOWNTOWN TELEPHONE 801-51748
Walt Disney FANTASIA TELEPHONE 801-51748
7:15, 9:30 Mat. Sat. Sun. 2:00
VARSITY DOWNTOWN TELEPHONE 801-51748
STALLONE R This movie he's fighting for his life
FIRST BLOOD 7:30, 9:30 Mat. Sat. Sun. 2:15
HILLCREST 1 HALLOWEEN SAMSON OF THE WEEK III The night no one comes home R 7:30, 9:30 Mat. Sat. Sun. 2:15
HILLCREST 2 R HIGH PRIORITY AN OFFICER AND A GENTLEMAN R A PARAMOUNT PICTURE 7:15, 9:30 Mat. Sat. Sun. 2:15
HILLCREST 3 R ATOMIC CARE "A STUNNER! WE HAVE BEEN WARNING WITH LAUGHTERS, LANDMARKS, AND CRISPERIES!" SET A TIME 7:40, 9:25 Mat. Sat. Sun. 2:15
CINEMA 1 MONSIGNOR 7:30, 9:40 Mat. Sat. Sun. COC
CINEMA 2 CLASS REUNION 7:30, 9:40 Mat. Sat. Sun. 2:00
The Western Civilization Film Series Presents
THE ROADS OF EXILE (THE LAST YEARS OF JEAN-JACQUES ROUSSEAU)
Thursday, November 4, 7:30 pm 308 Dyche (Audit.)
Admission: $2.00 at the door
Selling something? Place a want ad.
WHAT'S YOUR MIDNIGHT PLEASURE?
THIS IS A PICK-A-FLICK
weekend at the HILLCREST THEATRE
FRIDAY & SATURDAY — MIDNITE
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THE SONG REMAINS THE SAME
1 THE MUSIC OF LED ZEPPELIN
2
MONITY
PYTHON
LIVE AT THE
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3
A TEKY FLASH
FLESH
GORDON
A SKEW FLASH
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2 R
MONTY
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LIVE ON THE
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Nov. 4, 1982 — GSP - Corbin
7:00 p.m. Cross-Bar Library
WOMEN'S SELF-EXAM WORKSHOP
Nov.13, 1982 — Douthart Scholarship Hall
Sponsored by River City Women's
General Info. on Women's Health will be distributed.
Health Collective B116 Kansas Union 864-4934
Funded by Student Activity fee
GAWWONS
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NO COVER CHARGE Thirsty Thursday
50° Draws $1.25 Bar Drinks 10:30 - close
15c Draws 75c Bar Drinks
Entertainment by THE SCAT BAND
Homecoming Party
Saturday after the game with 2
for 1's on drinks from 5-8pm
Also serving our superb charbroiled burgers
After the game (minors admitted with their parents)
NO COVER CHARGE before 10
on weekends - Appearing this weekend
THE SCAT BAND
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I.
University Daily Kansan, November 4; 1982
Old-fashioned haircut trims frills, saves bucks
By MATT BARTEL
Staff Reporter
Although the traditional barber's haircut may once have started to give way to the hair stylist's shampoo, style and blow dry, depressed economic conditions could force a return to the barbershop, a Lawrence barber said recently.
Ken Gifford, the proprietor of the Stadium Barber Shop, 1033 Massachusetts St., said there was little difference between the haircuts he gave for $5 and the more costly ones that styling salons offer.
“All that other stuff — the shampoo, the blow dry — we do that, too,” he said, “and it will end up costing $10 or $12, or whatever, just like theirs. But a lot of guys don't feel they need to get a haircut, that's something they can do at home.”
Gifford said the current trend toward shorter hairstyles for men was fine
"We've had an awful lot of young fellows coming in and getting their hair cut to above the ears," he said. "That's our last time we had that in a long time."
THE QUALITY of the shorter cut is as good as any he has done, Gifford II.
"This is just a more full haircut," he said. "If I had to pick one style that I thought should stay around for good, I think the one now, where the hair is maybe around the top of the ear, would be the one."
"But it won't. They always have to change."
He said that the flat-top, popular in the 1950s, was probably the most difficult haircut to give, because it required the barber to stand for long periods of time with his arms out stretched, trying to make each cut similar.
"We'd cut one after another like that, and our arms would get pretty tired."
Giffard said, "Some days we wouldn't cut anything else."
Gifford said that he had a lot of regular customers, and that the conversation in his shop varied with each of them.
"We're all pretty good Monday morning quarterbacks," he said.
THE WALLS of Gifford's shop display hundreds of pictures of athletes, coaches and their teams from Kansas University of Kansas through the years.
Gifford's shop presents a quite different image to customers than the styling salons, with their individual hair styles, bright colors and glistening rows of blow dryers.
The owner of a Lawrence styling salon said her clientele differed from that of the conventional barber's. She said her customers preferred a style that took less time and trouble to maintain.
"Hairsties have gone more casual, to more of an easy-care approach," said Joda Doudna, owner of Joda and Friends, 745 New Hampshire St. "With more women in the work force, they have less time to spend on hair."
She said blow drying was a result of that desire for easy, quick care.
THE SALON offers a shampoo,
hair and style for $13 for men and
$15 for women.
The success of salons such as hers is due in part to the increased popularity of long hair for men, said Doudna, who has been cutting hair for about 10 years.
"When guys' hair got longer, barbers just couldn't handle it," said. "Guys' hair is shorter now, but there is still a lot of style to it."
TORONTO—Last-minute intervention by Chrysler Corp. Chairman Lee Iacoco yesterday failed to resolve a standoff between the company and its dealers, making a strike tomorrow against the automaker a virtuality.
Chrysler facing Canadian walkout
By United Press International
Iacocca, who pulled Chrysler's U.S. division from the brink of bankruptcy, did not make a new wage offer during
an hour-long meeting with United Auto Workers Canada Director Rob Rib
White said the two men met at Iacocca's request. But as tomorrow's 9 a.m. CST strike deadline neared, the union prepared for a strike that Chrysler officials have warned could destroy the company.
"WE TALKED about imports in the industry and the state of the economy, but on collective bargaining, there
was nothing new," White said. "If their economic offer doesn't change there will be a strike at Chrysler Canada."
A UAW spokesman said that it had not been immediately decided whether the two sides would meet again at a short-minute effort to agree on a contract.
Chrysler Vice-Chairman Gerald Greenwald, Iacoca's second in command, met with the Chrysler Canada bargaining committee yesterday and said that the two sides were far apart on salary proposals.
"IT HAS BEEN unanimously rejected by the bargaining committee," White said.
The company made its first economic offer late Tuesday but it was rejected because of its similarity to a wage package rejected by Chrysler's U.S. workers. White said that all lacoca did not reaffirm that offer and that there was no reason to expect Chrysler to make another one.
Investigator testifies shop fire deliberate
By CAROL LICHTI Staff Reporter
A Lawrence Fire Department official testified in the preliminary hearing yesterday of a Lawrence man charged with arson that the Feb. 3 fire at the Royal College Shop had been deliberately, originating in several places.
Tom Black, 40, 322 Woodlawn Dr., the owner of the shop, has been charged with arson and attempting to file a false statement with an insurance company.
Larry Stemmerman, fire investigator for the Lawrence Fire Department, said, "There were three points of origin independent from each other."
HE ALSO TESTIFIED that open cans of a flammable liquid were found in the shop's basement, which was where the fire started. The cans contained a de-glazing fluid used to remove dye from shoes, he said.
fire," said Stemmerman, one of eight witnesses who appeared yesterday.
Stemmerman and three other fire department officials testified that the Royal College Shop, 837 Massachusetts St., was locked when they arrived shortly after 6 p.m. on Feb. 3 to investigate a possible fire.
shop to fight the fire, all four extinctions. In other testimony, Mary Mier, a former bookkeeper for the Royal College Shop, said Black told her to gradually increase the amount of inventory shown on the November 1881, December 1981 and January 1982 monthly reports sent to the Northern Company of New York. All three reports were sent to the company in January.
The firefighters had to break into the shop to fight the fire. All four were certified.
"It was an incendiary fire - a set
MIER SAID THAT she had no knowledge of the actual inventory in the shoe store, and that the increase was based on invoices given to her by Black.
Black wanted the inventory on the February 1982 form to be $165,000, she said.
tory in the report for November 1981 and a $125,000 inventory in the December 1981 report. The December 1982 report is to $142,000 in the January 1982 report.
Mier testified that the shop showed a loss of $3,578 after the third quarter of 1981. The店 recorded a $1,416 profit in October, a $1,609 loss in November and a $3,578 profit in December. The store showed a profit of $4,177 for 1981 in the store's operating statements, Mier said.
ANOTHER STATE witness, Michael Roark, a certified public accountant who worked for the Royal College Shop, said inventory for the 1980 fiscal year ending June 30, 1981, was listed at $65.105 on Black's income tax return.
Using inventory cards that Black gave her after the fire, she determined a $191,000 inventory for the store at the time of the fire. she said
Greg Hammel, assistant district attorney, asked Roark whether he had questioned Black about the difference between the inventory figures on the insurance form and the income tax form
A $89,243 inventory was listed for the previous year in the store's record book.
"I asked him why the figure was lower than what was on the books," Rook said.
She said she listed a $117,400 inven-
ROARK SAID BLACK told him the lower figure on the tax form appeared because spring shoes already had been sold and fall shoes had not yet arrived.
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During Hammel's questioning, Koark said financial records showed a decrease in cash.
Roark testified that an inventory of $80,000 appeared on the July 1981 monthly insurance report. He said the figure was an estimate accelerated over the income tax inventory to cover any increase in inventory.
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Thursday, November 4
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Badminton and Table Tennis
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in Room 208 Robinson
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98
Use Kansan Classified.
ENGINEERS!
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Fri., Nov. 5
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at the
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IN THIS PAGE A MAN WORKS ON A LETTERHEAD DRAWING.
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FRI.—7:00 p.m. SAT.—3:30, 10:00 p.m.
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The true story of the Gdansk shipyard strikes that shook the world. Filmed with the cooperation of Solidarity leaders including Lech Walesa
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FRI.—3:30, 10:00 SAT.—7:00 Woodruff Auditorium $1.50
B. C.
---
University Daily Kansan, November 4. 1982
Page 9
Play by Hashinger Hall to be entered in festival
By KIESA ASCUE Staff Reporter
For the first time, a living group at the University of Kansas will enter the American College Theater Festival, the annual event of Hashring Hall said this week.
Bruce Jones, the program director, said his play, "The Lonesome Motel Blues," would be in the competition this year.
The play will be presented Nov. 11 through 14 at Hashinger. A judge from the competition will evaluate the play one of those evenings.
"There are many, many more people involved in this play than there have been in the past ones," Jones said. "We want a deal of pride in the size of this project."
For the first time, the hall will charge admission to its play. Tickets will cost $1 at the door, Jones said.
JONES WROTE the script and he co-directs the play.
"The play grew out of concerns I'd developed in other areas about mental illness."
Jones said he wrote the play because he could not find any playwright who handled slices of life from the Midwest very well on stage.
Also, he said, he had read few plays with strong female roles, but more women than men audition for roles in the main characters in his play are women.
Jones also wrote the country-flavored music that flows throughout the naiv.
Kennis Wessel, co-director of the
Institute for Cognitive Science,
play it characters in situations
where they work out problems without talking about their ideas.
"THE LANGUAGE of the playwright vaguely suggests the internal motives and feelings of the characters. We need to see how these motives affect those internal feelings and motives."
The play revolves around a woman, Sally, who discovers that her ex-husband was one of the clients of her deceased mother, who was a prostitute. At the end of the first act, her dead mother telephones.
"Understanding what's going on in the play is more cumulative than perceived," Jones said. "There are clues all the way through. I don't think the play's ambiguous, but moments sometimes are."
Five of the six cast members of "The Lonesome Motel Blues" are Hassinger
"WINNING IS going to Washington, D.C." Willis, who is also head of the KU theatre department, said. "The success comes from being selected."
About 40 plays will be evaluated in the theatre festival in the Midwest region, and four of them will proceed to regional competition. From the 60 plays entered on this level nationwide, between five and seven will go on to national competition at the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C., said Ronald Willis, national chairman of the festival.
The top prize is $2,000 and publication, he said. The winning playwright receives membership in the Dramatist's Guild
The cost of producing the play was $600, about average for a Hashinger production, Jones said. The hall presents a play every year.
Human rights group finds more graves
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina—A human rights group said yesterday it had discovered two more cemeteries that may contain hundreds of victims of the armed forces" "dirty war" against terrorism.
By United Press International
The human rights group, relatives of people who "disappeared" during the anti-terrorist attack of 1976-79, told Judge Pedro Soria the latest discoveries bring to eight the number of secret burial grounds that may contain the remains of thousands of people.
whether their relatives were buried anonymously in the municipal cemeteries of Berissa and Magdalena in the town of La Plata, 33 miles south of Bogota.
IN THE PAST two weeks, human rights groups have discovered more than 1,200 unmarked graves in the paupers' sections of the municipal cemeteries near Buenos Aires and other major cities.
fate of 297 Italian believed to be among those murdered by the Argentine military government from 1976 to 1979.
Judges investigating the cases have confiscated cemetery records to find out whether the people buried there were killed by the armed forces.
The Italian Foreign Ministry has recently issued communicated saying it has made repeated requests to the Argentine government for information about Italians reported missing in Argentina. The Argentine government has never replied to the inquiries, the ministry said.
over relations between Rome and Buenos Aires
ITALIAN AMBASSADOR Sergio C忍川achi said the military's failure to answer Italy's request was a "mistake" years "has always cast a shadow"
Human rights groups began their search for clandestine mass graves Oct. 23 when they learned that the body of a labor organizer, kidnapped by security forces and reported to the police, was parents in an unmarked plot of the Grand Bourg cemetery, 14 miles west of Buenos Aires.
AN ESTIMATED 6,000 to 20,000 people disappeared from 1976-78; most of them kidnapped from their homes or offices by heavily armed men claiming to be members of government security squads.
Departments to replace evaluation forms
By DIRK MILLER
Staff Reporter
The faculty evaluation used in the past to determine tenure decisions, faculty promotions and wage considerations at the University of Kansas will be replaced in most cases with current evaluations, KU officials said yesterday.
Funding for the curriculum and instruction evaluation, handed out by professors at semester's end, was cut. Another group of students was reduced by summer budget cuts.
Students evaluated professors in each class to provide feedback to KU, said Jerry Hutchison, associate vice chancellor for academic affairs.
June Michal, assistant to the vice chancellor for academic affairs, said the departmental evaluations could have helped in curbing tenure decisions as the old evaluations.
"No one can be considered for tenure without some evidence of teacher training."
HUTCHISON SAID the office of
BUT PHILIP MCKNIGHT, associate professor of curriculum and instruction, said that the old survey would be used by some schools and departments but that he expected only 15 to 20 percent of its former use.
McKnight is director of the office of instructional resources, which conducted the surveys. He said the evaluation would be used by the School of Business
and several departments in the School of Education.
Charles Krider, associate dean of the School of Business, said the school wanted to keep the evaluations conducted with data collected from past surveys.
He said the cost of the survey would be about $1,000.
McKnight said, "Departments will probably find that in developing, administering and talying their own costs, the cost will be larger than they expected."
He said the cost had increased to 15 cents a student from a previous estimate of 14 cents, which he had given in an Aug. 23 memo to KU departments. The cost included pencils, evaluation forms and computer tapes.
Computer time was donated by KU, he said.
Gerhard Zuther, chairman of the English department, said it would probably cost the department $30 to run its own survey to about 7,000 students.
The curriculum and instruction evaluation was not without problems,
KU
"There were some doubts about the usefulness of the numerical computations of the old survey," Zuther said.
HE SAID HIS department had relied mainly on the evaluation's comment section. The department would administer the results sheet for students to evaluate faculty.
Hutchison said that many faculty were using a different form than the traditional one.
O. R.E.A.D.
ORIENTEERING INSTRUCTION
will be the topic of this Outdoor Recreation Education Adventure Discovery workshop, tonight at 7:30 p.m.
23rd & Iowa. Gene Wee from the Student Union Activity Office will be presenting this workshop.
99
KWALITY COMICS' GRAND OPENING
Friday and Saturday November 5th & 6th $ \frac{1}{4} $ off bagged back issues sale
We have new and limited distribution Comics!
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!!GRADUATE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE ELECTIONS!!
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Nominations due in GSC Office, Kansas Union By Friday, 4 pm November 5, 1982
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12.
Page 10 University Dally Kansan, November 4, 1982
Cider Mill impresses past upon its customers
By VICKY WILT Staff Reporter
LOUISBURG—The aroma of hot apple cider and doughnuts fills the cool air inside the little store, attracting patrons to watch the doughnut-making process as they sample fresh-baked goods.
The Loussburg Cider Mill's apple cider has become a favorite of many area residents over the last five years, and it is the result, the mill's operation has expanded.
Dave Bosworth and Tom Schierman started the cider mill in 1975 and have expanded it into a full-time operation. A building in front of the barn has been transformed into an old-fashioned apple products and natural foods are sold.
Antique furnishings add authenticity to the store. Wood beams used in the store were saved from a local farmer's 1875 barn. Antique weighing scales hang from the ceiling and an old mantle holding stove stands in the corner.
Mailboxes from an old post office and glass counters with bins once used in a store hold jars of apple butter and baskets full of spices and apples.
THE MILL and store, located about 30 miles east of Ottawa, is a favorite stopping spot for tourists or those out for a Sunday drive after church.
Susie West, Hillsdale, said recently that apple cider used in place of milk gave the doughnuts their popular flavor. She was busy making and sacking doughnuts to stay ahead of the demand.
"About 2 p.m. we'll have a rush.
People come in after they get home from church and have dinner. If we don't start early, we'll get behind," she
Grover and Helen Boehm, Gardner,
watched the girls making doughnuts
and talked about the memories the country store brought back for them.
Grover Boehm pointed to an old cider press in the corner of the room and recalled making cider in the early 1930s.
"WE MADE apple cider a long time ago. We had a press but it was smaller than that one, it only had one bucket," he said.
Other antiques in an adjoining room took the two back to when they were first married. The sight of a wringer hanging on the wall spent whole days washing clothes.
As she leaned over an imaginary washboard and tub, she demonstrated how she used to rub the clothes against her arm and then wiren them through the rollers.
"We had a tub and a washboard to get the clothes clean and we had to use old lyse we made ourselves. Things are sure easier now," she said.
The cider press, the mill's main attraction, is set up in a barn at the back of the property and operates every day but Sunday. Behind the barn, crates of Jonathan and Delicious apples are stacked ready for the next press run.
"WE GET three gallons of cider from one bushel of apples. There are two apples in eight ounces of cider — calorie-wise." Linda Bosworth said
Both fresh cider and pasteurized cider can be bought at the store. When it's pasteurized, the fresh juice is made at degrees before bottled. Borsawith said.
"Fresh cider is just juice and every day it will taste a little different," she said. "Cider will turn into 8 percent vinegar, hard stone, and eventually turns into vinegar."
PASTEURIZED CIDER has an indefinite jug life and because it is heated it will stay good for 30 days before turning hard. Bosworth said.
He said the apple peels and cores were put in a compost pile or sold to a market.
Enzyme drops heart attack deaths
BOSTON-A review of a decade of international studies shows treating heart attack patients with intravenous infusions of an enzyme increased survival rates up to 25 percent, doctors reported yesterday.
By United Press International
Treating heart attacks victims with streptokinase, an enzyme produced by streptococcus bacteria, cut initial mortality rate 20 to 25 percent and
The treatment was most effective when given within a few hours, said Samuel Z. Goldbäher of Harvard University, a member of the research team.
enhanced long-term survivability, according to a report in the New England Journal of Medicine.
WHEN ADMINISTERED 72 hours after the patient suffered heart attack symptoms, the onyxene's ability to alter blood flow was reduced, the studies showed.
The researchers warned, however, the enzyme increased local bleeding and should not be given to patients with blood-clotting problems.
The review was prompted because of a growing tendency among physicians to do intracoronary infusions in which the enzyme is administered directly into a coronary artery by means of a catheter, instead of the intravenous infusion into an arm vein, Goldhaber said.
"Intravenous infusion of streptokinase is less invasive, less expensive
and easier than intracoronary infusion, and its effects have already been studied in randomized trials," the researchers reported.
HEART ATTACKS, suffered by hundreds of thousands of Americans annually, occur when the vessels carrying blood to the heart become blocked, thus cutting off the organ's oxygen supply.
Streptokinase dissolves clots in the coronary artery, thereby saving the heart muscle which would die if cut off from the blood supply for too long.
Students may own computers bit by bit
By BRET WALLACE Staff Reporter
KU students may add another piece of furniture to their rooms in the future a micro-computer.
"It is feasible that in a few years students can sit in their rooms and call the library and have the entire card catalog read into their computers," Earl Schwoppe, professor of computer science, said recently. "They can do an entire research project without leaving home."
Micro-computers are single-unit
Arthur Thomas, Arthur Young Distinguished Professor of Business,
He said that it was hard to tell how long it would be before KU would require students to have microcomputers, but that it was inevitable.
"MICRO-COMPUTERS will be as common in five years as the scientific computing revolution."
A Fabulous Change of Face-FREE
computers designed for home and office use.
"Technology is available to keep the price of computers dropping for several more years," he said. "Students will learn that it is important that that is powerful enough to work with."
Computer manufacturers are developing technology that would give computers more memory and add such features as text editing at a low cost, he
dropping 25 percent a year for several years, and this trend will continue. Schwepe said.
Carnegie-Mellon University in Pittsburgh last week announced a program which would require all students to buy micro-computers starting next fall.
SCHWEPPE SAID micro-computers were already playing an increasingly larger role in the job market.
Many departments are using the
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Corbitt teaches an introductory class in micro-computers which, she said, students will be required to take under five-year teacher education program.
Mary Kay Corbitt, assistant professor of curriculum and instruction, said that the School of Education has been teaching micro-computer use since fall.
STOP BY 115 MILITARY SCIENCE
computers for administrative purposes and several are teaching classes in use.
Prices of computers have been
"People are coming back and saying, 'I should have taken that class, my students know more about the computer than I do,'" Corbitt said.
Lanette Barton, Gamma Phil Beta, gets a makeover before Rush Week at Merle Norman Cosmetics. Individual or group demonstrations available. Call
CALL 864-3161
KU
INTRAMURAL SQUASH TOURNAMENT
November 13-14/15-16 beginning at 10:00 a.m. Tournament will be determined upon number of entrants. Entry deadline will be Wednesday. November 14-15 p.m. in Room 208 Robbin Center, Entrance $1.00 plus can of unonned balls.
MERLE NORMAN
STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT
9R
If you're a college senior, you can apply early and get our exams out of the way. If you pass the exams, we'll guarantee your Officer Candidate School (OCS) in writing.
at 841-5324, for an appt.
701 Massachusetts
ARMY. BE ALL YOU CAN BE.
Take your first step toward becoming an Army officer today.
That's in addition to Army benefits such as health care and up to 30 days earned vacation a year. And there may even be a chance to travel or live abroad.
944 MASSACHUSETTS
LADIES PURCHASE
25c for 15oz Draws
$1.25 for 60oz Pitchers
between
3-9PM
CALL: 843-0465
LADIES DAY TODAY
NightHawk
As an Army officer, you'll have many responsibilities. And some special privileges.
BECOME AN EXECUTIVE IN 21 WEEKS.
Attention
GREEKS
( ID's Please)
Don't Forget Greek
Happy Hour Friday
We will open to all our Members &
guests at 5 pm for our regular 2 for
1 special on Drinks & Food till 8 pm.
GAMMONS
SNOWWY
23rd & Ousdahl
Southern Hills
Center
842-3977
BUY YOUR KU FOOTBALL
Mum Corsages
at a Flower Shoppe
The Angelique underwrite is a sheer plunge and designed to reveal her in the most flattering way. There's a tap pant, bra, panty, teddy and camisole... all daring and lacy.
1101 Mass 841-0800 Open 8:30-5:30 Mon.-Sat.
WARNER'S
UNDERCOVER 21 W.9th
--and with the participation of
Warner's knows how to wrap you in a wisp of lace. And very little else.
WILL SPEAK ON
Yvonne Brathwaite Burke
Women and Political Savvy
DATE Factor, November 5, 1982
TIME 12:00 11:00 a.m.
PLACE In-Thermal Room
Barnes, an attorney, and vice chairwoman of the 1972 National Convention, was a former CONFERENCE CALIFORNIA chair. She will be the joint president of the CONFERENCE CALIFORNIA organization, which will host its second annual convention at the house of Representatives.
Sponsored by THE EMILY TAYLOR WOMEN'S RESOURCE CENTER, 218 STRAIGHT
UFS PRESENTS:
At LA CAGE AUX FOLLES
the strangest things happen
when you wear polka dots
UFS
YOUNG MAYOR
LA CAGE AUX FOLLES (Birds of a Feather)
MARCELLO DANON presents
UGO TOGNAZZI MICHEL SERRAULT
"LA CAGE AUX FOLLES"
[English Script]
Based upon the play by JEAN OUARD. A film by EDOUARD MOLINARO
FRANCIS VEDER, EFOULOR MARCELLO DANSON and J.A. PОВЯТ
with CLaire MARIER REMI LAURENT BENNY LAREM CARMEN LAUSA TOLUSA MANEIR
MICHEL GALABRU Music by ENNIO MORRICONE A French-halian co production
LES PRODUCTIONS ARTISTES ASSOCIES DA MA PRODUZIONE SPA
UNited Artists
At 7.9 & 11 PM
This Fri. & Sat. Nov. 5 & 6
In Downs Aud. (Dyche Hall next to the Union)
Admission $1.50
---
University Daily Kansan, November 4, 1982
Page 11
NCAA, AIAW fight over women's sports
BY DARRELL PRESTON Staff Reporter
Officials of the National Collegiate Athletic Association and the Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women are awaiting a federal judge's order to dismiss the death of the AIAW or the end of the AAA's involvement in women's athletics.
The AIAW is using the NCAA to recover losses the AIAW claims it suffered because of NCAA-sponsored women's athletic tournaments last spring. The civil trial ended last week after three weeks of hearings.
BOB WEST, clerk for the U.S. District Court of the District of Columbia, said yesterday that he expected Judge Thomas P. Jackson to a ruling in December after each submission its final written arguments.
The outcome of the case could influence the course of women's athletics at KU and other universities, athletic officials said recently.
Donna Lopiana, past AIAW president, said she was optimistic about the chances of a favorable ruling for the women's college basketball departments for women's collegiate sports.
"I don't think anyone expects us to win," she said. "I went into the trial giving us a 50-50 chance. Now I think we have 80-20 odds of winning."
Although the judge has not yet issued a ruling, Lopiano said, he denied several motions by the NCAA to have the case dismissed.
BILL CRAMER, the NCAA's Washington, D.C., attorney, said he made a motion to have the case dismissed after the AIAW presented its case.
violated the Sherman Antitrust Act by offering to pay travel expenses for women's teams attending last spring's basketball tournament.
"The AIAW did not have that strong of a case," he said.
The AIAW is seeking $6 million and a permanent injunction to prohibit the NCAA from having any involvement in women's athletics.
In the suit, the AIAW said the NCAA
MARGO POLIVY, the AIAW's Washington, D.C., attorney, said the AIAW presented a strong case.
"I think we have a good case, and I have no reason to believe we will lose." Polly said. "The NCAA has obviously violated antitrust legislation."
A 20-year-old Wellsville man was in the Douglas County jail yesterday on $1,000 boad on charges of vehicular homicide, driving under the influence and possession of marijuana.
Man charged in fatal wreck
Thomas Williams Higgins, Wellsville, was arrested Tuesday night on charges made in a complaint filed Monday in district court. The charges refer to a Sept. 25 accident that killed Orie Zeek, 55, Edgerton, on U.S. Highway 56 west of Baldwin City.
THE ACCIDENT OCCURRED when Higgins' vehicle collided head-on with Zeek's car in the
westbound lane, the affidavit filed in the case said.
Zeek was killed on impact and was pronounced dead at the scene, the affidavit said.
Higgins was pinned in the car until officers were able to release him from the wreckage. He suffered minor injuries.
OFFICERS AT THE SCENE conducted a breath test on Higgins that revealed 21 percent alcohol content, the affidavit said. Officers also found several marijuana cips and a large amount of the district attorney's office said.
The University Daily
KANSAN WANT ADS Call 864-4358
CLASSIFIED RATES
sixteen
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AD DEADLINES
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
to run
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Friday 5 p.m.
Friday Saturday 5 p.m.
The Keruas 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.
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 email to the Business Office at 804-4536.
BUSINESS OFFICE
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Do you need cash? Bring your unwanted merchandise to the Lawrence Community Auction. Every Wednesday, 7 p.m. Consignments accepted Tuesday through Friday, 10 a.m., p. 708. New Hampshire, Call 821-2421 for info.
SURROGATE MOTHERS needed for Hagar institute for inertia couples. Artificial insulation termination of buildings must be provided to residents, must have given birth to healthy child or pregnant mother. Call 912-323-1344, Hagar Institute three months paid. Call 912-323-1344, Hagar Institute three months paid.
Superscript Formation mini retreat exploring perma-
tural church formation at the 100-year-old
Christian Mission Center, 1024 Owakona.
Burmese Bible Study at Wesleyan Church.
FOR RENT
1 Bedroom basement app. on bus route 15 min walk to campus. Utilities paid. $225. 941-819.
EXTRA nice apartments, large and small. Next to campus. Tuesdays paid reasonably $481-485. Refrigerator. Freezer. Wi-Fi. Leases available on energy efficient 2 & 8 bedrooms. Reently constructed. Clean. SKW. SW location. 2 & 3 bedrooms from $300-$500. Call and ask about our low heating bills. C487-4754 between
2 BH apt, available now 1st floor, large quiet, comp. office, 3rd floor, large & 2nd floor & waived pet. No pets. Click to campus. 843-830-3300
LUXURY LEVING NEAR REAR Wet Meadows Condo,
Napa, BAYSIDE RUITER CAR, dishwashers,
nips. petitions 704/878-368 or 718-368
Live in the CHRISTIAN CAMPUS HOUSE this fall and spring. Become a part of a growing campus ministry. Call Alan Rosenak, campus minister 842-6592.
MADBOWROOK. Furnished studio available on sublease now through May 31st. Free cable, electric kitchen, fully carpeted. Enjoy the quality of furniture at affordable prices. Call 842-2600 at Crestline in Atlanta.
APARTMENT LIFE
GOT YOU DOWN?
THINKING OF
MOVING BACK TO
THE CAMPUS
LIFESTYLE?
THINK OF
NAISMITH HALL
ON CAMPUS
CONVENIENCE WITH
AN OFF CAMPUS
LIFESTYLE!
NAISMITH HALL
843-8559
1. Nice 1 bedroom apartment, furnished, water paid,
need sublease for next semester, starting in
January. If like to see, or interested at 841-684-
8142, 841-684, 8315, ask about 106, apt. 11, Hanover
Two and two bedroom apart, available immediately and
Laundry facility. Senior leases available.
Laundry facility. Senior leases available.
PRINCETON PLACE PATIO APARTMENTS. Now Available, 2 bedrooms, 3 bath, perfect for roommates, features wood burning fireplaces, 2 car garage with windows, kitchenette, gas range and pet kitchen, quiet surroundings. No pice $425 per month. Open house 9:30-3:30 daily at Princeton Bldg. or phone 842-2757 for additional information.
Backpack Vault - Suitebase 2 bdmr. apt, new carpet,
paint, ink in clothes, laundry facilities on bus
water, rf water. pd $30/month. Available Dec.
17. 798-2538
Reems for rent plus utilities. Kitchen privilges. No.
References. Non-smokers. 845-1601.
Sullivanice one IIR apartment, completely furnished. Water paid, laundry facilities. Close to campus.
Sublease 2 hr. dep at Park 25. Dec in Duc 18.
does not start paying till Jan 1. Sublease from Jan
to Dec ends on Nov 30.
SOUTHERN PARKWAY TOWNEHouses. 30th & Kauffman. If you're of today or a chipped apart brick house, all appliances, attached garage, swimming pool, all appliances, attached garage, swimming pool. Call 215-787-6192 (evenings and weekends) for more information. 215-787-6192 (evenings and weekends) for more information.
STEVEN REAL REALTATE insure demand subsample 3 h
STEVEN REAL REALTATE insure demand subsample 3 h
monthly份 private security deposit Call Theta
monthly份 private security deposit Call Theta
Salt Lake furnished copy 1. LR pt. ART, 225/month at 698
Expertly illustrated. Expensive mail! 841-303-8141
Sublime 1 bedroom apartment $329/month, close
to Westchester. $249/month, close to
Kapella 484/632 or Cedarwood Apartments.
Kapella 484/632 or Cedarwood Apartments.
3 three furnished sleeping rooms near downtown
Share large kitchen & bath. 800. 90 month plus deposit
Tired of doing all the housework? Check out Sunflower保洁. Secure clean and inexpensive laundry services.
Two BR Trailride townhouse for sublease immediately. rent reduced! Call 841-3513 for details.
VERVE nice 3 BR Puppies, fully carpeted, new paint,
hospital docking, disposal, penns, £275; burea
burea 841-482
NICELY DECORATED spacious room. Furnished
$8 utilities费. New university, downtown Off-
shore location. 90% tax paid. Call 718-534-2630.
FOR SALE
1973 Cree. Impal, AT, AC, FM/AM radio. 4-Dr. Must see.
Phone 7-849-1081
1978 Dodge Colt. Perfect condition, 39,000 miles, 2 dr., 4dr. and radiators. male. Box 84 at 1834-3983.
70 Old Delta 88, power steering, power brakes,
automatic transmission Good condition. Low miles.
AM/FM stereo, turbantle, 8-track all in one unit with
9 tracks. 480kHz/240MHz
2 Spaces. (1 and only one)
Biennes, 10 speed, aquarium, fan, air-conditioner. Call
Holmes - Mississippi bluestemmer guitar amp,
300W, 4-10" speakers, 300W, 924-8634.
House Sale! KLIPCH La Scalas 104 db efficiency
100 Bundle Tundra bw/case, great shape $135;
Jennings 70 lb compound bin box w/ acetate
thickness 70 lb thickness
Tires great 195 call; Call Gary at 864-1120
BUSINESS A RISE IN MCMC THEORY OF GRAPHED GEAR
BUISNESS A RISE IN MCMC THEORY OF GRAPHED GEAR
BUISNESS A RISE IN MCMC THEORY OF GRAPHED GEAR
Kedak slids projector 600. Excellent conditions, without slide bulb. Reqlt: $16-110, Books: $8-Call
KWALITT COMICS GRAND ANNUAL. November 6 & 8. We have "The Spirit" by Exeter; "blockbuster" by Daniel Cohn; and more.
NAD 30; wait arm $185 & B & W speakers $135;
turntable turntable with cartridge $20, or offer
any other option.
Observe Computer. Included text editor, supercalc,
basis, CPM, games, and other software $1600
$1600
PRE 1100 (190 in). Snookie Skate. Brand new - best offer.
748-2301.
$179.95, asking $60.99 Call off 6:00 8:41 11:05
GTSK5, GT50 750, 11,000 miles Looks and runs
are good for you!
TENNIS RACKETS - Recently selected selection newmed Head Compa, Wilson Advantage, Kramer Pro Staff. Dunlap Maxpay, Davis Classice, Prince Coach if you in good condition. 842/613 at 8:00 a. p. 913.
Champai Champ, 4 month old. Only 1,600 mcal
excellent condition. $500.00 need, asking $450.00
Technics SA-303 AM / FM receiver 45 watts, 2 year old.
Good condition. K610 186-1838 1:50 pm.
in instruments; Gibson Hummingbird Guitar,
$450; Gibson ES30 Guitar, $40; old black front
Fender Deluxe Reviver Amp with BJL speaker,
$299; Alto Autoharp, $60. All excellent condition.
84-6717
Toyota Corolla 1977-4D, A/C, radio, great condition.
must see to appreciate. $270 833-5644.
FOUND
LANTZ: 8 month old tabby totabie with black eyes and brown fur. Please visit www.lantz.com #11 & New Jersey. Please visit 842-683-5097, see www.lantz.com.
Found a pair of prescription glasses in a blue case in the Hoch Hof Auferstand. Identify at Hoch Leest &
LOST. Set of keys on a "General hospital" key ring
REWARD. Call 841-5628
FOUND: 1 pr. men's shoes, size 11 area of Stouffen
Place. Call 843-9418 to identify.
LGSIT. Black clutch衬垫 w/ bague trim (8" x 1")
clutch shims, the driver's license. SUED
at 190-799-3077.
Pineau green! Green Dewwart Macaw *Lovid vicinity 7h*
Pineau green! Green Dewwart Macaw *Lovid vicinity 7h*
Suitable for snug, Suitable for snug, Suitable for snug.
Reward: Last, deep orange male tattoo Cat. Swirl pattern on sides. Stippled. Stipped. Wearing name tag.
LOST. A pair of glasses rimless, plastic
lenses keep loss behind Welcome to 10-28. CALL
(954) 723-6964.
Computer service agency has an opportunity to enter or advance in computer field, full-time combination position. Send resume and/or training desired. Apply Personnel Office, Administration Center 201 Louisiana. DO YOU RUN OUT OF MONEY BEFORE YOU DO YOU RUN OUT OF MONEY BEFORE YOU with extra income from interesting part-time work? You may distribute trainers you for a朋善 opportunity. Send name and phone to Route 2. Box 185-A.
HELP WANTED
Catalic Center at Kansas University seeks experienced professional to direct external support programs with initial emphasis on ongoing state and local experience. Students earn 3 years of experience in fundraising or related profession. Salary based on experience. Send resume to Patrice Witte Krietle, St. Lawrence Catholic Center, 1425 East 46th Street, Boston, MA 02117.
We are looking for our pup. She is all black & not very big. Call Dave 841-8407.
FORTRAN APPLICATIONS PROGRAMMER:
Half-time research assistantship available for program adaptation and development in remote sensing applications. Training in microcomputers. FORTRAN background required, microcomputer and remote sensing experience required. Contact the Kassas Applied Remote Sensing Program, Room 340 Nichols Hall, 864-4754. Application deadline 5 p.m. November 10, 2018. Equal Opportunity.
Female wanted by disabled man to do simple one and two hour a week. Payment free, board and room.
Kwaity棠品 GRAND OPENING One-fourth off bagged back issue sales. Friday and Saturday Nov. 10, &half. 7th West. We also have undergrounds. Our students attend a special Program. Must have experience and/or study with young children. Send letter of hours available to Director Children's Learning Center 341
U.S. CIVIL SERVICE, $795.76 + $433.33, Job Security,
Civil Service is accepting applications for over 228 Federal
occupations. How many of these jobs do You qualify?
How many Federal Jobs are available for the entire state
of Kansas and Nationwide. The Cost? Only $0.00. And
You have a lot to gain and nothing but a loss. But a
$0.00 job package will not ever make you ever made in your future. Send $0.00 to: Federal Job Announcements, Jerry B. Hornbeck Services 411-254-1022.
Part-time girl gril personnel needed. Noones-nights and Sunday nights. Apply in person at the Visit Restaurant, 1872 F Street.
Freshman - Scholarships available, it's not too late to enroll in Naval ROTC. H码 809-3161.
KWALITY COMICS GRAND OPENING Friday and Saturday. Register for free prizes. 2 block west of the library. (866) 350-7411.
PERSONAL
A Special For Students, Hairdresser $7, Perms $42
Charme 1383% Mass. 843-836. Ask for Deen Jensen.
A Strong Keg outlet - Benet Retail Liquor. Cluffed
Wine-Kegs - ice-cold beer 2 binks, north of Memorial
Hall.
Buttons, campaignstyle, custom made for any occu-
pation. Send your resumes to:
COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES; early &
advanced outpatient abortion; quality medical care;
confidentiality assures Kansas City Area; call
(713) 469-2800.
Don's Automotive Center
TWO CAR TOWING
SPECIALIZING IN IMPORT
AUTO SERVICE & REPAIR
* Import Auto Parts
- Import Auto Parts
* Bosch Electric & Ignition Parts
501 Michigan M-F-8-6 p.m. 841-4833
Does the DCM TIME WINDOW REALY HAVE SECRET POWERS? FIND out at KFIR* GRAIN SECRET POWERS! A way to find out about ECKANAR, a way of life leading to greater spiritual awareness and freedom will hold an open discussion class Thursday. Nov. 4 - 3 p.m. on the campus of the University of Topics include Herbs: The Magic Healer, Health and the Astral Body and Running with Total Companions ENCORE CORPS CORP. 2121 W. Sharp Full color
NEW Standard IBM Correcting
Selective III typewrites. $50.25.
Volume discounts available.
Please, call IBM at
IBM
Footlights will now be open till 9:00 p.m. every
Thursday, Footlights, 2b & Iowa
ENCORE COPY CORPS, 2112 W. 25th. Full color copies from slides or urines.
1-295-1372
GLSOK invites you to a Potchuck dinner Thursday, 4 November, 7 at 4 p.m. at the Community Building, 11th & Vermont. Guest speaker topic:“Handcapped and Handicapized People: Perspectives provided.” Glove I love you more! Agate.
For good quality, clean, affordable next to new
York Avenue, 127th Street, 48th St. 459-862-3280.
249 New Haven in the Marketplace, Twn. Sat.
8:30-10:30, Sun. 10:30-12:30.
Elizabeta - I miss you. Please call or write. I miss you very much. 143.
How loud is reed? Find out at 7:00 p.m. at kiel's Kohl's Shop and in mob. Bob Wirtstein of the Crimson River.
KWALYPH COMICS' one-fourth offBiggard teen title in which the new comics also have Spanish Comics. 109, Wed 7th in the morning.
HAWKET HOLIDAY MART Shop for Christmas crafts and holiday decorations. Excellent opportunity for craftwork kits and supplies. Start earning money now! Friday, 9 a.m.-7 p.m. Etsy.com/hawketholidaymart Start earning money now! Friday, 9 a.m.-7 p.m. Etsy.com/hawketholidaymart Center 3rd & Guestland 642-851-8980 or 841-1092 for orders
Instant passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization,
employment, and of course fine portraits
Safari Studios 749-161.
— Home Electronics —
TV and Stereo Repair
on major brands.
842-4473 1104 West 23rd
NE Valentine Club
KS MO
HEADACH, BACKACH, STIFF NEEC, LEGK PAINT Find and correct the CAUSE of the problem! Call Dr. Mark Johnson for modern quirky carepiece: Accepting Blue Cross and Lone Star
FREE DETAILS
VALENTINE
BOX 28394
R.C. MO 64118
DEAR FRIEND, WE CAN INTRODUCE YOU TO SOME NEW PERSONS FOR FRIENDSHIP OR MARRIAGE
2222 Iowa
West Coast Saloon Open Jam Session Every Thursday Drums & amps provided Comic talent welcome 50° off Pitchers with Dorm ID
841-BREW
Kitten is seeking a positive environment in mature, playful, affectionate, cute as it has been by 1872. Req. Master's degree in Psychology WITH SUA- Sign up deadline NOV 5 @ 9 p.m. 4279. Also ask boat to stop in Steamboat Bay. Submit resumes to Kitten, Inc., 60 W. 3rd St. and Cancun, Mexico; too call SA Office 884-3477.
LEBERT: Happy! I [Dinner] served at 8:00 Dress. WE'RE HERE TO BE A PART OF YOUR FRIENDShip. LEBERT: Happy! I [Dinner] served at 8:00 Dress. WE'RE HERE TO BE A PART OF YOUR FRIENDShip.
We're An
Official Representative for
ALL Airlines offering the Lowest
Flights Filling Fast
Air Fares Possible
ON CAMPUS LOCATION
In the Student Union
See Us TODAY!
Maupintour travel service
749-0700
Many thanks to the beautiful ADPs) for another successful Hound Mothers' Halloween Howe. You are a great resource!
New, it is "Buy Doug Schoerke a Beezo" day. Happy 21st.
I'll be very happy with this.
PSCYCHIC AWARENESS FAIR. Consultations available from B.C. area C.pa school. Free lectures on the importance of water conservation in Ball. Ball. Sat, Nov. 6, 12 noon "Dreams," 2 p.m.; Pam."Ball." Southern Xtica Shopping Center, 23rd & 4th floors.
Pentel is now 30% off at footlights when you mention this penet
* PENTE AND FOOTLIGHTS.
RESEARCH PAPERS
TOLL-FREE HOTLINE
Portraits drawn from photos. Great gifts, Matting
of 48 inches x 36 inches. Mats for 84 inches or
40 inches. Keep warm. I'm up to it.
800-621-5745
800-621-5745
IN ILLINOIS CALL 312-922-0001
AUTHORS' RESEARCH, ROOM 600
4.0 Searnton, Chicago, IL 80055
SWORD-FIGHTING & MEDIEDIAL DANCE
formed of Kensington Fashion Fall concludes!
No charge. Come join the fun! Starts 8:30 p.m.
Friday, November 14, Southern Hills Shopping Center
pay you over $1000 per month for the last 2 years of college if you have taken 1 yr of calculus and 1 yr of physics; if you determine graduate level training in radiological fundamentals, and electrical engineering.
Say it on a shirt, custom silicone printing, T-shirts, jeans and caps. Swirl by Searls 749-1611.
larger if your academic performance is above average. Other benefits include a $3000 funds offer, graduate school, and a year after graduation and a startling salary that is second to none. For details on how you can investigate this opportunity, see Naval Engineering Program, personal interviewing in the Engineering Place.
Schneider Wine & Keg Shop The finest selection of
wine from the largest supplier of strong kegs.
W 22d, W 28f, W 36f
Skillet's liquor store serving U.S. daily since 1949. Compare in and compare. Skillet Wkidled Skillet. 1066 Mass
Merriman Televisions. Video Recorders. Name
Televisionist. Get your job at Merriman in the K.C. area. Get your best deal, then call them 718-354-0296.
This week's password at Fooldress is Mike Hunt
Mention it and receive 1% of gift! I gift you. Fooldress
Want to buy science fiction and fantasy paperbacks?
Call 843-7298 between 9-5.
The Kogger-Weekly Specials on Koggi! Call 841-9450
/ 1610% W. 21rd
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale ! Make sense out of Western Civilization! Sense make to use in your case! Study for exam preparation. "New Analysis of Western civilization!" available now at Town Crier, The New York Times.
The Etc. Shop
Thursday: House Shift "Down & Out" 7:15-8:14.
Tuesday for (1) S. 7, Up & Under among Johns-
wolf
Just Arrived:
10 West 9th St.
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
10 West 9th St.
1943 Olive Green Wool Jackets lined—Cute and Warm!
Video帐篷 of Academic SKL Enhancement Series:
Video Reading and Preparation for Exams.
Friday, November 5. Call or come by the Student
Room. Call 610-823-4128, 12:59 Hall for an appointment.
FREE!
What makes the birthday boy happiest on his birthday? Send him a strip-o-grap and see. 824-0000. World Class II can be no more than a department store shelfcase. Find out at Kefas Grammar School.
DON'T FORGET
10¢ DRAWS
$1.00 COVER
3 pm - 10:30 pm
TONIGHT AT
MURPHY'S
8th & Vermont
DON'T FORGET
KRAILY COMICS 'GRAND' GRAND OPENING one-fourth
off bagged hockey trade sale Friday and Saturday
from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
KRAILY COMICS 'GRAND' OPENING Friday and
Saturday. Register for free price; $bill west of
5 a.m.
Ski etc. presents all skis (every week) on Sleeper
SKI etc. presents all skis (every week) on Sleeper
Group rate and bags.
Call 614-723-8500.
Alterations, tailoring and dressmaking. Experienced
mess. No job too small or large. 824-5661.
SERVICES OFFERED
Alternator, starter and generator specialists. Parts, service and exchange units. BELL AUTOMOTIVE
CS TUTOR, CS 200, 300, 210 and other U.G. courses,
$5 an hour; Call Auria B4 842 748
Sarah will now! Lawrence Driving School, receive training on the right side of the road for three days, pay later, transportation provided.
FRENCH TUTOR. If you need a tutor, I need a student. Fam. 843-517-314
MATH TLUOR, Bob Mcairn, patient professional
M. for 40 yrs. in dance, disease, 80 yrs.
MATH GS- STATISTICS. Expert Tutor. Math 102, Ictard, business. Excel & math. math 102, Ictard, business. Excel & math.
**CHAPTER 7**
Your phone is locked and very reasonable. Tay 841-3065. Evenings
and weekends 843-3064.
Your portrait to someone with everything - rehearsal, harmenise. Holiday special $50. Christensen and Helen's new book.
TUFOR with good teaching experience in MATH
006-221 Cs 350 Engr. Engr & FRENCH (Native)
240-258 Cs 350 Engr. Engr & FRENCH (Native)
TYPING
ENORE COPY CORPS. We offer professional typing.
Most jobs 2 day maximum: 843-2001.
APPOUNDABLE QUALITY for all your typing needs
Call Jody, 842-7945 by 6 p.m.
Absolutely LETTER PERFECT typing, edging
Bottler Jitter, experienced Joan L., Sandy
K.
ANNOUNCING "TYPPING INK" A professional
typing service for your important papers, themes,
resumes, and illustrations. Spelling and grammar
corrections. Correcting Selective. Delivery/Kindle.
844-1539.
TYPING PLUS: Thems, dissertations, papers, letters to the editor, books published in grammar, spelling, e.g. English tutoring, dictionary and dictionary of words.
ATTENTION TOPEKA COMMUTERS. 10 years experience. Reports, dissertations, theses. Electronic Memory Typewriter. Student discount. Call Pam Sonville. 354-8330
ENCORE COPY COPHS, 7121 W. 35th. We can make
margins in the margins are right with our
variable reductions.
AI智能客服
Experienced tystist will type dissertations, thesem,
term papers etc. Call 844-3261.
Excellent typing done quickly. Will help you with revisions. Any paper under 75 pages done in 24 hours or less. Cost $7 to $1.00/page maximum. Call 843-385 anytime.
Word Processing Services
www.ESU.INC
(817) 463-8959
ESU INC
for your business, cost savings and personalization.
(520) 496-3731 offer the following target product services:
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Page 12 University Daily Kansan, November 4, 1982
'Silent aggressor still running
By EVELYN SEDLACEK Sports Writer
A teammate calls her a "silent aggressor."
She, on the other hand, calls herself "unathletic."
"I really am uncoordinated when it comes to sports," said Annette Craighhead, a member of the KU track and cross country teams. "I can't do anything. I can't play basketball, tennis or softball.
"In softball, I'm afraid of getting hit by the ball. In basketball, I'm always getting run over. Then in tennis, I know I can have any eye or hand coordination."
But there is one thing Craighead can do and that's run. A three-year member of the KU track team, Craighead holds several school records.
"ANNETTE IS a real hard worker." said Theo Hamilton, KU cross country coach. "In the past year, the confidence she's gained has given her the insight to realize that she is truly a middle-distance runner.
"In the outdoor and indoor seasons, we have run her in the 800- and 1,500-meter races, and she has shown a considerable amount of potential."
In the indoor season, Craighead
chalked up a number of personal beests
She was a member of the record-setting 3,200 meter relay team during
the big Eight championships held in Norman, Okl., earlier this year.
Craighead, however, saved some of her best performances for the outdoor season. Craighead experienced her first big success both the indoor and outdoor seasons.
"Annette is a big part of the team now and I'm sure she'll continue to be so as one of the co-captains," Hamilton said.
CRAIGHEAD DIDN'T come to the University just because of its athletic
She had decided on Kansas long before she was recruited by Teri Anderson, a former Kansas women's head coach.
"I really liked their academic program," Craighead said. "Anderson sounded real interesting and made the world smile." I'm here now and I have enjoyed it."
The University's academic program
has certainly given Criaghead some
thought.
"I've changed my mind six or seven times," Craighead said. "There are so many interesting courses that I could easily take up and study.
"PD IKE to think I've got some intelligence and when I obtain a degree, it will probably be in magazine journalism. I like to write so much, though, that I almost majored in English."
Early indications of becoming a writer were sparked by an incident in the sixth grade when she won first place in the "Why I Love America
contest." Craighead recalled that she composed quite a lot of poetry and short stories.
"I received a certificate for my achievements," Craighead said. "That's the only contest I entered and I know I have any desire to enter any more."
Easy-going and quiet, Craighead takes the day-to-day pressures that make her a good judge of both good and bad. That was evident when her sophomore year at Kansas.
"At that time, I had decided to major in pre-physical therapy. I was taking courses in chemistry, physics and anatomy, and they were all hard to study for," Craighead said. "And it took up a lot of my time."
IT ABSORBED so much of her time that she began to get behind schedule. Eventually, she quit running.
"If I decided I missed it a whole lot, I would come back out for the next year," Craighead said. "If I didn't miss it, then that was it."
It it didn't take long before Craigheal realized that she did miss running for the Jayhawks, so she rejoined the team.
"Even if I had the chance, I wouldn't go out for any other team than cross country," Craighead said. "Running around in a hurry would hurt your mental and overall view toward humanity."
"I don't think athletics are easy to explain to somebody. Athletics are not defined so easily. People think, 'oh it's wonderful being on the team. You have
all of your friends. It's so emotionally uplifting. You struggle through practice and then you celebrate when you have a good race.'
"It sounds like a novel or something."
ACCORDING TO Craighead, athletics can be beneficial because it takes a certain type of person who is willing to set his priorities before him.
Her teammates see her as an athlete who is determined to do well.
Heather Houchin, cross country teammate, said Craighead, through all of that seriousness, could be easily amused as well as amusing.
"She's the type of person who makes running all worthwhile," said Tudie McKnight, KU women's track member. "She can also be a serious athlete."
A night out on the town every now and then has eased the pressures that were thickening.
Craighead also has a keen interest for the stage as she traveled to New York this summer to see the broadway musical "La Vida." Any other chance she can grab she drives into Kansas City.
"I haven't seen too many musicals here because it seems I'm always taking tests and things," Craighead said. "When I do see them I enjoy them."
"It's the end of the outdoor season and I still don't know what I want to do for a major." Craighead said. "But I just do, I'm going to do it as well as I can."
Vuckovich wins AL Cy Young
By United Press International
Royals trade Jim Wright to NL Cubs
CHICAGO—The Chicago Cubs yesterday traded left-handed pitcher Mike King of the Midland farm club Class AA to the Kansas City Royals AAA farm club in Omaha, Neb.
In exchange, the Cubs received right-handed pitcher Jim Wright from the Royals.
Wright, 27, had a 5-2 record and a 3.41 ERA for Omaha in the 1982 season. He appeared in seven games in 30 appearances for the record and 5.32 ERA in 23.2 innings.
By United Press International
Wright has a lifetime major league record of 2-3.
NEW YORK—Pete Vuckovich of the Milwaukee Brewers, who wasn't considered good enough to make the American League All-Star team last July, yesterday was voted the winner of Cy Young pitcher of the year. Cy Young pitcher of the year.
The 36-year-old right-hander, an 18-game winner in a season that didn't produce a 20-game winner in the league, won over Jim Palmer of the Rockies by voting to 28 members of the Baseball Writers Association of America.
fourth with five first-place votes and 36 points.
STRUNG OUT behind the top four were Rick Sutcliffe of the Cleveland Indians, who was acquired from the Los Angeles Dodgers after the 1981 season, with one first-place vote and 14 points, Geoff Zahn of the California Dodgers, Bob Skurdy of the Boston Red Sox and Bill Caudill of the Seattle Mariners with four each and Dan Petry of the Detroit Tigers with one.
A first place vote is worth five points, second is worth three points and third is worth two points.
1982, is the best percentage in the major leagues over the last two seasons, 762.
Uvckovich received 14 first-place votes and a total of 87 points to Palmer's four first-place votes and 99 points. Dan Quisenberry of the Kansas State team won first-place votes and 40 points and Dave Stieb of the Toronto Blue Jays was
"The thing that impresses me is that he's such a tenacious competitor," said Harry Dalton, Milwaukee's general manager. "He's one of the best competitors I've seen in baseball in all the years I've been in it.
"HE IS a sincere teammate. He roots in his team very hard. He recognizes that his success depends on their cooperation as well as his, I think it legitimate."
Vuckovich was selected by the Chicago White Sox in the third round of the June, 1974 free agent draft. He made his major league debut Aug. 3, 1975, and was selected by Toronto in the 1977 expansion draft.
The St. Louis Cardinals acquired him and outfieldier John Scott for pitchers Tom Underwood and Victor Cruz in a deal to the Brewers in December 1980.
Player reps make call on USFL headquarters
By United Press International
Vuckichow had a 10-4 record in mid-season, but failed to make the American League All-Star pitching staff. This was at least partly because he was one of more than its innings pitched and regularly pitched in and out of trouble.
Earlier in the day, Ted Turner appeared at the hotel at the request of union head Ed Garvey to reopen discussions about continuing last month's union-sponsored all-star games.
The 16 players, along with union spokesman Dave Sheridan and NFLA assistant Doug Allen, walked out of the USFL office sporting USFL red, white and blue hats — apparently content that they had successfully devised another bargaining tool.
"THE CASE is pending in Federal District Court seeking a judgment on the two clauses in the NFL contract which gives the league authority to enforce the Sheridan. "It is a distinct possibility that we will activate the petition and
try to get Judge Penns to void those two clauses — then you would have 1,600 free agents.
right now, there are 352 NFL players who come free from agents by Feb. 1. . . they're in their option year this season. This meeting with the USFLI is another tool on our side. We have to consider our options. Turner is one option and this is another. These are contingency plans if management is not interested in a settlement."
His 32-10 record, including 18-6 in
Simmons, who said the union "called us and said they'd like to come by and learn more about the league," termed the meeting constructive and his league — which is scheduled to begin March 6
While the NFL was calling off a seventh weekend of games and bargaining continued between both sides and private mediator Sam Kagel in a midtown hotel, a group of 16 players, including 14 player representatives, were dispatched six blocks away for an impromptu game with United States Football League Commissioner Chet Simmons.
which is scheduled to begin March which was naturally interested in posing with sporting current NFL players who have not been eligible to play in the USPL.
"WE STAND by our statement that we will not interfere with the valid, bonafide NFL contract," said Simmons, "the question is, what if the player is in his option year? Then we'll give him a chance to talk to the USPL club that has his allocation rights.
"I think we would be absolutely nuts not to make ourselves available to those players. Overall, this strike has distracted the hell out of me, occupying our time thinking about the possibilities, including extending our reach. That's why we a real cause for concern and that it could be a very inhibiting factor to us."
NEW YORK-Negotiations in the 44-day NFL players' strike took another bizarre turn yesterday, with a contingent of player representatives making a surprise call to the headquarters of the fledgling United States Football League while talks between the Players Association and Management Council were still in progress.
Garvey summed up recent negotiations, saying, "There is no movements in talks. There is more movement here than at the bargaining table."
Randy Smith sets NBA record for consecutive games played
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Smith started the game against the Philadelphia 76ers to break the mark of 844 set by Johnny Kerr from Oct. 31, 1954, through Nov. 4, 1955. Kerr who was in attendance at the Spectrum last fall completed part of his streak with the 76ers.
Smith, 33, began his streak Feb. 18, 1972 with the old Buffalo Braves. He played seven seasons with Buffalo, one opee with Cleveland and one with New York.
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Lawrence, KS 9:30-6:00
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The University Daily
KANSAN
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
Friday, November 5,1982 Vol.93, No.55 USPS 650-640
University stops use of new TA contracts
By DON KNOX Staff Reporter
The KU office of academic affairs announced yesterday that it would stop using a newly created contract for graduate teaching assistants because it included a controversial dismissal clause that was enacted without salutation of student comment.
In a one-page letter sent to the executive coordinator of the Graduate Student Executive Council, Deanneil Tacha, vice chancellor for research, requests that the university temporarily suspend the use of the contracts.
The decision came after almost two months of negotiations between administrators and a special 12-member graduate student committee created to review the contract.
Graduate student leaders formed the contract committee on Aug. 31 after a number of graduate students opposed to an 88-word dismissal clause added to the contracts.
created to review the contract.
TOM BERGER, executive coordinator of GradEx and a member of the contract committee, said the announcement was "a significant step towards the recognition of graduate assistants' contributions at KU."
The clauses said "an appropriate dean, director or vice chancellor" could cancel the appointment of a graduate TA contract if financing was not available. The clause said, however, that each student whose contract was terminated had to submit an application to the semester in which his contract was terminated.
IN AN AUG. 20 letter to Chancellor Gene A. Budig, Berger said, "The administration's failure to consult with GSC leadership in this matter represents a reversal of the improved relationships between graduate students and the administration."
Tacha said in August that KU administrators
She said, however, that the contract change was made in good faith.
felt badly that the students were not included in the process.
IN HER LETTER to GradEx, Tacha wrote,
"Because of the substantial concerns expressed
by members of your group, we have given
careful consideration to the issues, and agree
that we will temporarily suspend use of the new
contract."
Tacha could not be reached for comment last night.
Berner said there were many arguments that the contract committee had against the dismissal clause. He said many graduate students at the university were angry for the administration to fire graduate students.
"But we were pleased that we were able to come to a compromise that was mutually beneficial."
J. K. Rowling
BERGER SAID a University graduate would be organized soon to study graduate student appointments and recommendations. The committee would be composed of graduate students,
Despite favoring the old contracts, John Lomax, a member of the contract committee, said he thought administrators would still be able to provide students' contracts in case of financial difficulties.
"This wide-based committee is going to look at graduate assistants as *a whole* in terms of the
following:
"I don't know if students are in a better position legally with the old contract or the new contract," Lomax said. "I think the administration feels it is just as free to cancel TAS under the contract."
U. S. Senator Nancy Kassebaum, R-Kan., spoke at a Law School forum yesterday before giving the keynote address at the third Conference on International Affairs last night. The conference concludes today.
But Lonax said he took Tacha at her word when she said she did not want to terminate TA
Arson, fraud charges against merchant dismissed
Bv CAROL LICHTI
Staff Reporter
Arson and fraud charges against Tom Black, owner of the Royal College Shop, were dismissed yesterday in Douglas County District Court after a two-day preliminary hearing.
Charges of arson and attempting to defraud an insurance company were dismissed because the judge said only circumstantial evidence had been presented.
Marvin Brumett, a retired district court judge from Concordia assigned to hear the case, said circumstantial evidence was not enough to prove a cause of murder cause the defendant committed the crime.
The charges against Black, 40, 322 Woodlawn
Square and 65 Park Avenue at a fire his store
at E.B. Massachusetts S.
Brumnett said, "Circumstantial evidence was piled on circumstantial evidence."
THE TWO CHARGES were dismissed after the state called 16 witnesses to testify, and presented 57 pieces of evidence.
"I'm happy, real happy. Black saxon.
Black's lawyer, John Lungstun, said, "We're
very pleased with the outcome. I'm one who is always surprised when the result is favorable because I always prepare myself for an unfavorable result."
Greg Hammel, the assistant district attorney who has been working on the case since September, said, "I felt we certainly had a case, otherwise we never would have filed a case." As I understand the law, circumstantial evidence carries the same weight as direct evidence.
"I WOULD NOT have done anything differently. We presented a lot of evidence, not all the evidence we had, but as much evidence as needed to show probable cause."
Hammel said he and the other attorneys in the district attorney's office would have to decide whether he should be charged.
Dismissal of a case by a judge can be appealed directly to the Kansas Supreme Court, he said. The district attorney's office has 10 days to appeal the decision.
Douglas County District Attorney Jerry Harper said a decision whether to appeal the case would be discussed and announced some time today.
THE ROYAL COLLEGE Shop will remain
Black has filed a $3 million dollar civil suit in federal district court in Topeca against the Northern Insurance Company of New York, because the company has not settled the claim.
Langstrum and Black would not comment further about yesterday's decision because of the pending litigation.
DURING TESTIMONY yesterday, a KU School of Business professor testified that the inventory in the shop at the time of the fire had been between $90,500 and $103,200.
Laurence Friedman, associate professor of business, said the figures were based on operating statements and department of revenue figures from Black's personal financial records.
Mary Mier, the bookkeeper at the time of the fire, testified Wednesday that an inventory of $165,000 had been recorded on the shop's monthly insurance report:
Hammel asked, Friedman whether that amount of inventory was possible considering the fact that he had a small order.
"I don't see how it could be possible to any stretch of the imagination." Friedman said.
MIER TESTIFED Wednesday that determined the inventory at the time of the fire as $191,000 using tally cards Black gave her after the fire.
Ray Creews, an agent for Northern Insurance Company of New York, testified Wednesday that Black had asked him to increase the coverage on the inventory in the shop several months before
Yesterday Clinton Daniels, a former employee at the shop, testified that a shipment of deglazing fluid, a flammable liquid, was delivered to the shop Jan. 28. Daniels said Black ordered the
Crews testified the increase of inventory coverage on the insurance policy binder went into effect Jan. 28, 1982.
UNDER CROSS-EXAMINATION, Daniels said the store had needed to reorder the fluid because the can they had been using was almost empty.
See BLACK page 5
Trade tarriffs damage U.S., senator savs
By JEANNE FOY Staff Reporter
The United States government needs to resist growing pressure to enact trade barriers against Japan to protect U.S. industry, Sen. Nancy Kassebaum, R-Kan, said last night during the keynote address for KU's third Conference on International Affairs.
The focus of this year's conference, which concludes today, is U.S.-Japan relations. The conference was conducted in the Kansas Union.
Kasebamia said Congress was being flooded with bills to raise protective tariffs against
Although Americans have a basis for some of their concerns about Japan, she said, they need to keep a balanced view of the issue and not try to impose a foreign scapegoat for U.S. economic troubles.
"WE CANNOT improve our lot by restricting trade. It will lead to ruin because we produce for export." she said.
Kassebum said Japan had to export in order to pay for its vital imports. Besides being a valued ally of be United States, Japan is one of America's chief export markets.
Japan, which buys 15 percent of U.S.
agricultural and largest foreign buyer
of U.S. agricultural products.
"Before we complain too loudly about the trade deficit with Japan, we should remember our sizeable trade surplus with Europe," she said.
The problem may not be that Japan has less competition or too many trade barriers, she said, but that the yen is undervalued, making U.S. exports more expensive and its overvalued, making U.S. imports expensive.
Kassebaum said Japanese imports had expanded the range of products available to Japan.
"In short, we continue a relation of mutual benefit," she said.
CONCERN ABOUT trade relations between the two countries is not without some justification, she said, and the U.S. administration is right in urging Japan to eliminate trade
Kassebaum said Japan had been successful in keeping out unwanted imports. United States companies had sold a number of baseball bats in Japan, and a Japanese company started manufacturing them.
She said that suddenly there were certain official specifications concerning baseball bats.
She said Japan also had established barriers to the importation of 22 high-value agricultural products, including beef and citrus fruits and the Japanese consumer must pay the price.
"BEEF IN TOKYO costs four times as much as it does in New York," Kassbaum said.
Because the United States is the largest export of beef to Japan, that trade restriction has been lifted.
Kasshebaum said that if unemployment continued to grow, an unhealthy pressure to protect U.S. jobs by enacting trade restrictions against Japan would increase.
Thermostats to be lowered during break
By STEVE CUSICK Staff Reporter
Officials at the University will close 34 buildings for a week during winter break to help reduce the University's utility bill, officials said yesterday.
Some of the buildings that will be closed with 45 degree temperatures include Bailey, Blake, Flint, Fraser and Wescos halls and Hoch Auditorium, either to a statement released or Relations.
Administrators had announced last week that the temperatures would be set at 45 degrees and operations curtailed in some campus buildings, but that they would continue this week whichirtures would be affected.
WILLIAM HOGAN, associate executive vice chancellor, said that the thermostats would be turned down for the week of Dec. 24 to Jan. 2. That period includes four workdays from Dec. 27.
David Lewin, personnel director, said he did not know how many employees would have to take time off because of the closings.
He said employees who work in the affected buildings would have to take compensatory time or vacation pay for the time off.
HOGAN ESTIMATED last week that the University could save $150,000 by operating at reduced capacity during the week between Christmas and Jan. 1.
He said he would have to add up the number of employees working in each of the 34 buildings in the district.
University officials also hope to save money between now and then by keeping buildings cooler this year than in years past.
A puppy at the Lawrence Animal Shelter awaits adoption. The number of animals left in the shelter greatly outweighs those adopted. See page 107.
See CLOSING page 5
PETS IN CONFLICT.
CHILLY
Weather
Tonight will be mostly clear with a low of 25 to 30.
Today will be mostly sunny and cool, with a high in the mid-40s, according to the National Weather Service. Winds will be variable at 5 to 15 mph.
Tomorrow will be sunny and warmer with a high in the mid- to upper 50s.
High-tech business vital to state's economic cure
Staff Reporter
By BRUCE SCHREINER Staff Reporter
Kansas' economic well-being, currently stifled by a national recession, will be revived only if the state rids itself of reliance on traditional industries and restructures its firms, economists and businessmen said last week.
The state's traditional industries, specifically aircraft and agriculture, will continue to be hampered by depressed markets, the group of economists and businessmen said.
But high-tech firms, or those using scientific innovations to produce very technical goods, could help build an almost impermeable barrier that would state from future budgetary crises, they said.
The growing dependence of Americans on highly technological products puts high-tech firms and the states where they situate in lucrative positions, said Dan Bearth, editor of the Kansas Business News, a monthly magazine circulated throughout the state.
TO ATTRACT high-tech firms, Kansas must concentrate on strengths in its higher education system and work force and reverse its reputation of being an entertainment and cultural wasteland, said Robert Premus, an economist for the Joint Economic Committee for Congress.
"We're seeing more automation in offices and factories," he said. "The reason for more automation is that for industries to keep costs to a minimum and therefore remain competitive, they have to become more automated. So there is tremendous incentive to purchase automated systems."
Premium, who specializes in high-tech firms and regional development, said an aggressive lobbying effort could result in Midwestern states like Illinois and high-tech firms that are now looking to expand.
Historically, high-tech firms have situated on both coasts; California is the current hotbed. But many firms now are looking to the interior of the United States to expand their operations, said Sam Cox.
Several factors made California and Massachusetts two of the states that reaped the highest taxes in the nation.
The overriding reason was the presence of prestigious higher education systems in Boston and Palo Alto, Calif., said James Law, corporate manager of land facilities at Hewlett Packard Co., a computer firm with headquarters in California.
Those two areas feature such highly acclaimed universities as Harvard University and Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Boston and Stanford University in California.
"They had a stockpile of bright and talented people who were appealing because they tended to be very good at what they did."
THE STAKES in attracting high-tech firms are great. Premus said, because traditional industries will continue to be limited in their employment possibilities.
But, he said, job possibilities in high-tech firms will expand.
"Those industries that are utilizing the most advanced technology are the industries creating
"Right now, 60 to 75 percent of all new manufacturing jobs are being created by the high-tech firms. Within five years, about 80 per cent of them would be indirectly associated with commuters."
Early in a high-tech plant's existence, employees may have to be imported from other regions. But within a few years, a majority of its workers are freed from the surrounding community. Law said.
See FIRMS page 7
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, November 5, 1982
News Briefs From United Press International
U.S. signs U.N. proposal for Falkland negotiations
UNITED NATIONS-United States broke with its British ally and voted for a U.N. resolution approved yesterday urging Britain and Argentina to settle their sovereignty dispute over the Falkland Islands through negotiations.
British Ambassador Sir John Thomson, speaking against the resolution, said Argentina had refused to accept "a definite cessation of hostilities" and warned the Assembly against raising false hopes in Buenos Aires.
Argentina seized the Falklands April 2, 1982, prompting a 74-day war that ended with the British recapture of the islands June 14.
"We cannot accept a call for negotiations on sovereignty after an unprovoked attempt to force the issue by invasion — an invasion which made abundantly clear the extent of Argentina's disregard for the islanders." Foreign Secretary Francis Pym told Parliament.
Israel to settle Jews on West Bank
TEL AVIV, Israel—Israel said yesterday it was moving ahead with plans to settle 1.4 million Jews on the occupied West Bank in 30 years, a move denounced by the State Department.
Ze'ez Ben Youssef, spokesman for the World Zionist Organization's settlement division, said a 1977 plan to spur Jewish settlement of the occupied West Bank had been "targetly achieved."
In Washington, State Department spokesman Alan Romberg said, "The United States regards this latest announcement of Israel's intention to begin work on additional settlements as most unwelcome."
In Beirut, U.S. Marines patrolled the Christian militia enclave of East Beirut for the first time yesterday.
Romberg said it was possible that U.S. Marines might eventually be ordered to patrol the length of the Beirut-Damascus Highway up to Lebanon's border with Syria, which would necessitate enlargement of the Marine contingent.
War with Iran nearly over, Iraq says
BAGHDAI, Iraq — Iraq said yesterday that the failure of Iran's latest drive in the Gulf war indicated the 26-month-old conflict was nearly over, but Tehran said its offensive was gaining momentum and more attacks were planned.
Iraqi Foreign Minister Saadoun Hammadi said he expected the war to degenerate into "more skirmishes on the border."
"The failure of Iran's latest offensive is considered a practical end to the war," he said in an interview published by the Kuwaiti daily Al Jazeer.
Iranian Prime Minister Mir Hussein Musavi, however, was quoted by the state-run Iranian news agency IRNA yesterday as saying the Iranian forces were prepared "for a chain of operations that would pave the way for another offensive."
However, reports from both of the warring capitals are generally unreliable.
Iowa pipeline explosion kills five
HUDSON, Iowa—A fiery explosion caused by a punctured natural gas pipeline killed five people yesterday and sent up a column of fire several hundred feet high that could be seen 30 miles away, authorities said.
"The bodies were blown beyond recognition," said Black Hawk County Medical Examiner Albert Dolan.
Mark Schildroth, who farms the land where work on the Northern Natural Gas pipeline was taking place, said the blast at about 2:15 p.m. hurried one body across the road and another into a ditch 100 feet away. The person was found in the backhoe that ruptured the pipeline.
One other person was found in the backbox that ruptured the pipeline. None of the victims was immediately identified.
Bill Greene, a spokesman for Northern Natural Gas, said a crew of workers was laying drainage tile on the site near Hudson in northeast Iowa when a backhoe apparently punctured the underground gas line.
Goldwater stable after heart surgery
PHOENIX, Ariz.—Sen. Barry Goldwater, conservative leader and the 1964 Republican presidential nominee, underwent successful heart surgery yesterday to repair three blocked arteries.
Dr. Ted Diethrich, who performed the 90-minute operation, said the blocked arteries were "life-threatening," but Goldwater, 73, came out of the surgery in good condition.
"His vital signs are stable." Dieithrich said, adding that there was no muscle or heart damage caused by the blockages.
Dieitrich said Goldwater probably would be in intensive care for three days and would remain at St. Joseph's Hospital for seven to 10 days. Goldwater probably will be able to return to Washington by Dec. 1 for a special congressional session.
Vietnam veteran commits suicide
Diethrich said Goldwater was also anxious to return to Washington.
OCALA, Fla. — A Vietnam veteran described as “one of the happiest and most patriotic guys around” downed Army fatigues, smeared camouflage paint on his face, marched into a grassy field Wednesday with a weapons arsenal and killed himself, authorities said yesterday
A bystander who saw Moody stalking around the field stopped his car to investigate.
Stanley Erwin Moody, 38, who served two tours with the American Special Forces in Vietnam, "would sometimes have flashbacks of his experiences."
The veteran's body was found lying at the base of a flagpole he had erected in honor of his father when he died in the late 1980s, officials
"He (the bystander) wound up getting shot, but not seriously wounded," Smith said. "Stanley wasn't shooting at anything in particular. He was just having his own war."
McDonald's, diarrhea illness linked
The CDC began its investigation of the aliment, which it calls "hemorrhagic colitis," after two separate outbreaks earlier this year in Oregon and Michigan. Those outbreaks, the CDC said, were associated with a case of McDonald's, Dr. Lee Riley of the CDC's enteric diseases branch said.
ATLANTA—More cases of an unusual diarrheal illness traced to eating McDonald's hamburgers were reported yesterday by the national Centers for Disease Control.
McDonald's issued a statement last month denying any connection between consumption of its burgers and the illness. "We serve 10 million guests a day and we serve them the highest quality products money can buy," the statement said.
Riley said health officials were almost certain the cause of the hemorrhagic colitis did not originate in the restaurants.
Stevenson holds narrow lead in Illinois Late returns draw Thompson's ire
By United Press International
CHICAGO-Gov. James Thompson, trailing by a razor-thin margin in his bid for a third term, charged yesterday that returns from 15 Chicago precincts were missing for two days before being counted.
Thompson stopped short of charging vote fraud on behalf of his Democratic opponent, former Sen. Adalie Stevenson who led gubernatorial race in Illinois history.
The only statewide totals available from a single source showed Stevenson with a lead of 3,358 votes. With 185 to 772, he received 1,777 votes, 1,778 to Thompson's 1,774,227.
THE FIGURES were provided by News Election Service, a cooperative vote-counting agency that tabulated figures from each of the state's 102 counties and Chicago. NES quit counting, with 185 precincts unreported.
questioned Chicago ballot boxes — which completed the Chicago vote
"EMPTY BOXES have become full and missing ballots have been replaced by ballots found in car trunks and basements," the governor said at an improptu news conference at his campaign headquarters.
Thompson said his figures showed him 171 votes ahead, with only 107 suburban precincts yet to be counted. His vote totals, however, included some suburban precincts where ballots became wet on election day and could not be counted until late Wednesday night. There was no way to determine for certain they had not been counted in the NES totals.
"I don't know who's questioning what," Thompson said. "All I know is that I've lived in this city all my life and I've seen just about everything."
Thompson said his representatives objected to the counting of the 15
Michael Lavelle, chairman of the Chicago Board of Election Commissioners, said there was nothing unusual about the late return of ethics attorneys. He said judges sometimes reported to the
board on election night without the materials and, when they were told to go back and get them, found their polling places locked.
Thompson
ELECTION OFFICIALS then have to be dispelled the next day to get the material. Laveille said, adding, "I suspect that anything has been tampered with."
Lavelle and aides to both Thompson and Stevenson said the election proba-
blyw would wind up in court. The most likely way would be a request for an injunction to block certification of the election board of Elections and to order a recount.
Delays in counting were attributed to some ballots that became soggy from rain and humidity and could not be retrieved or dried. There were also computer snusf.
Lavelle also reported late Wednesday II uncounted ballot boxes were not properly sealed and two other ballot boxes were seized. He said that there was no indication of fraud.
ALSO IN ILINOIS, the Daley name returned to mayoral politics as Richard M. Daley, son of the boss "Boss," defeated against incumbent Jane M. Byrne.
Daley, currently the county prosecutor, invoked his father's name as he announced he would run against. Byrne in the February Democratic primary.
"On this day, especially, I think of my father," Daley told several hundred cheering supporters who packed a downtown hotel ballroom. "He was never satisfied with the progress this city had made. He was always wanting to make it better because he loved the city."
Richard d. Daley served as mayor for 24 years until his death in December
HIS SON, who promised during his successful campaign for Cook County
state's attorney that he would not run for mayor in 1983, said he changed his mind because of requests from the people.
His family, including his mother, Eleanor "Sis" Daley, watched his announcement. They all wore white-on-blue buttons reading "RMD in 83."
Daley referred to Byrne, who has a campaign fund estimated at more than $3 million, as "the champion fundraiser of the nation" but said she could not "change the record of nearly four years in 30-second commercials."
Daley, 40, won his first elective office as a delegate to the 1969 state constitutional convention. He later served in the state Senate before beating a candidate backed by Byrne for the state's attorney's nomination in 1980. Byrne then worked quietly but strongly for the Republican incumbent in the general election in hopes of blocking Daley's political career.
IRONICALLY, it was the elder Daley who brought Byrne into politics. He first noticed her as a volunteer in the 1960 Kennedy campaign and later named her to head his consumer services department.
She broke with Daley's successor, Michael Bilandic, and defeated him when a freak blizzard virtually paralyzed her for only weeks before the 1979 primary.
International Day
is an international celebration in which entertainment, customer pottery, and other cultural items will be shared with students, faculty, staff and the Lawrence community.
International Day II—Saturday, November 13, 1982—Kansas Union Ballroom-1p.m.-5p.m.
FREE—Sponsors: SUA, the Office of Minority Affairs, the International Club.
International Day
Is an international celebration in which entertainment, culture, pottery, and other cultural items will be shared with students, faculty, staff and the Lawrence community.
International Day II-Saturday, November 13, 1982-Kansas Union Ballroom-1p.m.-5p.m.
FREE- Sponsors: SUA, the Office of Minority Affairs, the International Club.
HAVE HOMECOMING WITH US TONIGHT
&
SATURDAY NIGHT
THE PLADIUM PLUS
PRESENTS
PLAIN JANE
8 pm-12 pm
w.c. Frank
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University Daily Kansan, November 5; 1982
Page 3
Sizeler starts plans for redevelopment
By DOUG CUNNINGHAM Staff Reporter
Lawrence Mayor Marci Francisco and the president of Sizelar Realty Co. Inc., Kenner, La., yesterday signed a memorandum of agreement for the proposed downtown redevelopment project.
Sizeler's president, Tom Davidson, said he would be in Lawrence again Nov. 11 to discuss the work of the area residents at a public meeting.
Davidson said his firm was not deterred by the present economic situation.
"I think we have what amounts to a long-term project," he said.
"From start to finish, we'll probably go through a couple of economic changes in our people are ready to get started on the project and move forward."
The Nov. 11 public meeting is one of two required by the agreement.
ONE PROVISION of the agreement is that Sizerel use local labor and services, and purchase its materials here when possible.
Davidson said that Sizeeler would try to do that, but he also said that such decisions would depend on
local firms being competitively priced.
Local financing of the project is another possibility, but the amount of local financing used will depend on how many participants to participate in the project, he said.
Davidson, who arrived in Lawrence Wednesday, said he would have talked with representatives of four local banks by the end of today.
THE AGREEMENT also states that Sizerel is to submit to the city a formal proposal for the redevelopment project by March 4, 1983.
The proposal is to include a basic project design, an initial financing plan and a preliminary timetable leading up to construction.
The proposal also must outline the location of parking for the redevelopment, traffic patterns, any necessities, and design of the building design and character of the project.
The development project probably will include three department stores, he said, but so far Sizeler's contacts with department stores about the project have been only preliminary.
"WE WILL probably want to develop a plan that will be acceptable to the city before we talk to the department stores," he said.
Semi-yearly review requested
By DIRK MILLER Staff Reporter
Regents want new plan for fee increases
A Kansas Board of Regents committee recommended yesterday that fee increases at all Regents schools be divided into two different categories and brought before the board twice a year.
Grege Smith Jr., chairman of the Greges special committee on student tuition, said the committee had recommended scheduling reviews of proposed academic fee increases in April and decisions in May; academic fee increases would be reviewed in October and finalized in November.
Administrative fees are transcript charges and health fees. Academic fees are lab fees and other course-related costs.
Keith Nilcher, University director of business affairs, said the recommendations would conform with current budget procedures because the Regents schools had to submit their budget following fiscal year on June 1, he said.
THE REGENTS could start using the new fee increase schedule this May.
However Nitcher said, "There would have to be enough lead time between the request deadline and the approval of the fee increases."
ACADEMIC FEES are charged to students along with tuition and are not reflected in the schools' budget requests, he said.
proved by May, were the only fees that affected the budget requests, he said.
Smith, also chairman of the budget and finance committee, said that the committee unanimously recommended the changes.
"There is no question that the changes won't be adopted by the Regents," he said. "This will bring the system into order."
A comprehensive look at the Regents system would be the result of the adoption of these measures, Smith said. The Regents currently consider increases whenever schools request them.
The administrative fee increases, which would be approved or disap-
THE CHANGES will allow a comparison of special fees at all Regents universities.
mended by the committee would allow students to plan for fee increases. With the current system, changes are made anytime during the school year.
The Regents' concern about fee increases arose at last month's budget meeting in Pittsburgh when Kansas State University requested the committee's approval on a number of fee increases.
K-State tabled its requests to allow the student tuition committee time to recommend changes to the Regents on the current fee increase policy.
Smith said that the changes recom-
KWALITY COMICS
THE STUDENT tuition committee also considered differential fee charging and variable-rate tuition. These are methods for charging different tuition based on a university's costs for participation or for different academic levels.
"We did not get into these in any depth, though," Smith said.
He said that the committee probably would consider the tuition changes at a later meeting.
½ off bagged leaves lace sale
Friday & Saturday
½ block west of Mass on 7th St.
in the Browser's Basement
Need help? Advertise it in Kansan want ads. Call 864-4358
The
CLUBHOUSE Presents HORIZON
HORIZON
Friday & Saturday
He's just having fun!
6th & Wisconsin
$1 Drinks
'til midnight
50c Beers
6th & Wisconsin
GAMWONS
GAMWONS
NO COVER before 10 pm (on Weekends)
Listen to the sounds of THE SCAT BAND
Don't Miss our Happy Hour from 11-12 pm Fri. & Sat. Night
Homecoming Party
Saturday after the game with 2 for 1's on drinks from 5-8 pm Also serving our superb charbroiled burgers Bring Your Parents to Gammons After the game (minors admitted with their parents) Appearing this weekend THE SCAT BAND
Final Day!
THE BEAUTIFUL BUY
Now Save $20 on Siladium College Rings.
With the price of fine jewelry today, it's good to know that a jewelry-quality Siladium ring is now more affordable than ever. Save—and choose from a variety of beautiful styles. Then personalize your ring with custom options that express your tastes, your interests, your achievements.
Every fine Siladium ring is crafted with careful attention to detail, and backed by the ArtCarved Full Lifetime Warranty. Now, at these special savings, the value is exceptional! Don't miss this opportunity to get a beautiful buy on a fine Siladium ring. Visit the ArtCarved Ring Table soon.
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CELEBRATE K.U. HOMECOMING
Date Final Day!
The Jazzhaus
at
9261/2 Massachusetts
PRESENTS Fri. Nov. 5 ROCK N'ROLL Low Altitude Cooking
Sat. Nov. 6
TAL FARLOW guitar
RED NORVO-vibes
JAZZ GREATS
STEVE NOVASEL-bass
Tickets on sale JAY McSHANN Sat Nov.20
913-749-3320
Lawrence, Kansas
JAYHAWK STUDENT BASKETBALL SEASON TICKET SALE
WHEN: Nov. 9-12, Tuesday through Friday
WHERE: East Lobby, Allen Field House
TIME: 9:00 am----4:00 pm
PRICE: $22.00—INCLUDES 11 GAMES Games over student holidays are not included in season ticket or ticket price (U.S. International, Memphis State and Alcorn State).
Nov.10-
CRIMSON AND BLUE INTRA-SQUAD GAME
—Students FREE with KU I.D.
Nov.15-
EXHIBITION GAME:
YUGOSLAVIAN
NATIONAL TEAM
-Students-$1.00 and a can of food. Food will be donated to local charitable agencies for distribution to families in need for Thanksgiving.
1982-83
1982-83 MEN'S BASKETBALL SCHEDULE
Nov. 24 (Mon) U.S. international at home
Nov. 29 (Mon) Bowling Green at home
Dec. 5 (Tue) Mississippi Valley at home
Dec. 6 (Mon) St. Louis at home
Dec. 6 (Mon) Michigan University at Arm Arbor
Dec. 11 (Sun) Southern Missouri at Dallas
Dec. 12 (Mon) Missouri State at home
Dec. 20 (Mon) Alcorn State at home
Dec. 29 (Wed) Kentucky at Lexington
Dec. 30 (Mon) Ohio State at home
Dec. 6 (Thu) Oral Roberts at Tulsa
Dec. 11 (Sun) Alabama at Event Center
Jan. 15 (Sun) Univ. of Maine at home
Jan. 19 (Wed) Oklahoma at Nominee
Jan. 20 (Mon) Missouri at home
Jan. 26 (Mon) Missouri at home
Jan. 27 (Mon) Missouri at home
Jan. 28 (Mon) Missouri at home
Jan. 29 (Wed) "Iowa State" at Manhattan
Feb. 2 (Wed) "Iowa State" at Manhattan
Feb. 5 (Sun) Nebraska at Lincoln
Feb. 5 (Tue) "Colorado" at Lincoln
Feb. 12 (Sun) "Oklahoma St." at Home
Feb. 18 (Mon) Missouri at Columbia
Feb. 18 (Mon) Missouri at Columbia
Feb. 23 (Wed) Iowa state at Ames
Feb. 26 (Mon) K-State at home
Feb. 26 (Mon) K-State at home
Mar. 5 (Sat) Colorado at Boulder
Home Games
All Saturday Home Games Start at 2:00 p.m.
Weekday Games Start at 7:40 p.m.
(Except for TV Games)
DON'T MISS JAYHAWK BASKETBALL!
Page 4
Opinion
University Daily Kansan, November 5. 1982
Back to the old contract
After nearly two months of negotiations between administrators and graduate students, the office of academic affairs has agreed to stop using a controversial new graduate teaching assistant contract.
The decision is a victory not only for graduate students but for students throughout the University. At question was not only the contract itself, but the extent to which KU students and employees should be consulted in budgetary decisions that affect their futures at the University.
The new TA contract, approved this summer without consultation with graduate students, allowed the contracts to be canceled up to 30 days before the start of a semester if funds were not available. Students began
One graduate student on the contract negotiating committee said he doubted that returning to old TA contracts, minus the dismissal clause, made the administration any less free to cancel TA contracts in case of financial troubles. He is probably right, given the discretion administrators would have in dealing even with tenured faculty in cases of financial exigency.
protesting the change as soon as they learned of it in August.
Nevertheless, the change is important — important because it makes it less convenient for administrators to fire graduate students caught in the round of budget cuts, and important because the morale of students and faculty will depend heavily on their perception of administrators' responses to their concerns in case of further cuts.
After 38 years in alumni job, Clodfelter still going strong
Sure, the plushly decorated alumi office has the ever-present IBM Selectric clawing away in its office, and there's an abundance of paperwork done — just as in any other University office.
Tucked far back into the walls of the Kansas Union, the University of Kansas Alumni Association office conveys an aura of tradition.
TOM HUTTON
The difference between the Alumni Association room and other offices is that the finite things, the typewriters and the forms, all seem to be sent to this aura of tradition, and to friendliness.
Of course, the Alumni Association office had better be friendly — it provides the connecting
link between former students and the Uni versity.
Those alumni who will be returning to KU this weekend know, as many current students do not, how important the Alumni Association is to the life of the University.
There is one association employee who is particularly important. The people in the association office affectionately call her their "senior member."
Many returning alumni, regardless of the year of graduation, will remember having met Mildred Clodderite at some time. And even for alumni who have never met her, chances are good that they have received correspondence with her name attached.
Having been active in the association for 38 years, Mildred Clofetlfer is a perfect example of why KU has one of the most active groups of alumni in the United States. She is also at least partly responsible for the millions of dollars KU has received in endowments through her work with the Alumni magazine, the Flying Jayhawks and the Kansas Honors Program.
Her connection with the University goes back nearly 60 years, to when her family moved to Lawrence so that an older brother could attend KU.
While an undergraduate business major in the mid-1930s, Clodfelter worked at the student hospital to help finance her schooling and "hold her end of the bargain up." It took six years and five summers at KU for Clodfelter to complete his studies. She also taught people to tire of University life. Not Clodfelter, soon after graduation she was back at the hospital.
She began working for the Alumi Association in 1944. Most of Clodfelder's years with the
Alumni Association have been as the assistant secretary, interrupted by stints as the secretary-treasurer of the association
In the meantime, the number of dues-paying alumni has grown to more than 30,000, causing many changes in the duties of association employees.
As the association's size swelled, so did the stiff. This was supposed to leave Clodferl more time for the things she does best — corresponding with alumni, keeping alumni files up to date and representing KU throughout the state.
When Clodfeller was hired, she worked on the association's books, purchases, correspondence and fund-raising.
But time is always short when it comes to keeping biographical information on every student who ever attended KU and corresponding with them about the association's many events. These files contain photos, newspaper articles and personal information about the person on such things as employment, marriages and honors.
The files used to be kept inside the association's offices in huge cabinets. Computers are now used to store much of the information, Clofdeltier said.
"Just about everything is computerized now," she said. "I used to always have to ask someone to help me take something up on the things until I had it all worked out." She just kept going back until I knew how to do it."
As with the computers, Clofdlete has had to change with the times. She said her years at the University helped make understanding and adapting to the transitions much easier.
"I was riding back from Kansas City the other day and was talking with one of the young men in the car," she said. "He told me how lucky I was to have gotten to know all those famous people way back then. I guess it comes with age — just getting to know."
One of Clifford's biggest projects will be to help the Alumni Association move into the new K.S. "Boots" Adams Alumni Center across from the U.S. Navy's third office, newer and larger than past ones
Clodletter will be busy the next few days with scheduled reunions of KU alumni from the '49s covering the entire weekend. Six hundred advance reservations have already been released for the weekend, and nearly 1,100 tickets have been on campus for the homecoming day.
"I'll be 65 when the move is completed," she said. "I know I'll work for at least a year or two after that. There's plenty of things left for me to do."
Maybe that's part of the reason Mildred Cloedler will receive a distinguished service award next week from Gov. John Carlin. She's said she'll need more room and it will be hard to find more room on her wall.
KU
BILL WALE
Coming home
South Africa: Mideast of the 1990s?
By ROBERT S. McNAMARA New York Times Syndicate
NEW YORK—Unless South Africa's racial policies are fundamentally redesigned, they will eventually lead to a catastrophic racial conflict that will have serious ramifications throughout the Western world, most especially in the United States.
Frustration is clearly festering among young blacks within South Africa. Many have already left the country to join liberation movements. Many more will do so in the future. And if a rising tide of violence engulfs both whites and blacks in South Africa — and particularly if the white chosen to help wage a war of liberation drives back the white regime — then the United States will be confronted with a very dangerous set of dilemmas.
Many Americans — both blacks and whites — will have intense feelings about the issues. Strong conflicting pressures to support one side or the other will emerge. The resulting debate could quickly mobilize African political and social groups, and would divide the United States from its European allies. And it surely would lead to bitter and divisive debate within the United States itself.
To put it bluntly, if South Africa fails to deal justly and effectively with its own internal racial problem, that failure will not only result in immense damage to its own society, but it will impose heavy economic, military and political penalties on other societies as well.
It seems clear that the South African government recognizes that there is both internal and external criticism of its policy. It is seeking to give the impression that it is responding to such criticism with a number of limited reforms. Despite such actions, there has been little change in the basic structure of apartheid.
The weakness of the government's program is twofold. The pace at which it addresses the pressing social and economic needs of blacks is slow, and it fails to confront the issue of political participation.
Blacks are excluded from all significant forms of political participation in South Africa. They have no authorized voice; they are not even allowed to join political parties containing white members. Legislative power is vested in the 177-member parliament. The House of Assembly is chosen by whites (who total 4.8 million in a population of 29 million) and is restricted to whites. Executive power is held by the prime minister, the leader of the majority party in parliament. Parliament is supreme, and no court may invalidate its acts.
Nowhere does the South African government
begin to advance toward what former British Prime Minister Edward Heath has called the only solution: "granting of full political rights to all citizens," he said — a universal franchise at the national level."
Already one sees signs of a growing, though reluctant, acceptance among both South African blacks and outside observers that fundamental values will come only through revolutionary violence:
- Young blacks are increasingly chafing at inaction. An estimated 8,000 have left so far for military training abroad.
- — Many older blacks, sharing the impatience of the young, are resigning themselves to the inevitability of sabotage and guerrilla warfare as necessary for change.
- Growing acceptance of violence as a tool of change has stimulated interest in radical ideologies, particularly Marxism.
Because the South African government continues to refuse to make any fundamental change in its racial policies, a violent explosion appears inevitable. And it is possible that the depression," when it occurs, will be preceded or accompanied by Soviet penetration into the region.
Can one visualize a feasible alternative? I think one can.
Clearly, a major element of such an alternative scenario is the program of economic reform supported by liberal South African business leaders. But although a program of economic reform is highly desirable in itself and certainly requires government intervention in African and international business leaders, I do not think it is likely to bring the necessary political reforms fast enough.
I believe that the political issue must be confronted squarely. The South African government's view — that separate but unequal development is not inherently discriminatory, that all people are equal, that all people, regardless of race or color, is totally unacceptable — must, I believe, change.
Now, of course, no outsider can dictate the form of an acceptable political alternative in South Africa. But it seems obvious that whatever the final formula may turn to be, if it is to have any chance whatever of succeeding, it must do so before any event that will do two absolutely essential things:
- It must assure the blacks full participation in genuine political power.
- And it must protect the whites against a winner-take-all form of majority rule.
Some will object that rule by a black majority will lower the rate of economic and social advance in South Africa for blacks and whites because the education system has no capita, literacy levels and life expectancy are all
higher, on average, for blacks in South Africa than in the nations of black Africa. They attribute the difference to the limited experience of blacks with self-rule, and they predict the same impact of such rule on South Africa. They are undoubtedly correct.
The colonial powers no more equipped the blacks in their colonies for self-government than South Africa has trained hers. When Zambia became independent, there were 100 college graduates and 1,000 high school graduates in the entire country. And here in South Africa, white university graduates outnumber black graduates 75 to 1—in proportion to population, 390 to 1.
But the fact remains: For the blacks, social and economic advance is not an adequate substitute for political power.
What should U.S. policy be in the present situation? It should be based on the recognition that black nationalism in South Africa is a struggle whose eventual success can at most be only delayed — and at immense cost — but clearly not permanently delayed. Indefinite delay will only guarantee that at some point black resentment will erupt into widespread violence, supported by bases and arms outside the country.
The United States must make it clear to South African whites that in the face of such violence the United States will not support them against the blacks.
I recognize that South Africa's official reaction to such a U.S. position might well be to terminate its exports of the four key minerals it now supplies to the West: chromium, manganese, vanadium and platinum. These materials are essential to Western industry and defense.
In anticipation of such retaliatory action by South Africa, the United States and the other Western nations should begin now to increase their stockpiles, to develop alternative sources and to prepare contingency plans to share such limited supplies as would be available.
The final battle lines have not yet been drawn in South Africa. Fundamental political change, without prolonged large-scale violence, is still possible.
But time is running short, and the options are running out.
And if what is left of the 1900s does not witness real movement toward sharing of political power, then South Africa may, and I believe will, have a place. And if that happens, it would world in the 1900s as the Middle East is today.
In the matter at hand, to fail to act wisely now is only to govern having to act deprensively now.
Robert S. McNamara was president of the World Bank from 1988 until he resigned in June 1981. This was adopted from a speech given Oct. 21 at the University of Wilswatersrand, Johannesburg.
Central issue ignored in budget questions
To the Editor:
In all the discussions on the educational budget cuts I've listened to, the central issue is consistently evaded or ignored: Should education be state-controlled and tax-supported, as it is today?
The answer to the question becomes evident if one makes the question more concrete and specific, as follows. Should the government be permitted to forcibly expropriate the wealth of teachers or students in an institution may or may not sanction (the standards of education controlling all schools being pre-
All alleged "right" that necessitates the violation of another man's rights is not and cannot be a right. The Bill of Rights was not directed against private citizens, but against the government, as an explicit declaration that individual rights supersede any public or social power. When unlimited and unrestricted by individual rights, a government is man's
serbed by the state) and to pay for the education of children who are not their own?
To anyone who understands and is consistently committed to the principle of individual rights upon which this country was founded, the answer is clearly no.
deadliest enemy. There is nothing new or unique about this country's economic crisis.
The solution is to bring the field of education into the free marketplace. When the economic principles that have resulted in the superlative efficiency of American industry are permitted to operate in the field of education, the result will be a highly developed and concentrated educational development and growth.
Some educators fear that if this were to happen, their working conditions would deteriorate. You can't compare the conditions at private universities today with what conditions would be like if everyone took their hands out of everyone else's pockets and got rid of the governmental parasites that now feed off of and corrupt our educational system.
The University Daily KANSAN
The University Daily
The University Daily Kannan (UFSP 605-640) is published at the University of Kannan, 118 Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 60043, daily during the regular school year and Monday and Thursday during the summer months. Sunday, holidays and final period. Second class postpaid payment and six or 16 for money each or a $4 year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $3 a semester payable at Lawrence, Kan. 60044. Subscriptions by mail are $25 for campus and $35 for six or 16 for money each or a $4 year outside the county. Send address changes to the University Daily Kannan, 118 Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 60043.
Boston
George George Business Manager
Managing Editor Steve Palmieri
Editorial Editor Reese Rechenay
Cataloger Editor Mark Zieman
Retail Sales Manager
National Sales Manager
Campus Sales Manager Jared Wenderson
General Manager and News Advisor Matthew Langan
Advertising Advisor John Oherman
Pot Shots
As a result of the fact that education has been tax-supported for so long, most people find it hard to project an alternative. If, for many years, the government had undertaken to provide all the citizens with clothes (on the grounds that clothes are an urgent necessity and contribute toward the public "good"), and if someone were to propose that this field should be taken up to private enterprise, he would doubtless be to say "What! Do you want everyone except the rich to ruin and madden?" Yet it is a simple fact that our industry provides more affordable, high-quality clothing to more people than at any other time in the history of the world.
Kris Kahnert
Lawrence senior
The final chapter of Sam Hardage's political career:
"No! I'm not coming out to somebody gives me an office. I'm going to hold my breath until
"Sam, please, will you open the door? Reporters want to talk with you, your supporters want to see you, and your wife wouldn't mind hearing from you either."
"Look, Sam, it was only an election. You've test them before. But that doesn't mean you have to."
"But how can they keep this from me? Look at
Tom Gress
all the money I spent! I figured it was just like buying downwichta Wichita. And look at me: I am All-America football player. I was in the Air Bowl. But NO! NO! NO! They won't let me have it!"
"Sam, if you keep throwing these temper tantrums we're going to send you back to Mississippi without your dinner. Now let's be a good boy and come out and say 'hi.'"
This woman spent four nights in jail, and the official charge, (get this!) "offensive touching," is considered battery or a police officer and was arrested a penalty of five years in the state prison.
"Oh, all right, if you say so. But only for a few minutes. Then I'm going back to play with my
Even though the Equal Rights Amendment is, for now, dead in the water, men are beginning to claim their share of equal justice under the law. Case in point. A 21-year-old Florida woman was recently arrested for putting the squeeze on a male police officer. She pinched his posterior.
Reflect, if you would, on the number of males in our society who would be tossed in the
"That's a good boy Sam. Everybody will be pleased to see you. And remember: You can't win them all. Sometimes you can't even win your own county."
Tracee Hamilton
slammer if women were to make a citizen's arrest each time their derriers were grabbed, pinched, patted or slapped at work, on the streets and in bars. My opposition to prison overcrowding makes me hesitant to even consider the possibilities.
In this case, the officer admitted in his report that the woman looked familiar, so you may ask why the officer couldn't have, er, turned the other cheek. His report said, in part, "pinching an officer . . . doesn't do much for your positive self-respect."
I'm sure it doesn't. It probably wouldn't tinkle a man not in uniform. And, believe it or not, it doesn't do much for a woman's self-respect, either.
University Daily Kansan, November 5, 1982
Page
Black
From page one
Stan Hefley, a chemist for the Kansas Bureau of Investigation laboratory, testified that two elements found in deglazing fluid had been found in samples taken from various locations in the store.
Daniels and Ronald Hazen, another former employee, both testified that Black had ordered a gallon can of the fluid, although only a quart can was usually ordered, when it was needed.
Daniels said that Black had told him he had ordered the larger quantity because it was cheaper that way.
HAZEN said, "We don't usually use that much
Hazen and another former employee of the shop, Christopher Lazarino, Lawrence freshman, testified that Black had still been in the house when they left about 5.30 p.m. the night of the fire.
deglazing fluid. We wouldn't use that much in a year's time."
Larry Stemmerman, a fire investigator for the Lawrence Fire Department testified that a clock in the shop had stopped at 5:53 because of heat from an oven. The moulded junction box in the basement of the shop.
Jessie Treu, a Lawrence police officer, said the police had been called to the fire at 6:10 p.m. on Friday.
KANSAS CITY, KAN—The American College of Surgeons awarded its highest honor to a University of Kansas Medical Center professor at its convention in Chicago last week.
The Distinguished Service Award was presented to David Robinson, director of the Gene and Barbara Burnt Burn Center, for his accomplishments in the area of plastic surgery.
The defense presented no witnesses yesterday
Med Center prof receives surgeons' award
The award is given annually to a surgeon who has contributed to the field of surgery and patient care. Robinson received the award for his research, teaching and service, he said.
Robinson, who said he was a bit overwhelmed at receiving the award, said the work behind the award was more gratifying to him than the actual award.
"I've done a great deal of work for the American College of Surgeons, both here and in foreign countries," he said. "It's very nice to receive such an honor from the largest and most important surgical organization in the world, but it's a momentary expression and the next day is another day and it will soon be forgotten."
He said the service part of the award was
divided into two parts: serving on various committees and organizations, and medicinal service to people. He said taking care of patients was his most important service.
Robinson, who has been a member of the College since 1948, is the first surgeon from the Med Center to receive the award in the 26 years the College has given it.
Robinson has been a practicing surgeon, at the Med Center since 1950. He also has an distinguished professor of surgery for the past nine years. (4)
Chicago's O'Hare airport invaded by illegal imports featuring E.T.
.
CHICAGO-Customs officials said yesterday they have nabbed several hundred extra-terrestrial satellites at O'Hare International airport over the past two weeks.
By United Press International
An estimated $40,000 worth of illegal imports bearing the famous mug of E.T. have been seized, including hand puppets and key
He said the largest share of the illegal imports were destined for Chicago, but much was to be forwarded to other parts of the United States and Canada.
Closing
chains, said Peter J. Dispensirie, regional customs commissioner.
Most of the merchandise had been shipped from Japan and Hong Kong in violation of copyright laws against trademark infringement, he said.
From page one
Those buildings were selected because they do not contain equipment which cooler temperatures would damage, Hogan said.
Hogan said the list of buildings could possibly change between now and Dec. 24.
"We hope that during the day the sun will warm the buildings above 60 degrees," he said, adding that the thermostats will be turned up to 65 degrees in January.
Robert Cobb, executive vice chancellor, said the thermostats in most buildings would be adjusted to 80 degrees for the rest of the year.
Some of the 23 campus buildings that will have temperatures of 60 degrees during the closing period include Carruth-O'Leary, Dyche, Green, Lindley and Murphy halls.
OFFICIALS DECIDED on the 34 buildings after consulting with various departments, he
He said University officials had started turning on the heat in many campus buildings in
Officials had hoped to curtail the use of heat until Nov. 15, but that may not be possible if the fire is too severe.
NINE BUILDINGS, including Watkins Hospital, the University libraries and buildings housing critical research and sensitive equipment, will be kept at 68 degrees, the statement said.
Some of the 22 will have special areas with 45 degree temperatures, the statement said.
response to the cold snap that hit town Wednesday.
The buildings that will be closed Dec. 24 to Jan.
2 are: Bailey, Blake, Flint, Foley, Fraser,
Learned, Lippottcino, Marvin, Moore, Smith,
Spooner, Twente, and Wescoes halls, airport
hangar, Bailey Annex, the Campanile, Chamney
Barn, Danford Chapel, Hoch Auditorium,
Kurata Lab, Lindley Annex, the Military Science
building and annex, the nuclear reactor center.
No. Six Schoolhouse, Nunemaker Center, Old
Bank Building, the Regents Center, four traffic
control stations, Twente Annex, University
Relations, Wesley Foundation, Varsity House,
and buildings at 1318 Louisiana St. and 1400 %
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan, November 5. 1982
Entertainment
Two students create uncommon radio comedy
By VINCE HESS
Staff Reporter
"Tired? Bored? Ugly? All three?"
"Then you need to listen to the Bentford Samage-neck Vegetarian Hypsallergic Infal-
ture."
So goes the promotion for a show on campus radio station JKHJ 91 FM.
Cary DeWit and Peter Gust write, produce and perform in the show, known in short as the "Weekend Comedy CureAll." A new five-minute-long episode of the show is broadcast at 10:20 p. m. each Friday. Each show is repeated at 10:20 p. m. Saturday and 2:40 a.m. Sunday.
Two KU students have made use of their interest in humor and radio broadcasting in the United States.
Peter Gust, Prairie Village junior, and Cary DeWit, Shawnee Mission senior, take a break during the taping of their program,
*Weekend Comedy Care-All* "which will be broadcast at 10:20 p.m. today on JKHK 91 FM. The pair writes and produces the
The show was first broadcast the week of Oct. 8 and will end the weekend of Dec. 3.
DeWit, Shawnee Mission senior, recently described the show as a cliffhanger with
"It's very silly " he said.
Gust, Prairie Village junior, said the show was "silly. zany and a whole lot of fun."
The two main characters in the show, Smiilin Jack Grandpa, played by DeWit, and his young grandson Skiper, played by Gust, have run into the likes of the Animal Husbandry Liberation Organization, the Militant Shakepearians and the Sirem Half Goon.
IN THE FIRST episode of the program, Grandpa and Skipster dress as ducks and ride around a lake in a motorbottle. They encounter the AHLO but escape and, in the second episode, they are attacked by a group advancing the mandatory teaching of Shakespeare for children starting at age 4.
From there, the two are taken hostage by a space ship. During the adventures of Grandpa and Skipper in space, the show spoofs, among others, how to survive on a planet, people who eat pizza and telephone operators.
The show also has comedic advertisements and public service announcements.
In tonight's episode, Grandpa and Skipper contend a Bulgarian whose meal is interrupted by the crash of their space ship. Suddenly a loud voice reads a public service announcement.
The message urges listeners to chew foods, such as steak, thoroughly.
"Chewing foods gives full nutrition which builds stronger bodies so people won't beat you in the fight."
DeWit said that he and Gust got the idea for the show last summer when they were dice jeckes
for KJHK. Gust wrote a half-hour comedy script for the station, DeWit said, but the station had not planned to do it.
The pair submitted a revision, DeWit said, but the station rejected the script again. However, he said the station agreed to let them write an official material for the special features series.
Rey iwrin, Prairie Village senior and former manager of the special features series, said KJHK listener surveys last spring indicated an interest in interview shows and in comedy. At this fall's enrollment, he said, the station signed up people interested in working on special
DEWIT AND GUST submitted the 30-minute program, but Irwin said he proposed the five-minute shows because he had not heard their work. He said he was surprised by the
"I was really impressed by show one," he said. "They're really clever."
Dale Gadh, associate professor of journalism and radio TV film and adviser to KJHK, said that DeWit and Gust were the first students to propose doing a feature series for the station. Finally the station has had to recruit students to cover the press on a subject, such as how to fight inflation.
Gadd, who teaches a course in screenwriting, said he had thought the show would consist of what many other beginning comedic writers have done, including an obvious deviation from the normal is considered funny.
However, he said, he was surprised when he listened to the first episode.
"I thought that it was very sophisticated comedy," he said. "The guys are great."
Gadd said that in his four years at the station, no other students had written original comedy.
DeWit said he was considering a career in radio production, and Gust said he had been interested since high school in writing comedic sketches. But DeWit said he, he was not sure of his writing ability.
AS FOR THE IDEA of a continuing series with two major characters, Gust said. "It just kind of
"There's no better place to find out than college." he said.
Gust said the episodes were compilations of humorous ideas that he and DeWit occasionally wrote down.
"A lot of it is spontaneous ideas," he said, "when we revise these ideas when we sit down to write them."
The pair writes a script every weekend, DeWit said, and writes two weeks ahead.
Writing an episode takes at least five hours.
DeWit said, and production work, such as doing the voices and adding the sound effects, usually takes longer.
DeWit said they did not know whether the show had regular listeners other than their friends.
"We get a lot of feedback from people we've never met before — at parties, running around the park."
Gust said he had heard most favorable comments, along with some constructive criti-
"The last show we've had on has gotten the best reaction so far."
Gadd said the station would conduct a listener survey later this semester to obtain comments on the station's programming, including the "Weekend 'Comedy Cure-All.'"
ONE OF THE BIGGEST problems for the pair has been production work, Gust said. Neither DeWit nor Gust had worked extensively with special effects, and sometimes the pair has had
to improvise when a desired sound was not available
In the show to be broadcast tonight, Grandpa and Skipier are scheduled to return to earth in a space ship after their odyssey in space. The script calls for the ship to crash onto earth and bounce around to different continents. However, and no tape of a "boing" sound was available.
Gust said that he and DeWit had done most of the voices for the program, including the voices of women, although they have asked some friends to help out.
"We just went ahead and said it," he said.
Gust said the most enjoyable aspect of the program for him was the opportunity to be
"You start out, and you just have this idea," he said. "This little idea makes you laugh.
DeWit. Gust. Gadd and Irwin all compared the
program to the comedy of Monty Python and National Lampoon
"It's not true satire," Gadd said, "but there is some social comment."
GADD SAID the pair set up humorous situations well and also used sound effects well.
"You've got to follow it," he said. "You've got in really neat for some of their stuff."
DeWit and Gust said they were not sure what they would do next.
DeWit said they might do live comedy at local clubs in addition to a program on JKHK.
The name of the program has been the pair's biggest obstacle so far. Gust said, but the name is often not obvious.
"It was a hard thing coming up with the name," he said.
But, he said, the ideas for the scripts were easy to obtain.
'They just pop up in your head.'
Dance to spotlight big band sounds
Gordon Lee "Tex" Beneke, a former member of the Glenn Miller Orchestra, will bring his own 15-piece orchestra to KU to play at the Kansas University p.m. tomorrow in the Kansas University Ballroom.
Beneke and his 15-piece orchestra will play, among other songs, "Moonlight Serenade." "In the Mood," "Chattanooga Choo Choo" and "String of Pearls," B.J. Pattee, associate director of the KU Alumni Association, said Wednesday.
An 20-piece band, the Crimson and Blues Bothers Swing Band, will play at a dance for the classes of 1940-49. The members, Pattie said, are members who played in campus dance bands in the '40s.
"KU's Fabulous Forties" is the theme for Homecoming. Benedek was a member of Miller's group in the early forties. Although his band played on for many years after the war, Miller was presumed lost at sea in a plane crash in December 1944.
The subtitle of the dance will be "Music in the
Miller Mood."
Bands," Pattee said. "When people went out, they went dancing in huge ballrooms. Everyone was danced."
The popular bands of the time were Big
Shelly Stucky, Hutchinson sophomore and public relations chairman for SUA, said that the dance would be like those that Pattet described, that the band would also play some newer music.
People of all age groups are expected to attend the dance, she said.
The Alumni Association, which is co-sponsoring the dance with SUA, is having the dance because the classes of the '40s are having a reunion. Pattee said.
This is the first year a reunion for a whole decade of classes has been held together, she said, and the idea seems to be successful. There are over 1,000 tickets have been sold by the alumni office.
Other Homecoming activities include a
parade, starting at 2:30 p.m. today at the Chi-
lori Campus and then returning to campus for 1940s alumni. The buses leave at 3:45
p.m. today from the front entrance of the Union.
PENNIE FIELD
Tex Beneke
On campus
TODAY
CATHOLIC CENTER WORSHIP will be at 12:30 p.m. in Danforth Chapel.
HOMECOMING PARADE will be at 2:30 p.m. on Jayhawk Boulevard, from the Chi Omega house to the X-zone parking lot. Floats will be displayed from 7 to 9 p.m. in the X-zone.
BIOLOGY CLUB will meet at 4 p.m. in the Sunflower Room of the Kansas Union.
MARANATHA MINISTRIES will meet at 7 p.m. in the Pine Room of the Union.
ASTRONOMY CLUB will meet at 8:30 p.m. in m.son Lindley Hall if the skier is clear.
MID-AMERICA REGIONAL Institutional Research Conference will be all day in the Union.
search 'Umerterbe will be alu ünyi in the UBM.
SICHIN ANNUAL Career and Job Opportunities conference will be all day in the Big Eight Room of the Union.
"OPERA IS MY HOBBY," with James Seaver, feature in *Memoriam*: Maria Vittorio Serrano.
TOMORROW
SIXTH ANNUAL BLACK ALUMNI-
STUDENT Career and Job Opportunities
conference will be all day in the Big Eight Room of
the Union.
"THE VINTAGE JAZZ SHOW," featuring Michael Maker with "American Misselly," was an effort to bring the music back.
"THE JAZZ SCENE," with Dick Wright, will be at 10 a.m. on KANU 92 FM.
ALUMNI RECEPTION for the School of Law will be from 9:30 to 1 a.m. at Green Hall.
ALUNNI RECEPTION at the School of Business will be from 10 to 11 a.m. in the Watkins Room of the Union.
MARANATHA MINISTRIES will meet at 7 p.m. in the Alderson Room of the Union.
"THE GREAT AMERICAN SONGBOOK,
with Dick Wright will at $ p.m. on KAU 92"
Layers of reality, illusion and irony in 'Night Music'
CABARET
Desiree, an actress, played by Cathy Paddock-Hill, Lawrence junior, dictates a letter as her maid, Malla, played by Andrea Dulin, Dallas, Tex., sophomore, takes notes in "A Little Night Music."
Bv ANN WYLIE
By ANN WYLIE Entertainment Editor
Reality and illusion shift and change as easily as scenery moves and characters trade lovers in a Little Night Music." The setting and action带动这个故事在 a play, and, once another play within those.
"A Little Night Music," presented by University Theatre and the Department of Music, opened last night at University Theatre in Baltimore at 8 p.m. today, tomorrow, and November 11-31.
Review
The set, designed by David McGreey, Wichita graduate student, includes three screens depicting a moonlit forest and lake, which suggest reality. However, each screen is painted with a red velvet curtain, suggesting the stage, draped over it.
One scene includes a play, so the stage holds another stage.
Theatre boxes compose part of the set, and they are usually filled with the Lieder quintet, five characters whose job it is to watch the action and comment on it.
Also, there is always an audience. Someone is always on stage who is not involved with the action, but who watches other characters act, as if he, were watching objects, in a play.
Watching is important in the play. Some of the first words uttered in it refer to watching.
"You said I should, watch," Fredrika, an actress's daughter, told her grandmother "in an open house."
Fredrika is played by Tanya Shuffer, Lawrence High School junior
Also, characters often stand in the corner shadows of the stage and watch as they are
discussed by other characters. But this is not reality; they are not affected by what they see or hear.
The real audience is always watching, too, as actors move, visibly, behind screens and on and off the stage.
"A Little Night Music" is set in turn of-the-current Sweden. It is about elegant city couples having romantic encounters at a Swiss chateau on a night night, "a night when the sun never quite sets.
One song, "The Sun Won't Set," is about the white nights and helps explain the madness that goes on in the play — it was not all natural.
"The sun won't set. It's as dark as it's going to get. Perpetual sunset is rather an unsettling thing," the song says.
In the play, Frederick, a wealthy lawyer played by Alfred J. Lata, lecturer in chemistry, has married Anne, a woman nearly 30 years younger than he. Anne, played by Elizabeth Gesling, Ottawa graduate student, is still a virgin after 11 months of marriage.
The smiles are for the young, who know
The musical won six Tony Awards. Stephen Sondheim wrote the music and lyrics and Hugh Wheeler wrote the book, based on Ingmar Bergman's film, "Smiles on a Summer Night."
Frederick visits his old girlfriend Desiree, the actress, played by Cary Paddock Hill, Lawrence junior. She is involved with an aging bussar.
The hussar and his wife, Charlotte, played by Margaret Humphreys, Sherman Oaks, Calif., junior, intrude on the weekend, and the romantic shem ruhan begins.
Desiree again falls in love with Frederick. She persuades her aging mother to invite him and his wife and son, Henrick, who is in love with Anne, for a weekend in the Swedish countryside. Henrick is played by Paul Schneider, Lawrence sophomore.
nothing; the fools, who know too little; and the old, who know too much.
Sondheim's score is entirely in waltz time or variations on it. Members of the cast use waltz movements even when they are not specifically dancing a waltz.
"The entire show moves as to a waltz." Gregory Hill, assistant professor of theatre and speech and drama and director of the play, said recently.
The songs amuse and entertain, as well as further the action of the play, as most Sondheim songs do — "Company" and "Follies" are two of his other musicals.
"The music tells the story as much as the scenes do," Hill said.
"Send in the Clowns" is the most famous, but not the most important, of the songs. The clowns are the fools that the night smiles on, after it first seems to frown.
Another song, "The Miller's Song," deals with the practicality of love, Petra, a play, played by Sabrinia Hamble, Merriam sophomore, sings it. Although she's romantic — she dreams of marrying the Prince of Wales — she knows she's about love and enjoy her youth while she can.
"There are mouths to be kissed before mouths to be fed. And there's many a tryst and there's many a bed . . . And a girl must celebrate what passes by." she songs.
The funniest songs are as amusing for the action that accompanies them as for the words. In "You Must Meet My Wife," Frederick sings of Anne's virtues at Desertree tries to seduce him. He writes that she shygrasses him on Anne's qualities as a wife, shaming her eyes and ready to roll down her stockings.
Another ironic song is "In Prate of Women," which the hussar sings when he doubts his lover's strength.
"The least that I can do is trust in her, the way that Charlotte trusts in me," he says.
T
University Daily Kansan, November 5, 1982
Page 7
Firms
From page one
"After we've been in a location for three or four years, 60 to 70 percent of our employees come from that area," he said. "Within a year or two, we have a great deal of intense internal training."
PREMUS AND representatives of high-tech firms agreed that a reputable higher education system would continue to be a drawing card.
"A university connection is very important because high-tech firms are always needing an upgraded work force," said Maureen Frisch, regional manager in governmental relations at TRW, a Redondo Beach, Calif., firm that produces electronic and space system products.
"There's a great deal of concentration on the graduate level programs, but firms are also concerned about the kindergarten through 12th grade schooling."
Premus said universities in urban areas had an advantage over schools in rural areas, which he said gave the University of Kansas an advantage because of its nearness to Kansas City.
His studies of high-tech firms showed that the companies broke down the importance of education into several clearly defined categories, he said.
WHEN I asked the high-tech firm to list the most important university attributes, I found that educational offerings, such as training, programs and library facilities, were number one. "Premus站"
$ ^{96} $Cultural activities were number two and research capabilities, such as laboratory research, faculty consulting and faculty publications were number three. $ ^{97} $
The category that Lawrence and the University needs to improve is cultural activity, because students are expected to learn new skills.
as lacking in high-quality fine arts, he said. Rich Sexton, research economist for KU Institute of Economics, said that the work
"One of the major problems for Kansas is that it is not perceived as being a state offering social services."
"Many people who work in high-tech industries are highly skilled engineers and scientists, and they put a great deal of weight on amenities.
"INDUSTRIES GO to states where they can attract employees and keep them. One of the reasons California has been so successful is that it has many recreational opportunities."
The importance of education, lifestyle and entertainment should give Lawrence an upper hand among Kansas cities vying for high-tech firms, a Lawrence Chamber of Commerce of
in terms of Kansas, Lawrence is in the best position because of KU, the research at the University and its reputation as an outstanding academic institution, Johebsen, executive vice president of the chamber.
"Housing in Lawrence is reasonable and we have many amenities such as concerts, the library, a fitness center, a pool," she said.
"And we have good water recreation with Clinton, Tuttle and Perry lakes. And the proximity to Kansas City is also an advantage, because it's very important to many people who like the convenience of small-town living but who want to live close to a big city."
LAWRENCE CITY officials and KU administrators now are studying the possibility of creating a research park that would provide high-tech firms with a more location. The location will be early stage.
"We have to keep doing what we're doing and hope the word spreads," he said. "But if everyone is enthusiastic about Kansas, that will help spread the word about the state."
"We're never going to be a high growth state. But if we can maintain some economic growth, we can keep our environment clean and offer jobs to our young people, then we can make some inroads."
Kansans need to proclaim the advantages of living in the Sunflower State.
ONE OF Kansas' most appealing qualities, according to two economists, is its energetic and reliable labor force, which they said the state should promote.
To attract high-tech firms, a state needs much more than a prestigious higher education institution.
To boost the state's image, Bearth said, all
"The quality and availability of labor is the number one factor for firms looking to expand." Premis said. "There is always a need for teachers with training, with experience with a skilled labor force with college degrees."
The ability of a state's workers is the top priority for high-tech firms when they investigate a state as a possible site for expansion, Premus said.
"Kansas has workers who are highly sought after." Sexton said. "They are well known for their productive capabilities and as reliable workers."
One business official, Rolf Horn, director of governmental affairs at Varian Associates, a California-based electronics manufacturing company, said his state's work force was a nearly impossible task.
But Frisch said TRW conducted research on states' employment habits before determining where the firm would expand.
The second most important attribute in Premus aliday — the cost of labor — could give Klaus a big advantage.
vity and longevity records," she said. "They can be very important figures for a company."
"We have a highly productive and dedicated work force that is not really labor union workers."
"WE LOOK at employment trends, product
One reason Premix gave for the eagerness of high-tech firms to branch out from California is that it was easier to move parts.
The third most important factor, Premus said, is state and local tax policy, followed by the quality of education, cost of living, possibilities for expansion and state regulations.
When examining a state's taxation system, Law said, his firm looks closely for a balance between the two.
"We don't have anything like a one-stop permit place, which some states have, but we do have the mechanism to provide information about a broad range of things, such as taxes and regulations," said Deanne Vieux, KDED's planning section chief.
FRIISH SAID an important factor was cooperation and willingness to accommodate a company's representatives when they come to investigate a state as a potential expansion site.
"We look at what a state offers in the form of bureaues to help in our efforts to set up in their state," she said. "Many states set up departments that make it easy for companies to find out information about a state, such as labor costs and the regulatory process."
A member of the Kansas Department of Economic Development (KEDD), which oversees Kansas efforts to attract high-tech businesses and could provide could relay information within minutes.
"It's a matter of relaying information over the
phone at the moment a firm asks for the information, or looking up information and then passing it on later that same day. Really it's pretty standard among all states."
WHEN DRAWING up a plan to lure high-tech firms to Kansas, a consensus of economists and businessmen said, state officials should pinpoint the types of firms they want to attract.
"I think one option is for a state to examine the industry already there and then look for compatible high-tech firms that could service them." Frisch said.
Besides building up existing Kansas industry, which could spawn new high-tech firms, Bearth said, the state needs to promote the academic strengths of its universities.
"I know Kansas State has an emphasis on agriculture, and there is a chance a strong agriculture program could play a role in buring high-tech firms to Manhattan," he said.
Kansas State's agriculture school has already lured one high-tech firm, a genetic science company that uses the university's research capabilities.
"I KNOW KU is strong in pharmacy, and there is some potential for development in that academic area," Bearth said. "And Wichita State is in a good position in aeronautical engineering because of the aircraft industry in Wichita."
Sexton said success in luring a high-tech firm to Kansas could begin a domino effect that eventually would give the state a solid base of companies tend to cluster together, he said.
"I don't think Kansas can get the giant firms, like Texas Instruments, but it should concentrate on getting the small firms just starting out that have growth potential," he said.
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University Daily Kansan, November 5, 1982
Page 8
Democrats dominate top spot
By BRUCE SCHREINER Staff Reporter
The doors to Cedar Crest, the state's governor's mansion, have been locked to Republican gubernatorial candidates during most of the past two decades, something which has puzzled GOP leaders.
However, during that time the Republican Party, the state's majority party, traditionally has run well, and confident gubernatorial campaigns.
The Democratic Party, the minority party, has met the challenge by conducting energetic campaigns to compensate for smaller war chests.
And during the past 20 years, the results have almost always been the same.
THE MOST RECENT version occurred Tuesday, when Democratic Gov. John Carlin overcame both a lavishly financed campaign by Republican Sam Hardage and a smaller group who felt faithful to win another four-year term.
When Carlin's second term expires in 1986, it will mean Democrats have held the governorship for 16 of the past 20 years.
Democratic domination of the governorship began with Robert Docking, an Arkansas City banker first elected in 1968. Docking, whose son is the state's newly elected lieutenant governor, won a special-election bids before retiring in 1974.
The Republicans briefly recaptured Cedar Crest when Robert Bennett served the first four-year term as governor. A change in the Kansas Constitution had lengthened a governor's term from two to four years.
BUT BENNETT'S 1978 re-election bid was short-circuited by Carlin, who centered his upset on a promise to hold down utility rates.
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Carlin may not have fit the ideal role of an underdog this year, compiling about $900,000 in campaign contributions and effectively using the money to but any Democrat in a Midwestern state has certain disadvantages to overcome.
STOP BY 115 MILITARY SCIENCE
After Tuesdays loss, Republicans are desperately trying to solve the mystery of what keeps Democrats in the governorship while Republicans continue to control the Kansas Legislature and the congressional delegation.
"The party just needs to stick together and work from the bottom, maintaining and then making gains in the Legislature," Merlyn Brown, executive director of the Kansas Republican Party, said yesterday.
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Brown, who said Republicans traditionally ran genteel campaigns, predicted a new campaign approach by future GOP candidates.
"IT SHOULD HELP that we won't have to run against Carlin again, because he gets away with more than anyone I have ever seen," he said.
"I think Republicans have to realize that Democrats are Democrats, and what they are saying during the election, that they aren't doing in office," he said.
Brown saw a big difference in how Kansans viewed the governorship and the state's other lucrative offices, two seats in the U.S. Senate.
"Republicans have been somewhat passive, wanting to run nice-guy campaigns because there are more people who want to put it in reality we have to go after them."
"PEOPLE DO NOT perceive electing a Democratic governor is bad, but they have a strong fear of sending a Republican to office." "One reason is that people don't
Brown also said Democrates had effectively picked up many traditionally Republican ideals, such as fiscal conservatism.
perceive party differentials are as great here as in Washington. $ ^{7} $
But a top Democratic official said the diligence of Democratic workers and an ability to select attractive candidates for the democratic domination of the governorship.
"By and large, I think the people we worked with are more dedicated to the belief that our candidates are right for the state," said Jim Ploger, executive director of the Democratic Party. He is likely it for personal gain and selfishness."
PLOGER SAID Democratic gubernatorial hopefuls were consistently winning the battle for the important unaffiliated voting group.
"There is a large bloc of Independents who lean to Democrats if we run capable people who have the best chance of surviving than that of special interest," he said.
There were 477,099 registered Republicans and only 363,966 registered Democrats for Tuesday's election. But looming in the background were 397,440 unaffiliated voters, a group that voted heavily in favor of Carlin — a fact he did not ignore in his acceptance speech.
Looking forward to 1986, Brown said one problem Republicans would face would be another crowded group of Republicans, which could fragment the party.
Ploger did not show any hesitation in naming Tom Docking, Carlin's new lieutenant governor, as a potential Democratic candidate in 1988.
"I think it's in the back of a lot of people's minds", Ploger said, admitting that he was one of those pondering the possibility.
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Slattery win not voter protest
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Democratic congressional victories in some Midwestern and Northeastern states may have signaled voter dissatisfaction with the Reagan ad campaign.
By JOEL THORNTON
Staff Reporter
But several Kansas political party officials and observers said yesterday that Democrat Jim Slattery's victory over Morris Kay was more an approval of his own capabilities than a rejection of Reaganomics.
Republican Sen. Nancy Landon Kassabeum said yesterday Slattery's election was "hard to analyze," but reflected voters' confidence in Slattery.
"I think it bolls down to how candidates relate to their constituency."
DESPITE SUBSTANTIAL Democratic gains in state governorships and the U.S. House of Representatives, Kassebaum said she thought Kansans were not giving up on Reagan's economic plans. She said the lower inflation and interest rates were proof that the administration's economic policies were starting to work.
"I don't read it as people wanting to shut the door on what we've done," Kasselman said.
Jim Ploger, executive director of the Kansas Democratic Party, said a well-organized campaign and Slattery's own leadership qualities had led to his relatively easy victory over Kay.
Slattery captured 86,075 votes, or 57
MERLYN BROWN, executive director of the Kansas Republican Party, said that Slattery's well-known accusation that he had been a big factor in his election.
percent, to Kay's 64,164 votes, or 43 percent.
Plover said Slatter's early start on the campaign trail and his lack of strong opposition in the Democratic Party also important factors in his success.
Republican candidates. Kay's late start on his own campaign gave Slattery more time to plan an effective strategy, he said.
Slattery's victory may have reflected some voter dissatisfaction with Reagan's handling of the economy and his confidence in confidence indices in Slattery. Players can
"Jim Slattery earned the vote himself," Plozer said. "It wasn't a protest vote against Morris Kay or Ronald Reagan."
Slattery agreed with some of Reagan's plans, but "played the middle ground" enough to avoid confusion with Reagan, Brown said.
Kay was also hurt by his close association with President Reagan and Republican economic policies, Brown said.
ALTHOUGH THE 2nd district has more registered Republicans than Democrats, Flover said the voters in the district were more concerned with issues than voting a straight party ticket in "the independent" vote because he needed other support for Slattery, who is considered a fiscal conservative, he said.
Ploger said Slattery had shown his leadership by speaking out against Reagan's tax cut. Although opposing the cut was considered an unpopular move, Slattery did so because he thought a tax cut would raise the record federal budget deficit even higher, Ploger said.
KAY FERNANDEZ, Slattery's press secretary, said Slattery's common sense "approach to the problem was a vital factor in his success."
Brown said Kay's work as state Republican chairman might have hurt his chances, because he spent so much time campaining for other
Fernandez said Slattery's victory was not a rejection of Reaganomics. She said Slattery supported the administration's basic goals, such as a balanced budget and a reduction in federal government.
She said Slatter had offered more constructive solutions to economic problems than had his Republican opponent.
Roy Laird, KU political science professor, said Slattery had displayed a more personal personality to voters than Kav.
Slattery's relatively conservative fiscal beliefs had helped him attract Republican and independent voters, Laird said. His campaign stands had not been offensive to many Republicans.
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University Daily Kansan, November 5. 1982
Page 9
Re-election may spur passage of severance tax, Carlin says
By JULIE HEABERLIN Staff Reporter
TOPEKA—Despite Senate President Ross Doyen's recent denial that Gov. John Carlin's re-election was a referendum on the severance tax, the governor expressed confidence yesterday that the Senate would pass his proposed tax on the oil and gas industry.
"I'm not going to draw any conclusions on legislative participation now," Carlin said at his first press conference since his victory Tuesday.
"But just stop and think. There has probably not been another governor's race where the issues have been so clear. The people knew my solution to educational challenges and highway problems was the severance tax."
WITH DOYEN powerfully heading the opposition to Carlin's proposal, the Senate has rejected a 5 percent severance tax for the past two years.
The controversial tax, which the Kansas House approved last session, is projected to bring in $120 million annually for highways and education.
Carlin reiterated throughout the press conference that the election was a mandate from the people of Kansas for
his solution to the state fiscal crisis. He said he would not consider compromising on a tax package with the government revenue source was not a severance tax.
A. M. RIZAL
The message is clear, but I have to follow through." Carlin said. "I don't want to do that."
"I'm coming from a stronger position now, and whether legis-
lize is passed, not I think they understand that.
Without a doubt,
there are votes for the severance
tax in the House.
sion, but I think they were games more tied to election politics."
Adering to the strategy he had followed throughout the heated campaign against Republican Sam Hardage, Carlin said that he would reveal no specific plans for state budgets until the general election. Both analysts will file the state fiscal report.
Earlier reports projected an $89
"They played games last see.
million deficit for Kansas at the end of the year, unless there were tremendous growth spurs in revenue.
Even if the severance tax passes the Legislature, Kansas Board of Regents officials fear another budget reduction plan. They believe the state's immediate financial aid for education,
Concerning his political future, Carlin firmly said that he had no intention of running for the U.S. Senate in 1984, but Mr. Carlin's full four-year term as governor.
SNA FILMS
CARLIN DENIED a rumor that he would appoint former House Speaker Wendell Lady to the Board of Regents. Lady, a Republican and a strong Democrat, joined Carlin's severance tax through the Cardin's house during the last session.
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
BEFORE THE sentencing, Douglas County District Attorney Jerry Harper said swaggy was a sophisticated drug dealer who go in over his head.
King said the crime was a terrible tragedy for everybody involved. He said Swaggerty was a victim of the drug culture and his own greed.
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SWAGGERTY TOLD the judge he had had an important religious experience since he had committed the crime.
"I have a very big job to do in life now," swaggered said. "That job is to inform others of what happens when you get off the beaten path."
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He said he wanted to convince others that when simple things go wrong they can lead to very tragic occurrences.
"I have an understanding of what went wrong. What reality is — is knowing God," he said.
He said he would tell others what had happened to him and why it happened.
THE OTHER individual involved in the case, Michael Newman, 23, Prairie Village, pleaded guilty Oct. 25 to possession of battery; and aiding a felon.
Swaggery's lawyer, Wesley Norwood, told King before the sentencing that Swaggery acted out of danger to himself and his family.
Swaggygerty testified in previous court appearances that he shot Swanson because two drug dealers from Florida threatened Swaggygerty's
life, since he owed the men money to a drug purchase. Swaggergy said he had planned to kill the Florida men and decided to kill Swanson first.
Richard Vance Swaggery, 26, told Judge Ralph M. King Jr. he was sorry for what he had done, but he could not bring back the victim, Mark Swanson. King then gave Swaggery the maximum sentence for first-degree murder.
Texan convicted of local murder Swaggerty gets life sentence
After stating his new purpose in life, a Waskom, Texas, man was sentenced yesterday by a Douglas County District Court judge to 15 years to life for the Memorial Day murder of a 28-year-old Lawrence man.
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Page 10 University Daily Kansan, November 5, 1982
Food contracts ratified despite hall's protests
By KIESA ASCUE Staff Reporter
The Residential Programs Advisory Board yesterday approved scholarship hall contracts for 1983-84 and 2005-06, providing a compromise on a food cost debate.
Although one of the four men's hallis did not favor an increase, the board approved an increase of 8.2 percent for the cost in all four.
"There is no middle ground," said Fred McEhlenie, director of the office of residential programs. Three halls are absolutely in favor of one hall said "we're digging in our beams" as far as this is concerned."
Battelford, Stephenson and Grace Pearson halles were in favor of an 8.2 percent increase in the food budget which will be expected to will be about $2 for each person.
Pearson Hall was the hall that objected.
LAST YEAR, when the other halls spent approximately $682 for food, Pearson economized and spent only $322 of its budget.
Based on last year's food savings, the increase in the amount spent on each person for food at Pearson will be $112, because in previous years
The RPAB decided to eliminate the rebate system this year. Money budgeted for food that is not spent on food will go toward hall improvements, said Caryl Smith, dean of student life.
residents have received the food savings as a rebate.
Jan Short, co-chairman of the All-Scholarship Hall Council contracts committee, said, "Pearson's a different story. Their director's been there longer. They cut toCMoney budgeters try toimprove the money budgeted for food."
The RPAB voted yesterday to allow hall residents to explore creative ways to spend the extra money.
Rates in Douthard and Sellars women's halls will increase from $1,374 to $1,480. The cost of a school hall will increase from $394 to $557. The cost from $844 to $657.
With the increase in the food and other budgets, the cost of living in a men's scholarship hall will jump from $1,481 to $1,587 in 1983-84.
The biggest cost increases occurred in utilities, which rose 14.6 percent, and administrative expenses, postage, which increased 14 percent.
Society gives home to neglected animals
By VICKY WILT and DONNA KELLER Staff Reporters
Rv VICKY WILT
Humanity is reflected in the way people treat animals, an official of the Lawrence Humane Society said recently.
"It's a depressing sort of thing. I've just seen about as many dogs as I care to see on short chains, or stuck out by the side of the house in a plywood dog house," said Chris Long, president of the Humane Society.
Among the many services of the Humane Society Animal Shelter, 1805 E. 19th St. is, that of taking calls from animal shelters or cases of abused or neglected animals.
THE NUMBER of cruelty complaints is directly related to weather conditions. said Long, who is one of four states with the highest number of complaints. During extremely hot or
cold weather, the shelter receives between 15 and 35 calls month, compared to an average of 10 complaints a month during fair weather.
Some people mistreat their pets because they do not know how to care for them.
S she cited the example of a family whose dog died when it was left in a closed car on a hot day. Another dog froze to death during the winter.
She said that investigators often get search warrants to seize animals if the police are called.
Animal cruelty and neglect is a class-B misdeedman punishable by six months in jail, a $1,000 fine, or both, Long said.
IF THE OWNERS are found guilty, the Humane Society requests that the animals not be returned to them. The owners also are responsible for costs incurred by the society during the time it cares for the animal
Linda Decelles, manager of the
shelter, said that of the 1,078 cats and 2,024 dogs brought to the shelter in 1981, 21 percent of the dogs, and 26.5 percent of the cats were adopted.
Long said it was a myth that the Humane Society killed animals after keeping them for three days.
UNDER A CITY ordinance, the Humane Society holds the animal for three business days, and if the shelter is not contacted by the pet's owner, the animal becomes the property of the shelter, she said.
Decelles said the shelter's 1983 budget was very close to the shelter's budget.
A decision of whether to put an animal up for adoption is based on space available at the shelter, the animal's disposition and its health.
Long said funds for the o general came from the city and from private sources.
"Any money left over goes for improvements at the shelter." she said.
the county as well, although Douglas County does not finance the organization, she said.
MICHAEL HENDERSON, chairman of the board of directors of the Humane Society, said the board found out it would not receive county funding when the commission's decisions were published earlier this year.
Beverly Bradley, Douglas County commissioner, said, "They asked for revenue-sharing money and it was the decision of the board that we had not given it before, and we would not give it now."
"No official explanation was given other than what they published in the paper."
Loug said among the goals of the Humane Society this year were to increase its membership and to work with others in the care of the human treatment of animals.
"It's hard when people tell you that you aren't doing anything important, then you stop."
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University Daily Kansan, November 5, 1982
Page 11
Addition ahead of schedule
The $1.4 million addition to Summerfield Hall continues to climb skyward, two weeks ahead of the construction crew's schedule, the dean of the School of Business said yesterday.
"We've been really fortunate that the weather hasn't shut them down yet," said John Tollison, the dean. The project is scheduled for completion between September 1983 and February 1984. Tollison said
Construction crews from the R.D. Anderson Co. yesterday tied reinforced steel bars and built concrete forms to prepare for the pouring of the second floor of the five-story addition.
Lawrence Murry, foreman for the job, said crews would "brush the snow off" and attempt to work on the winter. He said 10 to 12 men were building the expansion. THE NEW ADDITION will include a common area on the first floor with vending machines and a lounge for student relaxation and conversation.
As a cost reduction measure, the interior of the fourth floor of the 25,000-square-foot addition will not be finished. Tollison said it eventually would be used as a microbrewery because of projected teaching methods indicated a need for increased computer services.
The fifth floor will have three classrooms. The fifth floor will be finished and the fourth floor unfinished because there is a much greater need for classroom space than for offices, Tolfsen said. Also, having offices on the fourth floor and classrooms on the fifth floor will integrate better with the existing building, he said.
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Faculty OK tenure panel selection plan
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Staff Reporter
The council earlier narrowly defeated a similar proposal.
Accusations and denials of bowing to administrative pressure preceded the Faculty Council's overwhelming acceptance yesterday of a compromise proposal for selecting members for the Committee on Promotion and Tenure.
James Seaver, chairman of the University Faculty Executive Committee, said, "It was a very good idea for us to improve our program in action. I don't know how they
Recently, administrators and past UCPT members have been calling for a change.
Council members called the amendment of faculty senate code a compromise between faculty and the administration in what some faculty members saw as a power struggle for control of the tenure process.
In the past, FaEx Ex selected faculty to serve on the committee, and the chancellor approved that list. Final approval is given by the Board of Regents.
For weeks, FaeEx had been trying to come up with a method of selecting committee members that would be more acceptable to the administration than the current method, but still acceptable to the faculty.
Ernest Angino, council chairman and FacEx member.
THE COUNCH had earlier rejected an amendment that said FacEx would provide the chancellor with twice the number of names needed to fill the position, and also defeated a proposal to give the chancellor one more name than needed.
THE AMENDMENT says that each year, FaxEx, "by virtue of delegation from the chancellor, shall prepare a list of nominees whose number shall not exceed twice the number of vacancies" on the committee.
"The chancellor would like to have a choice, is it what it boils down to," said
At that point, Charles Kahn, FacEx secretary, challenged the council to vote against amending the code. He had been criticized by members who supported the compromise proposals.
"This is a chancellor's committee." Kahn had said, explaining that Chancellor Gene A. Budig could at any time reject the suggestions made by FacEx and select committee members himself.
NO ONE FROM the council moved that the council take a final vote not to change the code. Kahn later said he expected the outcome that occurred.
The University of Kansas Theatre and School of Fine Arts present
administration will view what we did,
but probably favorably."
"I think people finally viewed that this really was the way," he said.
Several FacEx members denied bowing to administrative pressure.
ALTHOUGH MOST council members voted for the amendment, one who voted against it is unhappy with the decision.
Administrators have said they wanted Budig to appear as more than a "rubber stamp" in the committee appointment process so that he could defend tenure from possible legislative attacks.
Donald Marquis, council member,
said, "I think that the appointment
process of UCPT should be purely a
faculty project."
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He said that if the chancellor were allowed to choose UCPT members, he could purposely form a committee that was biased against a faculty member up for promotion who had unpopular political views.
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University Daily Kansan, November 5, 1982
Sports
Jayhawks look to win in home finale
By GINO STRIPPOLI
Sports Editor
Sports Editor
It's Homecoming, the last home game of the season and if that's not enough, the Jayhawks haven't won a game since Sept. 18.
KANSAS
These all things all add to upromover's contest with the Iowa State Cyclones at Memorial Stadium.
Kickoff is set for 1:30 with a crowd of 25,000 to
30,000 expected.
Gary Coleman
KANSAS
Bucky Scribner
It has been a very disappointing season for the Jayhawks, one that has seen them fall from being one of the highly touted teams in the early 2010s, one of the most disappointing in the country.
One has been the number of injuries — key injuries to players that the Jayhawks expected to overcome.
There are many reasons for the Jayhawks' collapse.
The Jayhawks' defensive unit has also been hit hard, especially on the line, where they were short-handed in the first place. Nose guard Walter Parrish is out for the season with a knee injury; Broderick Thompson has been playing with a cast on his leg for the past three weeks; and Kenny Powers broke both of his thumbs in one game and has been playing with one hand in a cast. He did not tell the coaches about the other thumb and it has gotten so bad that Powers will have surgery next week. The doctors, however, said he could play this week.
KANAS’ TOP offensive players have been hurt for much of the season. Quarterback Frank Seurer, the Jayhawks’ best offensive player, has been hurt for the last three games and has been ineffective. Dino Bell has had a hip pointer since the opening game and has been unable to fully recover from his injury. He is the strongest player on the Kansas team, has been out since the Texas Christian game.
The worst loss for the Jayhawks' defense was defensive end Tim Friess. Friess, in all reality, should have been out for the season. His knee had extensive damage, and it was not believed he would play again. But even though he missed contests against Kansas State and Nebraska, he will play tomorrow's contest, his last home game as a Jayhawk.
"Iowa State for the last two years has been ruined by injuries," head coach Don Fambrough said. "Their coach, Donnie Duncan, said it that he was ready and I think he must have been looking at him."
"We've had so many things go wrong that it has just snow balled. We can't do anything about it."
what has past, but we can do something about what is ahead."
And what stands directly in front of the Jayhawks are the Cyclones. Kansas has beaten Iowa State the last three years, winning last year's contest 24-11 in Ames. In that game, Seurer hit 12 of 18 passes for 132 yards and ran for an additional 101 yards on 15 carries.
THIS YEAR'S game looks as if it is a reversal of last year's. Iowa State was nationally ranked early last season, but the loss to the 'Hawks was no match. Kansas used it as a springboard for its bowl bid.
But this year, it has been a different story. The Jayhawks were the team that was supposed to be bowl bound and the Cyclones were headed for the bottom of the division. The Jayhawks though are the one headed for the bottom, and the Cyclones are a chance, a slim chance at that, to go to a bowl.
"Iowa State is a good football team," Fambrigh said. "The strength of their队 is in their defense. They are nationally ranked in the league and they make it tough on you to move the football."
But Iowa State remains a team that even a hurt Kansas football team can beat if they play well. The Jayshawks, however, have been self-destructing when something hits the team.
It's true that the injuries above have hurt the team, but even those should not have turned this one on. You could probably get it off.
lacked enthusiasm after the first quarter of each of their last three contests.
IN ALL of these games, either a fumble or a mistake in a drive has put the 'Hawks on the defensive, and they have not been able to come back.
When you think about it, the 1982 Kansas football team is in the same boat as the 1978-79 basketball team. That season, the Jayhawks were picked as high as second in the nation in preseason polls, but a loss to Kentucky in winters destroyed the Jayhawks.
This year, it may have been the Wichita State Shockers that took Kentucky's place. This team has never seemed to come back since Prince Cameron made a comeback last season and was pass to beat the Jayhawks in their home office.
"You have to go back to the very first game," Pambroach said. "It was a real shock when we ended up in the final."
"Now it's just turned into a bad year and it's due to a number of things. It's a big turn around from last year, but next year we can turn around with some new skills. We have a lot of good young players coming back."
BUT FOR the seniors, there is no next year. This was supposed to be the year that they would lead Kansas back to a bowl game. It has been, however, a very disappointing year for them, and no one has been more disappointed then Friess
Friess was forced to sit out the Kansas State game because of his knee injury and that hurt
he明early. He has gotten himself back into shape to play his last game, even though it is expected that he possibly will need surgery after the season.
"We're going to play him." Fambrough said. "He got the green light from the doctors and he is fine."
"I just feel that it was such an honor to play at Kansas," Friess said. "There's some great players here and to just be a part of it was great." "I'm just praying that I'll be able to get out there again! Iowa State. After being here five years, I sure don't want to miss the last one."
FRIESI AND the rest of the seniors may not be the only people involved with the KU team who are feeling the pressure. Buttons popped up last week with the saying "Fam should scram". These were most notable on the student side, but there were some on the alumnae as well.
"I'm just part of the game," Fambrough said. "I've been through it before, but I'd be lying if I didn't."
"Last year at this time, the coaches and the players were the greatest. Nothing has really changed except we've having a bad year. If you hadn't given them thought, though, you better not get into the game."
For all the seniors, tomorrow will mark an end to a career that started in the bottom of the Big Eight, but grew to last year's berth in the Hall of Fame Bowl. And not one of those seniors has had a better career at Kansas then pumpter Bucky Pratt. College after college. Pratt Junior College for one season after graduating from Lawrence High School, put the feelings of most of the seniors into perspective.
"I'd like to see us play well in this last game and give the sons something good to remember us by." Scribner said. "We've kind of let them this season so I'd like to end it on a good note."
Kansas and Iowa State have squared off 61
times with Kansas holding a 33-23-5 advantage
in the first round.
JAYHAWK NOTES--Punter Bucky Scribner continues to lead the Big Eight with a 44.9 yard average on 58 pnts. Twenty-one of those kicks have been down inside the 20-vard line.
The Jayhawks have not been a successful team on homecomings in the past. They hold a 23-38-5 record in Homecoming Day games, losing last year's game, 20-7, to Oklahoma State. The Jayhawks are 1-3 against Iowa State in Lawrence, winning the 1900 game, 28-17.
Twenty seniors will play their final game for the Jayhawks tomorrow.
Wildcats shoot for Sooners
By United Press International
Kansas State, 2-9 last season, used a variety of ondice kits to take a 2-10 first-half lead against Oklahoma in 1981, but the Sooners relied on their superior talent to win 28-21.
The Kansas State Wildcats almost upset Oklahoma with gimmicks last season. They would like to upset the Sooners with talent this year.
The two teams meet again Saturday in Norman, Okla., but Kansas State is far more competitive this season. The Wildcats are 5-2-1 for a solid third place in the Big Eight behind traditional powers Nebraska and Oklahoma.
Kansas State hasn't had a winning season since 1970 — the last time it beat Oklahoma — and has never been to a bowl game in the program's 86-year history. But a winning season and bowl game are both dreams nearing reality at Kansas State in 1982.
"When the year started, our goal was a bowl game." Kansas State linebacker Will Cokelay said. "Now we're in a position where we have to play better than that." Three games. We don't plan to screen it up."
But don't look for the No. 12-rated Sooners to take the Wildcats as lightly this season as they did last. Oklahoma has bowl hopes of its own with a five-game winning streak and a 0-4 record.
Kansas State posted its first road win since 1979 with a 9-3 triumph over Iowa State last week and now has a two-game winning streak.
"No doubt, this is the best Kansas State team we've played since I've been head
coach," Oklahoma's Barry Switzer said, "Jimmy (Kansas State Coach Dickey) deserves it. He's worked hard for it. Tell him we're going to work on onside kicks this week, but don't. Tell him that what's happens when you get good — people prepare harder for you."
In other games, No. 5 Nebraska hosts Oklahoma State and Colorado is at Missouri.
Oklahoma State has the nation's leading rusher, Ernest Anderson, who has 1,328 yards; the Big Eight's leading receiver, Terry Young, with 25 catches; the nation's No. 9-ranked defense; and the 15th-rated offense.
But the Cowboys are 2-3-1, leaving the entire conference puzzled, including Nebraska Coach Tom Osborne, who thinks their defense is about anybody on the Cornhusker schedule.
"I don't think Oklahoma State is as good as Penn State offensively because Penn State can really throw the football," Osborne said. "But Oklahoma State is the best running team we will have played to this point and it looks like they have the best defensive personnel of anyone that we've played to date."
Bill McCartney of Colorado will stand on the enemy sidelines at his alma mater Missouri for the first time in his coaching career. McCartney had coached against Missouri once while an assistant at Michigan, but that game was played at Michigan.
"I guess you can count me among those people who are surprised that their record isn't better. They have the personnel to be 6-1 or 7-0 at this point."
Owners put $60 million in money up-front plan
By United Press International
NEW YORK—The NFL Management Council, in an attempt to meet the union's demand for a wage scale, presented a $80 million cash up-front proposal last night on the 45th day of the pro
Under the plan, known as “Money Now,” a veteran player in his fourth year would receive a $80,000 lump sum payment. Players from first and third status would receive $160,000 per year of service.
Jim Miller, a spokesman for the Management Council, said 50 percent of the players would have fourth-year status upon resumption of the season.
The proposal appears to represent the Management Council's latest effort to meet the players' demand for a wage scale. In addition, the proposal includes a severance pay element that would give a veteran additional payment upon retirement.
The severance payment corresponds to the proposed wage scale with increases of $10,000.
In addition, the proposal includes "substantially increased pension benefits and both medical and life insurance coverage." The plan also provides an incentive bonus scale that determines a compensation based on team performance and individual statistical achievements. The value of the bonuses "will exceed $28 million."
Miller said the proposal was given to the players' union and "they're looking at it now." Dave Sheridan, a union spokesman, reserved comment on the onrossal.
In announcing a new offer was being prepared, Jack Donlan, the chief negotiator for the Management Council, said: "The season is in jeopardy."
Donlan agreed that while the length of the season was bargainable under the law, it was not practical to go beyond the Jan. 30 Super Bowl date.
"We have never categorized any offer as a take it or leave it offer," he said. "But now we feel we must put the facts out as they are. In ways we can not sit the players down to bargain."
Dolan said the NFL had made $106 million available for what it termed "a salary scale
"This is an effort to get the season saved." He also emphasized that the union will be involved in all negotiations, collective bargaining and individual negotiations.
The Management Council claimed it had an afternoon date to meet the union representatives with mediator Sam Kugel but they they hadn't able to sit down with the union representatives.
Dolan and Ed Garvey, chief negotiator for the players, agreed that the parties were "significantly apart," with Dolan claiming victory on the opposite apart for 1963 and $119 million apart in 1984.
"Basically, we accepted the wage scale principle," said Donlan. "This was the first time in sports that a wage scale had ever been accepted."
A lifetime contract?
Brett's demands for lifetime pact may spark trade
and the continue.
Let's get serious. George.
While most people are sitting around trying to figure out who is greedier than the other in the National Football League players' strike, George Brett, the beloved third baseman of the Royals, is the other. And the Royals give him a lifetime contract. And if he doesn't get it, he wants to be traded.
Bobby Brett, brother and business adviser to George, confirmed this on Wednesday, saying that there were other teams, including the Lacrosse team, who would play against him with several players, to attain George Brett.
IF BOBBY or George Brett think the Dodgers are going to give George a lifetime contract, they have another thing coming. Granted, I haven't been in contact with the Dodgers' front office late, but it is pretty obvious that they have a few players on their own team that are in the midst of a contract struggle. Signing Brett would throw their wage scale out the window.
Bobby Frett also said that the Royale "haven't made George a very happy man. They made him."
Also, if the Dodgers were going to offer anyone a lifetime contract, it would be to Steve "I bleed Dodger blue" Garvey. Garvey has proven that he is not the type of player who, year after year, bliss missed 117 games from 1977-80.
Kansas City, you should be ashamed of yourself. You've made George unhappy. You've
ALEXANDER
GINO
STRIPPOLI
Sports Editor
given him a contract that pays him only $1 million dollars a year.
Last year, George Brett, under his brother's supervision, signed a five-year contract with the Royals that pays him approximately $1 million a year. If Brett wasn't happy with the contract, he shouldn't have signed it. Since he signed it, he should live up to it, instead of running around and talking about how unhappy he is. Anyone who buys $1 million a year can't be that unhappy.
If he wants out of Kansas City, which he must because he moved his permanent home to California, fine. But let's not disguise it by saying that the Royals are being unfair to him.
JOIN SCHUERHOLZ, Royals' general manager, said that the team was not inclined to meet either demand at this time. He did, however, say the question of whether a object was not out of the question in the future.
The main thing, though, is that George Brett is supposed to be the "franchise" of the Royals. But when you look at the statistics, at least two Royals, and possibly three, have had a better season than Brett. Granted, anyone can have a bad year, but the "franchise" can not continually miss more than 20 games a year and be an advantage to his team.
It's obvious the Royals will make the next move in this flasco. The best thing for them to do would be to trade Brett to the St. Louis Cardinals and get at least two top notch players, and maybe a third. Or, if the Dodgers want Brett that much, they would probably part with one of their starting pitches, which the Royals need desperately.
Gerrett Brett has had some good years for the Royals, but it is time for the two to part. If not, his demands may get so high that Brett will be forced to box and Ewing Kauffman will start at third.
Surge for exits kills soccer fans
By United Press International
MOSCOW-Soviet sources said dozens of soccer fans were killed in what a state-run newspaper yesterday called an "unfortunate attack" on a team with an amphede apparently sparked by a last-minute gunfire.
Hospital sources said dozens of soccer fans were killed as members of a crowd of 15,000 surged for the exits near the end of the Oct. 20 game.
Thompson, Cummings sign
By United Press International
KANSAS CITY—First-round draft choice LaSalle Thompson, who forfeited his senior year at Texas, was signed to a four-year contract yesterday, Kansas City Kings president and general manager Joe Axelson announced.
No other terms of the contract were disclosed. Thompson, a 6-10 center and native of Cincinnati, Ohio, led the NCAA in rebounding last season with a 13.5 average as a junior. He was named the league's most eligible for the 1982 draft. He was the fifth player selected and the first center taken overall.
"We are very pleased to have signed our initial first round draft pick. LaSalle Thompson will help to provide one of our big needs, rebounding." Axelson said. "He is a bright, articulate young man who will be an asset to the team and community."
Thompson was one of only 10 Division I players to score at least 18 points per game, grab 10 rebounds and shoot 50 percent from the field in the 1981-82 season.
He was a consensus first-team All-Southwest
Conference choice as a sophomore and junior and consensus second-team pick as a freshman. He led the Southwest Conference in rebounding averages of 10.8, 12.4 and 13.9.
In Milwaukee, former DePaul star Terry Cummings — a holdout for the first four games — finally came to terms on a four-year. $1.7 contract with the San Diego Clippers yesterday.
Thompson also set all Texas rebounding records and led the Longhorns in scoring his sophomore year (18.2) and his junior year (19.5).
The 6-9 Cummings was the club's No.1 draft choice and the second player taken in the draft as a junior eligible. Cummings, who is a star for Auburn or for Athletes in Action before joining the Clippers.
But both sides finally came to terms yesterday and he joined the club's afternoon workout at the Milwaukee Arena, where the club will play the Milwaukee Bucks tonight.
With the signing of Thompson and Cummings, all of the first-round draft choices except Lester Conner have signed contracts. Conner, a star receiver, was drafted by the Golden State Warriors.
Predictions
| Strippoll | Cook | George | Cooksey | Sugg | Hamilton |
|---|
| Iowa State at Kansas | Kansas 14-13 | Iowa State 17-10 | Iowa State 28-14 | Iowa State 17-7 | Iowa State 7-6 | Kansas 21-19 |
| Louisiana State at Alabama | Alabama 24-10 | Alabama 28-14 | Alabama 28-10 | Alabama 27-14 | Alabama 10-9 | Alabama 28-14 |
| Colorado at Missouri | Colorado 27-17 | Missouri 17-13 | Missouri 27-3 | Missouri 17-10 | Missouri 24-7 | Missouri 10-7 |
| Georgia at Florida | Florida 21-17 | Georgia 21-14 | Georgia 10-3 | Georgia 31-10 | Georgia 10-7 | Georgia 35-10 |
| Michigan at Illinois | Michigan 24-21 | Michigan 28-7 | Michigan 49-21 | Michigan 28-14 | Michigan 21-17 | Michigan 24-10 |
| Kansas State at Oklahoma | Oklahoma 27-14 | Oklahoma 21-13 | Oklahoma 35-21 | Oklahoma 21-17 | Oklahoma 14-10 | Oklahoma 21-3 |
| Oklahoma State at Nebraska | Nebraska 31-12 | Nebraska 35-7 | Nebraska 45-17 | Nebraska 42-7 | Nebraska 11-6 | Nebraska 35-14 |
| Notre Dame at Pitt | Pitt 21-10 | Pitt 14-13 | Pitt 28-14 | Pitt 28-21 | Pitt 10-9 | Pitt 24-17 |
| UCLA at Washington | Washington 24-21 | Washington 10-7 | Washington 14-10 | Washington 24-21 | Washington 10-7 | Washington 30-20 |
| Northwestern at Michigan State | Northwestern 24-23 | Michigan State 15-9 | Michigan State 35-0 | Michigan State 28-10 | Michigan State 13-9 | Northwestern 7-6 |
| Season Totals | 50-24-5—625 | 52-22-6—650 | 48-26-6—600 | 54-20-6—675 | 53-21-6—663 | 49-25-6—613 |
The predictors are Gino Strippelli, sports editor; Tom Cook, associate sports editor; Gene George, editor; Susan Cooksey, business manager; Rich Sug, chief photographer; and Trace Hamilton, head copy chief and past Kansas sports editor.
University Daily Kansan, November 5, 1982
Page 13
Jayhawks fall start Omaha tourney today
By EVELYN SEDLACEK Sports Writer
In the first game the Cornhuskers took an early lead and won, 15-5. The Jayhawks, hoping to win the second, picked up a couple of points but lost, 15-7. In the final game of the evening, the Cornhuskers won, 15-3.
The Nebraska Cornhuskers defeated the KU volleyball team in three straight games Wednesday night in Lincoln, Neb.
"Even though we lost those three straight games, we played extremely well," said Coach Bock Lockwood. "Like the Nebraska coach said to me, 'Kansas came out and ran a fast offense. The KU team never quit and
Lockwood said the length of the game was evidence that it was well played. He also said the Jayhawks looked intense and were continually improving for the Big Eight tournament scheduled for the end of November.
"Nebraska was red hot. We lost, but a
'score is no indication of how well a
team played.'"
they kept right on fighting. It wasn't as we had anticipated.'
Earlier in the week, the Jawhaws traveled to Atchinson and won two matches — one against the Benedictine team and the other against Missouri Western.
"Benedictine played very well," Lockwood said. "After a miserable series against Iowa State, Kansas State and Oklahoma girls were ready to claim a few victories."
that cost them the game, 13-15. Kansas jumped to a 7-4 lead in the third game.
Kansas pulled out of its slump to defeat Missouri Western in two out of three games in the second match of the evening.
Lockwood said the Jayhawks owed their victories to outstanding performances by Lori Suffecer, Lori Erickson, and Julie Burns and Ronda Sheldon.
The Jayhawks will compete in the University of Omaha tournament this weekend.
CLEVELAND—The Cleveland Indians yesterday named former New York Yankee third base coach Mike Ferraro to manage the team next season, replacing Dave Garcia, who was not rehired at the end of the 1982 season.
By United Press International
Cleveland selects Ferraro to replace Dave Garcia as Indians' manager
The Indians, who finished the 1982 season tied for sixth place with the Toronto Blue Jays in the American League East, named Ferraro, 38, in the breadth of breaking some life into a team that has not been a contender since 1959.
Ferraro was considered to be the top choice of the Indians' president, Gabe Paul, who wanted a young manager able to deal with young players.
Paul, formerly president of the Yankees, had discussed appointing Billy Martin, former Oakland's A's manager, to head the Cleveland team, but talks between Paul and Martin's advisor broke down last month.
Ferraro has coached with the New York Yankees the past four seasons. He replaced Dick Hower as the team's first starter. He also coached in the Yankees' farm system since 1974.
The University Daily
KANSAN WANT ADS
Call 864-4358
CLASSIFIED RATES
one ten one two three four five six seven eight nine ten
two three four five six seven eight nine ten
$2.50 $2.50 $2.75 $3.25 $3.25 $4.55 $4.55 $6.50 $6.50
$1.50 $1.50 $1.50 $1.50 $1.50 $1.50 $1.50 $1.50 $1.50
15 words or fewer ... Each additional word.
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Monday ... Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday ... Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday ... Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday ... Tuesday 5 p.m.
Friday ... Wednesday
The Kanman will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or simply by calling the Kansan business office at 804-1588.
KANSAS BUSINESS OFFICE
118 Flint Hall 864-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Do you need cash? Bring your unwanted merchandise to the Lawrence Community Auction. Every Wednesday, 7 p.m. Consignment accepted Tuesday through Friday, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. New Haven, Hallamshire, Cali-242-812 for info
Silva Mind Control preview. Relaxation session. Discover the potential of your mind. Phone 842-3743
Serenity Center, 610 N. Pkwy. W. 41st St. Spiritual growth. 6:10 p.m. Pri. Nov. 1st at the
Silva Center, 950 E. 7th St. 1984 Owensville FREE. Register by calling 842-4833.
FOR RENT
EXTRA nice apartments, large and small. Next to campus. Utilities paid, reasonably priced. 842-418-3650. Warranty available. Lease allowable on energy efficient 2 & 3 bedroom apartments. Reconstructed with all appliances. Furnished. Contact information: 2 & 3 beds from $800-$350. Call and ask about low heating bills. Call 843-4754 between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m.
1 Bedroom basement app. on bus route, 15 min to campus. Tuition支付.费225.841-4139.
BR, apt. available new i 3rd floor, quiet, com-
fortable. Grad students prefer. Gas heat & water
bathroom.
LUXURY LIVING NEAR KEIR WM West Meadows Condo,
dishwashers, dishwashers, dishwashers, dishwashers,
no pets. BED 7408/700 or 419-3168
SPRING SEMESTER
Enjoy carefree living at affordable prices: Spacious studios, 1 & 2 bedroom apts - Carpeted, draped and on the busline.
The Luxury of Meadowbrook Is Just Right For You
meadowbrook
15th & Crestline 842-4200
meadowbrook
Live in the CHRISTIAN CAMPUS HOUSE this fall
Call 718-253-9045, campus ministers,
Call Ala. Tanneros, campus ministers
1. Need 1 bedroom apartment, furnished, water paid,
need sublease for next semester, starting in
January. If like to see or interested call 443-3641,
841-1521, or 841-3525, ask about 168, amt 168, I
hanover
MADBOOKROW Furnished studio available on sublease now through May 31st. Free cable, electric kitchens, fully carpeted Enjoy the quality of furniture at affordable prices. Call 484-2500 at MadBookrow.
One and two bedroom apartments. Move your belongings in after final-spend the holidays at home with family-pay rent upon your return in September or October. Visit local facilities your Paleidium, Paaleidium TV, 845-219-61.
Two and two床room apts, available immediately and
within walking distance to:
Laundry. Facilities. Semester leaves. available
A NICE PLACE WITH A TRADITION OF NICE PEOPLE
NAISMITH HALL
1800 Naismith Dr.
843-8559
CHECK US OUT!
PRINCETON PLACE PATIO APARTMENTS. Now Available, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, perfect for roommates, features wood burning fireplaces, 2 car garage with spacious rear deck, kitchen with built-in kitchen, quiet surroundings. No pets please $45 per month. Open house 9-3:30 or daily at additional Princeton Incl., or phone 812-2573 for additional information.
momize nice 1'3 ft apartment, complete furnish
and decorate, paint laundry facility! Close to campus
78-May.
Rockledge Lake Vitalis. Stubborn 2 bdrm, apt. new carpet,
bathroom. $3500. Water bidder. water pad $1300/month. Available
at 778-496-4000.
Rooms for rent plus utilities Kitchen privileges. No
pets. Refences. Non-smokers. 843-1601
SOUTHERN PARKWAY TOWNHOUSES, 20th & 40th floors, with ample rooms, you will love it. Our duplexes feature 8 WD, balconies and private baths. We offer paid, & idle of privacy. We have openings now. Call 419-788-2035 for evening and weekend for more information.
STEVEN'S REAL ESTATE - sublease option 1 BR
3BR/2BA - on-site in Grosso, New York
80month plus security deposit Call Theta
906-755-4000 www.theta.com
Ballistenle 1 bedroom apartment, $250/month; close
to campus; parking available. Kopalika
Kopalika 481-842 or 640-822. Doweler Apartments
Sublease room 1 crab app 218R $25/room at 929 Kentucky. Excellent location. Gratuit. Free Wi-Fi, full kitchen, dining room, one and a half bath, real nice Pit Oak townhouse, 2416 Alabama. Call Grey, 799-1042
3 three-furnished rooms bedrooms neat downtown.
Share large kitchen & baths. $850 9 month plus deposit
Tired of doing all the housework? Check out bunkerflower. secure, clean and inexpensive to do.
VERRY nice 2 BR Duplex, fully carpeted, new paint,
furniture, bookcase, disposal p. pets; $259.
page #84-103.
Two BTR Trailridge townhouse for sublease immediately. Rent reduced: B41-8314 before
NICELY DECORATED spacious room. Furnished
street parking, student students only, 941. burger,
street parking, student students only, 941. burger,
FOR SALE
Bus Very good condition 842-5747
1972 VW Bus. Very good condition. 842-374
1975 Chew Impal, AT;AC, FM/AM radio 4-Dr. Must see.
Phone: 740-1291.
1977 Troia Corolla Cosola 4-dr. 4-speed. Expedition coupe
1978 Troia Corolla Cosola 4-dr. 4-speed. Expedition coupe
1979 Jodge Coupe, Perfect performance. 30,000 miles. 2-dr.
1980 Jodge Coupe, Perfect performance. 30,000 miles. 2-dr.
70 Old Della Delta BH, power steering, power brakes,
automatic transmission Good condition. Low mile.
*
AM/FM stereo, 8-track all in one unit with 3
AM/FM speakers, AM/FM dura.
Bilson, 10-speed, aquarium, fan, air-conditioner Call
841-3296
CASE AmE : w/lenz and autowarrier. Vivizar room
Dear americana. Entrance of the Dear americana.
Dear tentacleant. Son of Ampulla amp; AIgre Fri
Holmes Mussafi bassmaster guitar amp, 20W, 4-10" speakers, 500, 829-6341
House Sale! KLIPSTP La Scala 104 db efficiency $100; Bunny Trombone w/o case, large shape $135; Jennings 70 lb compound banding w/ b/w composition $125; Diatom Fiber Case Three tree sweat pad $15; Call Care at 861-1120
NAD 207 head, $450 & $150; B & W speakers, $130;
Technix turntable palladium cartridges, $20; or
offer
KWALYLI COMICS) one fourth of angled backed
pages, with a long title. We have Marvel Graphic
Books's a website. We have Marvel Graphic
**KALAMY COMICS** GRAND OPENING, November 5th & 8th. we have "The Spirit" by Brian black. **MUNCIELLA** GRAND OPENING, November 10th.
Kodak slide projector 600. Excellent conditions,
without light bulb. Retail: $99-110 dollars; $59
called.
Vintage Instruments: Gibson Hummingbird Guitar,
$400; Gibbon ES30 Guitar, $400; black old-fashion
Penner Debeire Reverb Ampl. with JHZ speak.
Audio Automotive Amp, #689, $717,
857 717.
Toyota Corolla 1977-4-1 A/C/reg. great condition
must see to appreciate 82708 7453-843
PHE 1100 (100 lm) Snookie Shoes. Brand new - best of.
FAST-749 2831
TENNIS HACKETS! Recently selected selection newmed head Compson, Wilson Advantage, Kramer Pre Staff. Danap Maxxify, Davis Classic, Prince Pre Staff. Danap Maxxify in ii good condition. 842173 @ 8:09 p.m.
Vaugham Champs 6 month old. Only 1,000 miles
*Excellent condition* $800.00 using asking 450
*Bike Shipping*
Penny's student life new. Functional. since Paid
for. New home. New job. New school. New
Gatson GT500, 19, 12,000 Looms and Locks
and more.
great, $650. Must Sell. 798-1062
TENNIS SELECTED Basketball
Racquetball selection
FOUND
I have but a pair of prescription glasses on the way from McDonald's to Sydney Airport. A last visit to a hotel in Dublin.
LEOPRT. 6 month old brown tabby female with black ears and short hair. Newborn. Family: 842-597-3077.
NORMAL ADDITION. 1 month old white tabby male. Newborn. Family: 842-597-3077.
FOUND: 1 pr. men's abaes, size 11 area of Stoffer Place. Call 843-9418 to identify.
LOST Black chuck purse with big iner t (8" x 4")
Call please call 949-3057
LOST. A pair of glasses · rimless, plastic
lenses case lost behind Wesley 10:28 Call.
Credit: National Geographic.
LUST. Set of keys to a "General Hospital" key ring,
REARD. Call 841-5628
Please help! Green Dwarf Macaw. Lost victory this month. Rescued by our local wildlife organization or lawn or coachage. Sizable reward offered. 750¢. Reward. Lost, deep orange male tabby cat. Swimming pattern on sides. Stripped tail. Warning tag name.
HELP WANTED
Catholic Center at Kansas University seeks experienced professional to direct external support programs with initial emphasis on ongoing state and national accreditation. Employees years experience in fundraising or related profession. Salary based on experience. Send resume to Favorite Vincent Krissei St. Lawrence Catholic Center, 100 North Ithaca Street, Kansas City, MO 64103.
Computer service agency has an opportunity to enter or advance in computer field, a full-time combination position offered by the Computer Experience and/or training desired. Apply Personal Office; Administration Center, 2017 Louisiana Ave. DO YOU RUN OUT OF MONEY BEFORE YOU GO TO THE PAYMENT CENTER from income interesting part-time work. Local area distribution师 you for a攒够 opportunity Send name and phone to Route 2, Box 185-A.
FORTRAN APPLICATIONS PROGRAMMER:
Half-year research assistance available for program adaptation and development in remote sensing environments. Study of microcomputers. FORTRAN background required, microcomputer and remote sensing experience. Contact the Kansas Applied Remote Sensing Program. Room 266 Nichols Hall, 864-755. Application Information: Large Equity Opportunity; Affirmative Action Employer.
Female wanted by disabled men in do well care centre. Daily pay 200. Bank holiday. Payment free room and board. No commuting. £450/week.
Kwaily Comics' GRAND OPENING One-fourth off bagged back issue sales. Friday and Saturday Nov. 18-20 from 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Call or submit needed for *Child Development Program*. Must have experience and or study with young children. Send letter of application and hours to Kwaily Comics Learning Center, SI1 Mainte, KS 65040.
Part-time grill grill personnel needed. Noodle night and weekend. Flexible schedule. Applicant in the person position must be able to work 24 hours a week.
STAND TOGETHER. Special Kids need Special People. The STAND TOGETHER PROGRAM is currently seeking volunteers to serve as educational assistants in the State of Kansas. There is a particular need for these children and their families. These children need someone to represent them in all aspects of these special education programs. Parents, teachers, staff and the child, reviewing the special education programs, and attending occasional school conferences with the child, are needed on a two or two hours per month to stand together with a band of 20-30 students for number (for more information: 1-800-323-6922)
U. CIVIL SERVICE, $9,756, $48,553, Job Security,
U. CIVIL SERVICE, $9,756, $48,553, Job Security,
U.S. Air Force is accepting applications for over 252 federal
occupations. How many of these jobs do you qualify?
How many of these Federal Job Announcements for the entire state of Kansas and nationwide, The Cost? Only $0.80. And
how many of these Federal Job Announcements for the entire state of Kansas and nationwide, The Cost? Only $0.80. And
have you a lot to gain and nothing to lose but a $0.80 job?
Have you a lot to gain and nothing to lose but a $0.80 job?
ever made in your future. Send $5.00 to: Federal Job
Announcements, U.S. Air Force, 100 W. 1st St.,
Freshmen - Scholarships available. It is not to late to enroll in rollout ROTC. Call 864-3161.
KWALITY COMICS GRAND OPENING Friday and Saturday. Register for free prizes. West side of the mall. (951) 673-2840. www.kwatality.com
PERSONAL
- Special For Students, Haircut, * 7-Perms. * Tharmie 1033; Mass. 843-830. Ask for Deenjaon Seems.
* Strong Key outfit - Benetlain Retail Liquefied Candle. * North of Memorial Radium. * Bum6 Illinois. * 842-0222.
Buttons, campaign style, custom made for any occasion, one to 100. Button Art by Swells, 749-1611.
COMPRESIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES; early involvement; comprehensive health care; community confidence; Kansas City area; serves the communities of Kansas City.
We'll Get You The BEST AIRFARE! 841-7117 TRAVEL CENTER Southern Hills Center 1601 West 23rd
841-7117
TRAVELING?
We'll Get You The
BEST AIRFARE!
841-7117
TRAVEL CENTER
Southern Hills Center
1601 West 23rd
M-F 9-5:30 • Sat. 9:30-2
841-7117
CARTOON-O-GRAM FROM NOW THIRD HALF YEAR
CARTOON-O-GRAM FROM NOW THIRD HALF YEAR
SIZE, FULL COLOR, HAND DELIVERED. PUT
YOU FRANKIN IN CARTOONS THE CREATIVE
MARKET FOR NATIVE PERSON
CARTOON-O-GRAM 841-803-6255
CARTOON-O-GRAM 841-803-6255
ENCORE COPY CORP, 2112 W. 20th. Full color copies from slides or prints.
— Home Electronics —
TV and Steroid Repair
on most major brands.
842-4473 1104 West 23rd
Elizabetht. I miss you. Please call or write. I miss you very much - 143
Footlights will now be open till 8 p.m. every Thursday, Footlights 2d and 8iwa.
Thursday, Fooflights, 20th & 10th
For good quality, clean, affordable next-to-new clothing for women shop KATY'S CELLARSHOP 46 New Hampton in the Marketplace. Tuesday, Sat.
West Coast Saloon
TGIF
(a KU tradition)
25° Draws
every Friday
7 am - 6 pm
2322 Iowa 841 BREW
2222 lowa 841-BREW
Friday - Margaritas $12.55-7 HAPPY HOUR$1 for 1
or more. Margaritas on Friday only, Up & Under
above Johnson Street.
HARVEST HOLIDAY MART SHOP for Christmas gifts, woolfards, dolls, quilt, etc.! Excellent opportunity for craftspeople to sell handmade Christmas items. Start赚钱 money now! Fri. 5.7 p.m.-midnight. Sat. Nov. 6-10 Southern Hills Shopping Center & Daundall. Call 492-1828 or 841-1092 for reservations.
DON'T FORGET
$1.25 PITCHERS
NOON-8 PM Fri.
NOON-6 PM Sat.
at
MURPHY'S
8th & Vermont
HEADACHE, BACKACH, STIFF NECK, LECK
PAIN! Find and correct the CAUSE of the problem!
CAS! Mark Johnson for more chiropractic care.
ACCEPTING Blue Cross and Lone Star
insurance.
Hey Loony. There is a young girl named Kiera. Her name is *nana* pronounced like *Nier*. Wear her jacket to Joe's. Has foreigners for her. Definitely her bearer. A *skoo-koo* Happy Birthday Your Siren.
Instant passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization,
immigration, visa, ID, and of course fine portraits.
West Coast Saloon
West Coast Saloon
Final Home Game Special
2 for 1 Pitchers & Draws
with game ticket
7 am - 7pm
2222 Iowa 841-BREW
KWALITY COMICS' one-fourth off, bagged back-issues SALE, Friday and Saturday Nov. 9th & 11th. We also have Spanish Comics. 107 West 7th in the Browser's Basement.
J. J. T. How would you like a home cooked meal on the "13th," a special day?
A FRIENDLY Alternative
Sherry and conversation
4:00 until 5:30 P.M.
Canterbury House
1116 Louisiana
Prof. Pat Bickford
"A Geologist's view
of the Book of Genesis"
Kitten is seeking a positive environment to mature in. Playful, affectionate, cute as he, 841-741.
PACIFIC CITY UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN
A Fridav Alternative
Mike, nine months ago I met a wonderful girl. Just let me know you knew nothing. Katherine.
Mei Ui En. you remember the beginning adventures at the Town of Georgia? Who could ever forget officer friendly and the wide-eyed expression at the moment when I was invited to play world in Minnesota? How about the heated contest between Mei Chanqua and Banaan Roye at five o'clock in the morning? The main feeling is still here in my brain. My friend, I would like to welcome you back to the show that I have not won end of it. In my love is Y久恩, Eunmi Jeong. Mr. Rick Ack.
Nov. 6 in "Boy Doug Schoerke a Boeer" day. Happy 213!
PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTHRIGHT:
840-4821
Portraits drawn from photos. Great gifts! Matting
of portraits at home or in a gallery at 848-823-2000
after 6:00. Keeprying. 1 m up!
PSYCHICT AWARENESS FAIR Consultations
5 p.m., Nov. 4, 2018; www.psychicfair.org
Early讲座:
Nov. 5, 7, 10, 13, 16, 19; E.S.P.; "E. S. P."
Ballroom:
Nov. 6, 12月 6pm; "Dreams"; 2 p.m.; "Palm"
Ballroom:
Nov. 6, 12月 Hills Shopping Center, 2nd
& Oundah
PENE is now 20% off at Footlights when you mention this ad. *PENE AND FOOTLIGHTS*
SWORD-FIGHTING & MEDIVAL DANCE
formed at Renaissance Festival Fall full cost
No charge. Come join the fun! Starts at 9:30 p.m.
Friday, November 26, Southern Hills shopping Center
Say it on a shirt, custom silk-screen printed, T-shirts, jeans and cups. Shirt炎 by Swells 749-1611.
Get it on Sunday!
All the Pyramid Pizza you can eat at The Wheel!
5-8
Sunday $2.50 Girls $3.50 Guys
PYRAMID
PIZZA & DELI
Schneider Wine & Kg Shop 'The finest selection of wines in Lawrence', largest supplier of strong kg wines.
Skillful's liquor store serving UD daily since 1949 and in compare. Wiltshire Skillful Ended 1960. Mean
Silveren • Televisions • Video Recorders • Name
of the Company • Television Programmer in the K.C. area. Get your best price, then call TMS for help.
Schulhouse 1, 2 Bedroom townhouse, full kitchen,
bathroom, garage. 940-835-7888
schulhouse 560 Alabama Call Greg 749-1940 Takes
phone calls
Thanks for sticking with us through Halloween Linda & Linda. The Etc. Shop, 10 W. 9th.
Don't Miss HORIZON tonight and tomorrow at the Clubhouse (6th & Wisconsin) from 10 pm 'til 2 am They're gonna getcha!
--off bagged back issuance sale. Fire and Saturday, 9th & 8th血 blood of West of Mass, 7th Sunday. RWALITY COMICS' GRAND OPENING Friday and Saturday. Register for free prizes. Blood west of Mass.
The Alma Phi Bain thank the Kappa Alpha Theta for its support.
This week's password at Foodlifter is Mike Hunt Mention it and receive 10% off a gift item. Foodlifter
Video讲座 of Academic Skill Enhancement Series;
Textbook Reading and Preparation for Exams; Friday,
November 5. Call or come by the Student
Academy. Call 1-800-764-9232, 128 High Hall for an appointment.
FREE!
Want to buy science fiction and fantasy paperbacks?
Call 861-7228 between 9-5.
What makes the birthday boy happen on his birth day? Send him a trip-o-map and see. 824-0000
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Make sense of western Civilization! Make sense to use in a Western Civilization essay. For exam preparation "New Analysis of Western Civilization" available now at Town Clerk, The University of Tennessee.
etc.
pre-package ski trips every weekend. Sleepover
attendees will receive Group rates and bin charger
availabl. Call list:
SERVICES OFFERED
Alterations, tailoring and dreaming. Experienced
noisy. No job too small or large. 892-6044
Alternator starter and generator specialists. Paris.
ATOMOTIVE AUTOMOTIVE AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, 845-909-9000, W 6th. H
$5 an hour. Call Arun 84017494
The phone number is 84017494.
40 hh AMID CUNAR 842-7494
If you need a tutor, I need a student.
Part 842-7494
Improve your dissertation, etc. with technical ii-
lustration for small drafting job(s). 9ya exp.
Experience叫Call.
MATH TUFUR, Bob Mecas, patient professional
M A T H. M for 40 yr. (diagnosis: dyslexia)
MATH: CAL STATISTICS Expert Tutor, Math
Calculator, pae business & payee, & math
Call Centers. Cal Statistics.
Students call April to have all your training needs done fast and very reasonable. 843-911-081. Evenings
ENORE CORE COPY CORPS We offer professional help
www.enore.com/office/morris/fw2001
ATTENTION TOPEKA COMMUNITIES. 10 years x娘,
Memory. TypeKa. Student Discount. Call Pa-
mium Memory. TypeKa.
AFFORDABLE QUALITY for all your typing needs.
Call Lady, 8679-2495 at 6 p.m.
TUTOR with good teaching experience in MATH
Sciences. Call with good 841-965-3272 or FRENCH
Speaker. Call with good 841-965-3272
TYPING
TYPIING PLUS. Theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications, resumes. Assistance with composition, grammar, spelling, etc. English tutoring for foreign students - or Americans. 841-6254
Absolutely LETTER PERFECT typing - editing
460-6198 www.ebookjournals.com
460-6198 www.ebookjournals.com
Excellent lending done quickly. Will help you with any of your money needs.
Be on time or be late. Cost $75 to $1,000 maximum. Call
911 for details.
ANNUNCING *"TYPING INK"* A professional typing service for your important papers, themes, resumes, and dissertations. Spellings and grammar correction. Correcting Saletric. Pickun/Delivery. 864-1530
ENCREC COPY COHPS, 8121 W. 25th. We can make
margins on margins are right with our
relative reduction.
Experienced typist will type dissertations, theses,
term papers etc. Call 842.3201
Experienced typist for all your typing needs. Call 814-7497. Overnight warranty (under 25 hours).
Experienced typist will type letters, theses, and duotexts. IBM Correcting Selective. Call Donna
Experimental tuxant will type form papers, chess, snooker, or billiards. The set is available in II, III, or III. Call 842-743-4549 or 842-743-4587 at m.m.168. com.
Experienced typists. Tern, paper; theses, all miscellaneous. IM Correcting Selective. Elite or Pica, and will correct spelling. Phone 843-9544 Mrs. Wright.
Experienced typeit ,theses, dissertations, teem papers, micr iBM correcting electromechanics, Barach, after B. K. Merrill.
FAST, ACCURATE, APPROPRIATELY TYPING, AIMING 10 kites experience. Call 843 9532 619 after 6 p.m.
FOR PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call MyRq. 841/4900.
For a small cell turtle call D423-7458.
Former Harvard Med School research secretary
Bernard W. Hauger, Reasonable Rates. Call MI-
841-5922
density, Betty. 842-697-007, evenings and weekends.
It's a Fact, Fast, Affordable. Cleanup Typing 842-582-003
Professional Typing: Dissertations, theses, term papers, resumes, letters, legal, etc. HG Correcting
Shakespeare could write. Elvis could waggle, my
aint, paint. Call 414-8968 for a weekends.
Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms,
graphics, editing, self-corrected *Electronic* Call
lifting, typing Call 8610424 after 5 and weekend
nights Call 8610424 after 9 and weekend
Xerox XR-125 Memorywriter Royal Correcting
Xerox XR-125 Memorywriter
Typing I do good work. 121 Tennessee. 843-3113
MAGIC FINGERS TYPING SERVICE. 843-6129
WRITE BETTER; Editing - Typing Library
Research, Ettinger Clark. 843-8240
WANTED
Female roommate to share one bdrm, apt. $150 plan
electricity, 843-3476
Female teammate needed to join Jayhawk Tower Apt. in spring 8718.25/mouth, ubls included
Housemates wanted, one immediately and use for January. Small home close to campus. Call Phl.
Housemate, near campus, downtown. $25 plus
one fourth furniture. Available immediately or
else.
MALE **BOOMMATE** needed to share furnished
公寓 On bus line: $140/month plus one
month of rent.
BLIDE NEEDED to 10% & Main area of K.C. Mine.
Call Cellphone at 843-165 or 843-165. Please
see the instructions for phone calls.
Remain roommate wanted for 2 bedroom apartment on bus route. Good location. 841-487
Roommate Needled; for 1 bH house on bus route, near downtown, all ill. paid, incl. cable TV and phone.
Take my place in newly redecorated 4 BR
invoice room. Share with 3 girls. No request
depay.
Wanted: Female to move brand new play with us from campus and downstream. Kait atum from campus and downstream. Kait um atum from campus and downstream.
BUY, SELL, OR FIND YOUR POT OF gold with a KANANA CLASSIFIED
tax paid by the company with a warehouse order payable to the Kanana
company.
University Daily Kansas, 118 Flat
Wilton Laramie, Kansas 65072
same below in Figure costs. Now
you get mailing power!
Custodial Paying
Hire Ad Dear:
Phone: (843) 259-6611
Address: Chadwick Building
1900 S. 10th St. 40-N
Date in Date:
Mon-Fri-Sat-Wed-Sat
$0.25 $0.25 $0.25 $0.25 $0.25
$0.75 $0.75 $0.75 $0.75 $0.75
$0.75 $0.75 $0.75 $0.75 $0.75
Ad All Requests for Mail Only
Number of Packets
2.
Page 14
University Daily Kansan, November 5, 1982
STEREO HEADQUARTERS
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University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, November 8,1982 Vol.93, No.56 USPS 650-640
U.S. pressure led to halt of massacre, Yaron says
By United Press International
JERUSALEM—A senior Israeli army commander said yesterday the "main reason" Israel ordered Christian militiamen out of two Palestinian camps in Beirut was U.S. pressure,
Brig. Gen. Amos Yarut, 42, the top Israeli commander in the Beirut area and head of the infantry and paratroop corps, testified at an open hearing of the judicial commission probing the Sept. 16-18 massacre at the Chatila and Sabra refugee camps.
Christian militiamen killed hundreds of Palestinian civilians but an accurate toll may never be determined. The bodies of 328 victims were recovered and many more were listed as missing, according to the Lebanese Civil Defense.
Yaron told the court that by the time he heard that U.S. officials were pressuring Christian Phalangists to withdraw from the camps, the Israelis already had ordered the operation stopped because of indications "all was not good."
Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin yesterday began a serious effort to absolve his government of guilt for the Palestinian refugee massacre and said he'd image in media that it is its most important ally.
But he said the main reason for ordering the Phalangists out of the camps was "because of the American pressure and the possibility of moving the Lebanese army in."
Begin is due to meet President Keanan Nov. 10 and travel to other U.S. cities to ease friction with the U.S. government.
He will testify today before the panel investigating the massacre. His testimony will be broadcast nationwide on Israel Radio.
BEGIN WAS expected to face tough and potentially embarrassing questions on his apparent ignorance about Defense Minister Ariel Sharon's decision to allow Christian Phalange militiamen into the Sabra and Chatila refugee camps.
Sharon already has testified he did not inform Begin of his order to allow the Phalange to launch the ill-fated assault, which began with the attack and entering the camps on the evening of Sept. 16.
Yaron, in his testimony, said he had "warned them not to harm the local population or those living there."
Nevertheless, Yaron said he personally welcomed the idea of the Phalange cleaning out PLO guerrillas believed in the camps because "it was one less problem I had."
BY THE morning of Sept, 17, Yaron began getting disturbing reports from his soldiers. He said he informed his superior, Maj Gen, Anir Drior, and both agreed to order a halt to the
Phalange advance, though the militia could remain in the camps.
Much of the questioning by the panel involved a crucial 4 p.m. meeting Sept. 17 attended by chief of staff Lt. Gen. Rafael Etan, Dlaron, Yaron and an unnamed Phalange commander.
When asked about what was going on in the camps, Yaron quoted the Phalangists as saying, "all is OK. There is just one thing: The Americans want us to leave the camps."
Eilan told the Phalangists they were doing "a good job," agreed to give them a buildero "to destroy illegal buildings," but said the militiamen had got out of the cames by 5 a.m. September 18.
Under careful questioning, Yaron said he "understood" the Phalange operation could continue, but not advance, until the morning of Sept. 18.
Even at that hour, he said, no one realized the extent of the slaughter.
In other developments yesterday, Britain disclosed it had been asked to join the tri-national peacekeeping force in Beirut in a move by Lebanese President Amin Gemayel to reinforce the American, French and Italian units already in the war-torn city.
Francis Pym, Britain's foreign minister, said, "We're going to consider that very carefully because we have just received a request from Lebanon to do that. The multinational force is very important and we will think about it very carefully."
BY LATE Sept. 17, Yaron received information that refugees fleeing to Beirut were telling Israeli soldiers of the massacre. He called a meeting of officers and told them the Phalange had to leave the camps by 5 a.m. the next morning, he said.
Pym's remarks, made on British television, marked the first time the British government has acknowledged Lebanon wants it to participate in peacekeeping duties.
GEMAYEL, SAID before his visit to Washington last month that he wanted to bolster the force as to many as 30,000 soldiers to help his fidelity government and army forge control over the
Reagan administration officials reacted coolly to requests to increase the 1,200-mm U.S. Marine contingent, which now is stationed in Iraq. A military spokesman jeep patrols in Christian-dominated East Beirut.
But the American officials did not object to other nations surviving peacekeeping troops.
In Beirut, Parliament resumes debate today on the Cabinet's request for emergency powers to rule eight months by decree in matters from electoral law and social affairs to security.
See MIDEAST page 5
Political sources said the decree was expected to pass despite initial fears that the powers were overloaded.
Kansan staff applications available
The Kansan is now accepting applications for the positions of editor and business manager for the spring semester.
Applications are available in the Kansan
All applications must be submitted by 5 p.m. Nov. 18 to the School of Journalism office, 200 Flint.
business office, 118 Flint Hall, or the office of student affairs, 214 Strong Hall.
coffee. During the coffee, Marion Wade, class of '44, and his wife Louise, class of '43, took a final look at their alma mater before returning to Lenexa.
arrow you want to
Homecoming festivities ended yesterday morning when alumni and students gathered at the Potter Lake Pavilion for a farewell
Bells' peal honors WWII toll. alumni
Bv DAN PARELMAN
Staff Reporter
The Campanile beams pelleted yesterday morning, calling back memories for 60 alumni from the 1940s, memories of those who died in World War II.
KU's Fabulous '40s homecoming weekend,
sometimes filled with laughter and other times
with tears, ended solemnly yesterday at the Potter Lake Pavilion.
Babcock, 1947; Joy Bates, 1945; Nina Kanaga,
1964; and Ann Reed, 1948.
The weekend, planned by B.J. Pattue,
associate director of the University of Kansas
Alumni Association, began Friday afternoon at
the Chi Omega fountain with the annual parade.
VINTAGE CARS carried homecoming tickets of the '4s down Jayhawk. Bouteloved to Ms. Lombardi, they are treasured.
Crimson and blue floats portraying 45 versions of the Jayhawk cruised down Jayhawk Boulevard. Winners in the contest were Alpha Kappa Lambda and Alpha Gamma Delta, first place moving parts; Kappa Sigma and Alpha Chi Alpha and Alpha Omicron Pi, first place non-moving; and Pi Kappa Phi Colony and Alpha Phi, second place non-moving.
The Crismon and Blues Swing Band, composed of musicians of the '40s, strutped along.
Friday night, 650 graduates of classes from 1940 to 1963 dined at the Lawrence Holiday and remembered their days at the University; dandelion pulls with Chancellor Deane Malot, the protest over the University shortening winter break by a week, Tommy Dorsey playing at Hoch Auditorium with a kid named Frank Sinatra, and, of course, World War II.
"Your courage and dedication changed the face of the world and altered the lives of many."
Eyes clouded with tears as Budg mentioned yesterday's ceremony near the World War II Memorial Campanile that would honor those who died in the war.
"BE GREATFUL, be grateful as KU is, for their sacrifice" he said
The dinner program recalled the fun times more than the bitter times.
Bright pennants marking each graduating class hung from the walls of the Regency Ballroom. "Deep in the Heart of Texas," "Boogie Woggie Bugle Boy," other 40s songs
and news reports of the war played softly in the background as the alumni dined.
The speakers and the master of ceremonies,
Odd Williams, recalled memories of forlaking
In a letter to the Alumni Association, Malot, 84, chancellor from 1914 to 1960, said that he did not want to chance a strenuous trip to KU. But Malott did send a tape recording
HE REMINSCED about bumping around in the dark in the mornings because KU complied with President Franklin D. Roosevelt's request to turn off electricity to conserve energy during
Malott described emerging from an inspection of a tunnel one morning and seeing two students who looked at him incredulously, as if they were trying to scheming a plot at night beneath the University.
The president and representatives of each
grades graduating class also shared memories with the
president.
Charles Wright, speaking for the class of 41,
talked about the student body digging up
their problems.
"I can still see Chancellor Malott and those Thetas down on their knees digging dandelions." Wright said. "I don't know who had more fun."
See HOME page 5
Area magicians gather to share tricks of trade
THE DEBUT OF THE NEW YORK JAZZ FESTIVAL
Rex Gett, Manhattan, said, "Everybody will have three decks out; one in each hand and one in their pocket. All of us do card tricks. Cards are basic tools of magic, but there are other tools."
TOPEKA- The rustle of stuffing cards drifted through the room as magicians gathered in clusters to watch a new sleight-of-hand trick and crack lukes about their profession.
The third annual Novemberfest of Magic convention offered a weekend of magic to the 150 masters of illusion who attended the three-day conference here.
As one magician watched a card trick he had never before seen done and said, "How was that done?" The simultaneous response from several spectators was, "It's magic."
By VICKY WILT Staff Reporter
Chuck Larkey, a Topeka magician, organized
Harry Monte, master of ceremonies for the Third Annual Novemberfest of Magic demonstrated a ring trick during the magicians' convention last weekend in Topeka.
POPULAR MAGICIANS lectured on their secrets, dealers offered an array of balls, scarves and magic boxes and the magicians attended contests and shows.
the convention of members of the Society o American Magician. The highlight of the convention was a show by international magstars, including Peter Glovicki from Budapest.
Thursday night, the night before the conven
Monday Morning
tion officially started, local talent entertained the magicians who had arrived early.
Jack Armstrong's humor was a favorite with the crowd. Armstrong, a Lawrence insurance salesman, was dressed as a college student, circa 1940. He wore haggy pants, a tweed jacket and cap and blue tennis shoes. He told the crowd that he knew only one card trick as he pulled a
He drew a 10 of clubs from the deck. He then placed it back in the deck after the volunteer had memorized it. Then Armstrong ducked behind a curtain. A moment later, 'Julia Child' sprang up. The phony French chef then concocted a treat for the crowd.
He handed the cards to a volunteer from the audience. His fellow magicians laughed when he told the man, "Shuffle them up and don't change the order."
deck of Raggedy Ann playing cards from his satchel.
CHILD DUMPED the Raggedy Ann cards into a bowl. Quiping "add a little flour," Armstrong plucked a flower from a vase and tossed it in. He cracked eggs into the bowl and, mocking Child's famony "wow, wow," died and added ingredient to the mixture and bread into the mixture and nut it in a toaster.
After the toast popped up, Armstrong broke the piece of toast in half.
See MAGIC page 5
KU engineering senior dies; faulty furnace possible cause
Lawrence police yesterday were investigating the death of a 31-year-old KU student who was shot and killed in New York.
The victim was identified by police as Steven C. Spake, 1638 Delaware St. Spake, Wamgo senior, was majoring in engineering.
school, and was studying at Augsburg.
Palaean said Snake's body was found at 2 a.m.
Police said Spake's body was found at 2 a.m. Police found another man, Michael Zimmerman, 30, unconscious on the couch in the apartment. He was taken to Lawrence Memorial Hospital, where he was in stable condition in the intensive care unit yesterday, a hospital official said.
POLICE WERE waiting to talk to Zimmerman to try to determine what caused Spake's death. The hospital official said Zimmerman was
conscious later in the day, but unable to talk to police.
Police discovered the men after a woman called them and said she had not been able to contact her boyfriend, one of the two men, and was worried.
Police searched the apartment but found no drugs or evidence of foul play.
Police said the death might have been caused by carbon monoxide, but the cause of death had not been determined.
Alan Sanders, pathologist, performed an autopsy on Spake yesterday. He said the preliminary results showed the cause of death was accidental carbon monoxide poisoning. Authorities said they thought the poisoning might have been related to a furnace problem
Weather
PLEASANT
Today will be mostly cloudy with a high in the lower 60s and southeast winds at 5 to 15 mph, according to the National Weather Service.
Tonight will be mostly cloudy with a low in the lower 40s.
It will be mostly cloudy tomorrow with a chance of rain and a high around 60.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, November 8, 1982
News Briefs From United Press International
Soviet Union will respond to attacks, Brezhnev warns
MOSCOW—President Leonid Brezhnev, in a speech marking the 65th anniversary of the Bolshevik Revolution, warned "hot-headed" Western leaders Saturday they could expect "crushing" retaliation for any attack on the Soviet Union.
Brezhnev's tough remarks, coming less than 10 days after he attacked the "adventurism, rudeness and undisguised egoism" of the Reagan administration, apparently reflected a hardening stand against that administration.
"We shall do the utmost to see to it that those who like military ventures should never take the land of the Soviets unwaivers; that the potential aggressor should know: a crushing retaliatory strike will inevitably be in for him." Brezhnev said.
Brezhnev never specifically mentioned the United States or NATO, but his use of the term "imperialist" made it clear he was referring to the United States and its allies.
Chinese Ambassador Yang Shouzheng attended the parade for what was believed the first time in two decades, perhaps evidence of a thaw in Sino-Soviet relations.
Stevenson picks up votes in Illinois
CHICAGO - Adlai Stevenson sliced into Gov. James Thompson's narrow lead following a re-examination of Chicago ballots in the close governor's race.
Thompson, a Republican who has claimed re-election to a record third straight term, led by 9,401 votes out of 3.6 million when original totals were announced.
During a stormy $61\%$ - hour session Saturday, election officials rechecked returns from 14 so-called "zero" precincts. In those precincts, initial reports showed either no votes or very low totals for one candidate or the other.
Stevenson's backers said he had gained 2,962 votes, but Thompson's attorneys said they "don't necessarily accept these revised totals," which are still unofficial.
A winner will not be named officially until the Nov. 22 canvass. There have been hints of court action to settle the race.
Three Soviets hijack jet to Turkey
ANKARA, Turkey—Three Soviet citizens yesterday hijacked a Russian jetliner with 40 people aboard and forced it to land at a U.S. Air Force base in Turkey, where they surrendered.
The pilot of the charter jet and two passengers were stabbed during a fight with the hijackers, but the wounds were not serious, an official said.
Turkish officials said the hijackers, all born in East Germany but Soviet citizens, surrendered after a three-hour standoff at the U.S. Sinop Air Base in northeastern Turkey.
A U.S. Embassy spokesman said he understood the hijackers requested political asylum in West Germany.
Witnesses described the hijackers as between the ages of 50 and 60. They said the three men appeared tired but happy to surrender to Turkish authorities, who took them into custody pending an investigation.
Countdown begins for space shuttle.
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — The countdown began yesterday for the Veterans Day launch of the space shuttle Columbia on its first operational voyage, and engineers completed a major ground test on the second shuttle, set for launch in January.
The Columbia's flight, its fifth, will be a trailblazing mission that will put NASA in the space truck business.
During the five-day mission, the shuttle will launch two satellites, one American and one Canadian, from its cargo hold for a fee of $18 million. Rotating like taps as they slip into orbit, the satellites will be ejected by a spring-loaded turntable, then boosted into orbit by their own rockets.
The four-man shuttle crew, the largest crew to be launched into orbit in a single spaceship, is scheduled to roar skyward about breakfast time Thursday. The shuttle will return to Earth at Edwards Air Force Base in California on Nov. 16.
Nuns harness wind to power camp
ERIE, Pa.—The Sisters of Mount St. Benedict, who got into the energy business a few years back by drilling a gas well on their property, are at it again.
By week's end, the Benedictines plan to bring on-line a 140-foot wind generator tower, said Sister Joan Chittister.
The generator is expected to supply at least half the 42,000 kilowatt-hours needed annually at the order's Glinodo camp and conference center on Lake Erie, saving at least $1,800 annually in energy costs.
Sister Chittison said the idea for the wind tower came directly from the order's experience with the gas well, which now provides 50 percent of its energy.
Sister Chittister said the Benedictines undertook the wind project to help in energy research, to test a process that could be useful to many small-business people, and to cut energy costs at the camp.
Military wins in Turkish elections
ANKARA, Turkey—Turkey's 20 million voters overwhelmingly approved a new constitution yesterday giving military junta leader Gen. Kenan Erenen the presidency for seven years. Under the new constitution, restrictions on political freedom would be extended.
Even campaigned extensively throughout Turkey in the final days of the campaign in support of the constitution, which was proposed by the military. He acknowledged that it restricted freedom but insisted that it had allowed recurring terrorism and political unrest that existed under civilian rule.
Although the approval was not a surprise to them, western officials said that the right-wing military needed a large victory to legitimize its rule, which banned political opposition but restored law and order to Turkey's cities.
Correction
Gary Toeben, executive vice-president of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce, told the University Daily Kansan that he was misquoted in the Nov. 2 article on the closing of the Montgomery Ward store in Lawrence.
Toobben said he did not say, "Losing Montgomery Ward will cause some of the department stores that were considering coming into the business."
Toobben said yesterday, "It's my opinion that the closing of the Montgomery Ward store in Lawrence does not reflect the strength and vitality of Lawrence's retail sales market. It should have no impact on law enforcement and fire firms currently considering locating a store in downtown Lawrence."
Archbishop endorses withholding of aid
By United Press International
Minister Jose Guillermo Garcia, who accused Hinton of interfering in El Salvador's internal affairs.
Hinton has warned that the U.S. aid program is in jeopardy because the Salvadoran judicial system has failed to properly deal with an estimated 30,000 political "assassinations", including those of six Americans.
SAN SALVADOR, EJ Salvador - Acting Archbishop Arturo Rivera y Damas yesterday strongly endorsed U.S. Ambassador Deane R. Hinton's threat that $230 million in aid for the war because of human rights violations.
"I have said that fundamentally the serious majority of the Salvadoran people agree with what Hinton has said." said Rivera y Damas, the nation's top churchman. "There is no problem with deciying his intervention or criticizing power. Instead, this cry of protest should be extended to everything."
His Oct. 29 speech sparked a barrage of public criticism, including attacks by President Alvaro Magana and Defense
Rivera y Damas also said he believed Hinton might have underestimated the number of political killings. Hinton's son had been a fixture in the future of 30,000 assassinations is too high.
REFERRING TO Hinton's charges that the judicial system was lax in
prosecuting those responsible for political killings, Riversa y Damas said the law should be applied "without any other than that of the balance of justice."
"But unfortunately this is not so ... and it's not necessary for a sermon to tell us this," he said in his sermon in Salvador the Metropolitan Cathedral.
At the same time, court documents revealed that a National Guard line commander covered up the confession of a soldier charged with heading a patrol that killed American churchwomen in El Salvador.
The court documents showed that commander Dagoberto Martínez told PIO Clemente that the judge
Antonio Colindres Aleman admitted his responsibility in the Dec. 3, 1980, slavings of the churchwomen
But authorities did not detain Colindres Aleman and four other guardsmen until April 1981, and the implication of the National Guard in the incident did not surface for almost a year after the killings.
Martinez said he advised Colindres Aleman to cover up his involvement for the sake of "the national guard's reputation."
The guardmen could go to trial within two weeks.
Predicted rise in gas bills worries charity
GOVERNMENT AND military officials have denied any cover-up in the crime.
A rate hike approved by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission last month for Cities Service Gas Co. took effect yesterday and the costs will be passed on to residential customers of
By United Press International
KANSAS CITY, Mo - Some Kansas consumers can expect a substantial rise in their natural gas heating bills this winter, and the additional dollars charged for heat have workers at a Topeka charity organization worried.
Gas Service Co., a Kansas City-based utility.
Kansas consumers are expected to pay $66 million in increased rates because of the FERC-approved hike. Broken down further, it could mean a rise in fuel prices for Kansas customers of Gas Service Co., depending on where they live.
On top of that, Gas Service Co. has a proposed $29.3 million rate increase in a Kansas Corporation Commission decision. The three-member KCC are recommending
that the KCC approve a $7.1 million hike.
MARGE ROBERTS, director of Let's Help, an energy and food aid program, said it has been frustrating for the past week to 10 days. She said that the organization already had seen a big number of people who needed help in getting weather and heat, and that the coldest weather and rate hikes were still to come.
She said that it used to be that the organization could pay $25 on a person's gas bill and help, but now that gas bills were higher it did not help
much even when Let's Help. paid $100
toward a needy consumer's bill.
Gas Service Co. spokesman Dale Satterthwaite said that the utility had about 500 customers who were without service now because their gas was shut off for non-payment of bills from last winter.
He said this winter may be worse because the higher prices for gas mean there could be more shut-offs, but someone said the utility would consider age, health, disabilities and weather conditions before the gas was cut off.
Mon
Tue
Wed
Thurs
Fri
Sat
MONDAY
GREEK NIGHT
Hours Wear your letters (any will do) Mon-Sat 8 to 3 am Get $1 BAR DRINKS 9-1 am
moody's
NIGHT CLUB
Coming Up: LADIES NIGHT Watch For Details
JAYHAWK STUDENT BASKETBALL SEASON TICKET SALE
WHEN: Nov. 9-12, Tuesday through Friday
WHERE: East Lobby, Allen Field House
TIME: 9:00 am----4:00 pm
PRICE: $22.00—INCLUDED 11 GAMES Games over student holidays are not included in season ticket or ticket price (U.S. International, Memphis State and Alcorn State).
Nov.10- CRIMSON AND BLUE INTRA-SQUAD GAME Students FREE with KU I.D.
Nov.15-
EXHIBITION GAME:
YUGOSLAVIAN
NATIONAL TEAM
Students-$1.00 and a can of food. Food will be donated to local charitable agencies for distribution to families in need for Thanksgiving.
1982-83
MEN'S BASKETBALL SCHEDULE
Nov. 27 (Sat) U.S. International at home
Nov. 29 (Mon) Bowling Green at home
Dec. 2 (Thu) *Mississippi Valley* at home
Dec. 4 (Su) St. Louis at home
Dec. 6 (Mon) Michigan Univ at Ann Arbor
Dec. 11 (Su) Southern Methodist at Dallas
Dec. 14 (Su) Maryland State at home
Dec. 20 (Mon) Alcorn State at home
Dec. 29 (Wed) Kentucky at Lexington
Jan. 2 (Sun) Ohio State at Kemper
Jan. 6 (Tu) Oral Roberts at Tusas
Jan. 8 (Su) Evansville at Evansville Ind.
Jan. 10 (Su) Indiana State at Iowa
Jan. 19 (Wed) Oklahoma at Norman
Jan. 22 (Su) Oklahoma St at Stillwater
Jan. 26 (Wed) MIssouri at home
Jan. 29 (Su) K-State at Manhattan
Jan. 31 (Su) Illinois State at Home
Feb. 5 (Su) Nebraska at Lincoln
Feb. 10 (Thu) "Colorado" at home
Feb. 12 (Su) "Oklahoma St." at home
Feb. 16 (Wed) Missouri at Columbia
Feb. 19 (Su) Oklahoma at Home
Feb. 21 (Su) Iowa State at Home
Feb. 26 (Su) K-State at Home
Mar. 2 (Wed) Nebraska at Home
Mar. 5 (Su) Colorado at Boulder
*Doubleheader
All Saturday Home Games Start at 2:00 p.m.
Weekday Games Start at 7:40 p.m.
(Except for TV Games)
DON'T MISS JAYHAWK BASKETBALL!
}
University Daily Kansan, November 8. 1982
Page 3
J-school changes language requirement
By VERONICA JONGENELEN Staff Reporter
The School of Journalism has approved a change in the foreign language requirement that will make the actual study of foreign language the only option available to reach graduation.
The change will not affect students presently enrolled in the school. It will take effect beginning with freshmen who enter the school in the fall of 1983.
Faculty and student representatives of the School of Journalism recently approved a recommendation from the school committee to remove the possibility of fulfilling the requirement with computer science or statistic research. Bremner, Oscar S. Stauffer distinguished professor of journalism.
Before the change, students enter
ing the school could fulfill the foreign language requirement in one of three ways.
STUDENTS COULD obtain the equivalent of 16 hours of college work in one foreign language, or the equivalent of 10 hours in each of two languages, or successfully complete two courses in either computer science or statistics, including a basic and an advanced class.
Now, students who enter the school in the fall of 1983 and thereafter will be able to choose only from the first two options.
Bremner, who heads the committee that recommended the change, said yesterday the change was made because the faculty wanted all students who graduated in the school to have some exposure to a foreign language.
"Also, we thought that the study of a foreign language would help them with the study of their own language," Bremner said.
Computer science and statistics, as important and vital as they are, do not meet the intent of exposure to a foreign language. he said.
PROBLEMS HAVE arisen from the number of journalism students taking courses in computer science who have little interest or ability in it, said Del Brinkman, dean of the School of Journalism.
"Once all the interest in computer science developed, then these students who really wanted to dodge the foreign language requirement filled those classes and created problems for classes and instructors." he said.
Bremner said, "Some journalism students who undertook the computer science option were not well enough
prepared mathematically to tackle the second course, and possibly even the first course."
Brinkman and Bremner both said the school would not discourage journalism students from taking computer science.
"Quite to the contrary, we're encouraging students who we think can handle computer science to take courses in it because computer science would be so important to them in the future," Bremer said.
Victor Wallace, chairman of the department of computer science, said he hoped the effect of the requirement change would be an increase in interested journalism students enrolling in computer science classes and less who are not interested but want to take the courses to avoid languages.
SenEx discusses program slashing
By DEBORAH BAER Staff Reporter
KU faculty and administrators admit that the state's financial condition is such that Regents institutions could move in state allocations this fiscal year.
The possibility of eliminating some academic programs surfaced Friday at a meeting of the University Senate Executive Committee.
The committee has been asked to develop a method for eliminating programs and to define "program," by determining whether they are, for example, units that grant degrees or units that represent emphases in departments, said James Carothers, SenEx member.
Although it could be a difficult task,
he said, the reason for doing it seems clear.
"Some universities have approached financial difficulties by eliminating programs," Carothers said. "In the event of a very stringent budget situation, it's one of the things you have to consider."
HE SAID SenEx members agreed, however, that programs should be eliminated only for academic, not financial, reasons.
If the Regents decided to discontinue an academic program, all people working in that program, including teachers, said Angert Ingney, SepEk member.
Tenured faculty generally can be fired only for moral turpitude or if the University declares financial exigency. But according to the guidelines of the
American Association of University Professors, a university can legally eliminate an entire academic program,授予 tenured faculty and administrators.
Angino said, “It’s the kind of thing that probably always comes up during times of financial shortages. We went through these issues later the last financial crunch.”
Angino said several programs had been phased out in the past, including home economics, mortuary science and nuclear engineering.
"What bothers me is the notion that a particular administrator could form a committee and say, 'Review this unit.' he said.
Other members agreed and decided to draft a program elimination method that would not allow a single administrator to cancel a program, he said.
But Carothers said he did not expect any programs to be discontinued this year and did not sense any need for them. The method for eliminating programs
He said some people thought the act of preparing such a method would increase the likelihood of programs failing. He said he, when asked, would be
"But I don't think that's an option," be said.
THE BOARD of Regents has planned a five-year review of all academic programs in its institutions, which officials say would be used for evaluation of programs and not for their elimination.
Pell supplements coming, aid office says
Despite earlier cuts in funding, the disbursement of supplemental Pell Grant awards is on schedule, an official statement of student financial aid said yesterday.
Donna Kempin, assistant director of the office, said paperwork had been completed for almost all students eligible for the award.
ECONOMICAL CARS * ECONOMICAL RATES
OUR SUPPLIER
CADEMY
The additional funds became available when Congress overrode President Reagan's budget veto earlier this fall.
A
Financial aid programs nationwide have received approximately $140 million since Congress overrode the veto.
KU's office ordered the supplemental award checks last week, and the checks
15 PASSENGER VAN AVAILABLE
808 W.24 841.618
THE SUPPLEMENTAL checks may be as little as $6 or as much as $63. A matching award will be made at spring semester enrollment.
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Kempin said the office still was calculating additional award money for veterans.
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Veterans' awards previously were calculated on a formula that accounted for 100 percent of all VA benefits they received, Kempin said. Now only one-third of the benefits will be counted in the financial aid formula for veterans, making additional money available to them.
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--the Bahá'í Faith
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McCOLLUM HALL PRESENTS AN OPEN FORUM
JIM CRAMER Consensus Coalition
Meet the Student Body President & Vice-President Candidates
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--the Bahá'í Faith
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One heart at a time
Fraser quits Chrysler to keep workers' trust
Spokesman Bill Stempien said Chrysler regretted but understood Fraser's action and called him "a valuable member of the board."
By United Press International
"The question in my mind is whether or not the membership on the board would be conceived in a conflict situation." Fraser said.
In a letter hand-delivered to Chrysler Chairman Lee Iacocca on Friday, seven hours after 10,000 Canadian workers went on strike against Chrysler, Fraser said he would suspend his board membership until after contracts were settled in Canada and the United States.
DETROIT—United Auto Workers President Douglas Fraser said yesterday that he had resigned temporarily from the Chrysler Corp. board to keep workers from questioning his loyalty after heception is more important than reality."
Fraser told reporters he was trying to convince Chrysler to pay supplemental unemployment benefits to American workers for their jobs because of a walkout in Canada.
Some workers have questioned Fraser's commitment to the UAW but backed him.
American UAW members last month resoundingly rejected a pact that they supported to raise the minimum wage.
Fraser joined the board in June 1980 under an agreement in which UAW concessions helped Chrysler get federal loans to avoid bankruptcy. He was the first union official on the board of a major American company.
HE SAID he wanted the UAW to keep its seat on the Chrysler board.
Fraser said U.S. talks could begin before January but there would be no early return to the bargaining table unless he agreed to raise that no money was available for raising.
"I WOULD doubt if they would have parts that would take them that far down the road." Fraser said, adding a "long, long strike weakens the compa-
The strike has idied six Chrysle,
Canada plants. Another 16 plants in
four states will be affected by the
business that is this week, iding
2,500 American workers.
They have agreed to work under the old contract until negotiations resume in January.
Canadian employees of Ford Motor Co. agreed yesterday to pay $40,000 a month to help 9,600 striking Canadian Chrysler workers.
"THEY HAVE agreed to raise their dues $10 a month per person," said Ray Lebert, secretary treasurer of Chrysler local 444 in Windsor. "If the strike goes on more than a month, they'll pay $20 more a month."
The 4,000-member Windsor, Ontario local 200 of the UAW approved dues increases to help workers from three other Ontario Chrysler plants, who struck Friday to give wage parity with the General Motors of Canada workers.
Fraser said he was surprised by Chrysler statements that it would not settle with Canadian workers until a pact was negotiated for U.S. workers.
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Opinion
Page 4
Too high a price?
A Kansas survey of economists and businessmen last week showed that many of those interviewed thought Kansas' economy could be revived only if the state rid its reliance on traditional industries (agriculture and aircraft) and brought in firms specializing in high technology.
Now, of all the industries that Kansas could hope to bring in, high-tech firms are not only the most economically promising, but among the most environmentally satisfying as well. And not only do they produce little pollution, they often bring in well-paid, educated employees with money to spend and aesthetic interests to pursue.
All of this is well and good. But Kansans cannot turn their backs on agriculture and other traditional industries. Historically, agriculture
markets always have been among the most vulnerable, because farming carries such high overhead. Despite this, the industriousness that high-tech firms now find so attractive in Kansas enabled farmers to continue production in the nation's breadbasket even in the worst of times.
Kansas' economy was built on farming and, more recently, the aircraft industry. It does not seem wise to strip support for this economy in hopes that something new will fill its place. It seems very reasonable that high-tech industries could complement and improve efficiency in farming and in aircraft production. If, on the other hand, we allow high-tech to push out or replace such traditional industries, we may end up creating jobs for one segment of the unemployed by creating another, segment of unemployed.
Apolitical evaluation backs Federal Reserve's new move
By PAUL SAMUELSON New York Times Syndicate
CAMBRIDGE, Mass.—Wall Street likes the new Federal Reserve policy. Soon, Main Street will too. Like most economists weighing the scientific weakness of metanormarism, I don't know or care whether Paul A. Volcker, chairman of the Federal Reserve Board, and his colleagues changed course because of White House and senatorial pre-election pressures.
The important thing is that the Fed is on now a better course, one that does not give up on fighting inflation but does recognize the risks that a recession will turn into a depression.
The economic experts guessed that Reagan's first recession would end in May. It didn't June, July, August and September brought new waves of layoffs and bankruptcies.
Chokingly high real rates of interest — tight money, in layman's language — aborted a recovery in housing and depressed every kind of spending on durable goods. Wall Street, choosing to forget its joyous approval of Reagan's initial supply-side economics, attributed high interest rates to the enormous deficits his excessive tax cuts would create for the 1982-84 period.
For almost three years the Fed stuck to its 1979 monistic policy of adhering to fixed targets for money supply growth. Two recessions did not deter them — after all, the electorate had spoken out against inflation. The demand for money, whose stability provides the only scientific support for the simplistic dogmas of monetarism, gyrated wildly from 1980 to 1982. But this did not deter the Fed either in its determination to stay the course.
It was clear by July — and it is clearer still by benefit of hindsight — that the Fed should have acted to ensure that the American economy turned the corner. It would be a tragedy to repeal the blunders of 1930. If the Federal Reserve late in that year had taken determined and non-radical action, the payoff stock would have been contained as a normal capitalistic recession instead of snowbailing into a failure of thousands of banks and into a Great Depression.
The risk of a real depression is less in 1982 than it was in 1930. But that is precisely because unregulated capitalism has evolved into the responsible mixed economy model of 1930, and the administrative's crusade to move back to the laissez-faire way of running the economy, the risks of great depressions like
those of 1836, 1872, 1893 and 1932 would again be with us.
By August things got so bad that even the Federal Reserve had to go through an agonizing reappraisal. When Henry Kaufman, the respected bear on bond prices from Salomon Brothers, recognized how bad the recession outlook had been, he did not condemn and proclaimed that interest rates would fall.
The rest is history. Paradoxical history. The stockmarket stamped upward, breaking records for volume of trading. The Dow Jones average rose 20 and 30 points in a single day.
Don't think that insiders foresaw the recovery in share prices.
History repeated itself in October, again paradoxically, in the sense that newly perceived weakness in the economy was what triggered off another upward stampede of common stock prices. As word of autumn layoffs reached Wall Street, investors guessed correctly that the bad news had reached the Federal Reserve open market committee and pushed them at long last toward a new policy of lowering interest rates across the board.
President Reagan got his economics 180 degrees wrong when he claimed that the Wall Street rise was a recognition that his economic program was working. It was a recognition that his program was failing. Bond prices rise, and when an economy is weak. No paradox there.
What is paradoxical is that common stocks, which are supposed to represent evaluations of future corporate earnings, should leap upward in the short term and those projects are projected to be weak in the months ahead.
I would guess that the Reserve authority opted to ease interest rates because they correctly perceived the risk that they would be blamed if the economy got worse and that the independence of the Federal Reserve as an institution made it less likely to determine to stick to simple monetarism.
One last paradox. The Federal Reserve has acted as President Reagan's best friend. But at the same time that it is protecting the president from a terrorist attack, it is acting in the interests of the American people.
The Fed has not abandoned the fight against inflation. It has recognized that the alternative risks of unemployment and inflation have to be soberly balanced.
Paul Samuelson is professor of economics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and a faculty member.
Hostage restitution a long shot
On Nov. 4, 1979, Iranian students seized the United States Embassy in Teheran and the people in the embassy. On Nov. 4, 1982, exactly three years later, 10 of those Americans took hostage filed suit against the federal government for $100 million.
Thousands of Iranian students also celebrated the anniversary by converging on the abandoned U.S. embassy in Teheran and building a bonfire of American flags.
The hostages' suit, filed in the U.S. Court of Claims, is the first action any of the 66 hostages
CATHERINE BEHAN
seized by Moslem militants have taken against the U.S. government for property lost because of the incident.
The claim seeks $10 million each for seven hostages who were among 13 people released two weeks after the takeover, and for three embassy staff members, who hid for three months at the Canadian Embassy in Teheran before escaping from Iran.
Former President Jimmy Carter barred Americans from suing Iran as part of the hostage release agreement negotiated during the 2015 war. He filed against Iran, but all have been dismissed.
"They wanted to go against Iran," Coale said. "Now they just want what property of the government they want."
They say the Constitution requires the U.S. government to compensate them for taking away their right to sue Iran.
Attorney John Coale of Washington, said the 10 wanted only compensation for what they might have won if they could have taken Iran to court.
And why not? The Iranian government is responsible for the loss of the hostages' property. Why should the United States document use their property as a bargaining chin?
These 10 who decided to sue the United States were home long before the last 52 hostages were released in January 1961 after 444 days of captivity. They already had a suit against Iran pending in court when bank negotiated the others' release and agreed to ban any lawsuits.
Gorttitude
or Chomp!
The other hostages are being considered for separate compensation from the government for the year they were held captive.
The former hostages who filed suit last week were released Nov. 19, 2019. They are: Lilihan Johnson, a secretary from Elmont, N.Y.; James Hughes, an Air Force administrative officer; Sgt. Ladell Mapires of Earle, Ark.; Elizabeth Montague, a secretary from Calumet City, Ill.; Stg. William Quarles of Washington, D.C.; contract officer Lloyd Rawlings of Alexandria, Va.; and Westley Williams, a marine guard, of Albany, N.Y.
The three embassy employees, who were sheltered by Canadian diplomats until they could escape, are Mark L.Jijk, consular officer; Carol Lijek, a consular assistant, of Montgomery Beach, Calif.; and Henry Lee Shaltz, a cultural attachee from Coeur d'Alene, Idaho.
A federal appeals court ruled last month that the hostages could not sue Iran, but could file against the U.S. government in claims court on the grounds that the government took away their right to sue without just compensation as required by the Fifth Amendment.
The appeals court, however, took no stand on whether the hostages would be likely to win their claims.
The U.S. government, it seems, would rather suffer a lawsuit than endanger an already existing settlement.
It would be a difficult situation for the United States to renge on a promise. Iran, however, has had no difficulty reneging on promises in the past.
It might also prove difficult for the hostages to win a case against the government if the government is not informed.
The U.S. Supreme Court in 1981 upheld a separate portion of Carter's hostage settlement that suspended corporate claims against Iran and forced them to be submitted to an international tribunal. The high court did not touch the ban against suits by individuals.
The hostages deserve restitution. But they should get it from the Iranian government and not be forced to try to get it from the U.S. government. But because the Iranian government is so unpredictable and has yet to show any remorse over the hostage crisis, it is unlikely the hostages will get anything from anybody.
Letters to the Editor
To the Editor:
MCI phone service also has disadvantages
Last month, the Kansan published an opinion article that compared long distance telephone service from Bell and competing long distance companies. Several factual errors and omissions
In the comparison, the article states that long distance rates from MCI remain the same all day. According to MCI's advertising, that is not the MCI's rates do vary by time period as do Bell's.
More importantly, the article fails to inform the reader that MCI customers must pay $10 a month for 24-hour access to the limited MCI network or $5 for service between 4 p. and 10 m.
With Bell, you pay only for the long distance service you use. With MCI, you pay a flat monthly rate for long distance service even if you make no calls at all. When MCI's monthly rate is priced by call, Bell's long distance are very competitive, often less than MCI.
Long distance calling is like any other consumer choice — you get what you pay for
JOHN W. DEAN, III CLAIMS AL HAIG WAS 'DEEP THROAT'...
George H. Chaffe
District staff manager, news relations
THE DETROIT FREE PRESS
SPONDER BY THE WESTERN TOWNEY
LOT A
...WATERGATE-WISE, IN TERMS OF CRIMINALITY AND AN INTERFACE SCENARIO VIS A VIS NIXON, IS A...
...WHAT?
Recent articles in newspapers and consumer magazines such as the Wall Street Journal and Money Magazine indicate that someone placing a call through Bell is more likely to reach his number the first time, more likely to talk over a clear line and more likely to be billed correctly than with any other supplier of long distance service.
Tables turn on 'smear'
Coming from the same people who spend considerable money and effort to produce a poster attempting to show that all nuclear freeze supporters are willing duges of agents of the Soviet Union, who spent more time and money to print and distribute literature and bumper stickers with the same theme, sent a letter to the President of the United States impugming the motives and origins of the organizers of the bombings. The president somehow, their whining complaint of "libelous smear tactics" and "thuggery" have a hollow ring.
To the Editor:
As the old saying goes, Jeff, "when you throw a rock into a pack of dogs, the one who yelps is the one who got hit."
20. Jeff Johnson and the KU Conservatives make a exception to a law that (they all) link laws to climate change.
J. D. Willhite Lawrence resident
Letters Policy
The University Daily Kansan welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten, double-spaced and should not exceed 500 words. They should include the writer's name, address and phone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, the letter should include his class and home town or faculty or staff position. The Kansan reserves the right to edit or reject letters.
The University Daily
KANSAN
The University Daykan Kumun (USPK 600-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 First Hall, Lawrence, K安妮. 6006, daily during the regular school year and Monday and Thursday during the summer holidays. The U.K. student must attend a day in Lawrence, K安妮 6004. Subscriptions by mail are all for six months for $6 per year in Douglas County. Students through the student activity fee = POSTMARKER address change to the University Daykan Kumun.
Gene George Business Manager Susan Cooky
Managing Editor Steve Robertsen
Editorial Editor Janeyanne
Campus Editor Mark Zieman
Associate Campus Editor Brian Levinson
Associate Campus Editor Colleen Leavenson
Sports Editors Gina Stripoli
Associate Sports Editor Tom Cook
Entertainment Management James Willett
Production Manager Lillian Davin
Makeup Editors Becky Roberts, Jana Burson, Barb Khim
Wire Editors Janel Murphy, Anne Caloich, Cathy Lebhan
Photographers Ben Bigler, Don Delphia, Buddy Mangue, Jim Evans
Head Chief Copy Trace Hamilton
Copy Chief Tim Sharp, Dawn Wilson
Liael Garrett Cathy Behan, Tom Green, Calybe Lebhan
Tracec Hamilton, Hutton Hilkpler
Artists Rosemary Hesman, Bill Wythe
Retail Sales Manager Barbara Barson
National Sales Manager Jane Wendover
Campus Sales Manager Matthew Langen
Classified Manager Matthew Langen
Production Manager Amia Herburner
Artist Photographer Keen Jeling
Knowledge Manager Matthewseng
Campus Representatives Lisa Clowt, Barb May, Mary Payne, Lynn Stark
Retail Sales Representatives Larry Allen, John Clark, Katy Daggan, Jill Hirenkern, Jenny Cooper, Bill Nast, Ted Manning, Dave Moore, Bill Nast, Ted Schaller, Sheriya Seidl, Scott Winkeman, Ted Stegler
General Manager and News Advisor John Oberman
Consultant John Oberman
University Daily Kansan, November 8. 1982
Page 5
Home
To the crowd's amusement, the 10 of clubs was in the toast.
Armstrong said he had been interested in music for the first time.
In strong sand he had been interested in magick for three or four years but did not work. He kept memories of members of the classes that graduated during the war years were bittersweet.
JANE MLLEN, president of the class of 1944, wrote in a letter that "it is rather painful to pull up some of those memories."
Betty Alderson spoke for the class of 1946. She is the widow of the late Donald Keith Alderson, who was the dean of men at KU for 30 years and president of the class of 1946. She remembered what her husband said about the 1940s when the invitation asked him last year to speak at the dinner.
"And he said, 'Those were austere times.' And I thought, that sounds familiar — these are ausentimes."
Happier times emerged after the war
Sally Ward, speaking for the class of 1947, recalled that although some couples necked in the back seats of cars, the 1940s was a more peaceful time than years. She said she was glad of that innocence.
"Here's to the class of '47. We paid our due to get to heaven," Ward said. "And if we arrive before you do, we'll throw down a rope for the rest of KU."
AFTER THE DINNER program the alumni swung and slow danced to the big band sound of the band.
"Do you recognize the guys in the band?" one alumnus asked another. "They're so damd old," the other responded. "Everyone at the reunion is old." The first man said, smiling.
Barbara Dunlap, class of '50, listened to the music with Rita Olson, class of '54.
Dunlap commented about the GIs who returned, lowering the 3-1 ratio of women to men her freshman year.
"I would say we enjoyed the prosperity," she said.
Saturday was sunny and mild. The alumni returned to their fraternities, sororites and schools. The football team treated them to a 24-17 victory.
TEX BENEKE, a former player with the Glenn Miller Band, played Saturday night in the Kansas Union Ballroom before about 1,500 people. The evening of swing dance drew KU students past and present together in the celebration of homecoming.
NS
Buddy Manning/KANSAN
Larry David, Topeka, class of 1940, kept a close eye on his director as he marched with the Alumni Band during Saturday's halftime show. More than 160 alumni, the largest alum band ever assembled at KU, performed during the Homecoming show.
Despite efforts to pull the country together, sporadic fighting continued yesterday in Lebanon.
THE ISRAELI military command in Tel Aviv said that in Lebanon's Bekan Valley, a Soviet-made anti-tank missile was fired from inside Syrian lines at an Israeli position, causing no casualties, the Israeli military command in Tel Aviv said.
Mideast
From page one
Security sources said new factional fighting erupted in Lebanon's Shaout mountains, with Druze and Christian militantism fighting limited after the militants killed the first time since the rivals declared a pro-war
Israel Radio reported that to the south, near the Lebanese coastal town of Sidon, Israeli troops fired shots in the air to quell a riot by a Palestinian Islamist prisoner at the Ansar detention camp.
Magic
The magicians could not define magic, although a few tried.
professionally. The Julia Child act was one that he said he had created for a friend's wedding.
From page one
Eobmide Rodriguez, Kansas State University
sophomile. said "Miae is a vanishing art."
RICHARD GUY, Topeka, gave a more serious definition to the group. He took three individual ropes with knots entangled and formed a linking network across the ropes, passed the knotted ropes through one another.
"Magic is taking the impossible, adding a new possibilities, and then doing something that can't
Larkey said that if someone would practice magic for two years, he would be hooked.
The convention gave the magicians a chance to trade secrets, learn new acts or perfect their
showmanship. But non-magicians in search of secrets were out of luck. The pros weren't telling.
ONE MAGICIAN said that when someone learned a trick, the fun and awe vanished.
Larkey, who has been in magic for 38 years, said he had never tired of it.
"After 28 years people say I must know it all. If I did, I'd get bored," he said.
Mike Meyer, also of Topka, said, "Everyone wants to believe in magic. It stays with them all the time."
"Once you know how it is done, you say,
'That's it?' and you are disappointed. It’s more
fun not knowing because you can believe it," said Kevin Hula. Topeka
HAMMET SAID that people performed magic for different reasons. Many people never use magic as a profession but are interested in it as a hobby, he said.
Alumni executives believe in Reaganomics
By DAN PARELMAN Staff Reporter
At the mid-point of President Reagan's first term, Reaganomics is still the answer to the nation's economic woes, several corporate leaders who are KU alumni said recently.
The leaders, whose companies' profits have been reduced by the current recession, predicted
The nation's unemployment rate is now 10.4 percent.
"I think that it is probably bottoming out," said Edward Burns, who retired in June as president of Beech Aircraft Corporation, Wichita. "Now that we're going to rise out of it very rapidly."
BEECH HASIAD off 11,000 employees -- about
20 percent of its work force.
Most of the executives said Congress needed to balance the federal budget.
Former KU Chancellor Franklin Murphy, chairman of the board of the Times Mirror Co., Los Angeles, predicted that the president would
"I think there is a reasonable limit in all areas of spending, including defense," Brizzendine
John Brizendine, president of Douglas Aircraft Corp., Long Beach, Calif., said his company's profits were down 40 to 50 percent. He said if the federal budget was not balanced by cuts in spending, inflation would "absolutely eat us alive."
Voters sent 26 additional Democrats to the House of Representatives in the Nov. 2 election.
MURPHY WAS chancellor from 1951 to 1960.
MURPHY WAS chancenator from 1951 to 1960. He said a decline in classified advertising sales at Times Mirror newspapers had leveled off, but the recession might be reaching the bottom. Classified advertising sales is the best gauge of a newspaper's financial health, he said.
Times Mirror newspapers include the Los Angeles Times, the Dallas Times Herald, the Denver Post and Newsday.
Despite encouraging signs from classified advertising, the company's Oregon lumber mills have been operating one-fourth of their usual time, Murphy said. The slowdown in the lumber mills has forced the newspapers to publish somewhat smaller editions than usual, he said.
Robert Malott, chairman of the FMC corporation, Chicago, predicted that the economy would show modest improvement in the first half of 1984. It would be less as construction, would not pick up until 1984.
FMC SELLS a wide variety of products, including organic chemicals, construction equipment and automated guided missile landing systems.
Unlike Murphy and Brizendine, Malott said that although balancing the budget was worthwhile, it was not necessary. Japan and Germany's deficits both are a higher percentage of their gross national products than the United States' deficit, he said.
FMC has laid off 18 percent of its employees and product orders are down. he said.
However, Malott said he had not lost faith in Reaganomics.
"We've been living beyond our means for 20 years," he said. "You're not going to see it turn out that way."
The executives said they were encouraged by the recent drop in interest rates and the bullish stock market.
WILLIAM MUCHINIC, a member of the board of directors of Rockwell International Corp., Pittsburgh, said of the stock market's performance. "It's a bit mystifying to me."
The stock market's strong performance will give people confidence in the economy, he said. The signs of a turnabout at Rockwell are "very, very feeble," Muchnic said. Rockwell's sales to the Department of Defense and to the National Aeronautics and Space Administration have increased, but its commercial sales have declined.
Robert Wagstaff, chairman of the board of Coca-Cola Bottling of Mid-America Inc. Lenexa, said the sensational performance of the stock would have made people thought the economy was turning around.
He also said the decline in interest rates was an encouraging sign.
The Federal Reserve Board has lowered the discount rate to 9.5 percent. The discount rate is the rate it charges on loans to financial institutions.
Wagstaff said, "The interest rate probably has abated. I think that started the trend in the right direction."
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Page 6 University Daily Kansan, November 8, 1982
New insanity verdict unnecessary, experts say
By VERONICA JONGENELEN Staff Reporter
On March 30, 1981, John Hinkley Jr. blasted his way into the memory of the American people by firing six shots at President Reagan. One person there was the president; three other people also were shot.
Thirteen months later, his trial began. On June 22, 1982, the jury found him not guilty by reason of
The finding triggered outrage across the country. State officials throughout the country
In Kansas, an interim committee was set up to study an alternative to the insanity finding, one that several Hinkleck jurors said they would not accept. The court even available — the guilty but mentally ill verdict.
That verdict, proposed to the Kansas Legislature this year for the fourth time, may have popular public support, but few who have studied it think the verdict is needed.
THE VERDICT, as proposed by Attorney General Robert Stephen, would send a defendant, if found guilty but mentally ill, to a secure mental hospital to receive treatment until he is well. Once doctors determine the person is no longer ill, he will finish his sentence in a prison.
The jury could only find a person guilty but
mentally ill if the defendant raised the insanity defense, Stephan said.
Each jury then would have four options when presented with this defense, said Neil Wemeron, special assistant to the attorney general. They would be able to find the defendant guilty, not guilty, not guilty by reason of insanity or guilty but mentally ill.
Stephan's proposed verdict was roughly based on Michigan's guilty but mentally ill verdict, and he could have been more correct.
Support for the guilty but mentally ill verdict came from people who dislike the insanity defense, said David Gottlieb, KU associate professor of law.
"I BELIEVE it's being proposed because the insanity defense is politically very unpopular," he said.
The insanity defense was disliked for two reasons, he said.
People feel that it's unfair for someone who committed a terrible crime to be found not guilty, even if he was mentally ill, Gottlieb said. Second, he said, the public does not feel adequately protected if a criminal could be on the street again in 39 to 90 days.
The public believes that those criminals found not guilty by reason of insanity and sent to mental hospitals were not being punished, said William Arnold, associate professor of sociology.
That view was not accurate, he said. Many times, offenders ended up spending more time in jail than before.
But the guilty but mentally ill verdict may not be the answer to public dislike of the insanity defense.
TERENCE MACCARTHY. U.S. public dender in Chicago, said recently, "There's a really big problem with our schools."
MacCarthy is chairman of an American Bar Association task force that recently recommended rejection of the verdict to the ABA funding committee on criminal justice standards.
Kansas does not need a guilty but mentally ill option because there was very little abuse of the insanity defense here, said Michael Barbara, Washburn Law School professor.
An average of 10 crimes a year in Kansas result in not guilty by reason of insanity verdicts. In Shawne County, the defense had not been raised successfully in the last 30 years, he said.
The test used in Kansas, the MacNaughton rule, was strict enough to prevent anyone who was not insane from being judged that way, said Frey, Frey. R/Liberal, head of the interim committee.
ACCORDING TO this rule, it must be proved that the defendant did not know, at the time of the crime, the nature and the quality of his actions. Or, if he did know, it must be proved that he did not know that what he was doing was wrong.
Because the MacNaughten rule was so strict, Frey said, his committee would not recommend the verdict.
"That's a pretty tough rule. It appears to be working just fine in Kansas," he said.
But there have been problems in applying the MacNaughten rule evenly. Woermen said. He cited a case where Stephan, as a trial judge, had defense attorneys argue that the defendant was insane for the 10 seconds it took him to commit the crime.
THE JURY thought that the defendant was guilty, but also that he was insane. Although the defendant did not fit the MacNaughten stan- dence, he decided for the defense, Woermein said
"If the MacNaughten rule were in every case strictly applied and strictly looked at, maybe we wouldn't have these travesties of justice." he said.
Another problem arising from the insanity defense is treatment.
After someone was found not guilty by reason of insanity and sent to a security hospital, he received a hearing at which a judge decides whether the county District Court Judge James Pardockle
A concern for the jury in the case of Bradley Boan was that the defendant might be on the street again in 30 to 96 days, said Kevin Koch, co-counsel for the defense in the Boni trial.
A guilty but mentally ill option for the jury in
BOAN WAS found guilty Oct. 6 if first-degree murder in the University of Kansas Medical
Boan's case would have helped his client, Koch said.
"I feel, in this case, that may have made a difference," he said. "I hope they will, this time, hopefully go ahead and give him some treatment at Larned (State Hospital)."
If the jury had the option of deciding between not guilty by reason of insanity and guilt but mentally ill, then it also decided what treatment the defendant received. Gettlieb said.
"It is not clear to me at all why the jury is making that decision. The jury should be there to decide guilt or innocence, not prescribing a course of treatment." he said.
The therapy differs at each hospital.
OVERCROWDING OF mental facilities also was a possibility with the guilty but mentally ill verdict. Arnold said.
If the proposed verdict was passed, Arnold said, more people who commit crimes would be found mentally ill and be secured to secure Larned State Hospital already was too crowded.
Woermeen over crowding would not be a problem because of the rarity of the insanity
When Stephan proposed the verdict to the Legislature, Woermen said, he quoted a letter from Michigan Attorney General Frank Kelley.
Kelley that, since 1979, Michigan, with a population four times that of Kansas and a murder rate seven times higher, had an average of only 40 guilty but mentally ill verdicts a year.
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University Daily Kansan, November 8. 1962
Page 7
Two KU alumni tell of press corps flaws
By VERONICA JONGENELEN Staff Reporter
Two University of Kansas alumni of the '48s returned to their alma mater Friday and celebrated their return in a formidable event from most of their colleagues.
While most of the '40s alumni returned to Lawrence for Homecoming day reunions, R.T. Kingman and Allan Cromley, 1947 and 1948 graduates, spoke to a group of about 60 students and professors about their experiences as members of the Washington, D.C., press corps.
Their speech, "How Well Does the Washington Press Corp Perform its Watchdog Function?" was arranged by Allen White School of Journalism.
Kingman, who is the director of the General Motors public relations staff in
Washington, led the discussion with descriptions of what he called "four flaws of the watchdog function."
The first of those flaws is irresponsible, he said, which occurs when the news media allow themselves to be manipulated by the government. The government often wants to send up trial cases and an idea will go over with the public.
"I THINK a good reporter spends a lot of time guarding against that," he said.
Even a watchdog will bark at false alarms, he said, and this excessive barking is the price to be paid to keep the press free.
The second flaw Kingman described is shallow coverage of the policy framework.
in-depth coverage of the content of an issue.
Some reporters cover politics and issues as they would sports, looking for who will do what and what will happen next, he said. What is needed is more
The third flaw deals with advocates in Washington, Kingman said. Many young reporters do not realize that they are being an advocate for one cause or another.
"YOU HAVE to know who is doing what; where the bodies are buried," he said.
advocate. Reporters should also balance each
advocate against another, he said.
reporters who become advocates themselves are the fourth flaw, Kingman said. Involvement in a story is becoming more common among reporters. This involvement also can be a dangerous thing.
But overall, he said, the watchdog press should not be tied down. This would worsen the flaws already present, he said.
'You've got to let the watchdog bite
the postman once in a while to protect this function," said Kinneman.
Cromley, who is the Washington, D.C., bureau chief for the Daily Mailman and Times and the Collected with his writing with his views on news in Washington.
CROMLEY SAID stories that passed as news analyses were often simply news stories. Sometimes reporters try to see what is happening backstage and in the press room.
This led to what he called the "trust me" syndrome, which occurs in both liberal and conservative papers.
Many reporters in Washington also are driven to ask stupid questions at daily press conferences on Capitol Hill. The Bush administration's lack of information that is released there
There are also many ways for officials to avoid answering a question at those press conferences, he said.
Film Society changes financial objective
By KIESA ASCUE Staff Reporter
The University Film Society started showing popular films in Dyche Auditorium to raise money for student-made films, but their ambitious plans have gone awry, the chairman of the series said yesterday.
"Even a small, skimpy student film is going to cost around $9,000," said Mike Borbely, the chairman. "At the rate we're making money now, it would be several years before we'd come close to that. We're not going to be able to do what we initially planned to do." The group has purchased a wide screen and has a new sound system. However, without additional funds, the
original goal of the group will never be met, Borbely said.
Instead, the profits from the films could be used to bring in speakers with an inside angle on the film industry. You would spend a week to decide how to handle the funds.
UFS SHOWS one popular film six times every weekend and one classic film every Tuesday night in Dyche Hall.
The club started with about $2,000 from the Student Senate, but the group had trouble attracting audiences to its films. Borbely said.
"The first couple of weekends, we didn't have any people there at all because we didn't have any adverbs. Jorbely said. "We lost a lot of money."
Since the slow start, business has picked up considerably, he said. Between 200 and 900 people have paid $1.5 apiece to see each of the films shown since the first three weeks, he said.
Mark Reddig, Lee's Summit, Mo,
juniar, said the film series had
made enough money to produce a five-minute
student-made film.
BORBELY ATTRIBUTED the larger audiences to the group's emphasis on good film presentation.
"We have good sound and good focus," Borbely said. "People like the atmosphere here because it's small. It seats 200, but the seats are cramped. I tall and I can't sit comfortably in them."
Borbely said he expected a big crowd next weekend for "Rocky III", perhaps as many people as attended the group's best athlete tribute type Now. "I send out every night,
The group's films provide competition for the Student Union Activities film series, but it would be impossible to say how much damage the competition did, said Michael Gebert, director of the SUA film series.
"It can help, but I don't think it's really a significant factor," Gebert said. "We're in kind of a slump, but it has more to do with HBO and Cinemas, because sometimes they show the same films that we do."
Gebert said both groups had made a good profit in the same weekends this
Documents absolve 'Nazi war criminal'
By United Press International
SACRAMENTE, Calif. —A man who died in disgrace for federal charges he was a Nazi war criminal actually assisted the Allies during World War II, documents obtained under the Freedom of Information Act indicate.
Otto Albrecht Alfred von Bolschwing,
a former Nazi, was accused by the
federal government of persecuting Jews. The government, however, refused to allow von Bolschwing to answer the allegations publicly.
His sworn testimony that he cooperated with U.S. Army intelligence during the war is contained in a 17-page transcript of a 1970 interrogation obtained by the Sacramento Bee under the Freedom of Information Act.
The Bee reported yesterday that von
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VON BOLSCHWINGID in death at the age of 72 in a convalescent hospital in suburban Carmichael, CAft. to which he was accused against him. He was
stripped of his U.S. citizenship, which he had held since 1969, with the understanding he would not be deported as long as remained in poor
He was accused in May 1961 by the U.S. Department of Justice of heinous war crimes, including the "persecution and forced emigration of Jews from areas under the control of the Nazi government."
Drop in price of gas may continue
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LOS ANGELES- The average price of gasoline nationwide fell more than one-half cent during the past two weeks to 125.8 a gallon and may continue to fall, oil industry analyst Dan Lundberg said yesterday.
The overall price, including taxes, fell 0.69 of a cent since Oct. 22.
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Lack of climate control hurts TV equipment
By JEANNE FOY Staff Reporter
The reduced heating and cooling of KU buildings has caused television production equipment in Jolliffe Hall to break down more than usual this semester, the chairwoman said. V-film department said yesterday.
The summer's high heat and humidity and a cold snap that occurred before the building's heat was turned on have aggravated existing equipment problems, said Linton, department chairman.
A control room could not be used for two days this semester because it was damaged by excessive cold, Linton said.
Because two video editing machines were damaged this summer, all editing must be done on one system, he said.
However, Janice Platt, assistant professor of radio TV-film, said the numerous equipment breakdowns had already effected her classes.
He said work had been done on Jolifie this semester so it would be cooled and heated more effectively. The day before he could break be left on during Christmas break.
TELEVISON PRODUCTION classes are hindered by any breakdown of equipment because the radio-TV-film department does not have any backup equipment, he said.
Platt, who teaches basic television production, said she had to cancel a week and a half of laboratory work at the University of October because of breakaways.
She said tape machines, monitors.
and a video swiffer, which is used to cut and dissolve film, had been damaged. Two of the television sets could make down in the same week, she said.
In order to make up the lab assignments, some class lectures have had to be canceled, she said, and two important assignments also
"It hurts the morale of the students. The students' capacity to work is hurt," she said.
Not much planning can be done when equipment breaks down frequently, she said, and students have to leave class because less equipment is available.
Platt said she was having trouble grading because finding a good television monitor to watch the students' tapes was difficult.
GEORGE RASMUSSEN, who teaches television news production, said he had not canceled any of the classes. He problems teaching this semester.
"We've been crashing along," he said.
Bryan Yount, Spring Hill, Kan, sophomore, said he could never be certain what would be done in class. An assigned television interview has been postponed three times because of equipment trouble, he said.
His grading is humpered because he cannot hold students to deadlines, he said. The more interested students continue to turn in assignments, he said, but others wait until broken equipment is repaired.
Linton said the equipment failures were a drawback, but nothing that could not be dealt with.
"We have to handle it. There's no other answer, given the economic climate of the University," he said.
He said the department could cope with the situation until the planned $3.5 million communications building be built. The building should be finished in mid-1984.
This month's Lunch Abroad program will explore the problems of Afghan refugees.
Refugees subject of Lunch Abroad talk
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University Daily Kansan, November 8. 1982
Page 8
Mobley attacks Union selection Porn magazine sales protested
By DON KNOX Staff Reporter
The director of a campus religious group says he will continue to fight against the sale of pornographic magazines at the Kansas Union because "I love students at the University of Kansas and don't want them to die."
Steve Mobley, director of Marantha Campus Ministries, predicted Friday that his group eventually would succeed in acquiring a number of sex-oriented magazines at the Union
Members of Maranatha submitted a petition to the vice chancellor for student affairs this summer protesting the Union's sale of all pornography, including Playboy, Playgirl and Penthouse magazines.
"If we take these things, off the shelves." Mobley said, "then we're going to see a lot of things happen, like a drop in rape and a drop in incest."
LISA ASINHER, chairman of the Student Senate Executive Committee and a member of a Union merchandising board studying the complaint, said she was opposed to taking the magazines off the shelves.
"I think you have to look at the University as a protector of freedoms."
But Ashner said that even she had problems deciding which magazines to watch.
"Sometimes what are the most typical magazines often have people in various states of distress," she said. She cited a controversial painting of a nude woman that appeared on the cover of Newsweek last summer.
The merchandising committee met last month to discuss the controversy, but tabled any action until Warner Ferguson, the Union's associate director, could study how other universities handled the sale of such magazines.
THE COMMITTEE will probably meet again in mid-November to act on Maranatha's complaint, Ferguson said.
Still, Mobley criticized the University's policy of displaying the magazines behind the information counter at the Union.
"Men and women are able to walk up and see these things behind the counter," he said. "If a man has got his eyes on the Bible, then he will begin to
walk like God. But if he's go his eyes on a pornography book, he's going to begin to lust and degrade himself."
Mobley compared the reading of such magazines to drinking alcohol and smoking cigarettes.
"The word of God says this is sin," he said. "I want to expose the darkness in this area so people will know they are destroying the temple of God."
CURRENTLY. ALL pornographic magazines sold at the Union are covered, with only their titles showing. Other magazines sold at the information counter are not covered. Mobley said.
"There is pornography even in business magazines now." Mobley said. "It's not just your well-known pornographic magazines."
Another committee member, David Welch, student body vice president, also said he had trouble defining what is pornographic.
He declined to say whether he supported Maranatha's complaints.
"I realize that as only one person, I can only effect the campus," Mobley said. "But we're not going togive up at all — we've got victory in this."
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A half-covered Playboy magazine sites beside several other magazines on a rack at the candy counter on the fourth floor of the Kansas Union. Playboy and several other magazines have become the targets of a protest by the fans.
Glemp defends church's stand on Solidarity, martial law rule
By United Press International
WARSAW, Poland-Three days before scheduled pro-Solidarity demonstrations, Roman Catholic Archbishop Jozef Glef yesterday rebanded critical outcalls on the military regime but said the church would not support violent protests.
Martial law rulers, meanwhile, apparently sought to defuse public anger and televised excerpts from a seven-hour meeting Deputy Prime Minister Mieczyslaw Rakowski had with about 100 citizens, nearly half of whom openly questioned and attacked the government.
"Many people are waiting for (Lech) Walesa," one elderly woman told Rakowski, referring to the banned Solidarity union's interned leader.
She described the outlawing of the union as a "hummiling" move that "did not meet the approval of the will of the people."
church policy and said the church's main goal was to steer Poland away;
"It (the program) clearly is to serve as a safety valve," said a Polish journalist. "And it was very well done."
GLEMP, ADDRESSING a ceremony opening the academic year at the prestigious Catholic University in the southeast city of Lublin, defended
Wednesday marks the second anniversary of Solidarity's legal registration as the Soviet Bloc's first free trade union and the workers' underground has called for an eight-hour nationwide strike followed by street rallies to protest the outlawing of the union a month ago.
“The stand of the church will be the stand of peace,” Glemp told students and international dignitaries in the main hall of the university, the only university in Eastern Europe. “We will do everything to avoid bloodshed.”
Glemp acknowledged the church "could say sharper things sometimes," but said this was not because of a lack of courage or surplus of cautiousness.
"The church is responsible not only for itself but for many others, so it tries to assess in a moral was all facts, actions, phenomena, events," he said.
"AND IN light of this the church says that the nation which is humiliated has a right to protest, has a right to rights, has a right to be itself," he said.
He mentioned his continued pressure for the release of internees, including
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"We understand how very painful, how bitter, the situation is," he said.
Tuesday Night Special
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travel posters on campus, they have something like $189" in six-inch letters," he said. "But if you look closer, the transportation isn't provided, or you have to buy your own ski lift, just a way to get your attention."
Those providing their own transportation will get $64 off the $279 cost of the train.
sonarity chief Lech Walesa, and the church's opposition to the banning of Solidarity.
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"We've got about 25 people going out on the bus, and another eight or ten on the train."
"WE WILL not stop our warnings," he said, "but nobody can demand from the church that it leave the way of God. I will never pride its wisdom and which can in this way achieve greater results than could be achieved by desperate acts."
Sullivan said SUA would make as many seats available as there were people who wanted to go.
Sullivan said he thought SUA could offer better packages than travel agencies because they were a nonprofit organization.
"THAT WAY, they can just pick up their skis and take off," he said.
But SUA's latest venture, a trip to Crested Butte ski resort in west central Colorado, has been called a success by SU officials.
SULLIVAN SAID he thought the flexibility of the trip was one of the factors that made it successful.
Selling vacation travel during uncertain economic times can be difficult, sometimes impossible, as evidenced by the cancellation of Student Union Activities' trip to the Walnut Valley Festival in September.
The trip, which will be the first week in January, has already surpassed the required 26-person minimum, and that meant John Sullivan, one of the trip's leaders.
SUA calls Colorado ski trip success
Sullivan said SUA would sponsor free ski-fitting in the third week of November for those who signed up for the trip.
"I've never seen a trip fill up this
"If you look at some of the other
Why should you pick up the phone and call home?
B. be
Because it would be a l-o-n-g bus ride just to say hi.
Because if your mom doesn't know Morse code, smoke signals are out.
Because it would be a l-o-n-g bus ride just to say hi.
Because if your mom doesn't know Morse code, smoke signals are out.
10
MAP
WHERE
YOURE
HOME
Because your carrier pigeon can't even find his way to the cafeteria and back.
And most important, because they'd like to hear from you. Today!
Share a few moments with family and friends back home. You can call anyone in Kansas between 11 pm Friday and 5 pm Sunday and talk 10 minutes for $1.59* Or less, depending on where you call
Why should you pick up the phone and call home? Because it'll make them feel good. And you, too
Reach out and touch someone.
Bell
Southwestern Bell
*Price applies to call dialed OnePlus without operator assistance. Same rate applies from 11am to 6am every night. Tax not included
.
University Daily Kansan, November 8, 1982
Page 9
PAC director sees freeze votes as victory
By DARRELL PRESTON Staff Reporter
Approval of nuclear freeze referrences last week was a dramatic victory for the nuclear freeze movement, said the head of SANE, a national defense organization that jobs bins against nuclear weapons and increased defense spending.
David Corright, executive director of SANE: "A Citizens' Organization for a Sane World, spoke Friday at an Athletic Meeting of Athletes United for Peace.
At a press conference Saturday, Cortright said passage of the referendums would send the message to Washington that people did not want any more money spent on nuclear weapons.
"The election was a historic turning point," he said. "Unless Reagan makes a compromise on defense spending, there will be an outcry against him." Reagan's policies will not go forward unless he compromises."
Organizers of Athletes United for Peace said they hoped the group would become an international association of athletes opposed to nuclear war.
he hopes the group's members would play a persuasive role in helping lead America and the Soviet Union away from policies of nuclear proliferation.
The enormous prestige athletes enjoy in America and the Soviet Union would help the group promote peaceful competition and exchange between the two superpowers, Swan said.
BOB SWAN, founder and chairman of the group based in Lawrence, said
"Athletes United for Peace will labor diligently, as strong advocates of peace, to eliminate the mis-conceptions and misunderstanding that feed the fear and distrust that are used to justify spending billions of dollars on exotic weapons systems," he said.
Cortright said ideological boundaries would not be important for the group because the nuclear freeze movement cuts across conservativeliberal and Democratic-Republican boundaries.
MARK SCOTT, executive director of Athletes United for Peace, said the group would begin an international membership drive to gain athletes from junior high to professional levels. He said it would be good for athletes to become involved with political issues.
On campus
MARANATHA MINISTRIES will meet at 7 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR CHRIST will meet at 7 p.m. in the Big Eight Room of the Union.
CATHOLIC CENTER WORSHIP will
se at 12:30 p.m. in Danforth Chapel.
CAMPUS CHRISTIAN FELLOW- SIP'S Bible study and fellowship will be at 7:30 p.m. in the Union.
LINGUISTICS COLLOQUY, "Numeric Directionals and Space Grammar: Moving in the Mind," will be at 7:30 p.m. in 20 Blake.
PRE-MED CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in the Jawhawk Room of the Union.
Grad seminar scheduled for Nov. 18-19
TODAY
Merging classroom theory with practical use will be the topic of a graduate student seminar Nov. 18 and 19 at the University of Kansas.
The seminar is part of the Graduate Student Seminar Series sponsored by the University Council for Educational Administration, and in conjunction with the KU School of Education and the University Phi Delta Kappa chapter.
The conference will run from 8 a.m. Nov. 18 to noon Nov. 19, and include panel discussions and presentations from guest speakers.
"There is a raging debate in academia that theory simply doesn't apply to practice," said Marcela Reilly, chair of the conference steering committee.
The conference is designed to show graduate students how those theories work.
A 71-YEAR-OLD MAN was injured when he fell down the steps of Memorial Stadium Saturday during the Iowa State football game, KU police said yesterday.
On the record
The man, William Taul, was transported to Research Medical Center in Kansas City, Mo., where he was listed as missing yesterday, a hospital official said.
Hospital officials also would not release the man's address.
Taul suffered head injuries from the fall, police said.
Police did not know why the man fell or where he was from. They said they were not sure of his identity.
THEIEVS STOLE $2,110 worth of boating equipment Friday morning from the rear lot of Ports of Call, 1441 W 3rd St., police said yesterday. The equipment was taken from boats and trailers parked in the lot.
BURGLIARS STOLE TWO rifles worth $370 Friday night from a pickup truck parked in the 100 block of Pine Cone Drive, police said. The rifles were stolen after burglars broke a window in the truck.
Police search for suspect in stabbing
Lawrence police yesterday were still searching for a man who stabbed a Haskell Indian Junior College student and ran over another Haskell student when they tried to help two women the man was harassing. Lawrence police said.
Steve Sekayouma, who was stabbed in the chest, was listed in satisfactory condition at Lawrence Memorial Hospital. He was shot with the knife nicked Sebayouma's heart.
Sekayouma was stabbed after he approached the driver of the car and tried to make the man stop harassing the women.
NATHAN PHILIPPS, the other Haskell student, suffered multiple injuries after the man hit Phillips with his car. The child was treated and released, police said.
Sekayouma and Phillips were walking on Massachusetts Street when they noticed the man had pinned two women on his back with his car at 1043 Massachusetts St.
The man, driving a dark blue Oldsmobile, backed into a cab belonging to the Yellow Car company drive away during the incident, police said.
The University Daily
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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 Callman business office at 864-4358.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE
118 Flint Hall 864-4000
The Kaplan will be no responsibility for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of this ad.
AUDITIONS - for color TV dramatic production.
15, Nov & 16, 17 at 10:30, 18-24, 19Jolie Contact
Dr. Jan Platt, 864-2722, 214 Jolie for script information
Do you need cash? Bring your unwanted merchandise to the Lawrence Community Auction. Every Wednesday, 7 p.m. Consignments accepted Tuesday through Friday, p.m., 5:00 a.m., New Haven, Hallmark, 821-421-2192 for information.
Paid Staff Positions Business Manager, Edito
The University Daily Kansei is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer. Applications are sought from all qualified people regardless of race, religion, color, sex, disability, veteran status, national origin, age, or ancestry.
The Kanasa is now accepting applications for the Spring Semester Business Manager and Editor positions. These are paid positions and require some coursework in the application forms are available in the Student Senate Office, 105 B, Kansas Union; in the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 220 High Hall, and in 118 Pflitz Hall by 5:00 p.m., Thursday, November 18
SURROGATE MUTHERS needed for Hagar Institute for interteile couples. Artificial intelligence training must be given to residents, must have given birth to health child or parent, must have given birth to another month paid. Call 912-534-8458, Hagar Institute.
Silver Mind Control preview. Relaxation seminar.
Discover the power of your mind. 843-7354
www.silversmind.com
FOR RENT
1 Bedroom basement apartment, on bus route 15 min to campus. Utilities paid, $225.84-$439.60
I need a mature, non-smoking upperclass woman to subslure my apartment from January to the end of Joy. You will pay $15 for rent and will have your own room. It is in four-plus cells to camp and eat.
LUXURY LIVING NEAR KEIK Wet Minestones Condo 2
LUXURY FF, range ranging; C/A, warm; dohwashow,
college style
EXTRRA nice apartments, large and small. Next to campus. Utilities paid, residence prices: 842-643-7081. Wheelchair access. Kitchen appliances available on energy efficient 2.5 & 3 bedroom apartments. Constructively built with all appartment features. Rooftop patio. 2 & 3 bedrooms from $900-$350. Call and ask about our low heating bills. Call 643-4744 between a
Live in the CHRISTIAN-CAMUPIH HOUSE this fall
at the Christian Center for Youth Education.
Call Alan Bobes, camminator minimo
MEDADOWBOOK. Furnished studio available on sublease now through May 31st. Free cable, electric kitchens, fully carpeted. Enjoy the quality of Medadowbook at affordable prices. Call 694-785-6000.
New apart, 2 bed, 1 bath, fully furnished, close to campus, 841121 or 740-537-38.
1. Bedroom apartment, furnished, water paid,
need sofaplace for next semester, starting in
January. If like to see or interested call 643-884-
8142, 8412, or 8415,坐席 180,客 168, 客 1. Honeymoon
One one-bedroom, one bath apt with range
refrigerator and airwshower. Good location, 803, all
rooms are air-conditioned.
Rex bediee Villa ... Susitaella 2 bdm, apt., new carpet paint, lrg walk-in clothes, laundry facilities on bus rt. water, pd $50/month, Available Dec. 17,
490-358
One and two bedroom apartments. Move your belongings in after finals-spend the holidays at home with family-pur rent upon your return in January or February, and enjoy day-to-day facilities on paid cable Pawn Bank 743-8126.
PRINCIPAL CELEBRATION PATIO APARTMENTS. Now Available, 2 bedrooms, 2 bath, perfect for roommates, features wood burning fireplace, $3 car garage with windows and sliding doors, pet-friendly kitchen, quiet surroundings. No peta $425 per month. Open house 9:30-10:50 daily at 2608 S. 7th St., room # 4827 or phone 843-2623 for additional information.
Rooms for rent plus utilities. Kitchen privileges. No pet. References. Non-smokers. 843-160.
*hdp apt, for Jan. May- Submit your Can move in
1675 / 1690 mo, low utilities Nice neighbors
1435 / 1450 mo
SOUTHERN PARKWAY TOWNHOUSES 28th & Kasdell if you are of policy or cramped apartment. Hookups, all appliances, attached garage, swimming pool, kitchen, outdoor spaces. Call 749-1875 (evenings and weekends) for more information about our modestly priced townhouses. Call 749-1870 (evenings and weekends). Dec. 17, 1410/mo. low utilities. Nice neighborhood.
Sublease nice 1 NIR apartment, completely furnished. Walter paid, laundry facility, close to campus
Sublime 1 bedroom apartment $230,000/month close
to the beach. 2 bedrooms, 2 baths.
Kapila 4 bedroom apartment $69,000/month
or 8400/- door- or bedroom Apartment
Sublease furnished copy 1 HR apc. $25/month at 698 Kentucky. Excuse me, please. Fully equipped full kitchen, full dining room, ocean and a half bath, real pn Oak townhouse, 2006. Abbahna Call; Garg 7499-1040. Haken
SPRING SEMESTER
Enjoy carefree living at affordable prices. Spacious studios, & 2 bedroom apts. - Carpeted, draped and on the busline.
The Luxury of Meadowbrook Is Just Right For You
meadowbrook
15th & Crestline 842-4200
Sublease outstanding outbuilding 2, M 1½ bath, kit
LD, part. kitchen w/ appliances, patio, pool
LD, part. kitchen w/ appliances, patio, pool
Tired of doing all the housework? Check out Sunflower cooperate. Secure clean and inexpensive home furnishings.
Warm, inexpensive room. Block from Union
and Wake Forest. Enclosed by a fence.
Or move to roomwalk to campus.
A large range townease for sublease
in lieu of rent reduced: Call 841-3541 before
6 in the after 4 in the after
VIRTUAL nice B1 Duples, fully carpeted, new paint,
C/A, W/A disposable, diaposal no pets; $275/m.
VIRTUAL nice B1 Duples, fully carpeted, new paint,
C/A, W/A disposable, diaposal no pets; $275/m.
House Sale KLIPSCS LA Seatals 104 db efficiency
KLIPSCS LA Seatals 104 db efficiency
Jamestown 70 lb. compound burning w/ w/c
accessories $135. F PIRRELLI X14' I4 Italian Racing
Wheelz slide projector 600 Excellent credit
Kodak slate projector 600. Excellent credit
Mega/Boogio guitar amp, top. Graphic EQ. 60/100
Watt. To bear, call 882-107.
Kokai slide projector 600. Excellent condition,
without light bulb. Retail: $149-$190. Bags: $49-
$54.
Must sell us HP-41C with a card reader. Together or
separate. Best call (812) 4268 between 4:00 & 9:00
NICELY DECORATED spacious room Furnished $810 utilities. Near university & downstream Gateway. 24/7 availability.
1929 VW 38,000 miles 4-door, new Michelin tires, fuel injection,
691-847-8179 Call 847-4791
FOR SALE
NAD 20 watt wall mount $165 & R B W speaker $135,
turbidity tamperable with cardboard, $70 or offer,
increase battery life.
See at 1131 Vermont. Phone 904-2099. $159.
1973 Dodge Coroll Perfect. 9,000 miles. $395.
1972 VW Bus. Very good condition. 842-5747
AM/FM stereo, toppable, 8-track all in one unit with
2 speakers. 840-839-8003
1977 Toyota Corolla 2 dr. 4-speed. Excellent condition.
See at 133灵门. Phone: 504-2591. $1950.
70 Old Delta 18, power steering, power brakes,
automatic transmission. Good condition. Low mileage.
Olympus OM 10 35mm camera w/ 10mm lens,
perfect condition. Mt 124 Call 82132 after 3 p.m.
Renault Le Car 1900, with AC, stereo, map wheels,
surfcoat. Collect 1-172-8006. Price negotiable.
TENNIS RACKETS - Recently received selection newswed head Comps. Wilton Advantage, Kramer Pro Staff. Dunlap Maxey, Davis Classice. Prince Stripes if your game in good condition. 842-4713 @ 8:00 p.m.
Call Perfect condition, 30,000 miles, 2 dr.
4-pd, radials, caller. Stoll Rt at 834-3543.
Bikes, 10-speed, aquarium, fan, air-conditioner, Call
841 3290
Vintage Instruments: Gibson Hummingbird Guitar,
$450; Gibson ESS30 Guitar, $400; black-back front
Fidelity Reverb Amp. with JH, speaker,
with Altoid Ambisony, with A excellent condition.
842-6717
1979 Dasson 710 Wage metalic blue, 5 spade,
conditioned, very well kept, $4,000, 843-607 or
843-612.
Classic - 500 Fast 640 Spider Supper, greatest mpg,
good condition, good tires. Must inform: M43-3623.
FOUND. 1 pr. men's shoes, size 12 of Stouffer
Place, Call 842-548 to identify.
Yamaha Champ. 6 month, Only 1,000 mile
Excellent condition. $600.00 new, asking $490.
www.yamahachamp.com
I have lost a pair of prescription glasses on the way from McCallum Hall to Johannesburg Tower. A last chance to buy them will be on Saturday.
Denom turntable, Son of Amquaila amp; AGL Pre-Item
Denom Nassaui cassette; 486.250
FOUND
Demon turntable. Son of Ampulla amg, ACI Pre Amg. Nakani cassette cabinet. 942-2529.
Holmes - Mastaspira bluesmaster guitar amp,
200W, 4-17" speakers, 800-934-0634
HELP WANTED
LOST, A pair of plassure riemless, plushasse
tA chair for little between Bishnei Csit Cai
*A pair of plassure riemless, plushasse tA chair for little between Bishnei Csit Cai*
LOST. Bus pass and ID around Summerfield. If found call 786-501 or 942 8303.
Please help! Green Dearfar Mawac - Lovida victory 76-11-28
Green Dearfar Mawac - Lovida victory 76-11-28
green lawn rooftops. Reward offered: 749-313-13
LOST: 6 month old baby toddler with black
nose and dark hair. Please call 843-5977. She's
deliberately unmixed.
Catholic Center at Kansas University seeks experienced professional to direct external support programs with initial emphasis on engaging state-versus-state candidates. Requires years experience in fundraising or related profession. salary based on experience. Send resume to Catholic Center, 1631 Crescent Road, Lawrence, KS 60044.
LOSS: Black clutch pad w/ beige trim (¥ 4 x $7)
License: See license.DRIVE. Please call JJU at 748-500-3921.
Computer service agency has an opportunity to enter or advance in computer field, a full-time combination job, or training offered. Experience and/or training desired. Apply Personnel Office, Administration Center, 509 Louisiana Street, New York, NY 10026. DO YOU RUN OUT OF MONEY BEFORE YOU RUN OUT OF MONTH! Turn the tab with extra money required to pay for a distributor trains you for spendlng opportunity Send name and phone to Route 2, Box 155-A.
COMPUTER OPERATOR III. The University of Kansas Academic Computer Center is seeking a career oriented individual to work full-time in a career related position in the computer science more years of technical level experience in operating computers/related auxiliary equipment and be able to perform computer-related duties per interest is preferable. Starting salary is $1,277 per month plus state benefits. Submit resume to KU Personal Service, 101 Carroll Drive, Lawrence, KS 65203.
FORTRAN APPLICATIONS PROGRAMMER:
Half-time research assistant availability for program adaptation and development in remote sensing applications. Full-time research assistant in microcomputers. FORTRAN background required, microcomputer and remote sensing experience. Contact the Kansas Applied Hemisphere Program. Room 240 Nichols Hall, 644-675. Application deadline 1 p.m. November 19, 2018. Equal Opportunity Employer.
NURSING: FULL-TIME/PARTTIME Are You Interested in *Weekend only* work—Either day, evening, or night shift—1 QEE per day, or two days of opportunities for registered nurses are now available at our campus. We offer a three-week orientation. If you have been away from nursing ensuite, we can work you back in. We all work together and support each other. We all work together and support each other. SHIFT DIFFERENTIAL **HOURLY** Contact Beverly Anderson, RN, director of Nursing, Topkappa State Hospital, 2700 W. St. Willett, Kansas
STAND TOGETHER SPECIAL Kids Need Special People. The STAND TOGETHER SPECIAL PROGRAM is curated by a team of educators who vocates for handicapped students who are wards of the State of Kansas. There is a particular need for these children to receive special education services need someone to represent them in all aspects of their special education programs. Parents with the child, reviewing the special education programs, and attending occasional school conferences with the child, review the special education programs, and attend occasional school conferences with two or two hours per month to stand together with a hand-capped child, call our toll-free number for more information.
OVERHANG JOBS: Summer year round. Europe. S
French, American. High lighted job. Free info. Write LT Box 265-870-
2432.
Part-time grill personnel needed. Nine night and weekend. Flexible schedules. Please in person for the interview.
U.S. CIVIL SERVICE, $9,765. $7,466. Job Security.
Excellent Bribery Benefit Today. The U.S. Civil Service
requires you to perform certain occupations. How many of these jobs do You qualify?
For see your resume? Now you can get the current
jobs offered by the Kansas and Nationwide. The Can't! Only $50. And
You have a lot to gain and nothing to hate but a 80%
stain. This could be the best investment you have in
Announcements; Jerry R. Boone Services; 443
225-8140.
o call substitutes needed for Child Development Program. Must have experience and/or study with young children. Send letter of application and bursar's form to the Application Center, St. Lawrence, KS 60044.
Freshmen - Scholarships available; it won't take to enroll in naval BOTTC. Call 894-3161.
A Special For Students. Hairdresser - $7, Perms - $28.
Charmed 103% Mass. 843-330. Ask for Dienna Jenesen.
A Strong Rug Bentley. Bennett Retail Liquor. Chilled Wine. Kegs. ice-cold beer. 2 lbs. north of Memphis.
Buttons, campaign style, custom made for any occasion, one to 100. Button Art by Swells. 794-1611.
CARTOON-N-GRAM FROM NOW THIRTY HOURLY
BUSINESS PROGRAMS
SIZE, FULL COLOR, HAND DELIVERED. PLOT
YOUR FRINES IN CARTOON'S THE CREATIVE
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MARKETING MATERIALS.
COMPENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES: early
services, home care, and referrals to health
care professionals confidentially Kansas City Area Cities.
Elizabeth 1 miss you. Please call or write. I miss you very much .143.
Home Electronics -
TV and TeleStereo Repair
on most major brands.
842-4732 1104 West 23rd.
Footlights will now be open till 8:00 p.m. every
Thursday. Footlights 210-820-Alowa
Footprints will now be open Thurs. nights till 8 p.m.
Footprints, 25th & Iowa.
For something special with a touch of charm from
the neighborhood, 411 S. Cedar St. 918; Mass.
We are upstairs downtown, 411 S. Cedar St.
HEADACHIE, BACKACHE, STIFF NECK, LEGP AINF Paint and correct the CAUSE of the problem! Call Mr. Jackson for modern chiropractic care. Accepting Cleopatra Cross and Lone Star insurance.
Instant passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization,
documentation and of course fine portraits,
studio Studio 78-9411
West Coast Saloon
Every Monday
Pool Tournament
1st — Trophy
2nd — $10.00
3rd — 12 pack
Register by 8:30
2222 Iowa 841-BREW
John Chambers will speak at the Hillel伞 Church ("Christian Zionism") at 12:30 Wed. in 16:42 Cork.
KAPPA PHI Ceramics Classes for University
women. Sponsored by Kappa Phi Call 845-807-6719
Kitten is seeking a positive environment to mature in. Playful, affectionate and fun. **HAPPY HOUR 10 F**
Musician wanted: drummer, guitarist, saxophonist,
and stage (or combinations of) Joel Acei.
Please contact me at 516-395-7200.
New york jets, men's and rubber sports, winter coats, jacket sizes. 120.950.873.4154
jordans, jerseys, hardshell hand bags, Indiana jackets, hard
5-Up & Under above Johnny's Tavern.
To the Pike's:
Homecoming over
that is unknown.
But thanks for the memories
of planning, freedom,
and the AOPI's.
PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTHRIGHT
(843-891)
Sit it on a shirt, silicone akieron printing, T-shirts, jewels and cape. Swirl it on Shipley 749-1611.
*adults draws from photos. Great gifts! Matting
pictures. Art prints. Adhesives at 403-8250 or
604-2929. Keep waiting. I m up late.
Schneider Wine & Kog Shop The finest selection of wines in Lawrence - larger supplier of strong wines.
This week's password at Foothill is "004" *M*. It
increases it and receives 10% off 1 gift item. Foothill, 25th
Silverleaf Tele录播 Videos Recorders Name
Tele录播 Videos Recorders Name
In the K.R.A., Get your best报价, then call TEL 1-800-326-7555.
Wanted: Attractive female who enjoys dancing and prefers a gentleman. If interested请843-8360
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale ! Make sure you read all of them! 1) An easy study guide, 2) For class preparation, 3) For exam preparation. "New Analysis of Western Civilization" available now at Town Crier. The address is 509 E. 7th St., New York, NY 10019.
Carson and Figure serving U-Daily until 1946. Carson
and compared. Skipped Elizabeth. 1908 Man.
Alterations, tailoring and dreaming. Experienced in fabrication, fabrication of custom apparel, alterator, starter and generative specialist. Familiar with fabrication and generation specifications for various garments.
SERVICES OFFERED
Baldwin Dale, 1, L. Bedwick township, full kitchen
Baldwin Rosewood, 2, L. Bedwick township, full kitchen
6806 Ashamia, 3, Glenwood Canyon, 790-1048,
Ratesville 6806 Ashamia.
What makes the birthday boy happen on his birthday? Send him a strip-poogram and see. 942-8900. SKI etc., presents ski trips every weekend. Sheepers and packers can book raides and bus charters call. 941-8361.
Alternator, starter and generator specialists. Parts, service and excavation equipment. AUTOMOTIVE GUILD WC 900 W C 625 W C 410 W C 325 W C 250 W C 180 W C 120 W C 90 W C 625 W C 410 W C 325 W C 250 W C 18
FRENCH TUTUR. If you need a tutor, I need a student. Pam 843-574-1
**DONE WITH GREATER FUN**
Improve your dissertation, etc., with technical illustration (chart); make small drafting sheets. 8 yrs
The Keeper Weekly Specials on K歌! Call 841-9450
(1006) 730, 7917
MATH TUTOR, Bob Meura, patient professional M.A., $6 for 40 min, group discouts. 943-8329.
MATH C: STATISTICS Expert Tutor, Math
Statistics B: MATH 460-800, p.vy & math,
statistics Call Rob Bard 460-800
Students call April to have all your typing needs done on a portable keyboard. Dq-848-010. Evenings begin at 6:30 pm. Weekdays begin at 6:30 pm.
AFFOHDABLE QUALITY for all your typing needs.
Call duty: 842-7954 after 6 p.m.
TYPING
ANNOUNCING "TYPING INK" - A professional typing service for your impressions. Spelling and grammar corrections, re-write assistance. Professional IBM Typing Kit Up Delivery 864-1538 ATTENTION TO TEACHERS' EXPERIENCE. Pentagon, experience. Pentagon, dissertations, theses. Electronic Memory Typewriter. Student discount Call Pam
Word Processing Services
Writing 817-2042 (Louisiana)
call 813-4695
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University Daily Kansan, November 6, 1982
Sports
Jones, Seurer guide Jayhawks Running game, defense lead Kansas over ISU
Finally
After six long weeks without a victory, the Kansas Jayhawks took advantage of Iowa State mistakes and a revitalized rushing attack to beat Chicago 72-69. The game was but vocal, Homecoming Day crowd of 26.798.
The game, especially the second half, showed that the Jayhawks were supposed to play all Yankees.
There were defensive linemen Broderick Thompson and Tim Friess, both playing on virtually one leg, leading the line to its best performance of the season.
There was linebacker Mike Arbans, whose 14 tackles and roaming from sideline-to-sideline contributed to the loss.
THERE WAS fullback E.J. Jones, almost non-existent in Kansas' first eight games, rushing for a career-high 112 yards on 15 carries and two touchdowns.
There was quarterback Frank Seurer, who was hit hard several times during the game, completing 13 of 31 passes for 241 yards, for one touchdown and running for another.
And, in the end, there was head coach Don
B. R. S.
GINO
STRIPPOLI
Sports Editor
Fambrough, smiling for the first time in a long time in this otherwise disappointing season.
"I smiled for the first time in so long that I cracked my lips," Fambrough said, joking. "This was a great victory for us and we really needed it. We knew that if we won this game we would have a chance of winning the next two. This game helped us regain some confidence.
BUT IN the beginning, it looked as if it was going to be another disappointing game for the team.
"I don't know if I have ever been as proud of a team as I was of this one today."
Kansas' defense stopped the Cyclones on three plays in their opening drive, and took control of the ball at the ISU 41. On first down, Seurer threw to Darren Green, who dropped the pass. Then, on second down, and 10, Seurer hit Jones for a 6-yard gain, but Jones coughed up the football and gave the Cyclones the ball at their own 35.
It took the Cyclones just 12 plays to go 65 yards and jump out to an early 7-lead. Kansas then took the kickoff and moved to the Iowa State 7, before Steiner's pass for Bobby Johnson was intercepted. The Kansas defense held, but the offense turned the ball over again, this time on a fumble by tailback Robert Mimbs, his third fumble in the last two games.
In the previous eight games, the Jayhawks would have fallen apart at this point and let the opponent run through them the rest of the game. But some reason, this was a different Bears.
"We had it in our minds that we were going to play football today (Saturday)." said offensive
tackle Reggie Smith. "There was a feeling around this team that we were going to win today.
"UNIKE OUR previous games, we never got on ourselves. The way we were moving the ball, we knew we could do it. It is hard to explain what we worked, but you could see it all week long in practice."
The play that started it all for the Jayhawks was a fumble recovery by defensive back Rodney Madden in the end zone. Iowa State had third and goal from the 1 when tailback King Green fumbled going off the right side of the line. The ball rolled into the end zone and Madden beat the Iowa State quarterback, Dave Archer, to the ball.
It was the Jayhawks' turn to drive, led by Seurer, who still was not fully recovered from his shoulder injury. Kansas moved the ball 80 yards for a three-four Iowa State penalties, tiring the score at 7-2.
But it was Seurer's passing that was the difference in the drive. He connected on of 48 passes for 58 yards in that drive, culminating in a 10-yard scoring strike to Jones.
Iowa State jumped out to a 14-7 lead late in the second quarter on a 4-yard touchdown run by Tommy Davis, and the Cyclones led the Jayhawks, 14-7, at halftime.
THE JAYHAWKS, however, came out fired in the second half, led by the running of Dion Bell
Bell, who did not play a down in the first half,
started the second half and played all the way.
He gave the KU fans an inkling of what was to
come when he carried on the first play of the
game. Bell knocked the ball away. Then after an ISU penalty, Bell got the call again and went 8 yards for another first down.
After Jones went 15 yards for another first down, Seurer hit Johnson for a 35-yard gain to give Kansas the ball first-and-goal at the 9. Seurer threw incomplete to Green on first down, but Bell gained 8 yards to the ISU 1. On third down, Seurer faked to Jones and rolled right. When no one challenged him, he went untouched into the end zone.
After the Kansas defense held, the Jahyawns moved the ball to the ISU 8 before their drive stalled. Stalled K bailmaker, who had not kicked a field goal since the Oklahoma State game on Oct. 9, hit a 35-jarer to put Kansas in the lead. It was not enough for the OSU game that Kansas had led an opponent.
The Cyclones tied the game on a 32-yard field goal in the fourth quarter, but Kansas came right back and took the ball to the ISU 13. Bell took the handoff, but was hit hard and fumbled. Cornerback Alvin Baker picked up the ball and the Kansas drive was stopped.
THE JAYHAWKS, after a sack by Carky Alexander that stopped the Cyclones, took control of the ball with 5:14 left in the game on its own 28-yard line. Seurer connected with Green for a 27-yard gain to move the ball into Cycle territory. After two incomplete passes, Seurer hit Wayne Capers, who has had problems catching passes lately and was demoted to second team, for a 36-yard gain. Capers, after faking an ISU defensive back, had nothing but the goal line ahead of him, but tripped, giving Kansas the ball first- and十 from the 11.
No progress made in strike; rest of season in jeopardy'
By United Press International
NEW YORK "The striking NFL Players Association found management's latest proposal unacceptable yesterday, with union head Ed Garvey claiming the offer "would rob every player now and for the next 10 years of their freedom."
THE COUNCIL will send a synopsis of the 75-page proposal to the 28 NPL clubs, which will be made available to all players upon request. Garvey said yesterday that the summarized version of the proposal looked "a lot different" than the original document.
The Management Council presented a 75-page proposal Saturday night, before private mediator Sam Kagel and Management Council's chief bargainer Jack Donlan walked out of negotiations at a midtown hotel. Little progress was made in the eight-day session, and seven weeks of games have not been played because of the 48-day old strike.
"The NFL is asking that we tie 11-year-old kids up to a draft 10 years from now." Garvey said. "The players know it would drop the average career from 4.2 years to 3.2 years immediately. They know severance pay, bonus pay and pension vesting all ensure less
Garvey said the NFL requested a 10-year anti-trust exemption for its college draft, and he said the league wanted to move the draft from late April to Feb. 1.
He claimed the requests were made to help destroy the fledgling United States Football League and, if agreed to, would provide less security for NFL players.
The package includes a wage standard for each player based on years of service beginning at $30,000 and increasing $10,000 per year to a top level of $200,000; an immediate bonus of $60,000 to all players who are vested upon resumption of the 1982 season; severance payments beginning at $60,000 for a player with four years of service to $200,000 for 18 or more years experience; and a doubling of post-season benefits so that a player for a Super Bowl winner receives up to $70,000.
job security and a younger league in the future.
Claiming they are still willing to bargain, Garvey and player representatives remained at the hotel yesterday and called for management to return to the table. Garvey made it clear, however, that the Council's most recent offer was unacceptable.
"Everything we have been fighting for will go out the window with that proposal and that proposal."
"We have made a comprehensive offer to the players," Modell said. "I have in my possession here a 75-page document outlining the proposals made to the players and it is substantial. To make any more concessions would be suicide."
CLEVELAND BROWNS owner Art Modell,
an imam with ABC Radio Sports,
will offer the gift.
The union is seeking an injunction from the National Labor Relations Board that would force management to bargain on wages. The NLRB has already found management guilty of 12 counts of unfair labor charges. A hearing is scheduled for Nov. 15.
Tails broke off Saturday night when Kagel returned to San Francisco and Donlan went home to Boxville, N.Y. The current breakoff in talks is the second since the 73-year-old Kagel entered negotiations Oct. 12. Following a 12-day session in Cockayneville, Md., Kagel resumed talks on October 9 and resumed resumed Oct. 30 in New York and last eight days with little progress.
While Garvey called for Commissioner Pete Roeite and club owners to come to the table, a management Council spokesman said the Council was taking 'a day off' yesterday and 'we'll just sit back tomorrow and make a decision on what will happen next.'
"Either Rozelle or Donlan will have to get some people back to the table," Garvey said. "They'll have to see what happens with the computer." He will be the last shot for the so-called hard-drivers.
Dallas Cowboy player representative Robert Newhouse said he was aware of that架
GARVEY SAID the union also had filed a class action suit questioning the validity of the standard contract between the league and all of its players.
Speaking on CBS-TV's "NFL-Today" show, Dallas warred: "I think the season is in progress."
"I realize the fact that this season could be over." Newhouse said. "The last game of the 82 season could have been played already. The team would have families are being jugged around up here."
Jones gained 8 yards on first down, but injured his ankle on the play and came out. Harvey Fields, replacing Jones, gained 2 yards for a first down to the ISU 1.
Fittingly, Jones came back into the game and muscled his way into the end zone to give the win.
Smith said, "E.J. is a great player. He blocks like a guard and he runs like a tailback. You can't ask for anything more than that."
E. J. Jones had a tremendous football game," Fambrough said. "On the last play, we did not tell him what to do."
"OUR OFFENSIVE队 did a great job and we played together as a team." Jones said. "We had the confidence to overcome our early mistakes in this game.
Jones praised the offensive line in return.
"We've looked good at certain times all year long, but today we put it all together."
And even though Jones, Bell and Seurer all had outstanding games, the offensive linemen had to be the key to Saturday's victory. They opened
gaping holes for the backs and gave Seurer ample time to throw the football.
"I've been critical of the offensive line, but they were the difference in the second half." Fambrough said. "Their protection was good as well, and they was as good a performance as any this year."
The Jayhawks, although they know the season is all but over, have incorporated a new saying:
GRANTED, FINISHING strong would still just give them a 4-5-2 overall record and 3-3-1 in the Big Eight, but winning those games would mean a lot.
And if Saturday's line play and rushing attack continue the rest of the year, the Jayhawks should have two happy weeks ahead of them.
The enthusiasm in the locker room and on the sidelines was much better than it has been this season and the Jayhawks are now in an ideal position to win the next two games.
"We knew they weren't that good so we just went out and played football," Arbans said. This game puts us into a good spot for the Colorado and Missouri games. Our spirits are up.
JAYHAWK NOTES--Bobby Johnson and E.J.
Jones led Kansas收容者 with three catches
apiece. Johnson's catches were good for 78
yards, which was also onto the team.
"We know how to win again."
Darren Green continued to play well for the Jayhawks. He caught two passes for 45 yards and returned two punts for 40 yards. His 25-yard return in the third quarter set up the go-ahead field goal. Fambridge on Green: "He's played that way all year."
Jones, who was the first fullback to rush for over 100 yards in a long time at Kansas, was the first Kansas back to rush for over 100 yards this year. The previous high was 88 yards by Dino Bell.
The 24 points scored by Kansas were the most scored by any team against the Cyclones this year.
K.GREEN
Iowa State running back King Green found the going tough against the Kansas defense Saturday afternoon at Memorial Stadium. Green, met by Jayhawk defensive back Gary Coleman (84) and
two unidentified Jayhawks, managed just 30 yards on 10 carries as Kansas defeated the Cyclones, 24-17.
Hoop season gets underway
Coaches say rule changes ridiculous
Snorts Editor
By GINO STRIPPOLI
Sports Editor
KANSAS CITY, Mo.—Even though the Big Eight football season is not yet over, the Big Eight basketball game got underway yesterday with the annual pre-season press day at the KCI
On hand for the meeting were the eight conference coaches and two players from each squad, and while most coaches spoke lightly of their own talent, there was one thing that all the coaches agreed on — the rule changes in many of the major conferences in the country.
It was a consensus of the Big Eight coaches that they made the right move when they decided to vote against the shot clock and against the 3-point goal for the upcoming season.
Most conferences in the country adopted one or both of these experiments for the upcoming year, but the NCAA Rules Committee decided that there would be any for this year's post-season competition.
"All the rules are ridiculous," said Billy Tubbs, who is entering his third year as coach of the Oklahoma Sooners. "It would bother our coach if we were on second clock, but we definitely need only run rules."
"THE PROBLEM isn't the clock, the coaches. They won't let the players play ball."
Eight coaches. Not one was for the shot clock.
"I'm delighted we didn't change our rules."
conclusions. They won't pay the players you say.
Tubb's comments were reflective of all the Big
Kansas coach Ted Owens, the dean of Big Eight coaches, said, "With all the different rules we could have played 12 games with different rules.
"I'm delighted we didn't change our rules."
"I won't be for the 3-point goal until they make it have the same effect as a regular shot. They say possession of the ball is worth 1 point, which means that every other time you get the ball you must pass it with a 38 percent shot, I'm for it. But I'm absolutely certain that that distance is not 19 feet."
Oklahoma State coach Paul Hansen agreed with Owens.
"I DON'T care for the 3-point rule," Hansen, who is entering his fourth year as coach of the Cowboys, said. "I'll like the 3-point goal when I give a 1 point for a dunk, and I'm not being faced."
"The biggest change is going to be the held-ball rule. Without the hash marks on the court, it is going to make a lot of difference. This is the best move made to speed up the game, not
Of all the coaches in the Big Eight, however, Tom Apale, entering his second year as head man
Apke is a member of the NCAA Committee. That committee decided not to tamper with the rules, but to ask the conferences to experiment if they wanted to.
"We were astounded by the number of the conferences that took up experiments," Apke said. "When the season is over, we will collect
data on the experiments and make some valid decision on what to do.
"We know the college game is a great one, so we have to watch what we do. Right now we may confuse the fans because they'll be seeing games with different rules every night.
"MY PERSONAL feeling is that the shot clock is not the answer. We risk making college students wait."
The coaches did agree on one thing about the Big Eight as a league, and that it was on the team.
"This conference has begun to get national recognition." Apke said. "The influx of recruits, especially big kids, makes our conference more visible. We have more exposure and better credibility. We are one of the better basketball conferences in the country."
The Big Eight coaches agreed that this year the conference would be a much more evenly matched conference, with Oklahoma and Wisconsin. The Big Eight the past three years, leading the neck.
Nebraska will be the first Big Eight team in regular season competition when they take on Windsor Nov. 20 The Jayhawks open their season against the Blue game Wednesday in Allen Field House.
Editor's note: This is the first in a three-part series previewing the Big Eight and Kansas. Tomorrow's story will be a feature on Kansas head coach Ted Owens and Weinsteds's story will be a rundown of the Big Eight Conference and the Kansas Jayhawks.
Ex-Dodger Garvey tops list of 46 free agents
By United Press International
NEW YORK—Who's on first for the Los Angeles Dodgers?
It won't be Steve Garvey, who failed to reach a new contract agreement with the Dodgers, and on Wednesday he may be the most coveted player in baseball's re-entry draft.
"This is probably the saddest day in my life," Garvey said late Saturday night after his agent, Jerry Karpstein, could not work out a contract with Dodger management. "These years in Los Angeles have held many special friends for me and I love the house of all the fans and the friends I have here."
Now that Garvey is a free agent, the Dodgers said they would not draft him on Wednesday.
"WE MADE Steve what we felt was a very fair and generous offer," said Dodgers' President Peter O'Malley. "He has not accepted. Both sides made major movements throughout the
day, but we were still unable to solve the problem.
"He's been a great Dodger and he leaves behind many friends. We wish him well. We recognize his right to become a free agent. However, we will not retain rights to draft him. We've had ample time to try to reach an agreement feel that more time would not help the situation."
GARVEY PLAYED the past six seasons for $333,333.33 a year, a meager sum by current standards. He never asked to have the pact negotiated, saying he believed in sticking to an
Also of interest as the deadline approached
Garvey is one of 46 players listed by the Players' Association as being eligible for the draft, though some will likely be re-signed by their current teams. The Players' Association lists San Francisco pitcher Jim Barr and Chicago Cubs outfielder Jay Johnstone as free agents, but the Player Relations Committee dismisutes that status.
were Kansas City Royals' DH Hal MeRae, California Angel DH Don Baylor, and Chicago White Sox outfielder Steve Kemp.
McRae, who batted .308 with an American League-leading 133 RBI this season, was negotiating with the Royals. They said they would be responsible if rights they failed to sigh him before the draft.
Baylor, who helped lead the Angels within one victory of the AL pennant, exchanged offers with California. Buzzie Bavasi, the Angels' executive vice president, sounded hopeful of signing the deal that would enable him to sign him, he would honor Baylor's wishes on whether to retain him in the draft.
Floyd Bannister, a 27-year-old left-hander who led the American League in strikeouts this season, appears to be the most attractive free agent available in the draft.
Bannister turned down the Mariners' final offer, which would have guaranteed him $2 million for three years and could have earned him more than $3.1 million over five years.
...
The University Daily
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
KANSAN
Tuesday, November 9,1982 Vol. 93, No.57 USPS 650-640
Planners urge denial of rezoning request
By DOUG CUNNINGHAM Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
The Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission recommended last night that the City Commission deny a request to rezone about 600 lots in East Lawrence.
In an unexpected move, the planning commission also decided by a vote of 5-2 to reopen consideration of the East Lawrence neighborhood plan. This decision would make decisions about zoning ratings in the area.
The City Commission will discuss the planning commission's recommendation to deny rezoning of the lots at its Dec. 7 meeting. The lots are in an area roughly between Rhode Island Street and the Santa Fe Railroad tracks from Ninth Street to 18th Street.
THE LOTS presently are zoned for multiple-family, industrial and commercial uses. The request was to change those zoning ratings to allow housing of structures such as apartment houses.
Mark Kaplan, president of the East Lawrence Improvement Association, said the planning commission's actions were "an insult to the neighborhood. They don't want the land in East Lawrence used the way we want it used so they just reopen the plan."
VON ACHEN and several other commissioners said the rezoning request had prompted a great deal of public comment.
The planning commission's reopening of the plan and its recommendation to deny rezoning followed more than two hours of public comment and discussion among the commissioners.
Commissioner Kurt von Achen said the 600- lot rezoning request was too large to consider at
"I don't believe it's planning in the larger sense of planning — it's more political expediency," he said.
Commissioner Mike Miller said, "I've never been stopped on the street and harangued on an
However, Commissioner Nan Harper said
rezoning to single-family was necessary for the stability of the neighborhood.
She also said the neighborhood plan for East Lawrence did not need to be reconsidered.
"We can't negate the work that we've done," she said. "Our goal is to follow the guidelines that we have set."
But before the vote, Miller said that to recommend approval of the rezoning request would hurt those who wanted to develop their property.
RICHARD KERSHENBAUM, a representative of the ELIA, said the city had a commitment to maintain the character of the neighborhood, which he said was essentially
Commissioner Dean Harvey said the improvement association did not represent a majority of the people and asked Kershenbaum how many people were members.
A denial of the rezoning request would not send a good message to the residents of Eskayak
Kershenbaum said. "We really didn't want to force this down anybody's throats. We tried to be very careful to make sure there was a consensus in the neighborhood for doing this."
Harper said after the meeting that the neighborhood group did represent the people in
N
W E
S
"These are not 12 people who came to take over the world." she said.
Several residents near that lot asked the improvement association for help.
THE REQUEST for rezoning originally came from the improvement association in June, after a local real estate agent built two houses on one lot in the East Lawrence area.
After it received the request, the planning commission instituted a petition policy for permission.
The planning commission held a special public hearing on the request Oct. 20 but deferred consideration of the request until last night to allow the planning staff more time for study.
The City Commission in September then told the planning commission to study the 600- lot request more and report back with a recommendation.
After two public meetings and several hours of discussion, the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission recommended last night that about 600 lots shown in the shaded area not be rezoned to a single-family rating. The commission also decided, in an unanticipated move, to reopen consideration of the East Lawrence neighborhood plan.
Weather
Computer problems slow enrollment
云
Tomorrow will be mostly cloudy with a chance of showers and a high in the lower 60s.
Tonight will be cloudy with a 30 percent chance of showers and a low in the mid-to-
Today will be cloudy with a 20 percent chance of showers and a high in the low to mid-60s, according to the National Weather Services will be from the south at 10 to 20 mph.
By DIRK MILLER
Staff Reporter
KU's new computerized enrollment system, adopted to cut down on problems experienced by students at Allen Field House, caused its own problems yesterday as some students waited about a half-hour longer than expected to early enroll.
Early enrollment for classes, one of the phases of the new system, was interrupted four times yesterday and once Friday when computer problems forced the system to be shut down by Mr. Elliott, assistant director of records in the educational services department.
JERRY NIEBAUM, director of the Academic Computing Center, said he thought there was a problem with either the computer programs
Students waited patiently outside room 111 in Strong Hall while terminals and printers for the computer were turned off the computer used for enrollment, were turned off the computer between 10:20 a.m. and 4:00 p.m. yesterday.
developed for enrollment or the computer's original programs.
Technicians were trying to find the problem, he said. After 3:30 p.m., yesterday all terminals on the IBM system except those used for responding to messages from technicians tried to isolate the problem, he said.
Rich Bireta, assistant director of KU information systems, said there were 10 different programs or software that were used for the enrollment process. A comparison of data from the enrollment programs worked on Friday and Monday, so it would lead to the solution of the problem, he said.
"Amost certainly, it's the software," he said. Ilieta said he hoped to have the problem solved in a few weeks.
ELLIOTT TOLD the waiting students yesterday afternoon that they could early enroll today if they were not able to wait until the system was turned back on.
Gary Thompson, director of student records and registration, said the enrollment plan had enough time built into it to handle delays like computer problems. KU scheduled 180 students
each hour on fifteen terminals acquired from the University of Kansas Medical Center, he said.
"At K-State, in their first early enrollment, they scheduled 300 students an hour on the same number of terminals," he said.
FIGURES SHOWED that yesterday's early enrollment took care of 147 fewer students than Friday but eight more than Wednesday, Elliott said.
Students were originally scheduled for six-minute periods at the terminals, but the early enrollment process can be as short as 40 seconds, she said.
Jerry Hutchison, associate vice chancellor for academic affairs, said that 20 percent of the students scheduled to enroll had early enrolled by Friday.
She said that after the system went down, programmers took about 20 minutes to catch up with it.
"I don't know how to interpat that, but it was probably not good enrollment," he said.
The early enrollment will continue until Nov.
23
Begin testifies aides ignored army warning
By United Press International
JERUSALEM—Prime Minister Menachem Begin's Cabinet ignored Israeli army warnings that Lebanon's Christian Phalange militia was "sharpening its knives" to massacre Palestinian civilians, a probe of the Beirut killings revealed yesterday.
In testimony to an investigating panel, Begin said the warning by Lt. Gi. Raphael Eitan, army chief of staff, went unbeheaded by the entire Cabinet, which did not oppose the Phalanigist entry into two West Beirut Palestinian refugee camps Sept 16-18.
There was no explanation during the questioning why Eitan brought his warning to the Cabinet two hours after the militia already were inside the Chellat and Sabra camps.
QUOTING FROM A Cabinet protocol from the night of Sept. 16 when the Phalange went into the camps, reserve Maj. Mj. Onah Efraf, an investigative panel, repeated Efraf's words:
"The second thing that will happen is an outburst of revenge. This will be an unprecedented outburst. I can see in their eyes what they are thinking. (Phalange) system is sharpening its knives."
Begin, in reply, said, "I can only state the fact that no red light was lit for any minister after this statement."
Begin also testified that Defense Minister Aristel Sharon told of having sent the Lebanese Phalangists into the camps only after the Christian villagers were inside massacring Palestinian civilians.
BEGIN, WHO is to visit Washington Thursday, provided what was the high point of three weeks of hearings before a three-man judicial panel that ordered him and his daughter of Palestinian refugees in West Beirut.
Begin said in 45 minutes of testimony that Sharon ordered the Christian Phalange militias into two refugee camps without telling the authorities where they were. The minister for the apparent breach of procedure.
Nor did Begin's testimony clash with that of Sharon, who appeared before the inquired board two weeks wgo. Sharon told the commission he had every right to permit the Phalange to enter
See BEGIN page 5
Staff positions open for spring
The Kansan is now accepting applications for the positions of editor and business manager.
Applications are available in the Kansan business office, 118 Flint Hall, the office of the dean of journalism, 200 Flint Hall, the Student Senate office, 105 B Kansas Union and in the office of student organizations and activities, 220 Strong Hall.
America's passenger trains struggle to stay on track
TREATMENT
A handful of early morning travelers board the only Amtrak passenger train that stops at the Lawrence depot at New York and Seventh streets. The popularity of passenger trains has waned in
the past few years, replaced by cars, buses and planes, but a faithful few continue to include the scenic railroad views and sleeper cars in their travel plans.
By MATTHEW SCHOFIELD Staff Reporter
In the last few decades America's passenger rail system has been slowly, and reluctantly, grinding to a halt.
Once uncontestably powerful, perhaps the backbone of American transportation, now, at least in the West, the passenger rail system is besieged by problems, and relief is not in sight.
Every industrial nation in the world, except the United States, has spent the last 50 years developing and refining its passenger rail system. Its network includes that of Missouri-Kansas Rail Passenger Coalition.
"The reason people don't ride trains now is that they don't have the trains to ride, not that we do."
"In 1929 there were more than 25,000 passenger trains running in the United States, more than 150 in Kansas. Today less than 250 and only one in the United States," only one in Kansas."
RAIL TRAVEL'S decline in popularity was brought about by the growth of automobile, bus and airplane travel. he said.
NOW, THE SMALL Lawrence station owned by the Sante Fe Railway Co., with its
"Amtrak can never compete for the really long trips because planes are just too fast," he said. "But for distances between 200 and 600 miles it should be very competitive."
Trains are not completely riderless, though. Sharon Holt, Pueblo, Colo., junior, said she had ridden trains to and from Lawrence on five different occasions.
The only train that passes through Lawrence's lonely station travels under the shade of night, like a nocturnal animal, with an eastbound train at 5:40 a.m., and a westbound time of 12:20 a.m.
crack-riddled platform and empty lounge, resembles the empty shell of a large crustacean more than a functioning depot.
No more than two or three people nightly make their way through the desolate streets of town to catch the sleek Amtrak Southwest train. but when KU and Haskell Indian College let out for vacations — the peak periods for rail workers here — the station gets more crowded.
The trip to Puerto Coulot Holl $76, and she said she liked traveling by train. But such an attitude, which was dominant in the United States as little more than a passing fashionable prevalent — especially in Kansas and the West.
Mills said that train travel is the most economically efficient means of land travel. Considering that very few passenger trains are in use, the present system is woefully insufficient, he said.
"Russia, France and England all have very efficient electric trains," he said. "The United States had most of its electric tracks torn down."
EXCEPT FOR A few thousand miles of electric truck in the Northeast, American trains
Many other countries, such as France, Great Britain and Japan, take total financial responsibility for their rail systems, he said, whereas in India, the system is expected to survive on its fares.
"No passenger-carrying system has ever been able to support itself on what it collects from the farebox. There's no way to do it, it's too expensive," he said.
"Rail is the only totally self-sufficient means of travel. How many miles of highway has Greyhound built, and how many airports have the airlines built?
"But railroads have built all of their stations and paid for all of their roads. Passenger rail service cannot survive in the United States
See TRAINS page 5
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, November 9. 1982
News Briefs From United Press International
Court keeps firm in lawsuit over capsizing of showboat
TOPEKA-KA the Kansas Supreme Court said yesterday that the concession operators at Lake Pomona must remain in a lawsuit that is pending. The case could be heard on Friday.
Although four defendants have been released from the complex case, Aquamarine Corp., which had the state concession at the lake, was ordered back in the suit by the high court. Under lower court rulings, all four were dismissed by boat itself, Bruce and Veda Rogers, were dismissed from the case.
The Supreme Court ruled that Aquamarine had a duty to care for the safety of the entertainment facility, and placed it back in the suit with
Lawyers for the plaintiffs had argued that Aquamarine should be liable for injuries because it was supervisor of the Whipporwill. They maintained that both the firm and the Osage County sheriff were at fault for failing to warn the boat's operators of severe weather.
A tornado overturned the boat on Lake Pomona on June 17, 1978, killing 15 people and an unborn baby. The eight lawsuits pending in the case have been settled out of court.
Areas open to acid rain. group savs
The Environmental Protection Agency, however, immediately took issue with the findings, calling the report prepared by the Izaak Walton League of America a "blatant misrepresentation" of research done for the government.
WASHINGTON-A national conservation group yesterday said that larger sections of the United States, including the South and some of the West, might be more vulnerable to acid rain damage than previously thought.
The league, one of the nation's oldest conservation groups, based its arguments on a map of alkalinity of surface waters at 2,500 different sites across the nation. Alkalinity measurements indicate the ability of a watershed to withstand acid rain pollution.
Pope to visit homeland next year
WARSAW, Poland—In an apparent bid to defuse justice just two days before a new round of pro-Solidarity protests, Poland's military government announced yesterday that Pope John Paul II would visit his homeland next year.
The group said the alkalinity levels of lakes and streams within Southern, Mountain and Pacific Northwest regions were not adequate to support aquatic life.
The official Polish news agency PAP said the pope would return to Poland for his second visit as pontiff June 18, 1983.
At the same time, a government statement warned that the military would use an indispensible measure to ensure calm during a security crisis, greatly delaying its news.
Solidarity leaders have called for an eight-hour nationwide strike followed by street demonstrations to protest last month's ban on Solidarity and to mark the second anniversary of the union's legal victory. The union also scheduled Thursday to mark Poland's pre-war independence day.
2,500 U.S. Chrysler workers laid off
TORONTO—About 2,500 Chrysler workers at 16 plants in the United States were laid off yesterday as a result of the 4-day-old strike by Chrysler Canada employees demanding wage hikes from the financially aliling automaker.
No talks have been held since the strike began Friday and no new talks are planned, said Chrysler spokesman Walter McCall.
The plants produce parts for Chrysler cars manufactured in Canada. Despite the layoffs, the United Auto Workers called the 9,000 Canadian state workers "unhappy."
"The response has been pretty well mixed but I think we have the support of the vast majority," said Rick Reaume, UAW assistant strike director at the major Chrysler plant in Windsor, Ontario. "There are many locals from the States backing all the way."
DeLorean pleads innocent: trial set
LOS ANGELES-John DeLorean pleaded innocent yesterday to charges he tried to save his failing sports car company with a $24 million cocaine deal, and his attorney said he would argue that federal agents entrapped the international entrepreneur.
U. S. District Judge Robert Takasumi ordered DeLorean, who was free on $10 million ball, and two co-defendants to stand trial Jan. 7 on a total of 42 counts.
have increased incident to nine rounds of possessing cocaine for sale interstate trade and communication for narcotics trafficking and aid to racketeering.
Famed criminal attorney Joseph Ball, a member of DeLorean's defense team, told reporters outside the court that DeLorean's primary line of defense would be that FBI and Drug Enforcement Agency agents entrapped him.
Balloonist fails effort to circle world
BARRIE, Ontario—Balloonist Maxie Anderson's third attempt to circle the Earth in a 200-foot-tail balloon was scuttled yesterday by a plane.
Anderson, who holds the speed record for a trans-Atlantic balloon crossing, said he would abandon his dream of setting a world record by circling the world in eight to 10 days.
"I've tried three times," said a dejected Anderson, sitting in the balloon's gondola after the craft safely landed in a field. "I have to quit, but I just think it's the better part of wisdom and I leave it to the next generation to come out to do it."
Anderson and his co-pilot, Don Ida of Longmont, Colo., brought their balloon, "Jules Verne," in a field in a highway near Barrie, a small community about 60 miles north of Toronto. The balloon was designed for a single, non-stop flight and cannot be flown again.
Nuclear disaster drama causes stir
SPRINGFIELD, Ill.—Public radio station WSSR, evoking memories of the famed "War of the Worlds" broadcast 42 years ago, pulled the plug on a mock nuclear accident drama yesterday because of the "potential of alarm."
Richard Bradley, news and public affairs director for the station, said the "Crystal Radio" show was taken off the air about 2 $ \frac{1}{2} $ minutes into the day.
Bradley said the program dealt with a fake radio broadcast of a nuclear accident at the Illinois Power Co. nuclear power plant at
Among the callers was the office of the state Emergency Services and Disaster Agency.
Bradley said a disclaimer was read twice at the beginning of the program, which was produced by the Studies and Social Change Department at Sangamon State University.
Democratic coffers empty after victories
Staff Reporter
By BRUCE SCHREINER Staff Reporter
The Kansas Democratic Party, still basking in last week's victories, will ask party members for more than just their votes during the coming months.
After dolling out about $350,000 to its state ticket, the state Democratic Party is nearly broke. Jim Pligger, the director of the party, said yesterday.
Party distributed to $80,000 to GOP candidates, who ranged from state legislative hopefuls to gubernatorial candidate Sam Hardage.
However, the Kansas Republican Party, still recovering from disappointing results in the gubernatorial election, is financially sound, saves its chairman.
Robert Bennett, Kansas Republican Party chairman, said the GOP would have money left over after paying its taxes. It would not solicit drive for the 1984 election.
ANOTHER GOP official, Merlyn Brown, executive director of the party, estimated that about $35,000 would remain in the party's treasury.
Bennett estimated the Republican
Although Democratic funds dried up late in the campaign, Plger said that Gov. John Carlin's re-election would help rebuild the party's treasury.
"Either party would admit that having the governor from your party is the best form of fund raising available," he said. "A governor is a good fund-raising tool because he is the top elected official in the state.
"IN 1978, the state party had about $55,000 in past debts and Carlin's campaign had between $80,000 and $90,000 in debts after the election. We retired both debts within a year with a loan from U.S., hincones' and personal contacts."
"Ploger said a party should throw all its financial resources into a campaign because many close elections often urged on candidates' spending policies.
"My philosophy is that if you have a substantial amount of money left on your hand, you can afford to eat."
wise practice when lending that money to a candidate could have turned the trigger for him."
Carlin, who won a second four-year term by soundly defeating Hardage, was the main recipient of the record he earned and attributed by the state Democratic Party.
PLOGER ESTIMATED that Carlin's campaign received about $75,000 from the state party. The party gave about $35,000 to the five Democratic congressional candidates and about $45,000 to state legislative hopefuls.
The Democratic Party's spending policies greatly surpassed its efforts during the past few elections. Ploger said the trend could continue.
"I think the big difference was that we made more use in picking up new contributors. We have been cultivating our current contributors and upgrading the number of people who give $25 to $50," he said.
REPUBLICAN candidates were not given extravagant gifts because of a different philosophy by their state Republicans, who shops in favor of financial assistance.
"The biggest role for the state party is to be there to show the candidates how to campaign and raise money." Brown said.
Bennett, a one-term governor who lost to Carlin in 1978, said the party should emphasize its research and tutoring capabilities. But he said fund-raising responsibilities primarily rested with the candidates.
"We HAVE an ongoing contribution effort that concentrates on people who contribute on an annual basis," he said. "But you have to remember candidates also try to raise money, and some candidates, and rather give to the candidates."
He said strong incumbents such as Attorney General Robert Stephan, Insurance Commissioner Fletcher Bell and Senator Robert Rubin could raise enough money on their own.
Officials from both parties said they would be busy wooing current and potential contributors to help bolster the party's finances. They both emphasized the importance of direct mailing efforts and fund-raisers.
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University Daily Kansan, November 9. 1982
Page 3
RAs to have access to residents' grades
By KIESA ASCUE Staff Reporter
Resident assistants will have access to the academic records of students on their floors, the director of the office of residential programs said yesterday.
"We hope we can be at least a part of the process to keep students on the educational track," said Fred McEllenie, the director. "We do not see this as any kind of leverage or blackmail."
McElhenie said he could not specify when RAs would have access to academic files but said it would be soon.
In a recent Ellsworth Hall newsletter, Tom Combs, the hall's resident director, said RAs have a right to the information because they have a "mission to facilitate academic success."
However, not all students agree with him.
Matt Croghan, Orlando. Fla., junior,
said, "I don't like it at all. I feel that
everybody has a right to their own
privacy."
ANY KU EMPLOYEE can prove that he has a legitimate educational interest in a student can gain access to student records without violating the Buckley Amendment, which guarantees privacy in certain areas to students, said Gilbert Dyck, dean of educational services.
"If a faculty member needed to look at the records to help in the advising process, that would be legitimate." Dyck said. "I don't know how RAs could construe themselves to have a legitimate educational interest."
According to policies and regulations on student rights published by the
Division of Student Affairs, a Regents school may not withhold the written record of grades earned by a dependent student if the school receives a written report from a student, his parents or legal guardian. The student will be notified in writing of the disclosure.
CARYL SMITH, dean of student life,
said that students often had no
knowledge of academic resources and
were reluctant to ask for help. She said
RAs were informed peers who could
sympathize with academically troubled
students and refer them to KU
resources.
Croghan disagreed.
"Most RAs don't have the type of wide-ranging resources necessary to help just any students on their floors who are doing badly," he said. "I would rather go to the RA myself than have one come to me."
RECENTLY, resident assistants received a list from the dean of student life of the freshmen on their floors who were having problems after four weeks of classes in mathematics and English, McGillenie said. They were to have teachers, students and offered referrals to tutors and other academic aids, he said.
"There were some people who felt their privacy was invaded, but most people indicated that they appreciated the RAS showed." McEllenne said.
Randy Bush, an RA at Hashinger Hall, said the early warning list might have benefited a small percentage of students who made others upset or distrustful.
BUSH SAID each RA's impression of the job itself was different, and the individual approach taken in dealing with a student who was having trouble in classes mattered more than the confrontation itself.
Faulty heater apparent cause of student's death, police save
A faulty furnace was apparently the source of carbon monoxide fumes that left one KU student, Steven Spake, 31, dead after a car accident. Another, according to Lawrence police,
shortly before 2 a.m. Sunday after
receiving a call from a friend who was
sick.
A spokesman at Lawrence Memorial Hospital said Zimmerman had been transferred from intensive care yesterday and had been up from his hospital bed.
The second student, Michael B. Zimmerman, was in satisfactory condition in Lawrence Memorial Hospital yesterday afternoon after being overcome Sunday by the carbon monoxide fumes at his home at 1636 Delaware St.
Tests conducted at the house by employees of the Kansas Public Service Gas Co. Inc. showed high levels of carbon monoxide in the building.
The owner of the one-story house, Q.V. Snowden of DeSoto, said when contacted yesterday that he was unaware of the accident. Snowden said the furnace at the residence had been set on fire, and no one else received no calls or complaints this fall from either Zimmerman or Spake concerning the furnace.
Police went to the victims' residence
ARE "UNWANTED PREGNANCIES AND DISCARDED FETUSES . . . ONLY A VERY SMALL PART OF THE PROBLEM"?
In a letter to the November 3rd issue of the Journal World, Barbara G. Smith notes "with increasing concern the letters to the editor dealing with unwanted pregnancies and discarded fetuses." Mrs. Smith, with whom I've had many an interesting conversation, thinks "the writers address only a very small part of the problem when they mourn the loss of lives described as being a few weeks old." Mrs. Smith claims that "Logically, one is led back in time to the much greater number of babies who didn't even get that far . . . who were not even conceived" because their "potential parents . . . didn't want any . . . children."
Even while admitting that the letters to the editor which inspired her response "mourn the loss of lives described as being but a few weeks old," Mrs. Smith feels that a logical discussion about the dead infants should also include children who have never been conceived. When Mrs. Smith asks "Who is to say when life begins, when a soul is coming into being?" she forgets that there doesn't exist, either here or at any other state university, a science textbook which views life as commencing with the formation of the soul. Instead, at every reputable institution of higher learning and accredited medical school, such textbooks concede that life begins at conception with the growth and orderly development of the genetically unique embryo.
Last year John T. Noonan, Jr., Professor of Law at the University of Alabama presented a case for Private Choice, appeared before a Senate Subcommittee and said:
The right to aborto, was said by the Court to be part of the right to privacy; and the exercise of the right is said to be a private choice. Was there ever a right less exactly described? Was there ever a slogan more misleading? What is private is what can be done alone, or at home, or within one's family. The right to abortion is exercised with the help of a trained professional, a doctor, and often with the participation of a clinical or hospital staff . . .
When Mrs. Smith uses her expanded definition of "the problem," she ignores the fact that life must precede death. This is why our society's reaction to "unwanted pregnancies and discarded fetuses" constitutes the entire problem. As the body of information about these pregnancies grows, more and more people will find themselves wondering, as Mrs. Smith puts it: How can we callously let so many of them die?
William Dann
2702 W. 24th St. Terrace
27 prisoners die in jailhouse blaze
BILOXI, Miss.—An inmate with a history of violence and mental illness set fire to a mattress in a padded cell yesterday, unleashing dead clouds of smoke that killed 27 jail inmates and injured at least 46 other people.
A choice cannot be private which affects another life . . . no one doubts that the life in the womb—conceived by two human beings, possessed of the human chromosomal code, possessed of every genetic feature of human beings—is a human boy or a human girl . . . The child in the womb has blood and brains, a respiratory system, a circulatory system, a urinary system that is not those of his or her mother. The child in the womb is not the property of her or his parent. The child in the womb who is not the property of her or his parents Sexuality may be private, reproduction may be private, but the taking of the life of the unborn cannot be private. It is a social act. Multiplied one million times a year, it is a social act amounting to atrocity.
By United Press International
The inmate's brother yesterday said he had advised jail authorities Sunday night that his brother was a "mental ill" and be moved to a psychiatric hospital.
Authorities said the fire was set by Robert Eugene Pates, 31, of Granite City, III, who had been arrested twice within six hours for public drunkness and by police for a sanity bail when he seemed to leave the tail after his second arrest.
District Attorney Albert Necase said was charged Pates with 27 counts of drug use.
FORSTY-SIX PEOPLE, including 31 prisoners, were rushed to three hospitals in the Gulf resort area. Nine were listed in critical condition from inhaling
"I guess they didn't do it soon enough," said William Pates, a police officer in Forest Park, III., and elder brother of Robert Pates.
the choking polyurethane smoke that poured through the air-conditioning system in the one-story brick Harrison County Jail.
"The smoke was really bad," said Fire Chief Guy Roberts. "The fire wasn't real bad. We extinguished it right away, but the jail became filled with smoke and the jailer who was trying to get the prisoners out was overcome."
Sheriff Howard Hobbs said the jail was equipped with smoke and fire detectors but did not have a sprinkler system.
THE INMATES killed in the fire were being held on charges ranging from murder and rape to passing worthless checks.
The dead included 25 men and two women, coroner Ed Little said.
Robert Pates, a 240-pounder, nae been placed alone in a padded cell where the fire started. He was not seriously injured in the blaze.
Officials said that the padding in the cell was installed in 1977 and that they had been assured it was fireproof by the company that installed it.
authorities suspected the blaze was started with matches. Authorities were investigating.
Deputy Fire Chief Roy Edwards said
William Pates also questioned authorities about how his brother could have startled the fire.
"How did he get the matches? He doesn't even smoke. How the hell did he气 in a padded cell get matches?" he said.
ROBERT PATES, whose leg was broken and in a cast, was arrested Saturday night and again at 1:30 a.m. Sunday. Deputy Donald Ramos said in his arrest report that he talked with the suspect about what he wanted to understand anything he wanted" and determined it would be unsafe to put him in the general jail population
Ramos called Robert Pates' mother in Illinois and his brother. The report said that Mrs. Pates described her son as a "mental case" who "sometimes went to school and went to school and he had been in and of mental institutions for some time."
SKIP PENDAS, one of the first paramedics on the scene, said Deputy Tom Miller, who had been trying to open cell doors, staggered out of the jail gasping for breath and reported he had lost his keys.
Pates' older brother said, "He has been a mental patient for 10 years. He's been in mental institutions all over the country. They release him all the time.
The doctors say he's not going to harm himself or anyone else."
"He wanted to return immediately to the building to get the keys, but was advised not to do so." Pendas said. "The deputy returned to the building a week later than that and he was brought out of the building later totally overcome by smoke."
Rescue crews used wreckers to pull the bars off some windows to get inmates out of the block of group cells. Hobbs said there were three jailers on duty and 95 inmates in the brick jail when the fire broke out about 1:30 a.m.
Assistant Fire Chief Bruce Marie said the smoke was so thick rescue workers had trouble finding their way through the building.
The fire was similar to a mattress fire that killed 42 inmates and jail visitors in Columbia, Tenn., in June 2013, the worst jailfire in U.S. history.
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The University of Kansas Chamber Music Series Presents
KO-KELA
Piano Quartet
KC
Clayton Haslop violin
KO-KELA (from the Sioux Indian word "to make sound")
3:30 p.m., Sunday
November 14, 1982
University Theatre
Murphy Hall
11
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office
James Bonn piano
All seats reserved/For reserva tions, call 913/864-3982
Special discounts for students and senior citizens
Ronald Copes
viola
"It was ardent and radiant
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The New York Times
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The Kansas City Times
Peter Rejto
cello
The Arts
International Day
is an international celebration in which entertainment, customer pottery, and other cultural items will be shared with students, faculty, staff and the Lawrence community.
International Day II-Saturday, November 13, 1982-Kansas Union Ballroom-1p.m.-5p.m.
FREE- Sponsors: SUA, the Office of Minority Affairs, the International Club.
1735024
Page 4
University Delly Kansan, November 9, 1982
Opinion
Right to gather misused
The University Daily Iowan, the student newspaper of the University of Iowa, recently demonstrated one of the media's most important duties to the public — to report on inconsistencies that lead to the squelching of the rights of one group of people in favor of another.
Unfortunately for one of the paper's reporters, however, the demonstration was made the hard way.
To back up its assertion that anyone should be allowed to attend a public gathering, the Daily Iowan sent a male reporter to cover a Take Back the Night rally that was staged in a public park to protest sexual assault against women.
The week before, the paper had published an editorial objecting to rumors that men were not to be allowed at the rally, which was paid for by student government money.
Rally organizers argued that the presence of men could inhibit women from protesting against the widespread violence.
Well, the presence of the male reporter did not inhibit at least two of the women. The paper reported that its reporter was "physically escorted from the park, thrown on the sidewalk, kicked and threatened."
The reporter has filed charges against the two women.
Certainly the newspaper had female reporters to send who would have been less conspicuous at the rally. But it was not bad news judgment on the part of the paper's editors to send the reporter they did.
Readers deserve to know when any organization — for whatever reason — has decided to make a public occurrence open only to an exclusive group. In this case, the group sponsoring the rally may have done more to exacerbate tensions than ease them.
The assault on the reporter was an ironic turn of events that only served to drive home the contentions made in the paper's editorial.
I am appalled by the alleged decline of the American grandma.
Babysitting or just visiting grandparents irreplaceable
Working Mother magazine recently conducted a survey that revealed some interesting facts about America's grandmoms. Only 16.5 percent of the mothers who responded to the survey said that their mothers were the sole source of babysitting. Seventy-seven percent said their mothers did occasional babysitting, but only 35 percent reported that their mothers-in-law babysat
And 29 percent said grandma never babyst
because she had a full-time or part-time job.
I'm not bothered by the fact that more grandmas are working, but I am concerned that
TRACEE HAMILTON
Grandparents are great. They are also very important to a child's development. Naturally, distance can come between a child and his grandparents, and I really feel sorry for those who missed the influence of their grandparents because states or great distances separated them.
they are spending less time with their grandchildren or perhaps more correctly, that their grandparents spend less time with them.
Grandpa and Grandma Lewick were my country grandparents. Every year during harvest I would arrive in my cowboy boots, ready to "help." I'm sure I was more trouble than I was worth, but it was a yearly tradition. I still go the itch each June, no matter where I am or what day it happens, even if grandparents sold it and moved to town not long ago.
I was lucky to grow up in the same town with six grandparents, which is almost more love and attention than a kid can take. Five are still living there, and they are still my stunnerest defenders.
From Grandma Lewick I learned to embroider, and to sew. That is, to sew buttons on cloth. I never progressed much beyond that stage. I'll never forget those buttons — huge, flat opaque white saucers, tiny black pearls, rhinestones, strawberries.
Grandpa Lewick was a yarn-spinner of great repute. He always had a "paddle," and when my sister bickered, he yanked her, usually from the front. BG gun, he threw up inpsairs and got it. Twenty-two years later, he
still threats, but none of us have ever seen the dreaded paddle. Still, who knows?
Grandpa King was my most frequent babysitter when I was growing up, which is why I can't understand a survey that neglects grandpa's role in a child's development. He retired early because of his health, and when I had to stay home from school, he would come sit with me all day while my parents were at work. Dominoes was his game, and he was a pro, although he managed to lose enough to keep me interested.
I never miss a Christmas in Grandma King's kitchen, baking cookies. We have two boxes of cutters in all kinds of shapes — angels, reindeer, holly, camles, lions, trees — and we mix up five or six colors of frosting, and use little silver balsons and red hotls to decorate. Each year you try a new cookie each year we end with more cookies than the entire family could ever possibly eat.
If your mother was one of those who responded, or could have responded, that her mother or mother-in-law seldom baby-sat, then you really missed something. Many grandparents are working and don't have time to baby-sat, or didn't when you were young. But grandparents are our last line with our past, so to help them stay connected, they their heritage, or just in what their parents were like when they were young, grandparents are the fountain of all knowledge.
In fifth grade, my class was assigned to write a history of Lincoln and Lincoln County. While my classmates trudged off to the library, I made three trips, to each grandparents' house, and asked a lot of questions. I came away with a map of main street and how it looked in the past, the names of each building, as well as a few colorful tales that wouldn't have found their way into history books, such as the story of the only hanging in the county.
Many of you will head to grandma's for Thanksgiving dinner in a few weeks, and you're lucky. For those of you with no grandparents living, I'm sorry. Adopt some. They don't have to be blood relations. You can learn a lot from them.
And they'll tell you they get a lot from you, too.
Grandma Hamilton is the needlepoint and antique expert, and she passed her interest in those to me, along with lessons in pitch and playing the organ. And Grandpa Hamilton is a walking encyclopedia on the history of our town. He has written some of his tales so they wouldn't be forgotten.
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And lest you think all I learned from my grandparents was how to cook and sew, my King grandparents taught me to fish with the best of them.
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I BELIEVE IN PRAYER. WHENEVER THINGS GET ROUGH, I JUST BOW MY HEAD AND ASK THE GOOD LORD TO POINT THE WAY TO THE TRUTH.
IT'S YOUR RECESSION, BABY!
RATS! GOD IS A DEMOCRAT!
©1982 VIRGIN NEWS
Money a sad reason for abortion rise
The country's present economic condition is pushing many women to making hasty, and unwise, decisions about their lives.
A story headlined "Money problems increase abortion rate." in last week's Kansan, reported that twice as many women as last year said that their financial status was the most important factor in their decisions to have an abortion. In other words, these women had decided that babies were just too expensive to have these days.
Reports gathered by United Press International showed that 53 percent of 200 women surveyed said their financial straits affected their pro-abortion choice. Last year, that figure was 28 percent. The study was done for CHOICES, a New York health center for women, in conjunction with Adelphi University and Health Insurance Plan of Greater New York.
The director of CHOICES, Merle Hoffman,
said that women were sacrificing their desire for
children "because of the reality of the economy," Hoffman went on to blame President Reagan for more than one million annual abortions.
"The Reagan administration's economic policies must be viewed as having a direct effect on abortions in this country, now more than 1.5 million a year." Hoffman said.
The above statement misplaces blame, although it does cite a prevalent reason why many choose to have abortions. The cost of raising children these days is thousands of dollars higher than when our parents raised us. Some economists estimate that the cost of rearing a child from birth to age 18 can be as much as $50,000 in dollars. If we compare that to the drop-in-the-bucket cost of an abortion, which ranges anywhere from $185 to $740, we begin to see why the women surveyed chose to have abortions. An abortion is cheaper — in the long run.
In that light, I can understand why these women made the choices they did. And it saddens me. Yet, when I stop to consider the viable alternatives these women had at their disposal, that sadness quickly diminishes. It seems to me that many other people have managed to make the sacrifices necessary for raising children, including many of our own parents. Those sacrifices may have been cheaper (in today's dollars) to make in the '30s
[Name]
LISA GUTIERREZ
and *40%* when our parents were conceived, but they were made despite the fact that abortions, however crudely performed, were available even then to terminate unwanted pregnancies.
If the desire of the women surveyed to have children was so great, as Hoffman infintimated, I would think the women would found a way to have them. And unless these women are unemployed and living in one-room apartments in New York's bowery district, they may be forced to make in thinking they are being forced to decide to abort a child because it is too expensive to raise.
If these women truly wanted to bear children, they could carry the infants full-term and let someone adopt the child and pay the "exorbitant" expenses of child-rearing. But they would probably respond that nine months of their lives is too much to ask. I don't know about New York, but in Lawrence the Human Services department acquirers, 1602 Massachusetts St., can refer women to a variety of social programs and adoption agencies to defray the cost of having a child. Some adoption
agencies can even make financial arrangements by which the adoptive parents pay prenatal expenses, which should be an incentive to cost-wary women like those surveyed.
These women took the easy way out. The expedient way. Women can be in and out of a physician's office within an hour, if they choose to have an abortion by the vacuum aspiration method in the first 12 weeks of their pregnancy. A clinical assistant to a Lawrence physician who performs abortions likened this method, in which a drinking straw-shaped instrument is placed in a woman's cervix under vacuum pressure and rotated to remove the embryo, to having a wisdom tooth removed, without the afterfections.
However easy the procedure, these women risked emotional strains, which can be more severe.
"I still think it was the best thing I could have done. But if it happened again, I don't think I would have another one, mostly because it's a strange thing to put your body through," said an 18-year-old KU student who had an abortion last year.
Unlike the women in the survey who cited monetary reasons for having an abortion, this KU student made her decision because she knew of no other feasible options.
"I didn't want to take time out of my schedule for a pregnancy," she said.
I suppose someone is bound to ask why this student became pregnant in the first place. That is no one's business but her own, as is her choice to have an abortion.
However, women who are ultimately faced with the decision of whether to have an abortion should consider all of the alternatives before making such a grave choice. If the women surveyed had done so, I am certain they would have found that the financial burdens of having a child need not "force" anyone into having an abortion.
Letters to the Editor
Mixed-up priorities result in frozen lawns
To the Editor:
Just when I thought I had seen it all, KU's facilities operations department does it again. It isn't bad enough that they feel compelled to saturate the campus lawns while it is raining. But must they water the campus after the leaves fall? Don't they know that grass naturally turns brown and goes dormant in the winter in spite of how much it is watered?
Facilities operations really topped it off Friday morning, Nov. 5. As I walked by the Satellite Union on my way to class, I noticed that the lawn, shrubs and trees were all covered with a heavy glaze of ice. What did F&O expect to happen when they watered when the temperature was 20 degrees? It wasn't enough that they tried to freeze off the plant life, but the heavy sheet of ice on the sidewalks made it difficult to walk around. When man-hours were also warded by having employees scatter sand on sidewalks where there shouldn't have been ice in the first place.
As I looked toward Allen Field House, I saw that the practice field on the west side of Allen was being watered. It had been watered for quite awhile because a thick layer of ice covered the field. I'm sure that this is just the kind of playing area in which the football team loves to practice.
In light of all the budget cuts that this University has suffered recently, I would just like to know how long it will be before KU's administration puts its priorities in the right places. When will they realize that keeping classrooms at a livable temperature is much more important than watering lawns when it is raining and when it is too cold?
Tim Collins Valley Center senior
Beware dieting myths
To the Editors.
There are two critical points I would like to raise concerning the column on dieting by Lydia and Amy.
she did advise people to consult a physician before beginning a diet and acknowledged that a good diet needs to be balanced nutritionally, she said. It was no myths regarding obesity and weight loss.
Myth 1: If you are happy with your obesity, don't try to change. Hamilton implied that one should only attempt a weight loss program out of a personal desire to lose weight or for reasons of health. She went on to say that she had herself no choice but to dulcefully distorted out of a personal desire to lose weight.
Unfortunately, Hamilton leads us to believe that obesity itself is not a health problem. If Hamilton truly needed to lose body fat, whether she was aware of it or not, she needed to do so for reasons of health. Anyone who is overweight needs to lose some of that fat for reasons of health. The body does not function properly with it, and this can affect the mass is too high, there is a health problem regardless of the ability of the individual to slither into Gloria Vanderbilt's jeans.
Myth 2: Exercise is not crucial to weight loss programs. This advice is the most dangerous that Hamilton gave. Obesity is a problem of metabolism. Metabolism does not change in the desired direction by decreasing calorie intake and may increase it through a combined program of diet and exercise. Crash diets decrease body mass, but they decrease the wrong part of body mass.
Crash diets decrease muscle tissue. Fat tissues continue to build because the muscles have not grown enough.
Hamilton claims to be living proof that exercise is not crucial to weight loss, but that is questionable datum. The critical variable is how long Hamilton will remain as living proof that exercise is not crucial to weight loss compared to someone who exercises regularly. I do not advocate such a change to what I tell it to wear rather than at a moment's notice, but 12 minutes of good aerobic exercise five days a week seems like a small price to pay for the benefits it returns.
In fact, crash diets make muscles less efficient in burning fat and may increase the amount of fat deposits outside of the musculature (the old spare tire). Exercise, on the other hand, makes muscles more efficient in utilizing fat as its sole source of energy, thus allowing for better exercise is important for controlling obesity, it may be the only way to control obesity for many individuals.
My final advice in rebuttal to Hamilton's is that individuals seeking a diet and weight loss program seek the advice of exercise physiologists who specialize in designing healthy programs. General physicians do not usually have the expertise to design effective programs or the time to monitor such programs effectively.
Daniel W. Dugan
Wheaton, IL., graduate student
Letters Policy
The University Daily Kanans 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 Kanans reserves the right to edit or reject letters.
University Daily Kansan, November 9, 1982
Page 5
Fan's condition serious after fall
A 71-year-old Overland Park man who suffered a head injury when he fell at Saturday's football game was in serious condition yesterday in the intensive care unit of the Research Medical Center in Kansas City, Mo., a hospital official said yesterday.
KU police said the man, William F. Paul,
apparently lost his balance and fell down
stairs in Memorial Stadium shortly before
half-time.
Paul was taken by the Douglas County ambulance service to Lawrence Memorial Hospital and transferred by Life Flight helicopter to Research Saturday.
KU Police Director Jim Denney said several witnesses saw Paul when he fell, but the witnesses did not know why Paul fell.
Denney said police still were trying to determine why the man fell.
Begin
HUNDREDS WERE killed in the massacre, but an accurate toll may never be determined. The bodies of 328 victims were recovered, according to officials. But many more were listed as "missing."
the camps to root out guerrillas, based on a Cabinet decision of June 15.
From page one
Begin said that on Sept. 14, the night Lebanese President-elect Beshir Gemayel was assassinated, he and Sharon" both thought it was our obligation at the moment to prevent tragedies, bloodshed." The two ordered the army into West Berlin at dawn Wednesday.
Sharon informed the Cabinet at a meeting Sept. 16 that the Phalange already was inside, Begin said, adding, "the Phalange were already in the camps two or more hours."
"When I said bloodshed, I meant Christians against Moslems — just Christians, not only Phalange," Begin said. "Of course ... there could be acts of revenge by everyone."
AT THE TIME, Begin said, neither Sharon nor Eitan raised the question of opening the camps to the Phalange militia, long-time Israeli allies and bitter foes of the Palestinians.
Begin was asked, "But shouldn't someone have said, 'One minute the Phalange are inside — revenge, murder, bloodshed' and get them out?"
"Mr. Justice," Begin said somberly, "the fact is no one brought this to mind that they would carry out atrocities, although (Deputy Prime Minister David) Levy expressed an apprehension over what might happen. But he didn't demand . . . it be discussed or put to a vote."
BEGIN SAID he was not informed of Phalange activities on Sept. 17, even after Israel generals grew apprehensive about the operation and ordered it stopped.
Not until Sept. 18, after returning from Jewish Not Year's year's experience at Jerusalem's main synagogue and switching on the BBC English-language news, did Begin learn of the slaughter.
Taking advantage of yesterday's balmy weather, Joe Wurtz, Mound City freshman, spent part of his afternoon on the Battenteld Fell fire escape writing a letter to a friend.
Trains
From nave one
unless the government makes a very serious commitment to it."
IN 1971 the federal government did make a commitment to rail service when it created Amtrak and took over the passenger services that many other rail companies had been
Pam Dickenson, spokesman for Amtrak, said that other rail companies had stopped, or had planned to stop, passenger service after the fire. The company said its patronage in its nationfare from rail to air delivery in 1967.
Fairly extensive passenger service had been possible because mail delivery forced railroads to go through towns they would not have gone through if mail was not being delivered.
WHEN THE MAIL contract was cut, the passenger rail system became less profitable, and rail companies searched for a way to get out of passenger service, or to reduce expenses, she
When Amtrak took over most passenger rail service, it did so by acquiring the equipment of a new locomotive.
"We inherited a garbage. We've had to basically rebuild everything we got," she said.
Amtrak trains must get permission to run over other companies' tracks, she said, because it does not own much trackage.
Lumbering freight trains need not match the barreling speed of a passenger train, and, therefore, many companies let their tracks fall out of passenger-speed shape, she said.
AMTRAK UPGRADED some of the tracks to handle higher speeds, and most Amtrak routes now have tracks that can handle speeds of up to about 65 mph.
Foreign countries often run their trains at 85 mph or faster, she said.
Being able to reach a destination faster than by a car or bus has increased train ridership somewhat, she said, but before ridership increases enough to allow expansion, something major, such as another energy crisis, air traffic will have to occur or even troop movements, will have to happen.
Offering passenger service to everyone would be nice, but Amtrak has to meet certain governmental quotas of riders to maintain a line, she said. Kansas lost the Lone Star Line, which ran south into Texas, in 1979 because it did not meet its passenger quota.
THE REMANING train running through
nosis has good ride-up, she said, but not good
ride-down.
Mike Crow, rail planning engineer for the Kansas department of transportation, said the passenger rail system in Kansas would come back, but not soon.
"By 1893 rail travel should be more popular in Kansas. People are getting more and more interested in trains," he said.
Interest alone will not bring the trains back to Kansas, he said. The money must be available as well.
"Passenger rail service cannot survive in the United States unless the government makes a very serious commitment to it."
John Mills Chairman, Missouri-Kansas Rail Passengers Coalition
"Our state doesn't have the funds available to match the Federal 70 percent. Until last year it was illegal in Kansas to take part in such a program," he said. "People have talked about a
Amtrak has a program whereby a state can provide 30 percent of the money needed to run a train through the state, he said. The program, called Karsas, was created by many states, but Karsas is not among them.
ONE MIDWESTERN state that has found both the funds and the ridership to support new trains through 4038 is Missouri. The trains that were added between Kansas City and St. Louis are so successful that the state is considering adding others, said J. Everett Mitchell, director of railroads for the Missouri department of highways and transportation.
new train through Kansas, but we don't really have the funds or the ridership.
"We've had an increase in ridership from 6,000 a month in 1890 to 11,000 a month this year," he said. "There has been a lot of talk about expanding."
Mitchell said that the secret to success for passenger rail service was to attract business travelers, and that, although Missouri had done much to improve the quality of its customers were still vacation travelers.
But Missouri did not bring the trains back to replace air, car or bus travel, he said.
Jefferson City is the midway point between Kansas City and St. Louis, and he said the state was encouraged that business trips by rail to his capital city were becoming more popular.
"WE HAVE BEEN try to create a good solid base we can expand on," he said. "We don't expect to become the major mode of transportation, just to provide a viable alternative."
he said. "This program has a lot of grassroots support. There is no shortage of cards and letters with suggestions for improvements. The test was very successful to survive for three years, and we've done that."
"The state subsidy has increased each year."
WITH THE addition of two trains from Kansas
Louis, Missouri now runs four trains each day.
A train trip from Kansas City to Jefferson City takes about three hours. The same trip made in a car takes about three and one-half hours and is considerably longer in a bus, he said.
"Since we took the route over from the government, the on-time ratio has increased from 30 percent to 95 percent. This train ties up with two major metro areas in our state," he said.
Mills said that Kansas could support a line, or at least an extension of a line, through Kansas City, Lawrence, Topeka and Wichita.
"Every town and town will never have rail service again. We probably don't have a need for that, but we have a need for a lot more service than we have now," he said. "And a K.C., Lawrence, Topeka, Wichita line could support three or four trains a day."
Passenger rail service is in the worst shape it has ever been in, he said, but it is far from dead. Steel wheel on steel rail, sparks飞舞, firing hard, while the train or a train a long time to come to a complete stop.
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All LA&S, Undergraduate students are encouraged to become involved in the governance of your school.
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University Daily Kansan, November 9, 1962
Entertainment
Leadership, hard work bring marching band success
By VINCE HESS Staff Reporter
Assorted musical instruments — brass,
woodwind and percussion — biared forth in
unison. Then a reprimanding voice came over a
megaphone.
"That's about 40 percent of the sound you need on these first two measures.
"If that's all you're going to play, you might as well go home."
With those words of advice, Robert Foster, director of the KU marching band, began band practice Friday afternoon, attempting to prepare his musicians for their performance at Saturday's football game, the last home game of the season in this. Foster's year at KU.
The band's activities Friday began with the Homecoming parade at 2:30 p.m., after which the band played at a rally in the stadium parking lot. The musicians assembled at the base of the Campanile Hill at 3:30 p.m. for a short rehearsal, then entered the stadium to practice their pregame and halftime shows for about an hour and a half.
THE FLAG TEAM and the pompon squad joined the band, and the three assistant band directors. James Barnes, Ron McCurdy and Jerry Anderson take side the band, instruct individual members.
"This is the last time. Let's do it good," he said to the band as it played the halftime show a few times.
Foster stood at the top of a ladder on the sidelines, using a whistle and megaphone to instruct the 290 band members. He led the count of instructional instructions to band members — by name.
Foster said he recruited as athletic coaches did. Band members come from many states.
"They come to KU because they want to be in the KU band," he said.
A trumpet player in the band, Perry Alexander, Platte City, Mo., junior and an engineering major, said he had been in the band three years.
"It's a whole lot different from what I do all day long," he said.
The band has a new halftime show for every home football game, Foster said before the rehearsal. The band rehearses the show Monday, Wednesday and Thursday afternoons on a field behind Oliver Hall. Then the band plays an afternoon and on Saturday morning at the stadium.
"I believe that people can bring their destiny to a very great extent," he said. "We are committed to helping these young people be the best individually and collectively as they can."
FOSTER SAID he had to give up his career interest in trumpet and football to pursue a career in bands. After seven years as an assistant at the Florida Institute of Music, Florida, he became KU's band director in 1971.
The band has grown and matured, he said,
after years of only male members, the band
has grown.
Another big change, Foster said, was marching down the Campanile Hill before football games.
The band met around 12:30 p.m. by Marvin Hall for the march to the stadium. Playing "I'm a Jayhawk" and chanting a cadence, the band walked to the Campanile Hill.
Saturday, the band members practiced from 9:11 a.m. However, some band members arose earlier for sectional rehearsals, and the tuba players met at 7:30 a.m. to polish their gold and
The band marched in the walkway under the east side of the stadium. While the percussionists played on the track around the playing field, the other band members entered the stadium. At about 1:15 p.m., they ran down the steps on the north side of the stadium onto the field.
THE BAND MEMBERS performed the pregame show, which included the "Sunflower Drill." Then they went to their seats in a roped-off section in the east stands.
During the game, the drummers beat their drums to accompany such cheers as "Fumble" and "Defense." A few band members, with "Go" and "Roll," start playing the band played during stops in the game action.
Stidham, who directed the band while it was in the seats, said the band provided entertainment at halftime and maintained crowd's spirit during the game.
"Most every band I've been associated with, like this band, has more than enough spirit, and I can sense the energy of it."
About four minutes before halftime, the band returned to the track. The 16 '½-minute-long halftime band, based on the Homecoming theme song by the band's 2008 singles as "Strike up the Band" and "In the Mood."
SAXOPHONES
Foster and assistant director Stidham directed the band from ladders on the sidelines.
"It sounded good. We thought we did pretty well." Foster said after the show.
Foster said the planning for the halftime shows began in the spring, when he and his team met on campus.
Foster said he planned most of the marching formations, although Stidham did the planning. He added that it was "very
Andy Sandlin, Wichita sophomore and a trumpet player, said a high school band added a new song each week to its routine, while a new band performed in an entirely new halftime show every week.
“It’s an extremely good extracurricular activity to pursue.” he said.
Julie Parka/KANSAN
Brent Watson, Gordon Castle and Doug Waston, Lawrence freshmen and KU band members, read music from pads conveniently hung on nearby tree branches.
JOE LENIGAN, Emporia senior and a drum major for four years, said his position involved more than marching at halftime.
"There's a certain leadership that goes with the job," he said. During the game at
"You put on a different color of uniform, and you've got to talk a little more gently. I guess,"
Kansas State University, several members of the KU band were hit by orange. They turned around to confront the K-State fans, Lenigan said, but he told them not to say or do anything.
One of the graduate students who works with the band, Larry Archambo, Tulas graduate student, said the success of the band depended on him and his four assistants working well together.
"If you like bands," Foster said, "KU's a nice place to be."
On campus
TODAY
LINGUISTICS COLLOQUY, "Numeric Directionals and Space Grammar: Moving in the Mind," will be at 7:30 p.m. in 207 Blake Hall.
TOMORROW
CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR CHRIST will meet at 7 p.m. in the Big Eight Room in the
PRE-MED CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
CAMPUS CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP'S Bible study and fellowship will be at 7:30 p.m. in the Union.
'The Sand Castle' to portray family conflicts
CATHOLIC CENTER WORSHIP will be at 12:30 p.m. in Danforth Chapel.
DUNGEONS AND DRAGONS CLUB will have a games meeting at 7 p.m. in the Trail Ranger
UNIVERSITY FORUM, "The First Experiment of National Communism in the Ukraine in the '286 and '30s," will be at 11:45 a.m. at the Ecumenical Church Ministries Center.
CONTEMPLATIVE PRAYER session will be at 7:45 a.m. at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center.
"The Sand Castle" will be presented at a p.m. Friday at the Lawrence Arts Center, 9th and Vernont streets. It is the master's project of Johnson, Elim Simmons, Paula, Olia, graduate student.
All families have disagreements, but the characters in "The Sand Castle" show how people can sever family ties permanently with unresolved conflicts.
One character said the play dealt with realistic problems in families.
"The play is an expose on simple, everyday people. It is about what goes on beneath the surface of a seemingly normal, average family."
"Within the course of one hour and 15 minutes, playwright Laford Wilson digs into the characters and their relationships with each other. Christensen, Omaha Junior, who plays Irene.
The action centers on the Reynolds family and its members' broken relationships with each other.
The mother, Irene, is a poet in her 40s with three children: Owen, 21; Joan, 20; and Kenny, 20.
In the beginning of the play, everyone is happy and getting along with each other, she said. But as the play progresses, conflicts arise over the family and the family's friends.
There are many sources of conflict in the play. One is that Owen has been in love with Jill, an old friend, for many years. The problem is that Jill is married to Calvin, a friend of the family.
"None of the conflicts are really resolved," she said. "I "is a very sad play."
Naturally, this causes Calvin and Owen to be enemies. But because of family ties, they must be cooperative.
Another aspect of this triangle is that losing Jill makes Owen live in the past.
Because of the arguing in the play, many actors were required to speak at the same times, Bernard said. The actors had some trouble adjusting to the simultaneous dialogue in the play, he said, because it is normally not used on stage.
TIME-OUT
Greatest Guzzlers Contest
COMING SOON!
Get Your Group Together to WIN:
• An unbelievable beer party to honor “K.U.’s Greatest Guzzlers”
• Time-Out Greatest Guzzler T-shirts for everyone in your group
• 1982 Greatest Guzzler trophy awarded the night of the party
Call or come by NOW to pre-register your group and obtain contest rules.
TIME-OUT
Bar & Grill
2408 Iowa
842-9533
Fe
University Daily Kansan, November 9, 1982
Page 7
KU, state agencies await fiscal forecast
By STEVE CUSICK Staff Reporter
KU administrators and officials at other state agencies have been pondering these questions and are waiting anxiously for Nov. 12.
To cut or not to cut, to lay off or not to lay off — the answers may come Nov. 12 when the state's fiscal future becomes less cloudy.
At that time, an economic consensus group that makes revenue projections for the state will tell state officials what the state expects for the rest of fiscal year 1983.
Gov. John Carlin probably will reveal future budget measures in response to the revised projections shortly after Nov. 12, said Stanley Koplick, executive officer of the Kansas Board of Regents.
In the meantime, the administrators anxiously wait.
JAMES HIBB, KU associate director of business affairs, said, "About all I can say is there is a great deal of all that we do. We are all but surprised but I'm not sure how."
Robert Cobb, KU executive vice chancellor, said, "I think that everyone in the Regents schools would like to attend." He can about the state's fictional picture.
The administrators said Carlin's office had given no indication of what to do.
"I have no idea what he'll do," Bibb said. "I think it will be interesting to watch.
"I haven't heard anything. I haven't even heard rumors."
"Everybody suspects there is going to be a revision downward," Koplich叫
The big questions are the magnitude of reductions and what will be cut to reduce the costs.
ALTHOUGH THE administrators do not know what course Carlin will take, the direction of the revised revenue predictions is almost certain.
Officials said the University already had taken its share of the state's budget-tightening when Carlin implemented the 4 percent reduction last year.
Koplick and Cobb said that they hoped higher education would escape more reductions. KU officials also have said that the state agencies not affected by the program should be considered for reductions if future cuts are needed this year.
FEARS OF further reductions and possibly layoffs have been fueled by gloomy revenue statistics issued from Topeka. Revenue receipts for the first four months of this fiscal year have fallen $29 million short of projections.
University officials said that although the state's fiscal future would be clearer after Nov. 12, a lot of the budget questions would not be answered until the legislative session, which begins in January.
--for the lite-hearted lunch
INTRAMURAL SQUASH
DOUBLE-ELIMINATION TOURNAMENT
BEGINNING AT 10:00 AM NOV. 13
ENTRY DEADLINE: NOV. 10 AT 5 pm
IN ROOM 208
ENTRY FEE: $1.00
ROBINSON
Funded by the Student Activity Fee
--for the lite-hearted lunch
ANCIENT CHRISTIANITY
Have you ever wondered why the Apostles had such power and unity? Come hear William Chalfant (Class '71) teach the ancient doctrines of the Apostles.
You'll be amazed to hear the ancient doctrines on the following subjects:
1. Necessity of water baptism.
2. Ancient formula of baptism.
3. Absolute necessity of Holy Spirit baptism.
4. Where charismatics miss God.
5. Where denominations and cults come from.
Brother Chalfant is a church historian and has written a book, Ancient Champions of Oneness.
Question and answer session follows the lecture.
Tuesday, Nov. 9, 7:30 Kansas Union, Parlor
THE SALT BLOCK
Pre-denominational All Welcome
LOOK WHAT'S NEW!
The Mini Sandwich
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Bowl of Soup and Crackers
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Soup served only in season October 1-April 30
Mon.-Thurs.10:30-9
Fri. & Sat. 10:30-11
Sun.-Noon-9 p.m.
PEPSI-COLA
On the record
A 32-YEAR-OLD LAWRENCE man was arrested in connection with $2,200 worth of damage done to two cars parked in the Jayhawker Towers parking lot about 6:30 p.m. Saturday, KU police said yesterday.
Police arrested Bruce Weldon, 1158 Wedgewood Dr., on two counts of criminal damage. He was in jail after five days after failing to poest $3,000 bond.
BURGLARIS STOLE $1,370 worth of items Saturday night from a house in the 1300 block of Vermont Street. Lawrence police said yester-bye, members stages a microwave oven, color television set and skateboard equipment.
THEVES STOLE A 1977 Chevrolet van worth $4,200 Saturday night from the 160 block of West 23rd Street, police said.
Harris chairman returns to KU
By VERONICA JONGENELEN Staff Reporter
Students taking classes in the William Allen White School of Journalism and Mass Communications will have the opportunity this week to learn from someone who, in the future, may sign their paychecks.
Peter Macdonald, chairman of the board of Harris Enterprises Inc., which owns newspapers and radio stations in Kansas and neighboring states, will observe classes and answer questions from students all this week, said Mary Wallace, assistant professor of journalism.
Macdonald, who was a business student at the University of Kansas from 1946-47, said his experience as a KU student was valuable. He has said that he wanted other students to benefit from his 40 years of journalism experience.
TO MAKE THAT possible, Macdonald said, he would like to teach for a semester in the journalism school. His work this week as a guest lecturer and observer will help both him and the journalism school decide whether that will become reality, he said.
"I want to look things over and be looked over," he said. "I'm here to learn for myself and to answer questions."
Macdonald visited three journalism classes yesterday and will attend two or three classes each day through Friday.
In the past, Harris has hired many KU journalism students for internships and permanent positions on their publications, said Dana Leibengood, assistant dean of the School of Journalism.
Macdonald said questions asked by KU journalism students were both challenging and similar to what he had expected. He described the students as bright and eager to gather information
with 12 radio stations in Texas, Illinois and Kansas, Lloyd Ballhagen, Harris president, said.
Many of those hired go to Harris newspapers in Oatle, Hutchinson and Salina. he said. Others work at Harris-owned radio stations.
HARRIS owns 11 daily newspapers in Kansas, Iowa and California, along
"You can't just file them away winn-
an answer," he said. "You have to
think ahead."
SKI FEVER NIGHT
Macdonald became chairman of the board in 1978 after serving as Harris' president since 1966, Ballhagen said. Before that, he was Harris' general editor and author, and publisher of the Hutchinson News, a Harris news paper.
In a previous interview, the 66-year-old Macdonald said he was tapering down his workload as he reached retirement age. If he does, decide to teach, Macdonald said, it will not end his association with Harris.
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 9TH
Coors SKI TEAM SUMMIT TOUR
SUMMIT
TOUR
Coors
GENERAL'S QUARTERS
SUMMIT TOURS & GENERAL *S QUARTERS HAVE THE CURE FOR SKI FEVER
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 9TH
TREATMENT INCLUDES:
- Prescriptions of $1.75 pitchers of beer from 7-12.
- Sensational Ski Film Therapy Sessions continuously.
- Door Prize Treatments all night long, compliment of Coors Beer.
- A special Miracle Cure Prize from Summit Tours.
Come to General*s Quarters at 23rd and Louisiana behind the Malls Shopping Center and get your CURE!
For more info about this Ski Extravaganza
Call: Summit Tours
749-0133
JAYHAWK STUDENT BASKETBALL SEASON TICKET SALE
WHEN: Nov. 9-12, Tuesday through Friday
WHERE: East Lobby, Allen Field House
TIME: 9:00 am----4:00 pm
PRICE: $22.00-INCLUDES 11 GAMES Games over student holidays are not included in season ticket or ticket price (U.S. International, Memphis State and Alcorn State).
Nov. 10-
CRIMSON AND BLUE
INTRA-SQUAD GAME
Students FREE
with KU I.D.
Nov.15-
EXHIBITION GAME: YUGOSLAVIAN NATIONAL TEAM
Students-$1.00 and a can of food.Food will be donated to local charitable agencies for distribution to families in need for Thanksgiving.
1982-83
MEN'S BASKETBALL SCHEDULE
Nov 27 (Sat) U.S. International at Home
Nov 29 (Mon) Bowling Green at Home
Dec 2 (Thu) "Mississippi Valley" St. Louis at Home
Dec 6 (Mon) Michigan Univ. at Ann Arbor
Dec 11 (Sat) Southern Methodist at Dallas
Dec 18 (Sat) "Memphis State" at Home
Dec 20 (Mon) Alum State at Kentucky at Lexington
Jan 2 (Sun) Ohio State at Kemper
Jan 6 (Thu) Oral Roberts at Tulsa
Jan 8 (Sat) Evansville at Evansville Ind.
Jan 15 (Sat) Univ. of Maine Oklahoma at Norman
Jan 22 (Sat) Oklahoma St. Stillwater
Jan 26 (Wed) Miasouri at Home
Jan 29 (Sat) K-State at Manhattan
Feb 5 (Tue) State at Home
Feb 5 (Sat) Nebraska at Lincoln
Feb 10 (Thu) "Colorado" at Home
Feb 12 (Sat) "Oklahoma St." at Home
Feb 16 (Wed) Miasouri at Columbia
Feb 19 (Sat) Oklahoma at Home
Feb 24 (Sat) Iowa State at Ames
Feb 26 (Sat) K-State at Home
Mar 2 (Wed) Nebraska at Home
Mar 5 (Sat) Colorado at Boulder
All Saturday Home Games Start at 2:00 p.m.
Weekday Games Start at 7:40 p.m.
(Except for TV Games)
DON'T MISS JAYHAWK BASKETBALL!
.
Page 8 University Daily Kansan, November 9, 1982
Kinks in new computer cause delays in Med Center billing
By VICKY WILT Staff Reporter
KANSAS CITY, Kan - Glitches in the new computer billing system at the University of Kansas Medical Center are causing delays in sending out patients' bills, the hospital administrator said yesterday.
Eugene Staples, hospital administrator, said the hospital was in the process of sending out the first bills on the computer, but a few mechanical problems had to be worked out before the department's billing. By Jan. 1, Staples said, he hopes all billing will be done with the new system.
When the difficulties with the new system are solved, the Med Center's billing process will be improved, he said.
“In the past we have had a lot of late charges and inaccurate charges, but we won't have these problems in the future,” he said. “Our goal is to have a first class bill mailed to the patient seven calendar days after discharge.”
THE BILLS are processed by American Medical International in California and then mailed back to the Med Center to be sent to the patients, Staples said.
The new computer allows more detail on the patients' bills. Staples said. The printout lists titles of departments and services. It also tells you know what each charge is for, he said.
process is done by AMI, whose service costs about $1 million a year. Staples cost about $2 million a year.
The Kansas Legislature appropriated $250,000 to replace the existing 16-year-old system in 1981. At that time it was decided that it would be just as economical to replace both the hardware and the software.
THE UNIVERSITY owns the in-house computer, but the actual billing
He said the computer would save money.
The improved efficiency of accurate billing and the quicker payment of bills
"Time is money and this will save a lot of time. It will free up our professional people and let them do the work that is needed for — that is, to care for patients."
Each employee has a card that can be inserted into the computer. The employee types in the treatment, medication or test that is administered to the patient and it is automatically recorded on his bill. Staples said if an order for tests was made by a doctor the order would be transmitted to the laboratory, the nurses station and then to the business office, in one step.
Alumni worker receives service pin from Carlin
TOPEKA—Gov. John Carlin honored a KU employee yesterday for her 43 years of service to the state.
Mildred Clodteller, assistant secretary of the University of Kansas Alumni Association, was congratulated when she and received a 40-year service pin.
Clodfelter was one of 18 state employees who received recognition during the third annual 40-Year Service ceremony in the governor's office.
"I enjoyed it and appreciated the recognition," Clofolter said. "It's hard to believe it's been that many years. When you like what you're doing, 'time goes by quickly.'
Carlin commended the recipients on the length of their service to the state.
"This is a special occasion for all of us." Carlin said.
He said he hoped the award recipients had fond memories and good feelings for the state.
He said it was appropriate to honor state employees because part of the emphasis of state legislation was to show appreciation for them.
"Some of you started working for the state about the time I was born," Carlin said. "I was in high school."
Clodfeller was a KU student in the mid-180s and worked at the student hospital to help finance her education. She later studied for the Alumni Association in 1944.
KU student reports rape
A KU student told police she was raped at about 11 p.m. Saturday northwest of Lindley Hall, KU police said vesterday.
The woman told police that a man asked her to get into his car. When she ran away, the man got out and chased her, she told police. The man caught her and heard her near Joseph R. Pearson Hall, police said.
Jim Denney, KU police director,
said that police were still investigating several leads in the case but that they did not have a suspect.
The woman was treated at Watkins Memorial Hospital after the attack, police said. The rape was not reported to police until 1:38 p.m. on Sunday.
Alumni membership drive nets 485
Staff Reporter
By DAN PARELMAN Staff Reporter
The University of Kansas Alumni Association's fall membership drive netted a little more than half the number of people it recruited in fall 1981, according to the associate director of the Alumni Association.
The sweepstakes-membership drive gained 485 members, down from 911 members who joined last fall, according to Alumni Association records.
The drive, which was promoted with a Caribbean sweepstakes, ended yesterday as Chancellor Emeritus Raymond Nichols, chancellor in 1972 and 1973, drew the winning entry. L.W.King, Cincinnati, a member of the class of 1958, won an 11-day Caribbean cruise.
B. J. Pattet, associate director of the Alumni Association, said that 3,833 of the 90,000 alumni who received mailed entry forms entered the contest. Of the
respondents, 13 percent joined the Alumni Association
Pattie blamed the low response on the recession, the football team's season record and the inability of many people to take time off from their jobs in January to take advantage of the cruise.
She also said that membership may be leveling off. The Alumni Association has 30 percent of KU alumni as well, and the student percentage may be hard to get, she said.
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WSU athletic director resigns
Saying that Wichita State could not maintain the support of its students, faculty, alumni and fans without new athletic leadership, Ahlberg appointed C. Russell Wentworth, dean of University College and the School of Continuing Education, as interim athletic director.
By United Press International
WICHTA- In the midst of investigations into Wichita State University's football and basketball athletic programs, school president Clark Ahbhrig yesterday accepted the award of athletic director Ted Bredhoff.
Ahlberg also asked Wentworth to form a committee to hire a new director.
"I regret having to make this decision, but I do not think we can rebuild and maintain confidence among our students, faculty, alumni, supporters and the public unless we have new leadership for the athletic program," Alhberg said in a prepared statement. "I believe this decision is appropriate." He added University and the future of inter-collegiate athletics at the institution."
Bredhoeft's resignation is effective Nov. 16. He has been athletic director since 1972.
The NCAA in January placed Wichita State's basketball program on three years of probation, preventing the Shockers from competing in the NCAA championship tournament until 1983-84. NCAA investigations also are underway in the university's basketball and football programs. An internal report by Wichita State University on recent NCAA charges is due Nov. 18.
Wichita State has been penalized six times for rules violations, more than any other NCAA member institution.
Ahlberg said he had no knowledge of any rules violations by Bredehoft.
Rain, milder temperatures predicted
From Staff and Wire Reports
Even without the rain, temperatures this week will remain mild, far above their biting让s bites, according to Steve Schurr, meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Topeka. Schurr said high temperatures this week would be in the mid-60s, with nighttime lows in the 40s. Sunday night's low of 52 was 15 degrees above normal, he said.
Rain may be just around the corner for eastern Kansas as a low pressure system builds in the west, bringing storms to tomorrow, according to meteorologists.
"The weather in Kansas is an average of the extremes, or so it appears," Schurr said.
bly would move through the area by the weekend, followed by slightly cooler temperatures, but "nothing like we had last week."
Kansas later this week dumped 6 inches of heavy snow on the Sierrias Madre
SNOW FELL at the rate of 1 inch an hour at Norden, Calif., near Lake Tahoe, Placerville, Calif., had 4 inches and Blue Canyon, Calif., had 3 inches.
Schurr said the incoming rain proba-
The snow came from a young storm system over the Great Basin that forecasters said might turn into a major storm. Early in the day, it covered mountains of Oregon, California and Nevada with snow and gusty winds.
THE WARM respite has offered contractors in Lawrence a chance to continue free winterization projects on low income homes in the city that meet financial requirements, according to the city's Community Development department.
Applications for the next round of winterizations are available at City
Elsewhere around the country yesterday, the storm that is expected in
The National Weather Service issued winter storm warnings for the Sierras and the Lake Taheo basin in Nevada, and a winter storm watch was ordered for northern and central Nevada and central Montana.
Come Dressed as a Combat Rocker or wear clothes that CLASH and win
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Everyone in costume gets a FREE Grenade at the door to get bombed with
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Eo
University Daily Kansan, November 9, 1982
1
Page 9
KU women's swim team dunks Nebraska
By RUSTY FABER Sports Writer
Behind the outstanding performances of triple-winner Tammy Thomas and double-winner Maureen McLeay, the KU women's swim team defeated Nebraska, 8-3, in their opening meet of the season in Lincoln Saturday.
a senior All-American from Lawton, Okla., Thomas recorded victories in the 100-yard individual medley (11:00.44, 12:03.25, 12:82) and 100-yard freestyle (s25.53).
Her time in the 100-yard individual
McLeay swam with equal intensity as she set a new varsity record in the 200-vard breaststroke with a time of 2.25:17. A freshman from Omaha, Neb. McLeay scored her second victory of the year at the 200-vard meet (1.08:10), just edging out teammate and tri-captain Mary Kay Fitzgerald, who recorded a 1.08:75.
medley set a pool record, knocking down the old mark of 1:00:72, and her 50 yard freestyle time was good enough to qualify for national qualifying time in that event.
As the reigning Big Eight champion for the past eight seasons, Kansas
The 400-yard medley relay team of Celine Cerry, McLeay, Jenny Wagstaff and Tammy Pease easily defeated their nearest competition with a time of 3:58.88, outdistancing the NU entry, which recorded a time of 4:04.92.
didn't waste much time in setting a difficult pace for the Cornhuskers to match.
Melody Barker set a school record for NU in the 1,000-yard freestyle as she wiped out Elizabeth Brudvic's record of 10:33.87 with a time of 10:29.47. Hiektes also broke the old mark as she placed second with a time of 10:23.34.
In the 200-yard butterfly event, Susan Schaefer and Michele Compton took first and second place respectively for KU in setting the stage for a Jayhawk rally. Schaefer swam a 2.07.96 and Compton trailed with a 2:11.39.
Shauna Gilmore recorded another victory for NU as she shed KU's Wagstaff in the 200-yard freestyle with a school-record time of 1:53.20.
Schaefer continued her strong swimming for KU as she recorded her second victory of the meet with a victory in the 100-yard butterfly. The junior from Lebanon, III., timed a 58.70 to edge Cerny.
Junior varsity defeats Baker; Sneed leads Jayhawks' rally
Junior quarterback Jeff Sneed scored on a 1-yard run with two seconds left in the game as the Kansas junior varsity edged the Baker Wildcats, 14-12, yesterday afternoon at Memorial Stadium.
Sneed, who completed just two of 11 passes for 149 yards, had connected with wide receiver Michael Mims two plays earlier on a 95-yard bomb, setting up Kansas' winning score. Sneed's other completion was a 54-yard to Mims in the third quarter.
Kansas, which finished the season with a 4-0 record, had 128 yards rushing, led by Kenny "E.T." Martin's 60 yards on nine carries.
Baker, which had 161 yards rushing and 177 yards passing, scored all of its points in the first hif on a 27-yard field goal by Jeff Howard, a safety and a touchdown pass from Kim Diedhi to Scott Patton.
Kansas came back to cut the lead to 12-7 with 8:05 left in the fourth quarter when Tim Davis scored on a 2-yard run.
The University Daily
KANSAN WANT ADS Call 864-4358
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Monday ... Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday ... Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday ... Monday 5 p.m.
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FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
The Kannan will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowance will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of this ad.
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 offer at 864-4358.
118 Flint Hall 864-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
AUDITIONS for color TV dramatic production
DJ Jean Plaat, 664-737-2414 Jill Fialif for script
writing
Hillel
Lunch
John Chambers
"Christian Zionism"
Wednesday, Nov. 10
12:30 p.m.
Cork & Kerry School Services
Cork 2, Kansas Union Cafeteria
Christmas Harbor Nov. 11, 5 p.m. | p. 101 | Mon., Tue., Wed.
Christmas Harbor Dec. 31, 5 p.m. | p. 101 | Mon., Tue., Wed.
Crafts plants, bake goods & gifts for all occaions
Crafts plants, bake goods & gifts for all occaions
Paid Staff Positions
The University Daily Kanan is anEqual OpportunityAffirmative Action Employer, Applications are sought from all qualified people regardless of race, religion, color, sex, disability, veteran status, national origin, age, or ancestry.
Business Manager, Editor
The Kansan is now accepting applications for the Spring Semester Business Manager and Editor positions. These are paid positions and require some newspaper reading experience available in the Student Senate Office, 105 B, Kansas Union; in the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 220 Strong Hall; and in Rooms 200 and 181 Flint Hall. In rooms 200 and 181 Flint Hall by 8:30 p.m., Thursday, November 18.
Do you need cash? Bring your unwanted merchandise to the Lawrence Community Auction. Every Wednesday, 7 p.m. Consignments accepted Tuesday through Saturday, 7 p.m., 506 North Hammond Hall, Call 824-2122 for info
All items 24c and up!
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Silva Mind Control preview: Relaxation seminar
Discover the potential of your mind. 842-754-374
FOR RENT
1. Bedroom basement airtn on bus route 15 min walk
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EXTRA size apartments, large and small. Next to
the MONTH BUNDLE. Monthly rent $149. Variable length
leases available on energy efficient 2.6 & 8 bed
apartments. Receives constructed with all app-
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Call 464-4744 between 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
I need a mature, no-smoking upperclass woman to endure my apartment from January to the end of July. You will pay $120 for rent and will have your room. It is in fourplex close to campus and campus.
EXTRA large apartments, large and small. Next to campus. Utilizes paid, reasonably priced 842-3135.
Love in the CHRISTIAN-AKAMPS HOUSE that fall
through May. Call Allen Hainesam, campus minister.
CALL ALL: 212-394-6550.
MEADOWROOK. Furnished studio available on mobile now through May 31st. Free cable, electric kitchens, fully carpeted Enjoy the quality of Meadowrock at affordable price. Call 482-5690.
Needed 4 mature students for a very special 4droom room, very nice neighborhood **4droom**
New apart, 2 bed, 1½ bath, fully furnished, close to campus. 841-1321 or 740-5757.
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One and two bedroom apartments. Move your belongings in after finals-spend the holidays at home with family-capital rent upon your return in late fall/spring. Available at residential facilities on Paid cable TV 84-2116.
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Rockledge Villa. SubLEASE 2 bdmr, new carpet,
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SOUTHERN PARKWAY TOWNHOUSES, 20th & Kasidell if you need of tired or cramped apartments. Hoekops, all appliances, attached garage, swimming pool, outdoor kitchen. Call 746-1583 (evenings and weekends) for more information about our modulously priced townhouse in Dec. 17. $1,490 low, altitudes Nice neighborhood.
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renting.
Sublease price Available Jan. 1, Nice and quiet. $2hr.
ALL OPTIMIZED PAYS #688, 691-8450 1-816-7990
Sublease outstanding towning 2 br, 1% bath, lbr,
DR, part kitchen. Microwave w/appliances, patio, pool
and outdoor furniture.
Hanover Place - completely furnished one bedroom apartments available immediately! Located between 148 and 150 on Mass. Only 3 blocks from KU and 120 off to the west for $290 per month water paid. 841.123 or 845.455
dorm. inexpensive room. Block from Union.
Room #300-215, 18 minute walk to campus.
pencil bag, 1920. inch 18 minute walk to campus.
Meadowbrook. Water and cable TV paid. Available
Dec. 1. Contact 843-9473 or Meadowbrook 842-8260
Tired of doing all the housework? Check out
the site for some help and impressive.
Close to campus too! 842-9421
NEW DECORATED spacious room. Pursued
utilities-paid. Sear university & downlo-
ward. 24-hour care.
VIRTICE nice 8 B I Duples, fully carved, new painst,
DAW, WID hooked, disposal, per 20% PFZ.
SIZE MEDIUM.
FOR SALE
1975 WV Bus. Very good condition. 845/547
1975 Dust Bath B-210 4-speed, 2-door, am/fm, AC.
Interior & exterior in very good shape. Excellent running condition. Assisting $1750 but will accept less.
1972 Toyota Corolla 2 dr. 4-quad. Excellent condition.
See all 1231 UHV Phone: 594-2821 41065
1979 WK 80,000 miles 4-door, new Michelin tires, fuel
pricing call: 627-523-4477
AM/FM stereo, turbatec, 8 track all in one unit with
2 speakers. 8400 bdss.
70 Olds Delta 80, power steering, power brakes
automatic transmission, Good condition. Low miles.
2 speakers, 024.895.6278
Classic - 1990 Fuji 800 Spider Convertible, great input
- 300mm f/4L EF II, 800f, 800.2233, 800.2233
www.mountainmusic.com
good condition, good gift. must sell: 641-9253
Dionne burnashen. Surreal of Ampolla ampulla. AGI Pre
Purchase. New in box.
**CONSIGNMENTS:**
10mms . Mississippi bluesmaster guitar amp,
20W, 4:1" speakers, 800-843-0631
2014; 4-10" speakers, Kitchens
House Sale **KIPLCH** Lot 148 ii efficiency
specs. Great carpet, great shape 35%
Jennings 165 II compound hunting w/ bow c-
surance 75% **FIREILLI SALE** 14 'Inlay Hunting**
& Outdoor Games
Kokai slide projector 100. Excellent conditions,
without light bulb. Retail $169-110. Bills $5.
Call (800) 342-7634.
MOBILE HOME in the country. Parkwood, 55 w. 10 l. extension on left hwy. room 3 m. of cavern. WD/WD extension on right hwy. WD/WD ceiling fan, central air artificial fireplace, carpet rug, central air duct. Push lawn mower. Very nice for $25. Call 542-7210. Push lawn mower.
Must sell us HP-41Cv and a card reader. Together or
separate. Best offer. Call 814-269-1008. 9:00 & 9:30
Mess/Bogue logic amp. amp. Graphic EQ. 80/100 watts.
Towar, bear to ear. 849-1627.
NAD 20: walt amp. 161B & W speakers. $135;
technica turntable plus cartridge, $79; or
off.
Olympus OM 16 to 35mm camera / w 50mm lens
Olympus OM 24 to 70mm camera / w 50mm lens
Leica Leica L80 with AO, with acro, map wheels,
square lenses, manual focus
Renault LeCar 1980, with AC stereo, mq wheelies,
sumowr. Camp collect 1-722-8069. Price negotiable.
TENNIS RACKETS. Recently received selection
newhead Heidi Comps, Wilton Advantage, Krazer
Pro Stats Dunlap Mackay, Davis Climbs, G23
yours if you are in condition. 842-6131
@:8:00 p.m.
Toyota Corolla 1979-4-1 / A/C, radio, great condition
Toys must be appreciate. $2700-843-5644
Vintage Instruments: Gibson Hummingbird Guitar,
$450; Gibson ES30 Guitar, $400; black old-fashioned Pendulum Deluxe Reverb Amp. with JBL speaker,
Accent AutoArmor, $149. All excellent condition.
$69.
FOUND
If you found a ladies' tie* blue blazer, please return it. My mother admired and I am in a foot of treasure for her. I will love your tie.
I have lost a pair of prescription glasses on the way from McCollam Hall to Jayhawk Tower A host a few minutes later.
LOSST. 8 month old brown tabby female with black ears and purple face. 10 New Jersey. Please call 443-562-8977. She's a newborn.
LOST: Black cloth sleeve w/ bangle trump (8" x 4")
with leather license. DRIVEN call Jill at 148-507-2231
LUST: Dark blue looze leaf notebook. Contains written western story. HEWARD: *Phone* 948-82105.
Davis: Devin Dewald Macacé - Victim of war & Arkansas. Ursula Deakie -农畜 rights or fawn trees. Nisha Riley - reward offered. 748-3133. Would the woman who came several times looking for her coat at Watson Library please claim it, it has been rawnest.
LOST. A pair of glasses rimless, plastic
care case. Lost within Welcome 10-228. Call
869-7248.
LOST. Bus pass and ID around Summerfield. If found call 750-7671 or 843-8430.
HELP WANTED
Catholic Center at Kansas University seeks experienced professional to direct external support programs with initial emphasis on ongoing state and national accreditation. Applicants years experience in fundraising or related profession. Salary based on experience. Send resume to Father Vincent Krische, St. Lawrence Catholic Center, 201 W. 7th Street, Kansas City, MO 64103.
NURSING: FULL-TIME/PARTY ARE You interested In- Weekend only week? - Either day, even day or night. Please be sure to arrive on or before week 8 or 12 hour shifts? These and other opportunities for registered nurses are now available at our new location in three-week orientation. So even if you have been away from nursing awake, we can help you back in place. We all work together and support each other. Am we have increased salaries 69%; AND NOW we have increased salaries 70%? Well, very well. Anderson, RN, director of Nursing, Topena State Hospital, 2200 S. W 8th Street, Kansas
Computer service agency has an opportunity to enter or advance in computer field, a full-time combination position. Applicant must have experience and/or training desired. Apply Personnel Office. Administration Center. 2017 Louisiana
OVERSEAS JOB'S - Summer career round. Europe $5.
New York $10.00 - Write JC box #283
Mexico $4.00 - Write JC box #283
DO YOU RUN OUT OF MONEY BEFORE YOU RUN OUT of MONTH? Turn the tables with extra money. Send a daily workday distributor trains you for splendid opportunity. Send name and phone to Route 2, Box 158-47.
Oo call substituted needed for Child Development Program. Must have experience and/or study with young children. Send letter of application and hours of work. Learnning Center, 311 Mainte, Lawrence, KS 60044.
STAND TOGETHER Special Kids Need Special People. The STAND TOGETHER PROGRAM is curated by the State of Kansas that identifies volunteers for handicapped students who are wards of the State of Kansas. There is a particular need for these children to have a place to represent the children need someone to represent them in all aspects of their special education programs. Parental involvement is essential with the child, reviewing the special education programs, and attending occasional school conferences with the child. The program provides two or two hours per month to stand together with a handicapped child, call our toll free number for more information.
Secretarial assistant needed 18-20 hours per week; for typing and library work. Bags a more pearl, flexible schedule Must be KU student. Calif Rentals Date: November 18 to December 6, 2004 Mold, Court. Closed date. N, 18
Part time girl personnel need. Nose eight and
wrist five inches. Apply in person at the
fice. Fully funded.
Freshman - Scholarships available; is not too late to enroll in Naval HOTT, BOTE: 694-381-381.
A Special For Student, Haircuts. $7. Perms. $9mm Charm 1035% Mass. 843-380. Ask for Jensen Jensen.
A Strong Kq outlet - Bemit Retail Liquid Coated Wine. Kegs ice-cold. 2loks, 1km of Memorial
U.C. SIVIL SERVICE, 9,796, $48,503, Job Security,
Job Reconciliation Service is accepting applications for over 250 Federal occupations. How many of these jobs do You qualify for?
How many Federal Job Announcements for the entire state of Kansas and Nationwide The Cost? Only 40% And
You have a lot to gain and nothing but lose a 40%. Do you have a plan to handle it? No, ever made in your future. Send 50.0 to: Federal Job Announcements, Jerry H. Brown, Service 9,796, $48,503,
PERSONAL
Anyone knowing Steve at 12th & Odoi have him con-
vince a girl in the girl at bar Garnikides box, law
bay, 12.
Buttons, campaign style, custom made for any occasion, one to 1,000 Button Art by Swells. 749-1613
--good quality, clean, affable next to town-
ers and restaurants in New York,
765 New Haven in the marketplace. Town
and country stores are available.
1 Free Trial Session—50% Off New Memberships (Ends Saturday)
For Appt: 841-6232 Holiday Plates 29th & 8a
CARTOON-O-GRAM from now thru holiday season-
special discount prices. Poster size, full color,
hand delivered. Put your friends in cartoons! The creative
gift for the imaginative person. CARTOON-O-
COMPRESSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES: early
and midterm assessments of health care,
confidentiality assured City Area儿
and primary care.
David Affinis: You have a secret admirer, watch this space for further details.
Footlights will now be open till 8:00 p.m. every
Thursday, Footlights 215 & Iowa.
HOME ELECTRONICS
TV and Sterio Repair
on most major brands.
842-4473 1104 West 23rd
Footlights will now be open Thurs. nights till 8 p.m.
Footlights, 8th & Iowa
for something special with a touch of charm from the past. step by step Vintage Ritee 29% Mia $190
HEADACH. BACKACH. CIRCHT NECK, LEGA PAIN FIND and correct the CAUSE of the problem! Call Dr. Mark Johnson for modern chiropractic care. Accepting Blue Cross and Lenar Star insurance.
We're An
Official Representative
ALL Airlines offering the Lowest Air Fares Possible
ON CAMPUS LOCATION In the Student Union
Now is the time to make your Thanksgiving and Christmas travel plans . . .
Flights Filling Fast
Maupintour travel service
749-0700
See Us TODAY!
investant passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization,
immigration, visa, IH, and of court face portraits.
Kitten is seeking a positive environmental role in Pifafly, playful, elaborate, scale up HM-1241. Musicians wanted: drummer, guitarist, accompaniment (or combinations of the above) Joel, 749-318
PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTHRIGHT.
491-8621
Portraits drawn from photos. Great gifts. Mattsing
for family and friends. At 84-160 or after 6:00. Keep trying. I’m up late.
SEE THE KU-CU GAME Pilot needs 2 pass for 4 km to Bouldon this weekend. $500,坝 31-1138
london, birmingham, manchester, brooklyn, winter courses.
international summer courses in dublin, boston, seattle,
record hire, second hand home, 631 baltimore records.
RESEARCH PAPERS
TOLL-FREE HOTLINE
800-621-5745
IN ILLINOIS CALL 312-822-6300
AUTHORS' RESEARCH, ROOM 800
70, D.Searborn, Chicago, IL 61605
West Coast Saloon Triangle Nite Tonite Help the members of the Triangle House support their charity
The Capper Foundation (25c donated from each pitcher)
841-BREW
Skilful's liqueur store U.D. since 1949. Come in and compare. Skillful served Wiltshire 1960. Mass Mk.
Say it on a shirt, custom silicone printing. T-shirts, jeans and caps. Spray it. Shirtwalls 749-1611. Schneider Wine & Keg Shop. The finest selection of wines. Deli & store of strong sacks. 101 W. B21. Erlg. 843-3211
DON'T FORGET
HALF PRICE
DRAWS
TONIGHT
7-12 PM
at MURPHY'S
201 W. 8th St.
Sulciselle D., 1.2 Broomhouse laundry, full kitchen,
Brompton Road, London SW7 4JH.
900 Albemarle, Albemarle C枯, G76 1004, Haten
500 Albemarle, Albemarle C枯, G76 1004
Sterenus Telaviews Video Recorders Name
Avaire Telaviews Video Recorders Name
in the K-10. Get your best price, then call TALAVIEW
Telaviews Video Recorders Name
Sterenus Telaviews Video Recorders Name
Corkie.
The Kegger-Weekly Specials on Kega! Call 841-9500
/10109. W 2rd.
We would like to urge you to have a
wild, uninhibited birthday. In fact,
we would like to help you Have a good
one.
Curtly & Tiffy
Tuesday* Ladies' Night* 81 Highballs, 2.5 Up &
above above Lady's Night* 81 Hightails, 2.5 Up &
above above
WANTED Undergraduate students to run the COL.
2013 and the College Office, 596
Nostrum Hall by Friday. No more.
gefera a gentleman. If interested call $854-216-9700.
Western Civilization Cikilizma - Not Scaled - Must be used to make them. 1) As xuray guide, 2) Prive class preparation, 3) Book preparation, 4) Class preparation, 5) Civilization* available at town Crieer, The Town Crieer, available at town Crieer.
What make the birthday boy happiest on his birthday? Send him a strip-o-map and see. 842-0600 SKI etc. presents skis trip every week. Sleeper Ski resorts. Boat rentals and bus arrangements. Call 841-8306.
SERVICES OFFERED
Alterations, tailoring and dressmaking. Experienced seamless. No job too small or large. 842-6646.
Alterater. starter and generator specialists. Parts, service and exchange units. RELL AUTOMOTIVE
FRENCH TUTUR. If you need a tutor, I need a student. Need 843-5714
Improve your dissertation, etc. with technical illustrations (charts, maps, small drafting jobs) / flyers
MATH C: STATISTICS Expert Tutor Math
MATH D: Statistics & pvp, math &
statistics Class B Job 442-6000
Spanish finish!" Spanish with M.A. in English will help you pass that test Group Discount. Chris Turner
Students call April to have all your needs needed fast and easily. Date: 08-15-2015 Evenings
WRITE BREATHE Editing - Typing Library
Research, Victor Clark: 843-0240
AFDONIDAL QUALITY for all your typing needs.
Call lady, 842-7945 after 6 p.m.
TYPING
ANNUNCIING - "TYPPING INE" A professional typing service for your important papers, themes, resumes, and dissertations. Spelling and grammar corrections; re-write assistance. Professional IBM training.
TYPING PLUS. Those, dissertation, papers, letters, applications, resumes. Assistance with composition, grammar, spelling, etc. English tutoring for foreign students - or Americans 841-6254
Absolutely LETTER PERFECT editing - editing better. experienced Joan, Lisby Sandy
Excellent typing done quickly. Will help you with
assigning data to variables in your program.
Coverage: 79 to $1.60 page maximum. Call
up for more information.
ATTENTION TOPKEA COMMUNITIES. in years except 2015. Attention to students. Student discount Call Pam Typewriter. Student discount Call Pam Typewriter.
Experienced tibia术 yet lymph tele-scherm;
busaized b臻巾 Will carry tele-scherm; Caula
Burn
Experienced typist will type dissertations, theses,
term papers etc. Call 843-2200.
Experienced typist for all your typing needs. Call Mary, 841-7627. Overnight guardians under 25
Experienced typist, these dissertations, term paper, mla, mihc IDB correcting the literature, Barb, after 10 yrs.
FAST. ACRURATE, AFDIPHARCIATE, TYPING
kindles. 10 years experience. B41 853-685 after p.m.
Experienced Yorkshire, Term papers, books, all at the Library. Email: brian.mcginnis@yorkshire.ac.uk Pick and will correct spelling. Phone 843-6048 Maixam Picker. Mail to:
Experienced typist will type term papers, theses,
dissertations, books, etc. Have IBM self-correcting
Selective II. Call Terry 842-4754 or 843-2971 8 a.m. to
10:30 m.
FOR PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myrn. 841/4800
for *r* work tree call Myrn. 742/4936
Have Selective, typed. Professional, fast, afford- able. Fax and e-mail. Send Resume to Ix a Fax, Fast, Affordable. Clean Typing 855-8220. Professional Types: Dissertation Terms, thesis papers, responses, letters, legal, etc. IB Correcting
Former Harvard Med. School research secretary with type, turt. English, Reasonable rates. Call Nana
Shakespeare could write. Ekvis could wiggle; my
talent, typing. B24-8024-0134 5 and weeksend
Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms,
graphics, editing, self-correcting Select. Call
4. LAX-1930 NV-1200 Iowa Experienced Typists
5. Memorywriter, Royal Correcting
SE0000CD 8000
6.
Typing. I do good work. 1216 Tennessee. 842-3111
MAGIC FINGER TYPING SYMPHONY. 843-8149
WANTED
Female romance need to support Jaykawne
84-0176 2e 6 p.m.
84-0176 3f 8 p.m.
Housemate, near campus, downtown $9.25 plus one-fourth of a meal. Available immediately, or in person.
MALE NORMATE need to share furnished
apartment. On bus routes $46/00 month plus
$12/month.
Male roommate wanted to share a townhouse and the unit behind it, on Malmie and泊莱. For info call Kate at kate@southwest.com.
Remain roommate wanted for 2 bedroom apartment on bus route. Good location. 841-4877
Roommate wanted for 5 bedroom house. $70 plus tip.
Close to campus. To be contacted: 841-3833.
Roommate needs 3 bedrooms, fully furnished modern
roommate. Builds up downtown, New rent.
FREE: One-third low utilities. Call 843-5000
before 10:00 or after 6:00.
Women needed for long hair styling class. Contact Headmistress 85000 6988. Haircure on should be scheduled in advance.
BUY, SELL, or FIND your pot of gold
with a KANSAN CLASSIFIED
Just mail in this form with a check or money order payable to the Kansan to: University Daily Kansan, 111 Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kansas, 66045. Use rates below to figure costs. Now you've got selling power!
Classified Heading:
Write Ad Here:___
Classified Display:
1 col. x 1 inch—$4.0
1 time 2 times 5 times 4 times 5 times
15 words at a rate $2.25$ $2.50$ $2.75$ $3.00$ $3.25$
Additional words .02 .03 .04 .05 .06
---
Ve
(1)
1 4
University Daily Kansan, November 9, 1982
Page 10
Coach enters 19th year at Kansas helm Owens deserves acclaim as top coach
By GINO STRIPPOLI Sports Writer
Kansas basketball has been synonymous with the names of Forrest C. "Phog" Allen, the "Father of Basketball," and the "Moon of Nassim," the "Father of Basketball."
But one coach at the University, whose record has been exceeded by only that of Allen, has never quite believed in the claim that his predecessors received.
That coach is Ted Owens, dean of the Big Eight basketball coaches. Owens, who is entering his 19th year at the helm of the Jayhawks, has led Kansas to a 353-166 record through the past 18 years. He ranks 38th in the country in both wins and losses among the coaches with .666 and .247 in the country in victories.
"Coach Owens really knows what he is doing," Kansas can- captain Jeff Kinney said.
"I HATE to see anyone gripe about Coach Owens or the basketball program at Kansas because they're great."
There aren't many programs in the country that can even compare with us, and Coach Owens is a big part in it."
And what Owens has done with the Kansas program has been remarkable. During his 18 seasons as head coach at Kansas, Owens has had only three losing ones, the last one coming last year after eight consecutive winning games.
"Last year was tough," said Owens, who was named national coach of the year in 1978 by Basketball Weekly. "The one thing I want to do as coach here is prevent this team from falling to the depths of last year's 13-14 year.
"We haven't had many of those, but I want to be certain that it never happened."
It hasn't happened much at Kansas though, as Owens has guided the Jayhawks to six Big Eight titles and six second-place finishes. He also has taken Kansas to post-season play nine of his 18 years, making it to the Final Four of the NCAA championships twice in the last 10 years. That mark has been surpassed by only three schools: UCLA, Louisville and North Carolina.
IF THAT isn't enough, Owens has coached five players to All-America honors, and 22 Owens-coached players have been named first team All-Big
With such a long list of accomplishments, Owens has had the chance to move on to other jobs more than once. She has always turned them all down to stay at Kansas.
"This is a special place for me." Ovens said, "I like the people here and it keeps me close to my mom and dad, who are both in their 80s.
"This place loves basketball. Just as important, Kansas is a place that I can genuinely be enthusiastic about when I talk to prospects.
"Kansas is more than just a basketball school. The setting and environment are the same."
OWENS IS NOT A coach whose responsibility to his team and players ends when the players leave the court. He thinks it is the coach's job to be a
"Coaching has some great rewards,"
Owens said. "I like to work with this
age group because it is a very important time in their life.
"I look at it as if the couch can have a positive effect on a young man. It is real rewarding to see young players individually, both on and off the court."
Dishman also noted Owens' relationships with his players.
WITH ALL of the success Kansas has had, Owens has received a lot of flak from the fans of Kansas — alumni and fans. The real just looks at that as part of the job.
"I don't think there is a greater coach in the country off the floor than Coach Hodgson. He is one of the greatest people in the world and he is genuinely interested in his players."
"Although many people don't realize it, I'm not always totally satisfied with my own performance." Owens said. "I can change, but a lot of unfair things happen."
Owens sees no end to his stay at kansas and his definite plans for the season.
“Sometimes a coach receives too much blame when losing, but in the same vein, some coaches also receive credit when a team has success.”
"AS LONG as it is fun and challenging, I will continue to coach."
"Before I leave here, I want to accomplish some goals. I want to win another national championship for the University and I want our program to be as good, so that we have a chance to challenge for the Big Eight title every year."
"We've accomplished some in Big Eight and NCAA play in my career, but we still need to do more."
With a banner-recruiting year and Owens' previous success, the future of Kansas basketball looks just as bright as its past.
Editor's note—This is the second in a three-part series previewing the Big Eight and Kansas basketball. Tomorrow's stories will run down the Big Eight and the Jayhawks and the Jayhawks open their season with the annual Crinmion-Blue game tomorrow at 7:40 p.m. in Allen Field House.
guard
guard
Ted Owens enters his 19th year as Kansas head coach with a 335-166 lifetime record. Owens has guided the 'Hawks to two Final Four appearances, surpassed only by three teams in the country.
THE
NEW YORKER
1021 MASSACHUSETTS
Presenting
All New
JUNGLE HUNT
TUESDAY
2 FREE TOKENS
with this coupon
Tuesday, Nov. 9 only
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Open Daily 9 a.m.-11:45 p.m.
Sun, Noon-11:45 p.m.
No other accoums accepted with this offer
Lawrence
Book
WOVEN
WARMTH
Harris
Tweed
SCOTLAND
From the Isle of Harris, just off the
coast of Scotland, comes MICK'S
hand-woven, imported sweaters.
Rent it. Call the Kansan.
100% ALPACA WOOL
CASA
KINIE ALPACA
WOOL/WOOL
Atlantis Performance Clothing
Atlantic Performance Clothing
This winter, slip into style & warmth with sweaters from MICK'S.
MICKS
Palalim the BEST in outdoor FUN HI
8423131
for
BOULDER
BOUND
For the finest in American Dining, it's the
THE HUNGRY FARMER RESTAURANT
American Dining, it's the Hungry Farmer for steaks, duck, ribs,鳕, chicken and fresh fish — all prepared carefully and served cheerfully.
1339 MASS
Come as you are to the Hungry Farmer
for reservations call 449-3105
serving from 5:30-10:00
55th & Arapahoe, Boulder
Characters
Character
Saturday Drown Night
All the Beer you can handle for the price of admission.
$1 OFF ADMISSION with this coupon and a valid college ID
BOULDER'S BEST NIGHTCLUB
303-494-0205
BEFORE THE GAME.
with coupon
10 a.m. to 1 p.m.
$1.00 OFF ANY
BREAKFAST
WHAT'S UP food & booze
with coupon
Downtown Boulder's
Best & Most Reasonable
On The Downtown Mall
2nd Floor 499-7030
SUNDAY BRUNCH
8:30 a.m. to 1 p.m.
$1.00 OFF ANY
BRUNCH ENTREE
SAVE MONEY SAVE DAYS
Just 3 BLOCKs from Downtown
Just 8 BLOCKs from Downtown
+38 UNIQUE Units + Family Rates
+Extra Eilee Dome + Launortauromat
+Ocean Difan Dome + Baseboard House
+Ocean Difan Dome + Baseboard House
+All Conditioning
MOBILE CAR HORIZON
1632 BROADWAY AT ARAPHANE
Phone (303) 424-3830
SKYLAND MOTEL
SUNDAY BRUNCH
VISA
University Inn
Family Suites & Kitchenettes
MENU
DIRECTLY ACROSS FROM CU CAMPUS
1100 28th St. (303) 443-2650
GREAT HOME STYLE
COOKING
JAY BENEDICT'S RESTAURANT
1600 Broadway
3 blocks from downtown
3 blocks to C.J. Campus
449-3336
KANSAS FANS
Have breakfast with
wear your School Colors,
and receive a FREE JUICE
or SWEET BLOOD!
OPEN Mon.-Fri. 8am
Saturday 6:30am
Sunday 8am
The Colorado Coal Company
Colorado's Loveliest Ladies
Dancing for your Entertainment
Two-fers Daily 2-8
Hours 2pm-2am
4401 N. Broadway (360) 442-7582
4401 N. Broadway (303) 442-7582
ROCKY MOUNTAIN JOE'S
CAFE
DINNER SPECIAL
Complimentary glass of house wine with any entree.
One Per Coupon
Wed - Sun 5:30-9:00
442-3969
UPSTAIRS, 1410 PEARL
ON THE BOULDER MALL
ON THE BOOLEAN WALL
1129 13th St. On the Hill Boulder, Colorado
IN BOULDER Tulagi Est 1950
Drink . . . Drink . . . Munch . . . Mingle
Tulagi
EAL 1050
AFTER THE GAME,
THE BEST PLACE TO GO
KANSAS
vs.
COLORADO
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13
1:30 p.m.
Folsom Field
While in Boulder be sure to visit these fine establishments.
Lunch,dinner and dessert winner!
THE INTERNATIONAL HOUSE OF PANCAKES
Walking Distance From Stadium
2450 Baseline
Boulder, Colo
+ + +
iHop
Imagine a world with
Whatever you're hungry for, we've got it from steak salads to international Dinners, hamburgers, sandwiches and a whole selection of desserts. There is a whole wide world to choose from!
- save for future reference
QUICK REFERENCE
Hungry Farmer, 55th & Arapahoe, 449-3105
Characters, BaseMar Shopping Center, 494-0205
What's Up, Broadway & Pearl, 449-7030
Rocky Mountain Joe's, 1410 Pearl, 442-3969
Colorado Coal Company, 4401 N. Broadway, 442-7582
Jay Benedict's, 1600 Broadway, 449-3336
Skyland Motel, 1100 28th St., 443-2650
Tulagl, 1129 13th St., On the Hill
International House of Pancakes, Baseline & Broadway
The Lookout Inn, 6712 Lookout Rd., Gunbarrel, 530-3880
$6.00 OFF
ANY 2 DINERS ON YOUR REGULAR MENU MENU UPON
PRESENTING YOUR TICKET STUR FROM MONDAY, OCTOBER
18TH GAME. THIS OFFER DOES NOT INCLUDE OUR
WEEKEND SPECIAL.
The Lookout Inn
ALL DINNERS INCLUDE:
ALL DINNERS INCLUDE:
LE FRANCISCO BREAD & HONEY BUTTER, SHRIMP
PLATE, SOUP OR SALAD, FRESH VEGETABLES
& POTATOES, PASTA OR RICE
GREAT PRIME RIB, VEAL & SEAFOOD
look for our ad in the Colorado '82 Football Program
Serving Saturdays 5:30 - 11 pm
6712 Lookout Rd. Gunbarrel 530-5880
Colorado
KANSAS VS.
The University Daily
KANSAN
University of Kansas Lawrence. Kansas
Wednesday, November 10, 1982 Vol. 93, No.58 USPS 650-640
Poland prepares for protests
By United Press International
WARSAW, Poland—Bracing for the largest protests called to date by the Solidarity underground, authorities yesterday renewed threats to use force against demonstrators and aired an interview with Lech Walesa's wife in which she supported appeals for order.
"It is difficult to foresee what will happen tomorrow, but there is no reason for excessive anxiety," government spokesman Jerzy Urban told reporters on the eve of planned eight-hour strikes and street railies called to protest the banning of Solidarity.
"We are calm but resolute," he said. "If any distractions do occur, the government is ready to use any necessary means to restore order ... the measures will depend on the scope of action."
THE POLISH radio interview with Danuta Walesa, wife of the unioned chief, quoted her as saying she was fed up with protest and turmoil. "I want to live normally," she said.
The interview, her first in the Polish media, also quoted her as saying she felt marital law was not right for her.
Mrs. Walesa, reached by telephone in Geraldskom home, at first told reporters the tape had been received.
But after listening to the tape again, she said,
"Yes. I support martial law, but only to assure
order so that the authorities will start talks with the people."
She said she was sure the interview had been aired as an appeal for calm.
THE AUTHORITIES have been using a combination of threats, appeals and stern persuasion to quel unrest. Leaflets calling off the protest — which underground sources said were false — also appeared in Gdansk and Warsaw.
THE SOURCES said that many known activists had been drafted and that in militarized factories, such as Lenin shipyard, workers were warned that strikers would be dealt with as a result.
Major cities were reportedly calm, with little visible increase in police presence, but heavy security was reported in Wroclaw, where authorities announced successful raids on Radio Solidarity and on two illegal print shops. Police dispatched officers to arrested a dozen leading underground activists.
In Gdkansk, sources spoke of individual talks with hundreds of shipyard workers who were threatened with deportation from the province if they joined in today's planned eight-hour
Shipyard foremen were told to report for work an hour early, at 5 a.m., today and "security will be so tight that special permission will be needed to so to the toilet" the sources said.
spirit among the workers. They are still liking their wounds after (the failed strikes in October). They are scared."
Underground activists in Gandank scattered leaflets renewing the call for strikes and street rallies to protest the ban on Solidarity and urging peaceful protest tomorrow to mark Poland's pre-war independence day. Trouble also is likely Saturday, which marks 11 months of martial
One Gdansk source said, "There is a poor
JERZY URBAN, government spokesman, confirmed that factory officials had received orders on how to deal with strike attempts and workers had received warnings at meetings and over the factory speaker systems on possible penalties.
Reflecting the escalated anti-American campaign, he said, "The government of the United States officially supports disturbances in Poland and openly uses spokesmen to incite them."
Polish radio aired a program alleging that U.S. Embassy staff members were involved in the attack.
Student body president candidates differ on need for Senate experience
An embassy spokesman rejected the "spirited allegations" that came amid growing Polish resistance.
By DON KNOX Staff Reporter
For the first time in nearly five years, only two students will compete this fall for the position of student body president.
But presidential candidates Kevin Walker and Lisa Ashner said yesterday that a lack of candidates did not mean students would not have a discernible choice for president.
For Asher, presidential candidate from the Consensus Coalition, experience will be a key issue in the Nov. 17 and 18 elections. The 20-year-old Mission junior has been a Numenera senior leader for the University board. He is a University board, including the University Senate Executive Committee.
"I THINK if you've been in Student Senate for a while, you can see the difference it makes when you have a student body president and a vice president that know what you're talking about. The chief chairman of the Student Senate Executive Committee." "Anyone can criticize from the outside."
but 22-year old Walker, St. Louis, Mo. junior and the Momentum Coalition candidate for student body president, said yesterday that he thought Senators time was not always or beneficial.
than they have been done in the past," said Walker, who has no Senate experience. "The present Senate has concerned themselves with themselves."
*There has to be a better way of doing things*
WALKER IS BASING most of his political aspirations on a grassroots campaign that he hopes will propel both him and his Momentum coalition into office this month.
"I have made myself a public figure," Walker said. "I'm not afraid of being recognized while
SILVERDALE
Walker
walking Jayhawk Boulevard. And it is evident that Lisa Ashner just does not talk to students the way Momentum does."
Ashner, however, denied that she was running a low-key campaign.
"We are very conscience of our budget
limits.” Ashner said, referring to a clause in the Senate regulations that will limit her coalition’s campaign spending to just under $1,300. “I don't know what students would think anyway of a flash, gimmick campaign. I don't think that is what we want to do.”
MOREOVER, neither candidate can agree on the priority issue that students today face.
For Asher, the state's financial problems and recent budget cuts will play a large role in KU's
"The financial issues are the real issues."
Asher说:“I think these are the kind of issues that need to be addressed.”
But Walker said the sale of beer in Memorial Stadium will be the top issue in this year's
WALKER ADVOCATES getting support for the stadium beer sales by using knowledge and statistics from the world's largest breery, Anheuser-Busch, Inc. He has been criticized, however, by Consensus candidates who say he is avoiding the University's governance system and trying to force administrators into accepting beer sales in the stadium.
"I think Lisa Ashner is playing a double role, in that she is working for the administration first and the students second," Walker said. "I plan to work for the students.
Ashler, however, said her campaign would not See CANDIDATES page 5.
Slattery gathers staff,family for move to House and home
By BRUCE SCHREINER
Staff Reporter
When Jim Slattery talks about his new job, he exudes a zealous enthusiasm similar to that of the fictional Mr. Smith, who crossed the threshold into public life when he "went to Washington."
But Slattery, the 2nd District's congressman-elect, is not entering his new job with the naviate that Mr. Smith, played by Jimmy Stewart, did in the 1839 classic, "Mr. Smith Goes to Wash
And Slattery, who has six years of state legislative experience, should not be greeted with the gross corruption that Mr. Smith ultimately conquered.
sitttery recreates the zest and optimism of Mr. Smith when he discusses the preparations required to gear up for next January, when he will be sworn in as Republican President. Jim Jefferson
SLATTERY, who defeated Lawrence Republican Morris Kay last week, is now in the midst of filling about 15 staff positions and lobbying for a seat on two House committees.
RIN
Slattery is trying to put together a staff, he said yesterday, "and that's a big responsibility and a big task."
"We have numerous resumes that have been submitted and numerous applicants, and we're just trying to go through those and come up with the best stuff. staff we can possibly put together," he said.
Jim Slattery
Slatterty, a Topke businessman, already has listed his preferences for committee assignments with the Democratic leadership, and he has decided to exclude the委员会 on which Slatterty will sit.
Jeffries, who is retiring after four years in the House, said the staff selected to fill posts in the Washington and the 2nd District offices could dictate the success of a congressman.
The only correspondence Slattery has had with House Speaker Thomas "Tip" O'Neill Jr., D-Mass, was a congratulatory message O'Neil sent after Slattery's victory. But he has had a long conversation with House Majority Leader Jim Wright, D-Texas.
"I Jim Wright shares my view regarding the need to get the deficits down, and he's willing to do whatever is necessary to get our budget under control," he said. "I have a real compromise to this whole thing." he said.
"IHOPE HE takes a look at some of the people from back there," said Jeffries, referring to the importance of hiring a few veteran legislative staffers to represent the actions of the Hill, and they can be very important."
"WE JUST TALKED about committee assignments, and we talked about our different ideas on the budget and how to get the budget under control." Slattery said.
Slattery has shelved his desire to serve on the two most powerful House committees, and is alining at two committees whose decisions often affect his district.
"First of all, I don't think it's going to be possible to get on the Ways and Means Committee or the Appropriations Committee, so my next choices would be the Commerce Committee and the Education Committee," he said.
THE COMMERCE Committee appeals to Slattery because, he said, it wields broad
See SLATTERY page 5
Weather
MKU
Today will be mostly cloudy and mild with a high between 65 and 70, according to the National Weather Service. Winds will be from the south at 10 to 20 mph.
Tomorrow thundershowers are likely. The high will be in the mid-60s.
Tonight will be cloudy with a 20 percent chance for thundershowers. The low will be
A solitary student and the stairs on the west side of Wescoe Hall were silhouetted against the early morning haze yesterday as she zig-zagged down the mass of concrete stairs and bannisters.
Oil producer boycotting eastern county markets
From staff and wire reports
A western Kansas oil producer said yesterday he would not buy oilfield products from businesses in counties that voted for Gov. John Carlin in last Tuesday's election.
Carlin proposes a severance tax on oil and gas to add revenue to the state budget.
Fritz Dreiling, owner of Dreiling Resources, Inc., Victoria, said, "I don't like the word boycott. I hate to see the state's economy don't want to see an east against west thing."
Mike Swenson, Carlin's assistant press secretary, said Carlin wanted to represent all regions of the state. He said it was discouraging that some people would want to split the state.
Dreiling said he had told owners of other oil companies that he would not buy products from eastern counties, and they said they would consider where they bought their products.
HOWEVER, he said that his decision not to buy products from counties in eastern Kansas was made privately and was not part of an organized effort.
Dreiling said his opinions differed from those of Norb Dreeling, the Hays attorney who advised the Carlin campaign, even though they are related.
"He's maybe a third cousin," Fritz Dreiling said. "We do forgive Norb. We'd rather have him on our side, but we like Norb."
Frizz Dreiling said no tubular goods, concrete, pumping unit engines, pumping units, tank batteries or raw materials for cement sold in eastern Kansas would be used on any of his leases. He and his partners spent about $2 million on oil production last year.
IF THE COSTS were right, Fritz Drilling said, he would purchase products in Nebraska or Oklahoma before buying them from eastern Kansas businesses.
Fritz Dreiling said he hoped eastern Kansas business owners would persuade state legislators to oppose a severance tax when their businesses felt the effects of the sanction.
However, Swenson said that two-thirds of the severance税 would be paid by out-of-state companies. Swenson he thought part of the reason why Drilling would refuse to buy eastern products was a general misconception that the firm redistribute wealth from the west to the east.
He said that if the tax was passed, county taxes paid by oil suppliers eventually would shift to the state, leaving counties without a source of revenue. Counties then would be forced to raise property taxes for farmers, homeowners and businesses.
Skills give edge in tight job market
By JEANNE FOY
Staff Reporter
The current 10.4 percent unemployment rate is making job searching an increasingly tough challenge for liberal arts graduates, many of whom have been unemployed in a job and finding one that offers a good salary.
Merrick Hedges graduated from KU in spring 1982 with a Spanish degree. Unable to find a job in which she could use her Spanish in Lawrence, she got a job at a fast-food restaurant.
But people who graduate with specific, marketable skills and those who have high-demand majors such as engineering or computer science have an advantage in the job
A 1982 U.S. News and World Report survey of salaries for college graduates with bachelor's degrees lists an engineer's average monthly salary as $43,000, while a lawyer's salary is $41,327 a month.
THE COLLEGE Placement Council last year issued a report that said the hiring of liberal arts
majors fell 4 percent from the previous year. At the same time, hiring increased 10 percent for engineers, 7 percent for business graduates and 1 percent for science, math and other technical fields.
graduate.
Despite these gloomy statistics, jobs do exist for those with liberal arts degrees, but finding those jobs may not be easy.
1983 graduates should look for jobs now, said James Henry, placement officer for the College of Liberal Arts and Science.
"Jobs are harder to find. We don't have as many companies recruiting this fall, but hopefully we'll have more in the spring," Henry said.
LAST YEAR about 150 companies conducted on-campus interviews through the College Placement Office, he said. That number is now around 60. In another paper science, geology and other science majors.
Robert Lineberry, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, said more students needed to take advantage of the college's resources to respond suddenly and chaotically to the world beyond the College."
Henry said that one retail fashion chain had been looking for December graduates to fill management positions, but the firm canceled its ties because recently, because only three people signed up.
MANY STUDENTS. Henry said, are not actively seeking jobs. Instead, they are waiting for jobs to drop in their laps.
or if you teach a class.
"Students are reading the newspapers on how bad the job market is and thinking 'why bother to look.'" he said.
Henry said the keys to finding a job were preparation and a realistic view of the job
Preparation involves sending out resumes and signing up for as many interviews as possible, he said. Many students must interview six or eight interviews, but the companies asks them for a second interview.
He said most of the jobs being offered to liberal arts graduates were in sales and management. Companies that are offering jobs include Carlyle, Life Benefit, Johnson and Johnson and K mart.
See JOBS page 5
Page 2 University Daily Kansan, November 10, 1982
News Briefs From United Press International
Rwandans commit suicide in African border conflict
NAIROBI, Kenya—At least 35 starving Rwandan refugees, most of them aged and infirm, committed mass suicide by drinking poisonous cattle tick ointment so that precious food could be given to children in a refugee camp, an official of the U.N. High Commission for Refugees said yesterday.
said yesterday:
He said 8,000 more refugees faced imminent starvation after being trapped by the Oct. 27 border closure agreed to by the two east African nations of Uganda and Rwanda.
"The situation is more critical for these people everyday," the official said. "They have been without food for more than two weeks, at least." The official said the mass suicide had occurred about a week ago in a refugee camp
refugee camp. A Geneva-based U.N. official said the refugees had despaired over their conditions and the lack of food and fresh water in the camps in Uganda.
Uganda launched a "resettlement program" last month aimed at driving about 100,000 Rwandan refugees out of Uganda. Rampaging bands of soldiers and youth forced about 45,000 Rwandans back across the border, burning their homes and looting the belongings.
IRS to begin interest tax levy in July
WASHINGTON-The Internal Revenue Service ordered banks and brokerage firms yesterday to begin collecting 10 percent of interest and dividend payments in July in the biggest expansion of prepaid taxes since World War II.
Banks and brokerage firms will send the 10 percent directly to the IRS beginning July 1. This order applies to accounts that earn more than $150 annually, unless the holders of the accounts are exempt.
150 annually, dress the model in a black tie and Fritz Elmendorf, a spokesman for the American Bankers Association, said, "Ten percent of their money will be taken out before they ever see it."
Attempts to circumvent the withholding rule by scattering funds among many small accounts in different institutions could inspire an IRS crackdown on individuals or even industries, officials warned.
People older than 64, couples including one person over 64 and low-income earners are exempt.
Israeli predicts slow troop pullout
JERUSALEM- Israeli Foreign Minister Yilzhak Shamir yesterday dashed Reagan administration hopes of getting foreign troops out of Lebanon by New Year's, saying it could take months to arrange the withdrawal.
Shamir met for 90 minutes with a U.S. congressional group of seven members led by Lee Hamilton, D-Ind., chairman of the Europe and the Middle East subcommittee of the House Foreign Affairs Committee.
In Beirut, the Lebanese Parliament, in what was seen as a major victory for President Amin Gemayel, granted the fledgling president's Cabinet sweeping emergency powers to rule war-ravaged Lebanon by decree for six months.
deceit for six months.
The Parliament, meeting 24 hours after the worst day of violence since Gemayel took office Sept.19, approved the emergency powers by a 58-1 margin.
Police thwart plot to murder pope
MADRID, Spain—Three Basque terrorists were arrested by French police hours before a planned attempt to assassinate Pope John Paul II, the Spanish national news agency EFE reported yesterday.
The three members of the Basque separatist group ETA were arrested early Saturday, two days after ETA gunmen killed Spain's top field general in Madrid and 10 hours before John Paul visited the violence-torn Basque province of northern Spain.
EFE sources said the terrorists planned to attack the pope when he stopped at Loyola, a mountaintop Jesuit sanctuary in the heart of the Basque province.
Details of the plot unfolded on the last day of the pope's 10-day tour of Spain. The pope was flown to Santiago and from there back to Rome.
Young radical to lead miners union
PITTSBURGH-Militant lawyer Richard Trumka was way ahead of Sam Church Jr. in the race for the presidency of the United Mine Workers yesterday, according to unofficial returns from rank-and-file coal miners.
Trumka would be one of the youngest national labor union presidents in the United States.
Unofficial results from 404 union locals showed Trumka with 45,944 votes to Church's 18,944. Trumka steadily increased his lead throughout the evening as results came in from about 800 union locals in the United States and Canada.
Church, who awaited the results in Charleston, W.Va., did not immediately concede, but a campaign spokesman, Tack Cornelius, said. "We're losing bad."
Church became union president in 1979 after former UMW President Arnold Miller retired because of poor health.
American freed from Iranian prison
They said Zia Nassry, 35, an American of Afghan origin, was handed over to the Swiss Embassy in Tehran on Saturday after they negotiated his release.
BERN, Switzerland—An American citizen has been released from an Iranian prison where he spent $2 \frac{1}{2}$ years without trial on spying charges, Swiss authorities said yesterday.
Nassry was one of at least four Americans arrested on vague spying charges in Iran at the height of anti-American frenzy in early 1980.
Iranian officials put him into prison on March 10 that year when they became suspicious of his activities on behalf of Afghan refugees in the country, but he was never tried.
About the same time that Nasary was arrested, the authorities arrested Americans Cynthia Dwyer, Mohi Sobani and journalist Terry
Dwyer and Sobhani were set free in February last year but Graham is thought to still be in prison.
Vietnam memorial to be dedicated
WASHINGTON—The shunned warriors of the United States' longest and most unpopular war began converging in Washington yesterday for a long-delayed welcome home from the cold shadow of Vietnam.
Events scheduled for the five-day salute beginning today include a 56-hour candlelight vigil at the National Cathedral, a parade of 15,000 marchers down Constitution Avenue and countless open houses to reunite comrades-in-arms.
The highlight of the welcome will be the dedication Saturday of Vietnam Veterans Memorial - a stark, black granite wall inscribed with the names of the 59,893 killed and missing in Vietnam.
Correction
Because of a reporting error, it was incorrectly stated in On the Record in yesterday's Kansas that Bruce Weldon was being held in Douglas County jail after failing to post bond. Weldon was released Saturday from the jail after he posted a $3,000 bond.
Afghan blast killed 1,100, diplomats say
The diplomats said hundreds of vehicles carrying civilians and Soviet soldiers were trapped inside the 1.7-mile Salang Tunnel when a military convoy collided with what was reported to be a gasoline tanker.
NEW DELHI, India—Two trucks collided and exploded in a mountain tunnel in northern Afghanistan, suffocating at least 1,100 Soviet soldiers and Afghan civilians with deadly fumes, Western diplomats said yesterday.
The collision set off a huge explosion that filled the tunnel with deadly fumes, the diplomats said.
Soviet officials initially believed the explosion was caused by a rebel attack and blocked both ends of the tunnel, they said. The diplomats said vehicles that withstood the explosion were left running to keep pressure on the building into the tunnel, filling it with toxic fumes in addition to smoke from the explosion.
By United Press International
"Whatever the body count, there seems to be no one in Kabul who has not lost a relative or a friend and that number is city in mourning," one diplomat said.
THE DIPLOMATS sat at a weekly news briefing in New Delhi that their reports of the incident could not be independently confirmed and there were no official reports on the tragedy by the Soviet-installed Afghan regime.
The incident was believed to have occurred Nov. 2 or Nov. 3. The diplomas cited extended obituary memorials on radio that lent evidence to the report.
The diplomas said 700 Soviets had died and between 400 and 2,000 Afghan civilians were killed, according to various reports they had received. They said 200 Soviets and 200 Afghans were injured and taken to hospitals.
THE SALANG tunnel, which slices through the Hindu Kush Mountains at an altitude of 11,000 feet, is a crucial link in the only land route leading from the Soviet Union to the Afghan capital of Kabul. 60 miles to the south.
After the explosion, the Western diplomats said, the Soviets blocked both entrances to the tunnel with trucks and buses. They prevented Afghan civilians from getting out.
The fire quickly exhausted the oxygen supply in the Soviet-built tunnel, they said. The situation was complicated because the "electric ventilators in the tunnel had not worked in more than a year."
Liftoff set for tomorrow morning
Columbia gets nod for launch
Bv United Press International
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — The space shuttle Columbia won a "go" yesterday for launch tomorrow on its first commercial flight, and its four crewmen declared their mission would be "just like going on a picnic."
Everything was on schedule for the space freighter to roar into orbit at 6:19 a.m. tomorrow, hauling for hire a cargo of two communications satellites.
Brand said, "We're all trained and ready, and we hear the ship is ready."
"We're sure looking forward to a big launch," mission commander Vance D.
Brand, Robert F. Overmayer, Joseph P. Allen and William B. Lenoir — America's first four-man space crew — were obviously in high spirits.
Space shuttle chief James A. Abrahamson met with key space agency officials to review Columbia's readiness for its official go-ahead for a lunar tomorrow.
With earlier troubles overcome, launch technicians stepped up the pace of preparations. They stocked Columbia's pantry; loaded lockers with
medicine, fire extinguisher, cameras and other equipment; warmed up the guidance system; and tested other shuttle systems.
Although clouds were so thick over Cape Canavaler yesterday morning that they would have blocked a launch, officials said, winds were expected to shift and produce clear skies at launch time.
During their five-day mission the astronauts will launch two unmanned communications satellites, one Ameri- cation 50 and another from an orbit 184 miles above the Earth.
Staff positions open for spring
The Kanan is now accepting applications for the positions of editor and business manager for the spring semester.
Applications are available in the Kansan business office, 118 Flint Hall, the office of the dean of journalism, 200 Flint Hall, the Student Affairs department and in the office of student organizations and activities, 220 Strong Hall.
Law School
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JAYHAWK STUDENT BASKETBALL SEASON TICKET SALE
WHEN: Nov. 9-12, Tuesday through Friday
WHERE: East Lobby, Allen Field House
TIME: 9:00 am----4:00 pm
PRICE: $22.00—INCLUDES 11 GAMES Games over student holidays are not included in season ticket or ticket price (U.S. International, Memphis State and Alcorn State).
CRIMSON AND BLUE INTRA-SQUAD GAME
Students FREE with KU I.D.
Nov.15-
EXHIBITION GAME:
YUGOSLAVIAN
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-Students-$1.00 and a can of food. Food will be donated to local charitable agencies for distribution to families in need for Thanksgiving.
1982-83
1982-83
MEN'S BASKETBALL SCHEDULE
Nov 27 (Sat) U.S. International at home
Nov 29 (Mon) Bowling Green at home
Dec 2 (Thu) *Mississippi Valley at home
Dec 4 (Sat) St. Louis at home
Dec 5 (Wed) Michigan Univ. at Ann Arbor
Dec 11 (Sat) Southern Methodist at Dallas
Dec 18 (Sat) *Memphis State at home
Dec 20 (Mon) Alcorn State at home
Dec 29 (Wed) Kentucky at Jacksonville at Kemper
Jan 6 (Tue) Ohio State at Kemper
Jan 6 (Tue) Oral Roberts at Tulsa
Jan 8 (Sat) Evanvale at Evanvale.inl.
Jan 15 (Sat) Univ. of Maine at home
Jan 19 (Wed) Oklahoma St at Stillwater
Jan 26 (Wed) Missouri at home
Jan 29 (Sat) K-State at Manhattan
Feb 2 (Wed) *Iowa State at Home
Feb 3 (Tue) Utah State at Stillwater
Jan 10 (Thu) Colorado at Home
Feb 12 (Sat) *Oklahoma St. at home
Feb 16 (Wed) Missouri at Columbia
Feb 19 (Sat) Oklahoma at Home
Feb 19 (Tue) Iowa State at Ames
Feb 26 (Sat) K-State at Home
Mar 2 (Wed) Nebraska at Home
Mar 5 (Sat) Colorado at Boulder
*Doubleheader
onboard
All Saturday Home Games Start at 2:00 p.m.
Weekday Games Start at 7:40 p.m.
(Except for TV Games)
ON'T MISS JAYHAWK BASKETBALL!
University Daily Kansan, November 10. 1982
Page 3
Consumers benefit from new bank bill
By DONNA KELLER Staff Reporter
The banking industry and financial markets are in a period of transition and "interesting times," a local bank president said recently.
Lymn Anderson, president of the First National Bank of Lawrence, Ninth and Massachusetts streets, said the public is very interested in the industry in the months ahead.
One positive change in the banking industry from a consumer standpoint is a bill signed into law by President Reagan last month, said Anderson.
The primary elements of the Garn-St. Germain Depository Institutions Act of 1982 are the creation of a money-funded institution in the thrift industry's lending powers.
THE FEDERAL Home Loan Bank Board last week directed savings and loans to begin using the new lending powers immediately.
Anderson, who has testified as a community banker before both state and federal legislators about deregulation in the industry and its effect on the community, said the money-fund account would put local financial institutions in direct competition with Wall Street.
"These deposits have traditionally been flowing out of the community to
New York," he said. "This way the deposits stay in the community."
By creating a federally-insured money fund account, local banking institutions will be able to increase their local deposit base and thus broaden their lending base. Anderson said.
SAVINGS AND loans also may increase the amounts of consumer loans for purposes other than housing, and commercial real estate loans under the act. They may offer checking accounts to businesses, interest-bearing checking accounts to local government agencies, and credit for business or farm loans unrelated to housing or construction.
Anderson said the Garn bill was an indication of the deregulation occurring in the banking industry.
He said the Garn bill would put savings institutions in direct competition with banks in lending areas where there had been no competition in the past.
But, he said, an important aspect is that of local financial institutions which could serve as a conduit.
"It should be a positive thing," he said.
Joe Oberzan, vice president of Capitol Federal Savings and Loan Association, 11th and Vermont streets, and John H. Burbank was waiting for specifies of the Garn bill.
Janitor shoots churchgoers for firing him
By United Press International
DETROIT—A convicted murderer, who was sitting in on a hearing to decide whether he should be fired as a storefront chanitor, opened fire with two guns Monday night, killing two women and a man and critically wounding two others, police said.
The Rev. Henry Haywood, 66, said about a dozen people in a meeting at the Abundant Life Christian Church deciding whether custodian John Ellis, 67, would be let go.
Haywood said Ellis had been sitting back listening to complaints. Then when it appeared he would be fired, Ellis shouted, "Everybody has had their say, and now I'm going to have my saw clear and loud."
Investigators said the gunman opened fire in the church "like Wyatt Earp, with two knives" and found the roof of a store next to the church.
Ellis had been hired to maintain six apartments in the church-owned building
The dead were identified as Jeanneta Ruff, 23; James Green, 25; and Sammie Lee King, 55. Critically injured were Freddie King, 26 and her son; and Tyrone Dunbar, 21.
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And the officials are working on promotions, which began yesterday.
Season basketball tickets will cost less this year than last year, but they also will be good for fewer games, department officials said yesterday.
Fewer games included Basketball ticket prices shrink
Richard Konzem, assistant Williams Fund director and former acting ticket manager, said the games during spring training were the best year so that students could save money.
The price for each game has increased from $1.75 to $2. The student tickets are priced at $22, $6 less than last year's tickets. Tickets are good for 11 home games, but last year they were good for 16.
"We were trying to get the price down. Since most students aren't here during break anyway, they shouldn't be coming as long as games they aren't going to see." he said
Tom Hof, ticket manager, said he baped ticket sales would improve this year.
"It's hard to say what ticket sales will be." Hof said. "Last year was a down year, and it's hard to say what the student reaction will be."
The athletic department has already sold 2,300 of 7,000 available student tickets through the All-Sports tickets, merchandise and basketball games and track marks.
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The games during the winter break are included in the All-Sports ticket, he said.
Single-game tickets, which cost $3,
will be available for winter-break
games to students who do not have
All-Sports tickets.
In an effort to promote ticket sales, the athletic department is sponsoring a free intrasquid game tonight and an event at the Kolosavian national team next Monday.
"I hope it will bring out people who do not normally attend basketball games. It will get food for the needy and get us a little PR," he said.
Mike Hamrick, assistant to the athletic director for promotions, said students could attend the game Monday for $1 if they brought a can of food. The food will be donated to needy families for Thanksgiving.
Hof said he hoped the exhibition game would bring in more people.
BASKETBALL
BASKETBALL
BASKETBALL
BASKETBALL
Season tickets for the 1982-83 KU Basketball season went on sale yesterday. Tickets can be purchased in the east lobby of Allen Field House until Saturday.
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INTRAMURAL SQUASH TOURNAMENT
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Page 4
Opinion
University Daily Kansan, November 10, 1982
Students' rights at issue
A residence hall program to "keep students on the educational track" could turn into a lawsuit or worse if University officials are not careful.
The director of the office of residential programs, Fred McElhenne, said Monday that resident assistants had been given a list of students living on their floors who were having academic troubles after four weeks of classes. RAs were given the lists, he said, in order to help those students who might be hesitant to go to the RAs on their own.
McElhenie also said that RAs would have access to other student records, including transcripts, in the future.
However noble the intentions of the office of residential programs, access to students' records by RAs must be seen as a violation of their rights. And the issues only begin with that.
Thus far, RAs have been given only lists of names; they do not know specific grades, or even what specific classes students are having troubles with. But why should RAs, whom proponents of the notification acknowledge as students' peers, be allowed access to any indications of a student's academic performance?
The University may be on shaky legal ground. Any KU employee who can prove he has a legitimate educational interest in a student can get access to student records without
violating the privacy provisions of the federal Buckley Amendment, according to Gilbert Dyck, dean of educational services. However, Dyck went on to say, "I don't know how RAs could construe themselves to have a legitimate educational interest."
The administration did not notify students that RAs had been granted access to their files until after the early warning lists went out. If a student were angry enough, he could challenge the University in court, citing violation of his rights under the Buckley Amendment.
Students should feel free to go to resident assistants with their academic concerns, not the other way around. Although McElhenie said that few students thought their privacy had been invaded, he failed to recognize that it should not matter how small a minority of students think their rights have been abused.
It is difficult to gauge the feelings of RAs at this point, but just how much does the University expect of RAs? Are they to be personalized academic counselors for 60 to 90 residents apiece, as well as full-time students and part-time employees?
A policy allowing students access to other students' academic records should be considered a red flag to the entire University community.
Identity of 'Deep Throat' doesn't really matter now
Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein unfolded the real story of the Watergate break-in with the help of the mysterious "Deep Threat," who provided the elusive pieces of that puzzle.
They would not have found the necessary links and information without the help of Deep Throat — a very informed person who liked to meet in deserted Washington, D.C. C.D. underground gar-
People are still talking about the break-in and the person who supplied the two. Washington police have said they didn't know who was involved.
CATHERINE BEHAN
the White House to the break-in at the Democratic Party's national headquarters.
the White House to the break-
Democratic Party's national headquarters.
Guessing the identity of Deep Throat is a popular game in Washington, especially among the co-conspirators themselves in their books about the affair.
Recently, John Dean, who was White House counsel during the early days, wrote in his book *The Story of America*.
Haig was appointed Nixon's chief of staff May 4, 1973, in the last months of the Nixon presidency. Before that, Haig was assistant to Henry Kissinger, national security adviser.
In his book titled "No Thank You, Mr. President." John Hebers, a New York Times White House correspondent during the final days of the Nixon administration, wrote: "Haig, I thought, was a man of some conscience and a sense of the public interest . . . Haig was not paranoid about the press the way most of the Nixon people were."
That sounds like someone who might have thought it would be in the public interest to tell Woodward about the goings-on in the White House.
That caution probably would have kept Haig from telling too much.
However, Herbers also wrote, "Hai) was extraordinarily cautious, and what he said in the few private interviews I had with him rarely made news."
Hag also could be described as an ambition and power-hungry man. One doesn't have to remember back to far, specifically as far back as the 1890s, when President Beagan, to find evidence of that.
Haiy probably would not have stuck his neck in any way that might have jeopardized his life.
most importantly, Haug was not appointed as chief of staff until late in Nison's presidency.
from Deep Throat shortly after the break-in almost a year before.
Haig has denied that he was deep Throat. And Richard Nixon responded to Dean's allegations saying, "That's slightly ridiculous. Al Haig is many things. But he knew nothing about the whole Watergate business, had nothing whatever do with it at the time that it happened. He became my chief of staff after, frankly, we'd lost that battle."
Haig also does not seem to be the type of person who likes to hang out in deserted underground garages and divulge touchy information to reporters.
Although it is unlikely that Haig had access to the information Deep Throat provided Woodward, it does not really matter now who Deep Throat was, for many reasons.
For one, it would kill the great game of trying to figure out who the conscientious informant was. What would there be to talk about at Washington cocktail parties?
Finally, and more importantly, if Woodward told us Who Deep Threat was, he would be breaking a solid ethical guideline: 'Thou shalt not enter a building without permission to provide information for background only.'
Secondly, learning who Deep Throat was would be like telling a class of children that there is no Santa Claus.
Rarely is a story worth relying on information provided by someone who refuses to be identified. The Watergate story, however, was one example of this - impossible to solve without a confidential source.
And the reason behind that ethical guideline is yet another reason for not naming Deep Threat — if the promise of confidentiality was broken, other possible informants in similar situations might not talk in the future. Few of us would want to again face the disillusionment and national scandal brought on by the Watergate conspiracy. But the possibility always exists.
Whenever journalists must rely on inside sources for stories such as this, the situation usually proves unpleasant for the newspaper or television station and for the reader, as well as for the person or persons implicated. But if information is inaccessible to journalists, it is inaccessible to the public as well. Sometimes the guarding of information is to protect the public interest; more often, it is to protect individuals' self-interest.
If a story is very important, it is often necessary to go to great lengths to get that story. If informed people who want to get information cannot give it without fear of losing their jobs, then important stories may stay untold. Of course, there are probably some people who
Maybe Deep Throat was Haig, maybe it was Dean. It could have been a lot of people. It really doesn't matter at this point.
Of course, there are probably some people who wish they had never learned of Watergate.
So, John Dean, be quiet.
KANSAN
The University Daily
The University Dayton Kannan (USP$ 690-640) is published at the University of Kannan, 118 Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kannan. Kannan, daily during the summer semester, teaches English, Spanish, math and biology, holidays and final second class postpaid mail at Lawrence. Kannan. 6400 subscriptions by mail are $10 for six months or $1 a year in Douglasville, Georgia. Subscriptions through the student activity fee. POSTMATRIX.SEND address changes to the University Daily
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Gene George Susan Cooksey
Managing Editor Steve Robahn
Editorial Editor Rebecca Chaney
Campus Editor Mark Zieman
Associate Campus Editor Brian Levinson
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National Sales Manager Jane Wendervort
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I HOPE I CAN DEAL WITH THIS NEW CONGRESS.
ILL GO TALK WITH THEM!
'The better part of valour is discretion.' — Falstaff
No slump in the tax shelter business
By DICK WEST
United Press International
WASHINGTON-AT a time when the home-
building industry in a slump, it is good to learn
about it.
"If you've ever cheated on your taxes, it wasn't necessary," the seminar sponsors assure us. "Good planning is the only legitimate alternative to paying taxes."
Their brochure also advances the radical notion that "there is more to life than avoiding taxes."
This fall in far-flung places across the country have there been a series of "Zero Tax" seminars that could produce a flurry of tax shelter projects next spring.
Just what, it does not say.
A cozy little vine-covered tax shelter just meant for two makes an ideal addition to the portfolio of a young married couple whose joint
I don't doubt that even in today's economy a tax shelter is still a good investment, particularly one away from urban areas and near a waterfall.
income is derived primarily from wages.
Perhaps a few morning glories entwined around the loopholes would help give it a honey touch.
I can't help fearing, however, that the tax shelter industry is on a collision course with the Internal Revenue Service.
Every year about this time, the IRS announces it has simplified our income tax form. Again
Next year, 1 gather, Form 1040 will be so uncomplicated we may have trouble staying awake long enough to finish it.
Here are the tax shelter and tax simplification just don't mix. We can have one or the other, but we can't have both, at least not simultaneously.
Is there a danger that the tax form simplifiers will put the tax shelter seminarians out of business? Will the time ever come when there is no legitimate alternative to paying taxes?
The answer to those questions may depend on what happens to the "flat rate" plan now being talked up on Capitol Hill and in other centers of circuitous taxation.
The "Zero Tax" brochure from which I quote promises unquivocally that "there always will
be" a loophole. Yet if the future finds us all paying the same rate on all income, with no deductions, exemptions or exclusions, not to mention rebates, discounts and allowances, it is plain that lawful tax avoidance will be eminently more difficult.
And if the seminar sponsors are on the right track with the philosophy that "there is more to life than avoiding taxes," then taxpayers may enjoy pizza and parties on pepperoni pizza above loopholes.
It would seem, however, that the entire culture of tax avoidance is based on the philosophy that it is better to suffer capital losses than to let Uncle Sam usurp the money.
I'm not suggesting do-it-yourself tax avoidance would be as much fun as "Zero Tax" seminars. But, as the saying goes, any old shelter in a storm.
The ultimate answer to the simplified tax form might be a simplified tax loophole that comes in kit form and that any fool can put together at home, using only a screwdriver.
Dick West is an editorial columnist for United Press International.
Letters to the Editor
To the Editor:
Arms convocation to stress alternatives
Given the vote for the nuclear freeze around the country, including the three-to-one majority in Lawrence, there should be little doubt that the American public wants a stop to the arms
However, the freeze, even if the Reagan administration should incorporate it into its arms control plans, is only the stopping of the elevator on the way up while its passengers determine the safest way down. In recent months several alternative ways of supplementing the freeze have been receiving increased attention, in part because of the heightened interest the referendum has brought forth.
One of these alternatives is a Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty, which through prohibition of nuclear testing would indirectly slow the addition of new weapon systems to already large arsenals. The proposed treaty calls for on-site inspections, considered by many to be necessary for reliable verification of any treaty compliance. Another alternative is a No-First Use (of nuclear weapons) pledge by the former national recently proposed by the former national Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara of the Kennedy administration, and by the former American Ambassador to the Soviet Union and author of the post-World War II containment policy, George Kennan.
START (Strategic Arms Reduction Talks) and Zero Option, both programs of President Reagan being negotiated in Geneva at the present time, are proposals for reducing strategic and tactical nuclear weapons in the United States, the Soviet Union or Europe.
All of these are to be considered in the Convocation on Solutions to the Nuclear Arms Race on Veterans Day, at 11 a.m. Nov. 11 in Woodruff Auditorium a new film on No-First-Use, produced especially for this convocation, will be supplemented by commentaries on political scientist James G. Jaroszewski Pleikiewicz, professor of Soviet and East European studies, was active in the Warsaw uprising in 1944 and later a member of the American Army. Dennis Palumbo, director of the Center for Public Affairs, served in Korea in 1950; Rowland assistant manager of political science and faculty of the Vietnam war, has also been active in veterans' affairs since 1972.
To complement their remarks, materials have been requested from the Union of Concerned Scientists, the Federation of American Scientists, Young Americans for Freedom and Common Cause, and will be distributed to those attending.
This convoction is being duplicated on more than 500 college campuses Nov. 11. Ours is a bit different, but still a nice one.
The political science department, in sponsoring this convocation, is not pushing any of the alternatives to be considered, only the opportunity for KU students to familiarize themselves with proposals, one or more of which just might affect their future.
American wars to commemorate Veterans Day by exploring ways of discouraging future conflicts by slowing down the arms buildup that engages with weapons while decreasing overall security.
Clifford P. Ketzel
Clifford P. Ketzei Professor of political science
To the Editor:
Definitions expedient
I would like to respond to a recent letter by Carmen Penny and to a number of letters in the same vein. She states that human life is created at conception. This she asserts as a self-evident fact; hence any termination of the fetus prior to birth is equated with infanticide or murder. In actuality, however, it is a highly controversial and problematic issue as to when human life may be defined as beginning, ethically, morally and legally.
Let us consider a number of questions that might be seen to arise as a consequence of the acceptance of her argument, Is, for instance, the driver of a car responsible for causing a very minor traffic accident, which nonetheless injures a pregnant woman and induces an abortion, to be charged with negligent homicide? Are we to assign a right to a malformed child to sue its mother for damages because she smoked during pregnancy? Or are we to suggest that a pregnant woman who fell down the stairs suffering injuries that induce a natural abortion should, in addition to her own feelings of guilt, be burdened with a prosecution for murder?
Obviously it would be quite a simple task to so phrase the law that these apparent paradoxes may not arise. Yet in so doing it should become transparently clear that people like Carmen Penny are concerned not so much with protecting the rights of the unborn, but with restricting the right of women to exercise control over their own bodies and their own lives. Thus, in this respect, any definition of human life that equates abortion with murder is the expedient one to prescribe as a self-evident fact, regardless of any agreement upon its merits.
Bryan Bazin
Bryan Bazin Assistant instructor, Western Civilization
Hardage mistreated
To the Editor:
We are getting a little sick and tired of the way the Kansas has been treating Sam Hardage, the guardian for two children.
In the Nov. 3, Kansan there was a front-page headline that proclaimed Hardage had lost and that he had locked himself in a room. The fact of the matter was that Hardage had secluded himself along with his family and his running mate, Dan Thiessen, and other campaign people in a conference room in Hardage's campaign headquarters in Wichita. So what!
Can't a defeated candidate, whether he is Democrat or Republican, have a little privacy to reflect on an election loss before he or she faces the press? Wouldn't the assessment of the loss be more accurate? Just think of how we all react when we suffer defeats. Isn't the natural and human thing to shy away from publicity at that particular point in time, and don't we try to compose ourselves? Hardage probably did the smart thing by detaching himself temporarily away from reporters until he was ready to confront them.
Hardage had been working long and hard on his bid for governor and was obviously frustrated and upset about the election results. This was apparently Hardage's way of dealing with his defeat. He is, after all, human. Somehow, some people expect candidates for public office to be above humanity and to be perfect at all times. It is easy to sit back and criticize someone else's behavior when one isn't in that particular situation.
If that wasn't enough, the Kanan attacked and slammed Hardage again in an editorial Nov. 4. We don't mind a little constructive criticism, but this is ridiculous. Instead of carefully and analytically examining the results of the gubernatorial election, the editor told pot shop leaders that he respected that his campaign threatened to place a stigma (what stigma?) on the Republican Party that could be difficult to escape during the next two years. Hogwash! Who are you trying to fool?
The editorial went on to say that Hardage's idea of leadership was something Kansas and Republican could do without, given his behavior election night. Well, one incident doesn't necessarily strip one of all leadership qualities. In defense of Hardage, whom we both know personally as a liberal activist, the bombing attacks on Hardage, he is still an effective, intelligent and articulate leader, and we hope that he will continue to speak out on the vital issues that confront all Kansans.
In the future we would ask that the Kansan strive to maintain some semblance of fairness, balance and objectivity in its reporting of news and in its editors' articles. After all, the Kansan is a student newspaper, and there is more than one point of view.
Art Rays
Salina law student
Jeff Mason
Ulysses law student
一
University Daily Kansan, November 10, 1982
Page
Slattery
From name one
jurisdiction over natural gas pricing and many health issues.
The Education Committee is another logical committee assignment because college students compose about 13 percent of his district's voting bloc. Slattery said.
Slattery will receive an education in House protocol, and the chance to meet many of his colleagues and discuss committee assignments. Slattery will also send a two-week orientation session in December.
BESIDES THE orientation session, Slattery is drawing on the congressional experience of Jeffries and his staff. Jeffries, who vowed to make the transition as smooth as possible, said
he was helping to ensure Slattery's office would have all the needed equipment.
"We are doing all we can do to make our people available to his staff," Jeffries said. "I told Jim a long time ago that we would pledge our support for him if he won.
Candidates
When he is not reviewing potential staff members or studying issues likely to face the next Congress, Slattery is making arrangements with his wife and their two young sons to Washington.
The process of buying a home in Washington has been a somewhat depressing chore for Slatter because of the high prices of East Coast homes.
From page one
only support students, but give them a chance to work with the Senate.
"What's unique about our student government is getting students to work for students," she said. "Consensus is dedicated to keeping Senate and boards under knowledgeable student control."
WALKER ALSO has been a stanchion opponent of this year's Senate, and he said he thought the Consensus coalition was merely the Perspective last year. Persevier swept the Senate elections.
"You have to look at these incumbents and ask, 'What have they done for us?' " Walker
said.
He cited the Senate's recent problems with the student-run KU on Wheels bus system as an example. More than $50,000 is missing from bus system funds. The coordinator of the system; Steve McMurry, has been arrested on five counts of felony theft involving $20,425.
"If you are running on experience," Walker said, "then I don't think allow the Transportation Board to break down is an asset to a campaign.
ASHNER SAID, "It's always easy to criticize after the fact. But I think that the way the entire Senate has handled the problem is what is important."
Jobs
HENRY SAID that sales jobs typically involved selling company products to supermarkets and department stores and helping to merchandise the company's product.
From page one
Companies want to hire people at lower management positions so they can learn the ropes of their job.
This is both good and bad, he said. The starting salaries are low, but starting at the bottom are high.
A lower-level management position pays
$12,000 to $16,000 a year, he said, and sales job
pay $7,000 to $9,500 a year.
A 20-YEAR STUDY, published by the Association of American Colleges, reported that liberal students had better managerial skills and had more other than did those with other college majors.
"There is no need for liberal arts majors to lack confidence in approaching business careers," said a summary of the study "Career Development in Liberal Arts Major in Belt System Management."
Some students, however, do not want sales or management jobs.
Sandra Pellegrini, a Topteka senior majoring in political science, said she was considering alternatives such as going to Europe or joining the Peace Corps, rather than trying to find a job.
"I don't want to work for J. C. Penney or Sears.
That doesn't interest me," she said.
SHE SAID she could have been more practical in deciding her course of study, but she would not.
"I just enjoyed learning for learning's sake.
Engineers miss out because they don't get a wide perspective, I might change my mind next year.
Henry said, however, that no liberal arts majors had to starve for lack of a job because a liberal arts degree was an excellent background for finding a job, especially if a student supplemented his classes with some computer science, business and math classes.
"Frankly, I've seen the day when engineers were a dine a dozen and couldn't find a job. Needs change fast when you're that specialized," he said.
He recommended that a liberal arts major take at least 15 hours of math. The Bell study found that liberal arts graduates in the Bell System had mathematical deficiencies.
BASED ON HIS experience and contact with graduates, Henry he said the vast amount of work that he did was valuable.
"If they can't find a job, they waited too long." he said.
Lineberry characterized the current job market as one in which occupations are born, grow to maturation, and die within a single generation.
Because of this, he said, no substitute exists for the breadth of mind that comes from a liberal perspective.
He said that at the same time he could understand students' concern over the job of teaching.
"students carry a heavy burden in an economy where jobs are not readily available."
Although with a job market in a state of flux,
people will not stay in the same positions or careers all their lives, he said.
EVERYTHING GOES in cycles, he said, and,
without technical fields are growing now, they must
be developed.
Lisa Borden, a 1981 graduate who had a double major in personnel administration and Spanish, said, "If I lost this job, I could find another because I have a variety of skills."
BORDEN, WHO works as a personal banking representative for United Missouri Bank in Kansas City, Mo., said she was not using her computer because she did not consider her Spanish studies wasted.
She said the job market in Kansas City for Spanish majors was very lean, but that she wanted to move to Texas some day, where her Spanish would be more in demand.
James Carothers, coordinator of English undergraduate studies, said English graduates had found jobs in such diverse fields as sales, banking, teaching, editing, management and
"English is such a broadly portable skill. We ask people to read difficult material, analyze it and write about it. There are very few jobs where those skills aren't needed," he said.
PAUL SCHUMAKER, chairman of the political science department, said a liberal arts education was a long-term investment, and the college offered it. "You can't not be evident when a student went job hunting.
Nevertheless, he said, the generalized knowledge from a liberal arts degree prepares students to become critical thinkers.
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College of Liberal Arts & Sciences wants UNDERGRADUATE REPRESENTATIVES for the COLLEGE ASSEMBLY
Interested LA&S Undergraduate Students should complete nomination forms available at the College Office, 206 Strong Hall.
-Self-nominations are required.
-Filing deadline-4:30 p.m. Friday, Nov. 12 Election will be held Nov. 17-18 with the Student Senate Election
All LA&S. Undergraduate students are encouraged to become involved in the governance of your school.
DEPARTMENT OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
UNION OF CONCERNED SCIENTISTS
SOLUTIONS TO THE NUCLEAR ARMS RACE
PROGRAM
Film on No First Use
(Produced by Union of
Concerned Scientists for
-Professor Jaroslaw Piekalkiewicz
Convocation)
World War II Veteran
Professor Dennis Palumbo
Korean War Veteran
Professor Pete Rowland Vietnam War Veteran
World War II Veteran
Professor Clifford Ketzel
Comprehensive Test Ban
Printed Handouts On:
No First Use
START
SALT II
VETERANS DAY CONVOCATION
11:00 a.m.
Thursday, Nov. 11
Woodruff Aud.
Funded by the Student Activity Fee
Page 6 University Daily Kansan, November 10, 1982
Libertarians view first election as victory in disguise
By JULIE HEABERLIN Staff Reporter
The Libertarian Party had an official place on the Kansas ballot Nov. 2, for the first time in the party's history, with 25 candidates who asked voters for a radical change in state government
And in spite of the sound defeat of every Libertarian candidate, state and national party officials said yesterday that the election was a victory in disguise and a confident step forward in Midwest politics.
"We recognize that we are fairly new and underinformed compared to the major parties," said James Ward, a spokesman who ran for governor this year.
"THIS ELECTION is just another step. Our goal is not necessarily to elect Libertarian candidates, although that is important. We would accomplish our mission by being a party in Kansas and force the major parties to take some of our positions."
The Libertarian Party, with a platform that strips the government of power and abolishes most taxes, nationally in 1972 and in Kansas in 1974.
The Kansas coalition was not officially placed on the ballot until this year because of a statute requiring each party to turn in a petition to the secretary of state's office signed by 25,000 Kansas voters.
Ward said the party appealed the statute in federal court this year because it discriminated against the
minor parties. He said the federal court handed down a favorable decision in June, which gave the party little time to organize and nominate candidates.
THE STATE party's members campaigned for state, national and local office this year, including candidates for governor, lieutenant governor, attorney, former the Kansas Board of Education, Congress and the Kansas Legislature.
According to the unofficial vote count, Ward received 7,738 votes, 1 percent in the governor's race, the most votes captured by any of the parties. The Republican and American Parties also sponsored candidates for governor.
BUT A CANDIDATE who ran for the Board of Education fared more successfully despite the party's lack of interest and financial problems, Ward said.
In a local state-house race, Pat Goodwin, KU law student, received 117 votes of the 5,508 cast.
Marian Nunemaker, a candidate for District 7, received 20,355 votes, 30 percent of the votes cast in her race.
Another Libertarian candidate for the Board of Education received about 10,000 votes, which Ward said suggested some Kansans were leaning toward the Libertarian's philosophy of private education instead of public.
Ward said that party officials were already preparing for the next election in two years and that a Libertarian can face Sen. Nancy Kassebaum, R-Kan.
radical when you consider what we've had," Ward said, referring to present government policies.
"THE LIBERTARIAN philosophy is
"libertarianism is growing because of its liberal philosophy, and also because it has a conservative economic philosophy. It has two things come together very nicely."
Chris Grieb, a national party official at the Libertarian headquarters in Washington, D.C., agreed with Ward that the individualist philosophy of the Libertarians was more popular in the western states.
serve_in_elected_offices_next_year, he said.
THE LIBERTARIAN Party is particularly strong in Alaska, Grieb said, where Libertarian candidate Dick Randolph received 15 percent of the vote. The governor's party. The party also had two other candidates in Alaska during the past term, he said.
He said the party was disappointed but not discouraged, although all 900 Libertarians who campaigned across the nation lost in their bid for election this year. There are several Libertarians in bipartisan positions who will
Libertarianism is also gaining strength in Montana, Arizona, Colorado, California and Oregon, he said. His membership is about 400,000, he said.
City to consider life-line gas rates for elderly, poor
BURGLAR'S STOLE $465 worth of cash and items Sunday night from Everything But Ice, 616 Vermont St., police said yesterday. The burglar's store $38 in cash and $429 worth of miscellaneous items.
THEVES STOLE A 1975 Ford Mustang worth $2,100 Sunday night from the 2300 block of Ridge Court, police said yesterday. Police have
The party is approaching several candidates for the presidential nomination in 1984, including Randolph, U.S. Rep. Ron Paul, R.Texas, and Walter McCain, a economist at George Mason University in Fairfax, Va., Grieb said.
BURGLARSTOLE $260 worth of stereo and cassette tape equipment Saturday night from a car parked near the corner of 19th and Massachusetts streets, police said. The police reported to police until yesterday.
BURGLARS STOLE $200 worth of
stereo equipment Sunday night from
a car parked in the south parking lot
at Carborn Hall, RU police said
yesterday.
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Retainal materials are available for post program practice.
- Improves listening and visual memory.
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- Aids test taking and overall classroom performance.
- Aids student in establishing thinking and problem solving strategies.
However, Gary Watts, locarench agent for three bus companies serving Lawrence, said the present site was unacceptable and that other new sites had been looked at but were also unacceptable because they cost too much.
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For further information about
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The commission discussed at some length whether the city's transportation center should be downtown. However, the lease on the proposed new land area took years, so the bus depot could return to the downtown area later, Clark said.
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Approving the site plan for the location at Sixth and Michigan streets in Waukee.
GLEASON SAID the bus depot, which now is in the 600 block of Massachusetts Street, should stay downtown.
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The decision followed a $1_{1/2}$-hour discussion.
The Lawrence City Commission last night directed the city staff to look into the possibility of establishing a life-line for the elderly, poor and handicapped.
The proposal would establish rates that were 50 percent lower for the first 20 mcfs of natural gas used. An mcf is 1,000 cubic feet. The proposal, according to several people who spoke before the commission, assumes an average rate of 28 mcfs during the months of December, January and February.
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The commission also decided last night to approve a site plan for a new bus depot, at the southwest corner of Sixth and Michigan streets.
The program of lower rates only would be effective during those three months.
The commission also received final results from last week's opinion poll on the question of a nuclear freeze with the Soviet Union.
CITY MANAGER Buford Watson said the city attorney would begin studying the life-line rate question. A professor of law at Mississippi probably could be made within 12 months.
MONSIGNOR
CHRISTOPHER REEVIS
TAMPA BAY
CLASS REUNION
7:30, 9:40
Mat. Bat. Sun. 2:00
"I think we have to take the opportunity to institute life-line rates and to do it as soon as possible," he said.
Commissioner Tom Gleason said the city had an obligation to establish some new police stations.
The cost for each person, assuming a two-person household, would be about 2
However, other customers would pay an additional fee of $1.47 each month of
A public referendum probably would be a good idea, Clark said.
THE COMMISSION'S action came after two hours of discussion.
The commission also discussed its 5 percent natural gas franchise tax. Mayor Marci Francisco suggested that collection of the tax be suspended during the winter months as another way to help people pay their gas bills.
"I'm very worried about people getting built-up expectations about what the city can and cannot do," he said. "I think there is a serious legal
However, Commissioner Barkley Clark said instituting life-lite rates involved serious legal questions and the city might face a lawsuit if it did so.
The city commission may have to call a special election if it institutes a life-line rate system, he said. Such an election would be required if enough voters signed a petition of protest, he said.
However, Clark said such a proposal also would involve legal problems.
question based upon Section 14 of our franchise."
THE CITY has a franchise agreement with local natural gas utility.
New York, New York.
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BLACK STUDENT UNION
the organization designed with YOU in mind
encourages you to attend our fifth general meeting of the 82-83 school year
Wednesday, November 10, 1982 Satellite Union Conference Room
7:30 p.m.
(be prompt)
A WALK to the meeting will start at Engel and Irving Hill Road (between Ellsworth and Hashinger) at 7:00 p.m.
Funded by the Student Activity Fee
A
APARTMENT LIFE GOT YOU DOWN?
Let Naismith Hall take the "kassle" out of apartment living. Reserve a place now for spring 1983 or move in TODAY!
Naismith Hall 1800 Naismith Drive (843-8559)
University Daily Kansan. November 10, 1982
Page 7
No injuries in house fire
A one-alarm fire burned through the second story of a Lawrence home last night causing severe damage, but no injuries.
Lawrence firefighters responded to the fire about 9:20 p.m. at a house rented by Gary Rayton, 1025 Connecticut St. The house is owned by Rayton's father, Harry Rayton Sr., a relative of Rayton's said.
Rayton and several other men who lived in the house were not home at the time of the fire, fire officials said.
Fire Chief Jim McSwain said that the cause of the fire had not been determined. a fire investigator was called in to determine what started
McSwan said a closet on the first floor and a room on the second floor were burned extensively. The first floor also was damaged by water and the second floor and attic were damaged by smoke and heat.
Residents count pedestrians in traffic safety study
Firefighters used ladders to reach the roof and picks to break through the roof to fight the fire in the attic.
No estimate on the amount damage was available last night.
By MATTHEW SCHOFIELD Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
For two hours yesterday Nancy Richardson stood on the corner of Kentucky and 14th streets and watched people pass by.
Richardson is one of 20 Oread Neighborhood Association members who volunteered to count pedestrians as part of a traffic safety study being conducted by the City of Lawrence. She worked in the area where the study had been well worth the time.
“This has not been the most exciting thing to do,” she said, “but it has been
Having a private interest in the matter helps make the job a little easier.
"I have a child that walks to school along this strip," she said. "I can't let her cross this street alone. There's no real protection on this street."
pm, yesterday more than 140 pedestrians had crossed the streets. What she saw yesterday afternoon and has seen living on Kentucky Street for seven years convinced her that there were called for some action, she said.
THE TRAFFIC study, being conducted by Traf-Tran Engineering, 2500 W. 6th St., was approved by the Lawrence City Commission in June to make sure that protection would be available at the University crossways and street intersections.
"I hate to slow the traffic, but a stop sign is needed somewhere along here," she said.
Richardson said that between 2 and 4
THE VOLUME of traffic on the street is not as dangerous as the speed, she said.
"I have seen people going 80 or 90 mph down this street at night," she said. "I think the people of the neighborhood association have been aware that the crossing problem we have is tough and getting tougher."
Susan Davis, vice-president of the Oread Neighborhood Association, said it had been easy to get volunteers because the individuals who had been involved in the project through their associations would carry more weight as part of a group study.
"Twenty volunteers were all we needed," she said, then stiffened as a friend of her son darted across the street to traffic "oh my heart almost stopped."
RICHARDSON ADDED, "That's the way our children have to cross the street, dodging in and out of traffic."
Davis said the federal government had a law requiring citizens to match the time put in by the city.
"We were kind of expecting to be asked," she said. "We knew they would be needing volunteers when the city approved the study in June."
MAYOR MARCI Francisco will be a traffic observer today at 11th and Tennessee streets.
Davis said that was one of the city's trouble spots.
She said that in 1969 the city had changed Tennessee and Kentucky streets to one-way streets. Many people were affected by the cause of traffic problems, she said.
John Selk, engineer for Traf-Tran,
said the traffic study was going so well
that the company was waiting only for
accident reports.
"We're caught up with everything we had to do," he said. "As soon as the police get the accident reports to us, we can get started again."
Sikl said the reports should be delivered to the company soon, and the managers will see the report.
STOP
Claudia Tellegen, Amsterdam, Netherlands sophomore, counts pedestrians and cars passing through the intersection of 14th and Tennessee streets as part of the Oread Neighborhood Association's traffic watch.
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INTRAMURAL SQUASH
INTRAMURAL SQUASH
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BEGINNING AT 10:00 AM NOV. 13
ENTRY DEADLINE: NOV. 10 AT 5 pm
IN ROOM 208
ENTRY FEE: $1.00 ROBINSON
Funded by the Student Activity Fee
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Academic Skill Enhancement Series
FREE
Monday, November 15
Call or come by the Student Assistance Center, 864-4064,
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BANK OF BALKAN
ADMINISTRATION
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- Jacques Cousteau—Whales
* The American Bald Eagle
Discussion of Endangered Species and Habitates to follow.
TONIGHT
Attention!
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FREE AND OPEN TO THE PUBLIC
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Page 8 University Daily Kansan, November 10. 1962
Enrollment stays on schedule
By DIRK MILLER Staff Reporter
KU officials said yesterday that the new computerized enrollment system had created problems for early enrolled students and were able to keep the process on schedule.
The IBM computer that is used for early enrollment was shut down three times yesterday, said Patsey Elliott, the computer department in the educational services department.
But the early-enrollment staff was able to adjust to the computer shutdowns, which turn off the IBM's CPU and input and output devices, Ellott said.
Gary Thompson, director of student records and registration in the educa
tional services department, said enrollment officials had maintained the scheduled appointment sequence, which was made up according to the last digits of student identification numbers.
The operators took an early lunch during one of the shutdowns. When the computer was fixed they processed it, then turned it on to make up for the lost computer to
Students are scheduled for six minute appointments with the terminal operators, Thompson said. A sign in the shape of a clock outside 111 Strong Hall marks the appointment time that is being enrolled.
When there is a big backlog because of computer shutdowns, Thompson officials advance the clock at two-hour intervals for six-minute appointments.
Richard Mann, University director of information systems, said there were at least eight people working on the computer in the computer programs or software.
"We caught up with a 40 minute backlog in 15 minutes," he said.
He said the problem could be in one of the computer programs developed for the system.
"We're simply trying to find which software it is in," Mann said. "I hope you don't have to do that."
Mann said they worked through the night Monday trying to locate the problem. IBM sent four specialists to KU yesterday to help find the problem.
Sixty percent of the KU professors have missed the deadline for submitting textbook requests for the spring 1983 semester, Bill Muggy, manager of the Jayhawk Bookstore, said recently.
Mans said he had expected problems with the new computer program, and that he hoped that the current problem was not a significant one.
According to Union Bookstores, fewer than 1,000 requests have been turned in for faculty at the institution. Nurse that are offered each semester.
"Very few faculty are concerned about the cutoff date," Muggy said. "The pet is deadline, met, gives
The result could be another semester of uncertainty in ordering books and possible shortages. Muggy and Union Bookstore officials said.
Profs' late orders plague bookstores
He said faculty who dragged their feet until the previous semester was nearly over also made it difficult for his store to find cheaper used books.
"The used books all get gobbled up elsewhere by then," Muggy said.
He said the list was compiled from the requests that his store sent to professors each semester.
The Union Bookstore sends a copy of each request to Muggy's store at a cost of 10 cents a sheet.
"We usually pay about $250 to $300 a
semester for that information," Muggy said. One reason for the system is simplicity, be said.
University policy requires that information to be sent to the Union Bookstore, he said, so it is simpler and cheaper to have a copy of the requests sent from that store to the Jayhawk Bookstore.
Reductions in the number of teaching assistants hired by the University also could create problems, Word said. Students who are unable to get into a course because fewer sections are offered often take another course. A study found that unexpected increase in the number of books needed for that course, he said.
Word said reorders of books that ran short often took at least 10 days.
On campus
TODAY
UNIVERSITY FORUM, "The First Experiment of National Communism in the Ukraine in the '20s and '30s," will be at 11:45 a.m. at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center, 1204 Oread Ave.
CATHOLIC CENTER WORSHIP will be at 12:30 p.m. in Danforth Chapel.
CAPITAL CENTER WORKSHOP will be at 12:30 p.m. in Danforth Chapel.
NON-TRADITIONAL STUDENT Organization luncheon meeting will be at 1 p.m. in Corkroom One of the Kansas Union. in Corkroom One of the Kansas Union.
THE GERMAN CLUB will show a film, "German Catholics from the World." (Mia Koehler)
DUNGEONS AND DRAGONS CLUB will have a games meet at 7 p.m. in the Trail Room of the Kansas Union. Attendance is free. Jacques Cousteau films on whales at
7/15 p.m. in the Council Room of the Kansas Union.
THE KU SAILING CLUB will show two movies at 7:30 p.m. in the fifth floor parlor of the Kansas Union.
ORTHODOX CHRISTIANS ON CAMPUS will discuss the Roman Catholic Church at 8 p.m. in the Annexal Room of the Kansas Union.
TOMORROW
KU SWORD AND SHIELD will meet at 7 p.m. in the Oread Room of the RIVERSIDE
JAMES GUNN, PROFESSOR of English and author and critic of science fiction, will make a presentation; "Space Travel and Literature," at 7:30 p.m. in the Walnut Room of the Kansas Union.
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EXCHANGE
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We think our weekly specials are the best in town. We hope that you have the chance to stop by and have a SPECIAL TIME with us!
**Mon—Schnipps & Beer**
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Thur — Kamikazis Night
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Our entire Take-Out Menu can be delivered to your front door piping hot and fresh!
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(Registration period is from 8.00 - 8.30 when coffee and rolls will be served.)
For answers to your important questions attend the Fall Conference at the University of Kansas School of Law (Green Hall)
November 13,1982 8:00 A.M.-12:30 P.M.
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In response to our last offerings, many of you decided to invest. Our inventory of high-line used cars was depleted. But, once again we are able to offer several of the finest European sedans, coupes and roadsters that represent the ultimate in passenger comfort, safety and fuel efficiency.
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Driving conditions in the Scandinavian countries demand excellence in engineering and durability. Volvo's have long been regarded as one of the most rugged and best built vehicles in the world. It is not uncommon to see 15-year-old Volvos motoring throughout Scandinavia and Europe. We are pleased to offer eastern Kansas' largest selection.
1978-264 GL 4-Dr. Sedan. The very top of the line. Six cylinder fuel injected with sunroof, factory air conditioning, leather interior, excellent paint, etc. This car looks and drives good and is priced at only £7500, a fraction of the new price.
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1974 - 144 Sedan. This original voler Volvo sedan has been through our shop and came through with flying colors. It has an economical yet powerful 4 cylinder, fuel-injected engine, driven, drives as one should, and is specially priced at $3450.
1973-144 4-Dr. Sedan. Original paint and interior plus all factory options, including air conditioning. At $3750 this Volvo can be within most anyone's budget.
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1975--5301. This lovely original touring sedan is absolutely rustfree and is, today, regarded as one of Europe's great road cars. Features include new Michelin tires. The vehicle is absolutely outstanding and priced at only $8950.
PORSCHE
1973-914. This car features the best of both worlds. Porsche engineering, Karman coworkch and a 1.7 liter engine from the factory. An easy way to begin driving a great car that is actually appreciating. Priced at a very affordable $4450.
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University Daily Kansan. November 10. 1982
Page 9
KU Med service to help aged cope with red tape
By VICKY WILT Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
KANSAS CITY, Kan.—Senior citizens will find the complex facilities at the University of Kansas Medical Center less confusing after today thanks to a new service for elderly patients.
Eugene Staples, hospital administrator, said the goal of the new Senior Citizens Health Center, which was to be dedicated this morning, was to keep healthy and ambulatory so they could live independently (or as long as possible).
"What we are trying to do is assist older people as they come through the Medical Center," Staples said. "Persons over 65 can register with the center at no cost and they will be given an identification card that will enable them to get quick and efficient service on such things as problems with billing, making appointments or social service needs."
The health center's office is located in the main entrance to Bell Memorial Hospital.
Any problem that an older person is having, either within the Med Center or with community services outside the health center, with by with the health center, Staples said.
It can be very confusing for an older
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The health center will offer a sense of security to the senior citizen, Staples said. Volunteers will visit with hospital staff and patients to help them feel less alone.
The center was established to alleviate problems senior citizens encounter in areas of understanding bills, questions and problems with making appointments.
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"A person can call this number any time, day or night, and somebody will answer the telephone and help them get the assistance they need. During the interview their appointments are handled as prompt and efficiently as possible," he said.
If a patient has questions he can call the health center's special number, 588-1234, to get specific answers, Staples said. The health center will be open 24 hours a day, seven days a week, including holidays.
Programs on topics of interest to older people, such as Social Security or nutrition, also will be offered through the health center.
person who is not feeling well to find his way to a department for an appointment, he said. An escort service will guide him and end their way around the Med Center.
Volunteers are needed at the health center and senior citizens are encouraged.
Dean Palos, a planner in the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Office who has worked extensively on the downtown project, said, "What's important is that this Sizeler's first opportunity to hear the general public make comments."
Sizer Realty Co. Inc., Kenner, La., and its architectural firm will discuss Lawrence's downtown redevelopment project at a public meeting at 6:30 p.m. tomorrow at City Hall.
Redeveloper to see public
The president of Sizerel, Tom Davidson, and Mayor Marci Francis signed a memorandum of agreement for the project Nov. 4.
Palos said that Davidson and John Stainback, director of planning and urban design for Sizerel's architectural firm, Daniel, Mann, Johnson & Mendenhall, would make a short presentation at the beginning of the meeting, and would then listen to comments from the public.
A flow chart of steps to be taken in the project probably will be presented and explained. Palos said.
Davidson and Stainback met last week with local merchants, neighborhood representatives and banking officials, and will meet with estate agents, merchants, and real estate agents tomorrow and Friday. Palas said.
Hardage, in his second campaign for public office, garnered 339,700 votes, and minor party candidates Jim Ward, Shellon together received 18,972 votes.
FINAL ELECTION tallies in the gubernatorial race show that Carlin captured 405,399 votes, although there are only 833,966 registered Democrats Registered Republicans in Kansas total 409,997 and 374,490 voters are unaffiliated.
Gov. John Carlin's re-election represented a victory for the severance tax but not a significant vote against the traditionally strong Republican Party in Kansas, Robert Bennett, the state chairman of the Republican Party, said recently.
"I think there is no question that Democrats convinced voters that with a severance tax, somebody else would have to pay," Bennett said. "And independent voters, probably more than Republican, decided Sam Hardage just didn't have Carlin's experience."
Bennett also pinpointed the growth of special interest groups and dissatisfaction with President Reagan's policies that weakened the Republican ticket.
Bennett, as well as some Democratic officials, said that Republican and unaffiliated voters obviously contributed to GOP losses in the hotly
GOP still strong, Bennett says
Jim Pigler, state chairman of the Democratic Party, agreed with Bennett that Kansas voters, other than a 25 percent to 30 percent block of "hard-core" members in both parties, ignored fires when faced with the final ballot.
"This is a two-party state and has been since the days of Bob Docking." Bennett said. "I don't think you can say anymore that Kansas will traditionally vote Republican. Kansas voters are one of the least number of voters who have migrated here that do not feel obligated to vote Republican.
"I DON'T think you really can take this election as a turn against the Republican Party. We won most of the elected offices, and we retained the Senate and push comes to shore, the two major contested offices involved personalities."
contested 2nd District congressional and gubernatorial races.
But unlike Bennett, he said he sensed a growing strength in the Democratic Party, which he attributed to the fact that he was on a strong coalition of candidates.
IN THE OTHER Kansas campaign that promoted controversy, Democrat im. Slattery defeated Morris Kay, of the 2nd district and the 2nd District seat in the U.S. House.
But Bennett emphasized that these two easy Democratic victories in no way signified a trend away from Kansas' Republican voting bloc.
BUT BENNETT said that Docking's youth would work against him if he campaigned for governor in 1986. He also suggested that the lieutenant governor would have difficulty gaining any recognition if Carlin continued to ignore the office, as current Lieutenant Paul Duag has complained in the past.
"I would make a rather substantial guess that a Republican will win the governorship four years from now," Bennett said.
"TRADITIONALLY, most statewide offices are held by Republicans, though this has changed a little in recent years," Pliger said. "I think the Democratic Party has come of age." He said the Republican Party was able to run good candidates and possibly combat challenges than they could 20 years ago.
He also said that he foresaw no problem for the re-election of Sen. Robert Dole, R-Kan., if Carlin chose to run against him in 1986.
Ploger said he expected a bright future for the Democratic Party in Kansas and, for the lieutenant governor-elect, Tom Docking.
Docking, a 28-year-old tax attorney, has a family history etched with state politics. Both his father and grandfather served as Kansas governors.
Carin has said he would fulfill all four years of the governor's term, but hilted in a press conference last week that he interested in a future in the U.S. Senate.
THIS WORKSHOP IS OFFERED ONLY AT THE LABORATORY.
the village sampler
Cathedral Window
Trapunto
Counted Cross Stitch
Machine Applique Demo.
Folded Star
Candlewilling
Hand Applique & Piecing
ICHABOD'S
WED. NITE
8-12
DRINK-N-DROWN
$1 for Ladies $3 for Guys
2 Miles North of City Hall
TRAVEL CENTER
443-721-8000
Southern Hills Center
1601 West 23rd
M-F 9:5:30 * Sat 9:30-2
AIRLINE HOTLINE
Make Your Thanksgiving & Christmas Reservations Today
Fares Are Increasing and Seating Is Limited. Call Today
841-7117
TRAVEL CENTER
TONIGHT IS
PITCHER NIGHT
at
THE HAWK
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Refills:
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7:00-8.00 $0.75
8:00-9.00 $1.00
9:00-10.00 $1.25
10:00-11.00 $1.50
11:00-11.45 $1.75
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Sun. Noon-11:45 p.m.
No other coupons accepted with this offer
COUPON SALE
Get Outstanding Discounts on Your Favorite Jeans & Tops
$6 OFF
This coupon entitles bearer to
$6 OFF
Any Gal's Lee, Levi's,
Chic, Brittania or
Zena Jeans
at
KING + Jeans
Coupon good thru Nov. 14
at KING of Jeans LEMI
This coupon entitles bearer to
$6 OFF
Any Gal's Lee, Levi's,
Chic, Brittania or
Zena Jeans
at
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Coupon good thru Nov. 14
This coupon entitles bearer to
$3 OFF
Any Jeans or Pants
(Regardless of price)
at
KING + Jeans
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This coupon entitles bearer to
$4 OFF
Any Levi's
Corduroys
at
KING + Jeans
Coupon good thru Nov. 14
This coupon entitles bearer to
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Any Flannel
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at
KING + Jeans
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This coupon entitles bearer to
$3 OFF
Any Guy's Shirt
(Even if it's already
on sale!)
at
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This coupon entitles bearer to
$4 OFF
Any Guy's or Gal's
Recycled Jeans or
Cords
at
KING + Jeans
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Any Jeans or Pants
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price)
at
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Any Levi's
Corduroys
at
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at
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at
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at
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Page 10 University Daily Kansan, November 10, 1982
Students to study KU energy efficiency
By BRET WALLACE
Staff Reporter
Some architecture students will have the opportunity to help the University of Kansas save money by recommending ways to improve energy efficiency, the associate executive vice chancellor said yesterday.
William Hogan, the vice chancellor,
said the School of Architecture would start a program next semester in which selected students would study campus buildings and make recommendations and plans to improve energy efficiency.
Mix Lucas, dean of the School of Architecture, said the program probably would be for students who entered a design and energy competition.
Senior architecture students enter the competition and can work on a building specified by the contest or one of their own choosing, Lucas said.
THIS PROGRAM will give students
the opportunity to meet the qualifications, completion and may help help you.
Hogan said, "I would hope, with all the creative talent we have here, to make this even better."
Lucas said student designs would be modifications that could be done at a low cost.
Christopher Theis, associate director of the School of Architecture, who will be in charge of the program, said that he had taught the school worked on efficiency studies.
HOGAN SAID recommendations by the students would go through a long set of approvals before they could be enacted.
Lucas said the projects first would be reviewed by Theis and Thomas Dean, professor of architecture and urban design. They will collect the best
projects and submit them to the University, he said.
Not all of the projects will be feasible, he said. Sometimes students do not have the experience to design a project that can be constructed.
HOGAN SAID the office of facilities and planning would review the projects and submit them to the Kansas Board of Regents if the plans were feasible and showed a high savings in energy use.
Theis said students would work at different levels of analysis.
If the Regents approve the plans, they will be submitted to the Kansas Law Enforcement Department.
"We want to get as many students involved as possible." Thesis said.
Some students may be involved in semester-long projects, but others will only spend a short amount of time on it, he said.
large scale planning such as future development of new facilities at the University or the re-use of existing structures, he said. They also will study behavior patterns and how they affect energy consumption.
GRADUATE STUDENTS will study
The program will involve more cooperation between the University and the School of Architecture and Arts with critics within the school. Thesis said.
Lucas said the School of Architecture would be careful not to repeat the work of other groups. The students will have access to all other studies done on energy.
He said that although this project might open doors for students to become involved in other campus projects, they would have to be carefully monitored because students were not licensed to work as architects.
Architecture graduates have to work in three or four years before they can be admitted.
Lawyer's aide charged with plotting robbery
By United Press International
NEW YORK—An assistant to a lawyer representing a suspect in the bloody Brink's heist was charged yesterday with planning the robbery, driving a getaway car in other vehicles, putting to free suspects in the holdup
Sylvia Baraldini, 34, is a legal assistant to Susan Tipograph, who represents Brink's suspect Judith Clark.
Two police officers and a security guard were killed Oct. 20, 1981 in the $1.6 million holdup of a Brink's car in N.Y. The money was recovered.
Baraldini was ordered held on $300,000 bail at arraignment in U.S. District Court in Manhattan.
Tipograph called the bail "outrageous ransom," and said Baralidin was prosecuted because she belonged to a communist organization.
Tipograph said her legal assistant was a member of the May 19th Coalition, a group with links to the radical Weather Underground.
Authorities charged Baraldini with conspiring to commit a bank robbery.
Prosecutor Robert Litt said papers found on the suspect also indicated the existence of a plot to kill the doctor, a awaiting trial in Rockland County.
Indicted in the heist were Clark, Kathy Boudin, Donald Weems, David Gilbert, Samuel Brown, David LaBorde, and Nathanial Burns.
TONIGHT GO ITALIAN
TONIGHT,
GO ITALIAN
• Homemade Spaghetti • Meat & Cheese
Ravioli • Tortellini • Spinach & Italian Sauce
Lasagna • Manicotti • Carnelions • Meatball & Sausage
Orders **
Daily Special! ALL YOU CAN EAT EXTRAVAGANZA
$3.60 Day. $4.25 Evenings * Prices range $1.75 - $4.25
• Cold carryout & hot to go orders
Open day 11:00 am - 9:00 pm **
PASTAH'S
1809 Mass. 841-7122
Sunday is eight
—Show KUl O for a free soult
—Owned and operated by the Cortrucopia restaurant.
SHANN And the SCAMS
Coming Soon To Gammons (starting Nov. 15) Something New Look for it GAMMONS GAMMONS
GAMWONS
SNOWWS
Saturday, Nov. 13th
Dance — FREE BEER 8-9! Rhythm & Blues/Motown Lawrence Opera House
842-0600
KINGSIZE
PIZZA Shoppe
--for all occasions
6th & Kasold Westridge Shopping Center
4 TOPPINGS AND 22 ON PERCI
$8.75 DELIVERED plus tax
842-0600
COMPUTER STORE
1000 Iowa 841-0066
McCOLLUM HALL PRESENTS AN OPEN FORUM
THE STUDENT BASED PRESS CENTER PACIFIC COUNTY
Meet the Student Body President & Vice-President Candidates
LISA ASHNER VS.
JIM CRAMER
Consensus Coalition
CARDS & GIFTS Russell Stover CANDIES
Southwest Plaza 23 th rowes
141-2100
10-8 M-F
10-6 Sat
KEVIN WALKER
DAVID TEPOORTON
Momentum Coalition
---
VALID ID CARDS
comprehensiv health
LISA ASHNER
**beach**
*from progresive areas*
**maternity**
*directions from progresive areas*
**overland park**
Overland Park, KY 411-642-3100
Instantly Laminated Cold
available at
1 - DENT SYSTEMS
BENT SYSTEMS
Room 114A Mamada Inn 841-5905
commodore
COMPUTER
Computerark 841-0094
808 W. 24th
THE CASTLE TEA ROOM
1307 Mass
phone: 843-1151
MEXICO CITY
BORDER BANDIDO
Taco Salads 99° Reg. $1.49
Super Salads $1.99 Reg. $2.69
Guacamole Salad 99° Reg. $1.49
Wednesdays 11 a.m. - 10 p.m.
Place an ad. Tell the world.
1528 W. 23RD. Across from Post Office
842-8861
--now 6/99 $^c$
7Up & RC
6 pack, 12 oz. cans
$1.49
KING SUPER STORE NOW OPEN 24 HRS 23rd & LOUISIANA CHECK THE CORNER WITH THE KING
Coke, Tab & Sprite
6 pack, 12 oz. cans
$1.79
Shurfresh Vanilla Ice Cream Buy 1, Get 1 FREE
Deli Sandwiches 20% OFF
Kool Lights & Kool Ultra Lights Buy 1, Get 1 FREE
So-DRY Paper Towels 69¢/Roll
Old Style Beer
12-pack
$3.89
Candy Bars reg. 30°
Van Camps Pork & Beans 39° can
King Oil 20/30
reg. $1.09
now 89¢
Old Milwaukee Quarts
Tony's Frozen Pizza
Cheese, Hamburger, Sausage
$1.39
Strongheart Dog Food
Folgers Coffee Drip & Regular $2.49
Nutcracker Peanuts & Crunch
23$ can
7Up & RC liters
99¢
Farnsworth Cookies reg. 30° now 5/$1.00
20% OFF
Nehi Pop Liter
79¢
KING
MISTER
GUY
CAMPUS TRADITIONS
Hours:
M-T. W.-F. Sat.
9:30-6:00
Thur. 9:30-8:30
Sun. 1-5
Free Beer on Fridays
920 Massachusetts
Lawrence, KS
842-2700
University Daily Kansan. November 10. 1982
Page 11
Radio, ad executives to be cited
By VERONICA JONGENELEN Staff Reporter
A veteran eastern Kansas broadcaster and a Kansas City, Kan., advertising executive will be honored for their contributions to journalism as part of KU Telecommunications Day on Friday.
Jerry Holley, vice president for broadcasting of Stauffer Communications Inc., will receive the Grover Cobb Award for Broadcasting Service. William Harmon, founding partner and chairman of the board of Harmon and Prudential Public relations agency, will receive the Alumni Honor Citation.
The award presentations will be
HOLLEY SAID the award was important to him, not only because it came from the William Allen White School of Journalism and Mass Communication, but also because it bore Grover Cobb's name.
Both men expressed surprise over their selection.
highlights of the first Telecommunications Day.
"I was dumbfounded," Holley said. "It was great."
Harmon, who graduated from KU 25 years ago, said his selection came at a time when he could celebrate spending 25 years out in the cold, cruel world.
Harmon said, "I'm very pleased to say the least."
F. ROGERS
Holley gained his current position in 1977 after spending 17 years in produc-
positions with; various Stauffer stations. Harmon launched his agency in 1972. He is an account supervisor for the Kansas City Chiefs, CharterBanks and
Harmon
Frito-Lay, is an expert on instant-replay scoreboards.
Stauffer
THE PROGRAM will start at 10:30 a.m. Friday in Woodruff Auditorium in the Arts Building.
Flaherty, vice president for engineering of CBS-TV. Flaherty is a leader in the development of electronic newsgathering technology.
Bruce Linton, director of the radio-TV-film department, said Todd Benson Day was a re-amped version of the traditional Radio-TV-Film Day.
During a noon luncheon, the awards will be presented and Edward Fritts, president of the National Association of Broadcasters, will speak.
Eight other telecommunications executives will speak at the program.
THE NAME WAS changed and the program was moved from spring to fall to underscore the University's new emphasis on telecommunications in telecommunication, Linton said.
The first Kansas Media Workshop, a
tion, promotion and management
positioning with an agency Staffordshire.
The program will include tips on obtaining funds for arts and humanities productions, information on what to expect and to avoid in producing such programs and a session on resource development.
separate but related event, will begin at 10 a.m. Thursday in the Jayhawk Room of the Union.
Registration for Telecommunications Day is free. Luncheon tickets are on sale in the RTVF office in New York City. Registration fee for the media workshop.
The University Daily
KANSAN WANT ADS
Call 864-4358
CLASSIFIED RATES
twin two three four five six seven eight nine ten one-two-three-four-five-six-seven-eight-nine十-one-two-three-four-five-six-seven-e八九
AD DEADLINES
ERRORS
Monday ... Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday ... Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday ... Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday ... Friday 5 p.m.
Friday ... Saturday 5 p.m.
The Kassus will 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.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or simply by e-mail. Free promotional offer at 864-4558.
(818) 864-4558
NAVYDISCOVERY.COM
ANNOUNCEMENTS
ALERTIONS: for color TV drama production
Nov. 15 & 18 Nov. 17 at 13:30-8 PM, 104 Joliffe Contact
Dr Jan Platt, 802472, 2214 Joliffe (or script
information)
Christmas Haircut Nov. 11, 5 p.m. m-9 p. Nov. 12, 8 a.m. b - 9 p.m. BLDGS Church, 1900 University Dr. Crafts, plants, take goods & gifts for all occasions
Lunch & dinner served
Paid Staff Positions
Business Manager, Editor
The Kanan is now accepting applications for the Spring Semester Business Manager and Editor positions. These are paid positions and require some newspaper experience. Application forms are available online at www.kanan.edu/positions 105 105 B.Kansas Union; in the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 220 Strong Hall; and in Room 200 and 118 Flint Hall. In room 200 Flint Hall by 5 p.m., Thursday, November 18.
The University Daily Kansan is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer. Applications are sought from all qualified people regardless of race, religion, color, sex, disability, veteran status, national origin, age, or ancestry.
Silva Mind Control preview. Relaxation seminar
Discover the potential of your mind. Phone 842-7341
'Misfits Sale
Do you need cash? Bring your unwanted merchandise to the Lawrence Community Auction. Every Wednesday, 7 p.m. Commitments accepted Tuesday through Friday, 10 a.m., p.m. 769-852-4411. Hallmark 841-212 for info
in the CHRISTIAN CAMPUS HOUSE this fall.
Call Alison Hunen, campus musician,
Call Alison Hunen, campus musician.
Nov. 10th, 10 am-6:30 pm
Nov. 11th, 10 am-7
Attended larger
west entrance.
Supported by
Staff of Organization
All items 24c and up!
Racquets, t-shirts, t-wishers, suits,
shirts, swimsuits, surprize garb-
and surprise grab-bag.
Lawrence Dart Dance Association and the KU
Pokkie Dance Club present an OLD TIME COUNTRY
Kids' Performance on Friday, Nov. 14, 8-11
m.p. at Off the Wall Hall, Attendance $30, with
KUID $20. No partners are necessary and beginn-
ing fee? Refreshment provided Enjoy!
Enjoy!
FOR RENT
I need a mature, non-smoking upperclass woman to insure my apartment from January to the end of July. You will pay $450 for rent and will have your own close-up closet to campus and campus. M1-7658
1 bedroom Meadowbrook Apk. rent for thoughtless Meadowbrook. Please contact occupants at 740-1328. EXTRA nice apartments, large and small. Next to the Lake Meadow in our building. FIRST A MONTH RENT FREE. Variable length lease available on energy efficient 2 & 3 bedroom apartments. Recently constructed with high-quality flooring, 5 SW windows, & 2 3 bedrooms from $800-$1500. Call and ask about our low cost living lofts. Phone 843-4744 between us.
SPRING SEMESTER
Enjoy carefree living at affordable prices. Spacious studios, 1 & 2 bedroom apts. Carpeted, draped and on the busline.
The Luxury of Meadowbrook Is Just Right For You
meadowbrook
15th & Crestline 842-4200
Needed 4 mature students for a very special 4 bedroom home, very high neighbourhood. #480
5219 7366 2878 9960
New apart., 2 bed, 1/2 bath, fully furnished, close to campus, 941-1122 or 740-5757.
Nice 1 bedroom apartment, furnished, water paid,
need support for next semester, starting in
January. If like to see or interested call 654-854-
8314 or 654-8323, ask about 186, age 18, I haven't
Place.
Nice one-bedroom, one bath apt with range,
fishery and dishwashers. Good location. $285, all
insurance.
One and two bedroom apartments. Move your belongings in after final-spend the holidays at home with family-pay rent upon your return in January. Located next to compa, laundry facilities.
PHINCTERCE PLACE PATCH APARTMENTS. Now Available, 2 bedrooms, 2 bath; perfect for roommates, features wood burning fireplace; 2 car garage with windows, kitchenette, dining area, microwave kitchen, quiet surroundings. No p lease $430 per month. Open house 9-30:50 daily at 2308 Princeton fld., phone or 872-2682 for additional details.
APARTMENT LIFE
GOT YOU DOWN ?
THINKING OF
MOVING BACK TO
THE CAMPUS
LIFESTYLE?
THINK OF
NAISMITH HALL
ON CAMPUS
CONVENIENCE WITH
AN OFF CAMPUS
LIFESTYLE!
NAISMITH HALL
843-8559
Rockledge Villa, Sublude 2 hdmr. apt., new carpet,
shelving, closet. $470. Water tank. $150. water
pfd. $320/month. Available Des. 17
Feb. to Nov.
SOUTHERN PARKWAY TOWNHouses, 20th & Kassid. You are tired of noisy & cramped apartments, you like as like. Our duplexes feature 3 br., WD Hookup, all appliances,贮仓器, garage, windows, balcony, pool, patio, Call 748-156 (evenings and weekends) for more information about our modest priced townhouses. STUDIO apt. for Jan. May sublease. Can move in Dec. 17, $4/mo. low utilities. Neighborhood.
SUBLEASE in Dec, or Jan. once, 1B apt, furnished.
Close to campau. 749-385.
VIRYKY nice 2 B Duplex, fully carpeted, new paint,
WCW, WDH dispailor, disposal, pets. $75/unit.
Sublease p. avail. Available Jan. 1, Nice and quiet, 2-br
ALL UTILITIES p.90 & 61庐庐 844-1150-840
Sublease furnished bed and B. bgr 125/month at 629 Kentucky. Excellent location. Great deal 841-5995. Room size: 35'x27'. Dining room, one, and a half bath, real new Pin Oak townhouse, 2105 Alabama Cave. Guilt 749-1744.
ninja, inexpensive room. Block from Union Depot, no pets. Must have clean habits. Come to Katy if you need help.
Treet of doing all the **housework** Check out Sunflower cooperate, secure, clean and impress you.
Noblese outstanding outfitting. 2F, Jr; 1B; bather.
DR, prt; kitchen bachelor / w/ appliances, pool, footwear.
Water and ice cream T4 pool, Nannymouse,
Cake Bar, Kiosk. 2015 Rentals.
Subsitute $3 bedroom apartment. Good location. Start
own.
Sublease 2 bmts. apt., in recoateded 4 pln. Pay $1
rmt until January then $25/month. Call Natale
Schaefer, 806-735-9233.
FOR SALE
Hammer Place - Completely furnished one bedroom apartments available immediately. Located between 14th and 15th on Main. Only $8ks from KU and $30ks from $20 per month water paid. 841-323 or B2-842-655.
1027 Dellation B10-4 spare - door, windows, AC. (Acrylic cover)
1028 Dellation B10-6 spare - door, windows, AC.
condition checking $750.00 per unit, will accept boxed
condition check
NICELY DECORATED spacious room. Furnished
pstl utilities near. Near University, downf-
off from campus. Walk to cafeteria and
gym.
1970 Maverick. stick shift, rebuilt engine.
Henmark reliable. 8644-841-0570
1778 BMW 320i - 4-spd, A/c. 5,000 miles, alloy new, tire cassette, absolutely perfect. 841-1471.
1779 Toyota Corolla 2.4 - 4-speed. Excellent condition. See at 1331 Vermont. Phone: 964-2011. $196.
1791 Datsun 710 Wagon, metallic blue, 5-speed, air-ridden, very well kept, $4,800; 840-1460 or 842-1460.
brandy remainer, 900 601-8310.
UW Bus. Never used condition. 849.7247
1979 WV Hahld 30,000 miles. 4-door, new Michelin tires, fire protection. $1,600. *U.S. only.* For a full list of offers and great mpg, visit www.michelin.com.
good condition, good tires. Must sell #92 2023.
Koestel BAKDYN WT800 Bee Code wheels. also run
1832.450.3890 Excellent condition.
user: 864.704.600 ext. 453 afternoon; 841.900 evenings
slide propertor No. Excellent conditions,
without light damage. Renal: 95-110. Yours: $3. Call
941-909.
MORHLE HOME in the country Parkwood, 50 x 10 m/47 ft on live rock, 9 m. fl. E of Lawrence Road, W/D, ceiling fan, central air artificial fireplace, W/D, ceiling fan, central air artificial fireplace, push lawn mower. Very nice for $8,200. Mobile 542-3210. Push lawn mower. Very nice for $8,200. Mobile 542-3210.
Must sell an HP-41C with a card reader. Together or
separate. Best Call 844-526-2068 for 400+ or
707-348-8949.
Mea/Boag/ega amp. loop, Graphic EQ, 60/100
Watts. To bear, call 842-1617.
NAD 20: watt amp. $185; B R W speakers. $133;
technics tlaasable plus cardboard, $79, or off;
+50 volts.
Olympus OM 10 35mm camera / w/ 50mm lens, perfect condition, perfect 12H. Call 843-494-13 after 3 p.m.
Bennett Lc49ar with AC, stereo, mapi wheels,
Wetzel DL66 with AC, stereo, mapi wheels,
TENNIS HACKETS. Received selection selection.
Toyota Corolla 1972-4L 6-A, C.R. condition, great condition
mant see to indicate
$ 2708 843-564-64
TRENDS RACETTS Recently received selection newhead Head Compil. Will advantage Kramer Pre Staff. Dumpship Maxpy, Davis Classic. Prince Jake. Seen why it is good in condition. 842-6130 at 6:09 p.m.
FOUND
Yamaha C- Preview Excellent condition. Also
DK dark brown with Omega 60 black engra-
ing and Omega 75 white engraving.
Mint Condition.
If you found a ladder navy blue blazer, please return it. You will receive a password for your Leave a message for Kaitie at 841-882-9644 or 841-882-9640.
I call calculator. CFX X100. Please call 749-8053.
LOST? Pass and ID around Summerfield. If lost,
return the phone number to Kaitie.
LOST Dark blue lootie leaf notebook. Contains handwritten western story. REWARD. Phone 842-8123. Lost 11-82 at IN AP Parking Lot A: Allumbs - Norristown. Parking lot A: Allumbs. If found please call Jim Thewmon at 843-8133.
One very small black female dog. Call Joe Fina at 843-506.
Please help! Green Dwarf Macaw *Love* visitivity 78 and *Arkansas*. You can call be heard check trees, birds, snakes, and other animals. Would the woman who came several times looking for her cowat *Woman lawyer please claim it.* It has
HELP WANTED
Computer service agency has an opportunity to enter or advance in computer field. You will have full combination of Experience and/or training desired. Apply Personnel Office, Administration Center, 201 Louisiana Avenue, New Orleans, LA 77104. DO YOU RUN OUT OF MONEY BEFORE YOU MONTH? Turn the tables with extra income from your business. Visit our distributor trainers distribution trainer for you spendiable opportunity. Send name and phone to Routes 2: Box 155-A.
NURSING: FULL-TIME/PART-TIME Are You interested In-Weekwork only week? Either day, even daylight hours. You will be able to work one or two weeks or 1 or 2 hour shifts? There and other opportunities for registered nurses are now available at the nursing school. We offer three-week orientation. So even if you have been away from nursing awake, we can work you back in! The nurses will provide a three-week orientation. We all work together and support each other. And we have increased salaries 60%; AND NOW our students have more paid time off. Beverly Anderson, RN, director of Nursing, Topkota, Mumbai 60195, W 8th Street, Kansas City, Kansas 60136, 911-729-4533.
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Secretarial assistant needed 10-20 hours per week; for typing and library work. $35.30 per more hour. Residency schedule KU be student. Call Kristin Mackenzie at 864-8840 or 8104 Maclet. Close date Nov. 18.
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Page 12 University Daily Kansan, November 10, 1962
Players to get first action Jayhawks open season tonight
By GINQ STRIPPOLI
Sports Editor
The Kansas basketball team will open its 1982-83 season with the annual Crimson-Blue game tonight at Allen Field House.
Tip-off for the contest is 7 p.m.
Tip off for the contest is 7 p.m.
"I've really been pleased so far this year," head coach Ted Owens said. "Every veteran is better and the freshmen all have excellent attitudes and are dedicated workers."
The Blue squad will consist of veterans Jeff Dishman, 6-foot-5 forward; Brian Martin, 6-foot-8 center; Kelly Knight, 6-foot-7 center, and Tad Boyle, 6-foot-4 guard. Newcomers on the Blue team will be Carl Henry, 6-foot-5 guard, and Kerry Boagni, 6-foot-5 forward.
The Crimson squad will consist of three veterans and four newcomers to the Kansas team. The veterans are Mark Summers, 6-foot-7 forward; Mark Ewing, 6-foot-9 center, and Lance Hill, 6-foot-5 guard. The newcomers are Jeff Guiot, 6-foot-1 guard; Kern Kolleg, 6-foot-5 guard; and Calvin Thompson, 6-foot-6 forward, and Greg Gomez, 7-foot-4 forward, all students from Wichita State. This, and the intrasquad game in Hutchinson, will be the only action Drehling will see.
Here is a player-by-player analysis of this year's Jayhawk team.
BLUE TEAM
Carl Henry — Henry, who sat out last season after transferring from Oklahoma City, is one of the best all-around players Kansas has had in a long time. He can shoot, rebound and handle the ball.
In his sophomore year at OCU, Henry averaged 19 points and 11.7 rebounds a game. His mark of 11.7 rebounds put him ninth in the country.
Owens about Henry? "Carl hasn't played in over a year so it may take a few games for him to reach his goal." And he is going to become a fine player though."
Jeff Dishman — Dishman is a co-captain on this year's team and is the only player returning who started every game last season.
Dishman averaged 9.3 points and 5.9 rebounds a game last year after transferring from Hutchinson Junior College. If his pre-season play is any indication, Dishman will be the most improved player on the Kansas squad.
Owens about Dishman: "Jeff is a much improved player this year. He is stronger and his mechanics are much better."
Tad Bley — Boyle is coming off a disappointing freshman year that saw him average just 2.9 points a game, but wins the game behind the squad behind Tony Guy in assists.
Boyle was one of only four players last year who played in all 27 games, and he will once again be starting as point guard.
Owens about Royle: "Tad gained 20 pounds over the summer and it has helped him. He is quicker and stronger than last year."
Kelly Knight — Knight was plagued by an ankle injury last year, but still managed to be third on the team in scoring with a 12.3 average.
Knight's shooting ability and versatility enable Owens to play Knight at Patrol.
Knight is in a serious battle with Brian Martin for the starting center position.
Brian Martin — Martin started three games when Knight went down with an injury last year. He managed to average 3.6 points and 3.2 rebounds a game last year, despite averaging just 15 minutes of playing time a game.
Martin's quickness and defensive ability give him a slight advantage over Knight this season with the Jayhawks looking to run more. But, you can expect him and Knight to be on the same time during some of this season.
Kerry Boaglain — Kansas' most heralded freshman from Serra High School in Gardena, Calif. He was named to eight of the nationally ranked college teams after scoring 24 points and 17 rebounds a game his senior year.
Boagis is the lone freshman on the blue squad which consists of the top 30 players.
Owens about Boagint: "He'll be an outstanding player, but it will take some time. It it's untainted to expect a team that makes a dramatic effect on a team."
CRIMSON TEAM
Mark Summers — Summers, who along with Dishman are the Jayhawk co-captains, is coming off arthroscopic knee surgery and is not yet at 100
Summers averaged 1.5 points and 1.2 rebounds a game last year and if he can come back from his surgery, he will play against heyaws depth underneath the boards.
He averaged 1 point a game in limited action last year, after he transferred from Cloud County Community College, where he averaged 17 points and 10 rebounds a game his sohomore year.
Mark Ewing - Ewing is the tallest member of the Kansas team and his shooting touch and height could help the Jawhaws around the basket.
Lance Hill — Hill, like Summers, is recovering from knee surgery and is improving as the practice season continues.
Hill averaged 3.6 points a game last
year with a season-high 15 points against Oklahoma State that led the team to win 68-62.
Hill, who started in five contests last week, has scored 14 Kansas depth at both point guard and linebacker.
Guiot, who is a fine ball hander and shooter, will back up Boyle at the point
Jeff Guilf — Guiot was one of the top two Kansas recruits after a senior season that saw him average 24.4 points and 9 assists a game at Chanute High.
Kellogg had some problems early, adjusting to college basketball, but he is expected to fight for a starting berth sometime this season.
Ron Kellogg — Kellogg was named to four All-America teams following an exceptional career at Northwest High in Omaha, Neb. He averaged 21.7 points and 10.9 rebounds a game his senior year.
Calvin Thompson — Thompson, along with Guiot, was one of the top two prep players in Kansas last year and he so named to three All-American teams.
He averaged 21 points and 12 rebounds his senior year at Wyandotte High in Kansas City, Kan. He is one of the best shooters on the Kansas squad and should help the Jayhawks in that area.
Greg Dreiling — Dreiling transferred to Kansas after playing at Wichita State for one year. If Dreiling was eligible, he would have Kansas have tremendous depth and would enable Owens to move Knight and Martin to forward positions.
Dreiling will play in the two intra-squad matches and will practice with the team, but he will not be able to play against the competition for the Jayhawks this season.
Sugar Ray retires from boxing
By United Press International
BALTIMORE—World wetterweight champion Sugar Ray Leonard announced his retirement from boxing last night, ending a career that has earned him almost $40 million and two world titles.
Leonard, who underwent successful surgery in May to repair a partially detached retina in his left eye, said his experience was a positive feeling the ising gave. Boxing is history.
has ended months of speculation concerning his boxing future.
"Very few people get a second chance. I have that chance now to see what life is all about." Leonard spoke at a party attended by world middle-class champion Marvin Hagler, Muhammad Mumma, Ken Norton and other celebrities.
Leonard reportedly could have earned $23 million, the largest purse ever for one boxer, to fight Hagler. The Olympic champion's announcement
LEONARD TOLD 7,000 fans that a bout against. Hagler "unfortunately" lost the fight.
the champion's decision pleased most of the crowd, and especially his wife.
"I definitely don't want him to box again," she said. "He's got a million dollars."
Leonard has used his skills, including a flicking jab, to become a consumate
In 33 professional fights, Leonard has lost only to Roberto Duran in a 15-round unanimous decision in Montreal on June 20, 1980. He avenged that loss five months later with an eighth round TKO when he pursued Lewis during Quan quit late in the round.
HE STARTED his career. Feb. 5, 1977, in Baltimore and won the World Boxing Council welterweight crown on June 24. In his first fight beyond 10 rounds,
Leonard scored a 15th-round TKO victory when the referee stopped the fight with six seconds remaining.
Leonard gained undisputed claim to the world wetterweight crown in a 14-round TKO victory against Thomas Hearns on Sept. 16, 1981. Leonard earned $12 million, the largest purse paid to one fighter, in that fight.
Three weeks before he was scheduled to defend his title against Roger Sloaford on May 14 of this year, he sat in front of the vision in his left eye was blurred.
On May 7, a Buffalo doctor discovered a tear in the retina. Two days later, Dr. Ronald Meyers performed surgery on the retina institute at the Johns Hopkins Hospital.
Leonard, who proclaimed after winning the Olympic medal "this is my last fight," has scored 16 TKOs, seven knockouts and nine decisions and has not been knocked down in his professional career.
Game time set at 7 p.m.
The starting time for tonight's Crimson/Blue game has been changed from 7:40 m. to 7:00.
The game will be the first action for the Jayhawks outside of practice and will be followed by a photo and autograph session.
The Jayhawks will be in action again on Monday at 7:35 p.m., when they take on the Yugoslavia National Team.
Kansas will then travel to Hutchinson to play another intersquad contest on November 17. It will be a homecoming for Brian Martin and Jeff Dishman, who both played at Hutchinson Junior College.
NASHVILLE 245
MISSOUR
The Jayhawks will open their regular season when they take on U.S. International from San Diego, Calif., on Nov. 27 at Allen Field House. Game time for that contest is 2:00 p.m.
Lance Hill, right, and Jeff Dishman will be counted on heavily to help the Jayhawks improve on last season's 13-14 record. Kansas opens its season with the annual Crimson-Blue game tonight at 7 p.m.
Garvey claims rejection of contract unanimous
By United Press International
NEW YORK—Ed Garvey, executive director of the NFL Players Association, said yesterday that all 29 teams rejected management's proposal to end the 50-day football strike, despite announced acceptances from the New Orleans Saints, Houston Oilers and Los Angeles Rams.
The union chief said that those three clubs were not fully informed of the proposal and that their many questions to the offer was like a vote of disapproval.
"When you get to the bottom of it, they posed questions that required good hard collective bargaining," Garvey said. "Many of the teams have made lists that move very close to our proposal. In what do you want to convince what you do? List what your want and what you can change and go from there."
Details of the management's proposal were not released.
IN ANOTHER development, the NFL Management Council yesterday filed unfit labor practice charges against a company that incidents that union representatives
allegedly threatened an outspoken player
The charge stated that union President Gene Upshaw and Elvin Bethea of the Houston Oilers were among those who "threatened, restrained and coerced" Russell Erxleben, the New Orleans player representative, Erxleben repeatedly has criticized the union's conduct. The NFLAHA has denied the threats to Erxleben or anyone else.
The Rams reportedly voted 15-11 to accept the owners' proposal. The Oliers also reportedly accepted the proposal, although no vote count was given for Houston. The two teams join the Saints, who voted 45-1 with one abstention, as the only clubs to have voted for the proposal.
The Houston and New Orleans players said that some details still needed to be negotiated. The Los Angeles Times reported that at least 20 Rams were not present during the vote, but their ballots must still be counted.
THE PLAYERS are not going to "buy the management's proposal," Gavin says.
Jim Miller, spokesman for the owners, said no new negotiating sessions were imminent.
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The University of Kansas Theatre and School of Fine Arts present
The University of Kansas Theatre and School of Fine Arts present
A LITTLE NIGHT MUSIC
The Tony Award Winning Musical
November 4, 5, 6, 11, 12, 13, 1982
8:00 p.m. nightly
University Theatre Murphy Hall
Music and Lyrics by Stephen Sondheim
Book by Hugh Wheeler
Based on a film by Ingmar Bergman
*This is close to being the perfect romantic musical comedy...*
Brenden Giff/ The New Yorker
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office
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Brenden Gill / The New Yorker
Tickets on sale in the Morphe Hall Box Office
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University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
The University Daily
KANSAN
Thursday, November 11, 1982 Vol. 93, No.59 USPS 650-640
Soviet President Brezhnev dies at 75
By United Press International
MOSCOW—President Leonid Brezhnev died yesterday, the official Tass news agency announced today. He was 75.
Brezhnev's name failed to appear in a Pravda item today and Soviet media played funereal ads.
The Soviet leader's name was missing today from its customary place on the front page of the Communist Party daily in a congratulatory address to the American Marxist state of Angola on its national day.
Brezhnev was last seen in public Sunday, at the Red Square military parade that marked the 68th anniversary of the war.
"Leonid Breznev, died a sudden death at 8:30 a.m. (11:30 p.m. CST) on Nov. 10, 1922." Tass m.
Simultaneous announcements were made by
Leonid I. Brezhnev
the official news agency, the television and radio at 2 a.m. CST today.
Roussel said no special security actions were taken but "we are continuing to monitor the
President Reagan was awakened about one-half hour after the official announcement and was told of Brezhnu's death, a White House spokesman said today.
The White House planned a formal statement on Brezhnev's death later in the day, Roussel said.
Spokesman Peter Roussel said National Security Adviser William Clark awakened Reagan shortly after the U.S. Embassy in Moscow confirmed Brezhnev's death.
TASS SAID "the name of Leonid Ilych Brezhnev, a true continuer of Lenin's great cause and an ardent champion of peace and communism, will live forever in the hearts of the
The hulking and barrel-chested Breznev was written off by most Western analysts as a roughneck and hack when he took control of the party in 1964, and was seen as a transitional leader between Khrushchev and some long-term successor. But the steelworker's son grew into the highest office and in the second half of the 1970s disclosed a wider-faceted personality.
No funeral arrangements were announced immediately.
Soviet people and the entire progressive mankind."
He proved to be businesslike, intelligent and occasionally boisterous and charming. Tough, too. His conservative communist beliefs and the belief in vassalist power — security — were never in question.
Since 1964, Brezhnev presided over the Soviet Union's empire and made it the military equal of the United States.
the West, but by using the awesome power at his disposal to preserve orthodox communist rule, he demeaned the international mistrust he hoped to dispel.
He ardently espoused the cause of detente with
He signed two strategic arms imminent treaties with American presidents, then saw one of them repudiated as a result of the 1979 Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, which he ordered.
IN HIS last days, Breznev issued tough statements against "hot-headed" Western leaders, attacking the 'adventurism, rudeness and regurgitated egosism' of the Reagan administration.
"We shall do the utmost to see to it that those who like military ventures should never take the land of the Soviets unawares, that the potential
He gave his nation prestige, some prosperity and stability during a rule that lasted longer than those of all his predecessors except Josef Stalin.
See BREZHNEV page 5
Shuttle begins fifth voyage
By United Press International
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — Four astronauts flew the shuttle Columbia into space today carrying commercial satellites for paying customers for the first time.
"The big winged space freighter, weighing a record 4,488,000 pounds, took off on time at 6:19 am; CST and streaked out over the Atlantic after returning having a long trail of smoke and flame in its wake.
It was a spectacular Veterans Day sendoff for astronauts Vance Brand, Robert Overmyer, Joseph Allen and William Lenoir, the first four and the first to fly a spaceplane on a charter flight.
Mission control in Houston reported everything was proceeding normally as Columbia gained altitude, bucking headwinds as it accelerated.
THE PILOTS had a busy day ahead of them; Lenoir, an electrical engineer, was scheduled to direct the launching of the first of two compacts in early afternoon; open cargo bay about eight hours after blastoff.
Allen will launch the second satellite tomorrow.
Wearing sensors to monitor eye movement in a space sickness test, Allen was riding as a
passenger on the Columbia's lower deck for launch. He will switch seats with Lenoir in the cockpit for landing.
The weather was perfect for launch and Brand told the control center before takeoff: "I appreciate you guys ordering it for us."
Conditions were bad, however, at the emergency landing site in New Mexico. Dust storms closed that base today, making the Kennedy Space Center difficult to reach. The emergency return had one been required after launch.
The lakebed runways at Edwards Air Force Base in California's Mojave Desert were under water from recent rains, but officials said, the roads are still a paved runway there next Tuesday as planned.
THE BOOSTERS for the shuttle's last flight in June sank, but the parachute system was repaired for this flight.
Columbia's twin booster rockets fell away as planned two minutes after launch, to drop by parachute to the Atlantic Ocean for recovery by two ships.
The astronauts were all business during the ascent with none of the chatter that has marked their lives.
Controllers at the Johnson Space Center in Houston said that Columbia started out a little low on its course to space, but the ship's com-
paters steered it onto the proper trajectory for its first operational mission.
Once the shuttle jettisoned its empty external fuel tank, the astronauts fired the ship's twin maneuvering engines to push it into preliminary orbit.
Air Force space trackers calculated the Columbia would come within 60 miles of the twoman Soviet Salyut 7 space station over the Indian Ocean four hours after launch.
The critical final hours of the countdown began at midnight when engineers began pumping more than a half million gallons of frigid liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen into the shuttle's burgundy-colored external tank. Fueling was completed at 1:40 a.m. CST.
Brand, 51, a veteran of the 1975 Apollo-Soyuz Soviet-American spaceflight, is the skipper of the Columbia this time. It is the first mission for a manned spacecraft. (The two flight engineers — Allen, 43, and Lonner, 43.)
National Aeronautics and Space Administration officials halted the $25 million mission as an important step toward shifting much of the shut-in program of costs from the government to commercial users.
"IT'S A NEW era," said Glym Lunney, shuttle program manager at the Johnson Space Center in Houston. "It sure is a lot different from just flying for ourselves."
Clark says Lifeline may be challenged
Bv DOUG CUNNINGHAM
Staff Reporter
The Lawrence City Commission voted unanimously Tuesday night to取证 an opinion from the city attorney on whether it can institute a plan of lower natural gas rates for needy people.
Although a Lifeline plan is a good idea, the plan may face a serious legal challenge, Lawrence City Commissioner Barkley Clark said yesterday.
The city has a franchise agreement with the local natural gas utility, Kansas Public Service Co. Inc. The city therefore has the power to regulate the rates charged local customers.
"The basic problem, as I see it, is that Section 14 of the franchise agreement prohibits any preference to any person," said Clark, who also is a professor of law at the University of Kansas.
THE PROPOSED plan would offer rates that were 50 percent lower for the first 20 meters of gas used during the months of December, January and February.
1,000 cubic feet of natural gas.
All AHI is 1,000 cubic feet of air/hab.
Eligibility for the program would be based on
See related story page 5
income, with the program targeted to low income people.
But according to the plan, "full-time college or university students will not be eligible regardl
Other residential customers would have to pay an additional average cost of $17.71 yearly to up for the anticipated $250,000 cost of offering 1,800 households that are expected to be eligible.
The plan assumes an average usage of 25 mcfs during each of those months.
"I AM VERY much in favor of doing it. I think there is a tremendous need to do it — but there is also a need to do it legally." Clark said.
He said that amending the franchise agreement probably would require an ordinance, which would then open the issue up to public protest.
The city could be forced into holding a special election if enough people, about 1,200, were to sign a petition protesting the steps taken to implement the Lifeline rate plan. Clark said.
Commissioner Don Binns, however, said the commission should institute the plan, even though doing so might bring about a court challenge.
"I'm not sure you can amend a contract like this when the rights of a third party the other party"
"I'm all for it," he said. "I don't see any way out other than to go ahead and do it and let it be"
POLAND
4000 MARCH,
-300 ARRESTS
WARSAW
POLICE BATTLE
PROTESTORS WITH
CLUBS, TEAR GAS
WROCLAW
More than 800 jailed amid riots in Poland
By United Press International
WARSAM, Poland—More than 860 people, who unsuccessfully tried to rally to Solidarity calls for a national strike, were arrested yesterday for a nationwide pro-union protests in at least seven cities.
An American studying on a grant at the Polish Academy of Sciences also was arrested and charged as a "spy." Polish television said, many dozens of the arrest were not immediately known.
Government spokesman Jerzy Urban said the protest call was "a total failure for the government."
Polish television said more than 800 people were arrested in seven cities for attempted demonstrations and abortive strikes. There were 300 arrests in Warsaw.
"It opens the way toward the lifting of martial law."
candidate for vice president on the Consensus coalition. In the background are Momentum presidential candidate Kevin Waiker and vice presidential candidate David Teporten.
IT ADDED that 17 policemen were injured and 10 demonstrators were hospitalized, one in "very grave" condition.
The American arrested was identified as Roman Lau. The report said Lau had "close
Lisa Ashner, standing, candidate for student body president on the Consensus coalition, answered questions at last night's debate at McColum Hall. Sitting in the foreground is Jin Cramer.
and systematic contacts with the underground organization: in Poland."
U. embass officials did not have information on the arrest.
Police battled the protesters with flares, smoke bombs and clubs after the tear gas assault. After dusk, crowds fought riot police in a standoff as hurled car火 behind makeshift barricades.
The most serious clash was in the southwest Solidarity stronghold of Wroclaw, where 2,000 to 3,000 chanting demonstrators marched carrying weapons. “Solidarity will win” Solidarity will live!
"There was such a big panic and fear that people worked," said a worker from Gdansk's Lenin shipyard. "They were watched closely, but the work was not very efficient."
BUT IN OTHER cities there were only a handful of reported attempts to heed the underground strike call. Workers leaving factories said that with soldiers and factory officials stationed on shop floces to keep order, they were too afraid of threatened reprisals.
The official arrest figures mentioned detentions also in Poznan, Dierzoniew, Krakow, Lodz and Legnica — a city near the site of a major Soviet army base.
THE FILM WEEK
Two coalitions accuse Momentum of lying, plagiarizing in campaign
By DON KNOX Staff Reporter
Two coalitions competing in next week's Student Senate elections last night charged candidates from the Momentum Coalition with lying to students about possible lobbying ties with Anheuser-Busch Inc. and with plagiarizing portions of their campaign literature.
Momentum presidential candidate Kevin Walker, however, denied the allegations and countered with charges that he was "unsure of his eligibility" in elections because they would be run by senators.
The accusations came before and during a debate at McCollim Hall last night between student body presidential and vice presidential leaders from Momentum and Consensus coalitions.
Momentum candidates have said that they
would solicit help from Anheuser-Busch to aid in getting beer sold in Memorial Stadium.
RECENT FLIERS distributed by the Momentum coalition say "Bee in the stadium. We want it. And it will be our top priority. We plan to buy more equipment, the largest brewer, Anheuser-Busch Inc. to eat it."
Walker said he had never intended that Anheuser-Busch officials personally lobby at KU for stadium beer sales. He said that Momentum coalition candidates would only use "statistics and expertise" from Anheuser-Busch in guiding efforts to get beer sold in the stadium.
But Terri Reicher, campaign manager of Consensus, said yesterday that Momentum had never worked with Anheuser-Busch
"They never intended to work for us," Walker said. "No promises had ever been made."
Officials from Anheuser-Busch in both Kansas and Missouri also denied any connections with
Cameras dusch in both Kansas
ri also denied any connections with
See FORUM page 5
See FORUM page 5
RAIN
Weather
Today will be cloudy and windy with a 60 percent chance of rain or thundershowers and a high around 65, according to the National Weather Service.
Tonight will be cloudy with a 50 percent chance of rain becoming mixed with or churning up.
changing to 30% . The low will be about 30.
Tomorrow will be cloudy, windy and cold with a chance of snow. The high will be in the mid-30%.
24
Page 2 University Daily Kansan, November 11, 1982
News Briefs From United Press International
Candlelight vigil honors Vietnam victims, veterans
WASHINGTON—"Gerald L. Aadland." The name, solemnly intoned, marked the opening yesterday of a five/day national salute to the victims and veterans of the Vietnam War.
A candlelight vigil at the National Cathedral began at midmorning as organizers of the event began reading the roll call of the 57,939 Americans killed and missing in Vietnam.
Americans killed and misused a surprise visit to the cathedral at dusk President Reagan made in the vigna. Aides, citing security concerns, had said earlier it was unlikely Reagan would participate in any of the public events of the salute.
public events of the shale.
The capstone ceremonies will be the formal dedication Sandra S. Keller's stark, chevron-shaped black granite Vietnam War Memorial, located near the Lincoln Memorial on the Washington Mall, inscribed with the names of the dead.
The dedication of the memorial, built with $7 million in private contributions raised by the Memorial Fund, will take place after a parade of 15,000 veterans down Constitution Avenue Saturday. Organizers expect 250,000 people to attend.
CHICAGO - Democratic challenger Adalai Stevenson III said yesterday he would demand a recount of figures showing that Republican Gov. James Thompson won re-election in the closest governor's election in modern Illinois history.
Stevenson to ask for ballot recount
New figures released yesterday showed Thompson won by a margin of 5,344 votes.
Stevenson had counted on picking up enough votes in the Chicago campaign to wipe out Thompson's unofficial lead of 9,401 votes, which was announced Friday after a vote-counting process was delayed by wet ballots and faulty computers.
animals and faulty computers. But Michael Lavelle, chairman of the Chicago Board of Election Commission, noted that the former U.S. senator had gained only 4,092 votes in a canvass of Chicago ballots. Thompson had 1,814,255 votes to Stevenson's 1,808,911 statewide.
KCC asks for rehearing on rate hike
TOPEKA—The Kansas Corporation Commission yesterday asked the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission to conduct a rehearing on its decision to grant Cities Service Gas Co. a rate hike.
The motion for a rehearing said the KCC and Gov. John Carlin wanted a rebuke because they thought the "purchasing patterns of Cities Service Gas Co. had resulted in unnecessarily high natural gas prices to consumers in Kansas."
The rate hike raises gas prices by $66 million in Kansas and by more than $136 million in a five-state area that includes Kansas.
In addition, the KCC charges that the FERC's decision was arbitrary and capricious because the commission did not address the KCC's concerns about Kansas ratepayers.
Man holds hostages in high school
BURKE. Va—A former student, upset by an argument with his girlfriend, yesterday shot at her and took nine hostages in a high school. He released three in exchange for coffee and a fourth because she asked to go.
The man, identified as James Stevens, 18, fired several shots at police and at his girlfriend, a student at the school, forcing authorities to evacuate the school, police said. No injuries were reported.
suit the school, police said. No injuries were reported in the two people remained captive, including the school principal, John Alwood.
Teachers said the rifle-tooting man was able to pass almost unnoticed through the hallways at Lake Braddock High School about 1:30 p.m. because they thought he was in the school production of the musical,
Police spokesman Warren Carmichael said the young man was armed with a 22-caliber rifle with a telescopic sight.
Man awaits hearing in jail deaths
LOXI, Miss.—A former mental patient was ordered held without bond yesterday to await possible grand jury action on capital murder charges in the deaths of 27 prisoners in the Harrison County Jail fire.
ranges in the deaths of 21 presidents. Robert Eugene Eates, 31, was brought before Harrison County Judge Danny Guice for his initial appearance pending a formal hearing set for Nov. 17.
If convicted, Pates could be sentenced to die in the state's gas chamber.
No plea was entered at the hearing. Guice appointed two Biloxi attorneys, Jim Rose and Earl Stegall, to represent Pates after the defendant said he had been drawing Social Security disability benefits and had no money to hire a lawyer.
and no money to hire a lawyer.
A special grand jury will meet next week, but District Attorney Albert Necaia said it probably would be the following week before the Pates case was submitted to the panel.
Arafat may be invited to visit U.S.
TEL AVIV, Israel - The United States and the Palestine Liberation Organization are conducting indirect negotiations that could lead to an invitation for Yasser Arafat to visit Washington, an Israeli newspaper reported yesterday.
reported yesterday. The Hebrew newspaper Ha'aretz, quoting Arab sources, said the negotiations were being conducted through Morrocan and Saudi intermediaries.
The United States is demanding that the PLO grant Jordan's King Hussein the mandate to represent the Palestinians in autonomy talks, the newspaper said.
The autonomy talks, on granting the Palestinians limited self-rule in the occupied West Bank, have until now been between Israel and Egypt with U.S. mediation.
Washington is also demanding that the PLO accept U.N. resolutions 242 and 338, His aretz said, which recognize Israel as a state.
Spy pleads guilty, gets prison term
LONDON—A British spy pleaded guilty yesterday to providing the Special Union with top U.S. and British secrets "of an exceptionally grave nature" for more than a decade and was sentenced to 35 years in prison.
Geoffrey Prime, 44, got three more years for indecent assault against three young girls — the sex charges that tripped him up.
three young girls — the sex charges; Prime's spying was caused by accident — a matter of deep trust and interest in British government. After his arrest on the sex charges he confessed his sexual transgressions and his spying to his second wife, Rhona, 37.
Prince, a Russian language specialist, was a government translator for nine years. In 1976-77, he worked at the Government Communications Headquarters in Cheltenham, Britain's top secret electronic intelligence base, which shares its secrets with the United States.
IRA gunmen kill British customs officer
BELFAST, Northern Ireland—Irish Republican army gunmen shot and killed a British customs officer near the Irish public border yesterday on the one of the opening of Northern Ireland's new local parliament, police said.
By United Press International
Armagh is southwest of Belfast and is about 10 miles north of the border with the Irish Republic.
than 24 nurses. The officers officer died instantly when two hooded IRA gunmen armed with automatic weapons opened fire on his automobile at close range as he was leaving his post near the outskirts of the city of Armagh, police said.
It was the third IRA killing in less than 24 hours.
THE VICTIM'S identity was not immediately disclosed, but police said the man was married, in his 50s and the father of three children.
Pollice said the victim was a member of the part-time Ulster Defense Regiment militia that helped police an unidentified IRA, which claimed responsibility for the killin-
Fifty minutes after the Armagh attack "a number" of masked gunmen raided a golf clubhouse in the city of Newry, 35 miles south of Belfast and 20 miles from Armagh, police said.
The gunmen ordered occupants out of the building and detonated at least 100 pounds of explosives causing extensive damage but no injuries, police said.
No group immediately claimed responsibility for the Newry attack but police sources said the assault appeared to have been carried out by the IRA, which is especially active in the border area.
THE IRA EARLIER claimed responsibility for planting a car bomb that killed an off-duty police officer and a female passenger at Emniskillen Tuesday.
The upsurge of violence endangered
the opening of the assembly, Britain's latest attempt to reconcile the majority pro-British Protestants and the minority Roman Catholics who seek some form of link to the Irish Republic.
Nine other people have died in sectarian violence since the assembly election O=t. 20.
Northern Ireland Secretary James Prior said the 78-seat assembly would convene today for the first time in eight years, although 19 seats would be vacant because of a boycott by the two parties representing most Roman Catholics.
Abilene, Leavenworth both want Nixon Library
By MATTHEW SCHOFIELD Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
Volumes of documents and tapes chronicing Watergate and the presidential years of Richard Nixon may find a permanent home in Kansas.
each other.
Among other cities submitting offers is Independence, Mo., home of the Truman Library.
Despite tangential relationships between their cities and the expresident, both Abilen's Chamber of Commerce and Leavenworth's City Commission will bring to the Nixon library to Kansas.
Stan Mortonson, Nixon's attorney,
said that he would not say how the
offers were ranked because alisey
tends to pack a packing order among
them.
the Franklin Exp. my practice "IT'S BEEN my practice not to comment on how they are ranked." Morton said. "There are many sites and they're varied in rank and location."
location.
Neither Abilene nor Leavenworth has strong historical ties to the ex-president, but Abilene Chamber of Commerce president Ray Wyatt said Nixon served as vice president to
Dwight D. Eisenhower for two terms, which gave his city a valid claim to be the home of his library.
"Having the Eisenhower Library is something that set us apart from other interested cities," he said. "We fell it, would give us an edge."
But Robert VonSchlemer, chairman of the Leavenworth City Commission's Committee for the Nixon Library, said that Ablene's Eisenhower library would be a disadvantage.
person.
He said Kansas' central location in the country would make it a good location for the museum.
advantage.
"WHY WOULD a president want to plunk his library down next to another president?" he said. "As humans we don't want to live in shadow of another person."
Leavenworth is an army town, VonSchlemmer said, and that should appeal to the ex-president.
"We have 100 to 110 foreign officers graduate from the General Command Staff College every year, and they say they felt more secure under President Nixon than any other post World War II president," he said. "We feel the library would be a valuable addition to our town."
Leavenworth has been considering acquiring the library for several months, he said, but had not made a formal announcement of any nightly commission meeting.
BECAUSE of the stormy nature of Nixon's resignation from office in 1973, the commission had expected some resistance from the public.
"I was waiting for some opposition last night, but there wasn't any," VonSchlemmer said.
Jill Merrill, public affairs officer for the U.S. National Archives, said the Nixon records were among the most extensive of any president
If either Leavenworth or Ablene gets the library, more than 40 million pages of textual material, 11,000 cubic feet of gifts, 3,100 feet of audio visual material and 6,000 hours worth of tapes will make the VA a center across the midwestern United States into Kansas, she said.
Even if Nixon makes a decision on a library site soon, too much declassifying and reviewing of the material has to be done to release it in the near future.
future.
"WE DON'T anticipate being able to make any of this material available
to the public before 1984 or '85," she said.
Textual material would be released in segments as it was declassified, but the infamous tapes would be released as a whole. At present only about 30 percent of the tapes have been declassified.
declassified
Leavenworth and Abilene have potential sites, but Leavenworth has earmarked a 10-acre plot, while Abilene will wait for more feedback before making its decision.
VonSchlemmer said his committee had spent a lot of time making sure Leavenworth wanted the library.
"We have been very careful of not forcing this on the community," he said. "I would not want to see the nature of the city change. Bringing 250,000 people a year into a town has some effect, but if we can't do it right, we don't want to do it."
He said history would make President Nixon appear as a better man than the present assessment of him.
"History is the final judge," he said.
"When historians start looking at him closely, through these records partially, I think we'll see a different picture."
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University Daily Kansan, November 11, 1982
Page 3
On campus
TODAY
GERMAN CLUB will have lunch at 1:48 a.m. in the Cottonwood Room of the Masonic Temple.
KU SWORD AND SHIELD will meet
a p.m. in the Oread Room of the
Uni
CHRISTIAN CARE GROUP will meet at 8 p.m. at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center.
PETEY CERF, founder of Kansas for the Improvement of Nursing Homes, will speak at 12:30 p.m. in 104 Green Hall
PRESENTATION, "Space Travel and Literature," by James Gum. English and English critic of science fiction, will be at 7:30 p.m. in the Walnut Room of the Union.
CATHOLIC CENTER WORSHIP will
be at 10:29 a.m. in Danbury Chapel.
ASTRONOMY CLUB will meet at p.m. in 500 Lindley Hall if it is a p.m.
BIOLOGY CLUB will meet at 4 p.m. in the Sunflower Room of the Union.
COLLOQUIUM SERIES on ground wind in Kansas will be at 4 p.m. in 412
INTERVARSITY CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP will meet at 7 p.m. in the Pine Room of the Union.
Therapy program gives breath of life
By VICKY WILT Staff Reporter
The smooth functioning of the respiratory system is something most people take for granted, but respiratory therapists at the University Center recognize that this delicate system is involved in most illnesses.
"Most diseases really compromise the respiratory system. People primarily die of heart failure precipitated by a lack of oxygen," said Homer Rodriguez, technical officer at the therapy department at the Med Center.
The Med Center's respiratory therapy program is one of the outstanding programs in the country, Rodriguez said.
Now, between 25 percent and 37 percent of all patients at the Med Center receive respiratory therapy, said Steve Curtis, residency staff development coordinator and president of the Kansas Respiratory Therapy Society. He said this was because most patients had secondary lung involvement such as emphysema or pneumonia.
The Med Center received national
But the shortage of therapists is not limited to the Med Center, Rodriguez said the shortage was statewide and nationwide.
acclaim for starting the first respiratory therapy residency program for post-graduate students in 1973. Rodriguez said.
"Respiratory therapy, being a new field, is undergrowing tremendous manpower shortages. There are 80,000 and 60,000 and 40,000 are credited" he said.
THE PRIMARY PURPOSE of the residency is to turn out leaders in the field, leaders in management, education and critical care," he said.
"The KU graduate is in high demand, really high demand. Most therapists who graduate from KU can just about name their own ticket."
The program has graduated 45 residents and graduates about 20 therapists yearly. Rodriguez, Kansas Respiratory Therapy Board member, said that number was increasing and those students were accepted into the school now.
Budget cuts at the Med Center have caused a hiring freeze in the respiratory department, Rodriguez said.
CONGRESS NAMED this week National Respiratory Therapy Week to promote the young field. Curtis said
Respiratory therapy started in 1940 and dealt mostly with oxygen therapy, he said. In the 1960s, an increased awareness and need for respiratory therapy stemmed from the chest trauma injuries that came out of the Vietnam War. These injuries created a need for mechanical support to keep patients breathing, he said.
A shortage of credentialed therapists is another problem facing the Med Center. High standards of care at the Med Center do not allow people who are not credentialed or have credential eligibility to be hired
Because critical care is offered at the Med Center, patients there have more difficult cases requiring more care. Rodriguez said. Doctors who have difficult cases send patients to the Med Center.
Credential requirements are standards of care set by respiratory therapy associations. The associations have a voluntary test to let the public know that the therapist is trained. To be credential eligible a therapist must graduate from a therapy program.
Tertiary oil recovery methods give slow results
By BRET WALLACE Staff Reporter
Although tertiary oil recovery is considered the best way to supplement dwindling oil supplies, current experiments in Kansas show that it will have no effect on supplies for several years, experts said yesterday.
Paul Willhite, KU professor of engineering and co-director of the Tertiary Oil Recovery Project (TORP) at the University of Kansas, said tertiary oil recovery methods were slow because oil only moved through rock at the rate of a foot or less a day, he said.
"What you do today may not be seen for several years," Willhite said. "Patience is a necessary virtue in this field."
Tertiary recovery methods are those used after water flooding, which is the secondary method. Willhite said. The pressure of the gases in the ground, the pressure of the gases in the ground,
PRIMARY AND secondary recovery methods recover only 10 percent to 15 percent of the oil that is stored in rocks, and secondary recovery methods recover about another 15 percent.
Cities Service Co., Tulsa, Okla,
began a tertiary recovery experiment in an oil field near El Dorado in 1975. Production results from it yet, he said.
Larry Van Horn, project director for the experiment, said Cities Service had expected to see results by now, but the low permeability of the rock had not allowed the oil to reach production wells vet
Cities Service engineers have seen an
oil bank moving toward the production wells; but the amount of oil moving could not be measured, Van Horn said.
Observation wells were dug between the injection wells, where material called a surfactant is injected into the ground, and the production well, where the oil is actually taken from the ground, he said.
WILHITE SAID the surfactant method involved injecting a detergent-type chemical compound that mixed with the oil. The following reaction starts the oil flowing through the porous material it is contained in, be said.
"It is like using dish soap to remove grease from a pan," he said.
Van Horn said the material moving by the observation wells in the test chamber was about 30 percent oil, which was close to Cities Service's original projection.
Conference to focus on Slavic issues
Soviet and East European scholars will gather at the Kansas Union tomorrow and Saturday for the 21st annual Central Slavic Conference.
Gerald Mikkelson, president of the 1982 Central Slavic Conference, said the conference participants would discuss a variety of issues about the Soviet Union. He said they represent more than 22 academic, governmental and private institutions.
Chorus and the Strawberry Hill Crooklyn Folk Ensemble at a banquet
Mikkelson, an associate professor of Soviet and East European studies and Slavic languages, said KU last sponsored the conference in 1976.
HE SAID this year's conference was dedicated to Heinrich Stamler, professor of Soviet and East European studies and Slavic languages.
"We have to wait until we see some production results before we can determine if this method is economically feasible or not." he said.
The speech, which will be at 4 p.m. in Alderson Auditorium in the Union, is not part of the conference but is being sponsored by the conference and the School of Business; the departments of economics, economics, Slavic languages and literatures and Soviet and East European studies, Mikkelson said.
Besides scholarly papers, the conference will include poetry reading, a Slavic book fair and performances by the KU Foll Dance Club, Russian
WILHITE SAID Cities Service was spending $26 million on the project, which is testing two surfactant methods. Any experiments TORP does will be on a smaller scale and will not cost as the Cities Service project, he said.
University of Arizona-Tucson, on the absorption of computing, within the campus.
TORP has no money for experimenting, so they are appealing to independent producers in Kansas to finance and expand their farms for the experiments, Wilhite said.
Mikkelson said an additional event of the conference would be a speech by Seymour Goodman, professor of management information systems at the
"Until individual personal risk is reduced, people who are looking at the prospect will want a high oil price to protect against failure," he said.
The registration fee for the conference is $20. Banquet tickets are $12.
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Officials say proposal won't cut utility bills
By DIRK MILLER Staff Reporter
A proposed change in the academic calendars of the Kansas Board of Regents schools would not save the University of Kansas enough money on utility bills to justify the change, KU officials said yesterday.
Martin Jones, associate director of business affairs, said initial calculations of the utility savings indicated that the proposed calendar change with the proposed calendar change.
A COMMITTEE of academic and business officers from the Regents schools prepared a calendar that would start the fall semester about Sept. 1, and end final examinations Dec. 23. The spring semester would begin a week before the first Friday in May said Jones, chairman of the calendar committee.
The Regents schools are expected to present a report of the savings that would be generated by the calendar change at the next meeting of the Council of Business Officers, which is a committee of business officers from each Regents school, Jones said. The Council of Presidents, a committee of the Regents schools' presidents, requested the report.
"The amount is quite insignificant," Jones said. "We at the University of Kansas will not be in favor of the change in calendars."
And Keith Nitcher, University director of business affairs, said, "Obviously, $1,000 is not much incentive to change the calendar."
William Hogan, associate executive vice chancellor, said that some officials thought that air conditioning and heating might be reduced by the calendar change.
"But the way it worked out," Hogan said, "we're exchanging one week in the spring for one week in the winter."
He said there was almost a balance between the money saved by moving the fall semester back one week, and moving the spring semester back the spring semester back one week.
MARVIN BURRIS, Regents budget officer, said the Regents had not yet heard reports from any of the schools but that he expected them to report the savings from the proposed change next week.
Hogan said he would have a complete report on the effect of the calendar change on utility costs for KU later this week.
Burris said the Regents wanted the calendar to be used by all the schools, instead of individual calendars used by each school.
Last month James Gilbert, vice president for academic affairs at Pittsburg State University and a member of the calendar committee, said the committee had not been asked to suggest a "radical change" such as different calendars for different schools.
The Council of Chief Academic Officers, a committee of academic officers from each Regents school, voted not to recommend the calendar change last month because it would be disadvantageous to students.
Study abroad office moves to Lippincott
The office of study abroad has helped students travel for years, and now it is traveling, the adviser for the office said yesterday.
Ann Oetting, the adviser, said the office was moving from 108 Strong to 203 Lippincott yesterday and today and be back to full operation by Monday.
Ann Farah, secretary for the center of Latin American studies, said the center also would move, but not until December. It will move to 107 Lippincott.
ROBERT ADAMS, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, said, "We felt their new quarters would put them closer to some real estate than they could in a more organized area. They also will have a little more room."
The college is tentatively planning to use the rooms to bring some of its services, such as storage of confidential folders, from Nunemaker Center to a more central location, Adams said.
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University Daily Kansan, November 11, 1982
Page 4
Opinion
Boycott unwise decision
An oil producer in western Kansas wants to put an economic clamp on businessmen in eastern Kansas in hopes that they in turn will pressure their state lawmakers into voting down Gov. John Carlin's severance tax.
The producer, Fritz Dreiling, owner of Dreiling Resources, Inc. of Victoria, says he will not buy oilfield products from Kansas companies that are in eastern counties — counties where Carlin won big in last week's reelection win.
"I don't like the word boycott," Dreiling said this week. "I'd hate to see the state's economy disrupted. I don't want to see an east against west thing."
Despite those words, Dreiling's decision is a boycott. It could be disruptive — last year he and his partners spent $2 million on oil production. And by talking to other producers about his plans, he is promoting an economic war over the tax.
Dreiling, a third cousin to Hays lawyer Norbert Dreiling, a prominent Democrat who endorsed Carlin, argues that if the minerals tax is implemented, the county taxes that oil producers pay will be shifted to the state, cutting revenue for local government. Counties then would be forced to raise the property taxes of farmers, homeowners and other businessmen.
But Mike Swenson, Carlin's assistant press secretary, said that out-of-state companies would pay two-thirds of the tax.
The tax has been debated in the Legislature for two years, and has been an issue in Kansas for three decades. Those for and against have had their say more than once.
Dreiling wants to force a showdown over the tax, but it may be a showdown at the expense of the state's relatively healthy economy.
His decision to shop elsewhere for his supplies — effectively pulling $2 million from the economy — could only deepen the rift between the two sides in this issue and at the same time add to the state's financial turmoil that originally prompted Carlin to propose the severance tax.
WELL, ONE PUNDIT TO ANOTHER,
JIM, THIS LOOKS LIKE A
DEVASTATING DEFEAT FOR
REAGAN AND THE GOP.
YES IT DOES, BOB!
BUT LOOKING ON THE
BRIGHT SIDE, ID SAY
THEY'RE DOING WELL!
WELL ONE PUNDIT TO ANOTHER, JIM! THIS LOOKS LIKE A DEVASTATING DEFEAT FOR REAGAN AND THE GOP.
YES IT DOES BOB! BUT LOOKING ON THE BRIGHT SIDE ID SAY THEY'RE DOING WELL!
AND THE STATEHOUSES! THEY'VE LOST SO MANY STATEHOUSES! AND THE NUCLEAR FREEZE, JIM!
RIGHT, BOB! BUT ON THE UPBEAT SIDE, THE REPUBS ARE WINNING BIG IN CALIFORNIA!
LOOK AT THIS, JIM! THE GOP COULD LOSE MORE THAN 25 SEATS!
TRULY WONDERFUL NEWS, BOB! THAT'S BELOW THE AVERAGE FOR OFF YEAR ELECTIONS!
OH, WOW! LOOK AT THOSE RETURNS, JIM! THE GOP WILL NEVER RECOVER FROM THIS CRUNCH!
RIGHT YOU ARE, BOB! THIS LOOKS LIKE A VERY SUBSTANTIAL VICTORY FOR THE GOP!
THIS CONCLUDES OUR COVERAGE AND ANALYSIS ON THE 1982 ELECTIONS. GOOD NIGHT, JIM!
GOOD NIGHT, BOB!
©1982 MAXIM NEWS
GOP senators fine for now, but numbers off for '84 race
By STEVE GERSTEL United Press International
WASHINGTON-Senate Republicans, despite a series of scares around the country, weathered the midterm elections well. But 1984 could well bring them graver problems.
After all the votes were counted, Republicans maintained control of the Senate by the same margin that now exists. 54-46. That is not an easy matter to prove, but Howard Baker makes it more than workable.
But the Republicans can take little comfort in results that showed most of the Democratic incumbents winning by big margins, most of the Republicans by narrow numbers.
Although some of the Republican holdovers seemed hell-bent on performing the political equivalent of hara-kur, only Harrison Schmitt of the Tea Party group supported a totally spectacular career in the Senate.
But too many other Republicans, using every bit of the GOP's huge war chest, had to spend a long and agonizing night before finding out what they were doing to deploy employment statistics that are already too high.
That numerical luxury, which also played a significant role in the Republicans' big 1980 gains, will not exist for the Republican two years ago. It would have to defend 18 seats and the Democrats 14.
The failure of President Reagan's economic policies hurt the Republican members of the Senate, and the one factor that may have saved the GOP from losing control was that the Democrats had to defend 20 seats, the Republicans only 13.
And incumbency, as the midterm elections proved, is maybe the biggest single asset a presidential candidate has.
Under what conditions those candidates will run is impossible to forecast. The economy, if Reagan's plans ever bear fruit, could be in good shape, making it much easier for GOP senators.
And there will be a coastal effect, no matter who the Republican and Democratic president is.
But even this far ahead, it is virtually certain that the premiere Senate race will be in North Carolina, matching Jesse Helsinki, the New Right's moderate and highly popular Gov. James Hunt.
Helms epitomizes the New Right, and the race is certain to be a clear-cut referendum on his agenda, which has a strong following in North Carolina and other parts of the South. He is also the acknowledged master fund-raser and does not stint on spending it on his elections.
But Helms' attempt to buy the elections for four of his fellow travelers in congressional races in the midterm elections turned out to be a disaster. They lost.
Hunt, however, is a Southern progressive — not a Kennedy liberal — but at odds with Helms on virtually every important issue.
Two of the most interesting races, should the incumbents seek another term, would be those of Strom Thurmond, R-S-C and Jennings Randolph, D-W-Va. They are both already in their
John Stennis' easy victory in Mississippi at age 81 must have been heartening to Randolph and Thurmond. Like Stennis, they do not look or act as old as they are.
The Republican leadership has to run Baker, assistant leader Ted Stevens and policy chair
Do a number of committee chairmen: Pete Domenici of New Mexico, Budget; Helms, Agriculture; James McCleare of Idaho, Interior; Charles Percy of Illinois, Foreign Relations; Alan Simpson of Wyoming, Veterans; Thurmond, Judiciary; and Tower, Armed Services.
Mark Hatfield of Oregon, chairman of the appropriations committee, has already announced that he will serve on the FCC.
But there are some Republican, coming off their first term, who should be ripe for plucking after six undistinguished years. Foremost of New Hampshire and Roger, Roseen of Iowa.
To be sure, the Democrats have a number of the same, senators such as David Boren of Oklahoma.
But the problem for the Republicans is not in the names but in the numbers. Democrats have a lot of money and influence.
Steve Gersalel is a White House correspondent and political commentator for United Press
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John Oberzan
Some love can be suffocating
We are lucky people as students at the University of Kansas. We are loved.
"I love students at the University of Kansas and don't want them to die," says Steve Mobley, director of Maranatha Campus Ministries. Because he loves all of us at KU, Mobley wants the Kansas Union to stop selling pornographic magazines on its newsstands.
Reading such magazines is like drinking alcohol and smoking cigarettes, Mobley says with conviction. "The word of God says this is sin. I want to expose the darkness in this area so people will know they are destroying the temple of God."
To that end, Mobley and members of Marantha submitted a petition to the vice chancellor for student affairs this summer protesting the Union's sale of all porchography. The titles of the targeted magazines may sound familiar — Playboy, *Playgirl* and Penthouse.
The Union's merchandising board will probably meet in mid-November to act on Maranatha's complaint. Mobley is confident of a victory. He believes that Maranatha will secure the banning of sex-oriented magazines sold at the Union.
Should Mobley and his group achieve a victory, I certainly hope it does not come too easily. The precedent could backfire.
"I think you have to look at the University as a protector of freedoms," she said.
A member of the Union merchandising board defined the crux of the situation in expressing her opposition to taking these magazines off the shelves.
The freedoms she refers to includes one that Mobley is trying to stifle — the freedom for mature, responsible adults to decide for themselves what is moral and immoral.
I honestly appreciate the concern Mobley, and other people I have dealt with, have for my moral well-being, but I should hope that by the age of 22, I would be able to decide whether Playboy is the magazine for me. Just because I am from Kansas Union does not mean I am going to buy it.
and it certainly does not mean that those that do read these magazines are the ones most likely to become prey.
"If we take these things off the shelves, then we're going to see a lot of things happen, like a
LISA GUTIERREZ
I believe Mobley's concern for KU students is genuine. But the means by which he hopes to help all of us is wrong. Why not try to ban the sale of cigarettes in the Union while he's at it? Mobley has said that drinking alcohol and smoking cigarettes are sinful. Rebaults like this spring up when one tries to give others moral aid.
drop in rape and a drop in incest." Mobley said, intimating a direct correlation between the two occurrences. An off-committee fallacy in his argument is that the rape acts are to sexual acts, rather than acts of violence.
The issue of whether to sell pornographic magazines at the Union involves a serious question that courts of law have yet to thoroughly answer. What is pornography? A few years ago, the U.S. Court admitted they have trouble deciding what is pornographic. They are not alone in their doubts.
Because it is difficult to assign the label "porn," it would be unwise to indiscriminately ban some magazines while others may be in question. I would have to agree that Playboy, Penthouse and Playgirl magazines are pornographic. But what about such magazines as Newswire, The Times, the show people in New York state of undress World Mobley have the union ban Webnews also?
"There is pornography even in business magazines now. It's not just your well-known pornographic magazines," Mobley said. Granting him this, I start feeling sorry for him he intends to check the spread of pornography. It looks like a Herculean task.
The pornographic magazines in question are displayed behind the Union's information counter and are covered, with only their titles showing. They are not blatantly displayed — unless one considers the word "playboy" itself to be smut.
"Men and women are able to walk up and see these things behind the counter." Mobley says. "If a man has got his eyes on the Bible, then he will begin to walk like God. But if he's got his eyes on a pornography book, he's going to begin to lust and degrade himself."
Far be it from me to criticize anyone's religious beliefs. That is not my intention. But I begin to wonder when someone tries to wear 24,000 other people based on moral principles.
Should the committee agree to ban the sale of sex-oriented magazines, it had better be prepared to respond to several people who will invariably cry "censorship." The committee also had better be prepared to receive and consider other requests like this one from Maranatha and similar organizations. The prospects could be overwhelming.
Letters to the Editor
Science, creationism need not be at odds
To the Editor:
Although I'm a Christian and I believe in creationism (not necessarily "scientific," depending on your meaning), I nevertheless allow for the truth of evolution of species. This seeming ambiguity doubtless will raise the hackles of most fundamental Christians. I'm sorry for that. However, I do believe the Genesis account to be fact, not fiction.
Inconsistent? Not at all. Jesus himself requires his followers to eat his flesh and drink his blood. The 2,000-year-old tissues and arterial fluid of that person are not being ingested through the alimentary passages of believers today, yet I affirm we do fulfill his command, each time we share, but only if the inward man, woman or child reverently receives it obdertly, worthy.
Moses was no dummy. He was educated in the universities of Egypt and was aware of many natural processes in Earth's history. There was no moral advantage in relating technical transitions covering millenniums of time. His hearers were childlike in education, so he outlined the world's beginnings in order to explain why life is different. They had no capacity for molecular analysis, but Moses told his people of a real Creator and of their responsibility to that supreme Person.
I expect that each "day" of creation comprised eons. Fossils may be (and often are) misinterpreted, but they do not lie. The Creator planted no phony clues. He is the God of truth. I believe that Moses, the author of Genesis, in places used figurative language. The outstanding example is his account of the creation of Eve, to be Adam's "helpmeet." In this passage, Moses sensitively describes woman's intended oneness with her man — a union completely, exclusively and permanently a marriage — not coolly utilitarian, but affectionate and human. Moses also invented the rib of Adam was removed. Therefore, I conclude that here Moses was indeed under a tender poetic compulsion. Viewed as such, the record is beautifully true to God's design.
Getting back to evolution, I observe that
fearful religionists have for a long time condemned scientific discovery.
"The sun circles the earth.
"It's not going to rain no more. Fly."
"the earth is flat." (Some still believe it.)
"the sun circles the earth."
"The Bible proves that man will never fly."
"God will never allow man onto the moon." (One of my KU friends says it was and is a photographic hoax.)
That same defensive hysteria continues today.
I contend that the Almighty did not suddenly create round, smooth pebbles. There is abundant, ongoing evidence that He caused them to break down. Similarly, this continually changing world developed along guidelines of nature's laws.
Many years ago, a sheltered girl about 12 years old was abruptly told where babies come from. She burst into tears, disenchanted. "I thought babies came from heaven!" Well, babies really do come from heaven, by the Lord's beautiful process. That girl's anguish parallels today's upset over investigating our origins.
Whatever the stages or steps, a real, unchanging Almighty, thinking (and loving) power did it. He does not lie, nor do these tangible evidence. We do blunderingly investigate, but all sincere inquiries lead to the Common Cause.
Iron Bond Electrician, Facilities Operations
Musician chased away
watching and listening with fascination, unconsciously tanning their feet.
Between two of his songs the other day, the Tambourine Man revealed why he was not performing at his usual place, Wesoe Beach: he had been chased out by police. The question everyone asked was "Why?" Why? He was chased out? He wasn't hurting anyone. It is truly sad that the Tambourine Man, who provides color and entertainment, would be chased away by officials. The police should just leave the Tambourine Man and any other sidewalk performers alone. Surely they have more important matters to attend to.
There is a musician who frequently performs to sidewalk audiences on campus. For lack of his real name, I'll refer to him as the Tambourine Man. Armed with a guitar, a harmonica and a tambourine, he is often seen surrounded by young, playfully playing originals and requests for them.
The Tambourine Man is an asset to KU, through the music and unity he transmits. I only wish he and others could feel welcome on campus and not be something to be chased away
As the Tambourine Man himself points out, many onlookers may think these people are just skipping class, but they are really participating in a cultural event. The Tambourine Man has achieved something far beyond just playing music. He has destroyed some of the gaps between different types of people that make up the student body — punks, Greeks, hippies and many other clauses of people stand side by side, laughing and clapping together.
The Tambourine Man has added a touch of style and class to what otherwise could be a maze of people troupping past one another. Most people who happen to pass near him end up. Most people who happen to pass near him end up.
To the Editor:
Lawrence sonhomore
Letters Policy
The University Daily Kansan welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten, double-spaced and should not exceed 500 words. They should include the writer's name, address and phone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, the letter should include his class and home town or faculty or staff position. The Kansan reserves the right to edit or reject letters.
---
。
University Daily Kansan, November 11, 1982
Page 5
Forum
From page one
the momentum campaign, although a spokesman in St. Louis said the candidates had written to their headquarters about promotions involving the use of their product.
"WE DO NOT involve ourselves in student politics," said Jim Maurice, a spokesman from Anheuser-Busch headquarters in St. Louis. "It's something that is not appropriate for us to do."
Momentum candidates had contacted Anheuser-Busch earlier this fall. Maurice said.
"We thanked them for their interests but we demanded to participate in any of their demands."
Maurice said it was also Anheuser-Busch policy not to interfere with any decisions set down by the University or the Board of Regents.
Cliff McDonald, owner of McDonald Beverages, the Lawrence distributor for Anheuser-Busch, said that he had known about Walker's statements, but denied any involvement in the campaign.
the corporation and the nonunion company.
"I CAN tell you this — I have been in contact
Jim Cramer, Consensus vice president candidate, said he knew little about any Momentum ties with Anheuser-Busch Inc., but he has been a big prosecution brevy to provide statistics on stadium sales.
with St. Louis and they know nothing about this. And I know absolutely nothing about it," McDonald said.
Two candidates from the Introspection Coalition also charged Momentum vice presidential candidate David Teoporten with plagiarizing a quotation on Momentum campaign posters from former President Richard Nixon, although they could not document their claims.
Charles Lawhorn, a candidate for a Liberal Arts and Science seat with Introspection, alleged that Teopenten plagiarized the quotation but could not say where the quotation came from.
"WE INTEND to get that evidence." Lawhorn said last night.
Teporter, however, said, "If something came out of my head that sounded like something that was bad, I didn't do it."
"Every student must have confidence in the integrity of their government. The best and only way to achieve this is through a popular demand for the maintenance of a truthful government."
The quotation on the Momentum poster reads,
Lawnhaw said the quotation was "an exact reiteration of a statement" made by Nixon, although Nixon had used "citizen" where Teoporteen had used "student."
DURING THE two-hour debate, Walker and Teopoorten said they questioned the validity of the Nov. 17 and 18 elections.
"Tampering with the election ballots was our very first concern." Teoporten said at the
Teoporten said Momentum candidates asked David Adkins, student body president, where ballot boxes were stored during the two-day session. The students were placed in the Senate office, Teoporten said.
wren and if we are elected, we intend to de-politize these elections," Teporten said. He suggested that Legal Services or a group of law students be formed to run the elections.
Line
From page one
challenged in the courts or let people get enough signatures to force a referendum $ ^{14} $
ONE OF THE supporters of the plan said yesterday that action was needed now and that a delay not only would be unfortunate but could result in some people going without heat.
Read in some public places. "People are going to be in very difficult straits very soon," said Steve Fawcett, a research associate at KU's Center for Public Affairs.
I'm very hopeful that the commission will
take forthright action. I hope that any legal conflict wouldn't prevent them from exercising their duty."
meeting said the commission had a mandate to act, in the form a recently completed survey that was distributed to five Lawrence neighborhood groups.
Eighty six percent of the respondents to that survey, which was conducted by the local community development office and the Center for Public Affairs, supported city commission
"I felt that somebody had those tough questions," he said. "I 'm kind of focusing, unlike other people, on the legal questions. If there is a significant enough objection to it community-shouldn't there be an opposition for people to circulate a petition to get it on the balloon?"
DESPITE THAT, Clark said, the legal issues bud to be considered by the commission.
Lifeline rates depend on Legislature
Staff Reporter
By JULIE HEABERLIN Staff Reporter
Angry gas and electricity customers this winter may force the Kansas Corporation Commission and the Kansas Legislature to think again about Lifeline rates for the low-income elderly and handicapped, a KCC spokesman said yesterday.
Tom Taylor, the KCC public information director, said that the commission officially decided this week that Kansas law prohibited it to implement Lifeline rates. The decision will now place responsibility for further action with the Legislature.
A targeted Lifeline rate is set below the actual cost of service for the elderly, poor or other needy Kansans, to help ensure they get electricity and natural gas. Under such a plan,
"The commission does feel that it has a definite responsibility to help people." Taylor said. "This is a legal decision. Now it will be a social policy decision for the Legislature."
other customers would have to pay more money to make up the difference.
ALTHOUGH GAS and electric companies traditionally have opposed the ideology of Lifeline rates, Taylor said he did not think the KCC would strongly oppose Lifeline rates if the Legislature gave it the necessary regulatory power.
REC spokesmen consistently argued in committee meetings last session that a state statute prohibited them from authorizing a rate that they said would discriminate against other
State Rep Betty Jo Charlton, D-Lawrence, who introduced the Lifeline rate bill last session, said that Lifeline rates would not be discriminatory, because each rate hike already discriminated against those who used only small amounts of gas and electricity.
Proponents of the Lifeline legislation, which died in committee, disagreed. They said the KCC simply did not want to use its obvious powers and was misconstruing the intent of the statute.
"WHO IS subsidizing who? In the case of the
electric companies, the power plants have to be able to meet a peak demand, and it is the larger customers, commercial customers, that increase this peak demand," Charlton said.
"But the low income people still pay the base rate on the plant, can operate at that peak."
rate so the plant can operate at that peak. Charlton, re-elected recently to her second term, said yesterday that she expected more support from legislators. The rate she输到了, she said she would reintroduce to the Energy and Natural Resources Committee during the next session.
BUT REGARDLESS of legislative support, Charlton said, any state action this year would not help those elderly and handicapped who could not afford to pay their utility bills in the quickly approaching winter months.
"Lifeline rates are not the total answer," Charlton said. "We need to stop the deregulation of gas at the federal level. But for the sake of all of us we need to do something. High utility bills are becoming a hardship for some, and for others it is now a Lifeline and death matter."
aggressor should know: a crushing retaliatory strike will inevitably be in for him." Brezhnw said at a Kremlin reception commemorating the 1917 Revolution.
From page one
Brezhnev
Under Breznev's heavy-handed rule, the Soviet Union lost ground in terms of human freedoms, reversing the Khrushchev-era liberalization that had followed Stalin's repression. Political dissidents and Jews trying to emigrate were persecuted.
The "Brevhnew doctrine" reserved for Moscow the right to crush such deviations for the overall good of the Marxist-Leninist cause. But in Western eyes, it undercut his oft-appealed pleas for peace, coexistence and voluntary restraint in building up nuclear arsenals.
BREZIHNE SENT tanks into Czechoslovakia in August 1968 and ordered nearly 100,000 soldiers into Afghanistan 11 years later when the war ended. The attack of the Kremlin of the path of socialism as seen by the Kremlin.
BURLY, BETTE-BROWED, decisive,
brodhev was the son of a steelworker and
his wife.
Then in 1977, in the first major leadership shakeup since Khrushchev's ouster, he took on the additional title of president. His power resided in the party leadership while the largely ceremonial presidency put him on par with other beads of state in terms of protocol.
He helped to depose the flamboyant Nikita Krushchev in October 1964, then gradually emerged as "first among equals" in the ruling Polubiro. In 1966 he felt confident enough to take the title of general secretary of the Communist Party, not used since Stalin held it.
He matched wits and nerve with five American presidents and saw superpower relations fluctuate from Kissinger-era detente to Reagan's charge that Russian leaders
But while Krushchev was forced to capitulate in his biggest showdown, the Cuban missile crisis, Brezhnev repeatedly warned that the times had changed and that the Soviet Union would never again be humiliated by superior military power.
HIS PRIORITY carried a cost. The Soviet economy stuttered along, decades behind the capitalist nations. The Soviet peoples' standard of living remained one of the lowest in Europe, and its unreliable agricultural system forced them to feed on their people and livestock its livestock.
To back up that claim, Brezhnev launched the greatest military buildup in history, studding Eastern Europe with multi-headed nuclear strikes, the navy and president over a huge standing army.
Brezhnev, however, continued throughout his life to keep alight the flame of detente.
"God will not forgive us if we fail," the atheist Breznev told Jimmy Carter, a born-again Christian, when they signed the SALT II pact in Vienna on June 18, 1978.
IT WAS Brezhnev who made detente a reality with a nuclear-age blend of pragmatism and a recognition that without a superpower accord to
control their mighty arsenals, world peace was unachievable.
But it was also Breshnay who scuttled the chance for establishing a long-term agreement with the United States, when in December 1899 he sanctioned the invasion of Afghanistan by an estimated 90,000 Soviet troops and established a puppet government under President Brabek
Armenian experts speculated Brezinnef moved serious challenges within the Poliburo as a result of the decision to invade; and its huge cost to the Soviet Union, both economically and politically.
BREZINEV LECTURED two Polish party leaders on the dangers of the union movement and demanded that action be taken to stifle the challenge and return the country to party control.
Brezhnev also watched as Polish workers organized into the independent trade union, Solidarity, in 1980, threatening Communist Party control in that country, and by extension, as a threat to US troops.
But he hesitated to take the ultimate step — an invasion of Poland by the Soviet-led Warsaw pact forces that ringed the country and awaited his orders.
In his address to the 24th Communist Party Congress in 1971, Breznev outlined the peace program that disclosed the direction in which he intended to steer Kremlin foreign policy. It called for detente and collective security in Europe, a ban on nuclear arms and a commitment conference as well as the expansion of relations "with all states which seek to do so."
The first socialist leader not to have fought in the Bolshevik Revolution, Brezhnev was born Dec. 19, 1906, in the Ukrainian village of Kamenskoye, later named Dneprödzherzink. Royalty ruled Russia then and unrest gripped the nation.
His father, an ethnic Russian, was a poor steelworker. Brezhnev was 12 when the revolution swept Russia and installed bolshевism as the harsh new law of the land.
At 17 he joined the Young Communist League, thus becoming a senior member of the post-revolutionary generation of Communists in Russia. While climbing to full party membership, he studied engineering and worked for the state as a surveyor.
He later became a civil servant in government land offices in the Ukraine — work that served him well years later when he distinguished himself by successfully taking a role in Khrushchev's "virgin lands" program of agricultural development in Kazakhstan.
Like many other Communists who observed both party loyalty and political caution during the 1930s, Breezhen moved quickly upward through party ranks than backed by Stalin's purges.
Another such party worker was Khrushchev, who noticed Brezhnev's ability and dedication to him under his wing. Khrushchev guided Brezhnev's career almost until the very October day when Brezhev and other dissatisfied Kremlin figures deposed him.
Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas invites you to attend our Holiday Dinner Dance
on Friday, December 3rd in the Crystal Room of the Eldridge House Hotel. Full buffet dinner, including vegetarian entrees, full bar and set ups available, entertainment and dance music.
The answer is: C. The image shows a geometric shape with four triangles and two squares, which are likely part of a larger polygon. There are no clear indications of the type of polygon or its specific attributes such as number of sides or vertices. Therefore, it cannot be determined from the image alone.
However, if we assume the shape is a regular quadrilateral (where each side has equal length), then:
- The sum of angles in a quadrilateral is $360^\circ$.
- Since there are four sides, the sum of angles around each vertex is $\frac{360^\circ}{4} = 90^\circ$.
So, the correct option is B.
Dinner, entertainment, dance—$9.00
Reservations must be made in advance with $5.00 deposit by Fr1., Nov. 19th at GLSOK office, 3rd floor, Union.
THURSDAY
DRINKATHON
$1.00 at the Door
25c DRAWS
It Could Only Happen at
THE HAWK
1340 Ohio
INTRAMURAL ARCHERY
TOURNAMENT TONIGHT
May enter before competition begins
at 7:00 p.m., room 207, Rohlinson
Center
KAPPA PHI
invites you to join a "Ness" group
Sunday, November 14, 2 PM
Togetherness, 1204 Oread
hallmark
10-8 M-F
10-5 Sat.
CARDS &
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DENT SYSTEMS
Room 1.144 Manjada Inf.
841-5905
comprehensive
assistance from pregnancy risks
assistance to shortened service times
referee's license
overseeing
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Overland Park, KS 913-642-3100
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Leaves Lawrence Jan. 2nd.
There's room for more...
Stop by the SUA office today
and sign up. Space limited.
Academic Skill Enhancement Series
FREE
...or call 864-3477
via VIDEOTAPE
Monday, November 15
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Call or come by the Student Assistance Center, 864-4064,
121 Strong Hall, for an appointment.
SHANN And the SCAMS
Saturday, Nov. 13th Dance — FREE BEER 8-9! Rhythm & Blues/Motown Lawrence Opera House
K. U.
841-7117
841-7117
TRAVEL
CENTER
We Now Accept
TRAVEL CENTER
VOUCHERS
You'll receive the Best Travel Service and the Convenience of Payment with KU Vouchers.
And don't forget . . with every Airline Ticket Purchased You will also receive. . .
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Page 6
University Dally Kansan, November 11. 1982
Handicapped find KU access difficult
By BRET WALLACE Staff Reporter
No matter how hard David Wilson
to play, he'll win or lose two-
for-1s for 10-30 MWF club.
***
As soon as the 10-20 whistle blows, he leaves his class in the Military Science Building to go to his next class in which he can never make the class by 10:30.
Wilson is not able to climb the stairs as other students do, because the polio that afflicted him when he was 3 years old left him confined to a wheelchair.
To get to Wescoe, Wilson has to go down by Murphy Hall, up the street to the Art and Design Building, up one elevator and across campus to Wescoe.
Physically disabled people have fought since the late 1960s to destroy physical barriers and make programs accessible. They believe that they have been exploded from before.
Mount Oread is a barrier that disabled students at KU have not been
ROBERT TURVEY, associate director of the student assistance center, said recently that the transition between upper and lower campus was a big problem for students with disabilities. The normally brief trip from Wesco to Malott becomes a major excursion for a person in a wheelchair.
Students such as Wilson with motorized wheelchairs, can go around the room in one time. Turvey said. Other students have to wait for a van to take them around.
Wilson, who is secretary of Students Concerned with Disabilities, said his teacher was understanding about his tardiness, but some students had problems because a certain room was needed for special facilities.
Turvey said many students had scheduling conflicts because of the delay caused by having to ride a van from upper to lower campus.
"During class breaks a van has to wait on pedestrians, so it takes more than 10 minutes for a student to get from one class to another," he said.
Katherine O'Hara, president of Students Concerned with Disabilities, said disabled students realized they were unable to meet their academic needs and tried to schedule around them.
"THE TERRAIN creates a problem, but I wouldn't want them to change it. It is so beautiful the way it is. I chose to come to KU because of the campus, not because of the accessibility." O'Hara said.
Donald Whipple, assistant director of facilities planning for architectural services, said administrators had talked about building a skywalk between Malott and Wescoe to eliminate the hill problem.
"more planning would be done if the tending situation looked brighter."
Although the problem with the hill is not conquered, the University has improved greatly in the last five years in other aspects of accessibility, said O Hara, who contracted polio when she was 12 years old. "Now she now walks with the aid of crutches.
cooperative in helping make classes accessible. This semester, one of his professors moved a class because it was in an inaccessible room.
O'Hara said KU was still behind many other universities, because it was built on a hill and many of the buildings were old.
Wilson said the University was
"IT IS hard to adapt old buildings to be accessible. You have to put in elevators and ramps and make entrances level," she said.
The University of Missouri began making buildings accessible to the handcapped in the middle 1960s, so they are way ahead of KU, which did not begin to make large changes until the early 70s, Wilson said.
Although awareness and activity has increased at the University in the last five years, the national movement, which was intended to inform people and bring about concrete action by the government, has slowed down, he said.
Concrete action would be the construction of ramps and other things that would bring handicapped people into contact with other people, he said.
"Once we start getting concrete action, the disabled will interact more in society and people's attitudes will change."
But now the general movement has slowed down and switched to a community emphasis, he said.
"AFTER A big period of activism, there is a tendency for things to slow down." he said.
The increase in community independent living centers has shifted the involvement to the community level,
and many communities are now improving, Wilson said.
Kevin Martin, housing specialist for Independence Inc., 1910 Haskell Ave. said "Lawrence is a little below average, but he still bled compared to other communities."
Independence Inc. is an independent living center in Lawrence that acts as a clearing house for groups that advocate the needs of the disabled, Martin said. It also gives technical assistance to disabled people living on their own.
Many of the physical barriers in Lawrence are slowly falling because of advocacy for the disabled by many groups, Martin said.
Wilson said curb cuts needed to be made in many places around town.
"YOU CAN go along for 12 blocks just fine and then all of a sudden there is no curb cut and you have to drive in the street for you." he said. "I don't feel too safe in the street with cars towering over me."
Martin said advocacy in Lawrence had not been strong enough to get things changed, but said this was the first time he was aware of the problems of the disabled.
"Since the early 70s there has been a trend among special interest groups to pay more attention."
Shirley Wenger, president of the Mayor's Commission on the Needs of People with Disabilities, said that Lawrence was increasingly becoming more aware of the needs of the disabled.
The mayor's commission was formed in 1890 to advise the city governing body about changes that need to be made in the community, Wenger said.
The commission has been granted revenue sharing money from the city to make such improvements as curb cuts, automatic door openers on city buildings and paths through city parks for wheelchairs, she said.
THE COMMISSION is working on a parking ordinance that will punish people who park in handicapped parking stalls, Wenger said. The city has the authority to have illegally parked vehicles in public parking lots, but not private lots.
Martin said the lack of development in Lawrence also had caused it to fall behind other communities in access for the disabled in access for the disabled to be worked for.
"Lawrence is at a crossroads with downstream redevelopment. Martin said."
"With the downtown redevelopment there is a strong desire by the disabled to make sure access is available. It can be dealt with in the architect's office."
Wenger said the mayor's commission would monitor the plans for the redevelopment to make sure it would be accessible to all people.
The commission originally applied to have a representative on the Downtown Redevelopment Committee, but it was later rejected because of the size of the committee. Wenger said
A presentation by JAMES E. GUNN, professor of English, author, and critic of science fiction, at the November meeting of the Ad Astra L-5 Society. Thursday, Nov. 11. 7:30 p.m. Walnut Room, Kansas Union.
THE CASTLE
TEA ROOM
Completed applications must be returned to Mary Wallace, assistant to the dean, 200 Flint Hall, by 5 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 18.
Applications are available in the Kansan business office, 118 Flint Hall; the School of Journalism office, 200 Flint Hall; the Student Senate Office, 105 B Kansas Union; and the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 220 Strong Hall.
SPACE TRAVEL AND LITERATURE
phone:843-1151
Staff positions open for spring
BURGLAR STOLE A $500 videotape recorder from Smitty's TV, 1447 W. 23rd St. Friday evening, Lawrence police said yesterday. The burglary was not reported to police until yesterday.
The Kansan is now accepting applications for the positions of editor and business manager for the spring semester.
Attention
GREEKS
( ID's Please)
Don't Forget Greek
Happy Hour Friday
We will open to all our Members &
guests at 5 pm for our regular 2 for
1 special on Drinks & Food till 8 pm
GAMMONS
SNOWMILLS
23rd & Ousdahl
Southern Hills
Center
842-3977
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The Art of
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Glydons
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Slip into this enchanting Merry Widow from Glydon and Undercover and slip back in time a century or more...
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LAWRENCE TOYOTA/MAZDA
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PAGES AND SERVICES
LAWRENCE TOYOTA/MAZDA LAWR
Selling something? Call 864-4358.
We'll
· inspect belts and hoses
· flush radiator
· install new anti-freeze (up to 1 gallon)
· pressure test cooling system and test radiator cap
COOLING SYSTEM SPECIAL
TOYOTA LAWRENCE
Coupons must be presented at time of write-up
$24.95
commodore
COMPUTER
Computerark 841-0094
808 W.24th
MAYOR
LAWRENCE AUTO PLAZA
842-2101
Includes parts and labor (Additional parts and labor extra)
- install new spark plugs
* set engines to recommended
manufacturer's specifications
* adjust carburetor
* inspect operation of choke
* install new fuel filter/Marida
& Toyota only
* rotary engines not included
VISA
TUNE-UP SPECIAL
Electronic ignition (included all parts and labor 6 cyl models slightly higher.)
$29.95
LAWRENCE AUTO PLAZA
842 2191
Coupons must be presented
at time of write-up
TOYOTA LAWRENCE MAZDA
$36.95
Standard Ignition
(included all parts and labor 6-cyl.
models slightly higher.
We'll
• install new spark plugs
• replace points and cond.
• set engine to recommended
manufacturer's specifications
• adjust carburetor
• inspect operation of机
• install new fuel filter/Mazda
and Toyota only
• colley engines not included
SNA FILMS
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TONIGHT
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*INCREDIBLE* appolling, fantasist or all we,
*POINT OF ORDER* brings us back to the.
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7:30 p.m. Woodruff Aud. $1.50
Robert Deniro and Robert Duvall—consistently praised as the two greatest American actors of their time. And a brilliant supporting cast in a tough, cynical story about a shocking crime.
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REVERSE HANDS TRAINING - REVERSE HANDS TRAINING
COURSE DESCRIPTION:
JOIN US AS A REVERSE HANDS TRAINER AND START YOUR DEVELOPMENT IN AN EQUIPPED WORK ENVIRONMENT.
COURSE FORMAT:
SCHEDULE WITH ME ON TUESDAY & THURSDAY FROM 10 AM TO 4 PM AT THE MAIN ENTRANCE OF THE PROGRAM. WE WILL ASSIGN YOU A COORDINATOR TO EXECUTE THE SCHOOL'S OBJECTIVES. ALL PARTICIPANTS WILL BE PROVIDED WITH EQUIPMENT, VEHICLES, & LABORATORY ACCESS.
PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPER: JOHN PATTERSON (J.P.T.)
DR. SANJIT KUMAR (D.K.M.)
DR. MANDALA (M.D.)
DR. SHAWNA (S.A.)
DR. RISHNA (R.S.)
DR. BANQUET (B.Q.)
DR. PANCHIT KUMAR (P.K.M.)
UNITED ARTS
7:30 p.m. Woodruff Aud. $1.50
University Daily Kansan, November 11, 1982
Page
TV, losses hurt sales, merchants say
By DARRELL PRESTON Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
KU home football games did not generate the income this year that many Lawrence merchants have become accustomed to in past seasons, managers of local hotels and restaurants said yesterday.
Merchants blamed the slower than usual season on the television of games, which prevented some out-of-town fans from attending games, and on a series of games that encouraged to expectations, which discouraged victory celebrations at restaurants.
Fred Rice, manager of Brahma House, 352 W. Sixth St., said that when the hotel was empty on Saturday,
"No one in Lawrence wants to play when we lose. A victory is worth $1,000 on a Saturday night." Rice said. "If you'd take a look at my books, you'd see the difference between a win and a loss."
JIM TAYLOR, manager of the Lawrence Holiday Inn and Holidome, 200 W. Turnpike Access Road, said televised football games and the recession discouraged fans from attending games.
"We had a rash of cancellations because of broadcasting of football
games." Taylor said. "The NFL strike encouraged networks to broadcast more college games."
Home games against Texas Christian University and the University of Tulsa were regionally televised by CBS. The game with Kansas State University was nationally televised by WBTs, and the television station based in Atlanta.
Rice blamed the broadcasting of the K-State game from Manhattan for a disastrous loss.
"They played on national television during the dinner hour," he said.
TAYLOR ALSO blamed the lagging economy for sagging business. He said the Holldone did not sell out as expected.
"The crush never came as we had anticipated," he said. "It was not a total disaster, since we usually had at least a 90 percent occupancy."
This was the first football season for the Holiday Inn and Holidome, which opened in March. Taylor said that when he managed the old Lawrence Holiday Inn, it had always sold out for home football games.
MIKE SWEENEY, manager of Cornuopia, 1801 Massachusetts St., said the broadcasting of the Texas Christian game hurt his business because the game started an hour earlier than usual in order to accommodate CBS's sched-
Restaurants at the Holidome did well on game days, he said, despite slow turnaround. "I know it's a long time."
"Those who do come to town for games spend money," he said.
"People didn't have time to eat before the game, and they left town early after the game, so my business dropped," he said.
Sweeney said that other than that game, his game-day trade was off only 8%.
"We've usually done a little better on game days in the past, and the recession has affected us a little more than in the past." he said.
SOME BUSINESSES came through the season unscathed.
Mark Rimmerman, manager of Mr. Steak, 920 W. 23rd St., said that his business and customer count had been steady
Dennis Ritchie, manager of the All
Seasons Mets, 2300 Isole, and he had a
million dollars in the deal.
"Our business has been fantastic," Ritchie said. "I think football is recession proof. The teams still come. The fans still come. It's still an important event to people. I think people will save money in other ways so they can continue to go to football games."
Baby kill may hurt Chinese balance
PEKING—Chinese peasants are killing newborn baby girls at such a high rate that the nation's balance between males and females could be upset, an official publication said yesterday.
"Is there anything on earth more heinous than this?" the report said.
The China Youth News newspaper said female babies were being drowned or abandoned in the streets at such a rate that the authorities have trouble finding women to marry.
China's tough birth control policy allows only one child a couple in urban areas and a maximum of two in rural areas, without the risk of economic penalties, and in extreme cases, forced abortions.
In a study of rural communes, the report said three out of every five babies were boys. Because of reports of widespread killing and abandonment of unwanted female babies, the male-to-female ratio should be artificially damaged, it said.
FOR YOUNG couples clinging to "feudalistic thinking" that favors men over women, the pressure is to have a baby born on the same day as baby born first, the newspaper said.
By United Press International
The Chinese traditionally think a son can provide more labor as he grows up and take better care of his parents by taking care of the attire and carry on the family name.
A daughter often is viewed as a financial burden who eventually would
change her name once married and care for her in laws first.
Infanticide is illegal under Chinese law, which provides long imprisonment and in some cases the death penalty for such killings. But the government has not recently publicized any prosecutions for infanticide.
Statistics of communes already indicate an imbalance in the sex ratio in the last two years because of the infanticide, Youth News said.
"IN TWO decades, if this phenomenon goes unchecked, there will appear a serious social problem in which a person who will be unable to find spouses," it said.
By United Press International
"The law governing human development and propagation requires the rough balance between men and women in society."
WASHINGTON—Angry environmentalists tried yesterday to lay the blame for an oil company's invasion of the Salt Creek Wilderness in New Mexico squately on Interior Secretary James Watt.
Watt blamed for wilderness drilling
U. S. District Judge Juan Burciaga of Albquireau issued a temporary restraining order yesterday halting further drilling of the well and
Testifying at an emergency House hearing called by Rep. John Seiberling, D-Ohio, spokesmen for environmental groups said Watt did not move quickly enough to halt the baiting of Biter Lake National Wildlife Refuge.
They also charged that Interior Department officials failed to protect demonstrators threatened with being run over by a bulldozer operated by an employee of the Yates Petroleum Co.
The charges were disputed by Robert Jantzen, director of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, who said the department was seeking court action to stop the company from drilling in the refuge.
The order prohibits further drilling but allows Yates to keep a few people at the site to maintain the bore hole, pending a hearing, said Smyle.
THE CONGRESSMAN also voice "profound dismay" at the refusal of Garrey Carruthers, assistant secretary for land and water resources, to testify because his schedule was "too tight."
Seiberling, chairman of the House Public Lands and National Parks subcommittee, said there had been efforts to prevent the land and harassment of the demonstrators.
Spokesman Tom Smylee of Albuquerque said the wilderness would be closed to the public, protesters and "everybody except for Yates" minimum crew and Fish and Wildlife Service people. They were on route to late yesterday, when were on route to the site to serve the oil company officials with the court order.
scheduled a hearing on the order for tomorrow.
If such "lack of cooperation" continues,he said, he will use "a
THE FISH and Wildlife Service yesterday made preparations for an emergency shutdown of the wilderness area at 9 a.m. today.
Bob Burnett, vice president of the New Mexico Wildlife Federation, accused Watt and other department officials of "a shocking violation of their obligation to protect citizens who were legally on the wildlife refuge."
The harshest attacks on Watt came from national spiesmen for the Skiera Club, the National Wildlife Federation and The Wilderness Society.
"The courts will decide this, not the TV cameras," Young said, pointing to cameras on one side of the crowded hearing room.
compulsory process" to get officials before the panel.
TOM MAHONEY of the Sierra Club said the organization, based in San Francisco, would file suit against him for attempting to force him to stop the drilling.
Rep. Don Young, R-Alaska, denounced the hearing as "a dog and pony show" called for political reform in an environment group raise money.
Republican subcommittee members said it was unfair to blame Watt before all the facts were in.
Surgeon general's words 'personal'
Official retracts video remarks
By United Press International
WASHINGTON - Surgeon General Everett Koop said yesterday he was giving a "purely personal judgment" when he made an "off-the-cuff" remark indicating video games might incite children to violence.
In remarks to the University of Pittsburgh's Western Psychiatric Institute Tuesday night, Koop said games might be to blame for including violence.
"Everything is 'zap the enemy,'" Koop said. "There's nothing constructive in the game."
In a written statement yesterday,
Kayle said her comment did not
represent official policy.
speech on family violence at the University of Pittsburgh, I indicated that some video games may tend toward violence in their tone," he said.
"THIS REPRESENTED MY purely personal judgment and was not based on accumulated scientific evidence, nor on any other visual view of the Public Health Service.
"My off-the-fuff comment was not part of any prepared remarks. Nothing in my remarks should be interpreted as implying that video games are per se violent in nature or harmful to children."
"In reply to a question following a
by a trade group representing video game and pinhole machine manufact-
Jim Buchan, a spokesman for Koop, declined to comment beyond the written statement. Buchan said he did not know what Koop said in Pittsburgh and had been unable to get a transcript. Koop was criticized for the remark
Glenn Braswell, executive director of the Amusement Game Manufacturers Association, wrote the surgeon general evidence to support his statement.
"AFTER STATING your views, you publicly agreed that you had no scientific evidence on the effects of video games," Braswell said. "Re-engineering them will allow you only official mandate and authority is to develop scientific evidence."
Braswell said many psychologists said the games improved motor skills, increased concentration and introduced millions of children to computers.
KU
Your climb to the top is completed for this semester
Tonight O.R.E.A.D. will present CROSS COUNTRY SKIING with Dr. Mike Bahrke, KU HPER Department. 7:30 p.m.at 23rd & Iowa, Schoolhouse #6. OUTDOOR RECREATION EDUCATION ADVENTURE DISCOVERY PROGRAM IS A "Special Event" sponsored by Recreation Services.
OUR THANKS TO ALL O.R.E.A.D. Guest Speakers:
Mick Imber
Jim Meyers
Sherry Ladner
Bunny Watkins
KU Army ROTC
Ken Highll
Gene Wee
Dr. Mike Bahrke
KU Bike Club
Stake Club
KU Astronomy Department
Army Corps of Engineers
Army Corps of Engineers
Biology Dept., Lawrence High KU SUA Office
KU HPER Department
99
819 Massachusetts
Mon.-Sat 9:30-5:30 Thurs. till 8:30
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STUDENT SENATE ELECTIONS VOTE
ON NOVEMBER 17-18
Polling Places will be open from 8:30 to 4:30 at the following buildings:
SUMMERFIELD WESCOE UNION
GREEN (LAW SCHOOL)
LINDLEY
Student must bring K. U. ID to vote
(Funded by the Student Activity Fee)
---
---
THE GENERAL IS SHORT ON QUARTERS...
8-12 p.m.
Thursday
$1.00 Cover
GENERAL'S QUARTERS
...REDEEM YOUR QUARTERS FOR A COLD DRAW. BEHIND THE MALLS
Page 8 University Daily Kansan, November 11, 1982
JALOFTER C-3827 hobrook
Workers kept busy yesterday on construction at the K.S. "Boots" Adams Alumni Center, left, and the Summerfield Hall addition, right. The Alumni
SIR SUNDAY
Buddy Mangine/KANSAN
Center is expected to be completed by June 1983, and Summerfield is expected to be completed by August 1983.
Speaker says Russia occupies by formula
by VERONICA JONGENELEN
Staff Reporter
Michael Pauli, a librarian specializing in Slavic studies, spoke at the Ecumenical Christian University Noon Forum. About 50 people gathered to hear.
The activities of Russians in Poland are based on formulas that the Russians have used in the overtaking of other countries, such as the Ukraine and Lithuania, a KU specialist in Ukrainian history said yesterday.
hear his speech titled "The First Experiment of National Communism in Ukraine in the 1920s and 1930s."
Afterward, Palij said that the Russians learned from experience which formulas worked and which did not. The formulas involve weakening the people of a country and then taking that country over.
In his speech, Palj detailed the effects of Russia's expansion into the Ukraine, which included famine and death.
AN ARTIFICIALLY caused famine began in the Ukraine in 1933, Pali said.
After its removal, the grain was placed in state elevators and then shipped to the world market at a dumping price, he said. Those in impatient pasts who tried to prevent the shipments were removed from their jobs.
when Stalin overtook the country.
Stalin ordered all grain removed form the country, including seed stocks.
Many people died, and some entire villages were wiped out, he said. Russia began to move its own people in, and the Ukraine was occupied.
Poland, he said, because the Russian government wants to take away what the country produces.
the country produces.
Little by little, the people in Poland are beginning to feel the effects of the formulas, he said.
in those countries where the Russians have taken over, an abundance of policemen are needed, he said. This is a challenge that the police do not produce anything.
"Anytime when you have a lot of people who do nothing but eat, you will feel it," he said.
MEN AT WORK BUSINESS AS USUAL
Who Can it Be Now? Down Under
People, Don't Do To Play With Words
Be Good Johnny Down By the Sea
Australia's favorites have the #1 U.S. hit single, "Who Can It Be Now?" plus "Down Under" and more new age combustibles.
TRANSLATOR HEARTBEATS AND TRIGGERS
Everywhere That I Am Not
Swinging Scalpers When I Am With You
Everything You See Everywhere
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SCANDAL
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Won Smith, Leona White She Didn't Say He Another Bad Luck
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Broker tells students to learn about market
By JEANNE FOY Staff Reporter
The best way for students to learn about the stock market is to become actively involved in it, a stockbroker who works as an investor in a speech at Summerfield Hall.
A stockbroker can tell a customer when to buy and sell in order to make a profit, he said.
"I have a guy in telecommunications who calls in to ask what company to invest in. He knows better than I do," he said.
"There's the old saw 'I can pick stocks better than a brokerage firm.' I held to that once, but it just isn't true." he said.
HE SAID brokerage firms employed technical and fundamental analysts. A fundamental analyst looks at who is running a company and its probable earnings, he said, and a technical analyst charts statistical information about the company.
Fay said Dean Witter Reynolds had 100 analysts researching every field from telecommunications to retail sales.
But in areas that are unfamiliar to investors, a broker's research is useful. Fay said.
Fay said he knew of a client who was going to invest in a Wichita company, but after he wrote a letter requesting information, he found that the company's president had been cited for security violations.
Timing is the important factor in making a profit on the stock market, and a stockbroker should be able to get timely information about company's stock is going to change. Pay said
"STOCKBROKERS' research is valuable to an investor, Fay said, but the best way to find a company to invest in is to look in one's back
During the first hour of trading yesterday, the Dow Jones industrial average soared 10 points to 1.078 but ended the day by closing at 1,044.52, down 15.73. Tuesday was a near record day.
Ted Fay, a stockbroker for the brokerage firm of Dean Witter Reynolds Inc., said an active dealer in the stock market was always learning new things about it. Even though Fay has been working with his broker, the company was surprised by the latest bull market on Wall Street, he said.
As Fay was delivering his words, Wall Street was closing on a down note after surging past all-time highs earlier in the day.
THE SLIDE was prompted by analysts' warnings that the market was banking on too strong an economic recovery and a government report showing an anemic 6.4 percent rise in October retail sales.
Fay said one key to being successful in the stock market was having the advice of a stockbroker.
He said people should go to a stockbroker for two reasons — to receive sound advice and to take part in the brokerage firm's research.
"We're deluged with reports, all from our research department," he said.
He said anyone who had a stockbroker should keep in touch with the broker often, because most of their deals deal with about 1,000 clients.
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25
University Daily Kansan, November 11, 1982
Page 9
Officials predict early enrollment may change students' book buying
By MATT BARTEL Staff Reporter
Early enrollment can bring about a change in the way some students shop for textbooks, Kansas Union Bookstore officials said yesterday.
Steve Jewett, Union Bookstore textbook coordinator, said that although he did not predict a big jump in early textbook sales this year, more students would know what they were going to take much earlier. This could generate more early book sales in the long run, he said.
Initially, the Union Bookstore will use the same faculty book request deadlines, which means the prospects of stocking the shelves earlier this year than in the past are limited, he said.
"We'll have the tags set up by finals, so students who want to at least
see what books they'll be using can do so." he said.
STEVE WORD, Union Bookstore manager, said early sales could still improve.
Both Word and Muggy said their stores would set up next semester's books that were already in stock as soon as possible.
Bill Muggy, Jayhawk Bookstore manager, said one advantage of buying early was that students could get last year's prices on next semesters.
However, Word said, used books take longer to find. so some titles will not reach the shelves for several weeks.
The bookstore staff does not order some new books until they find out how many used books are available.
THE ONLY way to speed up the book-ordering process, he said, is to order new books as soon as faculty book requests come in. But this would not be the case because new books cost about 25 percent more than used ones.
Word said his store was working on getting more used books than it had in previous semesters.
"So far we've already done 75 percent of the used book business that we did during all of last year," he said.
Used book business accounted for a record high of about 40 percent of the Union Bookstore's book sales last year, but that's not likely to be able to see that figure reach 50 percent.
Muggy said the difference between those who bought their books early and those who waited tended to reflect class level.
Jayhawk billboard jolts cruising Missouri fans
By BONAR MENNINGER Staff Reporter
University of Missouri fans, complacently cruising Interstate 70 near the heart of St. Louis, have been jolted by a fierce storm that appears to be a blinding vision from hell.
Poised on a billboard near the Salisbury Street exit stands a Kansas Jayhawk, complete with pith helmet and blunderbuss.
The billboard reads, "Remember,
Tiger season opens Nov. 20," referring
to the upcoming football contest, and
exciting statement remark, "Here,
Kitty, Kitty."
The subversive proclamation in the urban thickets of "Mizzou" country is the work of KU alumnus James Arnold, class of 52.
Arnold is city manager of Ferguson,
Mo. a suburb of St. Louis, and said the
city has no plans to build a new building.
HE TALKED with KU graduate Dan Martin, a St. Louis area artist and former staff artist with the University Daily Kansan, and asked Martin to render a drawing of the crafty KU mascot stalking a Missouri kitty.
Martin was happy to oblige, and Arnold had soon solicited enough money from other KU alumni in the St. Louis area to pay for the billboard.
"I've been in Missouri for about 15 or 20 years now, and I have a lot of Missouri friends. We kind of go at it each year around football time, so I just thought I'd surprise them with the billboard." Arnold said.
Foreseeing partisan pressure from agast MU fans, Gannett Outdoor Billboard company of St. Louis installed an adjacent billboard beside the Jayhawk, which shows a fierce Missouri Tiger, with bared fangs and claws outstretched. The billboard says, "With you Mizzou."
HOW HAVE Missourians reacted to the visual invasion?
"I've got some people who won't talk to me until after the game," Arnold said.
The Kansas City, Mo., native said he had received numerous calls and letters from relatives in Missouri and Kentucky who wanted to take bets on the game.
Laughing, Arnold said, "We're just having a little fun. I would hope Missouri fans have a sense of humor, too."
The rivalry between Kansas and Missouri has been one of the fiercest in the country since Kansas won the first game in 1891. Kansas also won last year's contest, a victory that sent Hawks on to a post-season bowl game.
Officials say arson cause of house fire
Lawrence Fire Department officials yesterday determined arson was the cause of a fire that resulted in $10,000 damage to a Lawrence home Tuesday night.
Fire Chief Jim McSwain said the cause of the fire at 1025 Connecticut St. was determined to have been arson because there were multiple points of origin for the blaze on both floors of the house.
Firefighters were called to the home, owned by Harry Rayn Str. son, about 9:20 a.m.
McSaint said that investigators took four samples of fire debris from the house and sent the samples to the Bureau of Investigation for analysis.
Firefighters responded at 3:40 a.m. yesterday to put out the fire, which restaked in a matress. Firefighters were again called at 7:25 a.m., after the fire had rekindled in attic insulation, officials said.
The house was being rented by Harry Rayton. McSwain said.
McSwan said a closet on the first floor and a room on the second floor received extensive fire damage. There was smoke and fire damage to other rooms on the second floor and the fire spread to the attic and roof, he said.
Kay says unemployment key factor
After months dominated by speeches and campaigning, Morris Kay is grasping pencils and calculators in hands of 20C congressional District voters.
By BRUCE SCHREINER
By BRUCE SCHREINER Staff Reporter
While the Lawrence insurance executive sat at his desk, which already was scattered with various accounts — indicating his quick move back to law — he completed the reasons for last week's loss to Democrat Jim Slattery.
Kay concluded that the threat of higher unemployment in the 2nd District may have kept him from pursuing job he had sought since last summer.
Because voters were unable to express their frustrations about President Reagan's economic policies in the off-year election, Kay said, they unleashed their anxiety on his campaign.
KAY, WHO lost by a greater margin than most people expected in Kansas' most combative congressional contest, closely aligned himself with Reagan during his attempt to succeed Republican Rep. Jim Jeffries. Reagan campaigned for Kay in a September visit to Topeka.
"In a real sense, a certain number of voters saw an opportunity to vote against the president by voting against but still having the president." Kay said.
"The fear of unemployment played a larger role than the actual unemployment. There was a lot of conversation about it. I don't know how to measure it on the Richter scale, but it certainly was there."
Kay said that in predominantly rural Clay County, which has an unemployment rate of only 3 percent, he defeated Slattery two-to-one.
BUT IN the more populous counties, where unemployment poses more of a
Despite disenchantment with Reagan's inability to check rising unemployment, and the liability it posed for GOP candidates, Kay said he never regretted his close ties with Reagan.
"He is trying to do the job he was elected to do, and I'm very proud of the team."
Besides the handicap of unemployment, Kay said, his late entry into the race forced him to play catch-up with his team, who already had visited most of the district.
"I knew what the odds were going into the race because of the head start advantage the Democrats had," he said.
"The SLATTERY campaign had been out more than a year directly, and two years indirectly with labor unions to take control of voter registration and voter turnover drives.
Kay, who lost to incumbent Gov. Robert Docking in the 1972 gubernatorial election, refused to make any commitment about his future in poli-
"But we worked hard, and we brought it down to the point where if there had been a change in 23 votes in each precinct, it would have changed
However, it was confirmed yesterday that he was being considered for the top regional position at the Environmental Protection Agency.
Scott Richardson, assistant press secretary for Sen. Bob Dole, R-Kan., said that Kay had showed interest in the matter and had "passed on that interest to EPA."
LATER in the day Kay said, "I have had only a preliminary discussion about it with a member of Sen. Dole's staff. I'm honored that Senator Dole would recommend me, and it's important to have Kansans in those positions."
The regional post, based in Kansas
City, Mo., oversees operations in Kansas, Missouri, Iowa and Nebraska.
"I understand the importance of the position, and I understand the administration is interested in having someone with managerial experience." Kiya say.
The former GOP state chairman said that no matter what the future held for him, he would maintain his avid interest in Kansas politics.
"There have been a lot of people trying to write my obituary," he said. "But I have strong feelings for the principles of the Republican Party, and I have strong thoughts on the need to do what I can to help in whatever way possible."
But for the near future, Kay said, he will catch up on his work at National Guardian Life Insurance Co., 2500 W. University Drive, Gray City in Gray County in western Kansas.
WHILE KAY recuperates from the grinding campaign, many Republican leaders already are listing the 2nd District seat as a top priority in the 1984 election.
Merlyn Brown, executive director of the Kansas Republican Party, said Slattery could be vulnerable in 1984 if he sought re-election.
"A one-term congressman is in that position because he hasn't had a chance to establish himself in the district. So if Slattery supports T tip O'Neill on every occasion, we have made a mistake and will want a more conservative congressman."
"I believe we will probably put a great deal of emphasis on the 2nd District race because a congressman is in office after his first term in office," he said.
Brown said the 2nd District could become a headache for Slattery because of the great variety of constituent cities. The district includes Topeka, one of the state's largest cities, several universities and a large agricultural base.
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CLASS REUNION
Page 10 University Daily Kansan. November 11, 1982
THE
Kauai News
To supplement non-revenue sports scholarships, swimmers like Ken Grey, Mission Viejo, Calif., junior, hawk programs at home football games while other non-revenue sport's athletes rent backrests and guard parking spots.
Non-revenue sports in pinch KU teams work to earn money
By DARRELL PRESTON
Staff Reporter
Before home football games, Jodi Riehlm and other members of the KU crew team bundle up in warm clothes and the Memorial Stadium parking lots.
Team members save parking spaces for sports boosters, while earning money to pay for boats, travel and coaches' salaries.
Members of other non-revenue sports teams at KU also work to pay expenses, although they, unlike the crew team, funding from the athletic department.
The track and swim teams are financed by the athletic department, but team members work at football games to supplement their scholarships. The swim team sell programs, and members of the track team rent backrests.
Temple said most non-revenue athletes had not received full scholarships because more athletes could be helped from partial scholarships were awarded.
FLOYD TEMPLE, assistant athletic director for non-revenue sports, said the jobs provided extra money for the college who did not receive full scholarships.
Association limits the number of full scholarships a school can award in each sport, he said.
A full scholarship for an athlete is about $2,900 for Kansas students and about $4,400 for out-of-state residents. Students may be invited to room, board, tuition, fees and books.
Coaches can divide full scholarships into fractional scholarships, such as half, quarter or smaller. Temple said, thus giving money to more athletes.
STUDENTS ON full scholarships cannot get jobs, he said, but students with partial scholarships do take other courses, and teachers play games, to defray educational expenses.
David Darwin, crew adviser and professor of engineering, said members of the team each work 70 to 100 hours fund-raising in addition to training.
Although the crew teams compete with varsity teams from other schools, its members do not receive scholarships. The team is recognized by the University as a club, so its members have to raise money to cover the team's expenses, in addition to practicing and training all year.
Student Senate records show that the crew team earned $3,600 parking cars,$1,200 from concession stands and $4,196 from other fund-raisers, such as picking up trash at the 1982 Renaissance Festival.
THE TEAM received a Senate allocation of $1,862 last year and tentatively has been allocated $2,250 for next year. Senate allocations are used by the 80-member team to purchase equipment, such as boats and oars.
Matthew Gatewood, Senate treasurer, said the crew clab's willingness to raise so much of their own money was enough that they received funding from the Senate.
"The crew team is an exception to a typical group," he said. "Over the years the crew team has been very willing to raise money on their own. They don't take Senate funding for granted."
Riehm, Lawrence junior, said that in addition to training and helping the team raise funds, she also attended classes and worked at a movie theatre.
Girl raped in man's car after school, police say
Darwin said he would like to see the crew team financed by the University, though he did not think the athletic department could be in a position to be funding other teams.
The girl told police the man was a friend of the family who offered to drive her home after school. He asked her to help carry her when he took her home, she told police.
Temple said the economy and funding situation would prevent additional non-revenue sports from being financed by the athletic department.
A 15-year-old Lawrence girl told police she was raped by a 50-year-old Lawrence man who picked her up after school Tuesday, police said yesterday.
"It would be great to help out some other sports, but you've got to be realistic," Temple said. "If there is no need, I will think to think about additional funding."
The incident occurred between 3 p.m. and 4:30 p.m., police said.
Evidence Officer Jack Elder said the girl told police the man stopped the car on a gravel road, produced a gun and forced the girl into the back seat of the car. The girl did not know exactly where the incident occurred, but she told police it was north of the 31st and Louisiana streets intersection.
Police are still searching for the suspect, Elder said.
More students are receiving loans, official says
More KU students have received short-term loan this year than last, a Kansas University Endowment Association official said yesterday.
George Stewart, the Endowment Association's controller in charge of short-term loans, said that since the beginning of 2017 he received a total of $780,550 in loans.
For the same period last year, 1,754 students had received $642,710. he
students had received $642,710.
Stewart said that financial aid decreases this year probably contributed to the increase in short-term loan requests.
Students can apply for short-term loans in the office of student financial aid. The only restrictions are that the student maintain at least a "C" average and use the loan for educational purposes.
financial aid counselor to determine why the applicant needs the loan. Priority is given to the need for books, living expenses and transportation.
Students are interviewed by a
Students who do not repay the loan on time and fail to apply for a repayment extension have their academic records frozen. They also may be subject to a 14 percent penalty interest charge on the loan.
percent, to cover losses and adminis trative costs.
Stewart said the default rate on loans had decreased because his office had been more aggressive in its collection.
THE REGULAR interest rate is 6
The office has increased efforts to contact borrowers about delinquent loan payments and is turning the accounts over to attorneys and collection agencies faster than before. Stewart said.
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University Daily Kansan, November 11, 1982
Page 11
Official to discuss Tylenol's return
PHILADELPHIA - Six weeks after Extra-Strength Tylonel capsules spiked with cyanide killed seven people, plans were announced yesterday for a nation-wide conference to discuss reintroducing the new product in tamper-resistant packages.
James Burke, chairman of Johnson & Johnson, parent firm of Tynelon's manufacturer, McNeil Consumer Products Co., will discuss reintroduction plans before reporters at a New York hotel today.
His remarks will be carried via closed-circuit tele- to hotels in 29 other cities. In four of those cities — Philadelphia, Chicago, Los Angeles and Washington — reporters will be able to quz Burke.
Robert Andrews, spokesman for Johnson & Johnson, which is based in New Brunswick, N.J., said the
elaborate conference was the first ever for the giant, health products firm.
ANDREWS SAID Burke would disclose the new packaging for the capsules, briefly discuss plans to reintroduce them in stores and reflect on the impact of what the company calls the "Tylenol tragedy."
PACO Pharmaceutical Services Inc. of Lakewood, N.J., reportedly has been chosen to make the new packaging but the PACO would confirm or deny the report.
Andrews also said Burke might discuss a new advertising campaign but noted, "I don't think he's going to get far into it."
Except for a brief television campaign in late October asking people to "trust" Tylolen, all Tylolen ads were withdrawn after the seven Chicago area Tylolen-cyanide deaths, the first of which occurred Sept. 29.
An investigation into the poisonings continues.
AS FEARS about the deaths mounted, McNeil told stores to discontinue selling Regular and Extra-Strength Tylenoil capules and arranged with wholesalers and retailers to return the products.
The recall was a financial blow for Johnson & Johnson, which took a $50 million after-tax charge against its third-quarter earnings to cover the cost of recalling and destroying 22 million bottles of Tyleneol capsules.
McNeil also launched a program for consumers to swap Tylonei capsules for Tylonet tablets, which were not involved in the tampering incident.
Burke insisted at the time that Johnson & Johnson would invest heavily to re-establish Tysonel's position. He also said the company would reinforce market before the scare.
A 71-year-old Overland Park man who fell down the steps of Memorial Stadium last Saturday died yesterday afternoon in the intensive care unit of the Research Medical Center in Kansas City, Mo., a hospital official said.
Man dies from injuries suffered in stadium fall
Funeral arrangements have not yet been announced by Simmons Funeral
The hospital would not release the cause of Paul's death, and his doctor could not be reached for comment.
William Paul suffered a head injury when he fell down the stairs of the stadium shortly before half-time at the KU homecoming football game.
KU POLICE HAVE been conducting an investigation to determine the reason Paul fell (KU Police Director James Sweeney) and why reason Paul felt had not been determined but said the department was interviewing witnesses.
"With a major accident we try to get as many statements as we can to determine what happened," he said. "So far we have found nothing to indicate that it was not an accidental situation."
"We will take what we have to the district attorney's office for them to [be] prosecuted."
Denney said it was routine to take a case involving a death to the district attorney's office to be examined when there was a possibility of foul play.
Paul was transported Saturday after the accident by Douglas County ambulance to Lawrence Memorial Hospital and was then transferred by Life Flight helicopter to the Research Medical Center.
Asbestos maker files for bankruptcy
By United Press International
WASHINGTON - The blue-chip Manville Corp., accused by the daughter of a dead asbestos worker of committing "outraged murder," said yesterday it filed for bankruptcy to preserve profits for workers who have yet to sue.
The company said potential damage suits, with an average settlement of about $40,000, could put it out of business.
At a Senate Judiciary subcommittee hearing on the crisis in bankruptcy law, Juvenile Gentle of Baltimore, her voice cracking, described the "hell my father
went through dying of lung cancer after 27 years of working with asbestos as an insulator.
"What they have done is outraged murder," Gentile charged. Instead of using bankruptcy to delay paying claims, she said, executives "can do their high salaries and fancy cars. My never get to enjoy those luxuries."
MANVILLE, one of the largest asbestos manufacturers, filed for bankruptcy in August despite a net loss of $325 million and millions of dollars in cash on hand.
The company claimed the 16,500 current asbestos suits and an estimated $39 million in damages.
exceed its profits and make it impossible to borrow money in the meantime.
The subcommittee began considering bills to restructure bankruptcy courts because of a Supreme Court decision invalidating 1978 legislation. If Congress does not act by Dec. 24, the entire system, already burdened by 10,000 new filings a week, could be thrown into chaos.
Manville senior vice president Earl Parker said the firm was being sued by Sotheby's.
He said, "Even after receiving the full amounts we are claiming under our applicable insurance policies, Manville would not afford to pay the entire bill.
The second annual KU International Day Saturday afternoon will offer a schedule of entertainment and displays from cultures as diverse as American Indian, Puerto Rican and Palestinian. Activities officials said yesterday.
Events to recognize diverse cultures
Gina Stevens, SUA fine arts chairman, said the day would feature 15 booths displaying memorabilia from different cultures.
Several groups will entertain, including Canta, a Puerto Rican singing group from Manhattan, Kan., and the
The event is sponsored by SUA, the international Club and the office of management.
University Dance Group, a KU folk dancing troupe, she said.
MOST OF THE entertainment for this year will be on-campus talent, a switch from last year, she said, when the entertainers were from off campus.
Gerry Williams, assistant director of minority affairs, said, "The reason we have this is to highlight the cultural diversity we have here."
Although the entry deadline for displays and acts has passed, Stevens is still a viable option.
The events will last from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. in the Kansas Union Ballroom and are free to the public.
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CORNELL UNIVERSITY GRADUATE SCHOOL OF BUSINESS & PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION
Fredrick W.
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May we help you, too, get started and keep going to reach your educational goal! Check it out with the First. For an application, call Liz Hutton 295-3493 first, first, first. The National Bank, Box 80, Topska, Kanape 06010.
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Reagan takes part in Marine's 207th anniversary party
By United Press International
"Sir, you honor us," Barrow said, presenting the serving "to our commendation."
WASHINGTON—President Reagan, nibbling at a sword-sliced chunk of chocolate cake, helped the Marine Corps mark its 20th anniversary yesterday — snapping a special salute to the marines standing watch in Lebanon.
He noted that, as the ceremonies were being held, "Your fellow Marines are standing watch in Beirut."
A drum and bugle corps, clothed in scarlet tunics and standing in a semicircle facing Reagan, played a stirring "Stars and Stripes Forever," with the band playing the Hymn of the Republic and finally played the "Marine Hymn."
"For 207 years you have been there whenever and where ever our country needed you," Reagan said in a brief speech. "You have never failed your country."
In traditional Marine birthday observances, the oldest Marine presents cuts the first piece of cake and gives it to the youngest Marine present. But tradition was abandoned yesterday, as Marine Corps Commandant Gen. Robert Barrow unsheathed his ceremonial sword and used its long blade to slice the cake.
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Piano Quartet
KO-KELA
Piano Quartet
The University of Kansas Chamber Music Series Presents
CA
Clayton Haslop violin
3:30 p.m. Sunday
November 14, 1982
University Theatre
Murphy Hall
KO-KELA (from the Sioux Indian word "to make sound")
All seats reserved/For reserva tions, call 913/864-3982
11
James Bonn piano
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office
Special discounts for students and senior citizens
Ronald Copes viola
"It was ardent and radiant playing."
The New York Times
"In short, KO-KELA is one of the country's top chamber music ensembles."
The Kansas City Times
Peter Rejto cello
The Arts
Page 12
University Daily Kansan, November 11, 1962
Henry, Boagni show off skills
By GINO STRIPPOLI Sports Writer
It was the Carl Henry-Kerry Boogain show at Allen Field House last night.
Boogain and Henry led the Blue Team, consisting of the top six players on the Kansas squad, to a 101-84 rout over the Crimson team before a crowd of 4,410.
"We needed to play in front of people," head coach Ted Owens said. "It gave some of our inexperienced players the chance to play in front of a
But as it did last year, the game belonged to Henry.
Henry hit 15 of 25 shots from the field and two free throws to lead both teams with a game-high 32 points. He was also third on his team with six rebounds.
"I'm just doing the best I can out there." Henry said after signing hundreds of autographs following the team. "We're trying to get the ball moving."
Right behind Henry on the Blue Team was Boagni. Boagni, the heralded freshman from Serra High in Gardena, points on 13 of 22 shooting from the field.
EVER MORE amazing was Bogni's second-half performance, when Bogni
hit on all seven of his shots from the field.
"We ran the offense well and played together," said Boagni, who brought the crowd to its feet twice in the first half with breakaway dunks. "I'm trying to add to every aspect of the game. The coaches are emphasizing quickness and defense, and this team wants to run, run, run."
One person who does not fit into the running mound, center Kelly Knight, had a great evening. Knight, who is in a close battle with Brian Martin for the leading pick, was on nine of 13 shooting from the field and five of eight from the free throw line.
KANSAS
KANSAS
45
KANSAS
Rounding out the Blue squad were Jeff Dishman, eight points and a game-high three steals; Martin, six points and 12 rebounds, which was the team's first member and tied for game honors; and Tad Boyle, six points and nine assists.
He also was second on the Blue squan with eight rebounds.
Kelly Knight, right, center for the Blue Team, attempted to steal the ball from Lance Hill in the Crimson-Blue game last night at Allen Field House. Knight had 23 points and eight rebounds in leading the Blue squad to a 101-84 victory.
Jim Evans/KANSAN
The Crissman Team, despite being beaten by 17 points, did have some fine lines.
FRESHMAN CALVIN Thompson, from Wyandotte high in Kansas City, Kan., led the White team with 28 points and 12 rebounds. Thompson, who hit 19 of his 19 shots, scored 20 of his points in the second half.
"Calvin is a fine player, but before he becomes a great player, he has to become a good athlete," Owens said. "Thompson is a lot like David Magley when he came to Kansas. He worked hard, but he still got a little way to go."
Greg Dreiling, who transferred to Kansas from Wichita State after his freshman season and is ineligible to play this year, tied Thompson and Riley with 12. Dreiling also scored 21 points on nine of 13 shooting from the floor.
Mark Ewing, who saw very limited action last season, was third on the Crimson squad with 16 points and seven rebounds.
Rounding out the Crimson squad were Jeff Guiot, two points and six assists; Mark Summers, four points; Lance Hill, four points and two assists; Logg, nine points; Ron Jones, a walk on this year's team, did not score.
"We want to set a running pattern with any opponent we can, but some teams just don't allow you to do that." Owens said. "We also want to put on as much pressure as possible. If we're in shape, we will put as much pressure on the ball as possible."
JAYHAWK NOTES—The Jayhawks' next action will be Monday, when Kansas takes on the Yugoslavia Nazi House Game time is set for 7:40 p.m.
Garvey, Baylor top list of re-entry draft picks
By United Press International
NEW YORK—Steve Garvey and Don Bayley, two of baseball's premier sluggers, officially received their freedom yesterday while hard-throwing Floyd Banana grew off the shackles of pitching in the seventh and Seventh Kingdom in the seventh annual free agent re-eentry draft.
Garvey, the glamour name in a weak crop of National League free agents, was selected by nine clubs. At the conclusion of the 23-round draft, the Los Angeles Dodgers declined to retain negotiating rights for the lifetime .302 hitter, who hasn't missed a major league game since 1975 and has posted five 100-RBI seasons.
Garvey thus effectively severed his ties with the Dodgers, and the 33-year-old first baseman is expected to be wooped seriously by the San Diego Padres, who made a strong showing last season before slumping after the All-Star break. Also selecting the former Brooklyn Giants and Chicago Cubs, the Chicago White Horse Houston, the New York Yankees, Pittsburgh, San Francisco, Seattle and Texas.
Baylor, 33, cracked 24 homers and drove in 93 runs as a designated hitter with California last season and starred in the Angels' five-game loss to Milwaukee in the American League Championship Series. After Baylor was selected by six teams, including the Brewers, the Angels
"I have to sit down and meet with (president) Ballard Smith and (owner) Ray Kroc to plan our strategy," said Padsres' Vice-President Jack McKeon. "Sure, we'd like to have Steve, within reason. We're not gonna shoot the moon. If we do sign him, it could easily bring a substantial number of Dodger fans to us down the coast."
declined to retain negotiating rights for the 1979 AL Most Valuable Player. The Brewers figure to pursue Baylor vigorously, hoping to improve their designated hitter in an already imposing lineup.
Bannister, 27, headed an impressive list of AL free agents available and he was selected by 16 teams, including the New York Yankees, the Brewers and the world champions St. Louis Cardinals. Although he sports a paltry lifetime record of 51-68 in the major leagues, Bannister led the AL last season with 209 strikeouts while posting a 12-13 mark with Seattle. A former College Player of the Year at Arizona State, Bannister's untapped potential has placed him in prime position to make a financial killing in the free agent market.
The Yankees and Philadelphia Phillies are expected to make strong bids for Bannister, who says he wants to play his home games in a "pitcher's park" rather than the Kingdome, where the ball carries well and the power alleys are just 357 feet away.
"Bannister may be a pitcher just built for the Yankees and Yankee Stadium," said New York principal owner George Steinbrenner.
Joining Bannister as Class A free agents — requiring compensation of an amateur draft choice plus a professional player — were a pair of outfielders, Steve Kemp of the Chicago White Sox and Baltimore's John Lovenstein. Kemp, 28, was drafted by nine clubs after hitting .286 with 19 home runs and 98 RBI while Lovenstein, 35, who cracked 24 homers in part-time duty, was picked by seven teams.
Major league RBI leader Hal MMcAe was picked by the Yankees, California and Pittsburgh, with the anticipating the loss of Baylor.
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Our feature will make it
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Flower Shoppe
Open
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841 800-739
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Mon-Sat
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It's specially priced and ready to take home with you right now.
HEIRLOOMS
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EXCITING NEW COUNTRY STORE AND GIFT SHOP
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FRIDAY, NOV. 12 10-5 SATURDAY, NOV. 13 10-5
THE EXCHANGE
FOR A SPECIAL TIME!
We think our weekly specials are the best in town. We hope that you have the chance to stop by and have a SPECIAL TIME with us!
Mon — Schnapps & Beer
($1 for a chilled shot of Schnapps
and a draw)
Wed.—Ladies Night
(FREE BEER for girls from 6-12 p.m.)
Thur.—Kamikazai Night
($4 for a 30 oz. pitcher)
Tue.—Wine Night (50* wine drinks all night)
THE
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with this coupon
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Sun. Noon-11:45 p.m.
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JUNGLE HUNT All New All New THURSDAY 2 FREE TOKENS with this coupon Thursday, November 1 1th only
HOOD'S BOOK SALE! HUNDREDS OF SALE BOOKS
Nat. Hist., Women's Studies, Travel, Games Sports, Hobbies, Crafts, Cooking
50% OFF Hardcover Titles in Selected Areas!
HUNDREDS OF PRINTS 50c EACH
ALL HARDCOVER FICTION!!!
PLAYBOYS etc. $1.00 SCI-FI HARDCOVER $1.00 NATL.GEOG.10c
FRIDAY — SATURDAY — SUNDAY 1401 MASS. NOV.12-14
TONIGHT,
GO ITALIAN
TONIGHT,
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• Homemade Spaghetti • Meat & Cheese
Ravioli • Torrallini • Spinach & Italian Sausage
Lasagna • Mancotti • Cannelone & Meatball & Sausage
Gnnders
Daily Specials & ALL YOU CAN AT EXTRAVAGANZA
$3.00 Days $4.25 Fees • Prices range $1 75 $4 25
• Cold carnegie & hot to go orders
Open daily 11:00 am - 9:00 pm
PASTAH'S
1809 Mass. 841-7122
—Sunday is dorm night
—Show KUID for a free soda with meal.
—Owned and operated by the Cornucopia restaurant.
Rent it. Call the Kansan.
ROCKY BOOTS
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University Dally Kansan, November 11, 1982
7.
Page 13
This week's foe
Colorado looking for first home victory of year
Rv. TOM COOK
Associate Sports Editor
Colorado coach Bill McCartney knows the feeling of a winning football season. Rather, he used to know the feeling.
Now the first-year coach of the Buffalooes is experiencing what it is like to be on the losing end more than once or twice a year.
McCartney spent eight seasons at Michigan, coaching the Wolverines defensive ends from 1974 to 1976, and was the coach coordinator for the past five seasons.
The Wolverines were always contenders for the Big Ten title. But the Buffaloes are battling to escape the cellar of the Big Eight conference.
Colorado, 1-7-1, has played six home games this season and McCarthy is still looking for the first victory at Folsom Field, Kansas is McCartney's last hope, as the Jayhawks visit Boulder for a 1-0 m. game Saturday.
"I sure didn't want to see Kansas beat Iowa last week," McCarrney said. "I was hoping they'd come in here really soon." And they're really going to be fired up.
THE BUFFALOES, 0-4-1 in conference action, have been hit hard by injuries this season. The entire defensive line took an enormous amount of punishment in the 35-14 loss to Missouri on Saturday, McCartney said.
"It's just been one of those things, he said. "We're banged up. We're really hurting. Right now, we're
"A lot of players have been here three or four years, and I think it shook up their comfort zone when all of the new coaches came in," McCartney says. "Whenever you start a new program, you're going to have problems."
McCartney also said that the establishment of a new program at Colorado had added to the Buffaloos' struggle for a good season.
playing w-ona. We didn't even wear pads in practice Tuesday. That's the real thing.
Consistency also has plagued the Buffaloes in 1982.
After defeating Washington State in the second game of the year, 12-0, the Buffaloes have dropped six of seven games and tied OSU.
EXCEPT FOR a 25-22 tie with Oklahoma State at Stillwater, Colorado's top scoring performance was in the season-opening loss to California, 31-17.
"Offensively, we've been inconsistent." McCartney said. "Early in the game we were not enoughough for about the first three quarters. We'd just get tired and fall apart."
Last week, Colorado lost to Missouri, 35-14, and temporarily lost quarterback Randy Essington with an elbow injury late in the first half. However, Essington, a 6-3, 210-pound junior, should be ready for the JAYHawks, McCarthy men
McCartney was referring to the California game,when Essington hurt his arm. It swelled up by the end of the week, and he missed the following games against Washington State and Wyoming.
IF ESSINGTON cannot play, sophomore quarterback Steve Vogel will replace him. Vogel, 6-4, 199 pounds, played the remainder of the Missouri team for a season and paired for 384 yards, one touchdown and six interceptions this season.
Meanwhile, Eessington has completed 109 of 219 passes for 1,121 yards, two touchdowns and 13 interceptions. He is close to breaking most of the school's record.
Colorado's top two fullbacks are freshmen Chris McLemore, 6-0, 208,
and Dennis York, 5-11, 202. Lee Rouson,
6-1, 202-pound sophomore, and Richard Johnson, 5-8, 193-pound senior, share duty at tailback.
Johnson is the Buffers' lead resurer with 447 yards on 83 carries. Rouson has picked up 311 yards on 84 carries, and his core have rushed 107 yards on 32 carries.
Defensively, Colorado's lone stand-out has been linebacker Ray Cone, a 213-pound senior. Cone is the Big One in this game, averaging 17.2 tackles per game.
The University Daily KANSAN WANT ADS Call 864-4358
CLASSIFIED RATES
one time five times ten times eleven times twenty times thirty times four times sixteen eight nine ten eleven lewis or fewer one time two three four five six seven eight nine ten eleven lewis or fewer each additional word.
AD DEADLINES
ERRORS
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
The Kanan will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or simply by calling the Kansas business office at 843-5556.
KANSAS BUSINESS OFFICE
118 Flint Hall 884-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
AUDITIONS for color TV dramatic production,
7/19/2024-5/31/2025
Jae Jan彤, 904-322-2414 214 jliffe for script
Christmas Basket November 11, 3 p.m. to p.m. November 12,
December 5, 8 p.m. to midnight
Do you need cash? Bring your unwanted merchandise to the Lawrence Community Auction. Every Saturday, 7 p.m., Commitments accepted Tuesday through April, 5 p.m., p.O. Box 500, New Hampshire Hall 6142-8214 for info.
Business Manager Editor
Paid Staff Positions
The Kanas is now accepting applications for the Spring Semester Business Manager and Editor positions. These are required in a newspaper experience, Application forms are available in the Student Senate Office, 105 B, Kansas University in the Building A and Activities, 220 Strong Hall; and in Rooms 200 and 118 Flint Hall. Applications due in room 200 by 4 p.m., Thursday, November 18.
The University Daily Kanisan is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Opportunity school and are sought from all qualified people regardless of race, religion, color, sex, disability, veteran status, original age, or ancestry.
DJUKE GAYNAVA KOREA, KIMSA child care. f. 2018.
KOREA KIMSA seeks a Nurse Educator for interfaculty nurse education process. Women must be healthy, 21, Kansas residents, must have given birth to healthy child or children. Medical expenses and living expenses for children. Vinegar 91-323-2543, Hagari Institutional. Tepeka.
Dressing creatively can be an expression of the inner Self. Learn an enjoyable, everyday secret to upbeat dressing for any occasion and choose to bring into your personal universe ECKANARA informal talk; Monday, Nov 15, 7:30 AM
The Lawrence Barm Dance Association and the KU Dance Club present an old DATE TIME GUENTINE $84MAR 2015 Adriel Parker Memorial Band! Sunday, Nov. 14-8 i.m. at the Wall Hall. Attendance $10.90, with RKID $8.30. No partners are necessary and beginners welcome. Entrance granted. Enjoy!
FOR RENT
3. bedroom Meadowbrook Apt. for rent through
the Property Manager. Please contact us
at 1-800-456-2090 or ATTNIVEAIR@ATNIVEAIR.com for available for useable JANUARY 1. Perfectly carpeted and furnished, Close to campus. On RU fee route. Water and cable TWO STORIES.
ENTTRA office apartment, large and small. NB-135.
Campus. Duties paid. resale price,租二房.
SPRING SEMESTER
crawl in the CHRISTIAN CAMPUS HOUSE this fall and spring. Become a part of a growing campus ministry. Call Alan Rosenak, campus minister 410-4592.
Enjoy carefree living at affordable prices. Spacious studios, 1 & 2 bedroom apts.- Carpeted, draped and on the businef.
The Luxury of Meadowbrook Is Just Right For You
meadowbrook
16th & Crestline 842-4200
Housemates wanted. Enjoy a relaxed co-educative living experience, reasonable rates and to campus too! Call Sunflower House 844-9412 L 1GR lhr April; near campus 171/month plan deposit
Needed 4 mature students for a very special bedroom home, very quiet neighbourhood £900
New apart, 2 bed, 1½ bath, fully furnished, close to campus. 841-1212 or 749-5375.
One one-bedroom, one bath apt with range refrigerator and dishwasher. Good location, £285, all rooms are new.
One and two bedroom apartments. Move your belongings in after final-spend the holidays at home with family-pay rent upon your return in apartment or rental units, and stay at laundry facilities on priona. Paid rent. TY, 84213.
PRINCETON PLACE PATCH APARTMENTS. Now Available, 2 bedroom, 2 bath, perfect for roommates, features wood burning fireplace, 2 car garage with spare room, washer/ dryer hookups, fully equipped kitchen, breakfast bar, annual per month. Open house 9-30:30 daily at 2:08PM. Princeton lnd, or phone 845-2675 for additional information.
Roommate needed, very nice fully furnished apartment,
private room/bath: $135/month,
$250/month.
Rustic Country Stucco for lease/retail. $275每月价
deposit and ref. 3 m². S. B44-8118.
SHARE HOUSE; contemporary 2 BR 13.1 m SW
floor, 1850 square feet, 947 sq ft,
great basement, high grade $135 plus deposition. 746-805-3121
www.shares house.com
Stay Warm This Winter With
Naismith Hall
Individually - Thermostatically Controlled Heat
*Private Baths
- Private Baths
* Private Sleeping Study Areas
* Carpeteting
*Fourteen Meals Per We
*Fourteen Meals Per Week
*Air Conditioning
*Free Utilities
*Versatility in Payment Plans
*High Rise Living With A Pool
*And An Active Social Calendar
1800 NAISMITH DRIVE
843-8559
SUBLEASE in Dec or Jan. nice 1 BR apt, furnished.
Close to campus. 748-3425.
Sublease Num. 1. 8 Bedroom townhouse, full kitchen,
basement, large patio, outdoor fireplace.
bathroom, 3046 Alabaster, Call G79-1984. Rent
$2,500/mo.
SOUTHERN PARKWAY TOWNHOUSES, Bath & Kassidy if you are of noisy or cramped apartments in a neighborhood, call us at 615-382-4020. All appliances, attached walls, aquum-walls, all privacy. We have openings now: Call 749-787-0585 for information about our modestly parked townhouses. STUDIO apt for Jan.-May sublease. Can move in on the right. Call 615-382-4020.
Sublance outstanding outstreet, 2.5M, 1½ beds; lath,
DB, part, kitchen w/ appliances; patio, pool
and spa; landscaping.
Tired of doing all the housework? Check and
Sandpiper cooperate, be clean and unpack
your toys.
STUDIO apt for, Jan-May may house Can move in
Dec 17 $495/mo. low utilities. Near neighborhood
Sublease studio age. Dec 20 - June 3 $250/month
Close to campus and downtown. Downtown Place Appea-
sions. No credit checks.
Sublease payable Availability Jan. 1, Nice and quick, 2 hr.
ALL UTILITIES Paid With $4,811,949 - 109.38%
Warren, inexpensive rooms. Block from Union, depart from Paris. Must have luggage. Comely by a couch. Grab a taxi.
FOR SALE
**105** Daimon D-210 4-peeded 2-door, amf. AC, Inc.
**106** Daimon D-310 4-peeded 2-door, amf. AC, Inc.
condition making $750.00 will accept best offers
condition making $750.00 will accept best offers
Bubbae 2 bdg. apt, in reincarced 4 pay. Pls.
rent until January then $2/month. Call Natale
Sahra for details.
NICELY DECORATED spacious room. Furnished
801 paid rooms. Next university & downtown.
OFFICES AVAILABLE ONLY AT MIDDLE SCHOOL
Hauser Place - Completely furnished one bedroom apartments available immediately. Located between 14th and 15th on Mons. Only 3 beds from KU and 2 beds from $80 per month water paid. B41-122 of B42-845.
Date Call Number 843-576 or Midwestbrook 843-590
January 2011 apartment. Good location Start Jan.
May 2011. Call 789-2361
1970 Maviekir. stick shift, rebuild engine
Nemarkah reliable. baltic 841-843-0107
1972 VW Bu. Very good condition. 842-5747.
1973 Chev. Nova 6 cyl. hatchback, good condition
8420 NB RPT OFFER Call 841-3276
1977 HMN 3500 4 - aple / A.C. 45,000 miles, alloy new,
2016 Toyota Corolla 2-d; apex 4.25, Excellent excelent.
1977 Toyota Corolla 2-d; apex 4.25, Excellent excelent.
1977 Toyota Corolla 4dr 8-4-passenger Excelent condiment w/dual exhaust system A/C, great rain protection 1977 Toyota Corolla 4dr 7-4-dr. A/C, great rain protection
1979 Dahman 710 Wagen metallic blue, 5-speed, air-
conditioned, very well equipped, $4,600, $4,800
and $5,200.
70 Olds Delta 88, power steering, power brakes,
automatic transmission Good condition. Low mpg
1979 WV Rabbit 3,000 m². four, new Michelin tires, fuel injection, $3,600. Call 841-7457.
75 VOLKS DASHER 4 appl. 2 new radiah, new water
namer, starters, runner m8-4372
Chew 78 MALIBU PC, PB, AC, AT, FM AM/ Cruise
Snowdows 2 for 943.8410 after 5.
Classic - 1969 Fiat 800 Spider Convertible, great mpg,
good condition, good tires. Must sell. B43-8221
For sale: Fiat Stratoster Cabin, Call Dave 843-2270,
weekends or after 5:00
MORILE HOME in the country, Parkwood, 55 x 10 m, w/4'F. elevation on ly roof, 5 m. I. E. of Lawrence, WD, clothing fan, central artificial air refrigerator, WD, clothing fan, central artificial air refrigerator, paint lawn master. Very nice for $8.200. Q42-521009
Hewlett Packard HE300D Bar code reader, also
garage 864-4291 ext. 453 furnaces 841-5000 also
long, gray winter coat with boot. Size 14. Worn
only 5 times. $50. Call 841-5715 for info.
3 hours.
Must sell an HP-41C with a card reader. Together or
separate. Best offer; Call 841 698 between 9:00 and
10:00.
Mega/Bogo guitar amp. tp. Graphic EQ. 60/100
watts. To hear, call 845-1637.
NAD 20; natt amp. $16; R & W speakers, $125;
Technics plus tablet plus charger, $70; or
off.
Olympus OM-10 35mm camera / w/ 50mm lens,
perfect condition,垫火 CALL 824-7812 after $5 per ppm.
TENNIS RACKETS! Recently selected selection newhead Head Compus. Wilson Advantage. Kramer Classic. Buy your it in good condition. 843-4715 after 60 p.m.
Yumahab C-Pre-amp. Excellent condition. Also BW darkroom with Omega 860, encapsuler and case.
$12.5mm, $4, $8, $16, $32, $64, $128, $256.
FOUND
If you found a ladies navy blue blazer please return it. My mother made it and I am in a bad of trouble.
I lost calculator. Fax CX 350. Please call 769-0075.
LOST this pass and ID around the building.
If you need help, call 769-0075.
LOST. Dark blue lino-leaf notebook. Contains handwritten western story. REWARD. K84 8213-91.
Lunch 11-62 in AP Parking Lot 3: Albums *Bez Skags*, 38, and Big Sole. Beg. If found please.
One very small black female dog. Call Joe Fino at 843-560-5961
Skraggs, 38 Special and Bob Seger. If found please call Jim Thornat at 843-813.
Please help! Green Iwart Macaw *Lost vicinity to* Aransas and Antilus. Unarmed can be heard. Check trees, see how much light the sun is shining. Would the woman who came severen times look for her cost Wetson library please clash it. It has
HELP WANTED
Movie theater job opportunity in Lyme, SK, 260-second
movie presentation. Position requires a Bach deg or
bachelors education in戏剧或电影. Potential to
work with actors and directors on a production.
Email: jason.davis@lyme.edu
OVERSEAS JONES - Rimmer race round, Europe. 30.
Jewels. 25. Skiing. Ski equipment. Ski equipment.
Ski equipment. Free info. Write LC box NX 2687
NX 2687.
On call substitutes needed for Child Development Program. Must have experience and/or study with young children. Send letter of application and hours of service to Lawrence Center, 311 Maine, Lawrence, KS 60044.
NURSING: FULLTIME/PARTIER Are You Interested In... Weekend only work? Either day, evening or night shift! One day per week, or two days per week. Please fill out a short description of opportunities for registered nurses are now available at the Topka State Hospital: We provide a liberal education and training program away from nursing awake, we can work back you in part of a professional treatment team. We all work with our nursing students to gain experience salaries 60% and NOW SUPPLEMENT DIEFFER. Beverly Anderson, RN, director of Nursing, Topka State Hospital 2700 s W. 8th street, Kamasna
PERSONAL
Secretarial assistant needed 10-20 hours per week,
for typing and library work, $35 per more hour.
All must be KI student. Call Kristen Tremmer (9:34) at 8410 or 8410 Miahten. Closing daf new 19.8.
A Special For Students, Haircourt - A: Ferma, Perry 1383 Charnie 1033; Mans. 343-888; A: de Jonessen Jensen.
A Straight Kool outfit - Brennitt Beauty Liquor. Cliffted Stadium. 844 Nissan - north of Memorial Stadium. 844 Nissan - 922/472.
CARTOON-O-GRAM from now thru holiday season- special discount rates. Poster size, full color, hand delivered. Put your friends in cartoons! The creative artist is imaginative person. CARTOON-O-GRAM 841-8353
STAND TOGETHER. Special Kids need Special People. The STAND TOGETHER PROGRAM is currently seeking volunteers to serve as educational advisors and mentors for children in the State of Kansas. There is a particular need for volunteers for children in Topeka State facilities. These children need someone to represent them in all of their programs.
aspects of their special education programs. Participation would include activities such as visiting the child, reviewing the special education program and having discussions with the teacher in support of the child's best interest. If you have one or two hours per month to train with a handwritten number, you can transfer number for more information: 1-800-322-6921
COMPENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES: early & advanced outpatient abortion; quality medical care; confidentiality assured. Kansas City area. Call for appointments (813) 642-3100.
ATTENTION WALMERS, WALMERJETTES, AND
WE'LL BE HERE. We will have our group picture taken for the NYU WPAC Foodbread
from something special with it. We'll bring a past - stop by Hasty's Vintage Rose, 91% Mass.
and see the art.
David Adkins: Does politics make you blind to those around you? Watch this space for further details.
We're An
Official Representative
ALL Airlines offering the Lowest Air Fares Possible
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Flights Filling Fast
Now is the time to make your Thanksgiving and Christmas travel plans ...
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EUROPE. BABYSITTING FOR $4 Benefits, rm/bd,
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Experience counts. VOTE. CONSENRSU Student
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Footlights will now be open Thurs. nights till 8 p.m.
Footlights, 25th & Iowa
For good quality, clean, affordable next-air travel to New York City and beyond. 2015 New Hampshire in the Marketplace. Tuesday, Sat.
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Ladies Nite Tonite
1st hundred ladies
receive complimentary
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841-BREW
HEADACHIE, BACKACHE, STIFF NECK, LEGP
PAIN Find and correct the CAUSE of the problem!
CMR Dr. Mark Johnson for modern chiropractic care.
Accepting Blue Cross - Good Lots, Loan,
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KU. Sociology and Anthropology Departments,
Boston University, and sponsor the Iranian
film that has been recognized by the Film
International Critics Award in the 1971 Venice Festival-plus
a two-week program at the American
November 12, Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1284 South
Downtown.
Lorie. For R, K' balloons, "The Boyfriend," and the last funny, weird year, thanks. Love, Jim.
THE
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MADISON
5048 KIVA
LAWRENCE, CA 93044
MONEY FOR GRADUATE SCHOOL, MEDICINE & C
BACHARD AMERICA ACCOMPLISHMENTS
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Musician wanted: drummer, purlerist, saxophonist,
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new gift items arriving daily at the Village Sampler,
call for information on Christmas classes
149382
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New nylon, hammers, rubber boots, winter coats,
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Tu - Kegger-Weekly Specials on Krega! Call 881-9450/
1/10% x W. 3xrd.
Schulzner Wine & Keg Shop. The great selection of wines in Lovestead - largest supplier of strong wines in the region.
Say it on a shirt, custom silicone screen. T-shirts, jeans and caps. Shirt炎 Swells 745-1011
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Thursday: House Shoe 'Dawn & Out' 75 U2.3, HAPY
HOUR 9 for 1 U7.9 Up & Under above Johnny
PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTHRIGHT
454-8213
041-6223
Sit it on a shirt, say silk screen printing. T shirts.
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WANTED: Undergraduate students to run the COL-206
Contact the College Instructor, 265
Saint John's Blvd., Burlington, IA 52718.
Mail by post.
Videoapos;s of Academic Skill Enhancement Service
Monday, November 18. Call or come by the Student
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FREE!
To the Men of Pl Kappa Phi. There once was a Homecoming race for the very best float in the place. we worked in it we got right and we all get freethoughts. We got right and we all get freethoughts. Thanks for the memories. The Alpha Phi's.
lilian's liqueur store serving Ulyd since 1949. Came it and compare. Wilfred skillet lilian 1064 Mace.
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10° DRAWS $1.00 COVER 8-10:30 pm at Murphy's 201 W. 8th St.
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Western Civilization Notes. Now on sale! Make sure to purchase this 11-Study guide to sense use to Western civilization for exam preparation. For exam preparation "New Analysis of Western Civilization" by Frank M. Town Crier, The Bookmark, and Oren Bookmark.
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bus, reasonable prices. Group rates and bus charters
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WANTED
Female roommate wanted to share two bdrm. at $125 plus low utilities. 748-5418. Keep trying.
Female roommate needed to share nice 2 bedroom apartment close to campus and downtown. $125 plus
Fifth female roommate to share five bedroom house
Chair to campground and downtown. $150 plus fi-
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Housemate, near campus, downtown. $45 plus one fee for 1-hour. Available immediately or on request.
MALE HOOMMATE needed to share furnished
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Prices vary by location.
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some inmate wanted to share a townhouse and the utilities. Easy access to Mali and grocery. For info please call Keth at 749-3531.
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summertime. Quit. Walk to campus: 794-0187
Roommate wanted for 5 bedroom house: $70 per
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Page 14 University Daily Kansan, November 11, 1982
You're invited!
THIS SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 14, BEGINNING AT 9:00 A.M., YOU'RE INVITED TO SEE THE AREA'S NEWEST PREMIER RUNNING EVENT.
---
Maupintour Fall Classic 10K/5K Runs
TRACK CLUB
LTC
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
SHARE THE EXCITEMENT!
Last year the Lawrence Track Club presented its first Fall Classic. The run was so popular that LTC has joined forces this year with Maupintour for a repeat performance. Over 1000 runners are expected to compete in the 10K Individual Run and the 5K Individual/Team Run.
START AND FINISH!
You're invited to watch anywhere along the route. Suggested locations include the intersection of Sunflower Road and Sunnyside Avenue, and the top of Daisy Hill at the intersection of Irving Hill Road and Engel Road.
See the map for the route. The runs start and finish at the KU Memorial Stadium, with ample parking, refreshments and restrooms available. The awards will be presented at approximately 11:30 a.m. in the stadium.
WHERE TO SEE IT!
Maupintour
quality escorted tours since 1951
5K RUN ROUTE
10K RUN ROUTE
N
W
E
S
5K START
10K START
Potter Lake
MEMORIAL DRIVE
FINISH
Memorial Stadium
MISSISIPPI
TENNESSEE
CRESCENT DRIVE
JAYHAWK BLVD
SUNFLOWER ROAD
ENGEL ROAD
IRVING HILL ROAD
SUNNYSIDE AVENUE
Allen Field House
Pioneer Cemetery
AVENUE A
IOWA
21ST
INDIANA
LOUISIANA
18TH
The University Daily
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
KANSAN
Friday, November 12, 1982 Vol. 93, No.60 USPS 650-640
Heads of state praise Brezhnev as leader
By United Press International
MOSCOW-A medical report signed by the Soviet Union's leading physicians yesterday showed that President Leonid Brezhnev died of heart failure.
Sources said the delay in announcing his death, which occurred at 8:30 a.m. Wednesday (11:30 a.m. CST), was caused by doctors' vain attempts to elevate the chest寓死 for hours after he was clinically dead.
Most leaders praised Brehnev for his dedication to defente and halted him as a statesman of great stature who left his mark on history.
World leaders paid tribute to the late Soviet President and the United Nations lowered its aid.
BUT A FEW leaders offered critical appraisals of the Soviet leader and even fewventured to guess what direction the Kremlin's new rulers would take after his 18-year tenure.
President Reagan praised Brezhnev as "one of the world's most important figures."
He told the Kremlin that the United States had a strong desire" to improve relations with Russia.
Former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, on a private visit to Paris, said yesterday that the Soviet Union could now be on the verge of launching a new peace effort.
"If such a chance comes we must seize it," Kissinger said.
FORMER PRESIDENT Richard Nixon called Breznev a "ruthless schemer and a relentless aggressor" but said he was also "warm, effusive, bullient."
Nixon said the late world leader "wanted the world. But he did not want war."
A statement released by the official Soviet news agency Tass said an autopsy showed the 75-year-old Soviet leader suffered from a stroke and lost the flexibility of the aorta, the heart's main artery.
The autopsy showed that Brezhnev had an irregular heartbeat and scar tissue on the heart
Chine, which exploded its first nuclear blast in 1964 on the day of the resignation of Brezhnev's predecessor, Nikita Khrushchev, reported Brezhnev's death without immediate comment.
BREZINEV DIED less than a month after talks resumed between Peking and Moscow on Tuesday.
In Hong Kong, traders on the gold bullion market reacted to the news with panic, pushing the price of gold up 88 in the 30 minutes that followed the announcement.
"It was complete pandemonium," one trader said
On the London money market, the news and uncertainty over the new Soviet leadership booster the dollar yesterday against major economies, and now is the most world financial markets reacted calmly.
Austrian Chancellor Kreisky, while maintaining Breznev's role in world affairs should not be "underrated." it was the only government leader to criticize the late Soviet
REKISJY, A KEY figure in East-West relations, criticized Brezhny for keeping the "right to intervene in the internal affairs of any country" and the bloc should a political crisis develop there."
The United Nations, its blue and white flag at half-staff, cancelled a General Assembly meeting yesterday and held a commemorative session to pay tribute to the Soviet leader.
"His name is inextricably to the policy of lasting peace, detente and disarmament," said Imre Hollai, president of the General Assembly. Delegates then rose for a minute of silence.
U.S. Ambassador Jeanne Kirkpatrick extr
dare "our deepest sympathy" to the Sovi-
tian people.
Eastern European capitals went into mourning, with flags flying at half-staff and radio and television broadcasts altered to pay tribute to the dead Soviet leader.
POPE JOHN PAUL II sent a telegram to Vasily Kuznetsov, vice-president of the Supreme Soviet, expressing his condolences and calling the Soviet leader "the illuminated deceased."
In Tunis, capital of Tunisia, Palestine Liberation Organization chairman Yasser Arafat praised Brehnev as a friend of the Palestinian cause.
Brezhnev, he said, "supported the rights of the Palestinian people and their cause, their right to self-determination, and their right to return to homeland and build an independent nation."
In Bonn, members of the West German Bundestag interrupted a budget debate to stand
FRENCH PRESIDENT Francis Mitterrand spoke warmly of Brezhnev as "a great leader of the Soviet Union, a statesman whose eminent role in the world will be remembered by history."
Soviet loss could result in Polish gain, prof says
Bv MATTHEW SCHOFIELD
Staff Reporter
Dissidents in Eastern Europe should use the death of Soviet President Leonid Brezhnev, and the subsequent lack of a single powerful Soviet leader, to further the cause of independent labor unions, a KU professor of Soviet and Eastern European Studies said yesterday.
Professor Jareslaw Piekalkiewicz said that the state of confusion and uncertainty that generally accompanied a Soviet power struggle would allow greater freedom to independents.
"The SOVIET UNION is in a very difficult economic situation. I predict it will be more flexible in terms of economic conditions than we were left to be left to as an own designs for a period — maybe a few years,
maybe a few weeks. Solidarity should utilize that period and try to hammer for negotiations."
Solidarity could succeed by following such a course because for the next year Soviet aid to the U.S. would be limited.
"The KREMLIN WILL be concerned with its own problems," Pleklaianiewicz said. "The Polish martial law government can depend less on law enforcement than the Israeli government will be at a little bit of a loss."
But Norman Saul, chairman of the department of history, said the use of force against the Soviet Union was "a serious problem."
"I don't think it's very likely that anyone will pressure the Soviet Union," he said. "The result might be against our best interests. It might force a single, powerful leader to emerge."
CHILLY
AIRD, professor of Soviet and Eastern See BREZNEY page 3.
See BREZHNEV page 3
Today will be cloudy, windy and colder with a 30 percent chance of snow according to the National Weather Service. The high will be about 75 degrees Fahrenheit, steady or falling throughout the day.
Tenight will remain cloudy and cold with a low in the teens.
Weather
Tomorrow will be partly cloudy with a high around 40.
SHUTTLEBACK
space shuttle Columbia opened its cargo doors yesterday to ease the first satellite ever launched in space. This artist's
conception shows the satellite drifting away from the shuttle and a second satellite that will be launched today.
Columbia crew has perfect first day
By United Press International
Astronauts Vance Brand, Robert Overmyer, Joseph Allen and William Lenoir finished the flawless opening day of Columbia's first commercial flight with a promise to repeat their performance today by launching another communications satellite.
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — The crew of space shuttle Columbia, adopting the motto "we deliver," earned almost $9 million for U.S. taxpayers yesterday by launching an electric-blue communication satellite over the Pacific Ocean.
Plans called for the second communications satellite, owned by Telesat of Canada, to spring into operation.
A SECOND SUCCESS will bring Columbia's total earnings to $18 million and complete the year-end goal.
Although this flight was a "loss-leader," with the fee for its two launches covering only 7.2 percent of the mission's $250 million cost, NASA officials said it cleared the way for paying cargo to cover the full cost of operating a fleet of four shuttles within five years.
Flight Director John Cox said yesterday's launch from the shuttle's 60-foot cargo bay
of a drum-shaped, 7,300-foot satellite owned by
Satellite Business Systems at 4:17 p.m. — just
eight hours after their own blastoff from Cape
Canaveral.
"We deliver!" Lenoir told mission control.
"We got SRS off on time."
THE ASTRONAUTS beamed back a videotake of the SBS satellite spinning like a slow-moving top and moving away from Columbia at 2 mph, with the Earth 184 miles below."
Allen and Lenoir triggered the spring release
The opening day of the flight piled up an impressive string of other records.
Columbia is the first spaceship to go into orbit five times.
This was the first four-man launch.
Columbia's four earlier flights had two-man crews.
It was the first American space flight to carry a passenger. Allen rode in a seat on the shuttle's lower deck.
It was the first time a manned spacecraft blasted off with no provision for the crew to manipulate it.
And for the first time, the crew took off clothes in comfortable, blue jups instead of dresses.
THE BIGGEST problems were nagging ones — windshields smeared with salt spray and bird droppings, faulty instructions for activating a
German experiment on metal structure, suction-cup shoes that caused more problems than they solved, and a video screen that was on the blink.
From its blastoff precisely 39 second before
19 a.m. the mission was picture-perfect. Fox
squad members ran into the hangar.
Allen and Lenoir, the payload engineers, started the SBS launch by opening a white sunshield and turning on electric motors to set the satellite spinning in its cradle at 51 revolutions a minute. The spinning was to stabilize the satellite after launch.
THE SUN GLINTED off the blue solar cells covering the satellite's sides and the silver dish antenna covered over its top. The open sunshield was clearly visible as a white video name Pau-Man living on its back.
Allen snapped pictures and flashed a live telecast of the spin up back to Earth.
The launch took place with Columbia over the Equator west of Quito, Ecuador and out of radio contact with Earth. But a few minutes later, the satellite collided with the International Station. Chile reported it was flawless.
"We still have that beautiful satellite in sight," Allen said. "It's traveling right below us."
COLUMBIA'S SPACEMEN got a call from President Reagan during their third sweep across the Atlantic.
Pride endures with veterans of Vietnam War
Staff Reporter
By BONAR MENNINGER
The Vietnam War burned through the American psyche like a fireball. When the end finally came, many veterans believed that a disillusioned nation had turned away from them.
Yet much of their pride survived the Vietnam War. For many of those who fought in the tangled jungles of Southeast Asia, there was no shame.
Tamorrhoe, a memorial to those thousands who fought and died for their country will be held on Wednesday.
A CANDLELIGHT VIGIL began Wednesday at the National Cathedral, where the names of the 57,939 dead and missing from the war are readied. The reading of the list will end this evening.
The ceremony in the nation's capital is the culmination of five days of events aimed at bealing wounds from America's longest and most controversial war.
Still, like the war, the monument itself has been surrounded with controversy. The stark, chevron-shaped piece of black granite on the Washington Mall slopes into the ground. It is inscribed with the names of those killed or missing in action.
Critics have charged that the design of the monument reflects shame and dishonor.
As a compromise, a stature of three Marines, along with the American flag, will be placed
For several area veterans, the dedication and accompanying events in Washington bring back ambivalent feelings about Vietnam, and may serve as a bitter reminder of the way they were treated by the government and people of the United States when they finally came home.
JOHN MUSGRAVE is the director of the Disabled Veterans Outreach Program at the unemployment office in Lawrence. He is a former public school word about the war are edged with bitterness.
"Regardless of what the intentions of this government were, the intentions of the young
men who fought in Vietnam were honorable," Musgrave said.
In 1967, Musgrave was an 18-year-old infantryman, barely out of high school, attached to the 8th Marine Division in Vietnam. In 1968, when he was wounded for the third time, Musgrave had only a few days to go before his tour of duty was up.
The highly decorated soldier was shot through the chest and the jaw by machine-gun fire, spent 17 months under medical care and lost partial use of his left arm.
When I was shot the last time, I knew I was "dying," he said. "I just had to accept it. At that moment I was as satisfied as I had ever been and probably ever will be. I knew I had done everything for what I believed in. I wasn't ashamed. I wasn't embarrassed."
MUSGRAVE SAID he disliked the design of the memorial because he thought it attempted to
"I want a monument that speaks of our job and
WITEN AM."
Storms whipped through Douglas County and the surrounding area last night. Tornadoes were reported in Johnson and Franklin counties, but no one was injured.
DOUGLAS
Lawrence
JOHNSON
GRACE
FRANKLIN
MIAMI
Ottawa
Williamsburg
COFFEY
ANDERSON
LINN
Cold weather spawns area tornadoes, claims life
By JULIE HEABERLIN
Staff Reporter
Weather, forecasters were predicting Lawrence's first snow as gusting rainstorms swept across eastern Kansas yesterday, spawning two tornadoes and killing one man in Prairie Village.
Johnson County sheriff's officials reported a tornado about 6 p.m. that left a two-mile path of battered roofs and downed trees, fences and power lines in rural Johnson County.
The funnel moved northeast and touched down again in southern Overland Park, demolishing a barn, Overland Park police said. Damages were reported and investigations were reported in either case, police said.
THE TOPEKA area was under a tornado
watch yesterday at 4 p.m. when police report
sighting a tornado near Williamsburg in Franklin County. The tornado hit a rural residence before the building was destroyed.
Officials said the tornado damaged several tin buildings and treesees in Franklin County before it struck.
Flash flooding yesterday evening claimed the life of a motorist swept from a bridge at the Mission Hills Country Club into the swollen River, said Prairie Village Fire Chief Robert Wilcox.
A Prairie Village police dispatcher blamed leaves and debris clogging sewers for the rapid
At 4:30 p.m. m Kansas Power and Light Co.
officials said wind and weather had caused about
50 power outages in Eudora, Desoto and
Tonkea. Lawrence or Ottawa were reported
in Toneka. Lawrence or Ottawa
WEATHER FORECASTERS were predicting
Joe Eagleman, KU professor of meteorology,
said Lawrence might be dusted with light snow
yesterday afternoon that temperatures in Lawrence would drop into the 30s before midnight, with the possibility of light snow mixed with rain early today.
Ron Crandall, a forecaster for the National Weather Service, said temperatures would fall into the teens tonight. He predicted a 30 percent drop in temperatures and in the mid-30s by afternoon.
Eaglemen said that the latest winter onslaught probably signified the last of the unseasonably warm weather for Lawrence and predicted that temperatures would prevail for the next few days.
THE_EXTENDEDweekend_forecastshowsa warming trend, with highs in the upper sixties and lows in the lower seventies.
Batch Larios, supervisor of production control for facilities and operations, said that leaks were reported in seven buildings yesterday, including Murphy, Strong, Malote and Summerfield halls.
Yesterday's high winds and rain put an extra
workload on both city and city officials.
Larios said he could not estimate damages until the rain stopped and the clean-up crews
The weather did not cause major traffic problems in Lawrence and on the highways.
---
ROBERT PORTER, KU assistant director of facilities operations, said that workers were prepared to keep the main avenues and building accesses on campus clear in case of snow today, but reductions would prevent them from ensuring that routes were "bone dry" as in past years.
Page 2 University Daily Kansan, November 12, 1982
News Briefs From United Press International
Reagan says foreign agents are backing nuclear freeze
WASHINGTON—President Reagan said yesterday that there was "plenty of evidence" foreign agents have been sent to the United States to help "instigate and create" the U.S. nuclear freeze movement and keep it going.
During his nationally broadcast news conference, Reagan was asked if he thought foreign intelligence agents were behind the freeze movement, which calls for a verifiable freeze on the production of new nuclear weapons between the two superpowers.
"Yes, there is plenty of evidence." Reagan replied, saying some of it had been printed.
had been priced.
"There is no question but that the Soviet Union saw an advantage in a peace movement built around an idea of a nuclear freeze, since they are way out ahead (in nuclear arms)," he said.
However, Reagan said he thought the great majority of the members of nuclear freeze organizations were "sincere and well-intentioned."
Reagan declined to reveal the "evidence" of foreign intervention in the freeze movement, saying, "I don't discuss intelligence matters."
Exploding pipelines cause injuries
A separate explosion at an energy plant in Good Hope, La., just south of New Orleans, injured two workers when a heater blew out.
WESTLAKE, La. An ammonia pipeline ruptured and caught fire at a chemical plant yesterday, critically burning one person and injuring several firefighters.
A spokesman at the Oil Chemical Co. plant in Westlake said the ammonia line ruptured about 6:20 a.m., spewing nitrogen and hydrogen that exploded in flames that were quickly extinguished.
Calcasieu Parish school officials, fearing a release of toxic gases, canceled classes at five schools in Westlake and Mossville, and State Schools.
In the Good Hope explosion yesterday, two workers were injured when fuel gas ignited with air in heater at the GHR Energy Corp. complex.
Blaze near Salina threatens homes
HEDVILLE—A grass fire fanned by 30-mph winds threatened homes across a 150-square-mile area of central Kansas yesterday, prompting evacuations and an urgent call for civilian firefighting help.
At least two men were injured, one of them critically burned. The town of Hedville, about 100 miles west of Topeka, was being evacuated, as were other areas, according to a Saline County Sheriff's Department spokeswoman.
The fire, which began about 3 p.m., stretched along the western edge of the county.
of the Country.
David Weir, 25, of Salina, was in critical condition with second- and third-degree burns over about 90 percent of his body, according to Kevin McCade, a spokesman at St. John's Regional Hospital in Salina.
Weir, who was found in a field with his clothing burned off, was taken from the hospital to St. Francis Regional Burn Center in Wichita.
Three men die crashing roadblock
BELFAST, Northern Ireland - Security forces opened fire on a car that burst through a roadblock yesterday, killing three civilians hours after the province's first local assembly convened in a decade, unofficial police sources said yesterday.
The sources said three men died after their car burst through a security roadblock on a road 20 miles outside Belfast.
security roadblock or a road to hide out. A chase by police units followed and the car careened off the road when security forces opened fire, the sources said. Three bodies were later found in the vehicle.
Police officially would not discuss the deaths. Earlier, police said the three were shot by unidentified gunmen.
No one immediately claimed responsibility for the deaths. The outlawed Irish Republican Army have claimed responsibility for three deaths since Monday, all Protestants murdered within 48 hours of the assembly's first meeting since 1972.
UAW presidential race slows down
DETROIT—The race between two top United Auto Workers officials for the presidency of the 1.2 million member union appeared dead even yesterday with leaders making up their minds on which candidate to endorse.
endorse The UAW's Executive Board and a steering committee planned to meet today to choose a successor to UAW President Douglas Fraser, who will retire in May.
who will be in office.
Estimates say that UAW Vice President Owen Bieber, 52, and Secretary-Treasurer Raymond Majerus, 58, have about the same number of votes from the executive board.
ROME—Prime Minister Giovanni Spadolini handed his government's resignation to President Alessandro Pertini yesterday but the 66-year-old Socialist refused to accept it, leaving Parliament to decide the fate of the 10-week-old coalition.
In Ontario, UAW Canadian Director Bob White urged Chrysler Corp. officials to "stop playing games" and make a contract offer to end a strike by 10.000 workers.
"The president of the republic rejected my resignation, inviting me to explain in Parliament the institutional condition and policy of the government." Spadolini said.
Italian PM's resignation rejected
White also criticized U.S. leaders who have urged the union to end the walkout, which so far has cost 2,500 American workers their jobs.
Political commentators said this meant the prime minister would spell out the causes of the crisis to Parliament and then seek a confidence vote. This, they said, will likely bring the collapse of Italy's 4th government since World War II.
Man admits he hid body in cement
A Cabinet meeting had approved his decision to resign the government earlier in the day.
CANTON, Ohio—A man who encased the body of his slain 3-year-old stepdaughter in a concrete-filled garbage can and kept it for four years has pleaded guilty to obstruction of justice and gross abuse of a corpse.
The girl's mother, Yvonne Marie, 25, was convicted earlier of involuntary manslaughter and illegally collecting welfare for the child. Police testified that she had been released from Tampa jail and taken into punishment. She then put the girl in a room where the window had been left open, although it was February.
Temeka Byrd, whose body was taken from the girl's mother, Marie, 25, was convicted earlier of her murder and collectively collecting welfare for the child.
Samuel Webb, 30, was charged in connection with the death of Temekea Byrd, whose body was discovered in June.
without a couple then put Temeeka's body in the garbage can and poured cement over her because they were frightened when she died.
clement, because they were pregnant most times when they moved four times in four years, each time taking the body with them, police said.
Polish government to free Walesa
WARSAW, Poland—The Polish government has ordered the release of Lech Walesa, the charismatic leader of the outlawed Solidarity union interned since martial law was imposed 11 months ago, officials said yesterday.
By United Press International
world — have deluged Polish Communist authorities. It was one of the conditions demanded by the Reagan administration, economic sanctions against Poland.
Government spokesman Jerzy Urban said "no conditions" had been proposed to Wales in exchange for his freedom, but stressed that like anyone else, he could be re-informed if he acted in a way deemed harmful to the state.
Walesa was detained, along with thousands of Solidarity members, after the imposition of martial law Dec. 13. He had played a key role in the August 1980 founding of Solidarity, the first free trade federation in the Soviet bloc.
DEMANDS FOR Walesa's release —
from inside Poland and around the
"It it's too good to be true," Walesa's wife Danuta said. "I expected to go to Arlamowo to visit him Monday . . . I knew nothing of this."
Urban said Wales was no longer considered a "threat to internal stabilization."
Mrs. Walesa said she was "full of joy and fear" at the news, "Fear because I can't imagine the crowds of people who will want to see him."
There was no word on whether Walessa would meet with Jaruzelski.
Urban said Walesa was ordered freed after he met earlier this week with Interior Minister Czeslaw Kiszczak, who traveled to a remote hunting lodge in Iowa in southeast Poland near the Sewol border, where Walesa is being held.
Urban said Wallea would "have to go home, get a rest, think things over. His
Although the official communique announcing Walesa's release was d a t e d Wednesday, authorities waited a day to disclose it
100 YEARS AGO
- apparently to see the results of Solidarity's call for a general strike and street demonstrations
Lech Walesa 1981 photo
Riot police used tear gas to disperse about 1,000 to 2,000 marchers in Warsaw and Krakow who tried to parade through city streets waving
Solidarity flags and chanting "Solidarity" and "Free Wales!" after special masses marking the 64th anniversary of Polish independence Wednesday.
In Warsaw, most of the 8,000 people at the cathedral mass celebrated by Bishop Wladyslaw Mizielow went home peacefully. Riot police in Krakow and Warsaw clashed with dispersing immediately but a few small groups of hard-core protesters
Riot police backed by heavy armored vehicles in several cities had braced for possible illegal marches called by the underground, after the masses.
AUTHORITIES CLAIMED victory despite clashes between thousands of demonstrators and riot police in three cities. It was the second anniversary of Solidarity's registration as a free trade union. The strike call was to protest Parliament's banning of the union last month.
Explosion levels Israeli base in Lebanon
By United Press International
BEIRUT, Lebanon—A bomb explosion destroyed the Israeli military headquarters in Lebanon's southern city of Tyre yesterday, killing and wounding hundreds of Israeli soldiers and their Palestinian prisoners.
Israeli soldiers at the scene of the attack, believed to be the single most deadly assault against Israeli forces since they invaded Lebanon June 6, said as many as 200 people were killed or wounded.
A previously unknown group, the
Armed Struggle Organization, claimed responsibility for the attack."
IT TOLD Beirut's independent An Nahar newspaper the explosion was caused by "a booby-trapped car," but a preliminary Israeli investigation indicated the blast occurred inside the building.
Sources said it appeared as if explosive charges were placed on top of cooking gas cylinders or in the elevator shaft.
The Israeli military command in Tel Aviv said its initial casualty count showed 13 Israelis killed and 25 others wounded. The dead were Tyre residents, detained as suspected
guerrillas, were also pulled from the rubble and handed to the International Red Cross.
THE BUILDING served as general headquarters for the paramilitary police force, the military police department of Mat Saad Haddad's militia.
The top floors were used as a makeshift lockup for dozens of local residents held as suspected guerrillas. A massive roundup occurred Wednesday night, with eight side walls torn into the building, a nearby shopkeeper said. Israeli soldiers said troops were sleeping in the building.
Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin, arriving at New York's Kennedy International Airport on the first leg of a 10-day visit to the United States, said, "This new outrage in Tyrre, perpetrated by terrorists . . . won't deter us in doing our duty to ensure peace and security for our people."
IN WASHINGTON, where Begin will meet with President Reagan Nov. 19, the president ordered envoy Philip Habib back to the Middle East to lead an accelerated drive for the withdrawal of foreign forces from Lebanon and progress in talks on Palestinian autonomy.
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University Daily Kansan, November 12, 1982
11
Page 3
Muscovites indifferent to Brezhnev's death
By United Press International
There were no tears in Moscow's streets as shoppers rushed beneath the morning flaps.
One Soviet woman leaving Red Square was old enough to recall the people's reaction to the death of her husband.
"It was quite different when Stalin died," she said. "The people ran in the House of Unions to demand that he be sent."
THERE WAS NO running yesterday, but thousands of pedestrians streamed through the Lenin Mausoleum until police blocked off Red Square.
Workmen were busy dismantling flagpoles and scaffolding from last Sunday's Revolution Day parade — the final public appearance for the 75-year-old Brezhnev.
Hundreds of people gathered behind metal barricades for a curious scan of the square on a
gray, chilly day. Some lingered for a few minutes. The only surging crowds were perhaps 200 feet away, in the halls and shops of the giant GUM department store.
Reaction to Brehzev's death was noticeable more for the way citizens carried on normally than for any outpouring of grief, or relief.
"It IS VERY sad news," said one man, Valentin, as he stood with his wife at the edge of Red Square.
"He was a respected leader but he was old. It's natural."
SCHENEDELL
Soviet president Leonid Brezhnev, who died Wednesday at the age of 75, engaged in a mock arm-wrestling competition with President Nixon when the two leaders were traveling to the
Photo Photographed to the Karen
western White House in San Clemente, Calif., aboard Air Force One in 1973.
Soviet leader Leonid Breznev will be buried Monday on Red Square in a pine-shaded nook between Lenin's tomb and the Kremlin. Tass was said yesterday.
Funeral is Monday on Red Square
Brezhnev will lie in state at the House of Unions, a ceremonial building in downtown Moscow. Viewing will begin today and continue through Sunday.
salute will be fired in Moscow and other major Soviet cities and all work will be stopped for five minutes.
AT THE MOMENT OF INTERMEN, a
Schools will be closed.
Brevhne will be buried on Red Square between Lenin's tomb and the walls of the Kremlin, where Soviet leaders are laid to rest following cremation.
The remains of Kremlin leaders are generally cremated.
From page one
Brezhnev
European Studies, said that although the replacement for Breznev was not certain, it was certain that the next Soviet leader would be old — very old.
"If all precedence is not broken, the new leader will come from the Politburo, and the average age in that group is 70." Laird said. "The President is waiting in the wings in the Soviet Union."
Former KGB chief Yuri Andropov, 68, amateur Brezhvin's ex-right-hand man Konstantin Chenkenko, 71, are probably the two front-runners. The former Gromyko, 71, Moscow party leader Viktor Akulev, youngster Grigory Romanov, 59, the Leningrad party leader, are other possible choices, he said.
The choice will not come soon, however, and the process of making it may be chaotic, he said.
“WE'RE NOT GOING to see the real Soviet leader for the next year or so,” he said. “They don't have a legally prescribed method for choosing a successor.”
"In effect what is going to happen is that the party is going to look at the older leaders and say, 'You guys run things for a while until we see who the real leader is going to be.' The Soviets like long-time leaders. Unless you get your nose really dirty you're in there for life," he said.
Saul said the struggle in Russia's geriatric Politburo was between 13 conservative men, and that no recognizable change should take place in the structure of the government.
"NOTHING IS GOING to change immediately," he said. "It's difficult to say what the outcome of the power struggle will be, but there's the potential for a more liberal approach, and wouldn't expect to get a much tougher leader."
Most Soviet leaders have held their office for a long time, he said. Brezhnev served as president for 18 years, Joseph Stalin for 29 years and Vladimir Lenin for seven years.
Tougher or not the new leader will not be at all new, and the Soviet inability to foster young leaders is a major weakness.
If the Soviet Union remains conservative, brothev will be viewed as a baition of the faith, but it may also be seen as a source of income.
Pleikiewicz said a shift to the liberal side as likely, and history would not look kindly upon it.
NKITA KHRISHCHEV had done much more for the Soviet Union. We预免 Dreizehn d. he said.
"Khrushchev had imagination, he was flexible, he was actually rather naive," Piekaliewicz said. "He was a man with feelings of experience who tried to change things for the better."
"Brezhnev led the Soviet Union on the path to stagnation and will be forgotten rather quickly. I don't think there was anything done by him that was not for preservation of the status quo."
CENTRALIZATION OF power is a necessity in the Soviet government, however, so Breznev's successor will likely have the same power Breznev had, he said.
Laird said such a system cost the Soviets economically.
SHANN ▲ And the SCAMS
"The Soviet Union's plight is the price they pay for the enormous centralization of power," he said. "Their tendency to try to make all big decisions from Moscow is paid for by enormous economic inefficiency. I don't see that they are at all willing to change."
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While there seems to be a growing body of negativists unhappy with the status quo, the basically democratic nature of cur economic system is finding expression in a mechanism whose time has come. By merely investing in a ticket which could win a privately-owned store's cash jackpot, anyone can become an entrepreneur. This metamorphosis occurs because the enterprising individual in question will both be assuming part of the risk of and expanding a daring business venture with such a purchase. The more inspired of these nouveau entrepreneurs will be able to actually create jobs by simply acquiring several of said tickets.
Although it's certainly true that a small family-owned store would lack the financial resources to employ such a quasi-democratic device, think instead of all the happy, aggressive participants in this game of chance enjoying their entrepreneurial status. The phrase "to have one's number on it" used to refer to a projectile destined by fate to cause the death of someone, but this phrase will probably soon call to mind a beaming ticket holder emerging from an envious crowd to pocket the . . . uh . . . return on his investment. While the use of this quasi-democratic device may not satisfy all, please remember that not everyone is an investor with initiative.
William Dann
2702 W. 24th St. Terrace
International Day
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Page 4
Opinion
University Daily Kansan, November 12, 1982
The Senate's role at KU
Elections for student body president, vice president and Student Senate are scheduled for next week. And the campaigns of the two coalitions involved are being conducted against a backdrop of controversy.
This semester, the Senate's director of KU on Wheels, Steve McMurry, has been charged with stealing more than $20,000 in student funds. And an audit of student organizations that receive Senate money has revealed that $11,000 worth of property has disappeared.
To many students, the Senate's credibility has always been low; the organization's ability — or desire — to work for the student body has been questionable.
An example of that came recently when a Senate committee refused to send to the full Senate a referendum on whether the University should remain in the Associated Students of Kansas, a student lobby group.
The events of this semester coupled with the poor voter turnout of past elections could only add a little more tarnish to the Senate's reputation.
The Kansan thinks that the future of the Student Senate should be a central issue to the current campaign. The Senate's role in relation to the students and to the administration need to be re-evaluated.
Perhaps the present system needs to be scrapped in favor of a different form of governance, or no form at all.
Today's Opinion page is devoted to the question, "Should the Student Senate be abolished?" Kansas columnists Tom Gress and Tracee Hamilton and Mollie Mitchell, a member of the Student Senate, present varying responses.
Monday, the Kansan will publish guest columns from representatives of the two coalitions in the election
Student Senate the best and only student voice
It occurred to him that if a loud enough noise were sent up from the earth, it might be heard on the ground.
An ancient Chinese parable tells us there was an emperor who wished to learn whether people knew how to do it.
So he sent an order throughout all his domain that every man, woman, and child should gather in every village square on a certain day, at a certain hour, at a certain time, a mighty shout loud enough to reach the moon.
Elaborate plans were required for the experiment. At last the day arrived.
At the appointed hour all the subjects of the empire were assembled, anxiously awaiting the
MOLLIE MITCHELL
Everyone remained still because they wanted to hear the great sound themselves.
appointed instant. The signal was given and
needed the loudest sound the world has ever
seen there, then it rang out.
Fortunately, we do hear the University of Kansas Student Senate. Many people sit back and criticize Senate's existence without doing anything about it. Let's look at this rationally.
Student Senate is not only the best we means have of voicing student concerns, but it's the only means. And thus the voice of Student Senate is only as effective as those members who make it up: the same people the students of KU have the opportunity to elect.
Therefore if you do not like the system, or if you feel it has major problems, do not scrap the whole thing, but elect individuals who care about it. Also, give the voice of the students of the University of Kansas.
We are fortunate at KU to have student leaders in the Senate who take the time to learn about the issues, concerns and activities affecting the students of the University.
We need these students who make the effort to run for office, head committees and voice the opinion of the students to the administration, Board of Reeves and Kansas Legislature.
Students should realize that Student Senate performs many functions that no one ever seems to give it credit for; functions that, without the help of staff, may be able to continue to serve the students of KU.
If you have ever belonged to a club, the
marching band and or forensics队, ridden the bus, needed legal aid, participated in intramurals, attended a University Theatre production, concert or chamber music program, listened to KJHK-FM or even read this very paper, then Student Senate has served on
The Senate provides a major portion of the funds for many of these activities. Without the Senate these organizations would have to increase their prices greatly, accept funding allocated by the administration rather than the students, or fail to exist altogether.
Besides providing funding, the Student Senate has responded to the needs and concerns of the community.
Last semester, it endorsed the work of the Friends of Solidarity organization and encouraged living groups to participate in the United Nations program in support of the workers in Poland.
The Student Senate passed a resolution opposing sections of President Reagan's fiscal 1983 budget that cut benefits and eligibility requirements under Guaranteed Student Loans, Pell Grants, campus-based aid, state matching benefits, and other programs. Social Security benefits and other programs that provide financial assistance to students at institutions of higher education.
The Senate has established a Legislative Affairs Committee to help provide students with accurate and current information on issues that affect them at the local, state and national levels.
The Senate has also passed a resolution encouraging the creation of academic dean advisory committees within the different schools to address issues on budgetary actions and other school policies.
Until recently, few, if any, big name guest speakers came to Lawrence. But with the help of the Student Senate, the students of KU had the opportunity to hear John Houseman speak to a packed audience at both the Kansas Union Ballroom and the Law School.
The Senate isn't stopping with Houseman, though. It's currently working on creating a new senator.
So next time you hear criticism of the Student Senate, remember those services provides, the student opinion it effectively expresses and its overall contribution to the University. Furthermore, think of what you have contributed or contribute to make the Student Senate better.
KANSAN
Mollie Milchel, Hutchinson senior, is chairman of a Student Senate Committee on Cultural
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STUDENT
SENATE
Trashing system not a solution
The last time I voted in a Student Senate election was the spring of 1979, my freshman year. I was naive.
At that time I actually thought that Student Senate was good for something, that the senators elected actually cared about issues facing the campus.
I didn't, at that time, think that students only ran as candidates so they could make their resumes look good or that they were too tall. I had to follow the secondary procedure before the first Senate meeting.
It didn't take long after I first voted, however,
- nothing more than another way to students to make themselves look good
I'm sure there are a few student senators who are interested in working hard and in trying to do something more for their constituents than just allocating money every year, but unfortunately they seem to be outnumbered by senators who use it is something else about which to brave.
Considering that 2,589 students, roughly 10 percent of the students on campus, voted in last year's elections, many other students apparently think the same thing. What good is voting when it doesn't appear that Student Senate does anything?
Quite a few of us wouldn't mind seeing Student Senate buried somewhere beneath Strong Hall. Of course, a lot of the fun would go out of reading the Kansan, just to see what the senators have lost this week or what money is missing this time.
But getting rid of Student Senate doesn't solve anything. Whatever Student Senate does would have to be taken over by the administration, and usually wouldn't be in the students' interest.
What needs to be done is to find a way to get students to care about Student Senate. To do that means cleaning up Student Senate's reputation, and that would not be an easy task.
I will not be reprimanded.
TOM GRESS
Getting students who want to do something with Student Senate other than put it on their resumes for all the job interviewers in the world to see would be a good start. Right now Student Senate is a great place for a lot of senators not to show up.
It wouldn't hurt if Student Senate would appear to have a handle on what it is doing. The biggest news I have noticed coming out of Student Senate this year is $11,000 worth of lost property and the arrest of the coordinator of KU on Wheels on charges of stealing funds. The news is definitely not stuff to give one faith in Student Senate's integrity.
But acquiring a good reputation still isn't enough. The Senate is going to have to show why
they are important instead of telling us they are important.
As far as I can tell, Senate is one of those places where they do boring things, which makes for boring stories in the paper, which sends everybody scurrying to the sports page, which sometimes sends everybody back to their homework.
The average student is more concerned with going to class, his or her social life and what's on television tonight than whether Student Senate allocated $10,000 to the Committee on Boxer
Obviously, when nobody really knows or cares what Student Senate does, the elections become a force. The minority of students that do vote, vote more on whom they know than on what the candidates know. The elections seem to be less dependent on the affirmation of another clique on campus.
Yet, there is still a need for Student Senate. The senators, through some responsible action, are going to have to show why. This means showing up for the meetings, trying to understand what is going on and making an honest attempt at being a senator.
No, abolishing Student Senate wouldn't work. But changes have to be made, starting with the types of candidates selected to run, the number of daysual day-to-day workings of the Student Senate.
Those aren't the most tangible qualities to be proposed, but they are the best ones with which
Senate stifles voice of students
If you have a dry feeling in your mouth, it's because Student Sengh has gagged student speech.
Elections for Student Senate positions, as well as student body prez and vice pres, are Wednesday and Thursday. And If the Senate approves a referendum, they will be staging a referendum on the future of ASK.
Paul Buskirk, a student senator, proposed a referendum that would have let students decide whether the University of Kansas should retain students. Students of Kansas, a student lobbying group.
The Students Senate Rules, Privileges and Responsibilities Committee — how ostentations!
— voted not to send the proposed reference to the full Senate. The enterprising Buskirk then tried to bypass the Committee on Ostentationness but failed.
I have, in the past, viewed Student Senate as a necessary evil, which is much the same view the Senate takes of its constituents. But when it's possible to be elected to a position with only six votes, as some senators have, then we have to start questioning the validity of the organization.
The ASK question itself is not the main issue, although I am not really aware of anything terribly important that ASK has done for me lately. Mark Tallman, executive director of ASK, fought against the bill, but then again, Tallman has a vested interest — a salary.
"It's true that other universities have used a referendum to justify financial support to its student organizations," Tallman said. "But my biggest problem with this bill is that we have a month to justify our existence to our largest member."
They'll look around instead at a University with no heat in its offices and no syllabuses in its classes, a University that is looking down the barrel of further budget cuts and possible program eliminations, a University that's on a budget diet so severe it has become anorexic, a
The question then arises: If ASK is so important to students, why should it feel the need to justify itself? Wouldn't we all realize the vast amount of good it has done? Go down Jayhawk Boulevard and ask 10 people what ASK does. Once you've explained what ASK is (because few people know), they still won't be able to think of much.
But eliminating ASK is not the cure to the cancer. The sickness is Student Senate, not the organizations it supports. Election turnouts become a bigger farce year after year. I could have said that my student representative to the Senate has called my opinion on any issue on the fingers of one foot.
University that may be asked by the end of the month to cut back even further. And they're likely to wonder just how much effective lobbing is in fact being done in Toneka.
TRACEE HAMILTON
A
Student Senate at this University is one huge ego trip, a farm organization for future politicians and people who want to pad their resumes. There are some well-meaning senators there in the bunch. I'm sure. They may even show up at meetings, which is more than can say
The Senate does perform some useful functions in the midst of all the fighting and apathy. They divvy the pot, so to speak: They allocate funds for the various student organizations. Given the number of groups that apply and the number of funds available, it is not an enviable task.
For this reason, if for no other, Student Senate should not be abolished. It should, however, be condensed — there are 57 senators elected, and several more appointed. Finding a night or time that 60-plus college students can or will get together cannot be easy.
Abeseintse was so, rampant in this year's Senate that of 53 representatives elected, only 35 remained Sept. 24, according to a story in the Kansan, and nine more were on their way out. The Senate also lost — to time or theft — more than $11,000 in Senate-owned equipment. Add to that, the costs of buying new Wheels, Steve McMurray, has been charged with stealing more than $20,000 from the bus system.
Well, I suppose the Senate's purpose is not only to represent student interests, but also to expose
young politicians to the rigors of big-time politics. But I think the Senate has become a little too
The Senate is forced to spend far too much time policing itself and spends too little time gnawing students' thoughts. For example, the biggest story to come out of the Senate this semester has been the decision to restrict ballot boxes to campus locations. The Senate also wastes time debating criteria for removing members, and criteria for applying to run for the Senate, and criteria for criteria - self-governance ramming amuck.
Yes, I'm biting that hand that feeds me. The Senate partially funds the Kansan, and because of that it looks askance at any attacks on it in the Kansan. I sure we'll be deligged with letters, and I can already guess their imprints. The Kansan is a breeding ground for future hacks, we don't serve the students, we're on an ego trip, t乞 It's an old, old song.
Fine. Let 'em fire away. The fact remains that the small amount of space we are able to devote to Letters to the Editor provides more student time than does reading in the four and a half years I've been in school.
The referendum was a symbol, a test case if you will, and I think it served its purpose well. It accurately gauged the Senate's true concern for student input. Perhaps its time the students showed their true concern for the Student Senate.
Letters Policy
The University Daily Kansan welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten, double-spaced and should not exceed 500 words. They should include the writer's name, address and phone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, the letter should include his class and home town or faculty or staff position. The Kansan reserves the right to edit or reject letters.
---
University Daily Kansan, November 12, 1982
Page 5
Vietnam
From page one
our sacerdite," he said. "We died fighting for the country. A lot of my baddies are engraved in that granite and every one of us were fighting under the American flag. It may be不礼貌able to forget the things that we talked about and our willingness to die for the country."
IF PEOPLE WANT to put up a political memorial, it should be there, possibly Kent State University where young Americans were killed in the war, of the war, he said, emphasizing the world power.
The Vietnam monument was built entirely with private contributions, unlike previous war memorials.
"They made us panhandle for our monument. I think it was symbolic of the unemployed Vietnam veteran, standing on the corner saying 'Hey, buddie, can you spare a quarter for a Vietnam memorial?' How do you think that makes us feel?"
"I didn't give a dime to that monument, and I don't intend to because I paid in blood the three times I was wounded, and I bled all over Vietnam. That's when I paid for that sucker."
MUSGRAVE LOOKED at a photograph on his desk of his platoon in Vietnam. The picture showed a group of young men standing on the plains near the Laotian border with a mountain range in the distance. They were shirtless and grimming.
"Most of these guys_are dead." Musgrave said.
"The young men in this picture didn't lose the war. It was lost long before we got there. We are not embarrassed. America is, but why? They
John Christiansen, a Baldwin City resident who works in Lawrence, spent a year over the jungles of Vietnam as a mortarman in the 101st Airborne Division.
UNLIKE MUSGRAVE, he seemed unconcerned about the memorial and the coinciding events in Washington as he worked to install a building in Jaguar XKE at a local sports car repair shop.
"That's nice." Christian斯 said absently when told of the monument.
He added abruptly, "I certainly am proud I went to Vietnam. I'm sorry that a lot of other people weren't. It's been quite some time, people are just as intense now as they were then."
Christiansen said he thought about his experiences in Vietnam "a couple of times a
"A lot of us don't really know what went on. I was just there. Once you’re there, you do the best you can," he said.
"The part that was most disgusting about the
war was the politics, and that's all it was,
politics. It wasn't politics for us."
MUSGRAVE SAID he thought that trust in the government had been severely damaged by the government.
"The reasons I was told I was going to fight in 1967 were different than the reasons the next administration told the young men who followed." Musgrave said.
He said he thought the war started as a well-meaned endearon but then went through a series of mutations. The old saying "the road to victory" is an appropriate comment on Vietnam, he said.
How do veterans think they were treated when he returned?
At best, Musgrave said, society ignored them; at worst, it treated them as if the war was theirs.
INDEED, THE pervading image of Vietnam veterans in this country is of drug-crazed psychopaths who constantly flash back to the war.
"That's bullshit. It's an easy stereotype," said Murgrave.
"To lump all Vietnam veterans into that kind of category is a racist type statement just so you don't have to deal with the facts."
During the Vietnam years, protests against the government policies that perpetrated the war on Hanoi have been growing.
While in Vietnam, Musgrave said, he did not object to the anti-war protesters' right to free speech. He said he was alienated, however, by his parents' opposition and "How many kids did you kill today?"
'They were talking about something they had no idea about, and they were blaming the wrong person.'
AFTER HIS convalescence, disillusioned by his experiences, Musgrave gave a national organizer and spokesman for Vietnam Veterans Against the War.
"'worked as hard to end the war when I was in the peace movement as I did when I was in the bush. It hurt me deeply to have to do it, but as an American citizen, I didn't feel I had any choice.'
If this country learned anything from the embittering experience of Vietnam, Musgrave said, it was that we are no longer as naive as we once were.
"A DEMOCRACY IS a system of government that functions on obligations," he said. "Part of that obligation is to scrutinize the government and their policies. We tend to forget that in a democracy we are the employer, and the representatives, including the president, are the employees who are supposed to support our views and best interests.
Satellite's launch shuttles in new era
"We, as citizens, have the obligation to stand up when they are not fulfilling their duty to us."
By BRET WALLACE Staff Reporter
When the SPS-3 satellite collides out the cargo bay doors of the space shuttle Columbia at 2:17 p.m. CST yesterday, it marked the beginning of a new communications, a KU professor said yesterday.
Sam Shamgun, professor of electrical engineering and head of the KU telecommunications program, said most American satellites would be launched from shuttles in the future. Up until yesterday, satellites were launched solely by rocket.
The SPS-3 satellite, which was the first commercial satellite launched from the space shuttle, is owned by Satellite Business Systems, Greensboro, N.C.
Shuttle launches allow companies to enjoy the benefits of launching larger satellites and paying for space.
Officials for Satellite Business Systems were at the John F. Kennedy Space Center, Cape Canaveral, Fla., to follow the shuttle and were unavailable for comment.
THE TWO COMPANIES launching satellites on Columbia's current trip paid $9 million each, officials for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration said.
The launch of a second satellite, owned by Teletast Canada, is scheduled for about 2 p.m. (10 a.m.) Tuesday.
Linda Rankin, director of public relations for Telesat, said shuttle launches cost about two-third less than rocket launches.
"ANYTHING THAT saves money is going to have a major impact on an industry," Rankin said.
Telesat was scheduled to launch a satellite this month, and executives there wanted to follow NASA's policy of changing over to satellite communications so they decided to use a shuttle launched she said.
Shamnugan said shuttle bays were large enough to carry satellites four times the size of a car.
"We felt very privileged to be among the first to enjoy the thrill and opportunity of a shuttle
"Satellites now launched have a diameter of seven or eight feet," he said. "The shuttle can fly."
No companies are developing larger rockets now because of the space shuttle, Shamnugan said.
Companies are developing larger satellites that are designed specifically for the shuttle, he said. Larger satellites will hold more receivers and transmitters, so more companies can use
them and reduce the number of satellites needed.
for satellites to have the best effect they need be located in orbital approximately over New Orleans.
THESE SPOTS are already full, so the
government is having to allow the satellites to be placed closer together, he said. With satellites closer together, companies will have to use bigger satellites or different frequencies. Signals will get mixed if one of these methods is not used; he said.
10
NASA photo/special to the Kansan
Hughes Aircraft Co. engineers completed work in August on the invention and making history for NASA and the telecommunications industry. The satellite in the foreground, the SBS F-2, was launched yesterday, and the ANIK C-3 in the background will be launched today.
Ecumenical Christian Ministries (1204 Oread)
FILM PRESENTATION & PERSIAN DINNER TONIGHT 7:00 p.m.
Admission for film: $1.50
To benefit the families of the prisoners of conscience in Iran.
Sponsored by:
KU Sociology Dept.
KU Anthropology Dept.
KU Commission of the Status of Women
KU Students Anti-Nuclear Alliance
Moslem Iranian Students Society
(Supporters of the
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THE COW
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WINNER OF THE INTERNATIONAL CRITICS AWARD (BEST FILM)
"The Cow is a film . . . of an original and inven-
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan, November 12, 1982
Entertainment
[ ]
TOM MAYER
Ko-Kela is an Indian word that means "to make sound." 3:30 p.m. Sunday at the University Theatre in Murphy Hall.
Ko-Kela is also the name of a piano quartet that will perform at
Piano quartet 'to make sound' at KU
By SUSAN O'CONNELL
Staff Reporter
"Ko-Keka" is a Soux Indian word meaning "to make sound." It is also the name of a piano quartet that will play at the University of Kansas this weekend.
The Ko-Kela Piano Quartet will make its second appearance at KU as part of the KU Chamber Music Series. The performance will be Sunday in the University Theatre in Murphey Hall.
A professor who saw Ko-Kela's first KU concert two years ago and will also attend Sunday's performance said he liked the group's combination of string instruments and piano.
"They are a pleasant and refreshing group. I was very exhilarated by their performance." Thurston Moore, associate professor of English, said.
Clayton Haslop, violinist in the group, said Wednesday that the members ran into difficulty when they tried to name the ensemble. One of the founders of the group, Myra Kestenbaum, came up with "Ko-Kela."
She had been on a horseback trip guided by an Indian and asked the guide what the Indian word means.
NO SUCH WORD existed, but the closest thing was "Ko-Ra-Kala." The word is pronounced with a softening in some languages.
The group, now a quartet, was slightly larger when it began six years ago, he said. There were seven musicians who played string and wind instruments and the piano.
The group started when Neville Marriner, conductor of the Minnesota Orchestra, recommended that certain players in the Los Angeles band be reinstated to perform various chamber music works. Haslo said
Those musicians, and two others who were not from the Los Angeles orchestra, composed the theme music for "Oklahoma!"
After a year, the group became a piano quartet, he said. But four members do not play together all the time. Sometimes only one, two or three play.
Besides a pianist, the group has a violist, a cellist and a violinist.
"The name 'piano quartet' is used basically by convention." Haslop said. "There is no such
thing as a quartet with four pianos. When people speak of a piano quartet, they refer to one piano with three additional string players."
THE QUARTET MEMBERS are all solo musicians and are all on faculties at colleges and universities in California, Haslop said.
Other members of the quartet are Ronald
copes, violist; Peter Rejey, cellist; and James
Brown.
The members take short leaves of absence from the schools, he said, and travel during two-to-three-week periods to cities and universities across the country.
for the performance at KU, the group will play three pieces; Mozart's "Piano Quartet in E flat Major," Dohanyn's "Serendre for String and Dvorka" and "Piano Quartet in E-flat Major."
Tickets are available in the Murphy Hall Box Office. Your account is available with a KU authorization code.
The Ko-Kela concert is the final performance of the fall semester for the KU Chamber Music Series. The series will continue Feb. 6, 1983, with a concert by the American String Quartet.
'For Original Music' features new approach to variety acts
It looks like a typical variety show rehearsal. Singers clap and sway on stage, while an accompanist drums piano chords as if to punctuate the lyrics. A choreographer stands at the back of the auditorium, shouting encouragements one minute and threatens the next.
By DAWN GRAHAM Staff Reporter
But this is not a typical variety show rehearsal. The cast does not consult scripts, but each other. Dances step and are changed if they do not quite fit. This is a rehearsal for "The Lion King." A Showcase of Talent, a variety show created, performed and sponsored by KU students.
The show will be performed at 7:30 p.m. today and tomorrow and at 2 p.m. on Sunday in Aledson Auditorium in the Kansas Union. Tickets are for the ticket office and through organized living groups.
TU AOMEE LAMBDA, a junior-senior honor society, is sponsoring the show. The organization's purpose is to support creative work, and each year it sponsors an original production.
The director of the production recently said that the show was a forum for original musical work.
"The show has no overriding theme." Ray Williams, Omaha, Neb., junior, the director, said recently. "Each musical number will be introduced by the MC, who will mention the history of the song and the composers and also the singer."
Cressie, who had never choreographed a whole show before, described it as a challenge that she felt like was a challenge.
Williams wrote the music for 12 of the show's 16 songs. Five other students contributed music and seven wrote lyrics. Chris Crissie, St. Louis, Mo., senior, choreographed the production.
"When Ray called and said, 'Are you interested?' I said, 'Yeah!'" Cressie said. "And some of those dances aren't exactly easy."
THE SHOW HAS gone through several transformations since its start. Williams decided to present his own show last year, after performing in a short variety show at Templin Hall's casino party. Over the summer he and a friend collaborated on an original musical.
The original concept was written for a man who had cancer and died, leaving a troupe of dancers. The show was meant to follow the cast transformation from caring about themselves to carrying out the dream of the man," Williams said.
But the script did not work out. Williams, left with a stack of songs and no story line to frame them, decided to invite other composers to join him and present a variety show.
So "For Original Music: A Showcase of Talent" was born.
"I meant to feature many different styles instead of focusing on one," Williams said. "And in order to continue the creativity, the filers, the designers, and the invitation were all done by different people."
Williams has played piano for several variety shows, but this is his first attempt at directing.
"It's very interesting to direct the band, the players, and the audience," he said. "It is a first hand attempt for everyone."
THE SONGS RANGE from ragtime to ballads.
Majors for the cast and band, range from theatre in
New York to New Orleans.
Williams said the cast didn't warm up to the show until recently.
"At first they said, 'There is just no way,'" he said. "It was very much open to interpretation. Individuals were asked to look at the melody first and then take the words and make them match the music. But after doing a little bit of work on it, it eventually did come into place."
At rehearsal last week, Williams sat at the piano and pounded out a chord to get the cast's
"Come on, people," he shouted. "We've only got a few more rehearsals. Let's get this into shape."
On campus
TODAY
BIOLOGY CLUB will meet at 4 p.m. in the Sunflower Room of the Kansas Union.
COLLOQUIUM SERIES on ground water in Kansas will be at 4 p.m. in 412 Linden Hall.
CATHOLIC CENTER WORSHIP will be at 12:30 p.m. in Danforth Chapel.
Kansas will be nine p.m. in Mankato and four INTERVISITY CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP will meet at 7 p.m. in the Pine Room of the Union.
ASTRONOMY CLUB will meet at 8:30 p.m. in
Londin Hall if it is a clear night.
TOMORROW
SUNDAY
WOMEN IN LAW will have a conference.
"I Law School, is it for You?" , from 8 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.
at green Hull.
PRAYER will be at 10 a.m. at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center.
SUPPER AND WORSHIP will be at 5:10 p.m. at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center.
MONDAY
ECKANARK will sponsor a talk, "Spiritual
Aspects of Fashion and Social Life," at 12:30 p.m.
on Wednesday.
WOMEN ENGINEERS of Kansas University, will sponsor a lecture on summer job opportunities for women engineering students at 7 p.m. in 1014 Learned Hall.
Hashinger Hall play competes for national attention
Staff Reporter
By VINCE HESS
Some residents of Hashing Hall are putting on a play this weekend that is aimed at giving them theatre experience — and perhaps also national attention.
Their play will compete for an opportunity to be performed in Washington, D.C., as will a production of the KU University Theatre.
The Hashinger play, "The Lonesome Motel Blues," had its debut last night in Hashinger theatre. The play will be performed at 8 p.m. today and tomorrow and at 2:30 p.m. Sunday.
The play is also entered in the 15th annual American College Theatre Festival. The festival, sponsored by Standard Oil Co., has as its purpose the promotion of better standards in college theatre, Bruce Jones, coordinator for the artistic program at Hashinger, said recently.
HASHINGER'S ENTRY this year is the residence hall's first entry in the festival, Jones said. Most festival entries are the work of university theatre departments, not independent groups, he said.
The lead character, Sally Cowley, played by Rochelle Holmread, Mena, Neb., sophomore, returns home after her mother's death in a car accident. She had left the home, a motel run by her parents, 13 years earlier. At that time she had eloped with a hotel guest at Bayer's Hotel Cowley, Sally Cowley, played by Beverly Kelly, Derby freshman. Sally and Morgan were separated 10 years later.
Her mother's will bequeaths the motel to Sally, but Sally must either live in and run the motel for seven years, or reune with Morgan and run the motel with Morgan. The motel and the estate's assets will go to charity.
The three-act play, which lasts about two hours, is set in a motel in a small Midwestern town in 1982.
SALLY DECIDES that her mother had run the motel as a brothel — and that Morgan had been a customer just before marrying Salv.
The rest of the play shows Sally's unquiring decision over whether to meet the conditions of the will and her unhappy memories of the past. Sally even confronts — in her mind — Morgan
the estate she is puzzled, however, by the small fortune left in her mother's estate. With the help of her mother's lawyer, played by Jim Hoggatt, Shawne sophomore, and her mother's secretary, played by Joeanna Kobak, Franklin freshman, Sally examines her mother's account book to try to determine the source of the money.
and her mother, played by Melanie Taylor,
Lawrence graduate student.
Jones, who wrote the play, said he thought "Lonesome" had a good chance in the festival competition. However, he said, the quality of the entries varies from year to year.
Jones said the play was part of a series of plays, concerts, guest artists and lecturers that was specially designed for students at Flashinger, most of whom are involved in the fine arts.
He said that a problem for writers of original scripts was to find someone with the resources and courage to produce a new play.
Jones complimented the Hashinger management, which provided $700 for the production, and the cast.
Tryouts were in late September, he said, and the cast has rehearsed six weeks.
Jones said that he had written a play before but that "Loneesome" was his first serious pursal of scriptwriting. Jones finished the first version of the play in early 1981.
However, he said, the cast is inexperienced, and the script has been revised often — the final revision being made just a week ago — to accommodate the actors.
"The kids have worked very hard," he said. "I couldn't ask for a better effort from the actors."
"THERE ARE THINGS you just can't work out until you see it," Jones said.
Jones, who also wrote several songs that are performed during the play, said he wanted the play to give women a chance to act.
Jones and Kennis Wessel, Lawrence graduate students, are co-directors for the play. The other members of the production company and cast are residents of Hashinger, Brian Wilson, Lee's Summit, Mo, sophomore, is stage manager, and Todd Brown, St. Louis, Mo., freshman, is technical director and lighting designer, Lon Craven, Greenwood, Mo., freshman, designed one of the stage props, a record album cover. Cindi Evans, Roeland Park freshman, is understudy to the female roles and assistant to the directors.
"It's a good vehicle for actors, especially actresses." Jones said. "It's hard to find good roles for women."
Sheldon Lute, Omaha, Neb., freshman, has a bit part as a guest at the motel.
In the ACTF competition, groups of judges watch plays produced by theatre groups affiliated with universities on the nation, said Ronald Willis, KU professor of speech and language at the chairman of the jury. The judges are to select the best plays for regional contests.
THE LOCAL REGION comprises Iowa, Kansas, Missouri and Nebraska. Willis said, and the judges usually watch 25 to 45 plays. The judges select four or five plays to be performed at a regional festival; the local regional will be in late January or early February in Kansas City.
Only six or seven plays out of all 12 regions will be chosen for an April performance at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, Washington, D.C. Willis said.
Productions entered in the festival are
categorized as either "student original" or "other", Willis said. The category of "other" includes plays written by teachers or professionals. Festival rules stipulate that at least one of the plays performed at the Kennedy Center be a "student original" production, he said.
KU's entry in the festival competition last year was the University Theatre production "Dracula," which advanced to the regional Walt Disney who is also director of the University Theatre.
The University Theatre's entry in this year's festival is "Buried Child," which was performed Oct. 22-27. The play was written by Sam Shepard.
Hashinger residents will be admitted to the play, he said. Non-residents will be charged $1. The money will go to a Hashinger fund for artistic programs or to the "Lonesome" production company for travel expenses if the play advances in festival competition.
BENNIE LANE AND RICKY MURRAY
Jim Hoggatt, Shawnee sophomore, plays a lawyer, and Rochelle Holmgren, Omaha, Neb., sophomore, plays an heiress in "The Lonesome Motel Blues," which will play at 8 p.m. today and 2:30
p. m. tomorrow and Sunday at Hashinger Theatre in Hashinger Hall.
University Daily Kansan, November 12, 1982
Page 7
You're invited!
THIS SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 14, BEGINNING AT 9:00 A.M.,
YOU'RE INVITED TO SEE
THE AREA'S NEWEST PREMIER RUNNING EVENT.
Maupintour
Fall Classic
10K/5K Runs
TRACK CLUB
LTC
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
SHARE THE EXCITEMENT!
Last year the Lawrence Track Club presented its first Fall Classic. The run was so popular that LTC has joined forces this year with Maupintour for a repeat performance. Over 1000 runners are expected to compete in the 10K Individual Run and the 5K Individual/Team Run.
START AND FINISH!
WHERE TO SEE IT!
See the map for the route. The runs start and finish at the KU Memorial Stadium, with ample parking, refreshments and restrooms available. The awards will be presented at approximately 11:30 a.m. in the stadium.
You're invited to watch anywhere along the route. Suggested locations include the intersection of Sunflower Road and Sunnyside Avenue, and the top of Daisy Hill at the intersection of Irving Hill Road and Engel Road.
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5K RUN ROUTE
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan, November 12.
I
Board names president as coordinator Adkins to continue
By DON KNOX Staff Reporter
Student body president David Addkins, saying he wanted to see the bus system's problems "through to the end," will replace Steve McMurry as coordinator of KU on Wheels at least until next spring.
The decision, made last night by the seven-member Senate Transportation Board, requires no confirmation by the Student Senate. Adkins appointed himself acting coordinator after McMurry's arrest on 15 charges from February under the same title until a permanent replacement is named in April.
Adkins' term as student body president ends Nov. 19.
THE TRANSPORTATION BOARD also named Paul Buskirk, Liberal Arts and Sciences senator, to be chairman of the Transportation Board His appointment, however, has been confirmed by two-thirds of the Senate.
McMurry, who was arrested on counts of embzzing $30,425 of bus system funds had served both as an activist for the city and chairman of the Transportation
Board. He had overseen bus system funds since 1973.
A trial date for the 27-year-old former coordinator will be set Dec. 3 in Douglas County District Court.
After receiving the board's appointment, Adkins said that the restitution of missing bus system failure was "the foremost thing in my job."
"I am optimistic in getting at least some, if not all, of that money back," he said, adding that he did not expect his family to be able to compensate to be released until next semester.
The internal audit is expected to contain recommendations from the University Comptroller about how Kloon Wheels should lighten up the Kansas Union to the Comptroller's office in Carruth-O'Leary Hall.
HARRY WARREN, Douglas County assistant district attorney, has said that at least $50,000 was missing from KU on Wheels. David Ambrer, vice president of the case, an internal audit of bus system funds the day before McMurry's arrest.
bus work
The board did not approve a salary for Adkins, but board members did not rule out paying him after a certain period. The board compiled and approved by the board.
Adkins, however, warned board members that conflict* surrounding his appointment could arise in the Senate office after he is replaced Nov. 18.
"I DON'T WANT to be a student body president emeritus," he said. "Of course, when you are elected student body president, you want to run your own store. You want your own people to help you."
Adkins said the next president might consider him a threat.
But the board, in approving Adkins' appointment, disregarded any political problems that could threaten his standing with future Senate lead.
In other business, Duane Dugel, owner of the Lawrence Bus Co., said he was surprised and pleased by the number of people riding the bus on a new route that goes off campus at night. It was approved by the board weeks ago.
THE TRAILRIDGE ROUTE, which began operating Nov. 1, had 644 riders in its first ten days. The route is the first extension of KU on Wheels service since fall 1980, when a bus operated by East Lawrence area was introduced.
Ogle said the number of people using the new Trailridge route was higher than normal for a new route
Johnson & Johnson Inc. decided yesterday to manufacture a new tamper-resistant container before it puts Extra Strength Tylenol back into its bottle. Chemists scientists said the effects of the cyanide controversy could remain for a long time.
Tylenol may take time to heal
"It's definitely still affecting the sales of pain-relief drugs," said Stan Byrnes, pharmacist at Byrne's Pharmacy in Eudora. "It's a common thing for people to check boxes now to see if they've been tampered with. Before, people had a confidence in what was sold.
"IT'S A SHAME because Tylonel had built up such a good name, and now even Tylonel prescription sales have lowered."
"I think people are becoming more knowledgeable, and that's a good sign," said Marvin Bredoefh, a pharmacist at Medical Arts Pharmacy, on Main streets. "The more knowledgeable they are, the better off they will be."
Most druggists interviewed said that customers were excising extra caution when purchasing any over-the-counter drugs, or consider that a change for the better.
"We always take time to explain to a customer the drug he is taking, and I notice more people are asking more
questions about the drugs they are asking."
Bryne said, "Most people have taken drugs for granted so many years, and then bang, something like this," he added. "We realize how vulnerable they've been."
BREDEHOFT Said he had noticed a flurry of purchases over the-counter drugs at his store, and he said the masking procedures might be the reason.
“Overall, most of our drugs — even the over-the-counter ones — are behind the counter. So people come here with them, so no one could get at the goods,” he said.
The pharmacists agreed that sales for Tynolon tablets were down, and three pharmacists said demand for all capsule drugs had dwindled since seven people in the Chicago area died six months ago taking cyanide-laced Tynolon capsules.
"Sales may be slightly down," said Jim Rieth, a pharmacist at Super-X Drugs, 1015 W. 23rd. "I have heard some remarks about me, and I imagine there are a fair amount of people worried about tampering."
But Bieth said consumers 'fears often were baseless, because many over-the-counter drugs are unit-dose packed, which means each tablet is separately packed, cutting down the chance of tampering.
DON HODGES, pharmacist at Round Corner Drug, 801 Massachusetts St., said his store's Tylenol sales had
decreased dramatically and the store had taken Tylenol liquid preparations for children off the shelves.
some people are just scared off of capsules entirely, while others will still buy a drug equivalent to Extra Strength Tylenol. Hodges said.
Bill McNary, store manager at Raney Hillcrest Pharmacy, 925 Iowa St. said his store had removed all seals from the windows of seal sets after the first Tylomel deaths.
"People are examining everything — vitamins, eyedrops, mouthwashs — I think it will be a long time before people forget this," said McNary.
"IT MIGHT TAKE awhile, but sales should gradually begin to pick up again," Reeth said. "By year's out, if sales continue, then it should all die down."
The pharmacists said consumers' faith in Tynollen would not return overnight, but instead would need time to be rebuilt.
But Breedhoef said any decision on the Tylotlen capsules could have its effect.
"Capsules are going to have problems selling until people come up with seal-proof packages," he said. "But then there will be an increase in their price at least 10 cents, because there are more manufacturing processes with it."
Bredhoft also instituting tamper-resistant packages could result in a price increase of up to 25 cents, which he said could severely curtail sales.
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University Daily Kansan, November 12, 1982 Page 9
Faculty stay in closet Gavs fear rejection, says prof
By STEVE CUSICK
Staff Reporter
A KU professor who publicly acknowledged his homosexuality long ago said recently many gay faculty members at the University of Kansas feared "coming" he would endanger their co-creator and leave them rejected by colleagues and friends.
Michael Storms, chairman of the psychology department, estimated that 5 to 10 percent of the people in the United States were gay. He said the same percentage could apply to KU faculty.
But only a small portion of gay faculty members have become open about their sexual preference, he said. Because the majority, is still
"Definitely, the majority is still deeply in the closet," he said.
Volunteers at the Gay and Lesbian Services office in the Kansas Union said Storms' assessment was pretty accurate.
SHARON BUDD, who occasionally works at the gay services office, said that whether a faction member became a patron of an open-hearted dependant largely on the department.
The volunteers mentioned the School of Law and the School of Business as two schools where gay faculty might have problems about being open. The psychology department and other departments in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences might be more accepting, they said.
Storms said that although it might take a heavy psychological toll, many gay faculty members refused to reveal their sexual preference for "fear of losing their jobs and fear of being rejected by colleagues, friends and family."
Fears of being passed up for promotions and merit raises also arise, he
ALTHOUGH MANY of society's attitudes make it hard for gays to be open about their sexuki preferences, homosexuals often internalize the same
"It's a sad fact, but I think a lot of
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He said many of those who remained secretive told themselves they would be able to come out later.
They say to themselves, "Well, I'll come out once I get myself established," he said.
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"But it turns out it works just the opposite. The more they have the more they think they have to lose in coming out."
Said one of the workers," The student really doesn't have to worry about the problem.
The worker also said gay faculty members sometimes stopped by the office.
FOR THAT reason, gay faculty members have a harder time revealing their sexual preferences than gay faculty members and workers from the gay services.
"Being in the closet is almost certainly a psychologically stressful situation."
STORMS AND a group of graduate students recently completed a study that revealed that gays who remained in the closest tended to be more neurotic.
But those who were open tended to be less neurotic than the average, he said.
Storms said the psychological costs of leading the double life of a close gay client were enormous.
"Some of the things that I was afraid would happen, have happened," he said, "but those events did not lead to anything. But that I was afraid they would lead to."
Coming out was worth it for Storms, he said.
According to theories, he said, "going through that process builds psychological resilience."
Storms who came into the open in 1973, said his homosexuality often was the cause.
WHEN HE begins teaching a class of 300, for example, he knows "that almost everybody in that class already knits it," he said.
That opens the door to a great deal
of potential rejection by students. I've had students react against me in the classroom."
classroom.
He said there also had been "individuals who have attempted to discriminate against me."
One time, he said, "a very small number of individuals objected to my being allowed to teach a human sexuality course. They thought I would
He was able to teach the class, he said, but "I sort of had to jump an extra hurdle that a heterosexual would not have had to jump."
have had to jump.
Few of the closet gay faculty members have turned to Storms for advice, he said.
"I have very little contact with those faculty who are in the closet," he said "On the contrary, they tend to shy away from me. They're afraid of guilt."
STORMS SAID the atmosphere at the University was no worse than other places in society for gays to reveal their sexual preference.
He said the University had taken steps to lessen the chance of discrimination against gays at KU. One of these is a stipulation in the University's affirmative action plan that prohibits discrimination based on sexual preference.
Robert Cobb, executive vice chancellor, said that that was all the University had to say about gay faculty members coming out of the closet.
"The University statement on it is the one contained in the affirmative action plan, no more, no less," he said. "So I tell students that they should not hibrate to nobilize their views or not."
KU IS NOT the only university where gay faculty members feel reluctant to come out, according to an Oct. 20 article in *The Chronicle of Higher Education*.
The article, reporting on the annual meeting of the Gay Academic Union, quoted participants at the conference as saying homosexual faculty members were revealing their sexual preference than homosexuals in society as a whole.
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Sizeler accepts Lawrence challenge
KING
By DOUG CUNNINGHAM Staff Reporter
Tom Davidson, president of Sizerel Realty Co. Inc., presented at a public meeting last night what he saw as the "wish lists" of three parties to the proposed downtown redevelopment project.
Given ideal circumstances, Lawrence and its city officials probably would like to see no demolition of buildings for the project, no public financing, no parking garages and no existing downtown retail character.
Big department stores, which Davidson said were an essential part of any such project, would like a suburban location at the intersection of two highways more than adequate and a climate-controlled building.
THE BANKS and lenders that finance the project want to maximize their return and minimize their risk.
And Sizerel, the Louisiana developer chosen, Sept. 28 by the City Council.
for the project, must satisfy these groups, reconcile the various interests, make the project economically profitable and survive, he said.
"Ideally, I think the community would like to see the development limited to 200,000 to 250,000 square feet," he said.
He said Sizerley might be building too large a project if it followed its earlier projections for a project of 350,000 to 400,000 square feet.
DAVIDSON RESPONDED that 350,000 square feet probably would be a maximum fiure.
"We readily accept that challenge," Davidson told the 30 people at last night's meeting in City Hall.
Davidson said the redevelopment project could spur other investment in the downtown area.
"If we're successful — if we can do this — you're going to see a lot of other things happen downstown," he said.
his concerns was that the project not be too large.
Two people at the meeting presented fairly specific proposals of what they thought should happen.
ONE MAN SAID that a lot of land should be acquired and that a number of buildings should be demolished in order to make the project work.
Another said that much of the redevelopment should focus on Vermont Street and that as few businesses as possible should be forced to
John: Stainback, director of planning and urban design for the south central region of Daniel, Mann, Johnson & Mendenhall, the architectural firm working with Sizerer on the project, said that Sizerer and DMJM would hold at least three public presentations before March 4.
Richard Kersenbaum, a resident of East Lawrence and a member of the Downtown Improvement Commission in selection Sizerel, said one of his
March 4 is the deadline for Sizerel to present to the city its formal redevelopment proposal, which it to include a design and design an initial financing plan.
One of the meetings will be in mid-December, he said, when Sizerel will present findings from his preliminary Lawrence and the downtown project.
Commission to study rural land use
The Douglas County Board of Commissioners yesterday approved a resolution that calls for a committee to study the problem of urban development in rural areas, said Beverly Bradley, commission chairman.
The committee will be appointed as quickly as possible, she said, but it is expected to study the issue for some time.
The committee is to advise the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission in developing ways to solve those problems.
According to the resolution, the committee, to be made up of county residents, will "study and identify rural land use issues and problems."
THE COUNTY COMMISSION recently decided that one proposed
solution to development in rural areas needed more study.
Two amendments to the city-county subdivision regulations had been proposed that would have required houses built in rural areas to be on lots of at least 40 acres.
However, that proposal was rejected, at least temporarily, when the county's legislature passed a bill to reintroduce it.
RUSH REGISTRATION
Wednesday, Nov.17 Thursday, Nov.18
10 a.m.-4 p.m.
Centennial Room Kansas Union *Rush Fees and Registration Packet Due
Any woman who has not picked up a Rush Packet may pick them up at the Panhellenic Office, 119 B Kansas Union, Monday-Friday 8:30-4:30.
---
JAYHAWK STUDENT BASKETBALL SEASON TICKET SALE
WHEN: Nov. 9-12, Tuesday through Fridav
WHERE: East Lobby, Allen Field House
TIME: 9:00 am----4:00 pm
PRICE: $22.00—INCLUDES 11 GAMES Games over student holidays are not included in season ticket or ticket price (U.S. International, Memphis State and Alcorn State).
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1982-83
MEN'S BASKETBALL SCHEDULE
MEN'S BASKETBALL SCHEDULE
Nov 27 (Sat) U.S. International at home
Dec 4 (Tue) *Mississippi Valley at home
Dec 6 (Fri) St. Louis at home
Dec 7 (Sat) St. Louis at home
Dec 8 (Tue) Southern Methodist at Dallas
Dec 11 (Sat) Southern Methodist at Dallas
Dec 18 (Tue) Memphis State at Arizona
Dec 29 (Wed) Kentucky at Lexington
Dec 30 (Thu) Kentucky at Lexington
Jan 6 (Tue) Oakland at San Francisco
Jan 6 (Sat) Evergreen at Evansville
Jan 15 (Wed) Oklahoma at Norman
Jan 19 (Wed) Oklahoma at Norman
Jan 26 (Wed) Missouri at home
Jan 29 (Sat) K-State at Manhattan
Jan 31 (Tue) K-State at Manhattan
Feb 5 (Sat) Nebraska at Lincoln
Feb 10 (Tue) Colorado at Lincoln
Feb 16 (Wed) Missouri at Columbia
Feb 16 (Wed) Missouri at Columbia
Feb 22 (Wed) Iowa State at Ames
Feb 26 (Sat) K-State at home
Feb 26 (Sat) K-State at home
Mar 5 (Sat) Colorado at Bouder
All Saturday Home Games Start at 2:00 p.m.
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Page 10 University Daily Kansan. November 12, 1982
English, math vital as core classes
By STEVE CUSICK Staff Reporter
Members of a committee studying the feasibility of a core curriculum at the University of Kansas have agreed that English and mathematics requirements should be central to such a curriculum.
"The committee is in some sort of consensus that they should be required. Al Johnson, assistant to the director for academic affairs, said recently."
The committee met earlier this week to review position papers drafted by four subcommittees, and the group will conduct for three hours Nov. 20, Johnson said.
The committee members were picked this summer to study the possibility of a core curriculum for freshmen and sophomores attending KU.
ONE OF THE subcommittees has suggested a 34-hour core. It would include eight hours in mathematics, three of which could be in symbolic logic; nine hours of composition and literature; a three-hour course in public speaking; five hours in a basic math course; two hours in the arts or art appreciation; and a course to acquaint students with "the human situation."
"None of the members of this subcommittee has any serious objection to the core curriculum," one position paper said.
One of the other position papers stressed the importance of writing skills as part of a core.
"The ability to write clearly and effectively is essential, and must be a primary focus for any curricular change," that paper said.
THAT SUBCOMMITTEE ALSO recommended that besides remedial programs, "all students be required ... to complete two semesters of English composition."
"These are the courses that should be taught in the freshman and sophomore years.
Also, "the subcommittee felt strongly that remedial courses should not be included as part of general education. Remediation is necessary for many students and should be given in the freshman year as early and as vigorously as possible."
Another of the subcommittee position papers divided courses into skill courses and core courses.
JOHNSON SAID THE committee was trying to construct a theoretical core curriculum, and would discuss in the fall a series of questions would look like at the Nov. 20 meeting.
The committee is expected to complete its report in April.
"Skill courses include mathematics, English, speech, foreign language and computer science," the paper said.
The Kansan is now accepting applications for the positions of editor and business manager for the spring semester.
Convocation decries use of nuclear arms
Applications are available in the Kansas business office, 118 Flint Hall, the School of Journalism office, 200 Flint Hall, the Student
Senate Office, 105 B Kansas Union;
and the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 220 Strong Hall.
Pete Rowland, assistant professor of political science, answered a question from the audience yesterday in Woodruff Auditorium during a convocation on the nuclear arms race. Dennis Palumbo, director of the institute and Jaroslaw Plekalkiewicz, also a professor of political science, looked on.
Completed applications must be returned to Mary Wallace, assistant to the dean, 200 Flint Hall, by 5 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 18.
Lawrence and KU law enforcement agencies will sponsor a rape avoidance seminar titled "Lady Stay Alive" on Tuesday in the Kansas Union.
Rv IEANNE FOY
The guest speaker for the seminar will be Carolyn Hukle, crime prevention specialist for the police department in Norwalk, Iowa. Hukle also is chairman of the Crime Alert Program in Des Moines, Iowa.
THAT DAY, formerly known as Armistice Day, is celebrated as Veterans Day. The convocation at KU was attended by many students from college campuses across the country.
Spring staff positions open
The convocation, which focused on alternatives to the nuclear arms race, began on the 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th month of the year. These numbers are significant because the treaty that ended World War I was signed on the 11th hour of the 11th day of November 1918.
Seminar to show rape safety
By JEANNE FOY Staff Reporter
As Americans honored those who had given their lives in war yesterday, about 300 people gathered in Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union for a convoction on one of the biggest threats to the world — the nuclear arms
At yesterday's convocation, Jarelswos Pieklaiewicz and Pete Rowland, KU professors of political science, and Dennis Palumbo, director of the Center for Public Affairs, gave their views on the nuclear arms race. Clifford Ketzel, professor of political science, was the mediator.
Topics in the seminar will be rape, sexual assault and hitchhiking. Incest.
KETZEL SAID Piekakiewicz. Rowland and Palumbo were chosen because they were all veterans, and a discussion
The message of the film was that the United States should make a pledge not to be the first country to use nuclear weapons and strengthen conventional weapons in Western Europe.
THE NORTH ATLANTIC Treaty Organization relies on a flexible response policy, which uses a flaw the nation has had in its nuclear weapons several thousand nuclear weapons
"Citizens shouldn't let the military define victory and defeat," he said.
in efforts to prevent a nuclear arms race was an appropriate way to honor
PALUMBO SAID citizens needed to be more active in voicing their opinions on the nuclear arms race, and more involved in yesterday's convoction, were needed.
But the film argued that no nuclear weapon could be used without escalating to a full-scale nuclear war.
Rowland said he hoped that the convocation would be a step toward limiting the arms race.
would be used, if necessary, to fight Soviet forces if they ever attacked Western Europe.
"Nuclear devices are instruments of mass suicide."
Pikalekiewicz said, "It is a mistake to call nuclear warheads weapons. Weapons are used on hopes of winning a victory in order to be a winner in case of a nuclear war."
He said a nuclear war, which would probably last half an hour, would kill at least 200 million Americans and Soviets, making the 55 million people killed in World War II a trifling figure in comparison.
If only one city was left in the United States, but the Soviet Union was totally wiped out, then the military would define that as a victory, Rowland said. The convocation began with the showing of the film *The Unfinished War*. Use *Jacques Clunion War*, which was produced by the Union of Concerned Scientists.
"In war, each side ains to win. Why should they stop before their resources are depleted?" the film's narrator asked.
indecent exposure, baby-sitting, making acquaintances, and walking and driving safety also will be discussed.
The seminar will begin at 1 p.m. in Woodruff Auditorium and continue at 7 p.m. in the Ballroom.
The seminar is sponsored by the KU Police Department, the Lawrence Police Department, the Kansas Bureau of investigation and other local agencies.
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STOP BY 115 MILITARY SCIENCE
OR
CALL 864-3161
The University of Kansas Chamber
Music Series Presents
KO-KELA
Piano Quartet
Clayton Haslop
violin
3:30 p.m., Sunday
November 14, 1982
University Theatre
Murphy Hall
KO-KELA (from the Sioux
Indian word "to make sound")
James Bonn
piano
Tickets on sale in the
Murphy Hall Box Office
All seats reserved/For reserva-
tions, call 913/864-3982
Special discounts for students
and senior citizens
Ronald Copes
viola
"It was ardent and radiant
playing."
The New York Times
"In short, KO-KELA is one of
the country's top chamber
music ensembles."
The Kansas City Times
Peter Rejto
cello
The Phadime Plus
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University Daily Kansan, November 12, 1982
Page 11
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6th & FIRESIDE COURT, LAWRENCE, KS ACROSS FROM SUNSET DRIVE-IN Sale prices and quantities limited to store stock.
Page 12 University Daily Kansan, November 12, 1962
Candidates clash over ASK budget, beer
By DAVID SWAFFORD Staff Reporter
Kevin Walker, Momentum Coalition's presidential candidate, began last night's Student Senate debate in the lobby of Tempel Hall by clarifying his stance on the issue of selling beer in the stadium.
The debate, sponsored by the Association of University Residence Halls, touched on several topics, including the sale of beer in the stadium and whether to support Associated Students of Kansas.
Earlier, Walker had said Momentum would solicit help from
Anheuser-Busch Inc. to get beer sold in Memorial Stadium. But members of the Consensus Coalition claimed that he never worked with the company.
WALKER SAID Lisa Ashner, Consensus presidential candidate, had "totally blown the issue out of porportion."
"The issue has become a political football. The whole thing has become tainted."
"Anheuser-Busch has expressed interest in giving us advice on how to sell beer in the stadium. But their research is not about university politics. They are leaning
Jim Cramer, Consensus vice-presidential candidate, opened his part of the debate by saying that his coalition had looked into the issue during the summer and found out that it was against Anheuser-Busch's policy.
against it now because it has become a political issue."
"The stance has changed on the issue," said Cramer. "Earlier, it was 'Let's bring in the big boys.' Now they're saying that they are just talking to Anheuser-Busch for advice."
ing 50 percent, arguing that ASK "is just not doing the job right."
THE TWO OPPOSING coilitions differed most on the future of ASK. Momentum favors cutting ASK fund-
Walker said ASK had not gotten a bill to the Kansas Senate floor concerning higher education in the past several years.
Consensus argued that ASK won indeed doing its job. Ashner said ASK registered 50 percent of the eligible voters at KU this year.
She said there were three full-time ASK employees who were a real benefit to students because they were frequently in Topeka. For instance, she said, ASK was the only student group lobbying in Topeka at the time the Legislature approved the current budget reductions.
By DOUG CUNNINGHAM Staff Reporter
Planning director likes citizen initiative
A high rate of participation in land use and zoning decisions is an important characteristic of Lawrence citizens, the director of planning for the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Office said yesterday.
Staff Reporter
"One of the real benefits is the fact that you have so much citizen participation. That makes our job more difficult — but it also allows us to be successful and to do more meaningful planning." Banks said.
Price Banks, the director, started his duties in Lawrence on Oct. 4.
LAWRENCE IS FACING some big changes because of the proposed redevelopment of the downtown area, Banks said.
"I think that's probably the most exciting thing that's happening. That's still at a frail stage. But I'm impressed with the enthusiasm of the people in lawrence and I'm impressed with the enthusiasm of the developer.
"I think that development, if it is designed and put together properly, ought to enhance the neighborhood on
Lawrence is fortunate to still have an active downtown. Banks said
the east and it ought to be good for the businesses downtown, rather than taking away from them."
The riverfront along the Kansas River will offer opportunities for development, possibly during a second semester of the downtown project, Banks said.
"DURING THE 1960s, a lot of urban renewal projects cleared a lot of large areas in central cities. They were replaced with office buildings, and at times just as well roll up the sidewalks. They became dead zones," he said.
"We have a really valuable resource here in the riverfront, but nothing has ever really been done with it," he said. "We put up office in City Hall toward the river."
Banks worked in Michigan before coming to Lawrence. He replaced Garnet Stoll, the former director, who was now a manager to make a similar position in Lincoln, Neb.
PLANNING FOR future development is easier in Lawrence than in some other areas of the country, Banks said.
"I think the combination of the University of Kansas being here and the fact that we're between two major urban centers has proven a real benefit, in that it has kind of stabilized the economy and provided for a relatively stable rate of growth," he said.
"That's much easier to deal with from a planning standpoint because it's much more predictable."
Still, the University - and the students who are here because of it - pose some special planning problems when new development is considered.
Students often have needs that are different from those of the general population.
for the new library had been completed. The $88,000 furnishings include book stacks, study carrels, casual seating and office furniture.
“IT'S VERY difficult to write ordnances to establish controls that work for both groups,” he said. “Ideally, in areas with large numbers of student apartments, you would require more facilities in areas with family apartments.”
Planning is becoming especially important, Banks said. It is prompting a look at Lawrence's current zoning regulations and ordinances.
something that takes a broader look at what Lawrence needs," he said. "As we stand right now, we're in a position of real importance to come in." It would be nice to cobbled it back.
WE WANT TO come up with
Also, the changing economic situation brings about different types of changes in firms.
The library is financed by a $3.7 million allocation from the Kansas Legislature, $1 million from Med College and $200,000 from private donations.
T. R.
THE LIBRARY, named after former KU Chancellor Archy Dickes, will have double the 20,000 square feet of space in the Clendering Library. The library will have 444 seats, an increase over the 201 in the present library.
Drinking Myth of the Week
Construction work on the new $2 million Archie Dykes Library is ahead of schedule and 90 percent completed, with a total of 14 facilities planning at the Med Center.
酒杯和酒瓶
PEOPLE GET DRUNK ...OR SICK ...FROM
DUTTERING DRINKS
The new library will house more than 127,000 volumes of material. The History of Medicine bake will remain on the shelf for a storage of older journals. Weichert said.
**PEOPLE GET DRUNK ... OR SICK ... FROM**
**SWITCHING.**
That shouldn't really make much difference. What
usually causes an adverse reaction to alcohol is
drinking too much.
The expected completion date is set for March, but books will not be moved into the library until June 1 because of the absence of events at the end of the semester, he said.
MIXING YOUR DRINKS CAUSES HANGOVERS.
The major cause of hangovers is drinking too much.
Period.
Dykes Libraryv nearly finished
THE STORY MEN
IN THE BARRACKS
KANSAS CITY, Kan.-Beginning next fall, medical students will no longer study in cramped conditions amid volumes of books now housed in the small Clendening Library at the University of Kansas Medical Center.
The Student Assistance Center
---
--on Friday, December 3rd in the Crystal Room of the Eldridge House Hotel
Full buffet dinner, including vegetarian entrees,
full bar and set ups available, entertainment and dance music.
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ALLEN WEICHERT, director of facilities planning on the Lawrence campus, said contracts for furnishings
Dinner, entertainment, dance—$9.00
10 pm on Channel 2
MUSIC TELEVISION
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Dog, visiting sister help alert family of damaging house fire
Heidi heard strange noises in the heild, but did not suspect anything until Ozzie's persistence made her suspicion acted as if something had happened.
A dog named Ozzie and a visiting relative alerted a sleeping Lawrence family that their house was on fire yesterday morning.
Cheryl Heidi, Minneapolis, Minn., the sister of Brenda Patella, 801 Missouri St., koke up about 2:45 a.m. because her family's pet dog, was pestering her
When she opened the attic door she found smoke.
Patzel said Ozzie and Heidi probably saved the family's lives.
"There was an awful lot of smoke and the smoke alarm hadn't gone off yet." Pet.
ALL OF THE BEDROOMS in the house are located on the second floor, Patzel said. But the family woke up in the bedroom to see the house before firefighters arrived.
The four family members were
The two-alarm fire caused $10,000 damage to the Patel home. McSwaindamage to the Patel home. McSwain
outside when firefighters arrived, said Lawrence Fire Chief Jim McMain.
The fire was started by a short in the cord of a lamp in the attic, McSwain滩
He said the fire department was called to the house owned by Joe Patzel at 532 North 14th Street.
The fire熄毁 the structure of the attic and its contents, McSwain-said. The rest of the house received some smoke and water damage, he said, but fireighters were able to salvage much of the contents of the house.
Heidi came to Lawrence to celebrate Patzel's birthday Wednesday.
BRENDA PATZEL SAID Ozzie, whom one of the Patzel children called a wonderful dog, had been a family pet for five years. Ozzie likes to sleep in the guest room where Patzel's sister was staying, she said.
"I'm not sure she's anxious to come stay again," Patzel said.
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University Daily Kansan, November 12, 1982
Page 13
Chicago cabbie sues Rather
By United Press International
CHICAGO—CBS anarchian Dan Rather faces a $4-million lawsuit for defamation of character and depriving income from a cab driver who Rather contended took him on a ride to nowhere.
The cab driver, Eugene Phillips, said he picked up Rather at O'Hare International Airport two years ago Wednesday. Phillips was to take him to the North side of author StuDs with whom Rather had an interview.
BUT PHILLIPS said as the taxi neared Terkel's house, Rather accused him of not taking him where he
The image provided is too blurry and illegible to accurately recognize any text or details. It appears to be a blank or poorly parsed document. Therefore, no text can be extracted from this image.
wanted to go and refused to pay the $12.55 fare.
Phillips took off — with Rather in the cab — and drove south.
Phillips was charged with disorder conduct, but Rather, saying he had a busy schedule, dropped the charges against the driver.
Acting as his own lawyer, Phillips filed the suit Wednesday in Cook County Circuit Court. CBS officials in York declined immediate comment.
Woman tells of her abduction
PHILLIPS, WOILED the suit as a papure to avoid the filling fee, said he was forced to give up the cab he leased from Checker CCo. and lost money. He then lost both time and money from a recording project he was involved in.
A 27-year-old Lawrence woman told police she was kidnapped early yesterday morning by a man with a knife, Lawrence police said yesterday.
The woman told police she was leaving the Family Practice Center, 900 Rockledge Road, about 12:25 a.m. She was running for her car, used a knife to force her into her car.
user a knife to force her into her car.
SHE TOLD POLICE the man forced
her to drive the car. The woman jumped out of the car when she pulled in to the Kwik Shop, Sixth and Kasold streets.
Police said the woman told them that after she jumped out, the man got out of the car.
Police have not located the suspect, described as a male in his 20s or 30s and wearing a green jacket.
On the record
BURGLARS STOLE $540 worth of items Tuesday night from an apartment rented by two KU students in the 1200 block of Mississippi Street, Lawrence police said yesterday. The burglar sights a the $130 rifle, a the $400 diamond ring and $10 in cash, police said.
BURGLARS STOLE A VIDEO cas-
settle recorder worth $1,000 between Oct. 21 and Wednesday from the Pincock School, 810 W. 6th St., police said.
BURGLARSTOLE AN eight-track stereo tape recorder worth about $500 Tuesday night from a car parked at the Walmart Dana Ave. mall, 2300 W. 29th St., police said.
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SenEx to look at student jury duty policy
By DEBORAH BAER Staff Reporter
When KU students register to vote in Lawrence, they become potential jurors for the Douglas County District Court.
Staff Reporter
Many do not realize they can be called for jury duty, but some students may not be registering to vote in Lawrence to avoid the inconvenience of serving as a juror. William Balfour, University ombudman, said that students on jury duty arrange with their professors to make up classwork.
Because of the problems created when students miss class for jury duty, David Amblet, vice chancellor for student affairs, wants to develop a policy allowing some students on jury duty to drop classes without penalty.
STUDENTS ARE not excused from jury duty merely because they are students, and some have missed mid-term examinations and class lectures while performing this civic duty. Ambler said yesterday.
"I personally think that a refund of their fees is in order if indeed they
are not going to be able to finish the semester." he said.
He said if a student dropped courses while on jury duty, a notation should be made on the student's transcript showing why the course was dropped.
But, he said, only students who try to be excused from serving and who might have to serve for a long time should be given those privileges.
Ambler has asked the University Senate Executive Committee to look into the matter. Since the plan involves a judge, the Agents will have to approve it, he said.
James Seaver, SenEx chairman, said the committee would consider the
Severer said that during these times of financial difficulty, dropping out of school because of jury duty without a tuition refund would be a "terrible
Students cannot receive tuition refunds if they withdraw after the first third of the semester, according to the fall 1982 timetable.
Ambler said that although many faculty members were willing to write make-up tests for students on jury duty, no university policy existed that forced
EVEN IF TESTS could be made up, it would be hard to make up for the information lost by missing several lectures, said Ambler.
faculty to allow students on jury duty to make up their class work.
Balfour said one student called for pardy duty had told him he was sorry he had been wrong.
Ballourd said that although he recognized the potential inconvenience that registering could cause, he would rather have students voting.
Beverly Boyd, professor of English, said one of her students, a senior from Oklahoma, was not excused when she was called to jury duty in Lawrence.
ALTHOUGH BOYD wrote another mid-term exam for the student, who missed the lesson on jury duty, she caught up on the lectures she missed.
"I can't repeat my lectures for her," she said.
Boyd said that although she thought students should be required to serve on juries, they should not be asked to serve
She said that students could serve during the summer and that seniors might stay.
"There's something really wrong with a situation where a student comes here to go to school and gets pulled out for jury duty," she said.
However, Administrative Judge James Paddock of the Douglas County District Court said students called for jury duty were given special privileges. HE SAID MOST trials in Lawrence expected to last a few weeks or more, the student is told and does not have to serve on that jury, he said.
Also, although all people called for jury duty are supposed to serve two months, once a student has served on one case, he may be excused.
Potential juices are chosen randomly by computer and the list of registered water Jidders are published.
"Jury duty will not, for the average student, cause any difficulty." Paddock
Those called must check in once a week to see whether they are needed. If they are, they must report to the court questioned by the judge and attorevus.
BIG JIM SAYS
Those who do not report to duty can be fined $100 a day, but the fine is often not paid.
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in dash cassette with auto-reverse, automatic music search system, separate bass and treble controls, front to rear masteriler control and SP50-80 thin door speakers.
Reg.
$204.90 Now $159.88
In-dash cassette with locking fast forward and rewind, automatic music search and RP-720 door speakers
Reg.
$149.90 Now $99.88
in-dash casestreet with auto-reverse.
autohome " music watch, fader control,
push button memory tuning and SP-760 38
wait coastal 69" speakers.
Deluxe Car System
$219.88
841-3775
SANYO
LAWRENCE
Standard Import
Car System
FT CS
In-dash cassette with
autoliverce with SP790
floor door speakers
Reg. $99.88
$199.90
Now
Top Of The Line Import Car System
in-dash cashless with
$100
$250 FCHC
in-phone cashless with
$180.88
In-depth cassette with full auto-retention.
$229.90
and $309.90 at hotel door (each)
or $459.90 at airport (each)
and BP 90325 300 waist coat door
and BP 90325 300 waist coat door
Now $189.88
Standard Car System
Top Of The Line Car System FT-28A
iRobot cassette with Duty* no noise isolation, automatic music search, auto蘑菇, control, special tape jam protector system, optimizer PS and RM-100 100 coach cable.
$279.88
"I guarantee you the lowest price on every item we sell. We buy for less, so we can sell to you for less. You'll get your best deal from us, or we'll give you a free gift certificate for giving us a chan
master charge
VISA'
Y
NELSON'S
HomeElectronics
SuperStore
EMPORIA MANHATTAN SALINA TOPEKA
Page 14 University Daily Kansan. November 12. 1982
Jokes, thefts not funny to Watson Library staff
By MATT BARTEL Staff Reporter
Watson Library officials say they are not laughing at a rash of practical jokes which has hit the nation. But they intend to see them stopped.
Kendall Simmons, circulation librarian, said the pranksters were stealing books from the library, apparently to remove the "tattle tapes," or strips in the binding that set off an alarm at the main entrance if someone tries to carry out an unchecked book.
When books have been checked out properly, that tape is desensitized to prevent the alarm from sounding, Simmons said. The pranksters apparently plant a live strip in an unsuspecting person's knapsack or textbook, causing the person to set the alarm off even though he has no unchecked library materials with him.
"BOOKS ARE getting ripped off like you wouldn't believe," Simmons said. "It's getting to be a real drag."
There have been at least eight instances of books being taken out the fire doors in the past two weeks, Simmons said. One such incident occurred Tuesday night, when four men exited through a fire door despite a staff member's attempts to stop them, she said.
Robert Malinowsky, associate dean of libraries, said the incidents had prompted them to investigate the possibility of installing a more
secure type of fire door to keep people from using them for exits.
"I think if there were a different fire door, where they had to break something, it might make them stop and think," he said.
MALINOWSKY SAID library officials would not hesitate to notify the police if evidence arose regarding suspects of the pranks.
"Right now, about all we can do is wait," Malinowsky said.
He said library officials had no way of knowing how many books were missing until they were returned to the library.
So far, only one book has been returned.
Simmons said library officials suspected that many of the books were being mutilated to get to the evidence and holding their eventual return less likely.
"It's got to stop." Simmons said. "The serious users don't have access to these books."
MALINOWSKY SAID the thefts added to the financial strain the library has faced since a 2.2 percent but took effect over the summer
That cut, which left several full-time positions unfulfilled, makes it especially difficult for the library to locate lost or stolen books, he said.
"We can't afford more staff to watch everybody," Malinowsky said. "There are so many study areas and cubby holes where students go to study, where they can disappear."
SUA FILMS Presents
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Dose of own medicine best for hangover
2:00 p.m. $1.50
Woodruff Aud. (not Dyche)
By DONNA KELLER Staff Reporter
The symptoms are headache, upset stomach, heartburn and thirst.
Hangovers. The plague of most who indulge in strong spirits.
The symptoms appear long after the intoxication has passed and the alcohol is out of the body, and the effects may last as long as 36 hours.
No doubt remedies have been sought for hangovers as long as there has been alcohol. The most popular cures pass from generation to generation, with some family member claiming this was a pre-fire recipe for the morning after.
Marc Nicolas, Soeet, Netherlands junior, said that having another drink of the same the next morning might do the trick.
"Some of the hair of the dog that bit you," is an adage, but many still follow.
A recipe combining some basic
kinds of ingredients is favored by
some people.
Alicia Phillips, Alchison freshman,
said, "My Dad mixes tomato juice, raw
egg, salt and pepper in the blender. It
works."
Rose Lawson, Wescoe cafeteria cashier, said she had heard of a combination of beer, tomato juice and Tabasco sauce.
"IT'S AN OVERKILL cure. It has worked on me, but I can't promise anyone else will come out alive." Tracy said.
Mary Tracy, Lawrence senior, recommended two raw eggs, wheat germ
Susan Walker, Kansas Collection secretary recommended ice water with
Elise Clement, Perry graduate student, said a hot shower, a couple of aspirin and returning to bed was the best way to deal with a hangover.
Elizabeth Banks, associate professor of classics, said she had heard of a combination of tomato juice and Worcestershire sauce.
curing a hangover. Some people swear by straight tomato or orange juice by the quart or Bloody Marys by the pitcher.
Eating before drinking or taking aspirin before going to sleep were
Most people agree that fluid intake to flush out the system is important in
Banks said one of her relatives used to drink gallons of milk the following morning to quench his thirst, but she also kept a bottle of carbonated beverage for bourbon drinks.
Exercising to get the blood flowing was recommended by some people who said it was the fastest way to get the alcohol out of the body.
Nicolas said, "Eat dry bread to absorb the alcohol."
Kelly Morgan, Shawnee junior, said one of her relatives would get up, drink a lot of water, do 50 pushups and go back to bed.
SLEEPING OFF THE hangover appeal to marmalade is such as Todd Elmshratch's Tofu fresh.
"I just say 'never again,' each time," she said.
Nancy Martin, Silver Lake freshman,
said she took the standard two aspirin
Gina Nutting, Chicago freshman,
widely did not get honors.
Ted Wilson, professor of history, agreed.
"I throw up before I go to bed," she said.
Charlie Epperson, Wescoe cafeteria cashier, said there was not a lot she did about having a hangover.
"The best solution is 48 hours of sleep." he said.
But a bare few do not get hangovers,
Robert Rhodes, Prairie Village service.
"WHEN YOU'RE a senior, you're above hangovers," he said.
But of course, the most effective remedy of all, one suggested by some authors, is to use an electric shock.
A Happy Elephant ... is one who never forgets special occasions
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M
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Grand Opening
There's room for more . . .
Stop by the SIA office today
and sign up. Space limited.
HEIRLOOMS
...or call 864-3477
wants
FRIDAY, NOV. 12 10-5
EXITING NEW COUNTRY STORE AND GIFT SHOP
COMKERFRATE WITH US
College of Liberal Arts & Sciences
UNDERGRADUATE REPRESENTATIVES for the COLLEGE ASSEMBLY
SATURDAY, NOV. 13 10-5
Interested LA&S Undergraduate Students should complete nomination forms available at the College Office, 206 Strong Hall.
Self-nominations are required
All LA&S. Undergraduate students are encouraged to become involved in the governance of your school.
—Filing deadline—4:30 p.m. Friday, Nov. 12.
Election will be held Nov. 17-18 with the Student Senate Election
BOOKS
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kinko's copies
Presenting
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WE'RE UP & RUNNING
Saturday Lunch Specials
11 a.m.
2 p.m.
YOUR CHOICE:
CHOPPED STEAK
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University Daliv Kansan. November 12. 1982
Page 15
KANSAN WANT ADS Call 864-4358
The University Daily
Call 864-4358
CLASSIFIED RATES
one-time five-year one-time two-year four-year five-year six-year eight-year ten-year
15 months or fewer $2.25 $2.75 $3.75 $3.25 $3.25 $4.55 $8.50 $10.00
never ever $2.25 $2.75 $3.75 $3.25 $3.25 $4.55 $8.50 $10.00
AD DEADLINES
to run
Monday Thursday $ 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday $ 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday $ 5 p.m.
Thursday Saturday $ 5 p.m.
ERRORS
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
The Kansas will 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.
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.
KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Dior Hall 864-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Do you need cash? Bring your unwanted merchandise to the Lawrence Community Authority. Every Wednesday, 7 p.m. Consignments accepted Tuesday, 8 p.m. Wednesday, 9 p.m., 709 Hallway, Call 516-243-3781.
Dressing creatively can be an expression of the inner self. Learn an enjoyable, everyday secret to uplift yourself and give others a little confidence to choose to bring into your personal universe. BECKANMAN informal talk; Monday 10, 7-30BECKANMAN informal talk; Wednesday 10, 7-30BECKANMAN informal talk; Thursday 10, 7-30
Paid Staff Positions Business Manager. Edito
The Kansan is now accepting applications for the Spring Semester Business Manager and Management positions and require some newspaper experience. Application forms are available in the Student Senate Office, 105 B. Church Street, Student Organization, Students and Activities, 220 Strong Hall, and in Rooms 200 and 118 Flint Hall Applications due in room 200 on Friday, 4 p.m., Thursday, November 18.
The University Daily Kansas is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Acehood School that trains from all qualified people regardless of race, religion, color, sex, disability, veteran or national origin, age, or ancestry.
The Lawrence Barr Dance Association and the KU Folk Dance Club present an old AND TIME COUNTRY DANCE class with music from the Alfred Parker Memorial Band. Sunday, 14-8-11 p.m. at Off the Wall Hall. Admission $0.06, with RUIID $2.50. No partners are necessary and welcome. Exhibition provides enjoy! Enjoy!
FOR RENT
bedroom Meadowbrook Apt for rent through Mendonbrook. Please contact occupants at 790-1358 ATTACTIVE FOR DETAILS. Please carpet and furnish. Closet to campus. On KU fus res, water and cable TV.
case ID bcf2309950074648101
first_name chrisman, last_name clark, classID 442-8034,
month plus deposit 482-8034
EXTRAX nice apartments, large and small. Next to campus. Utilizes paid, reasonably priced, 842-418. Housemates wanted: Enjoy a relaxed co-operative living experience, reasonable rate and close to campan toow. Call Sunflower House, 642-481. Lg 1HR, new campus, 817/month plus deposit.
Needed 4 mature students for a very special bedroom order built, very quiet neighbourhood. £800
Livonia in the CHRISTIAN CAMPUS HOUSE this fall!
Become a part of a growing campus
ministry. Call Alan Rosenak, campus minister
842-6592
Enjoy carefree living at affordable prices. Spacious studios, 1 & 2 bedroom apts - Carpeted, draped and on the busline.
The Luxury of Meadowbrook Is Just Right For You
meadowbrook
SPRING SEMESTER
New apart, 2 bed, 1½ bath, fully furnished, close to campus. 841-312-129 or 749-337-535.
Nice, new 2 ft. apt. next to campus /a/c. carpet.
Dress. Available Mid-No. % Dec. rent free!
Fees: $1,000 per month.
Nice one-bedroom, one bath apt with range
proportion and dishwasher. food篮 280,
all kitchen appliances.
APARTMENT LIFE GOT YOU DOWN ? THINKING OF MOVING BACK TO THE CAMPUS LIFESTYLE? THINK OF
NAISMITH HALL
ON CAMPUS
CONVENIENCE WITH
AN OFF CAMPUS
LIFESTYLE!
NAISMITH HALL
843-8559
One and two bedroom apartments. Move your belongings in after finals-spend the holidays at home with family-pay your rent. Travel to campus. Laundry facilities on premises. Proud cable TV. 843-216-1000.
Buffalo Country Studio for lease rent. $275 monthly deposit and ref. 3 mli. N - 941-8116
PRINCETON PLACE PATO APARTMENTS. Now Available, 2 bedroom, 2 bath; perfect for roommates, features wood burning fireplace, 2 car garage with electric space and laundry facilities. The suite surroundings. No pets please $425 per month. Open house 9:30-10:30 daily at 2pm. Princeton Hill, or phone 842-3272 for additional pricing.
Roommaid needed, very nice fully furnished apartment, private room, both, bath/71½/maternal, bedroom, 20'x30'.
Roommate needed in a BIR house. Own room, share
meal kitchen, pool table, color ceramic TV, $150 per month.
washer for rent plus utilities. Nitches privileges.
washer, dryer. Refrigerator. No pets. Non-smoker.
SHIHAE, contemporyar $3 BIR. 13 SW
single graduate, $150 plus dept. no. 48-6005
high school, $155 plus dept. no. 48-6005
SOUTHERN PARKWAY TOWNHOUSES, 8th & 9th. Kasalid. If you’re tired of noise & cramped apartments, you will like it. Our duplexes feature a 3-BED apartment, 2 BATHS, an outdoor pool, & lots of privacy. We have opened now. Call 748-1578 (evenings and weekdays) for more information about our modestly prized townhouses.
STUDIO 140 to Jan May sublease. Can move in
10:47 am, low utilities. Nighborhood
is not listed.
SUBLEASE IN De, Jan, or Jan. size, 18R apt., furnished. Close to campau. 740-3425.
Sulisherace outstanding flowbath 2, 9 in, bath/卫
DR, part, kitchen w/appliances, pool, foal
DR, part, kitchen w/appliances, pool, foal
Sublease bpm. Available Jan, 1 Nice and quiet 2 bedroom sublease bpm. Available Jan, 1 Nice and quiet 2 bedroom sublease bpm. 1 bedroom apartment in Sublease building. No deposit required.
Sublease spacious 1 bedroom apartment in Meadowbrook. Water and cable TV paid. Availible January 31, 2024.
Sublease 3 bedroom apartment. Good location Nart
January. Call 740-248-1607
Sublease 3 hrs.附, in redecoated柜. Pay is
rent until January then $22/month. Call Mattle
(801) 475-3532.
Bibliostasen study de Ap. Dec - 20 June - 89/100/month
Close to campus and downtown. Haven Place Appear
on campus.
Sublease newly decorated 4 bedroom townhouse
Reduced rate. Call 843-9248.
Sublease large, newly remodeled 1 BH apartment.
Four blocks from campus, $400/month, 842-167-67
Four blocks from campus. $200/month. 842-106.
Tired of doing all the housework? Check out
Sunflower cooperative, Secure, clean and inexpensive.
Close to campus too! 842-9412.
very nice 2 bedroom duplex on the campus edge of
Karena or Karen, AlA. 404-3462, for Rita
for Karena or Karen, AlA. 404-3462, for Rita
Warm, inexpensive room. Block from Union Depot. Respond to calls. Comely by 6 or 8 p.m. for an immediate morning to minute wakeup call.
**summer Place - Completely furnished one bedroom apartments available immediately. Located between 14th and 15th on Mass. Only 3 books from KU and 8 other books from $8 per month water. 800-821-1322 or 824-445-
NICELY DECORATED spacious room Furnished
with air-conditioned. Near University.
No parking. No pets. No children.
840-271-6930
FOR SALE
600 Mayverick, stick shift, rebuilt engine
1250 Volvo, variable gear
Remarkarye vendele. 804-813-741
1972 VW Bus. Very good condition. 842-5747.
1723 Chev. Nov 6 cyl. hatchback, good condition
@ BEST OFFER Call 841-0259
1975 Datsun B-20i 4-paced, 2-door, am/fm, AC. Interior & exterior performance good. Excellent shape and comfort. Asking $750.00 but will accept best offer. 183-1833.
1976 Dalam 2008 (2:12) extra clean, no surface rust,
music pad. Size 3in x 3in Cable 749-554. Keep tryin'
1977 HMW 3200 - 4支, a/pC - 45, 450罩, alloyes, new
tissues, cassette, absolutely perfect. 841-1471
1979 Dutton 710 Wagon, metallic blue, 5-axed,
conditioned, very well kept, $4,800, 84-667 or
667.
1979 WV Rahal 30,000 miles, 4-door, new Michelin
tire, fuel injection, FUEL; call 841-7457.
1977 Toyota Corolla 1977-4-24 A/C, radio, great condition. Must see签收. $2700. 843-564-64
81. It GS 590 Sku91: Excellent condition, only 2000 ml.
81. It Priced reasonable. 842 7043
70-Old Delta 85, power steering, power brakes,
automatic transmission. Good condition. Low miles
Hewlett Packard HEAD3000 BD code reader also gaser
1844-623 137 ext. 433 offsprings 841-800晚登息.
Long, gray winter coat with hood. Size W. 14 worn.
5 times. $5; Call 843-715 after 5 p.m.
One very small black female dog. Call Joe Fins at 843-706.
MOBILE HOME in the country. Parkwood, X 30 to 41 W 4th Street home; live in home on 2nd floor; skirting, carpeting, W/D; ceiling fan; central air; artificial fever breaker; gas range; dishwasher; lawn mower. Very nice for 85,200. Call 621-8210.
good condition, good tires. Must 83-2923.
For sale. Fend Senterstaff. Call Dave 843-2200.
Pounds $1,250.
75 VOLKS DASHER 4 appd 2 new radials, new water
new start, more warp, water 843-4727
pump, new starter, run great. 84-8722
78 MALIBU 18, PC. AP, AC, FM/AM, Cruise
NAD 20: walt amp. $18. & W speakers. $135.
Technus turntable plus cartridge. $79, or
off.
control. Spares 2, 1942-8170 after 5.
Classic-1906 For two Sunconverter, great mpg.
Please help! Green Dwarf Macaw *Lost vicinity* 7 & Arkansas. You can call be heard. Check trees, tawn or roofs. Sit on rocks. Swim in water. Go to the rocking ring, lion in, Walton or Robinson. Reward, Susan at 841-5194.
Unlimited camera, Pentax K100. 900 flash, telephoto lens. 135 mm. case. Call (749-875)
Glympus DM 10 35mm camera w / 30mm lens,
perfect condition, perfect kit. Call 8413 7942 after 5 p.m.
Penny Vintage Revival Amplifier, 100 watts, x 2 12
voltage; tuxedo, $300 or best offer, #1412
Must sell an HP 41CV with a card reader. Together or
separate. Bent offer Call 841-2406 between 41 CV
and 41CV.
TENNIS RACKETS. Recently received selection nominated head Coach, Wilson Advantage, Kramer Pro Staff, Dumplin Maxpyl, Davis Classical, Prince Classic. Will boyfriend if in good condition. 8423713
HELP WANTED
If you found a ladder navy blue blazer, please return it. My mother made it and I'm in a tough of trouble. The ladder is in plain view. I call the calculator. CAT X 3109. Please call 748-9055. LOST. Dark blue loose leaf notebook. Contains hard-written western story. HEWARD. Phone # 845-8125. LOST. Dorm key on leather cover around Mali phone. Phone # 845-8125.
Yamaha D3 Prevamp. Excellent condition. Also
D4 dark dressing with Dingle 6 earring and
Tiffany watch. In excellent condition.
COMPUTER OPERATOR II, The University of Kansas Academic Computer Center is seeking a career oriented individual to work (full-time or large-scale computer environment) in a 5 or more department within an operating computers/related auxiliary equipment and be able to work on a relational shift based on experience. Master's degree in $1,277 per month plus state benefits. Submit resume to KU Personnel Services, 102 Carruthers Dr., Lawrence, KS 66043.
06 November 1975
Movie theater job opportunity in Lyons, KS. 200-street-Remodelled 5 yrs. on beautiful town square. Small investment. Let up Dec. 31. Potential to work with TV studio 711-435-1111 ask for Dean.
NURSING • FULL-TIME*PARTIME* Are You Inquired In-Week only work*Either day, evening, or night*You can register for one hour or 12 hour skills? These and other opportunities for registered nurses are now available at the Tupelo State Hospital. Do not hesitate, even if you have been away from nursing ambulance, we can help you back in. You can participate together and support each other. And, we have increased rates of care.* **HOURLY** Contact Beverly Anderson, RN, director of Nursing, Tupelo State Hospital, 2700 S.W. 6th Street, Tupelo, KS 64093.
Oral应聘 needed for Child Development Program. Must have experience and/or study with young children. Send letter of application and hours available to Learning Center, 381 Lawrence, KS 60044.
OVERWASH JOBS: Summer year round, Europe, S. Amer., Australia, All Airs. Fields $400 12100 Sightseeing, free info. Write LJ Box 32-KSI Corona Del Mar, CA 92655
STAND TOGETHER. Special Kids need Special People. The STAND TOGETHER PROGRAM is curricular seeking students who are wards of the State of Kansas. There is a particular need for volunteering and unwrapped students who are wards of the State of Kansas. There is a particular need for volunteering and unwrapped students to children need someone to represent them in all aspects of their special education programs. Far more children need someone to represent with the child, reviewing the special education programs, and attending occasional school conferences with the child, reviewing the special education programs, and attending occasional school conferences with the child, reviewing the special education programs, and two hours per month to stand together with a handicapped child, call toll-free number for more information.
Secretarial assistant needed 10-20 times per week;
for typing and library work, $3.35 or more per hour,
lexile schedule. Must be KU student. Call Kristine
Tiemier 9:30 daily at 4pm/3604 8109 Moldau. Call
Maria Tiemier 9:30 daily at 4pm/3604 8109 Moldau.
Crafts Sale, SAV. Nov. 13, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., Lavender,
Communities, School District 645 Albany, Artists,
Banks, Banking. 270-895-3700.
MISCELLANEOUS
Previews Scholarships available, I3 not too late in naval INVITATION CALL: 681-3611
ENCORE COPY CORPS. We photocopy englargements W.125th W.210th - Holiday Plaza.
A Special For Students Haircuts 7. Perms - 822 Charme 1033% Masei 843-200 Ask for Dennis Jeeves.
A Strong Key outfit: Benefit Bentley Lapur, Chaired Wine Kit Box, Bentley Lapur, Memorial of Marion Kinsler 843-8128 Illustrate 843-8128
PERSONAL
Derma Care
The Ultimate Skin Care Therapy
Deep Pore Cleansing
Deep Pore Treatment
*Extraction*
*Toning and Firming*
Oily Skin Replenished Skin
Men, Women, Children
Men, Women, Children
Genne's 842-8500
ATTENTION WALMERS, WALMERDRETTS, AND WE will have our group picture taken for the yearbook. We will have a large poster of Attention! **Look for the "Do Not Be Fooled!"** posters on campus. An informed voter. Feedback
CARTOON-G-GRAM from now thru holiday season-
special discount rates. Poster size, full color,
hand delivered. Put your friends in cartoon! The creat
society imaginative person. CARTOON-G-
841-BIH55
also special with a touch of charm from the past; stop by Harb at Vintage Rideway. (985) Mass. 671-4200.
For good quality, clean, affordable next-to-new clothes for women KATT'S CELLAR SHOPPE 725 New Hampshire in the Marketplace. Sat - Jan 10:30 - 5:30
COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES; safety
insurance coverage is provided.
conditionally assured Kansas City Area Cars
are insured.
ENCORE COPY CORP is your one stop thesis shop.
ENCORE COPY CORP, Ridgway Plaza
RESEARCH PAPERS
TOLL-FREE HOTLINE
Tau Omega Lambda presents:
800-621-5745
IN ILLINOIS CALL 312-922-000
AUTHORS' RESEARCH, ROOM 800
S. Dearborn, Chicago, IL 800
478-826-1700
800-621-5745
Experience, counts. VOTE. CONSENSDUS Student
Electoral Senate Nov 17th to 18th.
For Original Music Only:
a showcase
of talent
Nov.12,13 at 7:30 P.M.
Nov.14 at 2:00 P.M.
Ticket Outlet - Main Union
Residence Halls
Friendship Hall
Tickets are available at:
Friday: Margaret $12.55, 7:35 HAPPY HOUR for 14:30
from Friday on prt only. Up & Under
above Johnson's Tavern
Alderson Auditorium
Kansas Union
Call 864-2495, 864-2494, or 864-2661 for ticket reservations & info.
"Grandma," I'm sure I can arrange to have all of your belongings removed this year! *Happy Birthday*
Scholarship Halls
Various fraternities &
sororites
HRADACHE, BACKACHE, STIFF NECK, LEAG
FIND and correct the CASUSE of the problem!
Dr. Mark Johnson for modern矫形care therapy.
843-950. Accepting Blue Cross and Lone Star
THE EXCHANGE
2606 IOWA
92.00 - Ku Student w. 14
(Nov. 12-14)
62.50 - General public
$1.50 - Pre-sale (before
Nov 13th
Instant passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization,
immigration ID, and of course fine portraits
Study 280.
2222 Iowa 841-BREW
--sororities Information Booth
PRICES
jazz, rock-n-moll, boogie, swing,
big-band, ballad, waits, "uncle JD"
material, tone poems, "blue-jay"
music, music, music, airtime-
WE HAVE IT!
LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044
West Coast Saloon
TGIF
(a KU tradition)
25° Draws
every Friday
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1
Page 16 University Daily Kansan. November 12. 1982
Cooper out; Bastin in for CU contest Jayhawks go for second straight against Buffs
Kansas has not won a game on the road all season and the Colorado Buffaloes have yet to win a game at home.
One of these streaks, barring a tie, will come to an end tomorrow when the Kansas Jayhawks take on the Buffaloes at Folsom Field in Boulder, Colo.
Kickoff is set for 2:30 n.m. CST.
Coach Don Fambrough brings a revived Jayhawk football team into the Colorado game, coming off a big victory over the Iowa State Cyclones last week. It was the Jayhawks' second victory this season against five losses and two ties. But despite having just two victories, though said the Jayhawks were in a lot better shape this week at than the same time last week.
"LAST WEEK we faced a must-win situation, Fambridge said. "If we had lost to Iowa
101
GINO
STRIPPOLI
Sports Editor
"We needed a tonic to help us for our last two games and we got one. The victory helped restore our confidence and we needed that more than anything."
State, I honestly think that we would have had a tough time winning another game this season.
The things that the Jayhawks needed the most were a healthy Frank Seurer and a running game that did more than run to the line of scrimmage and stop. Seurer wasn't totally healthy but he was effective, and the running game, which had not produced a 100-yard rusher all season, had fullback E.J. Jones rush for 112 yards. The rushing of Jones and tailback Phoebe Johnson installed in the second comeback by the Jayhawks, as the KU offense kept the Iowa State defense, ranked sixth in the nation at that time, off balance in the second half.
And if the Jayhawks can get the same balance they had last week, the game against Colorado shouldn't even be close.
Seurer will be throwing against a Colorado defensive secondary that ranks last in the Big Eight, giving up an average of 172.2 yards a game. To make it even worse, the Buffaloes are going to win, giving up 410 yards a game. Fambrough, however, isn't looking at the Buffaloes as a pushover.
"We ARE hoping that we can take up offensively just where we left off last week." Farnbrough said. "We had the ISU defense off balance and that's what you want to have."
"Even though their pass defense is not highly ranked, we didn't emphasize the passing game any more than we usually do. When you go out to Colorado, you might be playing in a blizzard. You just don't know what the weather will be like."
Not only may the weather be against the Jayhawks, but one of the top players on the Kansas offensive队 will miss the game with the Buffaloes and a second will be at less than 100 percent. Freshman fullback Charles Cooper, Jones' backup, will miss the contest because of an injured ankle. Split end Russ Bastin, who was listed as doubtful for Saturday's contest against the Ravens, will not play but Fambrigh said Bastin was playing at about $9 per rightmost row.
Harvey Fields, a sophomore from Arkansas City will take Cooner's place behind Jones.
The injury situation on defense continues to increase. Dave Mehrer, who took over for nose guard Walter Parrish when Parrish went out with a knee injury, hurt his knee in the ISU contest and is out for tomorrow's game. Freshman Steve Nave will stay in his place. Bengals have not yet selected Cameron and junior Pat Kelley. Conner will also play behind defensive end Broderick Thompson, who last week played his first complete game since early in the season.
Thompson, who had been playing with a cast on his foot, played without it last week and had a few shots.
Lawrence Track Club draws more than 1,100 for contest
Enter fees are $10 a person and must be submitted at least a half-hour before the race. The five-kilometer race begins at 9:00 a.m. The 10-kilometer race begins at 10:30 a.m. The team are already closed.
"We have about 500 people from Lawrence competing," said Steve Ridgway, a spokesman from Maupintour. "This is the second year that there has been a run of this sort, but the first time Maupintour has helped sponsor t."
Last year, the Lawrence Track Club had about 400 participants.
"MANY of the runners have returned from last year to compete again," said Ridgway. "Many of them said that they covered back because they enjoyed the scenic course."
Among the numerous entries are a woman who is seven months pregnant and a 40-year old nun. There is also a contestant traveling from Wisconsin to run in the classic.
"We would like to see a lot of spectators come out and watch," said Ridgway. "We think that's as important as getting people to participate."
Trophies will be awarded to the top male and female finishers in each race. In addition to the trophies, the two winners in the 10-kilometer run will each receive two United Airlines tickets good for roundtrip flights to two cities in the continental United States.
Other prizes include hand-made pottery pieces, ribbons, which will be given to each participant under 15 who competes in the five-kilometer run, and Maupintour Fall Classic windbreakers, which will be given to the first 760 entrants.
ENTRY FORMS can be picked up in the Kansas Union or at 900 Massachusetts St.
Both races will begin at Memorial Stadium and wind through the KU campus before rolling along the open road in the West Campus area and finishing back at the stadium. A map of the courses is in today's Kansan.
Anyone needing more information on the Maupaintour Fall Classic should contact race-co-director Dee Boock of the Lawrence Track 141-3811-387 or Louis Copt at Maupaintur, 843-1213.
Proceeds from the Fall Classic will go to the Lawrence Track Club. The race is also sanctioned by The Athletic Congress and the RRCA.
After the runs, a "friendly skies drawing" will be held in which two more United Airlines flights are flying.
"THAT WAS by far Broderick's best game this year," Fambrough said. "He's had a good week of practice, and I think him getting last through all his work helped him. He also helped him out a lot for his morale and attitude."
One player that definitely played beyond all out last week was junior linebacker r Mike Arbanas. Arbanas had 19 tackles against the Cyclones. Arbanas said he and fellow linebacker Eddie Simmons said he "best games of their careers."
"He needs to finish strong. We need someone up there to play beyond all out."
The defensive secondary will also be put to the test this week if Colorado's quarterback, Randy Essington, is healthy and plays. The Kansas pass defense now ranks No.1 in the country, while the rush defense ranks 96 out of 97.
FOR THE Jayhawks, this has been a crazy
season. They were picked to finish high in the division and possibly find their way into the national rankings. But those predictions have failed with the dismal 5-2-2 start. Or have they?
If the Jayhawks can win their last two games, which they are definitely capable of doing, the Jayhawks would finish in fourth place with an outside shot at third. It would mark the third straight year that Kansas finished in the top division.
"I's crazy." Fambrough said. "We still have an excellent shot at placing in the top division. If you would have told me we would have a shot at winning, I wouldn't have begunning of the year, I would have said no way."
JAYHAWK NOTES—Quarterback Frank Seurer leads the Big Eight in passing yardage with 1,320 yards for the year. He has now thrown
for 3,136 carpenter yards, second best in KU history behind David Jaynes. 5,122 yards. Searne uses just 98 yards to pass former Missouri great Steve Pisarkiewicz for the No. 10 spot on the all-time Big Eight list. He needs 113 yards for the ninth position and 151 yards for the eighth spot.
Punter Burcy Scribner continues to lead the league in putting with a 44.8 yards a kick average. Scribner and the Jahways rank eighth in the nation in net putting with a 40.9 mark.
Junior Barren Green leads the Big Eight in punt returns with a 10.6 average. Green's 77-yard punt return against Tusa earlier this year has him tied with Oklahoma's Marcus Dupree for the longest punt return in the conference.
In other league play this weekend, Missouri is at Oklahoma, Nebraska travels to Iowa State and Kansas State hosts Oklahoma State.
Predictions
| | Strippoli | Cook | George | Cooksey | Evans | Hamilton |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Kansas at Colorado | Kansas 31-13 | Kansas 28-7 | Kansas 28-3 | Kansas 24-14 | Kansas 24-10 | Kansas 24-10 |
| Washington at Arizona State | Arizona State 17-0 | Arizona State 14-10 | Washington 21-14 | Washington 24-21 | Washington 17-14 | Arizona State 21-17 |
| Georgia at Auburn | Auburn 21-20 | Georgia 35-7 | Georgia 42-35 | Georgia 28-21 | Georgia 42-6 | Georgia 35-10 |
| Nebraska at Iowa State | Nebraska 55-0 | Nebraska 63-0 | Nebraska 56-10 | Nebraska 42-7 | Nebraska 35-9 | Nebraska 42-0 |
| Oklahoma State at Kansas State | Kansas State 21-17 | Kansas State 10-7 | Kansas State 49-42 | Kansas State 24-10 | Kansas State 14-10 | Kansas State 10-7 |
| Missouri at Oklahoma | Oklahoma 17-14 | Oklahoma 24-10 | Oklahoma 42-21 | Oklahoma 21-10 | Oklahoma 28-17 | Oklahoma 27-10 |
| Penn State at Notre Dame | Notre Dame 24-21 | Penn State 10-9 | Penn State 35-28 | Notre Dame 24-21 | Notre Dame 28-21 | Notre Dame 20-6 |
| Stanford at UCLA | Stanford 35-31 | Stanford 21-20 | UCLA 21-3 | UCLA 28-24 | Tie 10-10 | Stanford 28-24 |
| Clemson at Maryland | Maryland 27-21 | Clemson 20-10 | Clemson 13-10 | Clemson 21-17 | Clemson 24-7 | Clemson 24-14 |
| Texas A&M at Arkansas | Arkansas 55-14 | Arkansas 28-7 | Texas A&M 22-14 | Arkansas 28-14 | Arkansas 10-0 | Arkansas 35-10 |
| Season Totals | 56-28-6—622 | 58-28-6—644 | 54-30-6—600 | 60-24-6—666 | 59-25-6—655 | 57-27-6—633 |
The predictors are Gino Strippoll, sports editor; Tom Cook, associate sports editor; Gene George, editor; Susan Cooksey, business manager; Jim Evans, photographer; and Trace Hamilton, head copy chief and past Kansan sports editor.
Women's hoop team battles injuries
Sports Writer
By DAVE MCQUEEN
The 1982-83 edition of the Kansas women's basketball team limped into the Parrott Athletic Center conference room yesterday, looking like a ghost. The players were in face reporters and photographers on Media Day.
Vickie Adkins, who sat out last year because of a knee injury, was on crutches. Chris Hurley, who recently underwent arthroscopic surgery, sported a tightly-bandaged knee. Caroline Mixon had one leg wrapped from her thigh to just above her ankle.
The team was so banged up, in fact, that they had to cancel a scrimmage because they didn't know where it was.
And if that wasn't enough, Tracy Claxton, last year's leading scorer and rebounder, announced last month that she was quitting the team. The Washington Wizards beat 6-6 Philiacla Allen becomes eligible in January.
er as a team very early. They obviously need each other."
ALL IN ALL, basketball coach Marian Washington and her young team, which opens its season Nov. 20 against Drake, have their work cut out for them.
But they are far from discouraged.
"This team has an awful lot of heart," Washington said. "They've really pulled together."
Like last year's 16-14 team, the Jayhawks are mostly young and inexperienced. Besides Claxton, KU lost five players. Leonora Taylor, center, and Rhonda Spears, guard, graduated; Mary Chrynelich, guard, transferred to Wisconsin; and Robbin Smith, who married KK football player Wayne Capers during the eighth, and Rose Peeples did not return either.
But some experienced players are returning, including 5-10 Angie Snider, guard, Hurley, and 5-9 Angie Taylor, guard. Others who should contribute early are Mary Myers, a powerful 5-6 guard who out last season with a knee injury, and Ann Schell, a 6-6 freshman center.
Here's a position-by-position look at the team: CENTER - Washington doesn't mince words when talking about the inside game. "We're in bad shape inside," she said. "We're going to be able to can get Vickie back. We are looking towards the conference, and we should have Allen by then."
Without Claxton, who averaged 20 points and 14.4 rebounds a game last year, the Hawks are going to be weak inside initially. But Adkins, who sat out last year when she injured a knee a week before the season began, should be ready by December.
serious — just a blow to the knee, "Washington said. 'Vickie should make a very positive contribution to the team. She's not quite the best she is, but she is an excellent shot both inside and out."
"The doctors confirmed that it was nothing
KU's inside game should improve in January when Allen, who transferred last February from South Carolina, will be eligible. A 6-4 junior, she is one of the highest female players in the nation.
GUARDS — The Jayhawks might hurt inside, but they should make up for it outside. Leading the retirements is Snider, who started all but two and averaged 13.5 points a game last year.
"Snider's very much a key player this year," Washington said. "She has proven herself as a leader."
Sharing off guard duties with Snider, Washington said, should be Taylor, averaged six points a game last year, and Myers. Valerie Quarles, freshman, may also see some action.
FORWARDS — The Jayhawk will have some talent here too, but, as with the centers, it will take time to develop. Like Snider, who also plays forward, Washington sees Hurley as a key player because of her deadly outside shot and experience.
Other forwards include Mixon, the only non-scholarship athlete on the team, Barbara Adkins, Vickie's sister, and Tina Stauffer, a 5-9 freshman many compare to Hurley.
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Vol. 93, No. 61 USPS 650-640
Poles rejoice at Walesa's homecoming
By United Press International
GDANSK, Poland—Solidarity leader Lech Walessa returned home after 11 months of detention yesterday to a triumphant and tearful reunion with his wife and seven children and jubilantly halted 1,500 well-wishers with cries of "we shall win."
"We will need strength . . . We won't be down on our knees and we will have to operate with courage and thoughtfulness."
From the window of his six-room apartment, he raised his hands, with fingers forming a "V" for victory, and shouted, "Obviously we will win over you, and about it. But to win does not mean to destroy."
"Lech, Lech, Lech," shouted the crowd in return as Walessa, the 30-year-old leader of the August 1980 shipyard strike that gave birth to a national wave of anti-communist working-class suburb of Zaspa about 4:30 p.m.
Supporters who kept a vigil ahead the Walesa apartment for hours before his arrival roared approval, raised their hands in victory and chanted "There is no freedom without Solidari-
NOT ONCE did Walisa mention the name of Solidarity — which was outlawed Oct. 8 — but he pledged he "will not depart from the road or betray the ideals of August."
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"I哭ed when he came in but the children didn't," his wife, Damata, said in a telephone
"It has been an enormous experience. There has been tremendous joy," she said. "Now I would only wish to be with him alone."
WALESA HAD been interested since the imposition of marital law Dec. 13, and in recent months, had been held in a government-owned estate. A government-controlled village of Arlamwa, near the Soviet border.
Davon Cunningham/KANSAN
The crowd sang the Polish national anthem and cheered Walesa, who looked heavier and had longer hair since he was last seen before his arrest.
Charlie Gray, Lee's Summit, Mo., stridhed up Jayhawk Boulevard in route to a second-place finish in the 10-kilometer run of the Maupourt Fall Classic Sunday. Paul Schultz, an ex-KU runner from Lawrence, recorded the best time for men in the 10K Run at 30:33:56. Mary Shaffer, Kansas City, Kan., had the best time for women at 38:34:50. Chris Currie, Topeka, won the 5K Run with a time of 15.56.97. Margaret Hertstein.
His homecoming relieved the anxiety of his supporters and family, who had no word of his whereabouts since authorities said he left the hunting lodge early Saturday.
The mystery surrounding Wales's release became even more puzzling Saturday night when Polish television editors, with no explanation, canceled the broadcast of a 40-minute interview with Wales filmed Saturday just before he left the lodge.
Cape Girardeau, Mo., was cuckooed by 1853. Orff joined them among the bohemians. In the 5K Team Run, “Let’s Take Our Shorts Off” finished first among male university living groups with a time of 96.14.62. Sellards Hall took first for the female university living groups with a time of 121.57.12.
Leaked excerpts from the interview had quoted Wales as endorsing "national agreement," but "not on my knees."
See POLAND page 5
Odd Williams, KU benefactor, dies
By BONAR MENNINGER
Staff Reporter
Odd Williams, well known in Lawrence as a community leader, supporter of the University
Douglas L. Hornsby
Odd Williams . . 1971 photo . .
of Kansas and former state legislator, died early Friday morning of a heart attack. He was 56.
Williams was stricken about 5:30 a.m. at his home at 700 California St. He was rushed to Lawrence Memorial Hospital where he was pronounced dead about 7:00 a.m.
a memorial service for Williams will be held at 11 a.m. today at the Plymouth Congregational Church. He will be crenated. There will be a memorial service in the ceremony, in Lawrence before the memorial service.
With his father, Dick, and brother Skipier, Williams helped found the Outland Fund, which raised over $2 million for athletic scholarships between 1949 and 1973.
IN RECONGNITION of the Williams' service, the name was changed to the Williams Educational Fund in 1973, and it continues to provide private monies for athletic scholarships.
Williams' many interests in the community and University left a road of friendship and accomplishment behind him, particularly in the area of KU athletics.
Chancellor Gene A. Budgi said of Williams, "He was a rare human being. He made good things happen. He was one of KU's best friends. He stood for progress. He believed in this
"Significantly, he left this community a better place, then he found."
TED EOWENS, KU basketball coach who had known Williams for 23 years, said, "He was a great friend in good times, and a great friend in bad times. He was everything you could want in life."
University, and its potential for service. He will be missed by all of us on Mount Oread.
Football coach Don Fambrough called Williams' death a tremendous loss to the state, the University and, in particular, the athletic department.
"He was a great one," Fambrough said. "It was a loss for me because we were in school together and I've known him all these years. He was a close personal friend."
Williams was a resident of Lawrence all his life. He was born Sep. 2, 1926, graduated from Culver Military Academy in 1944 and entered KU where he graduated from the School of Business
HE GRADUATED from the School of Law in 1952, entered the United States Air Force that same year and rose to the rank of first lieutenant.
By DIRK MILLER
State group predicts $61 million deficit
Staff Reporter
A group of economists Friday confirmed the state's troubled situation when they predicted a $61 million deficit in the state's general fund if the state continues on its present course.
See WILLIAMS page 3
The projection, by the state's 13-member Revenue Estimating Group, is tied to a projected increase in the national economy that is expected after January, said Darwin Dacoff, KU professor of economics and a member of the group.
Last year's projections also were tied to a projected rise in the national economy that never occurred, Daicoff said. The projections led the state into budgeting $153 million more than the group predicts the state will collect in taxes this fiscal year.
Gov. John Carlin announced that he would initiate an allotment system to help cover the state's projected deficit. Final plans of the allotment system are expected to be released by
AN ALLOTMENT system would require state agencies to justify their appropriations. The system would allow the state to make selective cuts in agencies' appropriations, said William Bunten, R-Rossville, a member of the House Ways and Means Committee.
Bunten said that cutting state appropriations to cover the $61 million projected deficit would
"The $61 million estimate just gets you even, it doesn't leave any balance at the end of the year," he said.
Lautceil said the $61 million deficit was projected only after depleting all of the the
Bunten said the state probably would have to cut at least $91 million from state appropriations to leave it enough money to pay its bills at the beginning of next year.
MICHAEL SWENSON, Carlin's assistant press secretary, said that the governor's plan included not only the allotment system but also a change in the way the state collected revenues and a "looking in" of voluntary cuts made this year to state agencies as permanent budget reductions.
Swenson said that changes in the state's cash flow patterns would help boost state revenues. The state's quarterly collection of withholding taxes, which had been frozen, collection under Carlin's plan, Swenson said.
He said that the allotment system probably would not affect state agencies that had already installed the technology.
"AT THIS POINT, if the governor's plan is fully implemented, the governor's intention is not to go back to those state agencies," Swenson said.
Bunten said he thought the state probably would be able to prevent more cuts from Board of Regents schools.
"I think we could probably do that. Higher education has already taken a 4 percent cut," he said.
Advisers overestimate; state revenue falls short
Bunten said that more cuts in appropriations were not the only means the state had of covering the project deficient. The state could overcome revenues rather than cutting appropriations.
By DARRELL PRESTON
Staff Reporter
Since inflation and recessions became facts of life, leaders have depended on advisers to foresee future economic conditions.
Although the advisers are not always right, they give leaders a base from which to work on them.
Kansas lawmakers depend on a group of economic advisers, unofficially known as the economic consensus group, to forecast how much money the state will collect.
The estimating group is composed of representatives of the division of the budget, the department of revenue, the legislative research department and two economists, one from the University of Kansas and one from Kansas State University.
The group met Friday to revise estimates for the current fiscal year and to make new changes.
THEY SAID that the state's financial reserves could be depleted by Jan. 1 because the state had budgeted $133 million more than he had received in taxes so far this fiscal year, prompting Gov. John Carlin to announce an allotment system of budget cuts Saturday.
State agency and public school budgets may be cut so that Kansas falls fiscal 1983 with a balanced budget, which is mandated by Kansas law. And the estimates may affect the size of the severance tax Gov. John Carlin will request next year, state officials say.
The group made its estimates last year under the assumption that the economy would be strong, and its assumptions for next year project an increased growth rate.
SINCE 1974, spending allocations for state agencies and projects financed by the state's general fund have lived and died by the group's efforts. The State Legislature and Legislature use for allocating state funds.
The estimates are important, state leaders say, because if actual revenues are less than
estimated, the state must adjust its spending in the middle of a fiscal year, as it did this year.
When the group met in March, it revised its estimate for total revenue for fiscal 1983 down from $1.45 billion to $1.2 billion.
The error in revenue estimates this year was the worst since the group formed, said Jarvin Emerson, professor of economics at Kansas State University and a member of the consensus
BECAUSE OF the error, revenues were 47 million short in the last quarter of fiscal 1982 and prompted Carlin to ask state agencies to reduce spending 4 percent for fiscal 1983.
James Bibb, associate director of business affairs at KU and formerly Kansas budget director for 27 years, said some people might be unaware that they are immune to the rest of the country's problems.
"I didn't participate in making the original predictions, but I know that the predictions were for a good or better economy," Bibb said. "But I can't explain what we thinking. I wonder why we are as optimistic about the future performance of the economy as they were."
"We may have developed a mind set in this state that it couldn't happen here. But, of course, it can happen here."
DESPIEZE LAST year's overestimation, the group expects slow recovery in Kansas early next year. If the recovery does not come as expected, he has to have to be expected as soon as it was last summer.
Carlin asked the Kansas Board of Regents, which oversees the budgets of state universities, to absorb about $11.2 million, which was about 50 percent of the $22.5 million reduction.
In the process, KU reduced its budget by about $3 million. However, Regents schools were not expected to be affected by the allotment system announced Saturday.
In recent interviews, members of the group said they had not expected such a lackluster national economy when they had made predictions for this year.
"We expected that by the second half of '82
See RUBGET page 5
Weather
A bed with pillow and alarm clock on the floor.
Music therapy strikes chord with senior citizens
Today will be fair with a high around 50 according to the National Weather Service. Winds will be from the south at 15 to 25 mph
By DAN PARELMAN Staff Reporter
Tonight there will be increasing
Tomorrow will be cloudy with a high in the mid- to upper 50s.
In the front row, Anne Maxwell, Jewell Hall, Alberta Huston and Rosa Sims cradle their country-and-western guitars and stare at their music stands.
The Senior Scholar Band sits poised.
The back row singers sit patiently
Arlene Schaub, a singer, sits up.
Monday Morning
"Our first number is 'Amazing Grace,' she says.
ke, a singer, stands up.
Alicia Gibbons, KU's music therapy director,
plays the first notes on the piano.
"Audrey, on three on," she says, turning to Audrey Jones.
The band was entertaining the Pioneer Club, a senior citizen service and recreation group, at the Mint. The band played for over 100 hours.
ALL OF THE band members are over 60. Each signs up for free instruction and practice.
Gibbons has directed the band since its inception six years ago.
"Our next number is 'Side By Side,' " Schake says.
A man in the audience gets up, and supporting himself on the buffet table, dashes off a little soft
After "Side By Side" ends, the audience applauds the band and the dancer, who bows.
Gibbons said that although the band had fun, it took its music seriously. She said the band was "extremely unhappy with 'poor-quality products.'"
"They'll holler. 'Hey, we're not learning anything,' if the band is running through a new song."
MOST OF the members did not play a musical instrument when they joined the band, she said. Before she began teaching the band, Gibbons did not think most people over 60 could learn to play
"... You made me you, I didn't want to do it.
I didn't want to do it."
Anne Maxwell sings along as she strums a red country-and-western guitar.
Maxwell said she did not know how to play
SEE BAND page 3.
TOMMY BLAKE
Jim Evans/KANSAN
All eyes are on Bo Abella as he conducts the Senior Scholar Band during a performance at South Park Recreation Center.
---
Page 2 University Daily Kansan, November 15, 1982
News Briefs From United Press International
U.S. plants face shutdown if Canadian strike persists
DETROIT—Leaders of the United Auto Workers at Chrysler Corp.'s five U.S. car and truck assembly plants have been told those operations will be shut down in December if the Canadian autoworkers' strike continues.
The plants are dependent on Canadian-made parts, Chrysler took the union. The strike by 10,000 Chrysler workers in Canada entered its 10th week.
Leaders of the unions representing workers at the 3. automaker's Jefferson Avenue plant and the Warren truck assembly plant, both in Detroit, the Newark, Del., K-lar assembly plant; the Belvidere, III., small car plant; and the St. Louis, Mo., plant have been told they have sufficient parts to keep operating through the end of November and possibly through the second week in December.
Urysler officials have said that the two plants in the Detroit area might be the first to shut down.
Friday, Chrysler announced 2,100 new layoffs — biking the total number of strike-related layoffs in the United States to 4,500.
Two presumed dead aboard tugboat
The spokesman said authorities had not discovered the bodies of the two men but thought they were still aboard the boat, which is at the bottom.
CAPE GIRARDEAU, Mo — Two men who were aboard a tugboat that sank after it was run over by a tow of barges were apparently killed in the accident.
The crewmen of the tugboat were identified as James P. Shuffit, 53, of Scott City, Mo., and Don Henderson, 50, of Olive Branch, Ill.
The spokesman said the accident occurred Saturday when the small tugboat was assisting a larger towboat.
"For some reason it got around in front of the towboat and barges and couldn't get out of the way," the spokesman said. "It was pushed over into the water."
Begin's wife dies from heart attack
A spokeswoman at Hadassan Hospital in Jerusalem said Mrs. Begin died of a heart attack.
LOS ANGELES—Prime Minister Menachem Begin's wife of 43 years, Alza, died in Jerusalem early yesterday and Beg cancelled the rest of his work.
Begin was to have made his first formal appearance of the U.S. visit yesterday. He was scheduled to speak to the National Council of Jewish Federations at the Bonaventure Hotel.
Council President Martin Citrin broke the news to 1,000 stunned delegates gathered for the morning speech, saying that Mrs. Begin should be given more praise from minister Pinel.
Outside the hotel, several groups opposed to the prime minister's policies and American visit had gathered for demonstrations.
President Reagan was to have met with Begin Friday at the White House.
150.000 hail Nam vets, memorial
WASHINGTON—About 150,000 flag-waving Americans Saturday gave a belated welcome home to Vietnam veterans, who marched down Constitution Avenue to dedicate their new stark black granite memorial.
More than 8,000 veterans marched in blustery weather to warm cheers. Those cheers were in sharp contrast to cold silence, which greeted them a decade ago when they came home from the nation's longest and most unpopular war.
Thousands of veterans, many holding the hands of their children and wives, then converged on the Mall for the dedication of the controversial Vietnam Veterans Memorial, bearing the names of the 57,939 who were killed or listed as - missing in action in Southeast Asia.
Industries welcome lift on sanctions
DALLAS- President Reagan's announcement of the lifting of U.S. trade sanctions against the Soviet pipeline was welcomed by officials of Dallas-based Dresser Industries, the first company to experience the pinch of the trade policy.
Dresner spokesman Ed Lutter said the president's decision should end the company's court action against the Commerce Department to lift
Reagan imposed stiff restrictions on trade with the Soviet Union, particularly on materials used in construction of a pipeline to carry oil from Siberia to Europe. The sanctions were a response to the Soviet Union's support of martial law in Poland.
Dresser's French subsidiary, Dresser France, was the first company caught by the ban.
The sanctions did not significantly affect Dresser Industries, Luter said. The French subsidiary accounts for about two percent of the company's $4.5 billion annual sales.
Officials arrest 21 in Maine pot raid
Fifty police officers surrounded a lobster pier in this small, mid-cast community Saturday night and moved in when people began unloading marijuana from a 49-foot fishing boat, said Peter McCarthy, supervisor of special investigations for the Maine State Police.
BREMEN, Maine—State and federal officials seized a fishing boat containing 30 tons of marijuana and arrested 24 people on drug charges, officials said yesterday.
Authorities immediately made 21 arrests and three more were arrested in the area yesterday, McCarthy said. Ten were from Maine, four from Michigan and two from Massachusetts. Eight Colombian nationals were also taken into custody.
The arrests followed an investigation that has been continuing for several years, McCarthy said. The fishing boat seized in the raid was spotted by the Coast Guard off the coast, he said.
Correction
Due to a reporting error, John Musgrave was incorrectly identified in a story in Friday's Kansan as director of the Disabled Veterans Outreach Program. Musgrave is a counselor with that group. Also, Musgrave was with the 3rd Marine Division unit in Vietnam, not the 8th Marine Division.
Brezhnev buried, saluted by USSR
By United Press International
MOSCOW—Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev was buried in Red Square this morning to the sound of gun salutes fired across Russia, his final resting place one of the most revered in the Soviet Union.
The official news agency Tass said that at the time of the burial, workers across Russia were to observe five minutes of silence. Whistles would blow for three minutes in factories, railways and on ships.
THE SPACE for burial in Red Square is limited and is reserved for the nation's most revered statesmen. It is considered the highest Soviet honor to be buried in the tiny cemetery behind the Kremlin. It was the 10th person to be buried there.
Gun salutes were to be fired in Moscow, Leningrad and 20 other major Soviet cities in a final salute to Brezhnev, under whose leadership the nation rose to nuclear parity with the United States in a decade of violent arms buildup.
Among those buried on Red Square are former dictator Josef Stalin, the former president of East Germany and Zhunksy, Marshal Klement Vors浩lov and other Communist heroes.
Undeterred by bitter cold and the steady procession of world leaders past Brezhnev's body in the House of Soviets, thousands of Soviet citizens were killed. They were many wiping away tears as they filed past his flower-bedded bier.
ashes of American journalist John Reed and pioneer consoonaut Yuri Gagarin are among those buried in the wall.
An orchestra and a military band alternated in playing funeral music as delegations moved in and out to stand on the stage, a moment in front of the open coffin.
VICE PRESIDENT George Bush, Secretary of State George Shultz and U.S. Ambassador to Moscow Arthur Hartman arrived at the House of Soviets late in the day to pay a solemn tribute to Brezhnev. After standing silently in front of the late Soviet president, Boris Yeltsin expressed his "personal condolences and respects" to Brezhnev's widow, Viktoria, 74.
As he approached the black-veiled Mrs. Brehnev, who has been sitting by the side of her husband's sobbing wife, she asked his counselors he lay in state, she rose and smiled.
On arrival at Moscow's airport, Bush described Breezham "a strong man and
THE U.S. delegation also presented a wreath reading "From the People of America."
a fierce fighter for his deeply held convictions."
Chinese Foreign Minister Huang Hua, the first senior Chinese official to visit Moscow in 18 years, was among the mourners. West German President Karl Carstens, Foreign Minister Hans-Dietrich Gerschick and Ambassador Andrea Meyer-Landrut filed past in mid-afternoon.
The Soviet citizens waited hours in the gray chill of a mid-November day to pass through the chamber. The line waiting to view the body stretched more than $1\frac{1}{2}$ miles through the center of town.
Most of those in line were quiet as they marched through the side entrance and up the staircase, draped in red and black crepe. Black gauze covered the gold chandeliers and a huge portrait of Brezhnev on the landing was trimmed with red and black ribbons.
AT THE RATE of over 100 people a minute, 6,000 an hour, they passed through the doors, flanked all along the line by soldiers to keep order.
The red and black coffin, mounted on a gun carriage, was towed by an
armored car at a slow pace to Red Square, escorted by stepping-stopping, black-booted soldiers while a marching band played.
After Bush paid tribute to Breznev, he appealed to the new Kremlin leadership to help solidify U.S.-Soviet trust in "the pursuit of peace."
"We have come to declare to the Soviet leaders, to the Soviet people and to the world that the United States is devoted to the pursuit of peace and a reduction of global tensions," Bush said shortly after arriving in Moscow.
SEIZING ON the change of Soviet leadership to open a new era of cooperation between the superpowers, Bush said he came to Moscow in "a spirit of hope" to rebuild U.S.-Soviet relations and to disorientated rapidly in the last three years.
Brezhnev's successor, former KGB chief Yuri Andropov, was not present as Bush spoke. But the two men were expected to meet at a Kremlin reception after Brezhnev's burial at Red Square.
"Fears, suspicions and distrust must be replaced by hope, by trust, by mutual cooperation." Bush said. "The barriers that now divide men and nations can be dismantled and discarded."
Uncertainty may delay nuclear talks,prof says
By MATTHEW SCHOFIELD Staff Reporter
Any progress on a nuclear weapons freeze, such as the one called for by a recent Lawrence opinion poll, could be stalled by the death of Soviet President León Breznev, a KU professor said yesterday.
Jarslowo Piekalkiewicz, professor of Soviet and Eastern European Studies and political science, said that despite the appointment of Yuri Andropov as party chief, the Soviet power struggle would not really be over for two or three years and then until the power struggle ended it was unlike that any progress would be made.
"In this period of maybe two or three years the Soviet Union is not likely to do anything dramatic," he said.
Andropov, as well as most other Soviet leaders, is elderly, and that might put any action off even more, he said. A new generation of leaders will have to come into power before the government is stable enough make any policy changes of such magnitude as a nuclear freeze.
ONCE THE new generation comes into power, though, the Soviets should be willing to talk about a freeze, Pieliekiewicz said.
"I don't think the new generation is going to increase the potential danger of nuclear weapons," he said. "The Soviets will be willing to go further than a freeze; they'll want to talk about reduction."
Kate Torrey, secretary of the Lawrence Coalition for Peace and Justice, said she did not think anyone was sure what course Soviet policy would follow, but that the coalition would continue to push for a freeze even through a three-year wait.
"In no way will this lessen our commitment to a nuclear freeze," she said. "But the freeze is only the first step towards peace. Even if we were a reality tomorrow we would go on pushing for arms reduction."
ALTOUGH the freeze is not a reality, the nuclear freeze opinion poll in Lawrence is, and the results strongly in favor of a freeze, she said.
"We consider the election a success," she said. "One measure is that it went so smoothly; another is that it went so well to man an entire election process."
The results of the poll were three-to-one in favor of a freeze. Because the poll indicated Lawrence to be pro-freeze, the City Commission sent a letter to President Reagan telling him of the city's opposition to the proliferation of nuclear weapons.
The final tally for the opinion poll was 6,541 votes for the freeze and 2,298 votes against the freeze.
Mayor Marci Francisco and the commissioners sent the letter to Reagan on Nov. 9. It asks that he consider the results of the poll and an immediate nuclear weapons freeze with the Soviet Union.
Dole goes to Europe for trade meetings
By United Press International
WASHINGTON—A congressional delegation led by Senate Finance Committee Chairman Bob Dole left yesterday on a European trade mission including a stop in Moscow and a visit to Paris, meeting with Soviet leader Yuri Andropov.
PADRE PEDRO JUSTIN
Robert Dole
leased as the delegation left Andrews Air Force Base, Md.
The delegation, on a five-nation, 14-day trip, is to attend a trade conference in Moscow sponsored by the privately-supported Soviet U.S. Trade and Economic Council Inc., tomorrow through Thursday, the week of news of the death of Soviet President Leonid Brezhnev Wednesday.
THE ORIGINAL conference schedule included a reception at the Kremlin, and Brezhnov had been scheduled to appear.
The delegation is expected to leave its first stop, Bonn, West Germany, for Moscow today and stay through Friday.
Also yesterday, Dole was rated the second best senator in the 97th congress, close behind top-rated Senate Majority Leader Howard Baker of
+emmesses, in a poll conducted by
Margaret Murrey of Washington radio
station MALA.
It was the fourth biennial poll of reporters covering the Senate conducted by McCaffrey.
In third place, but well behind Baker and Dole, was Sen. Pete Domenci, R-N.M.
Although Republicans controlled the Senate for the first time in a quarter of a century and held every chairmanship, Baker, Dole and Domiciere were the only Republicans to finish in the top 10.
RIGHT BEHIND Domeniel, in fourth place, was assistant Democratic leader Alan Cranston of California, who plans to announce in January that he will seek the Democratic presidential nomination.
However, Sen. Robert Byrd of West Virginia, the Democratic leader, finished second in the election.
Sen. Bill Bradley, D-N.J. still in his first term, was the newest member to the board.
Sen. Henry Jackson, D-Wash., who came to Congress in 1941 and sought the presidential nomination in 1976, finished in fifth place.
Veteran Sen. Russell Long, D-La.
who finished either first or second in
the last three polls, was seventh,
followed by Sen. Sam Nunn, D-Ga.
eighth, and Sen. Dale Bumpers, D-Ark.
ninth.
SEN. EDWARD Kennedy, D-Mass,
the early front-rimmer for the presiden-
tial administration.
Eleven others were in what McCafrey called the "close but no cigar" category.
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University Daily Kansan, November 15, 1982
Page 3
Band
From page one
guitar when she joined the band two years ago. Gibbons said Maxwell, like most of the band, was a bit nervous at first.
Maxwell said she had learned a lot from Gibbons.
"I've learned to listen," she said, "when to come in and when to sit back; when to belt it out."
JONES WALKS over to Maxwell. Jones is a rarity in the band. she has had previous majors with him.
"I was with the show for years. I sing, dance -- what have you?"
She said that in 1920 she started touring with Snarct's Dark Street Shuttles, a Kansas City. City.
"I'll be down to meet you in a taxi, honey," she sings.
The song, "Dark Town Strutters Ball." was the Shuttle's theme song, she said.
Jones also sang the blues in Kansas City hotels.
"I can play on the piano, sing on the piano — like Sophie Tucker," she said.
GIBBONS SAID an undergraduate in the department of art and music education and music therapy taught each band member lessons for a certain instrument. Occasionally a band member who has learned rapidly will teach or teacher an older song.
"I'd like to teach the world to sing in perfect harmony . . ."
Rosa Sims plucks the chords on her guitar.
Schake sinus londiv
Schaake said the choir members shared a lot of camaraderie.
Maxwell said, "You look out for one another" Schaake, songbook in her hands, stand up in the crowd.
BO ABELLA, clad in a bright red jacket and red, white and blue tie, flicks his arms up to signal an up tempo.
"The last number, then, is 'Give My Regards to Broadway.' "
"Give my regaaards to Braaaadway
The guitars, the flute, the autoharp, the snare drum and gospel and country voices willingly begin.
Jones begins to sway. She stands up. She dances a soft shuffle.
She sings, "Be bop, beep, deet, dot, deet
She shakes, beeper fast, as she claps and
picks her up skirt.
The music ends.
"Whoo!" she says.
Members of the band and the club mingle in the recreation center.
Agnes Oldham, a member of the audience,
said the band impressed her.
"I thought it was fine. I don't mind growing old—not with that. It does something for you."
Williams also served on the Governor's Committee on Economic Development from 1960-62 and the Kansas Commission for Constitutional Revision from 1962-61.
In 1957, Williams entered the Kansas House of Representatives. He was speaker pro tem from 1960-61 and a member of the Kansas Legislative Council from 1962-64.
Williams
He was administrative assistant to former Gov. Robert Docking in 1965 and 1966, serving as legislative liaison.
He served as president of Kansas Day in 1965 and 1966. Williams was former president of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce and the KU Alumni Association.
WILLIAMS ALSO helped found the Douglas County State Bank with his father and brother,
Williams served on the board of directors of the Lawrence Industrial Development Corporation, the Douglas County Historical Society, and the National Peachbasket Committee, a group which gives annual awards in the field of basketball.
and had served as its president. He was a man on the board of directors of the bank until recently.
ATHLETICS ALWAYS were a large part of Williams' life. In 1977 he served on the State Athletic Commission and worked to get the Kansas All-Sports Hall of Fame located at the Elizabeth M. Watkins Community Museum in Lawrence.
Resolution passed
ONLY A WEEK ago, Williams was master of ceremonies at the Fabulous '40s dinner which coincided with Homecoming Day.
Said B.J. Patte, associate director of the association, former classmate and close family friend. "He was so outgoing, energetic and vibrant."
"It was just such a wonderful weekend." Mildred Clodfrey, assistant secretary with the alumni association, said. "It doesn't seem right that he is zone so fast."
"We worked on that" 405 thing together, and he was the most obvious choice for master of ceremonies because he had a flair for the crowd, a fair for a joke, and he had so many friends."
AURH protests release of residents' grades
Williams is survived by his wife, the former Jonell Asherff of Ashland; two sons, Dick and Larry; two daughters, three daughters, Lynn, Paris, France; Kimberly Dallas, Texas; and Evan, of the home.
By KIESA ASCUE
Staff Reporter
The Association of University Residence Halls last week passed a resolution recommending that resident assistants be denied housing until they fill the, the AURH vice president said yesterday.
"Your academic file is like your underwear drawer," said Alan Rowe, the vice president. "It's not that you're ashamed of it, you just don't want people looking into it."
The resolution takes no position about RAs having access to lists of students on academic websites.
Rowe said he feared the University could be in danger of lawsuits for breach of confidentiality whenever a resident assistant discussed the academic well-being of a student.
“AN RA IS a fellow student, and of RAs are loose-lipped, even though they shouldn’t be.” Rowe said. “Once they have a job, they can assure that they won’t use it against you.
"Just the fact that they know your grades can make you uncomfortable."
David Ambler, vice chancellor of student affairs, said the resolution made by AURH was premature; the exact records that would be available to hall staffs had not been determined.
students' academic records. Our plan is to provide information to the staff to help them
"Nobody has ever said they were to be allowed complete access," Ambler said. "They aren't."
Ambler said RAs were advisers, counselors and friends to the students on their floors.
"THE RA IS not a passive, laissez-faire person who waits until a problem is beyond salvage to act," Ambler said.
Rowe disagreed. He said that although RAs might have legitimate concerns about students, the department of housing and the office of residential programs should have no control over academic affairs as long as they are enrolled in 12 hours of classes at the University of Kansas.
If a student wants help, he will ask for it. Rowe said.
"In residence halls, privacy is limited anyway," Rowe said. "Every step we go to further limit that privacy is a step in the wrong direction."
THE FAMILY Educational Rights and Priva-cy Act states that University personnel who have a legitimate need to review records to fulfill their official professional responsibilities may have access to them. Providing living accom-modations and other services are among the professional responsibilities listed by KU policies.
Student employees who perform a function on behalf of the University are among the school officials who can gain access to those records according to a KU policy concerning the Act.
Last interview with Williams shows a humble, 'ordinary guy'
Editor's note: This interview with Odd Williams was conducted in late October and is believed to have been written in 2017.
By LYNLEA HALL Staff Reporter
He is and is not odd. His name is Odd Williams, but, he says, he is "just a pretty ordinary guy, who's been blessed with a wonderful life."
ALSO IN 1949, Williams, his father Dick, and
"I've gone by Odd ever since." Williams said. "My diplomas, cat them, they're all signed that I am qualified to be a lawyer."
When Williams, 56, a manager of farms in Kansas and Colorado, was two, he could not pronounce his name. Instead of saying Ed, he said Odd, and it stuck.
The fund receives over $1 million a year in contributions.
his brother Skip, all KU alumni, started the Outland Fund. The name was changed to the Williams Educational Fund in 1973, in recognition of the Williams' service.
Williams has lived in Lawrence all of his life, having graduated from the School of Business in 1949 and the School of Law in 1952.
"It grew and grew, so we turned it over to the University in 1973, which named it after. That was rather embarrassed," said Williams, who also said he did not like being put in the limelight. "It started strictly as a scholarship fund for student athletes."
The Williams Fund is made up of private contributions. All donations are tax deductible. Contributors can choose whether they want to fund an academic scholarships or athletic department expenses.
The Williams Fund and gate receipts from football and basketball games provide 80 percent of the proceeds.
the basis of contribution levels, ranging from special football parking and ticket choices to
FUND MEMBERS get special privileges on
sitting in the office and sharing his games
Williams himself is a member of the Executive
Club level. Its contributors each give $5,000 or
more a year.
"We're really proud of him down here," said Marge Hazlett, an athletic department secretary. "He's made an impact on the city of Lawrence. Everybody knows Odd.
"He has a dynamic personality, is real enthusiastic and is always willing to give a face."
Williams handles about 21 farms in southern Kansas and a few in Colorado. He also owns his own farm.
WILLIAMS SAID he liked to dress casually and only wore a suit when he had to, such as to a business meeting.
"What I really like best," Williams said, "is to
go to a wheat harvest and just out in the field in my blue jeans and boots."
On a shelf in his office, Williams has a pair of 50-year-old, hand-crafted leather cowboys with his name printed on them, which he wore as sports plaques. On his office shelf are civic and sports plaques.
Williams was a KU basketball letterman, and likes to play golf and handball. Under former Gov. Bob Bemett, Williams served as chairman of the State Athletic Commission and started the Kansas All-Sports Hall of Fame housed in the Watkins Community Museum.
"A lot of labor and love went into that," Williams said. "We're really proud of it."
WILLIAMS ALSO played football for KU and that he really enjoyed the Orange Bowl SIBIU.
"The percentage of students who return as alums is large." Williams said. "There lots of jobs for them."
Three of them also are KU graduates, Evan is a junior at the University and Russell is a senior at the University.
He is a father of five children: Lynn, Kimberly. Dick, Evan and Russell.
BESIDES REING involved in the University, Williams also has served in the Kansas House of Representatives and has been on a number of corporate boards. He was president of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce, is on the board of the Lawrence County Bank and is a non-practicing lawyer.
"I've always tried to stay active in the community," said Williams, who describes himself as a partisan with strong feelings about his family, KU and Lawrence.
"I wouldn't want to live in any other place. God has given me the good fortune of living in Lawrence and Kansas," he said. "The best part of a trip is coming home."
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Page 4
University Dailv Kansan, November 15, 1982
Opinion
An opportunity missed
Funeral plans for Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev barely had been made last week when the Kremlin announced that Yuri Andropov, former head of the KGB, would be his successor.
Brezhnev's death could have been predicted months ago, but that does not downplay the significance of the event for Americans.
The death and the swift reshuffling of power in the Soviet Union have put the future of U.S.-Soviet relations in question. We are trying figure out what, if any, new conflicts Andropov will create.
At such a sensitive time in the relations between the two countries, a little effort on the part of the United
States to build a friendship with the new leaders could go a long way.
Given the importance of the event, it is surprising that President Reagan has chosen not to attend today's funeral in Moscow.
As the New York Times said Sunday, Reagan showed no sense of history by choosing to stay at home.
"The personable Ronald Reagan, whose manner humanizes his doctrines, could be as effective on Soviet television as Nikita Khrushchev once was here." the paper said.
The "Great Communicator," as Reagan has billed himself, is missing a prime opportunity for a little international public relations work, not only with the new party boss, but with the Soviet people as well.
Election merits closer look
The student body presidential and vicepresidential elections are Wednesday and Thursday. But if past elections are any indication, barely 10 percent of the 25,000 students at the University of Kansas will care enough to vote.
Low voter turnout for student elections is nothing new. This low turnout puts the valid-
The issues this time around — problems of missing Student Senate equipment, theft of equipment, and more — are not new.
Despite the importance of these issues, it is doubtful that there will be a significant jump in training costs.
erment's responsiveness to the needs of the students — may seem familiar. In fact, some of them have been debated in past campaings.
Coalitions' campaigns are 'slick' promotions
The Kansan, in an effort to improve communication between the voters and the candidates, has turned over most of today's opinion polls. The shift of the Consensus and Momentum coalitions.
No longer are the bulletin boards in Wescoe cafeteria and other student gathering spots filled with empty envelopes.
It's Student Senate election time at the University of Kansas and a new swarm of posters has invaded any white space on bulletin boards throughout campus.
In the past these posters were often ugly, relying only on repetition to grab the passerbys' attention. But this year's elections are different in this, as well as other, respects.
The slick, 16-by-20 posters for the Momentum coalition picture Kevin Walker, Webster Groves, Mo., junior and David Teopteon, British Columbia, Canada, junior. They look like little
TOM HUTTON
M. MORGAN
U. S. Congressmen in their slickly produced poster — which is what this election seems to be turning into, a battle over the slickest campaign.
The strongest opposing coalition, Consolesh, also spared little in its rendition of its goals to take control of the White House. Lau Ashley, Mission junior, and vice-presidential candidate Jim Cramer, Prairie Village junior, beam brightly toward the prospective voter from their deep blue background. They look like the president and first lady, who are waiting, while going into the White House.
There is a limit, however, to how slick each candidate can make his election campaign. Candidates are limited by the Elections Committee of the Student Senate to spending $1,250 on an entire coalition's campaign. But that doesn't necessarily mean that each of the 40 or more members of the coalition gets an equal amount spent on his particular race.
The prospective senator then waits, hoping to ride to victory on the caffalls of his coalition's leadership.
Instead, each coalition member forks over about $20, most of which finances the presidential and vice-presidential races
Spending money in this manner to elect a student body president isn't new at KU. It seems to be a firmly embedded part of the coalfusion system that continues because it works.
Keep track of money is usually difficult, at best, for me. But both coalitions, with no prior notice, recently broke down campaign expenditures while on the phone.
Walker's campaign totals were $625 and he was willing to provide names and dates of these
Maybe it's the Consensus coalition's accusations of overspending that has perfected Walker's bookkeeping or maybe he's just efficient. Figures from Consensus treasurer Roger Ramsey, Prairie Village junior, were close to those reported by Walker.
Both coaliations will have to meet much further scrutiny than a telephone call as the election
A special Elections Review Board, which is made up of several senators, will review each campaign's expenditures to make sure they did not exceed the limit. The candidates must provide a copy and be reviewed for all campaigns and no vote may be counted until the expenditures are approved.
Momentum's idea behind its varied campaign strategy is to appeal to students from the entire school.
"We're trying to appeal to all 26,000 students at KU," Walker said. "Consensus seems to want to change."
Cramer denied wanting to appeal only to a few people. He said Consensus prided itself on its candidate's experience, and would concentrate on campaign issues and let the voters decide.
"We're trying to appeal to those people who take the time to vote and care about what they're doing," he said. "We want those voters who have a Student Senate or at least are willing to learn."
"Issue cards," containing the names and opinions of coalition members will be distributed on campus to inform students and encourage them to vote. It seems Consensus is serious in its approach, but there are issues, at least serious enough to spend a substantial part of the coalition's budget on the cards.
A different twist to the election will be provided by Consensus beginning this week.
Both coalitions will reach the monetary limits set by the elections committee. Each agreed that the rules — and strict enforcement of them — would be for a fairer campaign for everyone concerned.
"The rules have kind of been loosely held in the past," Cranmer said. "That's not going to be the case."
KANSAN
The University Dayan Kuman (US$ 650-800) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 FliH Mall, Lawrence, KS 69043, daily during the registration period. Subscriptions pay a monthly fee of US$ 25 and include holidays and final季级. Second course paid postage at Lawrence, Ks 60032. Subscriptions by mail are $80 for six months to a $120 year in Douglas County. Subscription by fax is $80 for six months to a $120 year in Douglas County through the student activity fee. POSTMASTER address changes to the University Daily
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Momentum's fresh ideas a plus
The Student Senate at the University of Kansas has for much too long a time lacked the Momentum to get things done.
On Wednesday and Thursday, KU students finally will get the chance to give the Senate what it needs — Momentum, the coalition determined not to just talk, but to get things
For a very long time KU students have heard about the possibility of having beer sold at Kansas Memorial Stadium. Many Senate administrations have discussed it; studied it and formed committees to look into it — but none of them ever managed to get the job done.
Certainly no one could argue the benefits of stadium beer sales. Increased revenue for the school and the philanthropic organizations that would sell it, the elimination of hard liquor from the stadium and a higher game attendance all seem rather attractive.
So why hasn't it happened?
We believe it's because of the Senate's failure to do one very simple thing; pursue some professional advice.
stadium and has the correct approach to get it done.
Momentum admits to knowing nothing about the business of selling beer. This is exactly the reason a Momentum-controlled Senate immediately will seek out brewery expertise. Those who sell beer for a living can certainly make a much more convincing presentation in favor of stadium beer sales than any student body president. Momentum believes in beer at the
The benefits received from KU's membership in the Associated Students of Kansas, a Topeka-based, student lobbying group, has become a hotly debated campaign issue. Momentum wants the students of KU to know the facts. After several years of effort, few, if any,
10
Tom Bath
passes of legislation initiated by ASK have even made it to the floor of the Kansas House of Representatives for a vote, all of course at great cost. The committee will not deny they receive, their accomplishments are
Momentum will first cut and then eliminate ASK, contingent upon replacing it with a KU-based lobbying effort which would be concerned only with KU and KU students.
A major concern to students is the price of tuition. Though we don't pretend to be able to lower tuition, we do feel that enacting a system of deferred payments is less than prudent. A student who pays tuition at once will be able to remain in school and not have to lay off a semester to work.
Momentum believes the price of campus parking tickets are too high and will fight to lower them. Momentum feels the students would like to know how this school feels it is justified in charging a student $7.50 for a parking violation, when most major metropolitan areas in this nation don't charge near that amount to their own non-student populations.
Our opponents feel they stand tall on experience. Once again Momentum wants KU students to know the facts. We just can't afford their type of experience. So far it's cost us thousands of dollars in unfound inventory and more than $20,000 in missing bus funds. This summer, that experience almost cost us another $8,000 because of an attempt to illegally purchase a computer for the Senate office. We can all do without that type of experience.
Momentum wants each student to know that all its candidates want to be held accountable for their actions. That is exactly why all 43 candidates have their pictures publicly and prominently displayed on posters around campus. They should also be able to talk to us and tell us your concerns.
A vote for Momentum candidates on Wednesday and Thursday will be a vote for a year of positive actions. The students of the University are leading the effort to build responsible leadership; they need Momentum.
Tom Bath, Stillwell junior, is a Liberal Arte and sciences candidate on the Momentum coalition tion.
Consensus' ticket experienced
Two days from now, elections for Student Senate will begin. Many students may still have doubts — who should I vote for? Why should I vote, or does it even matter?
We on Consensus strongly urge students to vote because it does matter, especially now. This election will make a dramatic difference in what happens in the future, and not only in the year to come, but for many years.
Experience is one of the most important issues in this campaign. It makes the difference between a Senate with only good intentions and a Senate that has a real say in University policy. The Senate can be more effective, not only to students, but to administrators, the Board of Regents and state legislators as well.
Lisa Ashner and Jim Cramer together have accumulated five years of Senate experience. Ashner chained the Senate Services Committee and most recently served as chairman of the Student Senate Executive Committee. Cramer has served on the Senate for two years and now chairs the Senate Committee on Student Rights, Privileges and Responsibilities.
Consensus combines the best of the returning senators with a number of outstanding individual candidates.
The other large coalition in this campaign has no Senate experience. This lack of first-hand knowledge of the Senate and the University is obvious when examining solutions for the problems affecting students. We offer candidates who will not need on-the-job training for KU's two most important elected student positions. Through their experience, Ashner and Cramer have recognized the Senate's weaknesses and can capitalize on its strengths to make it work for students on the issues that affect them most.
Budget cuts are the single most important issue facing students today. The elimination of jobs and reductions in financial aid in the last round of cutbacks sent many students reeling. Consensus supports the development of a state work-study program that would place students in paid internships with businesses and the state sharing the cost of salaries. Ashner has been successful in implementing this initiative is committed to its implementation. The oppositions offers nothing comparable.
Consensus supports the continued development of dean advisory committees, composed of students. The committees would give the institution organized voice in future decisions to cut spending.
Graduate students, comprising about one-
third of the student body, have been hit by the shortfall in unique ways. Teaching assistant contracts and discontinued programs are just two of the issues that a Consensus Senate would consider. Student input must be maximized in any decision over how and where programs
The rights of students to control their own organizations makes KU unique among universities. Students have control over health services in Watkins Hospital, their recreation facilities and their transportation system. In order to exercise control over these operations and run them to the best of their potential, the student body president and vice president must be familiar with University operations, as are Ashner and Cramer.
CAROLINE CAMPBELL
Terri Reicher
A Senate primarily controlled by students with no experience to spell disaster for these student-rum programs or cause the end of student control over them. An inexperienced Senate would need six months simply to learn about the Senate and the University.
Another area of student control concerns the student-run lobbying group, the Associated Students of Kansas. Consensus supports ASK as the most effective method of articulating student concerns in the statehouse. ASK gives students the opportunity to decide for themselves how to deal with issues such as financial aid, the drinking age and the landlord-tenant legislation.
ASK is a respected voice of the students in the Kansas Legislature.
The opposition views the student leadership of ASK as its major weakness, claiming that students cannot do a good job of articulating their own interests. We see the student element as ASK's major strength. Students who are concerned and informed are the logical spokesmen to address the legislative decisions that affect their lives.
In any election campaign, there are promises frequently made that may or may not be kept. For example, stadium beer sales has been claimed to be a primary issue by the opposition, more important to students than any academic or financial issues. Throughout the campaign, they have claimed the support of the Anheuser-Busch inoc. for lobbying the University and state. Anheuser-Busch, however, has 'named an owner's position as the opposition or in the future. Because of this, the opposition has blatantly changed their version of their dealings with Anheuser-Busch. Consensus hopes that students see this as a prime example of the opposition's credibility.
Consensus is the clear choice in student government. We offer students fresh ideas and knowledge that the opposition simply cannot match. We offer specific solutions to problems facing KU — problems the opponent either ignores or glosses over. If student government cannot deal with these issues from the student view, who can or will?
Finally, Consensus offers individuals who have shown a deep commitment to Senate and to KU in a variety of ways. When you vote this week, check the record — and vote Consensus.
Terri Reicher, a Leawood senior, is campaign manager for the Consensus coalition.
Letters Policy
The University Daily Kansan welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten, double-spaced and should not exceed 500 words. They should include the writer's name, address and phone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, the letter should include his class and home town or faculty or staff position. The Kansas reserves the right to edit or reject letters.
University Daily Kansan, November 15. 1982
Page 5
Budget
From page one
There would have been some recovery in the national economy*. Entenson said, "Of course it was an extremely disappointing day."
DARWIN DAICOFF, member of the consensus group and KU professor of economics, said agriculture and manufacturing in Kansas had been slowed by the sagging national economy
"Kansas isn't an island and of itself. When the national economy is weaker than anticipated, obviously the Kansas economy will be weaker than anticipated." Daicoff said.
"One thing is clear — employment in the aircraft industry is important for Kansas, and the air industry went down much more this year than anticipated."
RICHARD RYAN, legislative research director and member of the committee, said the current recession had affected Kansas more than recent recessions because this time it hit Kansas industries hard. During recessions in江西,Ryan said, the agriculture and aircraft industries were strong.
In the "Budget in Brief," a supplement explaining the governor's budget policies, one of the assumptions underlying the proposed budget is that the economy would improve by mid-1982.
"The state is not expected to suffer serious hardships because of a weak and sputtering national economy. Neither is it expected to experience a financial crisis of the type that has plagued other states in recent years," the report stated.
THE NEW ESTIMATES made Friday were made under the assumption that the national and Kansas economies would improve early next year, Ryan said.
"I think a solid majority of economic forecasters expect the economy to up."
Ryan said, "It won't be a vigorous bounce-back, but we see less sluggish growth rather than growth."
Ryan said he expected consumer spending to lead the way to recovery in Kansas.
Although the group's estimates were off by their worst margin ever, Ryan said the method of estimating revenues was better then the one used prior to 1874, when the responsibility for estimating revenue for the general fund was in charge of the budget division of the executive branch.
"There was controversy in the 1960s and early 1970s between the legislative and executive branches," Ryan said. "The legislative research committee often asked to second-guess the budget division."
IN 1974, the legislative budget committee recommended the establishment of the forecast group to get a consensus revenue estimate for budgeting.
"Members of the committee thought it would be better if the governor and Legislature worked together."
Ryan said the group, which is not sanctioned under Kansas law, was set up as a compromise between the executive and legislative branches.
EACH NOVEMBER the group meets to make initial predictions for the next fiscal year and to prepare for the following months.
Before the group meets to consider estimates, each forecaster arrives at his own forecasts, using his own model and data, for each source of income. Ryan said.
Emerson said he worked on his estimates during the course of the year. "I worked on it off and on over several months. Of course, you can't make the final estimate until right before it is needed, because you have to wait for the most current numbers to come in."
At the meeting, the group establishes a consensus estimate for each of the 21 sources of income for the general fund. They compare each source of income then reach a consensus, members said.
THE LARGEST revenue sources the group predicts are for personal income tax, corporation income tax, retail sales tax, commuting tax, investment tax, inheritance税 and interest earnings on idle funds.
Emerson said the group usually reached a consensus for all sources in less than a half day.
Ryan said that when the group was formed, it decided that if it could not reach a consensus, the Legislature and the budget department would have to compromise. But it has reached a consensus every year.
The consensus group is not supposed to worry about the expenditures or balance side of the budget.
"The object of the group is to come as close as possible in estimating revenue," he said.
AFTER THE MEETING, the group issues a memo to state agencies explaining the estimates and the assumptions used in reaching those estimates.
Members of the group said they hoped the estimates for next year would be closer, but they offered no guarantees that the economy would improve as expected.
"Theoretically, the economy could get worse." he said. "Although most nationally recognized forecasters expect a recovery, there are no assurances."
The consensus group will meet again to revise estimates during the Legislature's spring
Faculty, administrators brace for budget news
By STEVE CUSICK and DEBORAH BAER Staff Reporters
The official Polish news agency PAP said Saturday Parliament would meet in special session Dec. 13, the first anniversary of military rule, and Western observers saw that as a sign that martial law might be lifted soon.
Although faculty members and administrators say Gov. John Carlin's plan for dealing with the state's revenue problems is "welcome" news, experts argue that another KU will escape future budget reductions.
Mike Swenson, Carlin's assistant press secretary, said the plan might leave the state's university budgets unscathed, and would have the greatest impact on public schools.
But officials said further details about the reductions would not be made known until more information is available.
Dennell Tacha, vice chancellor for academic affairs, said that the latest news from Topkape
"It's very welcome news," she said.
Other faculty members were hesitant to say the University would be spared reductions.
RICHARD COLE, president of the KU chapter of the American Association of University Professors, said, "It looks hopeful, but it's too early to tell with any precision."
Ellen Gold, a member of the University Senate Executive Committee, said, "We're still going on hearsey . . . I think we should wait for a formal statement."
The president of the Classified Senate, Gail Hamilton, said the move should relieve the fears of the campaign.
The prospect of layoffs that has arisen since the budget cutbacks of last summer may have been dimmed somewhat by Carlin's announcement, she said.
ALTHOUGH THE University may not suffer further budget reductions, the spending cutbacks made this summer have been "locked in," said Stanley Koopik, Regents executive officer. Officials had hoped the money would be reinstated.
original resuscitations have had a very detrimental effect on all of the academic units."
Nevertheless, Kopik said he thought Carlin showed a commitment to higher education by his efforts.
Tacha said. "We still are trying to work with the effects of the original rescissions. The
"I'm encouraged by the governor's attitude" Koplik said. "I'm optimistic because more reductions easily could have been instituted."
The superintendent of the local school district said he was not surprised that the public school system might have to shoulder a large share of the reductions.
"We HAD anticipated this possibility," said Carl Knox, superintendent of Lawrence School District 497. "It's quite clear that there will be an aid as far as public schools are concerned."
Poland
Although Knox said he did not know how much the school system would have to reduce its budget, he said that the money would not come in and add percent of the budget earmarked for salaries.
"At this time of the year there's not much you can do with that because commitments were made," he said. "It leaves a relatively small part of the budget."
The remaining 14 percent pays for instructional supplies, staff development, libraries, substitute teachers and office equipment, he said.
Poland's martial law authorities announced unexpectedly last Thursday that Wesla would
with officials of the Roman Catholic Church before returning to Gdansk apparently were
ONE POSSIBILITY for reducing the budget would be to cut from that 14 percent, he said.
From page one
Walesa family members anxiously waited all day Saturday and yesterday for a telephone call from Walesa or authorities explaining his disappearance.
Another option would be to allow a smaller end-of-the-year balance in the district's budget.
Unless the state made up that loss, local property taxpayers would have to pick up the tab
"RUMORS THAT Walesa possibly was meetin
Kopik said that although he was encouraged by Carlin's apparent commitment to higher education, he wanted to make sure that Carlin taught his students almost the first cuts had affected Regents schools.
He will meet with Carlin sometime during the next few weeks, he said.
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Page 6 University Daily Kansan, November 15, 1982
By DON KNOX Staff Reporter
Student Body President David Adkins veted the Student Senate's supplementary budget Friday, saying he could not support a final budget that was "simply not what we had in mind."
The budget, which was overwhelmingly passed by the Senate on Nov. 3, would have allocated $17,272 million to the University of Kansas at the University of Kansas.
Adkins justified the veto by saying that the chairmen of the Student Senate Committee on Finance and Auditing, Jill Eddy and Loren Bushy, had recommended that the university's elementary budget be under $15,000.
"If we have budgetary recommendations," Adkins said, "then we should meet them. To continue to deplete our reserve is not a very good example of long-term planning."
AFTER SEVEN nights of budget deliberations, the Finance and Auditing Committee presented to the Senate a budget totaling $14,262. But the Senate voted 29-16 to restore more than $3,000 in financing to the department. In the Services, a Lawrence shelter (for battered and abused women).
Busy, who argued against restoring money to WTCs at the Nov. 3 meeting, said he was pleased Adkins vetoed the budget.
"We have to be careful in coming under budget," Busby said yesterday. "It is a luxury that we have to keep it down on unaccounted allocations, but when we
set a limit, we should follow what we set."
Busby said he would recommend that the Senate not finance WTCS in the three supplementary budget bills, which probably will be reviewed at the Wednesday Senate meeting. The $8,100 WTCS request could be sent through Senate as a request to a later meeting, he said.
THE SENATE also could vote to override Adkins' veto. Such a vote would require a two-thirds majority.
Eddy also said she was glad Adkins vetoed the bill, but said she thought WTCS was "deserving of their money."
If Busby's recommendation is passed by the Senate, WTCS would be the third organization to request money outside the formal budget process. The Senate earlier this year gave $5,000 to the KU Forensics Club and is currently considering a alteration from KU's Recreational Services.
For Adkins, the veto of the supplementary budget is his second. The student body president vetoed the Senate's budget last spring after the Senate vote to allocate about $485 million for the normal spring budget of $2,800.
Adkins, however, accepted the budget after the Senate trimmed the additional requests to about $18,000.
"The spring hearings were one of the low points of the year," Adkins said, explaining that he and the couple spent how much money was to be spent.
Adkins said yesterday, however,
that he would not make any
recommendations as to where fur-
ther budgets cut should be made.
On campus
CATHOLIC CENTER WORSHIP will be at 12:30 p.m. in Danforth Chapel.
TODAY
WOMEN ENGINEERS of KU will have a lecture, "Summer Job Opportunities for Women Engineering Students." A.7 p.m., in 1014 Learned Hall.
ECKANKAR WILL talk about "The Spiritual Aspects of Fashion and Social Life," at 7:30 p.m. in the Governor's Room of the Kansas Union.
TOMORROW LEAGUE OF WOMEN VOTERS Campus Unit will meet at noon at the Satellite Union.
LECTURE, "The Music of Carl
Preyer, "will be at 1:30 p.m. in 400 Murphvh床.
PUBLIC RELATIONS Student Society of America will meet at 6:30 p.m. in
the library on Friday, June 14.
the Regional Club of the Union
KU GUN CLUB will meet at 7 p.m.
in Conference Room 305 of the Satellite
Union.
CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR CHRIST
we meet at 7 p. in the Big Eight
room
ROBERT SIAW, music director and conductor of the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra, will give a speech. "The Narrator is at 8 p.m. in Woodruff Auditorium."
Astronauts may make space walk
C A P E C A N A V E R A L
Fla — astronaut William Leonor — barefoot, chipper and apparently over his motion sickness — was poised yesterday for a delayed $3^{1/2}$-hour walk
Bv United Press International
space today_with crewmate Joseph Allen
Lenoir and Allen planned to step into space shuttle Columbia's open cargo bay at 7:50 a.m. EST to test new $2 million spacesuits and rehearse a 1984 rescue mission for a crippled scientific satellite.
The walk is America's first in nine years and the 36th since astronaut Edward White made space history by stepping outside his Gemini 4 capsule in
Mission controllers delayed the spacewalk, originally scheduled for December 16.
AS THE astronauts prepared to retire about 4:50 p.m. yesterday, spacecraft communicator Brian O'Connor told them the past day had produced three problems in mission training and had aboard the big winged shuttle.
urday he was suffering a severely upset stomach. By yesterday afternoon, he was well on his way to recovery from his bout with space-sickness.
O'Connor referred to an electrical fire and power failure that briefly knocked out control center consoles Saturday night. It was the only mention to the crew about the incident, which had posed no threat to their safety.
Holloway and other officials said the control center fire, which started in a splice between copper and aluminum wire in one of four main power lines, caused the power failure. It produced thick smoke but did no serious damage.
THE FAILURE shut down the computer that operates displays on
Looking toward a return home tomorrow, Robert Overmyer also replaced a faulty electronics box in Columbia's dashboard to fix one of three video screens he must use to get vital information during re-entry.
control center consoles for between 20 minutes and three hours.
Holloway said the center lost the ability to send commands to Columbia's computers through two ground tracking stations, although the commands could have gone up from a backup site in Maryland. Voice transmissions still were possible, but were not used because the crew was asleep, he said.
WHILE THE astronauts spent their fourth day in orbit, Soviet cosmonauts
Anatoly Berezovy and Valentin Lebedev aboard the Salyut 7 space station made space history at 1:11 a.m. yesterday by beating a space endurance record of 184 days, 20 hours, 13 minutes in 1980 by two other monuments.
The spacewalk by Allen and Lenoir is the big task on Columbia's fifth flight.
In yesterday's telecast, Lenoir held up a sign reading: "Shuttle Deployment by Ace Moving Co. Fast and Courtese service. We Deliver."
During their first two days in space, the astronauts flawlessly launched two commercial satellites, proving the capability of a workhorse carrying cargo for hire.
KU professors receive awards
Several KU professors, including a husband and wife, recently received national and KU teaching awards.
The second Chancellors Club Career Teaching Award, worth $5,000, was given to Barbara Craig, professor of French and Italian.
Craig, who has taught at the University of Kansas for 35 years, was given the Award. Nov. 6 at the University of Washington upon receiving Luncheon in the Kansas Union.
The award was established last year for teachers who have taught at the school.
of the department of special education, and his wife, Ann Turnbull, acting associate director of the Bureau of Child Research, were named the 1982 Educators of the Year by the Association for Chartered Citizens of the United States.
H. Rutherford Turnbull III, chairman
The annual award, given to university teachers of special education, was given to the Turbulls at the institution's convention last week in Dallas.
The Turnbulls were cited for their service to educators and for their assistance and support to parents with retarded children.
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Mon
Tue
Wed
Thurs
Fri
Sat
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GREEK NIGHT
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• inspect belts and hoses
• flush radiator
• install new anti-freeze (up to 1 gallon)
• pressure test cooling system and test radiator cap
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MAZDA
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Coupons must be presented at time of write-up
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• set engine to recommended
specifications or specifications
• adjust carburetters
• inspect operation of机头
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torque engines not included
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adjustment
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NOVEMBER SPECIALS
MONDAY
Chicken Fried Steak
Potato Chips
12 oz Fountain Drink 1.80
TUESDAY
Chili Dog French Fries 6 oz Shake 1.60
WEDNESDAY
Double Cheese Burger French Fries 12 oz Fountain Drink 2.55
THURSDAY
B. B.Q. Sandwich Potato Chips 12 oz Fountain Drink 1.90
FRIDAY
Fish Sandwich French Fries 12 oz Fountain Drink 1.70
Also featuring our own Bakery Buns.
University Daily Kansan, November 15, 1982
Page 7
105
Buddy Mangine/KANSAN
The wind gave W.N. Long, 1721 Learnard Ave., a slight problem with his choices recently. However, Long quickly solved the problem by sitting on the leaves.
Supplemental grant checks delayed, to be awarded at January enrollment
Supplemental Pell Grant checks will not be available before Christmas break as planned, an official of the college. Student Financial Aid said yesterday
The official, Jerry Rogers, director of the office, said the supplemental awards would be disbursed at enrollment in January.
He said 1,232 students, or about half of KU's financial aid recipients, were still in debt.
"There is no problem getting the money," Rogers said. "It's just a part of it."
He said some schools had received the additional grant money to disburse to their students, but that those schools had not received the minimal aid allocation they were entitled to earlier this year.
KU's aid office received the minimal amount to disburse to its aid recipients this fall, but the additional aid allocation has been delayed until the Department of Education receives KU's financial aid progress report, which will be submitted this week, Rogers said.
"We were told not to send the report until the increase figures were noted,
which will delay our next allocation," Rogers said.
Officials of the office recently finished reviewing each student's records to find out which students would qualify for the supplemental award, he said.
He said the supplemental Pell Grant checks could add as little as $12 or as much as $126 to the award money received by eligible aid recipients.
The supplemental funds became available after Congress overrode President Reagan's budget veto early in 2010, allowing nationwide for financial aid programs.
District attorney files appeal of dismissal of arson charges
By CAROL LICHTI Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
The Douglas County district attorney's office is appealing to the Kansas Supreme Court the dismissal of a lawsuit against a Lawrence businessman.
The appeal, filed in Douglas County district court Friday, involved the dismissal of charges against Thomas Black Sr. 322 Woodlaw Court.
Marvin Brummett, Concordia, a retired district court judge assigned to hear the case, dismissed the case after a two-day preliminary hearing.
Brummett said that no direct evidence was presented to link Black to the Feb. 3 fire of the Royal College Shop. Black had been charged with arson and attempting to derraud the Yorkshire bank. He also caused York in connection with the fire that caused $280,000 damage to four downtown businesses.
BRUNMETT SAID that circumstantial evidence was not enough to show that there was probable cause to
think the defendant committed a crime.
Greg Hammel, special deputy assistant district attorney, said the appeal was filed because under state statute the office has the right to appeal a judge's dismissal directly to the Supreme Court.
Hammel said it would be four to six months before the Supreme Court made a decision.
Black's lawyer, John Lungsturm,
said, "Basically we were not surprised by the appeal. They have invested a lot of time on the case and they had to justify that time through an appeal."
LAW ENFORCEMENT officials and the district attorney's office have been investigating and preparing the case since the Feb. 3 fire.
Lungssturm said before the preliminary hearing that they wanted the case to proceed as quickly as possible. He said that Black and his family had been suffering from mental anxiety and they knew that charges were pending.
Lungstrum said Friday that Brummett's dismissal did not necessarily lengthen that process because the
district attorney's office would have had the opportunity to appeal a later trial decision.
"Tom was delighted with the decision Judge Brummett made," Lungstrum said.
HE SAID the dismalist was a strong vindication because an experienced district court judge ruled there was wrongdoing. He took his defendant committed a crime.
"I'm not surprised that the district attorney's office would try to get that reversed, or it would have confirmed that there wasn't a case there," he
Hammel the next step in the appeal process would be for the court reporter to prepare a transcript of the testimony and that would take several weeks.
After the transcript has been submitted to the Supreme Court, the prosecutor's office has 30 days to prepare a brief. Then the defense will have 30 days to prepare a brief with the possibility of a 30-day extension.
After oral arguments are presented by both sides, the Supreme Court will have 60 days to make a decision, Hammel said.
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Fall into Savings
Now! Big Savings throughout the store. Come in today and save! All items on sale while quantities last. Sale dates: November 15-17.
---
- Buy 1 item of clothing (excluding sale items) and get a second clothing item of equal value or less for 50% off.
- Entire selection of backpacks will be 25% off.
- Buy 4 records at regular price and get any $2.99 record free
- Selection of health and beauty aids at sale prices.
- Texas Instrument MBA Calculator—Reg. $70.00, on sale for $45.00
- All color keys for 59* each.
- Texas Instrument TI57 Calculator—Reg. $60.00, on sale for $36.00.
- FREE K.U. ACADEMICCALENDAR will be given to the first 250 customers that present this ad to the cashiers
kansas union bookstores main union level 2 satellite shop
KU
Consensus
Which Group has contributed more to your Student Government?
CONSENSUS
- 11 Past & Present Student Senators
- Chairman — Student Senate, Executive Committee
- Executive Committee
- Chairman — Student Senate Committee on Rights and Responsibilities
- Chairman — Student Senate
the opposition
- Chairman — Student Senate Communication Committee
- Co-Chairman — Finance and Auditing Committee
- 2 Members — University Senate
None
Executive Committee
- 4 Members — University Council
- 25 Members serving on
- Student Senate Committees
- 6 Members - Associated Students
of Kansas
Experience Will Make A Difference
Federal cuts in financial aid, State budget cuts in education, tuition increases: These issues and others like them will be facing students in the year to come. Are you willing to trust the important decisions that must be made in the next year to beginners? Too much is at stake.
Check the Record — Its Not Even CLOSE. Paid for by Consensus
Page 8
University Daily Kansan, November 15, 1982
[Image of a man kneeling on grass, feeding several ducks].
Larry Kipp, Vinland graduate student, feeds some of the ducks at Potter Lake. Kipp has been taking care of the ducks for the last three years.
Animal Care Unit to take over job but keeper to watch over quackers
By CINDI MERIFIELD Staff Reporter
Larry Kipp deals with, quacks,
handles dog food and has been known to
take an occasional swim in Potter
Lake.
Kipp, an entomology graduate student, has been the University of Kansas' duck keeper for the past three years.
The University has decided that next year the Animal Care Unit will assume the responsibility of caring for the animals in the facility and of the already-busy graduate students.
The Animal Care Unit is a group that has protected the animals used in teaching and research on campus since 1982. The unit cares for injured wildlife in the area.
Kipp's job entails feeding the ducks with dog food and jumping into the water from time to time to protect the ducks from dog attack, he said.
"One time a dog cornered one of my ducks so I jumped in, swarm over and tried to pull the dog away. It snapped at me and then ran on," he said.
NO ONE SEEMS to know when or how the ducks first appeared on campus.
"It is a mystery to us how the ducks got on Potter. There are more ducks there now than there were at the end of the summer," said John Ward, animal care supervisor for the Animal Care Unit.
The job of duck keeper has been passed along from one graduate student to the next and, with the help of Kipp, Kipp has tended the ducks since 1979.
Each year in November or December, Kipp moves the ducks from Potter to his home in Vinland. Geese, cows, hogs and hundreds of bees keep the KU ducks company at his nearby farm, he said.
LAST YEAR, Chancellor Gene A. Bud rewardedki's efforts with a
Rupp takes his job seriously and said he would continue to keep an eye on the dog.
certificate of appreciation.
"If anyone tries to mess with my ducks, I'll personally throw them in Potter Lake," he said.
Kipp's greatest fear concerning the ducks is that during these hard times, someone might try to catch one of the ducks and cook it for dinner.
"If they do will be disappointed.
These ducks are about five to seven
(years old) and will taste tough. The
ducks are usually about 12 weeks old," Kipp said.
Kipp has named a couple of the ducks. Charlie is the head duck and Charlotte is Charlie's "main woman," he said.
"I feel certain that all of the ducks are Democrats. I can tell by the way they act. I have some geese at home that are Republicans and when I put the two together, they just don't mix," he said.
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7:15, 9:10 Mat. Sat. Sun, 2:15
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BACK BY POPULAR DEMAND
Jayhawker Senior Portraits starting Nov. 29
CALL NOW FOR AN APPOINTMENT!
Yearbook Office 10-4 864-3728 Shootings: 9 a.m. - 5 p.m.
when shopping began in earnest at the end of November.
Front Entrance, Main Union
Stores start Christmas early
$1 sitting fee
'83 Jayhawkers for sale $15.
By JULIE HEABERLIN Staff Reporter
"Well, the economy has not been as tough on us here as it has in other segments of the country," Smith said.
Gleaming ornaments, bright Christmas wrapping and plastic holly — the commercial aspect of the holiday tradition, even before turkeys grace Thanksgiving tables.
Gasper said that TG&Y had been advertising Christmas items in its circulars throughout the past month. He said that 75 percent of the next weekly circular would be filled with toy advertisements to catch the attention of those just beginning to make out Christmas lists.
Customers may complain that stores are bringing out the Christmas season earlier each year, according to statistics from the United States, another product of the changing times.
"We live in a different world these days," said Marvin Smith, store manager of Gibson's Discount Center, 2525 Iowa St. "A lot of people in Lawrence have relatives living overseas and are in a hurry to mail packages. They want to buy Christmas paper in October."
Smith said that 70 percent of Gibson's annual sales occurred in November and December, and that the store pur-
chaused superint amount of many items,
especially oysts, in March for the sales
of new products.
DESPITE A tumbling economy and high unemployment, the merchants interviewed were optimistic about sales this season.
LIKE MANY small and large discount stores in the competitive spirit for a prime sales market, at Gibson's, on Saturday afternoon, or the shelves the day after Halloween.
By Thanksgiving, Christmas gifts and decorations line the aisles of most stores as merchants ready themselves the biggest shopping day of the year
"One of the biggest selling days has traditionally been the day after Thanksgiving," said Joe Gasper, store manager of TGY Stores Co., 711 W. 23rd St. "Most people have that day off, and they begin to think they better get out there and shop before there are only leftovers."
HE SAID the smaller variety store was forced to put Christmas items out on the shelves early in order to compete
He said that the higher-priced department stores probably would notice more of a decline in sales, as shopping pinchers by the tight economy turned to discount stores and factory outlets.
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The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Presents The University Choirs, Choristers and Symphony Orchestra in a performance of Beethoven's MISSA SLEMNIS
SO
Robert Shaw, Conductor Musical Director and Conductor of the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra
Sunday, November 21, 1982
3:30 p.m. Hoch Auditorium
Lawrence, Kansas
Sylvia McNair, Soprano
Elizabeth Mannon, Mezzo-Soprano
Norman Paige, Tenor
John Stephens, Bass
All proceeds benefit the KU Music Scholarship Fund.
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office and, on the day of
the performance, at the Hoch Auditorium Box Office.
Al. seats reserved/For reservations, call 913/864-3982
Special discounts for students and senior citizens.
素比素比素比
STUDENT SENATE ELECTIONS VOTE
ON NOVEMBER 17-18
Polling Places will be open from 8:30 to 4:30 at the following buildings:
SUMMERFIELD
WESCOE
UNION
GREEN (LAW SCHOOL)
LINDLEY
Student must bring K. U. ID to vote
(Funded by the Student Activity Fee)
---
University Daily Kansan, November 15. 1982
Page 9
Hospice program consoles dying patients, families
[By VICKY WIL]
Staff Reporter
Death is one of the most frightening experiences a person faces, but with the help of Hospice volunteers a patient can be saved very few weeks of life can be less painful.
The Hospice program offers two services — support to the patient while he is alive and bereavement care to him after the family member is dead.
The program will receive special attention this week, during National Biotech Week.
"People who have a misconception about Hospice think that it means death and they associate negative, fearful connotations with it," said Jay Memmott, director of the Lawrence Hospice program.
"In Hospice we're trying to put the care back into the health care system and we're trying to restore and make caring a central and an integral part of the health care system and to do it on people's terms, not ours," he said.
BUT THE PROGRAM offers hope to
BUT those who are dying, and to their
future.
Hospice workers offer people hope that they have the power to make their life better, even though they are in a bad situation, Mammott said.
"We try to work that very delicate
"They may end up dying but they may have three more months where if they did not have hope they wouldn't have lived that long."
balance of not giving people false hope, but we don't want people to give up hope either because hope is that quality of being a glives people more time." he said.
When a life-threatening situation strikes someone, unresolved issues surface which, if not dealt with appropriately, can lead to serious problems for the family, he said.
AFTER A FAMILY member's death, some people divorce, lose their jobs, and have personal conflicts. Hospice providers must address these problems and work to prevent them.
"It's neat to see our volunteers provide support to people, especially after a loss. Friends and relatives pull away after four or five weeks, and the person wakes up one morning and they're all alone." Memmott said.
That is when a volunteer may call and ask the person out for dinner or just go over to the home to look at pictures and talk about memories, he said.
Mayetta Rees, social welfare graduate student, said volunteers provided an important service by staying with the patient so a family member could get out of the house for a couple of hours. A neighbor's family could have a good night's sleep.
RESPITE CARE is valuable to the
"I think it can be better if the family member dies at home for the family members, because they have the opportunity to make their loved one comfortable, they can go about assessing their own grief about the situation by actually doing things," she said. "In a hospital things are more sterile and I think conversation flows a little better at home."
family members because they are in a very energy draining situation, she said.
Hospice workers try to help people disengage from the program as quickly as possible. But if a person needs help as year after a loss volunteers are available to work with them, Mammott said.
Rees said even though the family was viewed as a unit, Hospice does not always work with each family member individually.
"Sometimes I'm closest to the person who has the illness and sometimes I'm closest to family members. You have to know that when you are ill, you is and who has whom for support."
MEMOHTT SAID it was important for a dying person to have someone to talk to.
"Sometimes a person who is dying gets shut-off by the rest of the family. The family members say, 'Let's not talk about those dreary things, let's talk about cheer, happy things.' It's a natural response, but then the guy gets
left in a lurch because he wants to talk and people are scared to death to hear
People overuse the cliche "death with dignity," Mennott told. Dignity connotes dying by a standard, but dying should be a very individual experience. Some people accept it calmly and some don't, believing dying right up to the very end, he said.
THE LAWRENCE Hospice program is a branch of the Visiting Nurses Association. Family physicians refer individuals to the VNA and a nurse visits the family to evaluate whether H hospice care is needed. Sometimes physicians state on the referral that H hospice care is desired.
Then one of the three social workers in the Hospice program visits the patient and family and talks with them about budgeting their time and managing business to see to what extent Hospice needs to be involved.
The spiritual aspect of their life also is assessed. If they do not have a minister and want one, Hospice helps arrange for one.
The Lawrence Hospice Program started seeing people last May. There are now 10 families in the program; six are under direct care - care and support for the patient - and four families are under bereavement care.
MEMMOTT SAID he saw Hospice more as a part of health care in the community.
chance to die in their homes with their paintings; their junk and their clean-
The Lawrence program has 21 volunteers and others are waiting for training, but Mammotm said training was only offered twice a year.
Connie Tilden, executive director of Topka Hospice Inc., said that Hospice has grown in Kansas over the past 10 years and is now functioning or formulating ones.
In the United States there are 853 programs, a 200 percent increase in two
Tilden said the program currently is researching accreditation and standards to comply with medicine requirements for reimbursement.
HOSPICE IS different from home health care services, Tilden said, because Hospice spends more time working with the family and the organization of emotional support, while home health care rests the medical needs of the patient.
Each Hospice program is organized differently, she said. In small communities the group may be all volunteer without any paid staff.
Patients in the program do not have to be older people or have cancer. Rees Kee, a pediatrician, said that the program is designed for
"Hospice tries to educate the community as to what dying is about." **Therapist**
referrals to people who are in the later stages of their illness.
PEOPLE WORKING in the program find positive and rewarding experiences from their association with families.
Rees said, "This is a very significant time in a person's life and to be a part of that is very fulfilling for me. It's an honor to be included and allowed to participate in someone's dying and the family's grief.
"As you work with families and dying people they can really teach you some valuable things about living and about death," she said in your life and not keeping grudges.
FOR VOLUNTEER Judy Kimmel, associate professor of occupational therapy, the Hospice concept was based on research been aware of for along time, she said.
"It's a concept I really believe in, enhancing the last weeks of a terminally ill person and offering help to the family is important," she said.
There are difficult parts working with a dying person and his family, too, Rees said.
"I think the hardest part for me is just knowing what level of acceptance they are in and being in-tention to that so you can be confident, but not too uncomfortable for them," she said.
Broadcaster urges rule change
Staff Reporter
By VERONICA JONGENELEN
Staff Reporter
Broadcasters should lobby for reforms to correct the inequalities between the public service capabilities of newspapers and the electronic media, the president of a national broadcasting group said Friday.
Edward Fritts, president of the National Association of Broadcasters, spoke to more than 100 broadcasters, students and faculty, detailing problems that broadcasters face in trying to serve the public.
Part of the problem is the fairness doctrine and regulations of political science.
"WHAT THESE things have led to instead is the tendency of broadcasters to stick to the bland in programming to
The fairness doctrine, a regulation of the Federal Communications Commission, requires that stations seek out and air opposing viewpoints on controversial issues. For political broadcasts, the FCC requires stations to provide a candidate for political office with air time equal to any an opponent receives beyond the coverage of news events.
defend against government suits," he said. "We feel we must be free of these rules which interfere with the free flow of news to the public."
Fritts cited recent election coverage as an example. The public was inundated by advertising without having heard from the candidates or opinions from the electronic media.
He said that if those people read newspapers, though, they would have seen endorsements for several candidates.
"The upshot of this is that the public relies more on newspapers for endorsements," he said.
THE PRESS always has enjoyed the freedom of full opinion, but some people feel that broadcasters should not have this same right. he said.
"As journalists, broadcasters should be allowed the editorial discretion to see which of those candidates the public should know more about," he said.
Support for this position comes from newspapers that are entering the telecommunications age, such as those entering the cable market, he said.
In addition to the speech, Radio-TV Film faculty and students gave the Alumni Honor Citation and Grover
William Harmon, founding partner and chairman of the board of Harmon True Prutti, an advertising and public relations agency, received the alumni award for broadcasting for broadcasting of Stauffa Communications Inc. received the Cobb award.
The scholarship, which a student in the RTVF sequence usually receives, has fallen into disrepair in the past few years, Harmon said. To build the fund, Harmon offered a check to Bruce Linton, professor of journalism and media at New York University in the form of what he called the "For One Hell of a Good Teacher" award.
IN ACCEPTING the award, Harmon challenged both the alumni of the William Allen White School of Journalism and those in telecommunications fields now to revitalize the RTVF alumni scholarship fund.
Linton said only that the amount of the check was one of "substantial" payment.
Cobb Award for Broadcasting Service at the luncheon.
Eight other telecommunications executives spoke about different facets of the Expanding Dimensions and Challenge in the Telecommunications during the Telecommunications Day.
BURGLARS STOLE $500 worth of stereo equipment Saturday night from a car parked in the 2000 block of 20th Street, police said yesterday.
BURGLARS STOLE $710 worth of stereo equipment and 30 cassette tapes Saturday night from a car parked in the 1100 block of Highland Drive, Lawrence police said yesterday.
On the record
BURGLARST STOLE A $480 cassette stereo Saturday night from the 2400 block of West 25th Street, police said.
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Page 10 University Daily Kansan, November 15. 1982
False rape convictions ruin man's normal life
By United Press International
MOLINE, Ill.—Greg Petesky has been unable to shake his nightmares and recurring memories of the seven brothers, wrongly jailed as “the circuit raptist.”
Until mid-October, when another man confessed to a series of rapes in Illinois and Iowa, Petoskey dreaded each phone call and knock at the door.
"I thought the police were going to come ask me questions about every rape," he said. "I live with this paranoia, wondering if the police are still watching me. I've had a lot of sleepless nights and strange dreams."
A former clothing store manager, Petekosky, 33, has no idea how he became a suspect in the attacks on two dozen women during 1977 and 1978.
HE WAS TAKEN to Cedar Rapids, Iowa, in 1881 for questioning about the theft of money from a clothing store. The next thing he knew, he was in jail and they were calling him "the circuit rapist."
"You have to really live that to know what it's like," he said. "It was so frustrating that they wouldn't listen to me when I tried to tell them I was innocent. When I think about it now, I still shudder."
"I feel dirty, like rape victims say they feel. I feel like my soul and my mind were raped by the judicial system."
Peteksy was charged in April, 1981, with kidnapping, burglary and been armed with intent in two Cedar Rapids raped. He was not charged with sexual abuse because the statute of limitations had run out on that crime.
ALTHOUGH HE had evidence that he was elsewhere when two rannes
occurred, prosecutors refused to drop the case, or reduce his $200,000 bond
"If the police force had been a little more competent, they wouldn't have made these accusations," he said. "It was a very dirty and now we're going to prove it."
Finally, in October, authorities performed blood tests that proved he couldn't have been the assailant in one of the attacks. A grand jury then reviewed the evidence and dismissed all charges against him.
But Petoskey felt his innocence still was in question until David W. Bellman of Davenport, Iowa, confessed to the series of rapes last month.
PETOKESY SAID the worst part of his ordeal was being jailed and facing endless interrogations by police officers who insisted he was guilty.
"It was a fight for survival every day," he said. "You had to put up fronts for the other inmates. You had to be hard and callous all the time.
"I didn't even want to go outside. I didn't want to see what freedom was like if I was going to spend the rest of my life in prison. I just wanted to sit there and let my mind become mush, or maybe I'd vegetate into oblivion."
TIMES ARE still tough for Petoskey. His wife is working two jobs because he cannot find work. Their savings has dwindled to $100 and Petoskey's ex-wife has threatened to terminate visitation privileges with his 9-year-old daughter.
"I lost a lot of friends — well, a lot of people I thought were friends," he said. "And of course you run into the types who are bigots — hypocrites who still to this day feel there must have been a reason I was charged."
Petoskey plans to go back to school next April and is trying to resume a normal life. But, he said, "I've almost forgotten what normal is."
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payments and receives no funds from the University.
Terry Frederick, Student Senate representative to RPAB, said there had been a $4,000 surplus of income over last summer. Stouffer Place in the last two years.
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Is Your Social Life Spelled STUDY?
AT THE MEETING, Frederick encouraged board members to be "more than a rubber stamp for the housing department."
Break away from the books and bring a friend to College Life. Enjoy an action packed hour including a talk about "Three threats to relationships."
Be Sure to Watch:
"We need to look more closely at what the groups are offering, and not just what housing is recommending," Frederick said.
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will have to pay for installing smoke alarms in every apartment, said J. J. Wilson, director of housing. Wilson will be able to would cost $100 each, including wiring.
Rent at Stouffer Place will increase $13.30 a month next year, the Residential Programs Advisory Board decided last week. But that decision may not be
By KIESA ASCUE Staff Reporter
Married students at Kansas State University can live in apartments similar to those available at Stoffer footwear, a month with utilities paid, Balcazar said.
The association wants the rent increase to be no more than $7, buoyed by a reduction in
Residents of Stouffer Place pay rent to the housing department. They also pay for parking and all utilities.
"We expect to take this further," said Fabricio Balezar, chairman of the Stouffer Neighborhood Association. "We will go to talk directly with the vice chancellor, the chancellor and the Board of Regents if necessary."
Thirty cents of the monthly increase will support SNA programs and $13 will go to the housing department.
Next year, the housing department
The largest projected increase in expenses for Stouffer Place listed by the housing department is for building and equipment repair.
The $13.30 increase will mean that cumulative rent has increased 33 percent in the last five years, Balcazar said.
THIS YEAR, the rent at Stouffer Place is $140 a month for a one-bedroom apartment and $160 a month for a two-bedroom apartment.
KU student to face trial in 1981 burglary of store
A 21-year-old KU student will be tried Dec. 3 in Douglas County District Court on charges of burglary, grand theft, criminal damage and carrying a concealed weapon in connection with a $10,000 burglary of a Lawrence sporting goods store.
Michael Stephen Ruley, Prairie Village special student, was charged in connection with the Oct. 16, 1981 break-in at Francis Sports Goods, 731 W. State Street, which valued $8,500 worth of items were stolen, and the store was severely damaged.
Assistant District Attorney Jean
Sagan said that Ruley's preliminary hearing last Thursday was stopped by the judge because he said enough evidence had been presented to determine probable cause to believe the defendant committed a crime.
The state's main witness, Lisa Williamson, Overland Park junior, testified that Ruley told her in late Oct. 1981 or early Nov. 1981 that he had taken goods and giving Goods and gave her several items as warmup suits, shoes and socks.
John Revenew, manager of the store,
and George Francis, owner of the store.
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Sagan said that Williamson notified the police after she and Ruley broke up.
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A search warrant of Ruley's apartment, 704 Arizona St., produced 149 items of sporting good equipment, Sagan said.
Ruley and his lawyer could not be reached for comment yesterday.
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-
University Daily Kansan, November 15, 1982
Page 11
KU students add services to Nash clinic
By BRET WALLACE Staff Reporter
Finding a job or knowing what to do with free time are problems almost everyone faces, but for people with mental illnesses these problems can open doors to mental hospitals, a doctor of social welfare said recently.
Charles Rapp, the professor, said, "Many chronic persons return to state hospitals, not because of the lack of relevant programs, but because they have performance breakdowns in everyday life."
Most professional mental health services do not have the money or the time to provide patients with assistance in everyday problems, he said.
STUDENTS involved in the program help people who are thought to be in danger of being institutionalized, with jobs, housing, recreation and other social and family support, nutrition and medication, he said.
called case management, is one part of the process patients go through at the health center, he said. Clients also can ask for 'and medication through the center.'
Rapp said, "The unique thing about this program is that it provides a service that would not be available if security and the center did not collaborate."
The School of Social Welfare this semester began trying to fight everyday problems by using students to provide such services, Rapp said.
Robert Blum, clinical psychologist for Bert Nash, said, "The person may not necessarily be in immediate danger, but if there is a potential for harm, you should read the note we try to get them involved in the program." Blum said.
Students are working with clients of
Bert Nash Mental Health Center.
Students receive training.
"SOME PATIENTS may not need all three services," Blum said. "For some, case management might be all they need to help them live in society."
Blum said cooperation between the University and Bert Nash could only lead to advantages for Bert Nash's clients. Also, as the program advances, Blum said, there would be an integration between the other social service agencies in Lawrence, he said.
Students will work with a broad range of ogee, because Bert Nash is well-known.
The help provided by the students
WHEN CASE managers work through other agencies to find support for the clients, they are informing the other agencies of the work Bert Nash is said. This will help the center work more closely with these agencies in the future.
"So many people can be at risk of institutionalization for a lot of different reasons."
BLUM SAID involvement in the program this year was limited to four
Rapp said the program was designed so that students in the bachelor's and master's degree programs did the case management work and were supervised by doctoral students. Rapp and Blum supervise the entire program.
Students go through a six-week training period, led by Blum, Rapp and the doctoral student, before starting in the field. Blum said.
bachelor's and master's students, to allow proper evaluation and supervision.
Bert Sand now pays the University for the time Rapp and the doctoral student spend training the other students. Blum said. But if Bert Sand does not get funding in the future, he will take over training of the students.
Rapp and the doctoral student, Roma Chamberlain, Olathe, are designing a set of materials Bert Nash will take to over the training, Blum said.
The University Daily
Call 864-4358
CLASSIFIED RATES
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AD DEADLINES
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to run
Monday Tuesday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
The Kausan will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or simply by calling the Kansan business office at 864-1588.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
KANSAS BUSINESS OFFICE
118 Flint Hall 864-4358
Do you need cash? Hire your unwanted auction. Do the Lawrence University auction. Every Wednesday, 7 p.m. Compensation accepted Tuesday through Thursday, 4:00 a.m., 5:00 p.m., Hawaii Call, 281-221 for info.
Paid Staff Positions
Business Manager, Editor
The Kanan is now accepting applications for the Spring Semester Business Manager and Editor positions. These are paid positions and require some newspaper experience. Application forms are available in the Student Senate Office, 105, B.Kansas Union; in the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 220 strong Hall; and in Rooms 200 and 118 Flint Hall. Applications for Flint Hall by 5:00 p.m. on Thursday, November 18.
The University Daily Kanan is anEqual Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer. Applications are sought from all qualified people regardless of race, religion, color, sex, disability, veteran status; national origin, age, or ancestry.
JLHK is now accepting staff applications until Nov.
15 at 3 p.m. Pick up your application at the station or
Bake Annex.
APPLES OF GOLD
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SUBROGATE MOTHERS need help for Hager Iron
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Women must be health, 21, Kansas children
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total months paid. Medical 911-234-1084, Hager
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FOR RENT
Available Dec. 31, 2018. farm apt. near campus.
Vagrant experience. $800 monthly plus plan ($400 off first month)
and a 3-month lease.
1. bedroom Meadowbrook Aqr. for rest through room 2. bedroom Please contact occupants at 463-150-7100
2. bedroom Meadowbrook Aqr. for rest through room 2. bedroom Please contact occupants at 463-150-7100
3. bedroom Julie J. I fully carpeted and furnished. Choose to campus on Aqr. but rent the room, and cable TV on the computer.
ENERGY EFFICIENT 2 bedroom room in mid-
2 year old duplex $250 monthly plus utilities $492
***
EXTRA size apartments, large and small. Next to campus. Utilities paid, priced relatively cheap. Walking distance to campus. Efficiency of the building is efficient townhouses w./ garage. Spacious rooms for three. Only 3 bldgs in campus at 1482 S. Lakewood Blvd.
Midwoodway townhouse 2 bldm; 1 bth; 1 bath; bath
sublease $465. Available. DE 15-789-4513 eve
Housemates wanted. wanted a relaxed co-ed meal with friends in a classroom to campus go on. Call Sunflower House 892-431-LIVE in the CHRISTIAN CAMPUS HOUSE this fall at Church of Jesus Christ of Jesus University. Call Alan Kenack, campus minister.
Needed 4 mature students for a very special 4 bedroom home, very nice neighbourhood $460
New apart, 2 bed, 1½ bath, fully furnished, close to campus. 841-1212 or 749-5757.
Nice new 2 Br ap next to campus / a/c, carpet,
Available Mid-Dec '14 / Dec rent free
841-9353
One one bedroom, one bath apt with range,
shelving and a study. Good location $285,
all rentals 841-6744.
PRINCETON PLACE PATIO APARTMENTS. Now Available. 2 bedrooms, 2 bath, perfect for roommates, features wood burning fireplaces, 2 car garage with wood shelves, kitchenette, dining room, pet kitchen, quiet surroundings. No pets please $430 per month. Open house 9:30-10:30 at 2206 Princeton plvld, or phone 482-2575 for additional information.
One and two bedroom apartments. Move your belongings in after finals-spend the holidays at home with family-par rent upon you in indoor facility facilities. Paid cable car. #89-2118.
Quaik Creek Apartments sublease. Two bedroom, 1/2 bath, hallway, Mid. December June $500
Roomsma needed in a BRI房. Own room, share
nice kitchen, place, color cable TV, $150/month
- 4139 - 4138
Roommate needed, very nice fully furnished apartment,
private room, wash and bath, $127/month,
water closet, laundry, kitchen, stove, bathroom.
room for rent plus utilities. Kitchen privilges,
washer, dryer. Detferences. No pets. Non-smoker
SPRING SEMESTER
Enjoy carefree living at affordable prices. Spacious studios, 1 & 2 bedroom apts - Carpeted, draped and on the busline.
The Luxury of Meadowbrook is Just Right For You
meadowbrook
...mantic Country Studio for lease, rent $275 monthly plan deposit
and ref. rtl. 3, NU-8149.
SOUTHERN PARKWAY TOWNHOUSES, 9th & 10th
Kassidy if you need to noisy or cramped apart
Houses. 9th & 10th Houses. Houses.
all appliances, attached garage, swimming
pool, pool spa, hot tub, patio furniture,
C-199-107, evangelism and weekends; for more in-
quiries call (866) 295-3417.
STUDIO apt. for J月 may balance. Can move in
14/16/150 mbs, low utilities. Nighborhood
with park. Walking distance to campus.
Sublease studio apd. 20, June 20, June 13/18/month.
Close to clanup and downtown. Handle Place Apd.
8619 W. 7th St. Flushing, NY 11350. (614) 228-7200
SUBLEASE in Dec or Jan. once i186 aft, furnished.
Close to campau. 749-3425.
1979 Datamaster B-210 4-piece 2-door, am/fm, AC Trio
with dual-camera system. Includes a power conditioner, conditioning,aking $750.80 per year.
DVD included.
Hanover Place - Completely furnished one bedroom apartments available immediately. Located between 14th and 15th on Mass. Only 3 blocks from KU and downwards. See him! From $20 per month water费.
Spaciosa 1 bedroom room $300/month plus utilities. deposit required Available 1. Call 650-744-2986
Tired of doing all the housework? Check out and
use this app to help you get started. 184-9241.
Close up to see 184-9241.
FOR SALE
Warm, inexpensive room. Block from Union Depot, near Penn Ave., and close to Courtyard Closet. Minutes wait in lunch.
NICELY DECORATED spacious room. Furnished
for utilities paid, Near university & downtown.
Off-street parking.
Sublease large, newly remodeled 4 BR apartment
Four blocks from campus. 2900 monthly. 841-607
www.businessfurniture.com
Sublease newly decorated 4 bedroom townhouse
Reduced rate: Call 845-9248.
Pole bid flats from sample
furniture in the basement,
bedroom, or apartment in
Meadowbrook. Water and cable TV paid. Available
D. Contact 850-4944 or Meadowbrook 850-4944
carpeted Available. Dec. 17 923/month
carpeted Available. Dec. 17 923/month
1977 Tosca Corolla 1972 4-ft. A.C., radio, great condition. Mant see attestation $2700, 843-564-643
Very nice 2 bedroom duplex on the campus edge. Sublease starts in January. Call us 843-843, ask for details.
188 565 Sukurki. Excellent condition, only 200 ml on it.
Priced reasonably. 842 743
173 Cherv. Nov. 6 by cyl. hatchback, good condition.
850 BEST OFFER Call. M41-8259
70 Olds Delta 80, power steering, power brakes,
automatic transmission. Good condition. Low mileage.
1800 Open GT, Excelsior interior, good exterior
silver staircase, 79.000 square feet. Call after
6:30 AM.
1927 GMC 3.4 ton pick-up, 4 speed, power steering and brakes, 1 rear tires. Run great. $6000 Call
179p WV Rabbit 38,000 miles. 4-door, New Michelin,
fuel injection, fuel charge. 6,000 Call 814-4757.
Hewlett Packard HED3000 keyboard code reader, also gason
kit 864-429 elc. 435 after furnaces. 84-300 evening.
Long gray winter coat with boot. Size 14. Worn only.
Roll-up. CpwL 49% after 11 a.m., after 8 p.m.
10/17 Dafun 2008 (32½) extra clean, no surface rust
size inside. Maint size: **Call** 749-5515. Keen twinn
W.L. Workplaces $100 pr. NAD 20 amp/amp;
B110, or best offer, 81-494-9680.
control selection 2 for max size
for sale Fender Stratocaster Call Dave 843-2270
For sale Fender Stratocaster Call Dave 843-2270
MOBILE HOME in the country, Parkwood, 50 a. 10 v. 4 H/候 on live room, 5 m. 1 ft. E of Lawrenceville, W.D. ceiling fan, central air, artificial fireplace, W.D. cooling fan, central air, artificial fireplace, lawn mower. Very nice for $250. Call 542-5120 lawn mower.
Vivacious Vista Reverb Amplifier, 100 watts, wired speakers, new tubes, new or best offer (841-9730)
Savers Government typemasters, IDM electric, $150
reply required. B1-414-414
speakers, new tubes $20 or best offer. 841-6739.
Pioneer SX780 receiver and PL154-turbo adapter.
TENNIS RACKETS. Recently received selection newhead Head Coach, Wilson Advantage, Kramer Pro Staff. Drowp Maysky. *Dawn* Classic. *Pierre* Montpellier. *Jay* in good condition. 84,921 to 6:09 p.m.
Used camera. Pentax K10A, flash unit, telephoto
lens. 125 mm, cape. Call 789 6079.
FOUND
SUZUKI 15007, 1975, 12,000 miles, runs and looks great, must sell 749-108.
LOST 10⁹ gold chain with Delta Gemma Inlayer
with double-denilent value, reward if returned.
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LOST. A small dark blue book of addresses between
a small church and compass, includes all my
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Page 12 University Daily Kansan, November 15, 1982
1. the train was once a river 2. Prep with
Colorado wins first home game Buffaloes' offense stymies Jayhawks
From Staff and Wire Reports
BOULDER, Colo.—One week after the Kansas Jayhawks surprised the Iowa State Cyclones, 24-17, mental mistakes and early-season woes came back to haunt them.
Just when the Jayhawks looked as if they had found an offensive niche in defeating the Cyclones in the last game of the season at Memorial Stadium, inconsistency began playing a familiar tune in Saturday's game with the Colorado Bufaloes.
Meanwhile, Colorado coach Bill McCarty took a gamble by changing his injury-riddled offense.
McCarthy benched starting quarterback Randy Essington in favor of Steve Vogel, a signal-caller whose performance has wobbled from brilliant to dismal. But Vogel went out and threw three touchdown passes to Richard Johnson, who crossed the goal line on a rushing pass and gave Colorado its first Big Eight conference win of the year, a 84-38 victory over Kansas.
Johnson also gained 102 yards on 21 carries and ran back a kickoff for 28 yards.
THE LOSS pulled Kansas into the cellar with Colorado. Both are 1-4 in the Big Eight. The
Buffaloes, who won their first home game of the season, have an overall record of 2-7.1. The Javahawks are 2-4.2.
"Randy could have played," McCarrin said. "But Steve earned the start. He stepped in for us against Missouri and gave us one of our biggest halves (200 yards passing). He deserved a shot."
Vogel, who was 10 of 20 for 172 yards, hit
Honson on a screen pass on the second play of
the game, and Johnson broke a couple of tackles
and raced 77 yards for the score with 54 gage.
Eleven minutes later, Johnson caught a flare
in the 13 yards to make it 14-6 after the
first period.
Johnson made it 21-3 on a five-yard touchdown catch early in the fourth quarter, and later scored on a two-yard dive that capped a short 20-yard drive by the Buffaloes.
KANSAS, HAMPERED by a tenacious Colorado defense, managed only 40-yard field goal by Bruce Kallmeyer with 2:39 to play in the third period.
Johnson's three touchdown catches tied a Big Eight record for most scoring receptions in a single game and set a Colorado record in that category. Johnson also became the first Buffalo back to gain more than 100 yards in a game this season.
"When you play as bad as we did against
Colorado, the only thing we can be thankful for is the opportunity to play one more ball game," said KU head coach DumBamrouh. "It would mean to end the season on a performance like we had."
The Jayhawks linnah the season Saturday at
Columbia against the Tigers, a 42-14
linnah the season.
"Right now, we are getting outmanned and outplayed," Fambrough said. "We are playing a lot of freshman and have a number of injuries; the team is making it up, but the effort this team has to give to be successful."
"WE are not that good of a football team and
"We don't give an all-out effort, we are going to
play hard."
Reserve linebackers Willie Pless and Bill Malavalli were among the few bright spots in the Kansas defense. Pless, a freshman from Aniston, Ala., led the Jawahры with 11 tackles and had a fumble recovery. Malavalli recorded including one of only two Jawahрь stop for losses.
But Bambridge said he was very disappointed in the play of the Jayhawks and labeled the game "unfair."
"I totally confused with our play," Fambrigha said, "with freshmen playing, you aren't a joke."
missed tackles, poor blocking and lack of execution that makes you a more football team."
Colorado took the opening kickoff and wasted little time in scoring the game's first points. After a three-yard gain by Johnson, Vogel hit Johnson in the flat with a screen pass, and he raced 77 yards untouched for the score. Tom Field kicked the first of his four extra points.
THE BUFFALOES made the score 14-0 with
3:06 remaining in the first quarter when Johnson
tallied his second touchdown on a 12-yard pass
on the 12-play drive, rushing the 10-tail.
Colorado, as has every team this season, picked on Kansas' defense, which ranks 96th in the nation against the rush. The Buffaloes utilized their running attack to gain 181 yards against the Jayhawks, who, ironically, rank 0.1 in the country against the pass.
Kansas, meanwhile, could not generate its offense. The Jayhawks rushed for only 128 yards and passed for 96. Frank Seuer threw three interceptions and Mike Bohn threw one.
Ten players carried the ball for Kansas, led by backlacks E.J. Jones and Dave Geroux. Jones gained 46 yards and Geroux had 44. Brad Burtts gained 13 yards and the backfield, gaining 21 yards on three carries.
Seattle edges by Houston,102-99 for 10th straight
By United Press International
HOUSTON—Gus Williams scored 20 points and Jack Sikma added 18 in leading the unbeaten Seattle SuperSonics to a 102-94 victory over the Boston Celtics last night before a sparse crowd of 6,576.
Seven, 10.0, is the only unbeaten team in the NBA. Seven of its victories have come on the road. Houston lost its eighth straight and is the only winless team in the league.
With six minutes remaining and Seattle ahead 90-75, Houston went on a 21-6 rush and pulled within to three within 39-96, with 58 seconds left. Rookie Terry Teagle scored nine points during the stretch. Seattle held on two free throws by Williams and one by David Thompson.
The Rockets were led by Teague's 22 points in his first NBA start. Ex-Sonic Walker added 15 for Houston; Caldwell Jones had 14 matches and led the Rockets in rebounding with nine.
'Hawks host Yugoslavs tonight
Thompson and Gregory Kelser each had 14 points for the Sonics, Sikina led Seattle with 14
By GINO STRIPPOLI
Sports Editor
Sports Editor
The Kansas basketball team, coming off an impressive intrasquad contest on Wednesday, will get its first taste of outside competition when the NCAA regional championship in National Team tonight at Alen Field House.
he's been a great player.
In the Carolina Blue game, Jayhawk fans saw
him scoring one that runs and presses
"The coaches are emphasizing quickness and defense," freshman Kerry Boagni said. "We want to run, run, run."
If the intrasqua was any indication, the Javahawks will be able to do just that.
THE STARTERS, as expected, won the game easily, but the second team, or Blue squad, was impressive and from that team will come the third. We'll need it will need if the Hawks are to be a running team.
"I want to try to arrive at eight or nine players to play in our tough games." Owens said recently. "If a player knows someone can come in and play with them, they can go out all and play as hard as they can."
The probable starting lineup for tonight's contest will be the same as it was in the previous round.
6-5, at guards; Jeff Disham 6-5, and Bougni,
6-8, at forward; and either Brian Martin, 6-10
Top reserves should be freshman forward Calvin Thompson, who had 28 points and 12 rebounds ip the intrasquad; forward Mark Eckert, who had 30 points; Kellogg, 9 points; and guard Jeff Guef, 6 assists.
The Yugoslavia team is coming off a victory in the first game of its American tour. Dishman, senior co-captain, said that this game would mean a lot more than the intrasquad game did.
"I THINK we all put a little more emphasis on it when we play an opponent," Dishman, who had 8 points and 3 steals, said yesterday. "You pumped up just because it isn't your own team."
"It's good that we play our scrimmages early in the season, because it gives us time to iron things out. It shows us what we need to concentrate on."
One thing that the Jayhawks are hoping for is a good turnout by the fans. An unusually large crowd of 4,410 showed up to watch the Jayhawks in their intrasquared. Last season, Kansas home team the Bengals only played only the second time in Owens' career at Kansas that the average crowd dipped below 10,000.
"We were saying how surprised we were with the large turnout that we had." Dishman said.
"We feel we have an exciting team to watch and we put a lot of points on the board in the trip."
"Now we just have to follow it up."
JAYHAWK NOTES—The Jayhawks took advantage of the early letter-of-intent signing day, getting Jim Pelton, a 6-9 senior from Palos Verdes High School, to join the Jayhawk fold. Pelton averaged 15.1 points and 10.2 rebounds a game his junior year at Palos Verdes. He was selected as a high school honorable mention player in the Statewide Stateazine and also selected by Street and Smith as one of the top five players in the Los Angeles metropolitan area.
Coach Ted Owens following the Crimson-Blue game that the Jayhawks expected to sign only one player early, so it is not expected that the Jayhawks will sign anyone else until Ann.
Junior Carl Henry, who scored 32 points and had 6 rebounds in the intrasquad game, was named as a preseason All-American by Street and Smith.
Entrance for tonight's game with the Yugoslavia National team will cost KU students $1 and a can of food. The food will be donated to families in need and contributed to families in need during Thanksgiving.
Hopes slim for boxer's life
By United Press International
Kim, 23, lapsed into a coma seconds after Mancini slammed a hard right hand to his head at the 19-second mark of the 14th round in the final. She was eventually televised title bout at Caesars Palace.
LAS VEGAS, Nev.—Korean boxer Duk-Koo Kim remained alive yesterday only with the aid of a life support system after suffering a cerebral hemorrhage during a World Boxing Association lightweight championship fight Saturday against Rav Mancini.
Lonnie Hammargren, the Las Vegas
neurosurgery who removed a 100cc blood clot from Kim's head during a 2%-hour operation Saturday, said yesterday Kim's condition was stable. The respirator was attached to the injured fighter.
"We know there is massive brain damage," Hammergren said. "His eyes are fixed and almost all of his reflexes are gone. We always try to keep a little hope, but his chances of survival are very small. These injuries are usually fatal."
Hammargreen said "in all probability" a small vein was ruptured in the right side of Kim's brain from a single blow thrown by Mancini late in the fight.
Bowling team defeats Emporia State
The KU bowling team, ranked seventh in the country last year, won its third straight match, and scored 139.6 points.
in the team event, KU's No. 1 and No. 2 teams beat Emporia's two top squads, taking 61 out of a possible 80 points. In singles, Kansas placed four in the top five out of 20 bowlers.
Mack, captain of the KU bowling team, said the team's next meet would be Sunday at Manhattan. The KU bowlers are then scheduled to compete in the National Collegiate Team Match Play Championships at St. Louis on Nov. 26 and 27.
Howard Shaw, Kansas City, Kan., junior, took first, Mike Brennan, Kansas City, Kan., then Michael Cavani, Kansas City, Kan.
State, finished third. In fourth place for Kansas was Jim Mack, Kailua, Hawaii, junior. Ned Istas, Lyons junior, took fifth.
K-State volleyball team wins three of four from Jayhawks
By EVELYN SEDLACEK
Sports Writer
Sports Writer
The Kansas State Wildcats' volleyball team fought off the Kansas Jayhawks' attempts to win by taking three of four games Friday night at Ahearn Field House in Manhattan.
In the first game, the Jayhawks claimed a 15-7 victory. Kansas held at least a five-point lead
But after the teams switched courts for the second game, Kansas State took command for the remainder of the match, defeating the Jayhawks, 15-2, 15-8 and 15-0.
"What can I say," said KU coach Bob Lockwood. "We couldn't set, block or spike. You could name it and we couldn't do it."
One thing Lockwood could say was that he praised the efforts of the team and their ability to keen ahead of the Wildcats in the first game.
"The our nervousness threw us off guard," Lockwood said. "I really can't say what made us uneasy."
In the second game, however, the Jayhawks were plagued by countless unnecessary errors, Lockwood said. The problem stemmed from the fact that Jayhawks were unable to retrieve they had gained in the match matcher, he said.
During the third and fourth games, Kansas lost all hopes of taking home a victory by making the same errors time and time again.
"I can't say that I'm disappointed in the girls," Lockwood said. "Just with the loss. The girls worked so hard the previous week in practice. When you lack enthusiasm and the desire to remain confident, you will always lose."
This week's workout will focus on a different game plan, which, according to Lockwood, is still undetermined. Lockwood said that to get to the zone he would have to have players would have to deal with them one by one.
"Whatever we decide to do, I am confident that the team will start playing as they meant to." Lockwood said. "We still have the team that is our most important championship this weekend and I know we can do it."
The Jayhawks will have this week to pull together before the Big Eight Championships.
Pryor-Arguello: Will drugs spoil great title fight?
Aaron Prvor, the World Boxing Association junior welterweight champion, Friday defeated Alex Arguello, the World Boxing Council lightweight champion, in one of the greatest fights in boxing since Muhammad Joe Frazier in the "Thrilla in Manila."
The fight had everything it was supposed to, and was one of the few fights in recent years that were not fought at the arena.
From the opening bell until Pryor scored a technical knockout in the 14th round, the fighters went toe-to-toe and hit each other all they had.
BUT PRYOR came off his stool in the 14th but Pruryar armed early. Pryer never let up until the referee stepped in to stop the fight. The referee made the right call in stopping the light because Arguelo was unable to retrieve. Pryer was once again the champion
But yesterday, a black cloud was thrown over the entire fight.
Arguello seemed to be the stronger fighter as the fight went on as he closed the gap that Pryor had built in the early rounds. As the 14th round opened, Pryor was ahead by two points on two of the judges cards and Arguello was ahead on the third.
Arruello's agent, Bill Miller, has filed a protest with the WBA, saying that Pryor "was administered obvious foreign substances, which are against the rules." After the he was beaten "by a great champion" and that he would not question Pryor's victory.
But the protest is in the hands of the WBA and they should act on the fight.
Miller's allegations concern the liquid Pryor was given by his handlers between
GINO
STRIPPOLI
Sports Editor
rounds and the type of inhalation that Pryor's corner used.
HE CLAMS that Panama Lewis, Pryor's trainer, asked for a special mixture to give to Pryor during the fight. Anyone who saw the fight would know that Lewis did ask for something that he had "mixed earlier." The police also heard that Lewis televised the fight and had a microphone in Pryor's corner in that round. Lewis' request for the bottle came over loud and clear.
Now the WBA must find out whether Pryor took illegal drugs during the fight. That would be easy if the WBA had the results of an investigation by Miller said that no urine samples were taken
Miller said the liquid was illegal. Lewis said the liquid was only a mixture of Ponder with linalool and ethyl acetate.
The only unprejudiced opinion on the matter has come from Gene Marks, a member of the Miami Board Council. Marks, who was at ringside for the fight, said some of the liquid spilled on him and that the liquid did not appear to be water.
WHATEVER COMES out of the protest, it will tarnish the results of a fight that has been long over.
Boxing is not like it used to be. The heavyweights were once the glamour boys of the sport. But the slow pace of most boxers has wrapped that weight class from the public eye.
The boxers who people know today are Arguello, Ray "Boom-Boom" Mancini, Roberto Duran and before his retirement, Sugar Ray Leonard.
They bring to the world of boxing a freshness of loving the sport they represent. They are the ones upon whose shoulders the future of boxing rests.
Mancini, after winning the WBA lightweight title, said he wanted to travel around the world and fight to promote the sport that he had devoted his life to.
One can only hope that the Pror-Arguello contest, a great fight in every sense of the word, will not be brought down a level because of some illegal play.
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The University Daily
KANSAN
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
Tuesday, November 16, 1982
Vol. 93, No. 62 USPS 650-640
New form will make figuring taxes less taxing
By JULIE HEABERLIN Staff Reporter
The Internal Revenue Service will bless 20 million college students and other single taxpayers at Christmas time with what may be the largest tax form in history. IRS officials said yesterday.
"It's ideal for the single college student who has traditionally filled out the 1040A form in the past," said Scott Waffle, IRS chief of media relations in Washington, D.C. "The new shorter form has 11 lines compared to the 22 lines of the old form."
MARY E. ANDERSON, a Lawrence accountant, said the new 1040EZ form could be completed in one-third the time taxpayers usually spend filling out the old short form.
However, not all taxpayers who used the 1040A form will be eligible for the shorter form. The 1040EZ form will not eliminate the old short form, but will be packaged with both the 1040A and 1040 forms and mailed to taxpayers in December and January.
"It will especially be helpful for college students with a small savings account or for those who work on salary." Anderson said. "I am very confident that we can require of making less than $40,000 a year."
The taxpayer is single and does not claim exemptions for being 65 or older, or for being blind.
TAXPAYERS ARE eligible for the 1040EZ form if:
- The taxpayer claims only a personal exemption, and no other dependents
- The taxpayer's taxable income is only in
wages, salaries and tips and is less than $50,000 a year.
— The taxpayer has interest of $400 or less, and has no dividend income.
"The new shorter form will save the government about $500,000 in processing costs." Waffle said, "but that's not the main reason for the short form. The IRS commissioner was simply concerned about the growing complexity of the 1040A form."
WAFFLE ALSO SAID using the shorter form would not guarantee a quicker refund to the taxpayer. He said most delays in returning tax refunds were caused by problems in data processing after IRS officials had checked the tax returns.
"But you have to consider that the form will be shorter, so the taxpayer will have less of a
chance to make a mistake." Waffle said. "That has to save us some time."
This year's income tax forms also include for the first time a "marriage credit," which Anderson, of Accounting Specialists, 824 New Hampshire St., said was an attempt to save money from living together; rather than marrying to keep their income tax payments lower.
BECAUSE OF THE pyramid tax structure, married couples often pay higher taxes than do couples who live together and file separate returns. Anderson said.
This year, however, all married couples can pay taxes on a sum less than their total adjusted
For example, one partner may earn $10,000 a year and the other $20,000. Rather than paying $20,000, the other partner might
couple would take 5 percent of the lowest income, $500 in this case, and subtract that figure from the total income. With the new tax rate, you would earn $30,000 pay taxes on only $29,500.
Because of the considerable percentage increases in tax payments in the higher brackets of the tax structure. Anderson said, this tax increase would decrease the same amount in taxes whether married or single.
BUT A KU law professor, Martin Dickinson, said there was no single solution that the government could offer for the millions of individuals filing joint and separate returns.
"I think this year's changes in the income tax forms is the IRS reacting to the impatience of the public," Dickinson said. "They want things to be as simple as possible."
Federal judge decides registration law invalid
By United Press International
LOS ANGELES-A federal judge yesterday ruled the draft registration law is invalid because President Carter's order setting up the process in 1980 was not properly enacted.
In dismiss charges against a young draft registration resister who claimed he was singled out for prosecution because of his vocal dissent, U.S. District Court Jerry Tatter Jr., also cited the Reagan administration's refusal to let defense lawyers see White House and Pentagon documents and question presidential counselor Kevin Moee.
JUSTICE DEPARTMENT attorneys immediately said they would appeal the entire decision to the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals.
Hatter's ruling that the registration law was "illegally promulgated" came as a surprise, initially confusing attorneys and reporters who had covered the case since David Wayte, 21, a former Yale philosophy student from suburban Pasadena was indicted.
The judge agreed with a defense motion claiming the government had waited 21 days instead of the required 30 days from the time the registration law was published in the Federal Register in July 1980 to the time it actually went into effect.
"THIS COURT DOES not agree with the government contention that statements made by President Carter at the time he issued Presidential Proclamation #471 amounted to a clearly articulated and legally sufficient waiver for his comment requirement," the judge said.
"The court recognizes the widespread effect that a decision granting defendant's motion to damise due to the illegal promulgation of the law in our nation's selective Service registration program.
"However, justice compels the court to grant defendant's motion. The preclamation in question was neither expressly nor impLIED punishment from the 50-day notice and comment requirement."
Both the registration law and selective prosecution rulings could jeopardize the cases against several other young men who contend they were singled out for prosecution because they say they exercised their First Amendment rights or proclaimed their opposition to draft registration.
"WHAT THIS MEANS is that all the prosecutions that follow from the same (draft registration) system would be illegal and discriminator if the court's ruling is upheld."
said attorney Mark Rosenbaum, who defended Wayte on behalf of the American Liberties League.
His co-counsel, William Smith, said Hatter's ruling will have "a most psychological effect"
"Every lawyer is going to have a copy of our pleadings and judges will know how Hatter wrote."
Wayne's attorneys earlier focused most of their attention on the claim that the Reagan administration was illegally prosecuting only vocal resisters.
"THE COURT FINDS it hard to believe that the prosecutive arm of the government, with access to Social Security records, could not locate any non-registrants other than those who were vocal in their opposition to draft registration." Hatter said.
The government agreed last month to let Hatter privately study the documents requested by the defense — including memos of meetings attended by Meese where the policy was discussed — but defied his order to turn them over to the defense.
Prosecutors also refused to let Meessey testify, saying it would set a bad precedent because he was known for using excessive force.
"It came out better than I expected because the judge dropped the matter." Wayte said after the hearing. "I think we can win this case on anpeal, also."
HATTER DISMISSED the indictment with prejudice, meaning the government cannot punish someone for a crime.
A crowd of supporters who had packed the courtroom burst into applaud at the end of the baffle.
The judge also noted the government had failed to rebut his preliminary ruling on Sept. 30, when he tentatively held that Wayte was a defendant in the case and it was up to the government to prove otherwise.
Late last month, after privately reviewing the government documents, Hatter ruled that ACLU attorneys had a right to see them and that Meese could not be exempted from testifying in the case. The government announced Nov. 5 it would not comply with the order to surrender the documents, and invited the judge to dismiss charges so it could appeal.
Government officials have insisted that dismissal of the Wayte indictment, one of 13 indictments returned nationwide against about 675,000 young men who have failed to register for the government's policy, no impact on the government's policy because each case is pursued on its own merits.
A car is in a field. It has a broken hood.
A wrecked Pontiac lay in a ravine near the East Lawrence turnpike gate early this morning after the three juveniles who were in the car led Kansas Highway patrolmen on a high-speed
chase, which ended when the car became airborne and crashed. The juveniles were taken to Lawrence Memorial Hospital for treatment.
Youths hurt in high-speed chase
Staff Reporter
By CAROL LICHTI
A high-speed chase involving several Kansas Highway patrolmen and three Independence, Mo., youths in a stolen car ended early this morning when the car became airborne and rolled into the bottom of a ravine near the East Lawrence turnpike exit, troopers said.
The suspects were transported about 12:45 a.m. to the Lawrence Memorial Hospital by Douglas County Ambulance Service. A hospital staff member said that the three youths were in stable condition.
A Patrol dispatcher identified the youths as Highland Mulu, 15, the driver of the car, and passengers Rodney Thurber, 17, and Bryan Harrness, 17.
THE DISPATCHER, Dan Frieden, said the car, a two-window, 1974 Pontiac was stolen in connection with the fire.
The chase began about 12:15 a.m. at the Bonner Spring entrance to Interstate 70 and covered 20 miles in 12 minutes, Friesen said. Three highway patrol cars were involved in the chase.
Police said that at one point the suspects' car was traveling at 105 mph.
Kansas Highway Patrol officers attempted to stop the car for a minor traffic violation on Kansas 7. Instead of stopping, the driver ran the car through a curve and stepped west to the East Lawrence exit, police said.
"THEY TRIED TO run us off the road and everything," State Trooper Timothy Dennis said.
Friesen said, "They attempted to knock a triumphe trooper off the road, but none of our
"The vehicle was traveling too fast to take the exit. It went airborne and crashed because it was too low."
He said that the only apparent reason the youths raced from authorities was because they did not want to be caught with a stolen car. No alcohol or drugs were found in the car, he said.
DENNIS SAID the car was a total loss. He said the inside of the car had been stripped prior to the accident.
Lawrence police assisted the Highway Patrol after the accident occurred. Lawrence Fire Department officials also assisted in bringing the driver to the scene. Police officials said the car was never on fire.
COOL
Weather
Astronauts set for today's ride home
Today will be cloudy with a high of 55,
according to the National Weather Service.
Winds will be from the south at 5 to 15 mph.
Tonight will be partly cloudy with a low in
Tomorrow will be partly cloudy with a high in the mid- to upper 50s.
By United Press International
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.—Space shuttle Columbia's astronauts, barred from a long-awaited walk in orbit by two puzzling spacesuits and wearing helmets to ride home today and ordered beer and hurriedly back.
Astronauts Vance Brand, Robert Overmery,
Joseph Allen and William Lenox reluctantly
stowed the faulty spacecrafts and prepared for a landing at 8:34 a.m. CST today on a concrete ramp.
Weather forecasts for Edwards at the end of the five-day flight were good, calling for light rain.
CANCELLATION OF THE spacewalk by Allen and Lenoir yesterday — the first attempted by Americans in nine years — was a disappointment, the astronauts said.
Mission controllers called off the venture after hours of salvage efforts. At one point they had considered extending Columbia's flight by one day, but a broken motor in Allen's suit and a high pressure regulator in Lenor's suit were the only problems we walked today to test the new $2 million spacesuits.
But the most important task of the space freighter's first commercial mission — launch-
BLECHEN
DEIN WELT
While the Reverend Homer D. Henderson looked on, Paul Gray and the Gasligh Gang played jazz yesterday at the memorial service for Odd Williams, held at the Plymouth Congregational Church.
Friends bid Williams goodbye
Don Detnhjai/KAMBAN
By BONAR MENNINGER
Staff Reporter
Friends and family said goodbye to Odd Williams yesterday as Dixieland jazz walthed through the hundred-year-old chambers of the Plymouth Congregational Church.
More than 900 people, coming in from the bright, cold day, filled the main floor and balcony of the building for a memorial service for Williams, who died Friday of a heart attack.
Williams, a local businessman and former state senator, helped establish the Williams Educational Fund at the University of Kansas to train Skipper, and his father, Dick He was 56.
After an opening prayer, Rev. Homer D. Henderson led in the singing of "Mine Eyes Have Seen the Glory," with Paul Gray and the Gaslight Gang providing accompaniment.
Gray and his band had set up near the front of
the church, and played intermittently throughout the service.
They launched into a rousing rendition of "When the Satuts Go Marche In," which was sung by Hector Moreno.
"Today words fail us. One more time, as was in the case of his brother, Skipper — sudden, shocking, unpredicted, indeed — unfair. The moment of death has left us sprightles."
Henderson said he would not dwell on the long list of Williams' achievements.
"Odd Williams had a way with words." Henderson said. "He could tell a great story, he could tell a stupid joke with a twinkle in his eye and a twinkle in his voice, he could make a powerful speech, whether it was persuasive, or an entertaining speech, like the one he made just before he died at the Fabulous Forties homecoming at KU.
"Most of all he kept his word. Words never seemed to fail him, neither did they fail to symbolize the quality, character and spirit of Odd.
Henderson quoted Chancellor Gene A. Budg as saying, "Our lives are richer for having him among us, and we will miss him more than we will know."
The 45-minute ceremony concluded with singing of the "Crimson and the Blue," a song of the University, with organist James C. Moeser and the jazz musicians accompanying.
Some of the music played by Paul Gray and the Gaslight Gang included "Back Home Again in Indiana," "Lady Be Good," "Bourbon Street Parade," and "Jumpin' at the Woodside."
The musical interludes were similar to those performed at the funeral of Skipper Williams, who died in 1974 at the age of 51 following a heart attack.
After the service had ended and the people had tied back onto Vermont Street, Henderson and
"I imagine if he was looking down on this, as always, be he was having a great time here today?"
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, November 16 1982
News Briefs From United Press International
Begin grieves death of wife as Israelis honor 75 troops
JERUSALEM—A grieving Prime Minister Menachem Begin buried his wife of 43 years on the Mount of Olives yesterday — a somber national day of mourning as well for 75 Israeli soldiers killed in the collapse of a military headquarters in Lebanon.
With Begin and his three children looking on, Aliza Begin was lowered into a grave in the ancient cemetery in east Jerusalem.
Before the funeral cortege left under heavy security for the cemetery, a siren sounded throughout the country, signaling a minute of silence for the 75 Israelis who died last week when an eight-story military command post collapsed in the southern Lebanese port of Tyre.
A preliminary investigation yesterday said the collapse was an accident and not the work of terrorists as originally suspected.
Lebanese President Amin Gemayel yesterday returned from talks in Saudi Arabia where he sought King Fahd's leverage in getting Syrian and Palestinian troops out of Lebanon and money to help Lebanon rebuild.
Beagan urges school busing review
WASHINGTON—The Reagan administration urged the Supreme Court for the first time yesterday to conduct a sweeping review of the use of court-ordered busing in school desegregation efforts.
The Justice Department filed a friend-of-the-court brief in a busing case from Nashville, Tenn., supporting an appeal by local school officials and asking the high court to confront the politically sensitive issue.
Attorney General William French Smith and President Reagan both oppose busing.
The Nashville case involves a ruling that struck down a desegregation plan which exempted young students from being bused.
One administration official indicated that a favorable Supreme Court ruling would be "a signal that the fixation, particularly among appellate courts, on mandatory transportation is really erroneous."
Soldier finds bomb, averts tragedy
FRANKFURT, West Germany-A soldier's curiosity led to the disarming of a terrorist bomb in the underground garage of a 25-story U.S. military apartment house and probably averted a tragedy, the Army said yesterday.
In a ceremony at his headquarters, LL Gen. Paul S. Williams Jr., commander of the V Corps, awarded the Army Commendation Medal to Spec. 4 Francis M. Brown, 22, of Annapolis, Md., for quick thinking and alertness.
Brown said he noticed a light brown gym bag in the underground garage as he was leaving the building.
garage he was in with a car driving it. When he returned, he saw the bag was still there and opened it to find a fire extinguisher with protruding wires. He notified U.S. military police who phoned American and West German explosive experts.
An army spokesman said between 500 and 600 Americans were removed from the apartment house after discovery of the bomb Sunday evening.
Kroger. Dillon boards ratify merger
CINCINNATI—The Kroger Co., the nation's second largest supermarket chain, and Dillon Companies Inc., a Kansas-based retailer, announced a merger yesterday.
retainer, and encourage a merger together.
The boards of directors of both companies unanimously approved the merger and said it was "in the best interests of the shareowners of both companies."
However, consummation of the merger is subject to the approval of shareowners of both companies. The holders of at least two-thirds of Dillon's outstanding shares must approve the deal.
Pursuant to the merger, each outstanding share of Dillon stock will be converted tax free into .8539 of a share of Kroger stock. Kroger has 28.5 million shares outstanding, and an additional 16.6 million shares would be issued in the merger.
Kroger, based in Cincinnati, operates mainly in the Midwest and South. Dillon is based in Hutchinson.
Kohl offers to bridge East-West gap
WASHINGTON -Visiting Chancellor Helmut Kohl told President Reagan yesterday that West Germany was a "loyal partner" and friend of the United States, eager to strengthen the Atlantic alliance and improve East-West relations.
The two leaders praised each other during two hours of discussions at the White House that marked their first meeting since the conservative Kohl replaced Helmut Schmidt Oct. 1.
In a pointed reference to the Soviet Union after the death of Leonid Brezhnev, they offered to discuss ways of improving East-West relations with the new Soviet leadership "if Soviet conduct makes that possible."
Kohl made clear his intention to meet Germany's commitment to NATO, which at times appeared in doubt under Schmidt, an official said
Stressing the importance of mutual security, he endorsed Reagan's arms control initiatives and opposed any unilateral pullout of U.S. troops from Europe.
Brazilians vote in general elections
RIO DE JANEIRO. Brazil-Brazilians from the Amazon jungle to jet-set Rio streamed to the polls in a carnival atmosphere yesterday to vote in the country's most democratic and important general elections since a military takeover in 1964.
since a military officer in 1960.
"Brazil will not be the same country after today," said Leonel Brizola, 60, a socialist and front-running candidate for governor in Rio de Janeiro, as he cast his vote.
"This is the beginning of the end of the night that fell on us," he said. Heavy turnouts — up to 90 percent in some areas — were reported as 58 million potential voters elected 22 state governors, 25 senators, 479 congressmen and thousands of mayors and town councilmen.
Voting is compulsory, and Brazilians traveled by foot, mule, Amazon riverboat, car or bus to get to the municipality where they were registered.
Vote counting was not to start officially until today
Prisoner swap may free Americans
RUNDU, South-West Africa-Angola and South Africa began a complicated prisoner exchange yesterday involving American mercenaries, Soviet servicemen and Russian and South African bodies, the South African news agency SAPA said.
The swap, which also is expected to include up to 100 captured Angolan soldiers, is being carried out under the auspices of the International Red Cross. But Red Cross officials refused to disclose any details for fear of leopardizing its success.
people during his tenure.
The Angolan government is expected to release two American mercenaries who were convicted in July 1975 of fighting as mercenaries during the Angolan civil war.
A third American, businessman-pilot Geoffrey Tyler, 32, of Florida, also may be freed. He has been detained by Angolan authorities since his plane made an emergency landing in the former Portuguese colony last year.
Severance tax threatens to divide Kansas
By BRUCE SCHREINER
Staff Reporter
U. S. Highway 81, long considered the line of demarcation between eastern and western Kansas, could become more like the "Great Wall of Kansas" because of one issue that has almost shut the state — the severance tax.
Many eastern Kansans have hailed the severance tax, levied on oil and natural gas production, as an answer to the state's serious financial crunch.
But in western Kansas, where most of the state's mineral production occurs, the controversial tax is considered and more expensive than the preceding personal property tax resources.
DESPITE GOV. John Carlin's decisive win over Wichita businessman Sam Hardage on Nov. 2, which many observers called a 'winter kill' in western Kansas residents have not toned down their crusade against the minerals tax.
counties that helped give Carlin his second four-year term.
Last weekend, a covey of eastern Kansas hunters converging on the rich hunting fields of Ells County, in the heart of Kansas' oil producing region, were driven from the fields by passes of western Kansans.
Shot-gun toting Ellen County residents, atttunning over Carlin's victory, in the 1980s.
Last week, Fritz Dreiling, a western Kansas oil producer, began his personal drive against the severance tax by vowing not to buy oilfield goods produced in counties that voted for Carlin.
A CARLIN aide yesterday responded to the incidents by calling the latest division a new chapter in a long saga of differences between the east and west.
"I don't look at this as anything widespread. You have to look at the history of Kansas politics, where western Kansas has never been a stronghold," said Mike Swenson, Carlin's assistant press secretary.
the governor is concerned about it,
and we have to remember we are one state. I think once all this is behind us,
we can just keep going quickly
we all move on to other things."
For the third straight year, Carlin will center his budgetary policies on a severance tax. In 1961 and 1982, the governor in the Senate after passing the House.
SEVERAL WESTERN Kansas legislators said a bittersweet toward Carlin and the severance tax would continue to be withdrawn. The county could be soothed with a tax package
that included other tax sources to supplement a severance tax.
"I think there is a lot of resentment in western Kansas for eastern Kansas" support of the severance tax," said State Sen. Fred Kerr, R-Praff. "But we are one state and we need to work together.
"If the tax package is treated in a balanced fashion, then western Kansans will be more willing to swallow the severance税 if they perceive eastern Kansas people are paying into the system.
"But Gov. Carlin needs to be open to a compromise, supporting some form of increase in the gasoline tax or sales tax."
STATE REP. Mike Hayden, R-Atwood, said many western Kansans considered the severance tax, estimated to raise about $120 million annually, an attempt by northeast Kansans to steal the west's natural resources to improve their schools and highways.
“It’s an emotional and high-pitched issue,” said Hayden, who is expected to succeed Wendell Lady as House speaker in the upcoming session. “But I think it would be a great experience to work to iron out the problem, this won't be a recurring problem.
"I don't think it will create a permanent line of demarcation as long
as the governor and the Legislature's approach is a balanced one.
Swenson said that the governor was in the midst of drawing up his budget plans, and that. no compromise was included in the preliminary package.
"WE ARE NOT going to start talking about compromising in November," he said. "There is simply a misunderstanding about the severance tax. It is a statewide tax that will benefit the entire state. The money will not be distributed to counties, but will be dispersed in aid to education throughout the state."
Despite the pleas and hopes for unity, the legislators agreed that the state's size and diversification was an ideal setting for regional disputes.
"I think there has always been a gap, and now this may widen the gap some more," said State Sen. August Bogina Jr., R.-LenNexha. "I think there is a great deal of amimosity, and unfortunately, it's going to be difficult to get rid of it."
STATE REP. David Heinemann, R-Garden City, said western Kansas' suspicions of its eastern neighbors went on the time Kansas gained its statehood.
"It's been traditional for people out
been to see what goes back east
because it was a tradition."
Andropov, Bush meet following funeral
By United Press International
MOSCOW—Soviet leader Yuri Andropov used his predecessor's funeral yesterday to warn the West against any military buildup but had a 45-minute talk with Vice President George Bush in an apparent move toward detente.
the new Communist Party general-secretary's meeting with Push following Leonid Brezhnev's funeral was the highest-level encounter between of former President Carter and Brezhnev signed the SI II pact in 1979.
"IT GAVE BOTH sides the opportunity to exchange views on the state of their relations," he said, before boarding a U.S. Air Force plane for Zimbabwe, where he was to resume a 10-nation African tour.
Secretary of State George Shulz and Ambassador Arthur Hartman also took part in the talks in the Kremlin's St. George Hall.
Andropov also met with representatives of the Western allies in a
Bush said Andropov told them the "Americans" presence at Breziness in 2013.
diplomatic campaign seen aimed at restoring detente, Brezhnev's proudest achievement.
BUT BOTH SIDES had optimistic assessments of the private meeting.
The official Tass news agency said Andropov's regime was "ready to build relations with the U.S.A. on a basis of non-interference and mutual respect."
Bush and Shultz also met briefly with
six Siberian Pentecostals who have been living in the basement of the U.S. Embassy since rushing through the doors in 1978.
Brezhnay was buried yesterday in a pine-shaded nook in Red Square beside Russia's most revered leaders, as factory whistles blared, bells pealed and work stopped for five minutes in memorial.
THE GREATEST assemblage of foreign dignitaries ever in Moscow produced the Soviet capital's biggest show of non-wartime security. Police and other officials hold a 5-square-mile section surrounding Red Square in the heart of the city.
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1
University Daily Kansan, November 16 1982
Page 3
Candidates trade barbs at last debate
By TIM PARKER Staff Reporter
Candidates for student body president traded accusations last night in the final debate of the Student Senate election campaign.
Senate elections are Wednesday and Thursday.
Momentum Coalition student body presidential candidate Kevin Walker charged the Consensus Coalition last night with "falling down on the job," and avoiding the issues in the month-old Senate campaign.
Consensus presidential candidate Lisa Ashner, however, accused Momentum of making "fantastic claims" and having questionable priorities.
The debate, at the Kansas Union, was sponsored by KJHK radio.
"BUDGET CUTS and tuition are our priority issues," said Ashley, Mission junior and chairman of the Student Senate Executive Committee.
She labeled beer sales in Memorial Stadium, on which Momentum has centered its campaign, a "minor issue."
Walker, St. Louis, Mo., junior, defended his efforts on getting beer into the stadium because "that's what the students want."
Ashner also criticized Momentum's claim of ties with Anheuser-Busch Inc. and said officials at the company did not get involved with student political issues.
"If my issues are so unthinkable, let me drown in my own tears," he said.
WALKER SAID his coalition definitely had talked with Anheuser-Busch officials.
Dan Slehler/KANSAN
MATTHEW BALDWIN
Lisa Ashner, student body presidential candidate on the Consensus Coalition, answered questions at last night's debate, sponsored by radio station KJHK. Behind her are Lee Anne Winfrey, the moderator for the debate, and Kevin Walker, presidential candidate on the Momentum Coalition.
Walker labeled the accusations as a form of character assassination and said Consensus was avoiding the issues and dragging the campaign "into the fire."
guitar "Anheuser-Busch is not the issue. Getting beer into the stadium is the issue." he said.
Walker also charged the Consensus candidates, who have made their Senate experience a priority issue in the campaign, with falling down on the job. He said that Steve McMurry, former coordinator of the campaign, joined with embebbling $20,425 from the campus bus system, was directly responsible to Ashher.
"He duped the Senate on a simple scheme," Walker said.
WALKER SAID he would keep the situation from recurring by auditing every organization in the Senate and by interviewing the staff, he would ridify him of similar situations.
Asher refused to accept blame for the situation and said it was more important to look at how the administration handled the problem. The management had tried through several KU administrations and several Senates, she said.
She said the administration had shown its confidence in the present student government by not removing student control.
The Consensus Coalition's experience, Ashner said, was one of its most important assets.
"EXPERIENCE IS the key when you're dealing with budget cuts, financial aid, the Board of Regents or the Kansas Legislature," she said. "The opposition has no experience of."
But Walker said KU students didn't need Consensus' kind of experience.
"I will be an employee of the students, not the administration," he said. "Dr. Budig will respect that. I anticipate a wonderful working relationship."
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Over the years an imaginative psychiatry and a receptive judiciary have combined to create the concept of innocence by reason of insanity. Through the compassionate use of their gilded psychoscopes, some psychiatrists have managed to find in misbehaving defendants, whom they always happen to be representing, states of disorder which were temporarily beyond the afflicted's capacity to control. While some of the more irreverent members of the citizenry attribute this adaptability of the psychiatric profession to greed, many recognize it as an expression of a willingness to work.
SEVERAL MORE PSYCHIATRISTS COMM TED TO OPPEASEMENT DISCOVER YET ANOTHER PROFITABLE SYNDROME
Why, there have been some trials in which a psychiatrist eager "to get ahead" has uncovered a syndrome possessed by the defendant which even impelled that individual to murder. By taking this case into account, the psychiatrist created work for himself where there seemingly was none.
Recently some hard-working psychiatrists with initiative discovered yet another profitable syndrome in, considering the disorder, the most unlikely of places. While discussing the foreign language requirements at our colleges and universities, the November 15th issue of Newsweek says:
GDANSK, Poland-Lech Wales,
the recently released chairman of the banned Solidarity trade union,
pledged to honor the ideals behind Solidarity yesterday, but declined to help he would fight for its restoration.
Wales insisted no conditions had been attached to his release, but he said he had been briefed on the penal code for more than three hours by a lawmaker, and saw authorities yesterday, he hedged questions about his own future.
Hervard even allows undergraduates to "pach out" of its one year foreign-language requirement (if) students can persuade health-clinic psychiatrists to attest to their psychological inability to learn another language.
"I are released on a tightrope, underneath which is a prison yard, and this tightrope is greased with some lubricant." Walesa told reporters the morning after he returned to work in 11 months of isolated internment.
"I do not intend to fall."
"I AM WALEA and will act by Walea standards," he said. "I will do what is possible and what can be accepted."
Maybe this country needs only a few more aggressive psychiatrists skilled in the practice of rationalization and committed to appeasement to shake us out of our economic doldrums. William Dann
The comments reflected the care with which Waila weighed his words, stressing the need for peace, negotiations and an agreement the people could accept. He did not mention the name "Solidarity."
By pursuing his own interest . . . every individual
. . . frequently promotes that of the society more
effectually than when he really intends to promote it.
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Adam Smith once said;
He said he was looking for "a solution satisfactory to everyone, but never on my knees and never against the spirit of August (1980)," a reference to the historic worker-state accord he signed to end the shipyard strike in Dgansk and establish the East blox's first free trade union.
Walesa was freed Saturday after 11 months of interment. His release triggered speculation of an end to Poland's martial law, declared last Dec. 13. The Athens News Agency, in a dispatch from Moscow, said Polish marital law leader Gen Wojciech Poper Antosius Papiropoulos that marital law in Poland would be lifted within the next two months. The two men were in Moscow for the funeral of Soviet President Leonid Brezhnev.
"I don't know what I will do or," said the 39-year-old electrician, much stouter but still sporting his mustache. "I have to think it over."
seen as a threat to Poland's communist authorities, Solidarity was suspended under martial law
WALESA, WHO returned home Sunday night to a tumultuous welcome from supporters, refused to comment on the establishment of new, official trade unions to replace Solidarity.
imposed last Dec. 13 and outlawed last month by Parliament.
IN A RELATED development, the man who was Walesa's arrest, Jaureskiz, said in a rare interview published in London's Guardian newspaper that Poland's trade unions the working people want them to be.
Asked if he would insist on new free unions with the Solidarity name, Walesa said, "I don't know. I have to consider, to check everything."
"There is only one proviso clear to anyone who knows how to think in political terms — the labor movement cannot become a screen for destructivism in militant forces,吊到 the very essence of socialism," Jurelski said.
Walesa cleared up some of the mystery surrounding his release by saying that he was taken Saturday from his remote interment lodge in southeast Poland to a location outside Warsaw to meet for nearly a day with the nation's prosecutor general. The two discussed marital law.
Walesa said he later was driven to Gdansk.
FLANKED BY TWO former Solidarity advisers, Walesa said that during his 11 months of interment "I did not sign anything and I didn't give up what I was freed without any obligations." I was released a free man.
TV income may be budget solution
Television income is expected to offset a $100,000 revenue shortfall for the home football season, according to its budget statement releases recently.
Football revenues were $104,834 below estimates made by the athletic department when it planned its budget for this year. However, KU's share of Big Eight Conference TV income is to be $174,000 more than anticipated.
Saturday, November 20th. 9:00 a.m. Entry information in room 260 Robinson or City Hall, Lawrence Parks & Recreation
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KU GAMES AGAINST Texas Christian University and the University of Tulsa were regionally televised by CBS. The game with Kansas State University was nationally televised by WTBS, a cable television station based
Money from televised games goes to the Big Eight Conference and is divided among all Big Eight schools. Schools that participate in a televised game receive twice as much TV income as non-participating.
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DELAYED BROADCASTS, including those by Sunflower Cablevision, 644 New Hampshire St., do not generate news, Wilson said.
Sid Wilson, sports information director, said other RU football games had been canceled.
"The delayed games aren't enough to get wealthy. We don't charge the small networks an arm and a leg because they give us exposure," Wilson said.
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Opinion
r-age 4 University Daily Kansan, November 16 1982
Time to break up 'club' within Student Senate
The four candidates for KU student body president and vice president are in many ways typical of political candidates today.
One coalition seems to project the idea that just because its candidates have been in office before, they should be rubber-stamped into the highest offices in student government.
The other coalition is idealistic but inexperienced and really does not seem to know what the requirements and limitations of Student Senate are.
The choice given students, then, boils down to that of a palpable but nevertheless static status quo versus an inexperienced team that would like to shake things up a bit.
In the view of the Kansan, Student Senate needs to be shaken up a bit, to be made to recognize that it is responsible directly to the students of this University. On this basis, the Kansan endorses the Momentum coalition of Kevin Walker and David Teoorten.
Walker and Teopoorten have not moved through the hierarchy of Student Senate. They are not in awe of the Senate. "I pride myself on not having been a senator," Walker said.
Given that the No. 1 job of the Senate during the coming semester will be to clean up its own financial mess, which David Adkins's administration uncovered, this lack of a vested interest is vitally important.
The two Momentum candidates have said that they would arrange both an internal and an external audit of Student Senate within the first two weeks after election. They said they would ask the comptroller's office and an outside accounting firm to do the audits.
They acknowledged that bringing in an outside firm would be expensive.
"Yes, it's going to cost big bucks, but look at the bucks we've lost," Tepoorten said.
They also plan to introduce legislation to ensure that every organization receiving Senate funds is audited every six months.
"There should be no question of where the nickels and dimes of Student Senate are," Walker said. "You can't come before me with a request for a budget when you can't tell me where last year's budget went to."
The opposing coalition, Consensus, has not offered such a concrete plan.
has not offered such a concrete plan. Instead, Lisa Ashner, Consensus presidential candidate, and Jim Cramer, vice-presidential candidate, present a contradictory view of the issue.
As members of the present administration, they try to claim part of the responsibility for uncovering the
years-old trouble of missing equipment and disappearing funds. But neither is willing to admit to any culpability for letting the problem go for so long.
The Momentum coalition has many ideas that should be considered, although it lacks the planning to execute some of them. Consensus, however, has built its campaign around the successes of the past and offers few. if any. original ideas.
Ashner has said that the most important issue of the campaign for her coalition was whether students would be able to stay in school. Her single answer for this was a state work-study program crafted by the past administration and already out of Senate hands.
Momentum has proposed a deferred-payment plan for students who are unable to pay their tuition in one lump. The plan is not dependent on approval by the Kansas Legislature nor on massive funding. It is a relatively simple step that could make the difference for many students between staying in school or dropping out. It is also one of the few ideas proposed by anyone that could benefit middle-class students who fall between the cracks of traditional financial aid.
Controversies involving the Associated Students of Kansas and the steep charges for traffic permits and tickets levied by KU Parking Services have also become issues in the campaign. Neither coalition has come up with acceptable options. Consensus is satisfied with existing arrangements in both cases, and Momentum seeks drastic changes that are commendable. but perhaps naive.
Walker admits that he and his running mate are "wet behind the ears" when it comes to student government. But the Momentum coalition has recruited some experienced Senate candidates, and Walker has promised to put experienced people on his staff.
Of the two coalitions, Momentum has campaigned the hardest — at least Walker and Tepoorten seem to care more about reaching and involving all students. They have gone a long way to get their names before the average student.
Consensus, on the other hand, seems content to seek only the support of the traditional living group voting blocs.
Walker said that Senate members had tried to discourage him from running, telling him, "You can't break the club."
But "the club" should be broken. It is ludicrous to contend that Senate should be run by an exclusive membership whose ideas change little from year to year.
LEONID
BREZHNEV
1906-1982
Third coalition overlooked
What Now?
Letters to the Editor
Leave counseling to advisers
are not considered major because we are the smallest coalition (two candidates) when compared with the other parties.
Three weeks before any hard campaigning began, Introspection contacted every organized living group on campus, not to solicit votes, but to solicit input from students. Follow-up, we have visited some 30 of these groups since November 2017. We are meeting since mid-September, something the "two major" candidates from one of the "two major coalitions" cannot claim.
But why, then, did KJHK choose to have Introspection participate in its "Call Me Up" program with the "two major coalitions"? We believe there are several reasons for this fact, and several reasons why the Kansas should have included Introspection in its guest editors.
"The whole thing has jumped ahead," Fred McElhenie, director of the office of residential programs, said Thursday. "It's a concept we were on. It has not been absolutely ruined down."
That's a relief.
The program was designed to help hall residents, freshmen in particular, who were having trouble with their studies. Under the program, RAs would be informed if students living on their floors were floundering academically. If they never, give RAs free rein to examine transcripts.
Introspection has advertised extensively and campaigned hard. Our pantone green posters are all over campus, and our "Thinker" buttons adorn many. We have even published an issue sheet stating our views on ASK, beer in the stadium and parking tickets. Further, Introspection has proposed realistic solutions to these students needs, not merely statements of "We can change it" or "This is how we'd like to be." as the "two major coalfires" have done.
The outey received by the proposal alone should be enough to warn administrators that KU students will not easily tolerate peers' having access to their grades.
A policy that would give resident assistants access to students' grades is a prime example of University helpfulness gone awry.
This semester, RAs received a list from the dean of student life, Caryl Smith, of freshmen on their floors who were having problems after four weeks of classes in mathematics and English. Some residents, apparently appreciated the advice; others were not pleased.
RAS, according to the first reports of the proposal, would have access to the grades of all students on their floors. Whether this was a good idea or not will be decided by administrators, it met with heated outcry.
Do not mistake our intentions — we are not running an anti-anyone campaign. We believe that while we are not a multitude, the two of us collectively represent a multitude, and that we are a multitude seeking concerned, responsive representation in Student Senate. It may be difficult for the Kansan to hope that in the future the Kansan will not inadvertently overlook a "major coalition."
Kansas City, Kan., senior LA&S candidate for Student Senate
Charles D. Lawhorn
TO the Editor
The lead editorial Friday alluded to articles developed to appear in Monday's Kansas to be authored by the "two major coalition." We of Inspectionship wish to take issue with your definition of "major," for we do not believe that the possession of candidates for student body president and vice president should be the sole criteria.
Editor
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james L. Jefsey
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indicate for Student Senate
To the Editor;
Election '82 at KU has been a unique one thus far. There has been a multitude of publicity and a multitude of accusations, and there is a multitude of criticism. We Arts and Sciences and Nenakerer. Perhaps we
"It doesn't necessarily mean the RA would have the grades," McEihenie said. "It's not carte blanche to all RAs. There would have to be a good reason to see them, not just curiosity."
The University Daily Karnala USPS 605-640 is published at the University of Kansas, 118 First Hall, Lawrence, KAN. Subscription is free for Tuesday during the summer session, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final periods. Second-class postage paid atLawrence, KAN. 60044. Subscriptions by mail are at a minimum of one month or $25 a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $1 a semester, paid through the student activity fee. Subscriptions are $10 a semester, paid through the student activity fee. The University Daily Karnala 118 First Hall, Lawrence, KAN. 60045.
Herein lies the problem. What would be a good reason? What lengths would an RA have to go to justify seeing the grades of residents on his floor?
The University Daily KANSAN
The signature of the student, a parent or guardian is now required under the Buckley Amendment in order, for all but University officials to receive a copy of a students' grades. Although this may seem like unnecessary bureaucracy to some, students should appreciate this as a protection of their right to privacy.
"If a faculty member needs to look at the records to help in the advising process, that would be legitimate." Dyck said. "I don't know how to have someone else to have a legitimate educational interest."
According to Gil Dyck, dean of educational services, any KU employee who can prove he has a legitimate educational interest in a student can gain access to that student's records without violating the Buckley Amendment, which guarantees privacy in certain areas to students.
McEllenie and Smith maintain that an RA is an informed peer who can steer a student to academic resources of which the student might not be aware.
The University Daily
TRACEE HAMILTON
say hello, but she never seemed to take much of an interest in whether we were alive or not. "I just didn't want to be a victim."
But how informed and interested are most RAs? Some may be very helpful, especially if they are in the student's field, but many will not. It is important for her to self-refer herself from her boyfriend from time to time to
"They (Ras) might not even get the grades." McElennie stressed. "They might get an answer. He's having difficulty in English or French. You're careful that people's rights aren't violated."
"If they are in difficulty we want to say, 'Here are some resources you might look in.' To you are all these," he said.
Administrators are trying to skirt this issue by saying that transcripts would not necessarily be involved, that the RA might simply be told of the students' general standing. But the end result is the same - a student's peers are given permission that they would be given only at that student's discretion.
1075
They should sense when that right is threatened, and they should fight.
RAs go through a rigorous selection process, and I'm sure that most are very competent, enlightened people. But some RAs may themselves be struggling with grades. The grade requirement to be an RA is a 2.6 GPA. They may be under time constraints with their involvement in the RA program as well as hull hall assignments and skipper. Do we give hall directors the option to check their grades during the semester? Where does it all end?
Some residents might feel confident enough in their RAs to approach them for help. This would be the ideal situation. But for those students afraid or unwilling to ask for help, the relationship would only deteriorate if they were forced to access their academic stand-alone and had access to their academic stand-
Why not instead inform the student's adviser, who would then have an obligation to contact the school administrator?
This University has let the role of the faculty adviser slip into nothing more than an automatic signature at enrollment time.
Yes, the University often assigns freshmen to advisers who are totally unfamiliar with the intended field of study. My first adviser was a fine arts professor. Even so, the faculty adviser is the most appropriate channel for discussions of students' academic problems.
The student might still feel intimidated by being contacted by a professor about his failing grades, but the humiliation of contact by a peer, as he did on the floor might find out, would be eliminated.
Advisers already have access to a student's records under the Buckley Amendment, so this would seem to be the most viable method; a method that neither violates the law nor exposes the student to any additional stress. The stress of a failing grade should be punishment enough.
Death, the draft and 'All That Jazz'
President Ronald Reagan co The White House 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. NW Washington, D.C. 20500
Dear Mr. President,
Back in 1980, I saw a movie at the theater and have been meant to tell you about it ever since.
The film, titled "All That Jazz," concerned a New York play director and his preoccupation with death. It seemed that the pressures of directing and dealing with people got the best of him, and the director accepted his death as the easy way out.
"All That Jazz" can be seen as a 20th-century interpretation of Shakespeare's famous folio.
Unfortunately, I find myself in a similar position. However, in this situation, Mr. President, you are the director, and the decisions you will make affect the lives of your supporting cast. I am just one of many millions of extra waiting to see who will receive a part.
If I may be of assistance in your decision, I do not wish to be in your production.
You see, I have this unyielding will to live, and if I become a part of your cast, I feel that my chances for being able to continue with this desire would greatly decrease.
Within a month of my 18th birthday, I went to the post office and filled out a form that made me eligible to be drafted for service in the U.S. Army. Even though the words did not appear on the form, I registered as a "conscientious objector."
Although my religious convictions are not strong enough to quality me for that status, my moral convictions certainly are. In fact, my conscience bothered me for filling out that form
On the campaign trail in 1980, you said that
registration "destroys the very values that our society is committed to defending." Yes, Mr. President, I believe that you, too, were once a conscientious objector of sorts.
Once in office, however, you reversed your position and remitted draft registration, then submitted it to the board.
Yes, I'll agree with that statement. War is dangerous as hell. The ad say "Be All You Can Be" in the Army. Well, I could be dead.
Like the director in "All That Jazz," you are the director of this production. Only this time,
About 50 years ago, a man named Herbert
HAL KLOPPER
WILLIAM ROGERS
Hooover sat in the office you not occupy and said,
"Older men declare war. It is youth that
demand peace."
US community hours versus military hours public services versus funeral services.
Albert Einstein once said, "Peace cannot be kept by force. It can only be achieved by understanding." Have there been any dramatic
It seems that some of us don't want to fight and die. Since the draft registration was reinstated two years ago, some 800,000 males have failed to register. Others are jailed or given community service hours.
And suppose I die in combat, Mr. President. The government helps out with the cost of the funeral, not to mention shipping and handling charges. That money comes from the taxpayers' pocketbooks. The cost of living is plenty these days. Do we have to add the cost of death?
gestures toward peaceful world of crisis lazily? No, but we seem to do fairly well with establishing sactions and boycots. We have escalated the number of death-dealing weapons instead of sitting down to talk about freezes and disarmament.
Propaganda and scare tactics have been used in place of negotiations and understanding. Our marvelous gift of communication is not being taken for granted, because that would probably benefit from it the most.
Please don't misunderstand me, Mr. President. I appreciate the freedoms and opportunities America has given me, but I believe that I can serve this nation in a safer, more constructive and humane manner than through the violence of war.
Would I be dying for my country, or would my country be taking my life from me? I only wish it
No, Mr. President, I'm not ready for all that jazz.
Letters Policy
The University Daily Kansan welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten, double-spaced and should not exceed 500 words. They should include the writer's name, address and phone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, the letter should include his class and home town or faculty or staff position. The Kansan reserves the right to edit or reject letters.
University Daily Kansan. November 16 1982
Page 5
Shuttle
From page one
ing a pair of commercial ships from its winged 60-foot cargo bay was accomplished
Flight director John Cox called "it a very successful flight."
THE AMERICAN SBS-3 communications satellite, launched Thursday, settled some 22,300 miles over the eastern Pacific yesterday, letting down its blue solar cell skirt to provide electricity and flipping its silver dish antenna into an upright position.
The Canadian Anik-C, launched Friday, orbited in a temporary, egg-shaped path reaching 22,800 miles into space. A rocket firing at 12:59 p.m. today was planned to put Anik in an orbit 22,300 miles up, keeping it stationary over the eastern Pacific.
The twin launches earned $18 million for U.S. taxpayers and proved that the shuttle was a workhorse able to routinely carry cargo for hire. NASA officials said the spacecraft problems were minor.
RECOVERING FROM the letdown of the canceled walk, pepper-loving Lenoir asked mission control to order him "a jalapeno burrite and a beer . . . four beers" for his return. Cox said the order, a traditional delicacy for the Texas-trained crew, probably would be filled.
Alen, the mission's comic, jokingly threatened to stow away in Columbia's airlock until the weather came.
Glynn Lunney, shuttle program chief at the Johnson Space Center in Houston, said loss of the spacewalk was disappointing, but not a major setback.
"I sure would have liked to have seen the spacewalk go well," Lumney said. "We are obviously disappointed. But we still feel very good about this flight. And we'll be right back."
THE NEXT SCHEDULED spacewalk is on the 11th mission in January 1984. But Lunny said it might be possible to add an spacewalk for one of the flights planned for 1983, including the first mission of the shuttle Challenger this coming January.
Alen and Lenon had planned a 3½-hour houl-strum in Columbia's lenoir cargo bay to test the suits, practice a 1984 satellite repair mission and try working with construction tools in orbit.
THE SUIT PROBLEMS were found while the walkerwalls were still in Columbia's canhaped airlock getting ready to go out.
Both suits, built by the Hamilton Standard division of United Technology in a suit development program, had been thoroughly tested over the past 12 days prior to Columbia's hitoff Thursday.
A motor in Allen's life-support backpack failed first, repeatedly slowing to a stop. The motor, operating at 19,300 revolutions per minute, was required to run both the fan forcing fresh oxygen into Allen's helmet and the pump circulating water through a tube-tubed under-
The failure killed hopes for Allen to go out. Lenior suggested that, he go out "in the solitude of the night."
**ALLEN AGREED:** "I sure would like to make a strong suggestion, if it comes down to it, that Bill proceed with this. He's well trained and knows what he can give you a suggestion from the guy with a bad fan motor."
Mission controllers compromised, saying Lenoir could depressure the airlock and perhaps stick his head through its outer hatch for a test of the new suit in a zero-gravity vacuum.
By United Press International
Demos used issues well, GOP pollster says
KANSAS CITY, Mo—Democrats exploited unemployment to mend their tattered political coalition and turn out the big vote that gave them seven more governorships in the midterm elections, President Reagan's pollster said yesterday.
Richard Wirtlin, who conducts poll for both the White House and GOP candidates, dissected the Nov. 2 results for the Republican Governors to determine the election with 23 members and came out with 16.
Wirthlin's assessment is that the 10.4 percent national jobless rate and concern about Social Security captured voter attention during the campaigns and that the Democrats used them adroitly to woo organized labor and blue-collar workers away from the GOP column.
"THEY ORGANIZED one of the most successful get-out-the-vote efforts we have ever seen." Within told 18 state governors and one president in December, an opening session of the RGA's annual conference.
Wirtlhin's analysis was preceded by much the same message from Gov. James Thompson of Illinois, chairman of the RGA and a near victim himself of the Democratic tide.
"Economic unease and uncertainty are the overwhelming undercurrent of thought running through the minds of Americans today," said Thompson, who called the election "a cry for them. From the voters and warned his GOP college students have just two short years to reply to that."
Wirthlin said his research showed the Democrats did better than Republicans in
ONLY IN THE AREA of collecting campaign funds did the Republicans perform better, Wirthin said, and added, "We can't let that profile abide in 1884."
contacting voters in person, by telephone and by mail and in getting their voters to the polls.
Thompson, opening the meeting, discounted the election results as a repudiation of Reagan economic policies, saying the GOP would have lost control of the Senate, more than 28 House seats and more governorships, including his own, had that been the case.
Wirthin said there were several reasons the Democrats failed "to make it a landslide."
He spoke of a "pool of patience" that kept voters from deserting the GOP en masse, Reagan's success in 'framing the issue in terms of sacrifice', and the absence of a coherent Democratic alternative.
SOME OF THE governors who participated in a free-for-all discussion suggested the GOP is suffering from the image of wealth and unconcern for the poor.
One, William Janklow of South Dakota, also said Republicans ought to firmly repudiate the negative campaign help of New Right groups such as the National Conservative Political Action Committee instead of "dancing around" and "secretly hoping for" aid from such groups.
Warthin said some such groups went too far with negative campaigning and actually helped Democrats, but there was no evidence a majority of voters turned away from their own perception of conservatism — less federal government and stronger state and local government.
Janklow also complained that some Republi cans in Washington were "searing old people to
death” with “screwball plans” to change Social Security. And Gov. John Spellman of Washington said some GOP state legislators hurt the party image by taking the 1888 elections as a prime example of essential social programs, to oppose ERA, and more avidly than the Reagan administration.
GOV-ELECT John Summa of New Hampshire said many Republicans "ran away from the unemployment issue" in the campaign and he "stressed solutions" did better in the volum
Presidential aide Rich Williamson told the governors Reagan viewed the election results "not as a disaster but clearly a disappointment."
Still, he said, the administration believes there remain about 240 Republicans and Democrats — 22 more than a majority — who can be rallied by Reagan programs in the next Congress.
The governors also heard a report on the economy from William Niskanen, a member of the President's Council of Economic Advisers and an official on national policy would be to "stay the course."
NISKANEN SAID that during the latter months of the Carter administration inflation, interest rates and unemployment all went up while in a comparable period at the beginning of the Keagan administration inflation, the prime taxes went down while unemployment increased.
Speaking of the voters, he said "if they raise their sights from today's problems to tomorrow's opportunities, they would recognize that the Reagan administration for the first time in two decades has set the stage for a sustained economic recovery with low inflation."
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First Annual
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When?
Tuesday Nov. 30, 1982
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Where? Jay Bowl - Kansas Union
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K. U. Students/Staff (Part-time Students 3 hrs.minimum)
- Prize fund returned 100%
- Entry deadline Tuesday Nov. 23 at 5 pm
- For details call 864-3545 or inquire at Jay Bowl desk
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Page 6 University Daily Kansan, November 16 1982
Play looks at father-son relationship
By SUSAN O'CONNELL
Staff Reporter
David Schuster, Death Valley, Calif., graduate student and director of the play, said Sunday that the author, Thomas Babe, was an existence who played urgled to find humans in death.
The play opens at p.m. Thursday and will run nightly through Nov. 22.
To create the setting of the Number Ten Saloon, where the play takes place, the theatre will be covered with sawdust. Schuster said, "Once from a barn in Emporia was used to build the set."
"This is different from other plays because the audience is also in the saloon," Schuster said.
"The members of the audience are actually characters in the play and are encouraged to take part in the play. They definitely are not ignored."
TO FURTHER SET the mood of the old West,
Country and Western music will be played.
The band will sing in a choral mode.
Ten members of the cast have formed a country band. The Honky Tonk Heroes, he said. The band will play on stage beginning at 7:15 p.m. each night of the play.
The action of the play is set in the town of Deadwood in the South Dakota Territory, Schuster shews "Fathers and Sons" shows the legendary Wild Bill Hickox as a dying victim of
Hickok, played by William Kuhlke, professor of theatre, is surrounded by his former gang members and his long-time friend, Calamity Hawk. A graduate student and lecturer in English.
Jack McCall, Hickow's illegitimate son, bursts in on his father. McCall is played by Todd Sites,
Hickok had run away from his wife and child when Jack was quite young. Jack grew up to be a milk-drinking homosexual who desperately needed a father.
AS HICKOK AND MCCALL talk to each other, one of the themes of the play emerges: the conflict between fathers and sons.
in the play, one of Hickok's close friends,
Colorado Charlie Uter, gives a speech about
relationships between fathers and sons. Frank
Mack, Overland P sophomore, plays Charlie
"I never got to talk with him or get drunk with him," Charlie says about his father.
In keeping with Babe's theories of existentialism, one message of the play is to devote itself to the character.
"You've got a life, here — live it, don't waste it." Schuster said.
Students rock to music video channel, MTV
By DAN PARELMAN
Staff Reporter
As soon as the last soap opera watcher disappears behind a partition in the Oliver Hall television room, Dan Cavannaugh, Overland Park freshman, strides to a wide-screen television and
On the television, a blue-eyed, sad-looking rock star hangs the final chords of his song.
"I like this song," says Sue Schaeffer, St. Louis freshman.
She does not recognize Pete Townsend or "Ski Skirts," but Schaefner, a country music fan, can identify Bow Wow Wow and the Clash — bands she watches on MTV.
Some KU students said, as did Schaefter, that the station has altered their musical tastes. They said that they were now buying records they would not have listened to before seeing the flashy videos that accompanied the songs on television.
Sunflower Cablevision, 644 New Hampshire, began transmitting MTV in September to begin broadcasting.
"Iused to always listen to mainly country rock at home — Marshall Tucker, Pure Prairie League, the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band," Schaeffer said.
She said she now listened to more rock and new wave
AREA RECORD STORE owners and radio station program directors agree that video is changing listening habits.
Bob Wilson, owner of Better Days - A Record
Store, 724 Massachusetts St., said that bands such as Flock of Seagulls, Haircut 100; Duran, Duran; and Adam and the Ants have sold well since MTV came to Lawrence. He said that these performers all have one thing in common — good-looking video on MTV.
But Southern boogie bands, such as 38 Special; and heavy metal bands, such as Triumph and Jimi Hendrix.
And he said he thought that many of the people who were buying these records had not based their record purchases on musical quality.
"I believe if you'll make an interesting video, people will watch it and like it anyway." Wilson
Roger Bain, director of marketing for Sunflower Cablevision, also said that good-looking bands have an advantage over other bands.
"So a group that may be five ugly guys playing well may not do as well as David Bowie, who's a nice guy."
WILSON CRUTICIZED MTV for being "fairly one-dimensional." For instance, MTV does not show any reqae or soul groups, he said.
"The only black face you'll see is J.J. the disc jockey." Wilson said.
Monica Lacey, St. Louis junior, said she only listened to MTV about once a week at the Kansas Union. Her favorite musical forms are soul, pop and rock, but she said she wished MTV would play more of.
Brain said racial prejudice was not the reason the New York-based creators of MTV did not decide to show black groups. He said that they did not show black music because of the
Bain said that in the future, cable stations would probably add more music channels with different formats.
audience they were targeting—those who are 12 to 34 and are interested in album-oriented rock and new music.
Dave Strout, program director for KLZR, said that because radio was a flexible medium, MTV had not taken listeners away from his station.
"You can't watch MTV when you're driving your car," he said. "Radio is a medium that
He said that MTV helped reinforce the music his station played.
MOST OF THE STUDENTS said that they still listened to the radio as often as before MTV came to Lawrence. Students watch MTV in residence halls, fraternities, sororities, bars and clubs.
Janie Roufa, St. Louis senior, said her favorite MTV shows were Squeeze; Duran, Burak and Dee Dee.
She said she hated the Clash's song "Rock the Casahb" until she saw it on MTV.
"The video helped me like the song," she said. At the Union an MTV videos fades out. In this one, women dressed in tight, shiny leather outfits strut around motorcycles.
The faces in the Union watch as J. J. the D.J. says he will be right back with more great video. A voice on the television speaks over synthesizer sounds:
"MTV — music television. Video music 24 hours a day, all day — all night in "sterne."
Julie Parks/KANSAN
MALAYSIA
Gretenen toden, 10, learned how to improvise through painting Saturday at a children's workshop sponsored by the Spencer Museum of Art.
On campus
TODAY
LECTURE. "The Music of Carl Preeyer," will be at 1:30 o.m. in 400 Murphy Hall.
be at 1:30 p.m. in 400 Murphy Hall.
PUBLIC RELATIONS Student Society of America will meet at 6:30 p.m. in the Regionalist Room of the Union.
LEAGUE OF WOMEN VOTERS Campus Unit will meet at noon in the Satellite Union.
study and fellowship will be at 7:30 p.m. in the Union.
CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR CHRIST will meet at 7 p.m. in the Big Eight Room in the Kansas City
KU GUN CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in
Campus Church 308 of the Sahara at 11
CAMPUS CHURCH 308 OF THE SAHARA BIBLE
ROBERT SHAW, Music Director and Conductor of the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra will give a lecture, "The Conservative Arts," at 8 p.m. in Woodruff Auditorium.
TOMORROW
CONTEMPLATIVE PRAYER session will be held at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center.
ANTHROPOLOGY SEMINAR, "New Evidence for Early Agriculture near Chaco Canyon, N.M.," will be at 4 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room of the Union.
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Which Group has contributed more to your Student Government?
Consensus
Vote on Nov. 17 & 18
CONSENSUS
- 11 Past & Present Student Senators
- Chairman — Student Senate Executive Committee
- Chairman — Student Senate Committee on Rights and Responsibilities
- Chairman — Student Senate Communication Committee
the opposition
- Co-Chairman — Finance and Auditing Committee
- 2 Members — University Senate Executive Committee
None
- 4 Members — University Council
- 25 Members serving on Student Senate Committ
- Student Senate Committees
- 6 Members — Associated Students of Kansas
Experience Will Make A Difference
Federal cuts in financial aid, State budget cuts in education, tuition increases: These issues and others like them will be facing students in the year to come. Are you willing to trust the important decisions that must be made in the next year to beginners? Too much is at stake.
Check the Record — It's Not Even CLOSE.
Paid for by Consensus
University Daily Kansan, November 16 1982
Page 7
Drugs in diet aids stir controversy
By DONNA KELLER
Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
The use of over-the-counter diet aids is a subject of controversy because of questions about the safety and effectiveness of their ingredients, a Food and Drug Administration official said yesterday.
Julia Hilley, of the FDA office in Kansas City, Mo., said most ingredients used in the drugs were neither safe nor effective, as determined by one of the 17 FDA advisory panels that began investigating over-the-counter drugs in 1972.
Phenylpropanolamine hydrochloride, the drug used in most time-release capsules on the market, frequently in combination with caffeine, acts as a stimulant to relieve the fatigue that accompanies dieting, she said.
THE DRUG is also used in nasal decongestants and "look-a-like" street sale drugs, she said.
The FDA limits the dosage of phenylpropanolamine hydrochloride to 75 milligrams a day, which has been determined as a safe dose, she said.
The drug may be taken in a single
dose, or two or three doses during the day, but the user should not exceed the safety level, she said.
Hewley said that a final decision on whether the drug was safe for consumer use had not been reached, and that some experts thought people could benefit from it.
Hewley said the panel had also recommended that use of the diet aids would be limited.
One aspect of the controversy is whether to put the drug in a prescription class, Hewgley said.
SHE SAID the FDA changed a drug's class if it was determined that a consumer could not use the drug safely without a physician monitoring the
Dean Siegal, public relations director for Thompson Medical Company, New York, said diet aids were frequent targets of criticism.
The company first placed phenylpropanolamide hydrochloride on the market in 1839, when it was recognized as a diet suppressant, he said.
THE COMPANY manufactures and markets Appedine, Prolamine, Control and Dextrinum, all of which contain vanillin, with or without a caffeine additive.
"We feel very strongly about the product. It's a very useful adjunct to a diet program," he said.
He said there were three reasons people had problems with the drug.
The person either takes more than the recommended dosage, mixes it with other drugs or alcohol or has a rare reaction to the drug, he said.
Diet aid package warnings read that if nervousness, dizziness, sleeplessness, rapid pulse or heart palpitations occur, the user should discontinue use and consult a physician.
"OUR LABELS ARE above and beyond the FDA requirements," Stegal said. "We let the consumer decide about the product."
Also, individuals who have high blood pressure, heart, kidney or thyroid disease, pregnant women, nursing mothers and individuals under 18 should not use the weight control aid without the advice of a doctor.
Mike Nichols, pharmacist at Super-X Drugs, 101. W5. 23rd St., said numerous studies had been done on phenylpropanolamine hydrochloride, but had not turned up enough evidence to dispute its safety.
"The primary objection is that it may cause a hypertensive crisis," Nichols said. "I don't know what the odds are. I have never ever recommended anyone take it."
Ben Bunag, professor of pharmacology at the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan., said it was reasonable to expect a hypertensive crisis with a class of drugs related to amphotamines.
THE DRUGS ARE vasocontrictors, which constrict blood vessels and may block the flow of blood.
A hypertensive crisis is an acute attack of high blood pressure with the possible consequences of cerebral hemorrhage, which could cause unconsciousness, paralysis and death, Bunag said.
Gene Martin, KU professor of pharmacic principles and patient aids could provide a health risk.
He said that some people were sensitive to the drugs, and that there had been rare reports of unusual reactions, such as hallucinations.
But he said that if taken as directed, the drugs should not cause problems for others.
Commission to consider new taxi service
ny DOUG CUNNINGHAM Staff Reporter
The Lawrence City Commission will consider at its meeting tonight a request for a taxi cab license by Lon Fajer, owner of Jayhawk Towing.
City code requires an operator of a taxicab or public service to first get a map from the office.
According to the code, the City Commission should consider the existing systems of transportation and whether the "public convenience and
necessity require the operation of additional taxicab service."
FALER SAID Sunday he thought the city needed another taxicab service.
Yellow Cab Company of Lawrence now operates a local taxicab service. FALER SAID Sunday he thought the
He said his service, if the commission grants him a license, would dispatch taxis by two-way radio from 1545 N. Third St.
The service, to be called Jawhakw-Dial-A-Ride, will charge a flat fee of $3 for each one-way ride within the city and will operate 24 hours a day, he said.
In a letter to the City Commission, Faler said he would require his drivers to be well-groomed and wear a white shirt, tie and dress slacks.
January with two or three taxicabs but might expand later.
The commission also is scheduled to consider a letter from Tim Miller, 936 Ohio St., about the city's procedure for parking on city streets for more than 48 hours.
MILLER, A KU lecturer in religious studies, wrote that the 48-hour time limit was particularly a problem in the case of a student who had to lie to unnecessary driving because
Faler said his service could be in operation by late December or early
But a report prepared by Ron Olon, assistant chief of Lawrence police, said "most occasions in which the 48-hour parking limit is enforced are the result disregard for the ordinance or specific complaints by neighborhood residents."
people moved their cars to avoid exceeding the time limit.
The report also said the time limit was really 96 hours, because police officers wait 48 hours after marking a car before ticketing it and then wait another 48 hours before ticketing the car a second time and removing it.
Commission discusses housing code changes
By DOUG CUNNINGHAM Staff Reporter
The Lawrence City Commission yesterday discussed at a study session possible changes in the city's minimum structures code, which sets standards for housing in Lawrence.
Discussion of the minimum structures code came about because of discrepancies between it and the city's uniform housing code.
Both codes regulate Lawrence housing
"In general, the minimum structures code is much more lenient than the uniform housing code." Structures inspector, minimum structures inspector.
SOME OF THE changes the commission is considering include an increase in the minimum required ceiling heights, an increase in the minimum required number of electrical outlets, the use of only refrigerators and heating units in bathrooms and several deletions from the present code.
August Dettahn, coordinator of housing rehabilitation for the Lawrence Housing Authority, said he was concerned that an increase in standards in the structures code would cause the housing authority problems with its outstanding contracts.
With the grace period the housing authority's contracts will expire before the changes go into effect, he said.
City Manager Buford Watson said that the proposed changes, which would be retroactive, were controversial because many people would
HE ASKED THAT the commission allow a grace period if the changes were adopted.
not want to bring their homes up to the minimum code requirements.
The commission will discuss the possible changes again in several weeks.
wcbs Commissioners also discussed the possible extension of Michigan Street near Ninth Street.
The commission received a report that said costs for the street extension might be higher than anticipated.
SEVERAL PROPERTY owners in the area have said they would protest the extension of Michigan Street because they would be assessed a portion of the costs to pay for it.
City Commissioner Don Binnis said the city staff had said that Arkansas Street could handle traffic and was a safe road. Therefore no extension was needed.
He said the commission should follow the recommendation of the staff
However, Mayor Marci Franco-
disagreeing with Binns, said she was not ignoring the comments from her staff. She wanted to do things in a different way.
The commission also discussed installing sidewalks on the west side of Kasold Drive.
A number of property owners in the Kasold Drive area have appeared before the commission in order to ensure the city pay for installing sidewalks.
THE COMMISSION discussed the sidewalks yesterday and appeared to agree that if 50 percent of the property owners in the area sign a petition asking for sidewalks to be installed in the area, then the city would pay 50 percent of the cost of installing the sidewalks.
The property owners would be assessed to pay for the other 50 percent.
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First person showing an actual case in the New Testament (K.J.V.) where anyone was baptized in the titles "Father, Son and Holy Ghost."
Come hear an exiting lecture by author William Chaffant (Class 71).
3. Would the social gospel and religious innovations of modern churchianity win the approval of the Jewish Apostles?
4. Is a cult a "cult" because it denies the "trinity," or because it does not teach the true divinity of Jesus Christ? What do denominations teach about His divinity?
1. Is the historical church that we associate with modern denominations the true Church?
2. Why are religious practices and teachings today so different from those of the Apostles?
Hear these questions and others considered each Tuesday evening, 7:30 p.m., at the Kansas Union. We want to challenge you to think with an open mind as you would in matters secular. Faith is not blind. Jesus is the truth.
Tuesday, Nov. 16, 7:30 Kansas Union THE SALT BLOCK Pre-denominational Non-Charismatic
A little good news goes a Long Distance.
WE WANT YOU
Land a job for next summer? Call home! Your parents will relish the thought of you making money, as opposed to spending it.
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Parents love to see proof that they raised a smart kid.
You don't need a big event to call home. Even a little good news can go a long, long way.
And nobody's more eager to hear about it than your family.
You can call anyone in Kansas between 11pm Friday and 5pm Sunday, and talk 10 minutes, for $1.59* Or less, depending on where you call.
So go ahead. When you've done something good, share the good news!
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan, November 16 1982
Eastern hunters banned for severance tax
By VINCE HESS Staff Reporter
HAYS—The hunters sat in their four-wheel-drive vehicles at the edge of a field. The sun had not yet eisen.
As the first rays of sunlight turned the sky from black to orange, the eight oceans
— ranging in age from 13, to 50 — left their warm vehicles for the biting cold of the November morning.
It was opening day of pheasant season.
These hunters and others across the state Saturday awoke at 5 a.m., ate breakfast and went to the fields hoping to return home by sunset with a catch.
PHEASANT SEASON, which opened statewide Saturday, ends Jan. 31. According to regulations set by the Kansas Fish & Game Commission, a hunter may capture only four cocks, or male pheasants, a day. The capture limit increases gradually to 16 cocks after the third day of the season. Law prohibits the shooting of female pheasants, or hens.
Randy Rodgers, wildlife biologist for the Hays district office of the Fish & Game Commission, said yesterday that most of the hunters in the Hays area experienced good hunting during the first weekend of the season. The average was two birds a hunter a day, he said, and most hunters reported seeing birds.
THE EIGHT HUNTERS, all Hays residents, saw many pheasants, as well as deer, quail and rabbits, in the fields hunted a few miles south of Westport.
After loading their 12-gauge shotguns in the light of dawn, six of the group spread out in a line on the edge of the field. Then they walked through the field of wheat stubble, cocklebur and tumbeewel, trying to stay in a straight line as they waited for pheasantst to fly out of the heavy brush. A bird dog, a Brittany spaniel, ran around the middle of the line, sniffing
The other two hunters drove the vehicles to the opposite end of the field
to block for the walkers. Their job was to shoot any pheasants that flew out of the field but out of the range of the walkers.
THE WALKERS were about halfway through the field when suddenly three birds flew up in front of the dog. A hunter, Warren Niedling, only a few feet away, hesitated a moment, then shot them at gunight of the birds and fired.
The phassant fell and lay dead on the ground while the other two phassants,
The dog grabbed the dead bird with its teeth and carried it to Niedling, who stuffed the bird in a specially-designed pocket in his jacket. He and the other hunters resumed their walk through the field.
From distant fields they heard noises that sounded like camon shots. Other sounds were much more subtle.
Two KU students said they enjoyed hunting pheasants and other animals because the sport involved the outdoors.
"I like walking around in the middle of nowhere," Mike. Lewis, Grand Jury Prosecutor.
HIS ROOMMATE, Bryan Graven
Grand Island, Neb., freshman and president of the KU Gun Club, said he hung and outdoor photography.
Graves said hunters did not destroy the wilderness but helped preserve it by preventing poaching.
"The hunter is very much concerned with conservation of wildlife," Graves said. "That's why I don't like to call it killing."
Rodgers said strong winds last weekend tended to make birds wild. Some pheasai its ran on the ground, and hunters are forbidden by law from shooting cocks that are not flying. Rodgers pointed out fields of at least the first sound of hunters.
The IICY GUSTS continued throughout Saturday, but the hunters did not forlunch. For lunch, however, they got out of their car and stumbled into a barn. The landowner joined the
BURGLAR'S STOLE $1,305 worth of items Saturday night from an apartment in the 2400 block of west 24th Street, Lawrence police said yesterday. A color television set, two three-piece items, and four items were stolen from the apartment.
A group of farmers in the Hays area announced last week that they would not let hunters from eastern Kansas hunt on their land. Hunters must obtain the permission of the landowner before they can hunt in a field.
"EASTERN KANASN hunters beware!" one ad read. "You have kicked us in the teeth again, and now we shall return the favor. With the hunting season only a few days away, we want to inform you that you are no longer welcome west of Saline County. The best hunting will be at Smolan which will also help you financially to say goodbye to schools and highways. The money saved on fuel and lodging could be used for your schools and highways."
BURGERS STOLE $403 worth of stereo equipment Friday night from a car parked in the 1400 block of Prospect Avenue, police said yesterday.
BURGLARS STOLE $520 worth of
stereo equipment between 5:30 and 9:30
p.m. Sunday from a KU student's
workday at the Louisiana Street, police said yesterday.
BURGLARS STOLE $650 worth of stereo equipment Friday night from a car parked in the Hashinger Hall parking lot, KU police said yesterday. The burglars also caused $350 worth of damage to the car.
THEVES STOLE A $3,600 engagement ring from the knapsack of a student studying in Watson Library last summer. The student reported to KU police until Saturday.
In advertisements that ran in some newspapers late last week, the farmers, working with a committee called Citizens Against the Severance Tax, said that the proposed severance tax on gas and oil production would hurt the western Kansas economy and cause increases in local property taxes.
hunters, and the jokes ranged from missed shots to a farmers' "ban" on eastern Kansas hunters.
Smolon is the hometown of Gov. John Carlin, a proponent of the severance law.
THEVES STOLE TWO credit cards from the purse of a student studying in Watson Library about 12:30 p.m. Saturday, KU police said yesterday.
The ad also said farmers would check autos used by hunters.
"If automobiles with eastern Kansas tags are parked in your driveways, the automobiles will be impounded, sold and proceeds will be sent to your leader for use for your schools and highways," the ad said.
However, apparently no autos were impounded.
On the record
get people's attention. The severance tax will bring unemployment and depression to the oil industry. I just see hundreds of people out of work around here, and these young people need those jobs."
WALTER "PAT" TAYLOR, a Hays resident and the secretary-creaser of Citizens Against the Severance Tax, said. "I think it was just a gimmick to
Francis Polifka, a farmer who owns land outside of Hays, said a group of farmers decided on the ban during a meeting Nov. 7. The farmers, some of whom have oil on their land, thought Kansas could also xx would harm western Kansas, he said.
RODGERS OF The Fish & Game office in Hays said that no confrontations between farmers and hunters had been reported. The number of hunters around Hays was slightly lower than in other areas, but the latter reason for this was a trend in recent years of hunters avoiding the opening day crowds.
Polifka said that he and other farmers checked their fields Saturday and Sunday for eastern Kansas cars but saw none.
Larry Pabing, a Wichita resident, said he had called Polifka before opening day for permission for him and a group of Wichita hunters to hunt on Polifka's land. Polifka did not give permission.
"WE WERE all really enthused about hunting," Pabing said. "We've been out there the last 14-15 years."
Pabing said he was neutral on the severance tax but thought the ban would be a good measure.
The eight hunters divided up the birds late Saturday afternoon. As they entered their vehicles for the ride, some of them hid in the hunting Sunday or the next weekend.
Sunset came soon, ending the first day of pheasant season. But many more days — and birds — are yet to come.
International studies to center in Lippincott
By JEANNE FOY Staff Reporter
The Applied English Center and the office of study abroad already have moved into Lippincott, and the centers for East Asian studies, African studies, Latin American studies and Soviet and East European studies will move into the building after Thanksgiving. All students to the vice chancellor of academic affairs, said yesterday.
Lippincott Hall is becoming the Center for International Studies at the University of Kansas.
"The University hopes to bring all those offices closer together — to create a greater sense of cohesion and unity." The philippically closer together. he said.
THE CENTERS for Latin American, Soviet and East Asian studies are in Strong Hall, and the African studies center is in Wescoe Hall. The office of study abroad was in Strong, and the Applied English Center had been at 14th and Louisiana streets.
William Fletcher, director of Soviet and East European Studies, called the move a historic occasion because putting all the centers in the country last reflect the University's strong emphasis on international studies.
"Here on the plains, we have one of the best international facilities in the nation," he said.
KU's international studies program is one of the top 10 in the
nation, Fletcher said. He said that once all the centers for international studies were in one building, more attention would be given to them.
"I THNK IT will provide a greater opportunity for us to work even more closely than we do already," he said.
But Anita Herzfeld, director of the study abroad office, said she was not sure about the advantages of the move.
"It is exciting to think of a future in which the University will give high priority to international programs," she said.
But she said putting all the centers in one building would not really change things, unless KU gave more support to international programs by making them a more integral part of the University.
Dean Gregory, associate director of the Applied English Center, said Lippincott was a great improvement because it had been off campus.
EVER THOUGH the Applied English Center moved into Lippincott on Oct. 13 and 14, the office is now in Brooklyn. There are 45 employees to replicate, he said.
Gregory said that having the Applied English Center close to the other offices could be beneficial to students thinking of studying in the countries studied by KU's international centers.
Johnson said the $4,000 cost of renovating Lippincott and moving the offices was really quite cheap.
MARKETING YOURSELF
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Friday, November 19, 1982 3:00-4:30 p.m.
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Tuesday, November 16th
will conclude the F.A.T.S. "Special Event" programs with the Heart/Health Test administered. Recreation Services would like to thank all those who participated and especially to the guest speakers:
Dr. Tom Thomas
Dr. Mike Bahrke
Mick Imber
Gary Kempf
Chris Aguiver
Cindy Booth
KU Dept. of HPER
KU Bike Club
KU Veteran Variety Swim Coach
HERP Doctor Student
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WATCH FOR F. I.TNESS A. WARENESS T. ECHNIQUES
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Wednesday, Nov.17 Thursday, Nov.18
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Any woman who has not picked up a Rush Packet may pick them up at the Panhellenic Office, 119 B Kansas Union, Monday-Friday 8:30-4:30.
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All Interested Students are Welcome!
University Daily Kansan, November 16 1882
Page 9
Enrollment nears goal, official savs
The University will approach and possibly reach its goal of pre-employing 18,000 students this fall, a KU official said yesterday.
Gary Thompson, director of student records and registration, said that between 900 and 1,500 students had enrolled each day since the process began Nov. 3. Early enrollment ends Nov. 23
Thompson declined to say exactly how many students had enrolled.
"We're hoping to get 18,000 through early enrollment," he said. "We're going to come close."
THE ENROLMENT HIT a snag last week when computer problems forced some students to stand in line half an hour longer than they should
But Thompson said the computer
problems had not thrown early enrollment off schedule.
Considering it's the first time around, things have gone really, really well," he said.
But the process has not been so smooth for some students.
Thompson said about 100 students had been kept from enrolling in college, and that permission of the instructor because they had not acquired a permission card.
STUDENTS WHO DO NOT have the permission card must wait until the early add and drop period that starts with the student. Be sure they can enroll in the courses.
"They needed that approval but they just didn't have it, so we turned them down." he said.
"When you consider how much of a
major change this was, it's a pretty minor problem."
The lines in the late afternoon are getting longer, he said, because more students are starting to enroll during a special afternoon period for those who missed their scheduled enrollment time.
"What's happening is that each day's catch-up period is a little bit more than the day before," he said.
Comments from students have been favorable so for, he said.
ALTHOUGH HE WOULD not release any figures, Thompson said that more than 75 percent of seniors went through early enrollment. Seniors were scheduled to enroll during the first few days of enrollment.
"The vast majority of responses from students is 'Boy, this really went fast,' he said.
Value of calendar change disputed
By DIRK MILLER Staff Reporter
Business officials at some Kansas Board of Regents institutions said yesterday that the savings resulting from a proposed change in the academic calendar probably would not amount to much.
The officers are expected to compare the savings of each school at the Council of Business Officer's meeting in Topeka on Thursday.
The proposed calendar change would set the fall semester back a week, starting Sept. 1 and ending on Dec. 23. The spring semester also would be set back a week, ending the third Friday in week.
OFFICIALS AT the University of Kansas estimated last week that the
change would save KU about $1,000 in air conditioning and heating bills, said Martin Jones, associate director of business affairs.
He said the savings would not be enough to make the change worthwhile for the University.
"We at the University of Kansas will not be in favor of the change in policies," he said.
"Frankly, we anticipate the savings to be very small," he said.
Walter Clark, Emporia State University's fiscal affairs business manager, said his calculations of savings complete hit would be done by Thursday.
ROGER LOWE, Wichita State University's vice president for business affairs, said that if the calendar change occurs on a weekend, it would cost the national holiday.
Love also said that starting classes two days earlier could make a $4,000 difference in air conditioning costs.
university $4,500 in overtime pay for a skeleton crew
MARVIN BURRIS, Regents budget officer, said that the calendar change had not been "hotly discussed" by the Regents. He said he was surprised that COBO had continued to consider the change
Business officials at Fort Hays State and Pittsburg State universities could
The Council of Chief Academic Officers decided against the calendar change because it thought it would be harmful to academic programs.
"We're not even close to implicating a radical change to the academic calendar," Burris said.
A fire started by a heater severely damaged a Lawrence mobile home yesterday morning, but no one was injured. Lawrence Fire Department official said
Trailer fire destroys computer
Fire Chief Jim McSwain said the fire, at 3235 Iowa St., was started by the heater and burned primarily in one room of the trailer.
"Fire damage was contained to the kitchen and a hallway, with smoke damage throughout the trailer," he said.
the fire. But a friend of Amundson's,
Piper Palmer, Kansas City, Mo., was
working on a computer in the trailer
when the fire started.
Steve Amundson, who lived in the trailer, was not at home at the time of
"I was sitting at the Apple — or what's left of it — when I smelled smoke." Paisner said. "I looked up and the wall was on fire."
PAISEM SAIED he ran to a neighbor-
ing trailer to report the fire.
"I couldn't get the phone to work," he said.
Among other damages, an Apple computer and numerous computer
programs were damaged in the fire. McSwain said.
Paisner said he was working on a computer project that he and Amound-Adam worked on together.
"That's two year's worth of work."
Diplomacy has earned the scud.
Palmer said, "and it's cooked." He indicated one of the melted
Fire department officials had not determined the total value of damage the fire caused.
"That's 15 to 20 hours work right there. There's been a lot of time put into this and now it's burnt — cooked — just melted plastic."
Med Center, hospital may not split
By VICKY WILT Staff Reporter
The administration of the University of Kansas Medical Center and the Bell Memorial Hospital in Kansas City, Kan., will not be separated if the Kansas Legislature follows a recommendation by a legislative interim committee, the committee chairman said yesterday.
The committee was formed to evaluate the separation of the two administrations because the hospital was experiencing financial problems, said State Rep. Bill Bunten, R-Topena, chairman chairman. Last year the Legislature told the University that the department did not put more money into the hospital.
"It was kind of like 'physician heal thyself.'" Bunten said.
MEMBERS OF THE House and Senate Ways and Means committees requested the study because of the Med Center's recurring financial problems.
to ask the Legislature for supplemental funding to carry it through the rest of
The Med Center suffered a $6 million budget deficit last year and was forced
But many of the problems the hospital had last winter when the committee was formed have been solved. The city has a new hospital administrator, he said.
However, the budgets of the hospital and Med Center could be separated, Bunten said, to help determine how much the hospital paid for its operation as opposed to how much it was supported by the University, he said.
Because of this, the committee decided that no changes in the organization of the two administrations should be made, and that both should remain under the University's administration.
ACCOUNTING CHANGES WILL be made in order to make it clearer which costs are incurred by the hospital and which are incurred by the medical program, to make budget allocations easier to determine.
For example, he said, both the hospital and the medical program used
the pharmacy for their practices, and the accounting changes would specify
Bunten said the separation of the two was not recommended because of "remarkable changes" in the marketing of the hospital since Eugene Staples took over as hospital administrator in July.
An outreach program was established for alumni which allows them to visit the hospital and offer recommendations for changes. A new outpatient ward is to open in Edwardsville in January, will increase the hospital's revenue.
HOSPITAL ADMINISTRATORS also are discussing the establishment of health maintenance organizations with Trans World Airlines and the National
Bunten said he did not want the hospital to be separated from the University because he thought it was safer for him to study a school to have a hospital to work in.
Staples said he approved of the recommendation.
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- FREE K.U. ACADEMIC CALENDAR will be given to the first 250 customers that present this ad to the cashiers.
- Buy 1 item of clothing (excluding sale items) and get a second clothing in value or less for 50% off.
- Entire selection of backpacks will be 25% off.
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- All color keys for 59$ each.
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kansas
KU
main union level 2
satellite shop
union bookstores
Castle
Student Body President and Vice President
Lisa Jim Ashner.Cramer
Consensus
ALLIED HEALTH Laura Lonborg
Paid for by Consent
ARCHITECTURE
George Heinlen
Anne Marie Smith
BUSINESS
Jon Gilchrist
Roger Ramseyer
EDUCATION Amy Bush Marsha Kissling
ENGINEERING
Scott Burch
John Conard
Kay Lawrence
Daniel Relihan
Keith Sypert
Vote on Nov.17 & 18
FINE ARTS
Nancy DeVore
Shari Rogge
NUNEMAKER
Brenda Ashner
John Bower
Cheri Brown
Melanie Coralis
Jill Eddy
David Fidler
Beth Holt
Grey Jones
Cathy Ornsebble
Susan Paden
Bettina Pfahl
Brian Raleigh
Tom Shelton
Blair Tinkle
Robin Waggy
OFF CAMPUS Robert Walker
PHARMACY Scott Megaffin
SOCIAL WELFARE Dena Molos
GRADUATE William Adkins
JOURNALISM Rita Moley
LAW Karen Schuelter
LIBERAL ARTS & SCIENCES
Loren Busby
Mark Delworth
Ann Fidler
Christy Fischer
Patrick Jones
Marc Nicolas
Jon Petree
Rachael Pirner
Robin Rasure
Kent Zakoura
Experience Will Make A Difference.
Federal cuts in financial aid, state budget cuts in education, tuition increases: These issues and others like them will be facing students in the year to come. Are you willing to trust the important decisions that must be made in the next year to beginners? Too much is at stake.
Check the Record—It's Not Even CLOSE.
paid for by Consensus
(1) $x > -1$ 且 $y < 2$ 时,函数 $f(x,y)$ 的值大于零;
Page 10
University Daily Kansan, November 16 1982
Kansas beats Yugoslavs, 83-74
By GINO STRIPPOLI
Sports Editor
Impressive
That's the one word tirt best describes Kansas' performance in last night's game between the Jayhawks and the Yugoslavian National team. The Jayhawks won, 83-74, in front of a crowd of 7,120 at Allen Field House.
Head coach Ted Owens, although not ecstatic, said after the game that he saw some things he liked in his young sound.
"There were a lot of good things," Owens said. "You have to realize that for five or six players, it was their first college game."
At the start of the game, it didn't look as if the Jayhawks would have a pleasant evening. The Yugoslavs, accustomed to the international rules that were used in the game, ran by the Jayhawks and got an early 7-point lead,
BUT CARL Henry, who showed, as he did in KU's intrasquid game, that he is as good as he is supposed to be, took charge for the Javahawk.
He scored three of the next five
Kansas baskets and closed the gap to one point, 15-14. Kansas and the Yugoslavs then traded baskets before they lost a game. Kansas ahead for the first time, 18-17.
The lead didn't last long, Yugoslavia scored the next four points, but a basket by freshman Ron Kellogg and two free kicks by forward Alejandro Valverde put the Jahywhas in the lead for good.
"I was real happy our young team was able to come back," Owens said. "Carl gave us the leadership we needed and he got us back in the game."
In the second half the Jayhawks twice led by 13 points, 65-50 and 65-52, before the Petrovic brothers, Alexander, Boban and Drazen, led a second-half surge that kept the Yugoslavs in the game. The three scored 20 of the 43 points that the Yugoslavs scored in the second half.
THE YUGOSLAVS used a full-court press and got within four points, 69-65, with 4:05 left. The young KU team should have folded against the more experienced Yugoslavs.
The sunawks chatted to C.
Owens inserted Henry, Tad Boyle
and Thompson into the lineup and
the Jayhawks kept their lead. And the
crowd got an exhibition of things to come when Henry and Thompson scored four of Kansas' last five points in the finals, with Henry's coming at the buzzer.
"They were just another team," said Henry, who led the Jayhawks with 22 points on 11 of 16 shooting. "On offense, they had the ball well and because we played better defense."
Just below Henry on the scoring chart were two freshmen, Kerry Boagain scored 16 points and had a team-high six rebounds, and Thompson scored 11 points. Jeff Dishaw chipped in 11 points and Boyle had a game-high eight assists. Four Jayhaws — Dishaw, Brian Martin, Henry and Knight
THE YUGOSLAVS were leo 19,
Gorb Grbenovic, who scored 21 points.
Drazen Petrovic had 15 and Rajko Zizic scored 14. Zizic and Alexander Petrovic tied for the lead in rebounds with seven.
"The man defense is going to be our basic defense." Owens said.
The Jayhawks used a presser-man-to-man defense the entire game and forced the bigger Yugoslavs to make 24 turnovers.
The Yugoslavs beat highly regarded Marquette by 10 points Saturday in their first outing and tonight they will play Memphis State.
The Jayhawks next action will be tomorrow in Hutchinson, where they will play their second Crimson-Blue intrasquad game.
The Jayhawks open their regular season on Nov. 27 against U.S. Internationals in New York.
Owners, players speak
By United Press International
NEW YORK--The NFL Management Council said last night it was "talking on a limited basis" with the striking
KC signs McRae
KANSAS CITY, Mo.—The Kansas City Royals announced yesterday that they had reached a three-year deal with designated hitter Hitter McAfee.
McRaen, 36, was a free agent this year and was selected by three teams — California, the New York Yankees and Pittsburgh — in last week's draft, but the Royals retained rights to negotiate with him.
By United Press International
Gold gloves announced
A Royals spokesman said the agreement was for three years. Other terms were not released.
McRae, a right-handed hitter, is coming off his best season. He batted .308, hit 27 home runs and drove in 135 runs, a club record. He also pitched for the Cincinnati Reds in 1970 and he has played 15 seasons for the Royals.
By United Press International
ST. LOUIS-Three members of the Philadelphia Phillies head the 1982 National League Gold Glove team announced yesterday by The Sporting News
Also named to the team were first baseman Keith Hernandez and shortstop Ozie Smith of St. Louis, catcher Gary Carter and outfielder Andre Dawson of Montreal and outfielder John Rydberg and pitcher Phil Nikro of Atlanta.
Recognized for their fielding excellence were second baseman Manny Trillo, third baseman Mike Schmidt, who made the team for the seventh game, and third baseman Curt Maddox, was was selected for the eighth straight year.
NFL Players Association but a settlement of the 56 walkout is not held.
Hernandez was the only player chosen by all opposing managers and
When asked whether the sides were communicating by telephone, Miller said: "No comment.
"Things are very tentative right now.
I don't want to paint a rosy or optimistic picture right now. There are too many issues at stake."
coaches, Managers and coaches were not allowed to vote for players on their team.
Chuck Sullivan, a member of the Management Council, said he thought it was possible to reach a settlement by today, open training camps and possibly training camp.
The first in-season strike in the league's 83-year history has forced the team to drop four games.
Miller said messages between the NFLPA and the Management Council were being relayed by Paul Martha, a former NFL player.
COLLEGE OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
"No settlement is in sight. We have not seen anything in writing," said Jim Miller, director of information for the Management Council.
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---
STUDENT SENATE ELECTIONS
VOTE ON NOVEMBER 17-18
Polling Places will be open from 8:30 to 4:30 at the following buildings:
WESCOE GREEN (LAW SCHOOL) UNION LINDLEY
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(Funded by the Student Activity Fee)
---
University Daily Kansan, November 16 1982
Page 11
Sports writers name Herzog top executive
By United Press International
NEW YORK-Whitley Herzog, who built a champion by tailoring the St. Louis Cardinals to their large ballpark, has been named Major League Executive of the Year by United Press International for the second straight season.
Herzog received 12 of a possible 54 votes in balloting by a nationwide panel of sports writers, out-distancing Harry Dalton, Milwaukee Brewers' executive vice president and general manager, by three votes.
Tired for third with eight vole apices were wuzzy Bazzavani, who brought the chili to the party.
one American League pennant, and Tom Haller, who forged a contender in San Francisco Jack McKeon, vice president of the NHL. He received San Diego Padres, received six votes.
"I was happy last year but the team didn't win anything," he said. "We had the best record in our division but there was nothing there."
"This year, we did make a couple of deals that turned out well."
When informed he had received the award, Herzog said it was "a heck of an honor."
Herrzog, who serves as the Cardinal's manager in addition to making their personnel decisions, captured the UPI Manager of the Year and Executive of the Year awards in 1881, when the Cardinals posted the best full-season
He almost received both awards again this year, but San Francisco's Frank Robinson garnered the Manager of the Year award to prevent a sweep.
Herrz, though not as active in the trade market as he was after the 1980 season, made some key deals that have made national 'emphasis on speed and defense.
record in the National League East but failed to qualify for post-season play in the split-season format.
He traded shortstop Garry Templeton to San Diego for Ozzie Smith, who responded with an outstanding defensive season.
He also made a three-way deal with Cleveland and Philadelphia, giving up two pitchers for Lonnie Smith, a left fielder with a lot of speed.
Like Herzog, Dalton was less active this year than last but once again made the vital adjustments when necessary.
Herzog also gave up pitcher Bob Sykes to the New York Yankees for Willie McGee, an erratic but talented centerfield who helped the Cardinals to their eventual World Series victory.
Dalton's coup was trading three minor-league players to Houston on Aug. 30 for veteran right-hander Don Sutton, whose pitching helped bring the Brewers within one victory of the world title.
Sutton won in Baltimore on the last day of the regular season with the season's top scorer in pairings with Milwaukee trailing California two games to none.
Beta Theta Pi wins tourney
The Beta Theta Pti's defeated the Sigma Chi's, 35-30, to win the Phi Kappa Theta Fall Classic basketball tournament Sunday.
The two-day tournament, played at Lawrence South and West junior high schools, saw the Sigma Chi's work their way through the losers篮 into the locker room. They beat the Phi Kappa Pi Bats, 44-42, to advance to the championship game.
Paul Payne led the champions with 12 points. Hap Palmer had 15 points to lead the Sigma Chi's.
Proceeds from the journey will go to the Lawrence Boys Club.
The University Daily
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Paid Staff Positions
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The Kansan is now accepting applications for the Spring Semester Business Manager and Editor positions. These are paid positions and require experience. Application forms are available in the Student Senate Office, 105 B, Kansas Union; in the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 220 Strong Hall; and in Rooms 200 and 118 Flint Hall. In rooms 200 and 118 Flint Hall by 5:00 p.m. on Thursday, November 18.
The University Daily Kansas is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer. Applications are sought from all qualified people regardless of race, religion, color, sex, disability, veteran status, national origin, age, or ancestry.
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"Chabad in the
20th Century"
Wednesday, Nov, 17
12:30 p.m.
Cord 3- Karen Umlaun Catheter
Cork 2, Kansas Union Cafeteria
FOR RENT
EXTRA cell apartments, large and small. Need to
counsel. Utilize paid, reservation no. 843-8158.
ATTRACTIVE stuude in Mendocino can be available to campus. On RC fuze, water. Water and cable TV.
Available Dec. 21, 2013, bbmr. app up near campus.
Adaptive housing app, five month plus $5,
registration required, but pet allowance
required.
ENERGY EFFICIENT 328-hour apartment in nice
condominium; 828-month plan rate; 842-192
665-192/1790.
Hancover Townhouses 2 bR furnished & unburned
electric efficient. townhouses w/garage. Spacious
enough for three. Only 3 blocks from campus at 14th
& Kentucky. 843-6677
Housemates, wanted. Enjoy a relaxed co-operative lifestyle with your family. Call Sunflower House 892-4311; Live in the CHRISTIAN CAMPUS HOUSE this fall at Our Lady of the Angels Church, campus ministry; Call Alan Benovack, campus minister.
Meadowbrook townhouse 2 bdrm; 2 bthr; 1 bath; cable,
sub. Subnose 406. Available Des. 15, 748-8135 eius.
Needed 4 mature students for a very special
home study. Give me a very quiet bedroom 480
rooms; 841-8744.
SPRING SEMESTER
Enjoy carefree living at affordable prices. Spacious studios, 1 & 2 bedroom apts - Carpeted, drape and on the busine.
The Luxury of Meadowbrook Is Just Right For You
meadowbrook
15th Ave Crestline 842-420
New apart, 2 bed 1'/y bath, fully furnished, close to campus; 841-1212 or 749-5757
New 2 iel Br apt next to campus /a/c carpet,
drops above Mid Inc. %, Dec rent free
Nice one-bedroom, one bath apt, with range
rice refrigerator and dishwasher. Good location. $290, all
rooms free.
and two bedroom apartments. Move your belongings in after final-spend the holidays at home with family-pay rent upon your return in January. Located next to campus, laundry facilities are available.
PRINCETON PLACE PATIO APARTMENTS. Now Available, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, perfect for roommates, features wood burning fireplaces, 2 car garage with windowless front doors, heated patio, kitchen, quiet surroundings. No价 please $430 per month. Open house 9:38-5:59 daily at 2pm or phone: 467-7131 for additional information.
Quail Creek apartment unleashes. Two bedroom, 18th floor, balcony, holiday. Mid-December three jams $65.
Roommate needed, very nice fully furnished apartm
porth, private bath, $187/month; water
charge. 20% off room.
APARTMENT LIFE
GOT YOU DOWN?
THINKING OF
MOVING BACK TO
THE CAMPUS
LIFESTYLE?
THINK OF
ON CAMPUS CONVENIENCE WITH AN OFF CAMPUS LIFESTYLE!
NAISMITH HALL
Hoas for rent plus utilities, Kitchen privilges,
dryer,洗衣机. References not. Pete. Non-smok.
Cook.
STUDIO 40 for Jan. 7May may visite. Can move in
480 $044, low ms. utilities. Nice neighborhood.
480 $044.
Special Low Rent. A one male needed to share apartment. It is fully carpeted and furnished and 30 seconds from the Union. Rent with utilities (ONLY $136, $84) (C291 Call at 7:00 p.m., 9:00 p.m.)
NAISMITH HALL 843-8559
Sparcom 1 bedroom apartment $200/month plus utilities, deposit required. Available On Call.
Bristol Country Studio for lease/rent. $275 monthly deposit and ref. 3 ml. S. 841-8138.
Sublease staff apst. Dec 20 June 3 $260/month.
Close to campus and downtown. Hope Place apst.
Dec 18 Dec 22
SOUTHERN PARKWAY TOWNHOUSES, 60th & Kassid. If you are fired of needy yell or cramped apartments, you like to watch and swim in a pool, attached swimming pool, & lock of privacy. We have opened new. Call 78-1957 (evenings and weekends) for more information about our nicely priced townhouses.
Risinate needed in 130 B屋. Own room, share
kitchen, pot dish, color烛盘 $150/mo
$180/mo
Sublease newly decorated 4 bedroom townhouse
Reduced rate. Call 648-09248
Sabinele Meadowbrook studio. New furnished, carpeted. Available. Dealer # $235/month
www.sabinetexpo.com
Tired of doing all the housework? Check out Sunflower cooperative, secure, clean and inexpensive. (Phone: 713-490-8526)
Sublease large, newly remitted, 1 year apart in
the basement. One bedroom apartment in
Sublease spacious one bedroom apartment in
the basement.
SUBLASEEN in Dec, or Jan. once, 1 bbl apt., formated.
Clase to campanule 740-3425.
MUST SULEBLE. quiet 1 bedroom furnished apart
on hard line, 5. depress. Available fee. 41. ap-
portable. 23. freestanding.
ram server Place - completely furnished one bedroom apartments available immediately. Located between 1140 and 1158 on Moms. Only 3 blocks from KU and UCB. Wi-Fi access 800MB per month, waived. Bq1-1221 or Bq4-1245.
every nce 2 bedroom duplex on the campus edge
Sublease starting in January. Call 848 8315, ask for Karen or Kita. A8 844363, ask for Rita
NICELY DECORATED space/room. Parnished
kitty petals. Near University and downstairs
parking.
1960 Opel GT. Excellent interior, good exterior
AM/FM stereo, 79,900 miles. Call us: 5:00 p.m.
(800) 234-6800.
FOR SALE
1972 GMC 3/4 ton pick-up, 4-quaded, power steering and brakes, 80 lb. tires. Runs great. 1000 calls.
1975 Fiat 142 Sport. Runs great. Winterized, new battery, rebuilt alternator, new brakes. $1060 $1414 $1835
1975 Datsun 2000 (%)²) extra clean, no surface rust, super new tires. $1295
1975 Chevrolet Monte Carlo. A/JG, audio, road cop
dust. Must be to appreciate. 9750, 8546, 5044.
1979 WV Rabbit亭 3000-meter, 4-legged, new Michener
Hunting Horses. $2,000-$4,000.
70 Olds Delta III, power steering, power brakes,
autonomic transmission. Good pedals. Low mileage.
1981 GS 550 Suzuki. Excellent condition, only 2000 ml on
it. Priced reasonable. 842-7043.
B1.W Loadspeakers $100 p., NAD 300 amp/preampl,
B1.5W, or best offer, B41-6400m
control Snowflies 3 b 6424750 after 3
for sale: Fender Stratocaster. Call Dave 842270
www.fender.com
New York: Pearson HED3000 aaa code reader, also gas station; 484-627-9115 afternoons; all admission fees. Boston: Mendel's Books Inc.; Pacific DC, Pacific; new and tack issues; Science fiction, Undergrounds; Spanish comics; 701 W. 7th St.
Long, gray winter coat with hood. Size 14. Worn only
times. $5,00; Tomato 84315 after 3 p.m.
Off-season leather 1975 304 cyl. Honda Fuse well.
New paint. Back high seat back. 814.5324
Made in China.
Pevy Preintage Mini Amplifier 100 watts x 2 feet
Pevy Pre vintage Mini Amplifier 100 watts x 2 feet
Plasser SX720 receive and PL514 turntable. Ask
speakers, new tubes 8000 of last order. 81-354.
Pioneer XS1200 receiver and PL1548 tasking.
Assembled in the USA.
Save: Government typewriters, IBM electric 1150 recently serviced. 814-4144
TENNIS RACKETS. Recently received selection
needed head Coach, Winston Advantage, Kraiser
Pro Staff. Dunlap Maxcus, Davis Glasse, Prince
20:60 p.m. in it good condition. 840-7211
@ 6:00 p.m.
Unused camera PENX K120, Fash unit, telephoto lens, 135 mm; case C497 0509
SUZIKU 550GCT, 1975, 12,000 miles, runs and looks great, must sell 749-1081.
FOUND
**LOST** 18F gold chain with Djama Gamma kavlerine,
with two Djama Gamma diamonds deep sentimentual value reward if returned;
LOFT. A small book of book addresses between
all over addresses. If found 864-640-7
overwished addresses. If found 864-640-7
Found 'Ladies' wristwatch, gold-tone. Dyche
Aidson, after it 'more'钱. Mobile 8615-8155 or
www.dycheaidson.com.
EAIMS 2013 this summer painting bonuses in honor of the opening of the EAIMS Center. Interviews will be Nov. 29. All management interviews will be on Wednesday, Nov. 29.
LOST. dark blue loose-leaf notebook. Contains hand-
written western story. REWARD. Phone 842-8153.
LOST. brown/bleach/cream striped scarf 11/12/82.
REWARD. 842/8153 eyes.
HELP WANTED
NURSING: FULL-TIME/PARTTIME Are You In interested In - Weekend only work=Elderly day, evening, or night shift? One day per week, or two days per week. Register your nurse as a hospitalist for registrars nurse are now available at the Topeka State Hospital; we provide a liberal range of nursing services away from nursing awake; we can work you back in to your home and continue your care. We all work together and support each other. NOW SHIFT DEPARTMENT: HOLIDAY BEdhery Beverly Anderson, RN, director of Nursing, Topeka State Hospital 790 S W 8th Street, Topeka, Kansas
Movie theater job opportunity in Lyon, KS. 260-781-1444.
Movie directing job opportunity in Lyon, KS. 260-781-1444.
Small investment. Apply up to $25,000. 3 potential jobs available.
**REQUIRED:** 2 yrs of experience as a **Director** in the film industry or a **Producer** in the film industry.
EXCELLENT WORKING CONDITIONS Join a first class team & have fun while you work. Gammon's an excellent team building game and its persistence necessary although helpful. Hourly wage, commission and tips. Fully hourless hours. Mike or woman only. Pay based on Daytime applicants please enter through double onions on south side of building at east end, tool W4. PLEASE SUBMIT YOUR REQUISITION.
VERSEAN JUBB J-UBS3 Summer Annual round Europe. 8th-11th June 2015. Visit www.overseenjubb.com for signings. Write into LW柜 LC-W柜
STAND TOGETHER. Special Kids Need Special People. The STAND TOGETHER POPUP program is designed to help students who are wards of the State of Kauai. There is a particular need for these children to receive special education care for handicapped students who are wards of the State of Kauai. There is a particular need for these children need someone to represent them in all aspects of their special education programs. Parents with the child, reviewing the special education programs, and attending occasional school conferences will be able to attend two or two hours per month to stand together with a handicapped child, call our toll free number for more information.
Secretarial assistant needed 10-28 hours per week for typing and library work, bursary or more or hourly schedule. Must be KU student. Call Kristen at 617-538-4900 or M404tt. Claim No. 10888.
Student technical writer half time. The University of Kansas Academic Computing Center is seeking an academic, technical, and computer applications, software, and general computer usage. A minor also with seminars, workshops, and other courses. Demonstrated skill in technical writing and student status at KU. Prerereference applicants with degree in Jersoy or related field and a one-month month. Send resume, letter of application, and sample writing to Kim Moreland, Academic Computing Center, 2007 Lawrence, KS 66045 by Dec. 1, 1982 AA-EOE. Freshman Scholarships are not too late when received.
PERSONAL
A Special For Students, Haircourt. $7. Perms. $22
Charmel 103% Illus. M43-8300. Ask for Seven笛
A Strong Kugel outfit. Benetton Retail Liquefied
Clothing. $50. North of Memorial Stadium.
Storm Illinois. 843-6722
We're An
Official Representative
ALL Airlines offering the Lowest Air Fares Possible
ON CAMPUS LOCATION In the Student Union
Flights Filling Fast
Now is the time to make your Thanksgiving and Christmas travel plans . . .
See Us TODAY!
Maupintour travel service
749 0700
749-0700
ATTENTION WALMERS, WALMRETTEES, AND WARM KEEPERS! Within the next few weeks you will be able to see our book. Stay tuned for details. TUFWK. Poodlehead. CARTOGON-GRAM from now to holiday season. CARTOGON-GRAM from now to holiday season. Delivered. Put your friend in cartons! The creative gift for the imaginative person. CARTOGON-GRAM.
COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES: early detection of cancer, incontinence, cardiovascular conditionally identified Kidney City. All staff are required to obtain a Job Description.
RESEARCH PAPERS
TOLL-FREE HOTLINE
Cannot seem to find your favorite bottle of wine? Bennet's wine selection includes over 200 bottles of wine.
800-621-5745
IN ILLINOIS CALL 312-029-8005
AUTHORS' RESEARCH, ROOM 800
S. Dearman, Chicago, IL 8005
Don't get mad, get even. Send the "Bitter Bouquet" Wilfied flowers delivered locally. Phone 814-6245.
ENCORE COPY COOPHS is your one stop thesis shop.
212 W. 20th, Holiday Plaza
SKIERS
BED/BREAKFAST PACKAGE
$13.25 per person
(four people to a room)
EL RANCHO MOTEL & BUNDLE CAFE (located 35 m. east of Wolf Creek) good food - clean room. lake reservoir house reservation Elancho Motel, Box 229, D尔诺. 61132. Phone: 303-687-3322. SAVE STAY LONGER - 3-DAY RATES
Every Thursday night she rocked the rock on her From 8am to 10pm at the balcony of the building at 10 a.m. during the albatross at the age of 9 years with 40 thrills.
Experience count. NOTE CONSENSUS Student Senate Election November 17th, 2018.
Football has Pares for 20% off when you mention
it ad. Football, Holiday Plazn
for good quality, clean affordable next-to-new chie-
ves. See the website at THE CALLLOP SHOP
748 New Hampshire in the Marketplace. Turn - Sat.
10:30 AM
For something special with a bunch of charm from the past - stop by Karyn's Vintage Bone, 915 Main St, New York, NY 10024.
HEADACHE, BACKACHLE, CORRETT NECK, NECK,
PAIN? Find and correct the CAUSE of the problem!
Call Dr. Mark Johnson for modern chirurgical care
6055. Accepting Blue Cross and LOan Star
Instant passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization,
instructor ID, and ID of course fine portraits in
Studio 694 - at 10am.
Kwaitly Comms lense selection of Marvel, DC.
Pacific; new and back issues, Science fiction,
Undergrounds, Spanish comics, too. 701 W 2th
843-7259
4c Copies
Self-Serve Good Quality
O
Encore Copy Corps 2112 W. 25th
Encore Copy Corps
2112 A West 25th Lawrence, Kansas
(Holiday Plaza)
400
MONEY FOR GRAUATEE SCHOOL MEDICINE & CHEF
180 West 2nd Street, New York, NY 10027
American Education Services, 3 th floor
518 W. 42ND STREET, N.Y.C. 10016
New rooftop hammers, men's rubber boots, winter coats,
shoes. Bedding. Carriage jackets. Barbie. Hardcover Hand Book $15 Indiana
Book $30.
Nice selection of skirts, sweaters, shirts, suits, and coats just in time for winter from Linda and Linda at The Ec. Shop, W 9th W 9th
C:
commodore
COMPUTER
- Word Processing Systems
* Business Systems
Home Systems (VIC-20)
* Software Supplies Game Carriers
Computerark
808 W. 24th 841-0094
Hours: M-F 10-7 Sat. 10-4
PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTHRIGHT,
843-821-021
Presentable, interesting (not so young) male professor seeks company of healthy youth (18-20) at an institution specializing in conversation, music (serious), sports, science (technology, science fiction, psychic phenomena), business (adventures). SEE B222. Include name, address, telephone, descriptive paragraph. A picture is helpful. Confidentiality statement required.
Say it on a short, custom silhouette printing printings, jerseys and caps. Shirt炎 by Swella 749-1611.
Impress them over the holidays
One
Free
Session
40%
Off
Membership
Relax in our safe, effective tanning beds. Also offering Jane Fonda Aerobics classes.
For Appt. 841-6232 Holiday Plaza 25th & Iowa
Send a friend's spirit up toearing with a beringer banquet (5% off) with this offer. Cash and money are accepted.
Schulzer Wine & Keg Shop . The Innest selection of wines in Lawrence . largest supplier of strong kegs
Skilled's blower store serving U.S. only since 1949 in and compare. Skilled Flooded Skillet 1060 Mass
Stereo - Television. Video Recorders. Name brands only. Factory sealed cabinets. Lowest prices in the K.C. area. Get your best price, then call Total Sound Distributors. 915-384-0600.
DON'T FORGET
HALF PRICE
DRAWS
TONIGHT
7-12 PM
at MURPHY'S
201 W. 8th St.
Trouble with your kids? Send her the "Little Hug"
bounty $10.00 delivered. 811-6243.
The Kogger Weekly Specials on Koggi! Call 811-943-0500/
1/10th, W. 3rd
This week's password for Pledgings is "penetration"
Mimmon it and receive 10% off it. Get gift. Pledgings.
Click here to enter your code.
Tuesday, *Ladies Night* 81 Highlands, 7.5 Up
under above Johnson's Traverse 'HAPPY HOURS 6-9
ENCORE COPY CORPS offers a complete resume service. 842-2001.
SKI etc... presents ski trips every weekend. Sleeper bus, reasonable prices. Group rates and bus charts available. Call 641-8386
**Western Civilization Notes, Now on Sale:** Make sense of new Western Civilization makes sure to use resources appropriate for your study. For exam preparation, New Analysis of Western Civilization is now available at Town Creek, The University of Texas Press.
Don't miss this book! Announcing the l1 Lawrence appearance of Carte Hanche. (Includes 2 exemptions of "Jauper"). Drink at the Elderforker restaurant. DRINK AT THE EDERFORKER RESTAURANT ALL YOU CAN DRINK ONE NIGHT ONLY.
SERVICES OFFERED
Students call April 14th with all your typing needs done and will very successfully have Day 84-0110. Evenings are on Wednesday from 9:30 to 11:30.
Alterations, tailoring and dressmaking. Experienced seamstress. No job too small or large. 842-5664
Alternator, starter and generator specialists. Parts, service and exchange units. HELL AUTOMOTIVE
Improve your dissertation, etc. with technical lifejacket training, small drafting jobs (9 years experience). Call us at 1-800-456-7232.
Trouble with your lady* Send her the "Little Hug"
bouquet. Only $6.00 delivered. 841-4243.
MATH TUFOR, Bob Meers, patient professional M. 46 for 14 mm, group discount, 843-5239.
Stress Workshop Wed. Nov. 17 2:30 p.m. Robinson Inn. 844-2899. Evansgrove.comc
CS TUTOR CS 206, 210, 300, 510 $ an hour. Call Arun.
802-7454
MATH - CS STATISTICS. Expert Tutor. Math 803-122, pcsseb, pacific business & math, & math
903-122, pcsseb, pacific business & math, & math
TUTOR with good teaching experience in MATHE
0021- CS1, CS3, Mech Engr. & FRENCH (Native
WRITE BREITt Editing Typing Library Research, Vetter Clark 843-843-8400
TYPING
ANNOUNCING - "TYPTING INK" - A professional typing service for your important papers, themes, resumes, and dissertations. Spelling and grammar corrections are provided. Correcting Selective, Pickup/Delivery. 841-1538
FORDABLE QUALITY for all your typing needs Call Judy, 892-7945 after 6 p.m.
ATTENTION TOPEKA COMMUNITIES, 10 years experience. Reporter, dissertations, theses. Electronic Memory. Typewriter. Student discount. Call Pan Somerville. 544-8303.
TYPING PLUS. Theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications, resumes, assistance with composition, grammar, spelling, etc. English tutorial for foreign students; or Americans 814-8254
Absolutely LETTER PERFECT typing - editing Better - faster - experienced. Joan, Lisa, Sandy 843-661-980
Excellent typist will do your typing. IBM Selectric
Will true themes, reports, etc. 842-4688.
Excellent testing done quickly. Will help you with revisions. Any paper under 75 pages taken in 24 hours or less. Cost $7 to $1.00/page maximum. Call 842-385 anytime.
Experienced typist will type dissections, these,
term papers etc. Call 841-2303
Experienced typist will type letters, theses, and dissertations. IMC correcting Selective Call Pad System.
Experienced typist - themes, dissertations, term papers, mice, misc IB correcting materials; Barb, after it.
Experienced typists. Turn paper, thesis, all manuscripts. IBM Correcting Selector, Elite or Pica, and will correct spelling. Phone 843-8544 Mrs. Wright.
Experimental cytoplasm will test paper templates, these will be used to create the paper with a specific layout. II. Cell Tumor 642-8734 or 9745-8724 at m. s. t. 10 am and 11 pm on Friday, February 16th.
FAST, ACCURATE, APPROPRIATELY Taping. ALL KINDS, 10 years experience. CALL 843-8653 after 6 p.m.
FER PROTECTIONAL DINGBLE Call MyRu. 841/4800.
For a fixed type call TEL92-749-4736.
Former Harvard Med. School research secretary will type, tutor English. Reasonable rates. Call Nan 841-902-8107.
Have Sevice, will type. Professional, fast, affor-
bal. Hottie: 822-493-6007, evenings and weekends.
It's a Fact, Fast, Affordable, Clean Typing 843-3200
Overnight Express 40 ppm or under 10 years exp.
Call: Rush 844-6288 after 5 p.m.
Professional Typing. Dissertation themes, terms
paper, summaries, letters, legal etc. IB Correcting
thesis.
researchers, teachers, and students in the health care
reports, data science, research, healthcare for麻疹,
hepatitis, colitis, infectious diseases, and other
medical areas.
amokieppe could write. Evil could wiggle; my
talent, typing. Bk 824-0031 after 5 and weeks
Xerox 615 Memorywriter, Royal Correcting
S30000D 840-5675
MAGIC FINGERS TYPING SERVICE, 843-6129
WANTED
Female roommate will share to two bibm. item 8125 plus low utilities. 798-5418. Keep trying.
Female膀胱需要移动到 share 2 bedroom f
Fifth female roommate to share five bedroom house.
Close to campus and downtown. Plan fifth
five bedroom house.
Housemates wanted. One unarmed, one in an car. Unarmed home house to camp. Call P.Hl. 842-3107.
Male roommate wanted to share 3 bdm arm, for spring semester. Quit. Walk to campman. 740-9187
male roommate for 2 bedrooms trainee, one-half tuition plus $100 per month. Call after 8:43 a.m. 843-1603. Male seeking apartment and roommate(s) for spring semester. Call 864-1684. Keep trying!
NOM-SMOKING MEA ROOMMATE wanted by graduate student for December 1 January 1 through July 31. New 2 bed room apartment in 2 year old suite. 450 plus utilities. 800-199-6891 keep training!
Roommate to share large two bedroom bath. Lots of wood, close to house. Call 801-4532. Keep trying to sleep in the room. Roommates preferred. Fully furnished. 3-bedroom, house. Bedroom, kitchen, laundry. Room is 4 on Tuesday andWednesday. Keep trying.
-
University Daily Kansan, November 16 1982
WE GIVE BIG DISCOUNTS!
THE GRAMOPHONE
Cactus
DJ GNOME
HERE ARE OUR "TEXAS TERMS":
shop
HERE ARE OUR "TEXAS TERMS"!
All new units have full factory warranty! Manufacturers require original sales shipped at their factory service centers in Kansas City. All used equipment carries our 5-day "buy back" guarantee. All equipment must be inspected and replaced with complete new factory warranty. In order that we may provide this service, all units purchased may be picked up the day following purchase. Please, no exceptions. None of these units are sold out of distress. These units are being sold as a means of rotating new
$104,000.00 "BIG-AS-ALL-OF-TEXAS" BONANZA
STEREO BONANZA
Pardners, we need to move these models out to make room for new models arriving daily! Floor models, demos, and discontinued models of
top-quality audio components are cut out of the herd and priced to sell now! This is your choice, but hurry. Most quantities are extremely limited!
10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100
RECEIVERS
Qty Item List Kierf s
1 AkiaA22R 30W/ch '176'
1 AkiaA32R 45W/ch '229' '234'
1 BOA2400Rc 695'' '348'
1 Harman/K hk570 40W/ch '329' '209'
1 Harman/K hk570 60W/ch '429' '209'
1 Harman/K SR201 25W/ch '200' '138'
*1 Htaicha JM200 30W/ch '270' '188'
*1 JCRX18 JM200 245'' '188'
*1 JVCK-R10 30W/ch '210' '133'
*1 JVCK-R20 30W/ch '260' '169'
*1 JVCK-R40 350'' '214'
*1 Kenwood KR-5 22W/ch '239' '169'
*2 Kenwood KR-5 35W/ch '289' '184'
*1 Kenwood KR-40 35W/ch '430' '245'
*2 Mitusubishi DA-35 50W/ch '295' '228'
*1 Mitsubishi DA-35 85W/ch '640' '238'
*2 Onkyo TX-11 20W/ch '199' '169'
*2 Onkyo TX-21 30W/ch '249' '209'
*2 Onkyo TX-41 35W/ch '299' '248'
*1 Onkyo TX-2000 27W/ch '260' '199'
*1 Onkyo TX-4000 27W/ch '260' '199'
*1 Pioneer SX-4 20W/ch '250' '138'
*1 Pioneer SX-5 60W/ch '250' '138'
*1 Pioneer SX-4 50W/ch '425' '239'
*1 Pioneer SX-5 60W/ch '425' '239'
*1 Sony STR-VX1 22W/ch '225' '138'
*2 Sony STR-VX2 22W/ch '260' '149'
*2 Sony STR-VX3 310'' '199'
*1 Sanyo DCR-150 22W/ch '159' '199'
*1 Sanyo DCR-250 199'' '149'
Telexo S/A-10 20W/ch '190' '149'
Technics S/A-203 30W/ch '220' '148'
*1 Toshiba S/A-1 R1 20W/ch '199' '138'
Toshiba S/A-2 R2 20W/ch '269' '197'
Yamaha R-300 35W/ch '269' '197'
Yamaha R-500 50W/ch '330' '287'
Yamaha R-700 55W/ch '460' '388'
Yamaha R-1000 100W.ch '700' '558'
*KIEF'S BEST VALUE BUY!*
CASSETTE DECKS
| Qty | Item | List | Kie's |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
*2 *Akai CSi-F12 | "B" | "179" | "126" |
| 1 *Akai CSi-F14 | "B"*C*C* | "199" | "148" |
| 1 *Akai CSi-F21 | "B"*C*C* | "249" | "160" |
| 1 *Akai CSi-F31 | "B"*C*C* | "299" | "180" |
| 1 *Alba AD-315H | "B"*C*C* | "220" | "148" |
| 1 *Alba AD-3200 | "B"*C*C* | "285" | "199" |
*1 *RBO 8002 HX-PRO | | "1100" | "125" |
| 1 *Harman/K G009 | | "249" | "160" |
| 1 *Hinechi DE-22 | "B"*C*C* | "179" | "129" |
| 1 *Hitachi DE-33 | "B"*C*C* | "200" | "148" |
| 1 *JVC-KD-D10 | "B"*C*C* | "160" | "109" |
| 1 *JVC-DK-D20 | "B"*C*C* | "185" | "125" |
| 1 *JVC-DK-D30 | "B"*C*C* | "182" | "129" |
| 1 *JVC-DK-D40 | "B"*C*C* | "260" | "159" |
*2 *Kenwood KX-50 | "B"*C*C* | "239" | "158" |
*2 *Kenwood KX-70 | "B"*C*C* | "299" | "186" |
*2 *Kenwood KX-600 | "B"*C*C* | "289" | "199" |
*1 Mitsubishi DT-25 | "B"*C*C* | "290" | "219" |
*1 Mitsubishi DT-35 | "B"*C*C* | "490" | "239" |
*1 Nakamichi DK-140 | "B"*C*C* | "425" | "279" |
*1 Nakamichi BX-2 | "B"*C*C* | "460" | "428" |
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*1 Nakamichi 7082XE | "B"*C*C* | "2400" | "1500" |
*1 Onkyo AX-3500 | "B"*C*C* | "219" | "145" |
*1 Onkyo AT-2015 | "B"*C*C* | "219" | "160" |
*1 Onkyo AT-2025 | "B"*C*C* | "259" | "219" |
*1 Onkyo AT-W80 | "B"*C*C* | "379" | "257" |
*1 Pioneer CT-4 | "B"*C*C* | "200" | "119" |
*1 Pioneer-GI-61 | "B"*C*C* | "200" | "119" |
*1 Sanyo CT-71 | "B"*C*C* | "320" | "199" |
*1 Sanyo DT-77 | "B"*C*C* | "220" | "199" |
*1 Sanyo RDS-24 | "B"*C*C* | "149" | *89* |
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*2 PC-G6R Auto Rev | "299" | *269* |
*1 Yamaha K-300 | "B"*C*C* | "280" | *248* |
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| *1 | Akai AP-B110 | B.D. | ' 99** | ' 77* |
| *2 | Akai AP-Q310 | Q.D. | '129** | '129* |
| *2 | Akai AP-L45 | Lin.T | '329** | '238* |
| 2 | B.B/O. 1602 | D.D. | '240** | '199* |
| 2 | Donon DP-11F | D.D. | '200** | '178* |
| 1 | Hitachi HT-45 | D.D. | '140** | ' 99* |
| 1 | Hitachi HT-51 | D.D. | '170** | '109* |
| 1 | JVC-A31 | D.D. | '160** | '108* |
| 1 | JVC-A41 | D.D. | '170** | '119* |
| 1 | JVCQL-A51 | Q.D. | '220** | '139* |
| 1 Mitsubishi | DC-6 | D.D. | '220** | '178* |
| 1 Mitsubishi | LT-5 | D.D. | '450** | '365* |
| *1 Mitsubishi | LT-20 | Lin.T | '410** | '378* |
| *2 Onkyo CP-1000A | B.D. | '139** | ' 87* |
| *2 Sanyo TPX-3 | D.D. | '169** | '119* |
| *2 Sanyo P-33 | Lin.T | '279** | '178* |
| 1 Sanyo Q-25 | Q.D. | '199** | '139* |
| 1 Sony PS-LX2 | D.D. | '149** | ' 99* |
| 1 Sony PS-LX3 | D.D. | '190** | '119* |
| 1 Sony PS-X-600 | Q.D. | '400** | '248* |
| 1 Technics | SL-Q20 | D.D. | '200** | '129* |
| 1 Technics | SL-Q30 | D.D. | '220** | '139* |
| 2 Yamaha P-200 | B.D. | '150** | '137* |
| 1 Yamaha P-500 | D.D. | '220** | '187* |
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2 Accuahb LAB 480 4-way "12" 935*nc. *169*cn.
2 Accuahb LAB 480 4-way "10" 250*nc. *99*cn.
2 ADS 520 2-way "8" 250*nc. *179*cn.
2 ADS 620 2way "8" 250*nc. *179*cn.
2 AAD 1500 T PANL 400 948*nc.
2 Ahee 1010 2way "10" 199*nc. *198*cn.
2 Ahee 1012 2way "12" 299*nc. *149*cn.
4 AME DR/s 5000 3-way "12" 230*nc. *119*cn.
**A* AMERDB/ s** 3-way "12" 230*nc. *119*cn.
4 BM400 4-way "15" 279*nc. *159*cn.
B O S-45-2 3-way "199*nc. *199*cn.
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B Box 301 2-way "8" 180*nc. *99*cn.
B Box 90 HI Ret 525*nc. *137*cn.
B Boston A-70 2-way "120*nc. *150*nc.
B Boston A-100 2-way "10" 200*nc. *147*cn.
B Austin A-200 2-way "12" 375*nc. *154*cn.
**D* DCM T.W. T.D. 380*nc. *338*cn.
Exsse 200 2-way "8" 100*nc. *148*cn.
Infinity IMS-2 2-way "8" 100*nc. *148*cn.
Infinity IMS-8 Entr 110*nc. *119*cn.
JBL L-40 3-way "120*nc. *250*nc. *119*cn.
JBL L-96 3-way "120*nc. 395*nc. *295*cn.
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Mitutoh X-14 3-way "120*nc. 440*nc. *129*cn.
**M* Mitutohi SX10 2-way "120*nc. 129*nc. *75*cn.
M mitutohi DS-181 3-way "8" 169*nc. *148*cn.
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University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
KANSAN
Wednesday, November 17, 1982 Vol. 93, No.63 USPS 650-640
Lavoffs certain if budget adopted, official says
By STEVE CUSICI Staff Reporter
The University of Kansas would be forced to lay off 82 employees if the state adopts a fiscal year 1984 budget recommendation by the Kansas Division of Budget, a KU official said yesterday.
The official, Ward Zimmerman, KU director of the budget, said that 54 classified employees and 28 unclassified employees would have to be off under the budget division recommendation.
The budget division is requesting $98 million in general use funds for the Lawrence campus. That falls short of the Board of Regents recommendation of $104 million.
For all seven of the Regents institutions, the budget office is requesting $424.7 million, 8.6 percent more than the current budgets at those institutions, for $431.8 million, about a 16 percent increase.
STANLY KOPLIK, executive officer for the Regents, said the state budget division recommendations would mean the seven Regents institutions would have to lay off more than 250 employees.
Koplik and James Pickert, chairman of the Regents, testified Monday at the governor's budget hearings in Topeka.
Pickert said, "We are more than willing to do our fair share to ensure that our state emerges from this period of fiscal uncertainty in an even stronger condition than before."
But, he said. "To force our institutions to reduce the quality of the services they provide to Kansans because of a temporary financial crisis," he said. "I will adversely affect Kansas for years to come."
Koplik said, "The question is how much are we going to be expected to do for the people of Kansas, and how can we be expected to do it with 280 fewer people?
"I like to believe we can come up with some suggestions that are better for higher education."
GAIL, HAMILTON, president of the KU Classified Senate, said the state budget division recommendation was just that — a recommendation — and that it should not trigger alarm.
The state budget demand request must KU be denied other recommendations contained in the Regents budget request. Koplik said they included an additional $100,000 for library acquisition, $175,000 for instructional equipment and $175,000 for academic computing.
But, she said, "If indeed that becomes a
reality . . . there are alternatives to layoffs to handle that."
Hamilton is a member of a committee of state employees studying alternatives to layoffs. The
Jerome Niebaum, director of the Academic Computing Center, said his office needed that computer be able to
"FOR US, it means the difference between whether we can operate our Honeywell gift card or not."
The University received the computer this fall and is covering the learning for me, so I can install.
Niebaum said his department already was working on a tight budget.
"We are underfunded in academic computing by at least half a million dollars a year," he said.
Under the recommendation, the University also would have to return $577,000 in enrollment adjustment funds to the state because of an enrollment drop last fall.
Zimmerman said that under the Regents proposed 1984 budget, the University would not accept grants from the university.
The Regents request calls for a 9 percent increase in unclassified salaries along with a 1 percent increase in the state's contribution to the faculty retirement plan.
1270
Nine-year-old Aric Branham attempted to herd his turkeys to their feed yesterday. Aric helps take care of the birds, which are raised by his pareats, Ruth and Richard Branham, both faculty members in the department of design.
Thanksgiving Day turkeys cast off passive stereotypes
Staff Reporter
By MATTHEW SCHOFIELD Staff Reporter
Call them stupid, fat or slow. But say it in a whisper and don't get too close, because they might attack.
whether alone or in herds, the beasts of the holiday season, these waddling gobblers, are vicious.
Unlike the passive stereotype turkse have lugged around with them ever since becoming a domesticated animal, they have at least the potential to be violent, said Ruth Branham, a KU lecturer in design who has raised turkse for the last five or six years.
Branham said she had witnessed many turkey attacks, and they were not pretty
"They come kind of slow, and they have to throw their legs out to the side to run," she said. "When they do this at any speed it’s so much heavier. It’s more of a waggle than anything else."
THE BRANHAM'S neighbors have met with several different experiences, she said. One elderly neighbor, carrying a patent leather bag, was the object of a turkey charge. Another neighbor was stalked by one of the ungainly creatures and eventually hurt.
"They love shiny things," she said.
From the Indians' first offering of turkeys to the Pilgrims, through the weeks of leftover turkey sandwiches, turkeys are, and have been, an integral part of American life.
"Children are pretty low to the ground and have nice shiny eyes. If a turkey nails you in the eve, it's a serious injury."
Turkeys are not noted for their warfare but rather for their appearance at Thanksgiving Day dinner in the midst of seemingly endless plates of food.
ON THANKSGIVING Day, most people feel a turkey should always be big and full of stuffing. Yet, if a turkey gets too big, problems can arise.
Branham said one of her sons raised turkeys for a 4-H project. They have raised as many as 25 turkeys at once, but this year they are only raising nine, she said.
Benjamin Franklin even suggested that the turkey be the official bird of the United States.
Branham said she grew a turkey that was large so she could not hold it, and she said it was delicious.
Instead of being noble symbols or terrorizing brutes, turkeys spend most of their time foraging in a grassy field.
"One turkey we had stood in the middle of some hot coals for quite some time," she said. "I was thinking, 'What's that guy doing?'
See TURKEY page 5
Registration resister to lecture
By BONAR MENNINGER
Staff Reporter
One of two Bethel College students indicted for failing to register for the draft will speak at the University of Kansas today, two days after a federal judge in California ruled that the draft registration law was unconstitutional.
However, Jim Marquez, the U.S. Attorney for Kansas, said yesterday that the ruling in California was not binding and would have no effect on execution of those who failed to register in Kansas.
Epp, a 20-year-old philosophy student, will speak at noon at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries as part of the University Forum. The meeting that brings portable individuals to the campus.
Bettel College student Charles Epp and fellow student Kendell Warkentine were indicted in September for not registering for the draft in Newton.
ON MONDAY, U.S. District Court Judge Terry Hatter Jr. diminished charges against a young draft registration resister in California, saying that former President Carter did not allow a 30-day period for public comment on the registration law, which is required by the constitution.
In dismissing the charges, Hatter also said that the resister, David Wayte, 21, of Pasadena had been singled out for prosecution by the government because of his vocal dissent. He cited the Reagan administration's refusal to let defense lawyers see White House and Pentagon documents and to question presidential counselor Edwin Meese.
"The decision of the federal district judge in California is not binding on the district in Kansas." Marquez said.
"The effect of the ruling is none whatsoever. We will continue to prosecute. I have no doubts that the same defense that was raised in California will be raised here; however, my office is willing to litigate that issue in this district."
EPP WILL go to trial in January. He said yesterday that although the California ruling was not binding, he thought it would affect the outcome of the trial and encourage on what the outcome of the trial might be.
Daniel Wildcat, vice president of the Lawrence chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union, said the issue of selective prosecution raised by California judge 'hit the mail precisely on the head.'
"It is an important decision," Wildcat said.
Epp, in defining his personal reasons for not registering for the draft, said, "Considering the tensions between the Soviets and the Americans, we have to begin searching out other than military alternatives in dealing with them. My decision not to register is a statement against using military means to solve foreign policy problems."
Epp said his lecture today would provide an overview of the anti-draft movement and outline reasons for the high non-compliance rate.
SINCE THE program was enacted in the summer of 1980, 8.7 million young men have registered for the draft, according to a recorded service. System officers in Washington D.C.
The statement said an additional 75,000 earning letters would be mailed in the near future.
Official says proposed merger may be stalled
On Aug. 16, the government mail out warning letters to more than 33,000 men who had not registered, advising them to comply with the law or face public prosecution.
The statement said the national compliance rate is slightly over 94 percent and is expected to rise as a result of a recently initiated audit, which will include an address and address those who have failed to register.
Staff Reporter
By MATTHEW SCHOFIELD
The competition situation existed between Lawrence's Dillons and Kroger stores could stall the proposed merger between the two food chain giants, a merger that Commission officials said yesterday.
"If Krogers owns a store that competes with a Dillons, it could be forced to shut it down before the merger takes place," said the official, who asked not to be named until the FTC action was over.
The law that calls for such action is the Clayton Act, which says that if a merger would create a substantial lessening of competition in a market area the merger is not legal, he said.
The merger between Kroger Co. the nation's second largest supermarket chain, and Dillon Companies Inc. based in Hutchinson, was amounted to a mere $17 million two-thirds of Dillon's stock holders.
Jack Caton, Dillon Stores director of public relations, said that Lawrence was the only city where competition between a Kroger and a Dillon store existed.
At most BILLION, senior vice president of Dillon, said he was not sure how the problem would be resolved.
"I can only speculate," he said. "But I would say that one side or the other would have to go. Maybe that's wrong."
Because Lawrence has four Dillon stores and only one Kroger store, Dillon said he thought the Kroger store would be closed if any store had to be.
Dillon said there were still a number of other types of supermarkets in Lawrence, and the competitive situation would not be hurt by the new legislation. But the government might think differently.
"We wouldn't do anything unless we are forced to by the government," he said.
DALE SEROVICH, FTC consumer protection specialist in Los Angeles, said nothing prohibited companies from merging, but there are certain market-share criteria that must be met.
"If the acquisition puts the market into a non-competitive situation, one company would be forced to close," he said.
Caton said the merger gave both chains a wide area to expand into and would firmly establish Kroger as the No. 2 supermarket chain in the United States.
Individual stores will continue to operate under the same names, and the merger should eventually create jobs, he said. The conflict in Lawrence is the only sing he knew of at the time.
"There will probably be some adjustment made," he said.
The FTC official said the merger, or acquisition, did not appear to place the two companies into direct competition any place else.
Pro football to resume; 57-day NFL strike ends
By United Press International
NEW YORK - The 57-day NFL strike ended last night with the 28 player representatives voting to accept a five-year contract totaling nearly $1.6 billion.
Gene Upshaw, president of the NFL Players Association, made the announcement at 10:30 p.m. CST at the Summit Hotel in New York, where we have been taking place on and off since Oct. 30.
"We have a tentative agreement that must be ratified by the players," said Usphah. "We'll return to work. If we can get everything done, we'll have football on Sunday. We had a will to win and I hope this will start a new relationship with the NFL."
The approval of the 1,500 players is considered a formality.
The NPL season is expected to resume Sunday. The 28 teams were to return to their home stadium.
See STRIKE page 5
Weather
Weather
Today will be partly cloudy with a high in the low 50s, according to the National Weather Service. Winds will be from the southeast at 5 to 15 mph.
Tonight will be cloudy with a 20 percent chance of rain. The low will be in the low
Tomorrow will be partly cloudy with a high about 55.
Rodeo clown must play daring game of inches
By DAVID SWAFFORD
Staff Reporter
Leon Coffee wiped on the white base make-up from his face in his dressing room after last Sunday's American Royal Rodeo show and talked about "a game of inches."
Coffee, 30, — "hot and black just like the drink" has been a professional rodeo clown for seven years. He rode bulls for more than 15 years before becoming a clown.
"One blow from a bull's horn can kill you, if it hits you right. You can compare the danger of a bull to standing next to Reggie Jackson swinging his bat at your head," he said.
"When a ball is charging at you straight on, your feet are saying 'let's leave', but your mind and pride are saying 'stay'.' Coffee said of close encounters in the arena.
and genuine leather cowboy boots take precedence over chewing gum and Nikes and the straw dust and the stench of animal manure permeate throughout the buildings — will be running through Saturday at Kemper Arena, the city's only rodeo. The Governor's Expansion Building in Kauai City.
Coffee said he was proud of his accomplishments because he was the only black clown in professional rodeo. He also added that as a showman, he was the first rookie to make it on the pro circuit.
COFFEE'S ACT and the entire American Royal Rodeo and Livestock Show — where Skowal
Kansas City has been host of the show for past 83 years.
"Fighting bulls (the term that clowns use to describe their job) is fun, challenging and exciting."
"The only thing you take home with you is the bumps, bruises and broken bones."
COFFEE SUFFERED a tern ligament in his right hand about a month ago during a rodeo in Texas.
But, he said, "I've got nothing to complain about. I'm doing the thing I want and I love it. Any accident is a mistake on my part. Mistakes cause accidents. I was over-exerting myself and that's why I got this torn ligament. I tend to over-exert myself at times."
but the bull was able to turn around and injure his hand with its horn, he said.
This year's opening show of the American Royal Rodeo was sold out. Kemper Arena is one of the largest rodeo arenas in the nation, so consequently it has some of the largest rodeo crowds, according to Don Endsley, master of ceremonies.
HE SAID professional rodeors earned a total of $14 million on the circuit last year. Rodeors earned a total of $80,000 at this rodeo alone. The company also paid $269,000 to 640 professional rodeors on the circuit, he said.
In fact, Endesley said, ticket demands were so high for this season's rodeo that officials had to cancel some rides.
"The professional rodeo business is more a way of life than just a job," said Endsley, who was wearing a cream-colored suit with a matching cowboy hat.
"There really isn't an off-season.
"There are less rodeos in November and December, but the season goes all year round. You're on the road about 40 to 45 weeks out of the year. If a man wants to be a champion rodeo, he should expect to go to at least 170 rodeos during the year."
Endsley said the lifestyle of a professional rodeo could be compared with that of a
Endsley thinks the reason that the American
ON THE OTHER hand, Endsley said, he remembered a man who had earned $410,000 at a real estate auction.
"Each man picks the robeon he wants to go and then pays for his own expenses. It's a risky business because sometimes he could end up not erring a thing," he said.
Royal Rodeo and Livestock Show is so popular with local people is that it only occurs once a year, contrary to rodeos in Texas, which might occur every week.
This year is Endley's fourth as announcer at the Royal. However, he has been a professional master of ceremonies for the past eight years. He will be the next announcer, Endley rode bulls for 10 years.
"I'm a cowboy turned announcer," he said. Endley became interested in the rodeo when his parents took him to the American Royal Rodeo when he was a youngager living in Kansas City.
Coffee said that he, too, had been introduced to the rodeo when he was a boy and had known at once that it was what he wanted to do.
"You just got to love it. If you don't, then you shouldn't be in the business," he said.
HE FINISHED removing his clown make-up and outfit.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, November 17, 1982
News Briefs From United Press International
Jury begins pondering case of arms smuggling to Libya
WASHINGTON—The jury began deliberations yesterday in the trial of Edwin Wilson on charges of smuggling arms to Libya. The defense portrayed the ex-CIA agent as "a spy who was left out in the cold," and the prosecution called it "a case of greed."
The case went to the jury on the second day of the trial after a series of swift developments, including dramatic testimony for the defense by
After about 1½ hours of deliberations, the jurors asked U.S. District Judge Richard Williams to adjourn for the night. The judge said the proceedings would resume this morning.
Wilson, 54, who worked for the CIA from 1955 to 1971 and then began an export business, was charged in this trial with criminal violations of U.S. interstate and export laws for shipping four handguns and an M-16 automatic rifle to Libya.
Wilson, who has been held on $60 million bond, still faces three more trials in Washington and Houston on charges that he helped Libyan Col. Moammar Khadafy get explosives and train terrorists.
Ramp collapse kills state inspector
ELWOOD—A ramp for a bridge being built across the Missouri River completed yesterday, killing a state concrete inspector and injuring at least one worker.
Three of the injured workers were admitted to hospitals.
Officials said the inspector, a woman who was not identified pending notification of relatives, was trapped in the rubble of the ramp for an hour. Officials at the scene said she was an inspector for the Kansas Department of Transportation.
Doniphan County Sheriff's inspector Bobbie Dubach said the woman was inspecting the concrete being poured when the ramp collapsed. She said she did not think any other workers had been trapped.
The ramp was part of an interchange leading to a bridge being built as part of U.S. Highway 36 between Elwood and St. Joseph, Mo.
West German terrorist leader seized
The leader, Christian Klar, 30, West Germany's number one terrorist who has eluded police since 1977, was picked up at Sachsenvald, east of Hamburg, while digging up arms from the secret hideaway, the Interior Ministry said.
HAMBURG, West Germany—Hundreds of elite police swarm the leader of the Baader-Meinhof gang yesterday at a woodland underground arms dump in the second crippling blow against the terrorists in less than a week.
Klar, wanted for six murders and at least two terrorist attacks on U.S. forces, was armed with a large caliber pistol and carried false identity documents.
It was the second blow to the Baader-Meinhof gang, officially called the Red Army Faction, in less than a week. Klar's girlfriend and another woman, both leading members of the terrorist group, were arrested Thursday.
Catholic bishops may OK scriptures
WASHINGTON—The nation's Roman Catholic bishops took a break yesterday from debating a controversial missive on nuclear war to discuss using the same Bible readings for Sunday worship as those heard in Protestant churches.
More than 250 bishops at the annual meeting of the National Conference of Catholic Bishops are expected to approve overwhelmingly the use of "Lectioration for Trial Use," the same scriptural chapter in the church calendar that the Protestants read each Sunday on a limited basis.
The bishops took up a variety of church matters before resuming debate today on a proposed pastoral letter concerning nuclear war.
A third draft of the letter, which condemns first use of nuclear arms and questions U.S. nuclear strategy, will be written when debate ends tomorrow, and the bishops will vote on it in May.
Rebels' time bombs kill 16 in Kabul
NEW DELHI, India—Rebels bombed three restaurants in Kabul, Afghanistan, killing 16 Communist Party officials and secret police agents Thursday, Western diplomats said yesterday.
Time bombs planted at the restaurants in the posh Shahri Nau district exploded within 45 minutes of each other, the diplomats said.
The explosions came nine days after an accident involving two Soviet convoys in the Salang tunnel that reportedly killed at least 800 people. The tunnel is 60 miles north of Kabul.
The diplomatists said most of the deaths in the tunnel were caused by suffocation, because vehicles were left idling to keep their occupants safe.
The diplomats cited other reports of increased rebel activity in Kabul, including the assassination of a former government official and sporadic exchanges of gunfire.
The bodies had originally been buried on the desolate South Atlantic islands where they fell, but following a public outcry, they were
Britain brings Falkland dead home
SOUTHAMPTON, England—The bodies of 63 British soldiers and one Chinese civilian who died in the Falklands war came home to Britain yesterday.
In all, 257 British soldiers died in the Falklands war, in which the islands were recaptured from Argentine invaders June 14. By tradition, the battle was fought at Kula in the Falklands.
Of the men killed in the Falklands, 14 were buried at San Carlos cemetery on the islands and three remain buried where they were killed. The rest were either buried at sea or have not been recovered, the Ministry of Defense said.
Scientists' find may be moon rock
WASHINGTON—Antarctic scientists have found what appears to be an extremely rare meteorite that may be a piece of moon rock, the
William Cassidy, a University of Pittsburgh geologist who led the group that found the meteorite, said it could be "among the most significant scientific findings in the field of planetary sciences in recent years."
"It's been suggested for years that fragments have been kickoffed on the moon by meteor impact," Cassidy said. "But this could be the first time we've seen a fragment."
The meteorite was among the last of 378 found in January by a group of seven researchers Cassidy was leading in a region of ice fields known as the Allan Hills, about 140 miles northwest of McMurdo Station, a principal U.S. scientific outpost in Antarctica.
Shuttle completes first commercial flight
By United Press International
Vance Brand, Robert Overmeyer,
Joseph Allen and William Lenoir,
the first four-man shuttle crew, glided to
fawless landing in a spacecraft bearing
the scorches and nicks of five flights
covering more than 10 million miles.
EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE, Calif.-Space shuttle Columbia's astronauts flow home yesterday from a crash site in Arizona as the start of a spaceflight revolution.
The astronauts guided Columbia through a thin layer of gray clouds to a picture-perfect landing at 6:33 a.m. PST, eight minutes after the sun rose over the Mojave Desert landing site 60 miles from Los Angeles.
spacewalk raised concern about plans for future repair missions involving
The astronauts flew on to Houston after brief welcoming ceremonies.
WHILE COLUMBIA'S two satellite launches in orbit proved the shuttle an able space freighter, the spacesuit failures that thwarted a planned
NASA officials said the next space shuttle crew would attempt a walk during its flight two months from now. If Columbia can be fixed in time, Columbia's crew can be fixed in time.
A team of 200 technicians quickly moved in to prepare Columbia to return to Cape Canveral, Fla., Sunday atop a plane that was delayed due to overhaul before returning to space.
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This was the shuttle's first commercial mission, with the launching of two communications satellites its main goal and crowning achievement. No manned spacecraft had ever before served as an orbital launch platform.
THE TWO launches went flawlessly, earning $18 million for the U.S. government and proving Columbia and Boeing's reliability in carrying out commercial transport missions.
The next shuttle mission will be the
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maiden flight of the Challenger. Now at Cape Canareal, Challenger is scheduled to be moved tomorrow into a tall crane for launch of rockets on a mobile launch platform.
Associate space agency chief James Abrahamson said Challenger's flight, which will include the launch of a huge rocket, will take place between Jan. 24 and Feb. 4, 1983.
He said the Challenger mission would include a spacewalk if technicians
could find out in time why a vital fan motor failed in Allen's space suit and why a regulator valve let pressure drop in Lenoir's suit while the two were preparing to go outside Columbia Monday.
Testing the new $2 million suits in orbit as soon as possible is important, Abrahamsson said, because they will be needed in April 1848 when astronauts try to snare and repair the broken Solar Maximum scientific satellite.
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Use Kansan Classified.
Why go to the Hatter and drink 3.2 beer? What did you turn 21 for anyway!?
Why go to Gammons
and have computerized drinks? Computers don't give you that extra tip of the bottle!
MOODY'S IS THE PLACE
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---
STUDENT SENATE ELECTIONS
VOTE ON NOVEMBER 17-18
Polling Places will be open from 8:30 to 4:30 at the following buildings:
WESCOE GREEN (LAW SCHOOL)
UNION LINDLEY
BETWEEN SUMMERFIELD & MALOTT
Students must bring K.U. ID to vote.
(Funded by the Student Activitty Fee)
---
University Daily Kansan, November 17, 1982
Page 3
Campaign audits show no overspending violations
By DON KNOX Staff Reporter
The Momentum Coalition, which had been accused numerous times of overspending in its drive to win this week's Student Senate election, spent nearly $100 less than its biggest campaign rival, the Consensus Coalition.
According to audits filed yesterday afternoon with Elena Brito, chairman of the Senate Subcommittee on Elections, Momentum spent $1,121.96 in its campaign, more than $140 less than its spending limit of $1,262.62, Consensus; however, spent $1,219.92 in the cam-
patign, less than $80 under its limit of
$1,297.62.
The audits, which Brito checked,
must be formally approved at a
meeting today of the five-member
Elections Review Board.
"It's kind of ironic, isn't it?" Momentum vice president candidate David Tepoorten said after the audit figures were initially released. "What we have been saying about false accusations appears to be true."
THREE FORMAL complaints were filed against Momentum for overspending. Two complaints were filed by the Introspection Coalition, and one was filed by Consensus.
Teoporten questioned the timing of the complaints, saying he could not understand how opposing coalitions could lodge complaints before campaign audits had been filed with the Elections Subcommittee.
JIM CRAMER, 'Consensus' vice presidential candidate, said his coalition lodged a complaint because they had thought that Momentum would large amounts of money on advertising in the University Daily Kansas.
"There is no logic in that whatsoever," he said.
Tpoeporten said he and Kevin Walker, Momentum's student body presidential candidate, were still concerned with elections tampering. Momentum poll watchers be stationed at all five polling places during the two-day election, he said.
"We plan on watching those polls very closely," Teporten said.
According to campaign audits, however, Momentum has purchased no Kanan advertising.
Momentum presidential candidate Kevin Walker said he was pleased with the results of the audit even though the findings were not yet final.
"I think we definitely had a more effective campaign, and we spent less money," he said.
The Impact Coalition spent $199.56 on its campaign, about two dollars less than its campaign spending limit of $201.18. The Reach Coalition, limited to spending $261.24 in the campaign, spent $128.16. The Introspection Coalition, with a spending limit of $328.58, spent $241.67.
Altogether, the five coalitions spent $2,911.27 in the month-long campaign. A number of independent candidates spent an additional $47.12.
The spending limits are determined on the basis of the number of constituents for each Senate seat. Each candidate may spend 3 cents a person, except for off-campus senators who may spend $35.
Student senate candidate accused of plagiarism
By DON KNOX Staff Reporter
Student Senate candidates from the Introspection Coalition claimed yesterday that a quotation the Momentum Coalition used on posters was plagiarized from Richard Nixon's "Checkers Speech."
Last night, however, David Teoporen. Momentum vice presidential candidate, emphatically denied the accusations.
Chales Lawnhorn and James Jeffey,
Introspection the only candidates, said
Tepoorten plagiarized a quotation from the famous Nixon speech, delivered Sept. 23, 1952, from Los Angeles, Calif. At the time, Nixon was a vice presidential candidate from the Republican Party.
Lawhorn and Jeffrey first accused Teporten of plagiarism at a presidential debate last week at McColm Hall. He also provided documentation for the claims.
IN THE SPEECH, which was broadcast nationwide, Nixon said: "I feel that the people have got to have
confidence in the integrity of the men who run for that office and who might obtain it. I have a theory, too, that the best and only answer to a smear or to an honest misunderstanding of the facts is to tell the truth."
On a Momentum poster distributed throughout campus, Teoporento is quoted as saying: "Every student must have confidence in the integrity of their government. The best and only way to achieve this is through a popular demand for the maintenance of a truthful government."
through a total of 10 volumes of Nixon's presidential papers, and we have called Richard Nixon's offices in New York. The Checkers Speech has to be where the idea for Teoptoon's quote came from."
Jeffrey said that although the quote did not appear to be plagiarized verbatim from Nixon, he contended that rewriting an idea or a notion from another person's work was still plagiarism.
Lawhorn said, "We have been
"THIS IS a very famous speech." Lawhern took. "Any political science
major worth his salt would know the content of this speech."
After the McCollum Hall debate, Teoorten said, "If something came out of my head that sounded like a cry," he said, then what can I say. Big deal."
Jim Cramer, Consensus Coalition vice presidential candidate, said he had read the Nixon speech, but he said, "I was close enough to call it pliarism."
Cramer said he thought the accusation should not be an issue in this week's elections.
On campus
TODAY
CATHOLIC CENTER WORSHIP
will be at 12:30 p.m. in Danforth
Chapel.
DUNGEONS AND DRAGONS CLUB will have a games meeting at 7 p.m. in the Trail Room of the Kapsas Union.
NON-TRADITIONAL STUDENT Organization luncheon meeting will be at 1 p.m. in Cork Room I of the Union
LECTURE SLIDE PRESENTATION, "Computer Graphics," will be at 9 a.m. in Room 515 of the Art and Design Building.
AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL will have a panel discussion on "Human Rights: The Law and the Policies of the Carter and Reagan Administrations" at noon in the Oread Room of the Union.
UNIVERSITY FORUM, "Nonregistration and the Draft," will be at 11:45 a.m. at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center.
ANTIHROPOLOGY SEMINAR,
"New Evidence for Early Agriculture
Near Chaco Canyon, N.M.",
in the Jayhawk
Room of the Union.
COLLEGE LIFE will sponsor a speech, "Three Threats to Relationships," at 9 p.m. in the Ballroom of the
GERMAN CLUB will meet at 4:30 p.m. in Room 4047 of Wescoe Hall to exchange recipes for a Christmas party.
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Opinion
Page 4 University Daily Kansan, November 17, 1982
Voters set Senate path
The story is the same every year. Only 10 percent of the students on campus turns out to vote in Student Senate elections, and the other 90 percent spends the next 12 months complaining about the worthlessness of the Senate.
It seems unlikely that student government elections will ever draw a majority of the campus population to the polls when a 40 percent to 50 percent turnout is considered good for state and national elections.
But it is only reasonable to expect that if 10 percent of the students elect the representatives of the entire University, it will be to that 10 percent that those representatives cater; after all, those students are their constituents, the ones who put them in office. Why should they be expected not to work for them, rather than the
students who did not care enough to cast a bullet?
Of course, whatever the faults of Student Senate, few elected officers have actually taken this logic to heart. Many do their best to represent the interests of all KU students, even those students who could care less about the Senate's efforts.
The point is, when senators can expect to be held accountable to only a fraction of students, they are less likely to worry about voting for actions that do benefit a small minority. Obviously, only when more students participate in voting will Senate be made more accountable for its shortcomings, which includes the mismanagement of student dollars.
However obvious the problem is, though, the ballot box statistics remain discouragingly similar year after year after year.
Smokeout a time of stress for nicotine-hooked smokers
Tomorrow is the day when all good men and women will put down their cigarettes for 24 hours and all obnoxious non-smokers will come out of the woodwork
The publicity for the American Cancer Society's annual 'Great American Smokeout' has been staggering. Sports and entertainment personalities will lead the smokeout fight, which is intended to get thousands of smokers to kick the habit for good.
Actor Larry Hagman is giving people a "Larry Hagman Special Stop Smokin' Wrist Snappin' Red Rubber Band" for those who light up automatically.
With these handy gadgets, smokers can snap
CATHERINE BEHAN
the rubber band around their wrist and get a slight sting, rather than indulge in a cigarette
Yeah, right, that will work well. I thought it was pretty funny when I saw one of the things. What a waste of money. The American Cancer Society could have used money for cancer research a lot more than it needed the Hagman Specials.
The ACS expects that 16 million to 28 million of the 58 million smokers in the country will try to quit.
If that many do succeed, which I doubt, it will be because of harassment rather than a great loss.
This is the sixth annual smokeout, and for the all the years that I have smoked, I have received so much abuse on this one day each year that, by comparison, no one seems to notice my habit the
I am happy that so many are concerned with my health, but, come on, I am entitled to my vices as long as I am not really bothering anybody else.
Last year, the ACS reported, 16 million tried not to smoke that day, but because of jangled nerves and basic withdrawal symptoms, only 4.5 million made it through the entire 24 hours.
I bet that many of those who did not make it
got jangled nerves because people kept asking
them whether they were going to participate in
Cigarette smoking is bad for the smoker and bad for those in direct contact with his smoke, but some smokers just may not want to quit.
But to those who can handle the harassment and who really want to quit smoking, at least for a few days.
The ACS has some tips for quitting smoking, at least for tomorrow:
1) Drink one of liquids. However, avoid caffeine-laden drinks such as tea, coffee and cola because they only increase the urge to drink alcohol, herbal tea, fruit juice and caffeine-free sodas.
2) Eat low-calorie, high-nutrition food. The urge to nibble will be strong. Stick to fresh fruit, crunchy vegetables or unbuttered popcorn and the urge to nibble won't result in 5 extra pounds. Also, avoid spicy food. It increases the desire to smoke just as caffeine does.
3) Brush your teeth often. Clean teeth and breath will be an incentive to keep them
4) Do anything that keeps your hands busy. A friend of mine once hand-washed all of her sweaters, which kept her hands not only busy, but too wet to light a cigarette. You could also try the Hagman technique and snap your wrist every time you want to smoke.
5) This one is my own: Get up and do something immediately after finishing a meal. This is, for many, a favorite time to light a candle so avoiding the temptation might be the cure.
The ACS purposefully tries to keep the smokeout a light affair. Woody Woodpecker and Pac-Man are even joining the rivolition in Washington, D.C., and Texas, respectively.
That lighthearted approach is probably a very good idea. Being with a person or — horrors — a group of people trying to quit smoking can be a tense experience.
Giving a smoker who is trying to quit a lot of trouble about his habit might be inviting danger. Nicotine is a drug, and withdrawal is a reality — usually a stressful one.
Putting more stress on a smoker who is trying to outit is obonous and not very nice.
So be nice to a smoker to quit tomorrow.
Maybe he'll return the favor next time you're
ready.
THEY CALL THIS WALL
WITH A BUNCH OF NAMES A
MONUMENT? WHERE'S THE
STATUE SHOWING OUR FIGHTING
MEN IN EPIC BATTLE DRESS,
FEET FIRMLY PLANTED...
It was 8 a.m. when my friend Alex dropped his canvas bag on my living room floor and told me that the duck shoe hunting was the best he had seen in four years of college.
Open season on duck shoes
"Uup, bagged my limit today," he said as he smoothed out his khaki hunting fatigues and sat down on my sofa. "Got myself six pairs of 'em just during the 7:30 classes alone. G got a couple pairs of red, three green pairs and one really pair. You got some coffee made or anything?"
I poured him a cup and asked him just what the hell duck shoe hunting was.
'Why, shoot, it's the finest way I know of to have some sport and beautify the campus at the same time. You never been duck shoe hunting?'
"No."
"Don't I need a hunter's permit or anything? I've never even been hunting before."
"I'll be here at 4:30 a.m. to pick you up. We gotta set up the duck shoe blind and practice some duck shoe calls. Get a good night's sleep, and remember to wear some long underwear. It gets a mite cold out there early in the morning."
"Well hell-fire!!" Alex shouted, slapping me hard across the back, causing coffee to spill down my pant log. "We'll just have to take you out there tomorrow morning and let you try to do it."
"Naw, they used to require that stuff — you know, hunter safety and all that jazz — but the duck shoe population has been growing so much in the last few years that the administration's real worried about a nature imbalance on campus. Those duck shoes, well, they're sort of predators. They'll eat up anything that's unimportant."
"Yes, but aren't duck shoes functional?"
"Yea, sure, if you're a longshoreman. Look,
I've got to go. Remember, be ready tomorrow
morning, and we'll get, you a few trophies for
walls."
The next morning was crisp and cold with a chance of snow flurries — perfect weather, Alex said, for duck shoes.
"I might just bag my limit two days in a row," Alex said as he drove his battered 74. "I think I was trying to get it over."
He grabbed a thermos of coffee and picked up two Remington 870s from the gun rack in the
PETER L. SCHLAFFE
TOM GRESS
window, handing one to me. We trudged around to the front of Strong. The campus was still quiet.
We set up our blind, then Alex told me about the duck shoes calls to use.
'One of the best ones I use is 'awesome.''
'awesome2'?
"That's right, awesome. Those duck shoe wearers, it's just their word for everything: 'How's the pizza, Chip?' 'Awesome, Jack, simply awesome.' 'How's your girlfriend, Skip?' 'Awesome, Chuck, just absolutely awesome.' 'How's your poor mother dying of heart disease, Bif?' 'Why she is just awesome, Pete, absolutely, positively awesome.' See what I mean? All you have to do is scream awesome once and you'll have a flock of duck shoes on their way to psychology over here. Try one for practice."
"AWWEESSSOOMMMEE!!!!" I screamed.
and listened to it echo off Wescoe Hall's outer walls.
"Not too bad." Alex said, "although try it, make it sound a little more important. Pretend you just found out your house got into Encore or something like that."
We practiced for another half-hour with Alex using some of his other favorite duck shoe calls
— "super," "excellent," and the all-purpose phrase, "Like, it isn't really just too much?"
The sun was now up, and Alex gave me the signal to start with the duck shoe calls. I shouted out a few awesomes, supers and excellentes, and soon we were firing away.
"Hey, over there!" Alex shouted above the gun fire. "A couple of green duck shoes trying to set up a voting booth to select the most personable professor on campus."
Blam! Blam! We dropped the green duck shoes with ease.
"Over there." I shouted to Alex, "two pairs of red duck shoes trying to sell tickets to a
Blam! Blam! We dropped the blue duck shoes.
Blam! Blam! Down went the red duck shoes. We both spotted a pair of blue duck shoes on our head.
Quickly our bags filled up. We reached the duck shoe limit by the time for 8:30 classes. We hauled our backy to the pickup truck, and Alex started up the truck. We drove out onto Jayhawk Boulevard and headed home for Miller Time and the brotherhood of beer.
'Ah, it's too bad,' Alex said. "Only a few more weeks of duck shoe season left."
more weeks of dark snow than I had ever seen.” I said, “I even had fun out there.”
Letters to the Editor
Test. I said, "I've never had an art room." "Well, if you think today is fun just wait for early spring. That's when we trap for moocasins."
Senators selected at random would be more representative
To the Editor
Instead of choosing student senators by majority vote, why not choose them by randomly selecting students from the entire student body? Those who didn't win would decline and those who would could be chosen.
Not only would this save us all the rigamore of choosing between clone ' coilations that may or may not have the best interests of the rest of us at heart, but it would also get students on the Senate who were more representative of the student body.
I think the duties of the Student Senate could be better performed by a randomly chosen group of students than by a group of young politicians chosen by a small fraction of the student body.
Lenexa senior
Ed Stamm
Combat party tasteless
To the Editor:
Nov. It was Veteran's Day. This is a day that has been set aside to observe the contributions and sacrifices of servicemen and servicewomen. Locally, a private club, Gammon's, and radio station KLZR promoted something called a "Clash Combat Party" to celebrate Veteran's Day. The radio ads made it sound like a whole lot of fun. Everyone was supposed to come in clothes that clashed or in combat costumes. There were to be cash prizes for the best outfits. Hand grenades were to be given at the door as favors.
I can only speak for myself. As a veteran, it is my judgment that this party and its promotion on this day was in very bad taste. It is my judgment that the commercial exploitation of a day better suited by quiet and dignified observance is a poor reflection on the sensitivity of the owners and management of both Gammon's and station KLZR. I am offended, angered and deeply saddened by yet another example of the callous public response to the service of my fellow brothers and sisters at arms.
This seems to be another manifestation of a combat chic that I do not comprehend. Camouflage fatigues, web belts, jungle boots and other military paraphernalia are quite the rage among young people who have had the luxury of power having a war zone experience.
William C. Daniels Jr.
Lawrence senior
I served as a non-combatant in Vietnam. I assisted in the performance of autopsies.
Combat quickly loses its allure when one sees the human wreckage that comes from it day after day. Each body bag contained its own horrible surprise. Each torn body represented the torn hopes and dreams of a young man. Indeed, it was all downright heartbreaking.
ASK rebuts charges
Kevin Walker, Momentum candidate for student body president, is quoted as saying, "ASK has not gotten a bill to the Kansas Senate floor concerning higher education in the past several years." Walker is indirectly supported by voters who are one-third of her criticism of Student Senate to an attack on the effectiveness or visibility of ASK — I'm not sure which.
While I am aware that it does little good to get into a shouting match on the pages of a newspaper, a statement concerning the Association of Independent Journalists in last Friday's Kanan demanded correction.
To the Editor
I certainly have no desire to intrude into KU student politics. ASK will work with whoever wins the election. Walker has every right to do so, but it is the responsibility of the student governments, even to reduce its
funding. But to say no bills supported by ASK have been passed is a gross misstatement. I don't know where his information came from — certainly not from the state staff.
I had been asked, I could have explained that a number of bills supported by ASK last year alone were passed into law and signed by the governor. They included amendments to the Higher Education Loan Program of Kansas (another bill supported by ASK several years earlier). The bills are parents as well as students. Another bill, supported exclusively by ASK, makes it illegal to use student fees to construct academic buildings without first holding a student referendum. A third changed Kansas tax laws to deny tax-exempt status to donations made to racially discriminatory schools and colleges. The bills did the Regents' appropriations bill, which provided funds for KU, on which we spend the biggest portion of our time.
I could have informed Walker that ASK testified a number of times before the House and Senate Ways and Means committees, as well as the Senate Judiciary Committee.
I team have told him we worked with other student groups from around the nation to defeat President Reagan's proposed reductions in student aid.
I could have pointed out that over the past several months, ASK has been working to develop a new, expanded program of student aid and employment, which has already drawn the support of other higher education groups and legislators.
I could have shown letters of gratitude from the Secretary of State's office on our voter registration drive, which registered several thousand student votes for this fall's election.
I could have discussed the success we have had in getting private colleges and community
colleges interested in working with the public university students in forming the Kansas Student Alliance, which would, for the first time, represent concerns of all 130,600 college students.
I could have explained all these things, had I only been asked. But Walker didn't ask. Neither did Trace Hamilton, before she boldly stated that ASK had done nothing terribly important for her lately. I can only ask of those critical critics that would you have us do that, we are not doing now?
Some have said that if students are unaware of our work, it is our own fault. But if we have to spend more time "blowing our own horn," we will have less time to do the job we are paid to do: represent and advance student interest. It may be that the getting student fee money to do the reporting.
ASK executive director
If Kevin Walker is elected, we will certainly work with him, and I think he will work with us, because if elected, he would that student serve at test server, build a house, not by tearing down. *Mark Tallman*
Homecoming thanks
Lawrence resident
To the Editor:
To these unsung homes of Homecoming '82 — and I think they know who they are — thanks!
*homecoming' 12* is now history. We've heard all about the people who worked to make the weekend a success, and I'm sure we'll continue bearing about some people.
There were others -- all of whom went completely unrecognized. They worked around busy personal schedules to share their time and talent with others of less talent. Their efforts made it possible for many of us to enjoy ourselves.
The University Daily KANSAN
The University Daily Kannan (USPS 606460) is published quarterly on Monday and Tuesday from 6:00 to 8:00, 6:30 to 9:30, 6:55 to 7:55, 6:15 to 7:15
Editor Business Manager
George Gene Susan Cooksey
Managing Editor Steve Roberden
Managing Editor Steve Roberden
Campus Editor Mark Zeman
Business Manager Benjamin Brennan
Assistant Campus Editors Colleen Caye, Anny Lowe
Sports Editor Gina Stripple
Artist Tom Cook
Entertainment Editor Ann Wryl
Production Manager Lilian Davis
Retail Sales Manager Darb巴鲁
Sales Manager Jamie Barnard
Campus Sales Manager Langton
Classified Manager Laurie Samuelson
Harmony Harman
Artist/Photographer John Keeling
Tourism Manager Mike Hamberg
Marketing and News Advisor John Obernan
Advertising Advisor
Letters Policy
The University Daily Kansan welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten, double-spaced and should not exceed 500 words. They should include the writer's name, address and phone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, the letter should include his class and home town or faculty or staff position. The Kansan reserves the right to edit or reject letters.
University Daily Kansan, November 17, 1982
Page
Commission OKs cab license for Jayhawk Towing
By DOUG CUNNINGHAM
Staff Reporter
-The Lawrence City Commission last night approved a taxacib license for Lon Faler, owner of Jayhawk Towing. 1545 N. Third St.
Faler said he would start his taxicab service, the second in Lawrence, as soon as possible with two or three taxicabs.
The commission also voted 4-1 to have the city staff prepare an amendment to the parts of the city code dealing with taxicabs, which now states that all taxicabs must have taximeters.
However, Faler said he would not need any
taximeters because he planned to charge a flat rate for each trin within the city.
MAYOR MARCI FRANCSCO voted against drawing up the ordinance for what Commissioner Barkley Clark said should be emergency passage.
She said this ordinance should be no different from any other.
The commission also directed the staff to prepare an ordinance that allowed for a system of telecommunication.
The commission had received a letter from Tim Miller, 395 Ohio St., asking that the city take some action to alleviate what he said was a parking problem in the Oread neighborhood.
He said that the city's 48-hour limit on parking in one spot on a city street was too short and that it forced some residents to unnecessarily drive their cars.
COMMISSIONER DON RINNS dissented and said the city was inviting legal problems by setting up such a permit system.
The commission also discussed the future role of the Downtown Improvement Committee, which assisted the commission in selecting a citywide plan for the proposed redevelopment of the downtown area.
Francisco noted that the committee had a meeting scheduled for 1:30 p.m. Monday at City
The commission also discussed the site plan it approved last week for a bus depot at the southwest corner of Sixth and Michigan streets.
Francisco said that one reason the site plan had been approved was that the lot was an existing lot of record, or one which had been on file with the city for a certain time.
The commission recently received a letter stating that the lot for the proposed bus depot was approved.
The commission agreed to discuss the matter next week.
Strike
THE NEW SCHEDULE, unlike any other proposed during the negotiations, calls for a nine-game regular season, including a makeup game and one final game played, as scheduled, Jan 30 at Pasadena, Calif.
From page one
There will be no divisional teams, and the 14 teams in each conference will vie for eight spots in a new playoff format. The postseason will consist of three rounds leading to the Super Bowl.
camps today for the first time since the strike was called Sept. 21.
"The long battle has finally come to a tentative conclusion," said Ed Garvey, executive director for the union. "We demonstrated solidarity and the players demonstrated, once and for all, that the players are the most important element of the game. Dan Rooney (president of the
Pittsburgh Steelers) said it best when he said, 'Now we're in a partnership.'
The 28 owners must also agree to the settlement but, like the vote of the union's rank and file, that is also expected to be a formality. The owners are to gather in New York today for the vote.
"ITS PRETTY a normality," said Jim Miller, director of information on the NPL Management Council. "As long as the executive recommends it the owners usually go along."
The Management Council said it would not elaborate on the agreement.
"We'll have plenty to say after ratification," Miller said.
The breakthrough seemed to come at 6:20 p.m. Jack Dollon, executive director for the Managers' Group, said: "It's a terrific moment."
site of the negotiations and announced that he, Garvey and Upshaw had reached an agreement.
"The proposal is really nothing different than we presented last night except it was a maturing process," Donlan said at the time. "We're happy with the settlement."
ACCORDING TO a union spokesman, Garvey and Upshaw met with the executive committee beginning at 7:10 p.m. They issued a statement 90 minutes later saying "certain democratic procedures" had to be followed before a settlement could be completed.
Mark Murphy, the player representative for Washington and a member of the executive committee, said the committee did not take an actual vote on accepting the proposal but recommended to the 28 player reps that they agree to the offer.
When asked what the vote was among the player repons, Tom Condon of the Kansas City
Chiefs and executive committee, said: "I don't want to comment on that."
The proposal that brought to an end the first in-season strike in the league's 69-year history is nearly the total sum that the union demanded in earlier talks. However, the contract will cover five years, with $1.3 billion going to players beginning in 1983 through 1986.
THE REMAINING $300 million will be distributed this season, with a portion of that money already tied up in player contracts previously negotiated in addition to the $60 million bonus pool earlier proposed by the Management Council.
Turkey
"It's a lot of money, particularly this year," said Kansas City Chiefs president Jack Steadman. "It's a big, very lucrative contract for the players. The trade-off is that we'll have five years of peace. It was an expensive exercise, not only for the players but the owners."
From page 1
off the ground and look at it, then just set it down in the same place.
"A turkey is a very stupid animal."
"A turkey is a very stupid animal."
BUT AL Adams, a poultry specialist at Kansas State University, said he thought turkeys were rather intelligent birds.
"They have a personality — more of one than a chicken has at least," he said. "I've never tried to hunt turkeys, but people who do it are one of the hardest wild animals to shoot."
"They have a lot of inmate intelligence. Adams said there were not many turkeys let in."
"We are one of the smaller turkey states." he said. "We grow maybe 80,000 or 90,000 turkeys. At one time we were a big turkey producing state."
Kansas used to produce about a million turkeys a year, he said.
TURKEY FARMS left Kansas because most of the processing plants closed down and because shipping to the nearest plant in Nebraska became too expensive, he said.
David Smith, Douglas County agricultural extension agent, said the turkey industry was very commercial, with some farms having as many as 100,000 turkeys. Turkey producers left the fertile plains of Kansas for less productive soil.
"In some of the regions where turkeys are grown, it's not really good farmland," he said.
Adams said that the trend in turkey farming was toward confinement but that many Midwestern farms still left their turkeys to graze.
Call them stupid, call them fat, call them out of the pasture. But don't call them late for supper, because they are not only good for Thanksgiving dinner, they are also mean.
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The University of Kansas School of Music Arts Presents
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in a performance of
Beethoven's
SLEMNIS
Robert Shaw, Conductor
Musical Director and Conductor of the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra
Sylvia McNair, Soprano
Elizabeth Mannion, Mezzo Soprano
Norman Paige, Tenor
John Stephens, Bass
Sunday, November 21, 1982
3:30 p.m. Hoch Auditorium
Lawrence, Kansas
All proceeds benefit the KU Music Scholarship Fund.
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office and, on the day
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All seats reserved/For reservations, call 913-864-3982.
Special discounts for students and senior citizens.
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Student Senate 1983 Consensus
Lisa Jim Ashner.Cramer
ALLIED HEALTH Laura Lonborg
ARCHITECTURE
George Heinlen
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Experience Will Make A Difference.
Federal cuts in financial aid, state budget cuts in education, tuition increases: These issues and others like them will be facing students in the year to come. Are you willing to trust the important decisions that must be made in the next year to beginners? Too much is at stake.
Check the Record—It's Not Even CLOSE. paid for by Consensus
Page 6
University Daily Kansan, November 17; 1982
Bones excavated in Pompeii of interest to professors
From staff and wire reports
Archaeologists in Herculaneum Italy, have unearthed a large collection of complete skeletons from the explosion of Mount Vesuvius in a find that several KU professors call "terribly exciting."
The archaeological find, as reported yesterday by National Geographic magazine, included the discovery of the skeleton of a woman who was struck down in an archway and wounded with rings set with gemstones. Archaeologists also found the preserved skeletons of a sailor who was clutching an oar in a capsized boat.
and a man lying face down on a beach his sword beside him.
Excavations at the site, south of Naples, uncovered more than 80 skeletons. Most were intact from head to toe. It was the first indication that the site was inhabited by humans. T9 also buried hundreds at the nearby Herculaneum seaside resort.
Elizabeth Banks, KU associate professor of classes, called the discovery team.
"THIS DISCOVERY makes possible better information about the way in which people responded to the disaster," he said. "The vast amount of material from those
sites, which are particularly fertile for architecture and wall paintings."
Banks said the Italian discovery also was important because the city of Herculaneum was destroyed by molten bronze and the pamice and ash that buried Pompeii.
"There is a different set of circumstances surrounding the deaths of the people in Herculaneum," she said. "At Pompeii, they have made incredibly difficult to imagine models of people in the position they were in when they mussed their last."
The discovery of skeletons at Herculaneum, Banks said, will open up an unusual view of everyday life in a Roman city during the first century.
JAMES SEAVER, professor of history and director of the Western Civilization program, said the discovery of more skeletons would provide an interesting twist for a group of KU architecture and history students that planned to visit Herculaneum and Pompeii next summer.
"Certainly, the discovery makes me look forward to our trip next summer to Italy," said Seaver, who has traveled to Italy, nearly every summer since 1900.
"Much of ancient history is directly fed by archaeological finds. The numismatic finds (coins) and the gemstones undoubtedly will be valuable."
Seaver said the discovery of the
skeletons was significant because they
THE DESTRUCTION of Herculeanum differed from that of Pompeii, Seaver said, because boiling mudslides made it harder for people to escape the disaster. Charred doors and window frames have been found at excavations made throughout at the city, which was thought to have been a resort for fashionable Romans and Neoolitans.
"They couldn't have been moved since antinity." he said
State faculty research funding declines
By DIRK MILLER Staff Reporter
State funding for faculty research this year is almost $710,000 less than requested, continuing a decline in state funding, a research official said recent
Carolyn Hallenbeck, director of research support and grant administration, said about $670,000 was awarded to KU researchers from the general research fund. While the amount of money received was less than half of that requested, about 64 of the proposals received financing.
Hallenbeck said more proposals were financed because some of them received less funding than requested. She said the amount of money requested yearly from the general research fund, a state appropriation to KU, had been more than $1 million for the past couple of years. But, she
said, the amount of money appropriated was only 50 percent of that requested.
GLEE SMITH JR., Kansas State Regents Budget and Finance Committee chairman, said the private college should make up for the loss in state money.
"Because of the quality of research, we've been able to attract outside funding," he said. "I think the research will be more expensive to research the last few years."
"This stresses the importance of the fund. Research is an integral part of the University." Hallenbeck said.
Although two-thirds of Herculaneum still remains unexcavated, archaeologists think that many residents of Herculaneum, hoping the worst was over, remained in the city after the Vesuvius explosion.
Smith cited the state's financial problems as one of the reasons that research had not been of primary importance to the state.
Hallenbeck said that when Gov. John Carlin made his 4 percent budget cut this summer, KU reduced other parts of the research department before reducing the general research fund.
"This particular fund is a substantial investment by the state."
SMITH SAID that research was an important function of the Regents schools but that teaching was still the number one concern.
The deadline for submitting research proposals for next year to the office of research, graduate studies and public service is Jan. 4.
Robert Bearse, assistant vice chancellor for research and graduate studies, said a $4,000 limit for faculty salaries awarded for summer research was recommended by the Faculty Senate Research Committee. The committee insisted because of review committees differing attitudes on salaries.
HALLENBECK SAID said the
Guidelines for the proposals were changed this year because the current ones were unclear as to how much attention was needed to salary amounts during summer research.
guidelines also set a minimum limit for faculty salary requests at two weeks of regular salary.
There are eight review committees in several fields: social sciences, physical sciences, mathematics, humanities, fine arts, engineering, biological sciences and behavioral sciences.
Faculty members submitting proposals can request a review on their proposal by any of the committees, which are composed of KU professors, according to the guidelines. In this the proposal has been recommended by the review committee must be considered by the research committee.
Another change was made in renewal proposals for grants already awarded and in progress. Proposals requesting an extension of a grant's funding now must include more documentation on the progress of the research.
Physical anthropologist Sara Bissel, hired by National Geographic to work at the site, said residents were caught up in the mud. They suffered a full force of the volcanic avalanche.
Two inmates found guilty in stabbing
The jury deliberated three days before finding Carlos Johnson guilty of first-degree murder and Oscar Brown guilty of second-degree murder.
TOPEKA—A federal jury yesterday found two inmates at the U.S. Federal Penitentiary in Leavenworth guilty of murder in the stabbing death of a third
By United Press International
The victim, Charles Jackson, was stabbed about 15 times in the recreation room of the prison in February, court officials said.
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EMERGENCY EQUIPMENT
Lisa Ashner
Student Senate 1983 Consensus Student Body President and Vice President
Vote on Nov. 17 & 18
Cramer
-
University Daily Kansan, November 17, 1982
Page 7
Job agency owner says 'beware'
By DONNA KELLER
Staff Reporter
"The theme is "buyer beware" when using the services of an employment agency to find a job, the owner of a company or an employment agency said yesterday.
The owner, Mert Hersch of the Robert Half Personnel Agency, said there were several December graduates should be aware of when placing themselves in the job market through an employment agency.
"Examine the agency's expertise in the field," Hersh said.
Students who have specialized in a particular area, such as business or computer programming, should shop for clothes that meets that specialty, he said.
Hersh said if the individual decided that the agency would not serve his needs, he should look for a more suitable agency.
"ASK WHAT his credentials are, just like any other business," he said.
Also, examine any documents you as a customer may have received from him or sign them without reading them."
The document may outline the agency's terms for representing the applicant, such as the fee involved for representation and the sequences of leaves of a job. Hersh said.
State laws vary regarding the fees, he said. The fee, which is usually in the range of 10 to 30 percent of the
client's first year's salary, may be paid by either the client or the emlover. Hersh said.
Under Kansas law, the employer,
not the applicant, pays the agency's
placement service fee, he said.
However, he said, the employer can decide whether he wants to be compensated for the fee by the new employee.
FOR EXAMPLE, the fee may be taken out of the individual's salary, or if the individual quits the job within a certain period of time, he may be asked to compensate the employer with part, or all of the fee. Hersh
"It's rare that the employer asks the employee to return the fee, but it happens," he said.
Hersh the applicant could fill out the agency's data card, put his resume on file and interview with the representative, but if asked to sign an agreement, he should request to take over and return it to the agency later.
The applicant may want to get another opinion about the terms of the agreement, he said.
Employment agencies are becoming more competitive with state employment agencies and even the companies that are hiring. Heras
applying for the jobs. We have handpicked them for the interview, we have checked them and we know them."
"A STATE employment agency cannot compete with the professional services of an employment agency," he said. "We know the individuals
Hersh said a company using an employment agency was allowing the agency to decide which individuals met the company's specifications, and by doing so, a great savings was made in company in terms of time and money.
"When they put ads through the paper, they are inundated with resumes," he said. "Good, experienced people are hard to find. Most people are qualified for the job, but when push comes to shove, it's a personality match. We provide that service," he said.
Vernon Geisler, director and coordinator of the University Placement Center, said graduates using the services of an employment agency have higher expectations than the agency's ability to place the individual in a job.
"Not all of the agencies are skilled in dealing with graduates," he said. "Don't expect them to get your job for you."
GEISSLER SAID the six placement centers on campus assisted students in preparing for the job market.
Included among the services offered are employment skills clinics employment contacts and referrals letter and resume preparation, practice interviews and lectures or employment market trends.
KANSAS CITY, Kan.-The University of Kansas Medical Center is searching for a new University Relia-
tor in the School of Nursing, acting director, said yesterday.
Humana Inc. owns Suburban Medical Center in Overland Park.
Susan Shipley resigned from the position last month and accepted a job with Humana Inc. of Louisville, Ky. Shipley also relinquished public relations in Texas and Colorado.
Med Center seeking new PR director
"SUSAN WAS here for five years and worked to improve internal communications and improved communications with the media," said Harrison. She said the Med Center would miss Shipley.
About 140 applications have been
received for the position, said Harrison,
and a search committee will start
working on the plan.
Qualifications for the position include five years of experience in a university or hospital setting, a degree in advertising, public relations or communications and journalism experience.
New national Catholic group elects KU director president
KU's Catholic campus minister was elected president, last week of a newly formed national organization for Catholic campus ministers.
Vince Krische, director of Catholic campus ministers at KU, was elected the first president of the Association for Diosceles Directors during the national meeting of Diosceles Directors of Campus Ministers in Boston last week.
meetings and to visit different dioceses.
Seventy-five delegates representing all parts of the nation attended the meeting.
He said his new duties would include traveling once a month to attend board
"I feel grateful about the trust they put in me," he said.
KRISCHE SAID the association was established at the request of the education division of the U.S. Catholic Conference.
meetings and to visit different offices.
"I think it will be pretty exciting. It's going to be a great opportunity for me to grow." Krische said.
He said the new organization would help campus ministries come into their own in the 1980s. More Catholic students are expected to attend public universities in the 30s, he said, thereby increasing the capacity of campus ministers.
"The association will continue to develop the vision of Catholic campus
He said the association would provide an opportunity for greater collaboration among Catholic campus ministers.
"I'm excited for KU and Kansas being recognized on a national level," he
On the record
THEIVES STOLE A $400 1973 Ford about 9 p.m. Saturday from the 800 block of New Hampshire Street, Lawrence police said yesterday. The theft was not reported to police until yesterday.
BURGLAR STOLE ITEMS worth $805 between August and November from the basement of a house on the 1500 block of Vermont Street, police said yesterday. A western saddle, a suede suit, a two-man tent and a radio set were not discovered missing from the basement until recently, police said.
BURGLARS STOLE ITEMS worth $353 Friday night from a car parked on the 3400 block of Iowa Street, police said yesterday. The burglars stole cups and drinks from tapes and a cooler. The burglary was not reported to police until yesterday.
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan, November 17, 1982
U.S. Rep. shies away from gas tax Slattery endorses some form of jobs bill
By BRUCE SCHREINER Staff Reporter
Democratic Congressman-elect Jim Slattery, still wading through the difficult problems facing Congress, yesterday endorsed some form of jobs bill but stopped short of supporting the one linked to a gasoline tax increase.
Kansas' newest congressman also evaded the Social Security stalemate, but he said a quick solution was mandatory.
Slattery, who will succeed Republican Rep. Jim Jeffries in January, would not pass judgment on a proposed job program for highway and bridge work that is based on a 5-cent gasoline tax increase.
The measure has received some bipartisan support. Kansas GOS. Sen Bob Dole and various Reagan administration Democrats have elected Democrats in boosting the proposal.
"RIGHT NOW, I don't know whether I will support it." Slattery said in a telephone interview. "I haven't been able to see all the facts yet. But I do support the basic idea of a jobs bill to get people back to work."
Slattery, a 34-year-old Topeka businessman, said that another alternative for financing a jobs bill would be to delay next year's 10 percent tax cut and to reduce Defense and Energy Department budgets.
During his campaign against Lawrence Republican Morris Kay, Slattery repeatedly said a delay in the final leg of President Reagan's three-year, 25 percent tax-cut package might be needed to offset an expected $180 billion deficit.
"I would like to see a comprehensive plan, which would include cutbacks in military spending, trimming spending agencies and also a job bill," he said.
THE 5-CENT increase in the gasoline tax is another alternative. There are going to be different alternatives put forth, and if one is better than the one I talked about, then I will go with it."
Some House Democrats have grumbled about the timing of a tax reduction that occurs while the government is grappling with record deficits.
Slatterry said he had not decided whether to propose the final 10-percent discount.
"I don't know whether I would vote against the tax cut. It depends on interest rates and where the economy is at the time," he said.
"But I'm very worried about interest rates because of the deficits. The government is competing with private industry for the same available capital. And if interest rates rise, we will be in need of more loans that have no sustained economic recovery."
knife when it reviewed Defense and Energy Department budgets in an attempt to lower the deficit.
Slattery said he might favor Congress' wielding a sharp cutt-up
SLATTERY SAID the house could have several options, including the controversial MX missile system, when it would be parts of the defense budget it could cut.
"I'm concerned about the 600-ship Navy and some of the other nuclear weapons being proposed," he said. "We don't have to worry about overall cost procurement procedures."
"And the administration has talked of saving $1 billion to $2 billion in the Energy Department, and I have no problem with that if the commitment to energy research and its services continues."
When he gave his prognosis of the ailing Social Security system, Slattery evaded commenting on most of the alternatives compiled by the special commission that studies Social Security.
But Slattery, who predicted that party partisanship would be discarded when decisions were made, said the failure of his benefits would be safe from review.
"THEE HAS been a little misunderstanding about talk of cutting benefits," he said. "We don't have to cut benefits, but we need to change the methods for computing future increases. I will oppose any efforts to cut benefits below what they currently are."
He said he would support an effort to raise the eligibility requirements to keep more people paying into the system for a longer time span
"In the long term, I think this will be modified. We could phase the increases in age in around the year 2000, but the decision has to be made now," he said.
Slattery suggested raising the minimum age to receive partial benefits from 62 to 65 and increasing the age to obtain full benefits from 65 to 68.
The Topeka resident said he opposed efforts to incorporate current federal workers into the Social Security system, one of the commission's proposals. But Slattery might consider future federal employees in the system.
Inner-fund borrowing is a short-term alternative to making the system financially sound, Slattery said.
BUT SLATTERY said he was still studying proposals to hasten future increases in the payroll tax. One compromise now under consideration would be to move tax increases did for 1858, 1863 and 1900 back to 1984.
The payroll tax now paid by employees and employees is 6.7 percent. By
Another proposal Slattery said he was still studying would base the system's cost-of-living formula on price increases instead of on price increases.
Youths injured in chase possibly facing charges
Three Independence, Mo., youths who led Kansas Highway Patrolmen on a high speed chase yesterday morning may be facing charges in both Douglas County and Jackson County, Mo., a patrolman said yesterday.
One of the youths, Rodney Thurber, 17, was in satisfactory condition at Lawrence Memorial Hospital yesterday. A patrolman said Thurber broke a wire on his truck and ended a chase from Bonner Springs to the East Lawrence exit on Interstate 70.
The driver of the car, Highland Mulu, 15, was treated and released from Lawrence Memorial to undergo further treatment. A paramedic patrolmen and hospital officials said.
Trooper Timothy Nails said Mulu suffered a severer laceration to his left arm.
OFFICIALS at the Truman Medical center said Mulu had been at the hospital after an attack.
The other youth involved in the incident was in Douglas County jail yesterday. The youth, Bryan Harness, 17, was treated at the hospital after the accident and was taken to the jail by a trooper.
County they would be sent through juvenile court.
A difference in the legal adult age in Missouri and Kansas might create an awkward situation, Dennis said. Harness and Thurber could be tried as adults in Missouri, where the adult age is 17, Dennis said, but in Douglas
The 1974 Pontiac the three youths were driving was stolen from Independence, Mo. Dennis said. He said he knew the driver in some case or all three youths for the car the car, theft.
DENNIS SAID he was recommending that the Douglas County district attorney's office charge Mulu with possession of stolen property, aggravated assault against a police officer, wreckless driving, attempting to elude a police officer and driving without a driver's license.
Mulu was arrested yesterday morning after the accident but has not been charged.
The chase began when a patrolman tried to stop the youths for making an illegal U-turn. Three patrolmen participated, and the last lasted 12 minutes and covered 20 miles.
Dennis and another patrolman said Mulu tried to force them off the road the day before.
"They had all had something to drink, but they weren't intoxicated," he said. "One of them told me they were drunk." He went back to 70. That's why they made the U-turn.
The chase ended when the car Mulli was driving went airborne as he tried to escape.
was surprised they were not more seriously injured, Dennis said. "I was just shocked."
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THE HONEYWELL FUTURIST AWARDS COMPETITION
University Daily Kansan, November 17, 1982
Page 9
In response to state fiscal crisis
SRS proposes reductions in general assistance
By JULIE HEABERLIN Staff Reporter
The latest budget reduction proposal by the Kansas Department of Social and Rehabilitation Services would eliminate general assistance payments to local agencies in Douglas County, a local SNS official said yesterday.
Ernest Dyer, SRS income and maintenance section chief for the lawrence office, and most of these people live in poor conditions, people and couples without children.
The SRS proposal, released yesterday, suggests a $4 million to $5 million reduction in general assistance benefits in response to the state fiscal crisis. If approved, the SRS proposal would take effect Jan. 1.
RSGS lost all hope of a supplemental $8 million state appropriation for 1983 when Gov. John Carlin announced the state financial crisis Saturday.
WILLIAM RICHARDS, SRS commissioner for income, maintenance and medical services, said the SRS general assistance program was singled out because its budget was made up entirely of state dollars. Other SRS programs, such as food stamps and aid to dependent children, have state budgets that are matched with federal funds.
"General assistance payments have risen dramatically," Richards said. We focused on general assistance bonds because our most savings related to state dollars.
"It's a time when you just have to make choices. Anything we do at this point is going to cause problems. You live in hope and die in despair."
Dyer said he could not comment yet on whether the new budget reductions would create life-threatening situations in the Lawrence area.
"It depends on a lot of things," Dyer said. "The people losing general assistance are those that have the ability to work. They have been legally paid their payments, and not they must find another source of income.
IT DEPENDS on job availability, and family and friends who will be willing to help them out."
In its proposal, SRS included a one-time transitional payment of $100 in a 12-month period, but no further payment was due. Those who will lose general assistance.
Richards said this payment was not in to guez against possible plaintiffs.
But State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, said the single $100 payment, equivalent to a monthly payment for many recipients, would not go far in helping those who could not find jobs.
"I'm very concerned about people who are unemployed who have gone off unemployment benefits," Branson said. "We have the moral obligation to provide food resources to those who will not have food, shatter and warmth for the winter."
BRANSON, WHO has been a strong legislative supporter of social programs, said she had not yet discussed the proposal with SRS officials.
"I'm certainly not condemning SRS. I realize they are faced with cuts they have to make." Bramun said. But she added, "We've already had been reduced 4 percent this year."
summer along with other state agencies, had the staff to determine what would cause life-threatening situations.
Richards said that the public would be able to voice criticisms in an open hearing tomorrow, which may produce modifications in the proposal. After the proposal is adopted, it will go to the governor of Delaware and the Legislature for temporary approval, until the entire legislative body can vote on it.
Because the proposal, if approved, is not scheduled to take effect until Jan. 1., those losing assistance would receive their December payment, Dyer said.
"It will be the end of January before any real effects are seen," Dyer said. "If expect a good percentage of these people to pay for the $100 transitional payment."
SRS OFFICIALS estimate that 3,700 Kansans will lose general assistance if the proposal is approved.
The SRS proposal would continue general assistance to families in which one or all of the members are physically incapacitated, mentally restrained, or undergoing a treatment program or residing in a drug and alcohol abuse facilities.
Assistance would also be provided to those participating in vocational rehabilitation training, those needed in the home to care for another family member, those needing self-care and families in which the adult member is 51 years old or older.
The SRS office, 319 Perry St., will use a tele-net system so that local people can come to the office tomorrow, hear visible meeting and call in comments.
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Page 10 University Daily Kansan, November 17, 1982
'Grandma
By VERONICA JONGENELEN Staff Reporter
It may seem unlikely that a 60-year-old grandmother of five could protect herself against a younger, larger, male attacker, but Carolyn Hukle wants to prove that if she can, anyone can.
"Just because I'm a grandmother, don't think I can't. I'm perfectly able to." she said
Hukle, speaking at Lady Stay Alive, a personal safety seminar conducted twice yesterday in the Kansas Union, used Lawrence Police officer Bob Avery as her attacker to prove her point.
Hukle is chairman of the Crime Alert Program in Des Moines, Iowa. The programs yesterday were sponsored by the KU Police Department, the Lawrence Police Department and the Kansas Bureau of Investigation
HUKLE SAID women should fight only when the attacker was not armed. They must decide to fight immediately, and do so as violently as they can, using the element of surprise to help them, she said.
Hulke suggested several techniques to use in case a woman was grabbed from the front and demonstrated them.
Hukle had Avery grab her, then stepped backward, knocked him off balance, grabbed his belt and raised
teaches personal safety
her knee, stopping short of striking him in the groin.
"If you have to, you can, and you
dont feel well about it," she said.
"if you have it, you can, and you don't feel guilty about it," she said. The gren is not the only vulnerable area of a man's body, she said.
BONES IN THE top of the foot are very vulnerable, and nine pounds of pressure are all that are needed to break one, she said. Slamming a heel down onto the man's foot and holding it firmly against the balance mantle will do it, she said.
Many times, hair is a good thing to grab. Hukle said, demonstrating by grabbing Avery's hair, pulling his shirt off and raising her knee into his face.
"There's going to be blood all over the place, but it won't be yours," she said.
Another technique is one which police often use when handling criminals. Hukle said.
She took hold of Avery's left ring and pinky fingers with her right hand, slid her wrist and elbow over his arm and held the fingers back, brought him to his knees
LATER, HUKLE demonstrated how to trip an attacker.
As Avery grabbed her, Hukle took hold of his right arm, twisted it to the outside, placed her foot in front of his feet and pushed him to the left. Avery hit the floor, sending peals of laughter through the audience.
behind, Hakele, the woman should slam the back of her head into the attackers face, or else swing her fist into his groin.
Knowing how to protect yourself in case of an attack is not enough, Hukle said. Crime prevention is even more important.
When caught in a bear hug from
One thing a person can do to prevent crime is to keep driving rather than stop when someone needs help along the road. Hukle said.
"THE BEST thing you can do if you see someone else who needs help, and I hate to tell you this, but unless your person's life, don't stop," she said.
"You never, ever, hitchhike. It could be the one most dangerous thing you do in your life."
Hukle spent some time discussing the merits of burglar alarms and chemical sprays.
The sprays are available in different sizes for different purposes, she said. Some fit on key rings or in purses and some clip on belts.
"Hey, it's not going to do any good in your purse. If the guy grabs you, you can't say, 'Wait until I get my stuff out!'" she said.
Hukle is taking her program to other schools in the area, including Manhattan. Her programs are geared to different groups of people; men, women, preschoolers or senior citizens, she said.
By DARRELL PRESTON Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
Oilman tells of takeover wars
Mesa Petroleum would probably try to overtake a giant oil company if it had the chance, the president of the little company said yesterday.
"The larger the company, the cheaper you can get its assets," said T. Boone Pickens, president and chairman of the board, who founded the company in 1944. "Oil companies must find new oil in the cheapest way possible."
THE BID by Mesa Petroleum of Amarillo, Texas, to gain control of Cities Service — a company 10 times larger than Mesa — created havoc in the oil and gas industry as companies tookover and survive the takeover wars, he said.
It found by exploration costs $15 a barrel, he said, but if Mesa had successfully acquired Cities Service Gas Co., as it tried to do this past spring, Mesa would have acquired oil reserves for $3 a barrel.
Because Mesa is smaller than Cities Service, Mesa had to take on financial partners in order to raise the money it needed to purchase Cities Service's stock.
Pickets spoke to about 150 people in the Satellite Union as part of the School District's campaign.
"Gifts Service knocked off our partners pretty fast," he said. "When they found out and was helping us, they came out and helped them out if they went ahead and helped us."
Despite Meas's failure to gain control of Cities Service, Pickens said, he would still try again if the right opportunity came along.
In addition to takeover wars, Pickens described recent changes in oil and natural gas industries as disastrous.
"IVE NEVER seen a more complete, total collapse as in 1982 for the oil and natural gas business," he said. "I hope we have a cold winter. It would do more for the gas business than we else to clear out some of the old gas."
Although gas-glutted reserves are to blame for the low profits in the petroleum industry, he predicted fuel shortages by 1985.
"When you see the amount of oil drilling drop like it has recently, you can't prevent shortages that will occur in a few years," he said.
Shortages would encourage OPEC to raise its prices, he said, which would raise prices for American producers,
thus increasing profits for oil and gas companies.
By the next presidential nomination, high profits for oil and gas companies will make it look as if they are ripping off the public, he said.
He said the petroleum industry faced a problem different from other industries.
DESPITE THE cyclical nature of the oil and gas business, Pickens said, he opposes stabilizing the market with price controls.
"Although price controls might help for a white, in the long run they would discourage drilling, which will lead to more shortfalls," he said.
"When an oil or gas company starts production, it uses up the assets of its stockholders by taking off oil or gas," he said. "There are a number of oil companies that are liquidating themselves today by not replacing the fuel reserves that they deplete. Oil companies must replace their reserves."
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Come and enjoy skits, music and a talk by Warren Calwell on: "Three Threats to Relationships" Discover how to enjoy
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Kansas Union Ballroom
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Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas invites you to attend our
full bar and set ups available, entertainment and dance music.
Holiday Dinner Dance
on Friday, December 3rd in the Crystal Room of the Eldridge House Hotel. Full buffet dinner, including vegetarian entrees, full bake dish, wine tasting and music.
Dinner, entertainment, dance—$9.00
Reservations must be made in advance with $5.00 deposit by Fri, Nov. 19th at GLOSK office, 3rd floor, Union.
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University Daily Kansan, November 17, 1982
Page 11
Council to consider science fiction study center
By DIRK MILLER Staff Reporter
The University of Kansas may have the world's first center for the study of science fiction if the Council of Presidents approves a proposal Friday in Topeka, a KU professor of English said yesterday.
James Gunn, the professor and noted author of science fiction novels, said the proposed center would not cost KU anything additional but would use existing funds from the graduate school.
Gunn said the proposal, if passed by
"Science fiction originally came to popularity with puls science fiction magazines. As a consequence, it has had to overcome a certain amount of prejudice about its respectability." Gunn said.
the presidents of the Board of Regents would then need the Regents approval.
He said the proposed center would be a recognition by KU of science fiction's origins.
"THE CENTER would be a recognition of the academic position the study offered."
Carol Prentice, administrative assistant for academic affairs, said the
The center would organize workshops and conferences of people interested in science fiction. Gunn said. It would not teach students, but instruct teachers of science fiction.
Gunn said the proposed center would be under the jurisdiction of both the center for humanistic studies and the graduate school.
HE SAID the proposed center also would encourage science fiction authors and editors to contribute works to the special collections section of the
Council of Chief Academic Officers had already approved the recommendation
Spencer Research Library, which houses perhaps the world's largest collection of science fiction works in foreign languages.
In other actions Friday, the Regents are expected to consider recommendations from a Regents committee on student fees.
The committee recommended in a report to the Regents Budget and Finance Committee that academic fees, including student housing fees, be considered in November and that administrative fees, including building construction fees, be considered in May.
A new savings account requiring a $2,500 minimum balance will allow banks and savings associations to compete more effectively with money-market mutual funds, local financial officials said yesterday.
"The money that is invested in mutual funds is almost all sucked out of the community, whereas these
The account will limit the number of withdrawals and checks written during each month and will keep more money in the local economy. Mr. Snyder is president of Douglas County Bank, Ninth and Kentucky streets.
New account to be offered
funds will be put back into the local community to stimulate the community's growth," he said.
Other information about the account from federal regulators was sketched, such as the limit on withdrawals and checks. he said.
Dan Hepten, assistant vice president at Capitol Federal Savings and Loan Association, 1046 Vermont SL., said the account, unlike the money-market funds, would be federally insured.
The University Daily
Call 864-4358
KANSAN WANT ADS
CLASSIFIED RATES
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Tuesday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
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Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or online, but find the Kang business office at #46308.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
KANSAS BUSINESS OFFICE
119 Flint Hall 864-4358
Do you need cash? Bring your unwanted merchandise to the Lawrence University Auction. Every Wednesday, 7 p.m. Compensations accepted Tuesday through Friday, 1-2 p.m., 2-90 Named Hall, Campbell St. #48212 for sale
KJJKJ is now accepting staff applications until Nov 17
at 9 p.m. Pick up your application at the station on
Buffalo Annex.
Paid Staff Positions
the Kansas is now accepting
a Bachelor's in the Spring
Semester Business Manager
and Editor positions. These are
paid positions and require some
experience paper. Application
forms are available in the
Student Senate Office, 105 B,
Kansas Union*, in the Office of
Student Organizations and Ac-
counting Rooms 200 and 218 Flint
Rooms 200 and 218 Flint Hall.
Applications due in room 200
Flint Hall by 5:00 p.m., Thursday,
November 18.
The University Daily Kansan is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action university. Areas are sought from all qualified people regardless of race, religion, color, sex, disability, veteran or original origin, age, or ancestry.
Shop at Spintarell Books for feminist, Lebanese and Afro-American authors. Also knitbooks. Also woozy music, cards, buttons. 110% Manuscript! Includes hear current Friends. State: Connecticut. Spintarell is a feminist library & children's center. Spintarell is a feminist library & children's center.
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Housemates wanted. Enjoy a relaxed co-educational living experience, reasonable rates and close to campus (us) Call Sunflower House #84 9411.
Live in the CHISTAN CANPUS HOUSE this fall and migrate! Become a part of a growing campus ministry; Call Alan Honzek, campus minister
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PHINCTON PLACE PATIO APARTMENTS. Now Available, 2 bedrooms, 2 bath, perfect for roommates, features wood burning fireplace, 2 car garage with windows, kitchenette and 10-foot kitchen, quiet surroundings. No pet please $42 per month. Open house 9:30-6:30 at day 20. Princeton plnld, or phone 842-5257 for additional info.
Qainik Creek Apartment suite two bedrooms, 2 baths, balcony, guest, mid December thru June $665
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Naismith Hall
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1800 NAISMITH DRIVE
843-8559
Rustic Country Studio for lease, rent. $275 monthly
Rustic and ref. 3 mi. S. 841-8118
**SHRAKE HOUSE**, contemporary 3 BRL 13 m³
**SHRAKE HOUSE**, contemporary 3 BRL 13 m³
675.0 BLDG, high rise. NO utilities. 748-0000
675.0 BLDG, high rise. NO utilities. 748-0000
SOUTHERN PARKWAY TOWNHOUSES 36th & Kaskade if needed of firey, nicks & cramped apartments. Hookups: all appliances, attached garage, swimming pool. Call 748-2175 (evenings and weekends) for more info.
Special Light
One male needed to share apart!
Two female needed to share apart!
Seconds from the Union. Rent with option!
ONLY for special light needs.
Sandhya Apartment, Purchased one bedroom,
with furnished kitchen. Water paid,
water paid, 12 month. Call 811-359-1088
or 811-359-1087 between 1.5.
Furnished bedroom, furnished kitchen.
Water paid, water paid, 12 month. Call 811-359-1088
or 811-359-1087 between 1.5.
STUDIO apt, for Jan May subway can move in
DT$140/mo, low utilizes. Nice neighborhood.
Apt $250/mo, high utilizes.
Tired of doing all the housework? Check and
harvest cooperative, clean and sleepsome
housekeeping.
Sublease 1 br. agr. Pursued Cary dear Great
good, interest, good call. Call 841-3958 Available
$180. 4th floor at 9:00 p.m. - 10:00 p.m.
Sublease newly decorated 4 bedroom townhouse
250 sq. ft. in central location
1969 OpT Gt. Excellent interior, good exterior
1969 OpT Gt. Excellent interior, good exterior
79,000 miles. Call us 8:00 p.m. on
Sunday.
Hauser Place. Completely furnished one bedroom apartments available immediately. Located between 10am and 8pm On May only 2kids from KU and 6-8 years from $25 per month was paid. 841.123 or 843.445.
FOR SALE
Sublease large, newly remodeled + 1 BR apartment
Four blocks from campus, $300/month, 642-187-900
Very nice 2 bedroom studio on the campus" edge
Software startup in business. (拜访 gb46, ask
for details.)
MUST SUBLUE QUEST: 1 bedroom farmhouse furnished on bus line; to deposit. Available from 21 first payment.
NICELY DECORATED spacious room. Furnished $91 utilities paid *New University & Downtown* Offering. Free parking. Free Wi-Fi. SUBLAGE GUTSANDING TOWNEIRE, 2 fr, lrs. LHR, DR, birtle, kitchen w/appliances, pizza oven, laundry room.
106 VOLVQ 4 padd. radial. Body good. Engine runi-
bus need work soon. Best offer over 660. Call
Gill.
California Meadwick studio. Newly furnished.
carpeted. Available Dec. 28. $235/month.
Emerging artist. 110 S. 6th St.
Four blocks from campus. $200/month. 842-1697
Bunkhouse on campus. $35/month. 842-1697
Mandarin room. Water and cable TV available.
Mandarin room. Water and cable TV available.
WARM quiet room one black from Lunen. Open windows, no pets, after 9 a.m., 1998 Ohoa.
1927 GMC 3/4 ton pick-up, 4-axed, power steering
brakes, 1.25 horsepower. Runs great. #109 Call
GMC.
1957 Fitl 142 Sport Runs great, new wintered, Winterized, rebuilt alternator, repair kit, brakes $1500 811-841-3848, new tires $1200 811-841-3848, super stop Must see!! Call 749-5831. Keep Trying. 1957 Toyota Corolla 1971 Call 4-d; A/C, radio, great condition.
YT 1401 Truck service 5,895 miles,
trails, fuel injection, $2,600. Call 841-4737
1981 GS 1050 Suspension. Excellent condition, only 200 mi!
Durable. Discounted. GS 2041
1979 VW Rabbit 3-mile, 4-hour, new Macchett tires, fuel injection, $2,000. Call 814-7457.
on it. Priced reasonable. B82-7043
9090-YDunay, air_sitename.resantec, rev.gsx, gsx
oil if. PFI response code: 894-194
7950 DXLAM, air, alters-case-machine, req. gas, exit
7950 DXLAM, air, alters-case-machine, req. gas, exit
Clothes dryer, Kenmore electric, brand new, white.
Debbie 842-802-1080 at 8:10 p.m.
NFLM $200.00 (no taxes, plus tax-exemption)
NAD 20 att air/prem-appr, $101, or best offer
411-4988
Globe dress, Kemore electric, brand new, white.
Demand 84,600床
Workforce 10,900 workper hour.
Straightforward. Call Dave 643-2270
after worship or 5:00.
KU-MI football ticket, Cheap $41.95
Kwaii Comics edition of Marvel, DC,
Pacific, and new back issues. Science fiction,
Undergrounds, Spanish愈多, too. 70 W 71th
Floor.
KU-MU football ticket. Cheap. Call 841-8340.
Save! Government typewriters, IBM electric, $150
revenued weekly; 841-4144
Off season training 1923-304 c y驹. Huns well. New paint. High back bench. Host offer. 841-5348. Fully licensed equipment, all 12 speakers, rented. $200 or best offer. 841-7932. Pioneer XS70 receiver and PL314 palatable刀.
TENNIS RACKETS】Recently received selection
newedised Head Comp, Wilson Advantage, Kramer
Pr皇 Staff. Dumplop Maxuay, Davis Class. Prince
Kramer if you in good condition. 842471
@ 4.0 p.m. on f.
TV (8) & W $ 41. Blake (8 speed) 83.5 ¥ 9.0 p. 864.4000.
Technische Cassette Deck 76% top of the line when new, front loading. Excellent condition. Call 841 5174.
Penumbra. Pintak 6700 flash (umt). Flash 1528.
Pintak 6700 flash (umt). Flash 1528.
SZUKI 5006T, 1957, 12,000 miles, rum and look great, must have. 749-1081
FOUND
1 pair of pre-cleaned glass floors on 9 floor indoor
restroom of Prescott Hall, Monday. Call 780-4100 at
floor 1.
Found Ladies' wristwatch, gold-fine, Dyche
Aidronium after its FUSION movie, Call #816@835 & em.
For sale at New York Comics.
Found Sunday on Watson steps one white longwhale male cat, light green eyes, fond of back on head.
I lost my propryl prescription glasses in a binge case with Maryroe's 'glasses' on the case. Help!
LOST: A small book of addresses between McBullham Hall and campus. Includes all my memory books at the library.
LORSF 10" gold chain with Delta Gold lavalier,
with a deep, sentimental value; reward if returned.
LDSH. pylon biblon at Wednesday November 3
University drive between Hall and campi-
sion 108.
SHAWN LEE
LAST. brown/bighorn/cream striped scarf 11/12/83
Reward: 82,000 miles away
Male gray kite jacket with black stripes and white collar.
Heward offered 1221 & Kentucky, 842-3244.
HELP WANTED
EARM 12M this summer painting painting in your own
art center! This will be November 28. AM壁画
Center Interviews will be Nov. 28. AM壁画
Center Interviews will be Nov. 28. AM壁画
NURSING: FULL TIME PARTY TIME. Are You an In-
Worked - Week only work*? Either day, eve-
ning, or night shift! One day per week, or two days
per week! We have opportunities for registered nurses are now available at the Topeka State Hospital. We provide a liberal
range of nursing positions away from nursing awake, we can work back in your home. We all work together and support each other.
And, we have increased salaries 60%, AND NOW
we have increased hours 120%. And, we have
Beverly Anderson, RN, director Nursing, Topeka
State Hospital 260 W 5th Street, Topeka, Kama-
sie.
STAND TOGETHER. Special Kids Need Special People. The STAND TOGETHER PROGRAM is curricular and recreational for children who vocates for handicapped students who are wards of the State of Kansas. There is a particular need for special education programs for these children. These children need someone to represent them in all aspects of their special education programs. Parents, teachers, and caregivers with the child, reviewing the special education programs, and attending occasional school conferences may be required for two or two hours per month to stand together with a handicapped student for more information. 1-800-332-6822
OVERSEAS JOURNAL. Summer year round, Europe, Spain, and Latin America. Write for Info. Write LC best & LCM best. Shipbrokered from: Info. Write LC best & LCM best.
A Special For Students, Haircouts - $7 Perm. $22
Charms 130% Illus. M45 843-2604 for Adeen Jensen
A Strong Kool outfit - Bennett Titaly Liquid Coated
Haircuts 844 Illus. 844-0728, north Memorial
Stadium. 844 Illus. 844-0728
Secretarial assistant needed 10-20 hours per week; for typing and library work. May be more or less hour, flexible schedule. Must be KU student. Call Kristin Maithe at daily at 8:36-9 or Malcolm Chalote at daily at 8:36-9.
EXCELLENT WORKING CONDITIONS Join a first class team & have fun while you work. Gumbo's Hiring waitresses must be perquisite and 32. No driving or compass commission and fees, flexible hours. Mike or Daytime applicants please enter through double doors on south side of building at end east. 100 IHWU.
Freshman - Scholarships available, 1/1 not too late to enroll in Naval ROTT. FCC: 664-1351.
Student technical write half-time. The University of Kansas Academic Computing Center is seeking an academic position in computer applications, software, and general computer usage. Assist also with workshops, seminars, and other technical training programs demonstrated skill in technical writing and student research. Job duties include research in English, language or related area. Salary is $375-$475 per month Send resume, letter of application, and reference to KU Academic Computing Center, University of Kansas, P.O. Deer Park, KU.
PERSONAL
ENCORE COPY CORFS. We photocopy
environments, 810 W.W.30th-Florida Plaza.
B. H. Thanks for being here, and for being the brave one we never have. Have a super 24 hour day to celebrate you!
047-7117
AIRLINE HOTLINE
Make Your Thanksgiving & Christmas Resolutions Today
Fares Are Increasing and Seating Is Limited, Call Today
Reservations Today
841-7117
Southern Hills Center
1601 West 23rd
M-F 9:3-5 * 30:1, 9:3-20
CARTOON-GRAM from now thru holiday season-
special discount prices. Poster size, full color,
hand delivered. Put your friends in cartons! The creative
gift for the imaginative person. CARTOON-GRAM
COME HEAR HOW SOCIETY ALLOWS YOU TO LIVE. David Grie speaking on "Homeowners and the Law" 7:30 p.m. Thursday in the International Room of the Room.
COMPENSIFIES HEALTH ASSOCIATES: early care of children in the community; care deintensifikatelnikom Kampanyi area City Call: 623-412-5900 (Joshua R. Smith).
Can't seem to find your favorite bottle of wine? FormFit's wine selection includes over 600 bottles of wine.
4c Copies
Self-Serve Good Quality
Encore Copy Corps 2112 W.25th
EDUCATION
Encore Copy Corp
2112 A West 25th Lawrence, Kansas
(Holdings Plaza)
(804) 769-3500
Dear A.C., a lesbian friend of mine is a pediatrician. Unfortunately she has to lead a reclusive lifestyle because the AMA can revoke her license if they discover her sexual preference in their application. *Applaud*.
Dear Guest: In some places you can & some places you can't. Learn your rights at 7:36, Thursday, http://www.usda.gov/usda/pages/careers/find-usda/
Dear A.L. I want to bring my lover to the office Christmas party. M: name is Kirk, my lover's Greg. Y: I'm a doctor.
y
Dear Appalled: In spite of her fearfulness, I do know she has to be in recursive fear of losing patients, but I don't know she is protected by the law. Go to the Department of Law, 452 W. 6th St., and hear her Grand speech on Legal Legal Right.
COMMODORE 64≥
ONLY $595≥
commodore
COMPUTER
Computerark
808 W. 24th 841-0094
Hours: M-F 10-7 7:00
Foothills has Prenté for 80% of you when you mention this ad. Foothills, Holiday Plaza.
Don't get mad, get even. Send the "Bitter Bouquet."
Wilfred flowers delivered locally. Phone 412-6454.
ENCORE GCPP CORPS is your one stop thesis shop
212 W. Hilda. Holiday Plaza.
For good quality, clean, affordable meal-to-table
and take-out dining in New Hampshire in the Marketplace. Tailor
New Hampshire to your needs. 718-490-6250. www.marketplace.com
Every Thursday roll back the rock on 8th. From 8-4,
p.m. listen to West Coast Salon's all odeals show.
Drink at the bar at 1900's prices with 45 Bud
Pounders.
For something special with a touch of charm from
their New York studio, 819 Main Street.
We are upstairs downtown. 841-264.
Give your body a warm break this spring-go to Padre Island with SUA. 843-9477.
West Coast Saloon
Manager's Special
2 for 1
Pitchers & Draws
7 pm-9:30
Open Jam
Drums & PA provided
All musicians welcome
2022 Iowa 941 BREW
841-BREW
KNOW YOUR RIGHTS? "Gays and the Law" guest
sparkles David Gerris; 7:30 p.m. thursday, Informa-
tion Center; 265-418-8898.
Instant passport, portofile, resume, naturalization,
immigration, visa, ID, and of course fine portraits.
Evality Contests. Judge selection of Marvel D.C.
Fantasy Comics. Pick a writer or publisher.
Underground. Spanish comics, too. 701 W. 708
Street.
New york lynn hahn, mum, rubber boots, winter coats,
snow shoes, jacket, backpack. Barnes & Noble $153 Indiana
Barnes & Noble Hand Hoe $184
PLIEGNANT and need help? Call BIRTHRIGHT,
843-821.
HAPPY 22nd
PFIFFER!!
AC
---
Presentable, interesting (not so young) male professor seeks company of healthy young (18-20) attentive and experienced students for conversation, music (senseful), sports, science, technology, science fiction, picture phenomenon, computer graphics. Send resume to 549-3222. Include name, address, telephone, descriptive paragraph. A picture is in helpful. Confidentiality statement.
NICE FIVER CLEARS. We prescribe a week in April for the 12th grade students, then a crested student with Summit Trains and The Court 84. The 13th grade students will receive a week of instruction.
Say if on a shirt, custom silicone linen printing. T-shirts, jerseys and capes. Skirting by Swirlman 749-1611. Schönne Wine & Keg Shop. The finest selection of wine grapes and soft drink of strong kogs. 1610 W. Briad. 843-3211
ICEABOD'S
WED. NITE
7-12:00
DRINK -N- DROWN
$1 For Ladies
$3 For Guys
2 miles North of city hall
The Kegger-Weekly Specials on Kogii! Call 841.9450 /
1/100 x 8.3rd.
Skillet's lager store serving U.S. daily since 1998 Come in and compare. Wildfall Skillet 1906 Mass.
**Television:** Television. Video Recorders. Name
Sterios. Get your phone number. Call them in the K-C area. Get your belt load. Then call TOTAL.
This week's password at Footlights is "presentation"
this month and receives 10% of 1 gift item. Footlights
BASIC CORE WIN 95/2000 (v4.01)
PROGRAMMING CORE WIN 95/2000
CORE V8 CORPS CORPS offers a complete resume
programming resource
Trouble with your lady? Send her the "Little Hug"
IMC/OEM & OEM COURTS drives a computer reservation service. 340-2601.
boquet. Only $6.00 delivered. 841-6254.
ENVIRONMENT NOW OFFERS a complete resume
Wednesday Live music from 8-4 HAPPY HOURS
at 1, 5-7 Up & Under below Janet's Tavern
To Steve's friends, mission accomplished. Thanks
(or your help), C.
What makes the birthday boy happiest on his birth day? Send him a Sirio G. O and see #82-0000.
Western Civilization Notes. Now on sale! 1 Make a list of items to be learned in Western Civilization. 1. Am exam guide; 2. For class preparation. 3. For exam preparation. "New Analysis of Western Civilization" available now at Town Clerk, The New York University Press.
Your pretty next A.M.K. Ich denk von dir during Thanksgiving. Eat a Brocken for me.
Going to the RUMI games at Step #3 The Triple Crown
Sunday, Jan. 26th, 10 a.m., Blue Springs MO, 11 miles north of Royals
Hall.
OLD & NEW WARRIORS UNTION TIGHTH!
Remember our military spring treek meeting. Be
in touch!
ets etc. presents skrips trips every weekend. Sleepwear,
bus, reservation, Group rates and bar chart cards.
Ski passes to snowshoeing.
SERVICES OFFERED
Alterations, tailoring and dressmaking. Experienced seamless. No job too small or large. 842.6664.
Alternator, starter and generator specialists. Parts, service and exchange units. BELL AMOTGVITE3
improve your dissertation, etc. with technical illustration (chair maps, small drawing jobs). #yrs
MATH STATISTICS Expert Tutor Math
Statistics Call Rob Rohm 843-606-6000
Math Statistics Call Rob Rohm 843-606-6000
Knew each ! LAWRENCE Driving School trained.
Know how to drive safely on the road.
Drive new move, pay later, transportation provided.
Trouble with your lady? Send her the "Little Hug"
bogout. Only 80 delivered. 841-6245.
MATH TYUOR. Bob Mearn, patient professional M.A., for 64 mm, group discount. 843-820-383
Stress Workshop Wed, Nov. 17, 2:30 p.m. Robinson Rm. 248. Everyone welcome
Students call April to have all your typing needs fixed and very removable. 824-911-601. Evertings phone number is 824-911-601.
TUTOR with good teaching experience in MATLAB
00:32, CS18, MSc. Engr., FREACH or MATLAB
00:32, CS18, MSc. Engr., FREACH or MATLAB
WRITE BETTER: Editing - Typing - Library Research, Vince Clark, 824.824.824
TYPING
ANNOUNCING, "TYPIING INK" A professional
typing service for your important papers, themes,
resumes, and dissertations. Spelling and grammar
checks are included. Correcting MLA,
Correcting Selective, Pickup/Delivery, 841-3500.
ATTENTION TOPERA COMMUTERS - 10 pc essential
computer software for Topera, Student Discount Call
Emails, Typewriter, Student Discount Call Emails
ADFORDABLE QUALITY for all your typing needs
Call Judy, 842-9745 after 6 p.m.
TYPING PLUS. Thes, dissertation papers, paperlets, booklets, lecture notes, posters, grammatical spelling, et al. English tutoring, grammar instruction.
Excellent typet will do your typing. IBM Selectric
will type them, reports, etc. 842-4068
Clean and fast typing assured. Call 814 4864 anytime.
Expert typing done quickly. Will help you with revisions.
Any paper under 78 pages does in 24 hours or less. Call 8-75 to $10.00 page maximum. -Call
Absolutely LETTER PERPECT typing editing
with the experienced Joan, Lela, Sandy
not just set up.
Experimented types will type letters, theses, and dissertations. HM Corner Selecting. Call Domas HM Corner Selecting.
Experienced typic - these, dissertations, term papers, mice, HM correcting spectrometry, Barb, after B. L. Fuchs.
Experienced typists. Torn papers, thematres, all their
texts, and other documents should be received.
Pics, and can correct spelling. Phone #452 6564
www.filmorelaw.com
Experimental grid will turn, open term paper, these
materials. The grid will hold the material, and it will
hallucinate. HC Cell 849-745-883 or 845-787-10. a 8 m.
e 16 ft. c 6 ft. d 20 ft. e 4 ft. f 12 ft. g 10 ft. h 16 ft.
Experienced typist for all your typing needs. Call Mary, 814-763-0291. Overnight warranty under $25
FAST, ACCURATE, AFFORDABLE TYPING.
EAST, 10 years experience. Call 843-7853 after p.m.
FOR PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myru. 841/4900.
For a good call test Dale 749-6356.
Former Harvard Med. School research secretary with type, turtle English. Reasonable rates. Call Nailman.
Have Selective, type professional. fast, affordable. Betty, 843-607, weekends and weekdays
In a face Paint Attendant, Clean Typing 855-3241
Calls 601-950-7882 Call 868-5281 at 5 p.m.
Call 868-5281 at 5 p.m.
nmental Typing: Dissertations. theses, term
researchs, letters, legal, etc. JM Correcting
Selects.
Reparts, dissertations, resumes, legal forms, graphics, self-correcting, Selective. Call
Shakespeare could write. Elva could wiggle, cry,
taint, paint. Call 842-4900 at 1 a.m. and seven o'clock.
Xerox 615 Memowriter Royal Correcting
SE508CD1 843-0675
MAGIC FINGERS TYPING SERVICE, 843-6129
WANTED
Roommate roommates wanted to share two baths. Bt5 plus is low if wanties. 740-618. Keep USING
Female roommate needed to share nice 3 bedroom apartment close to campus and downtown $125 per month.
Housemates wanted One inedible one in Han Uban
homestead home to camp in. Call-Pall 443-562-1091
I will pay $190 for someone to take over my contract I will pay 100 for someone to Naimah Hall. Call 744-2288 or 744-6530.
6
Male roommate for 2 bedroom trailer. One-bed unit utilizes $100 per month. Call after a183-5040. Male seeking apartment and roommate(s) for spring apartment with a183-6000. Keep trying.
NON-SMOKING MALE BOMMADE wanted by graduate student for December 1 or January through July 31. Nice 6 bedroom apartment in 3 years tuition $142,50 plus 10 percent. 842-1280 www.mastercareers.com
Roommate to share large two bedrooms. Lok of. wood close to house. Call 843-4542. Keep trying to find a roommate. Roommate preferred? "Fully" furnished 2-bedroom. house. Roommate required? "Fully" furnished 2-bedroom. house on Tues and Wed, 8:45-9:45. Keep trying to find a roommate.
1
University Daily Kansan, November 17, 1982
CU president says Clemson to stay home
By United Press International
CLEMSON, S.C.- Defending national champion Clemson will not appear in a post-season football bowl, Bill Atchely, president of the university, announced yesterday — apparently because it fares NCAA probation.
Atchley declined to elaborate on why the Tigers would not play in a bowl game. He said he intended to explain the reasons in a news conference next
The school has been under investigation by the NCAA since 1980 for alleged recruiting violations in its football program. Two former high school coaches were charged that they were offered money and other gifts to sign with Clemson.
Atchley's announcement, released by the Clemson sports information office, ended weeks of speculation on whether a star would be able to appear in a post-eason game.
"It am announcing officially today that Clemson will not appear in a post-season bowl this year." Atchley's statement read.
"Several bowl committees have continued to express interest in us, and we and all Clemson fans appreciate that very much. But unfortunately, for reasons I now plan to expel in at a press conference next week, the 1982 season for us will end with the Mirage Bowl in Japan on Nov. 27."
Clemson, 7-1-1 and ranked 12th in the UPT Board of Coaches national ratings, is scheduled to face Atlantic Coast Conference foe Wake Island in Tokyo. "It has been a great season for a
"It has been a great season for a great team," Aitchley said.
"I can't praise highly enough these young men who have played under enormous adversity all year. They have responded with confidence and are, and there's no doubt at all that they will continue to do so in our last two games."
MIS
The
COMPUTER STORE
1000 Iowa 841-0066
FRESHMEN
NAVAL ROTC
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AVAILABLE
STOP BY 115 MILITARY SCIENCE
OR
CALL 864-3161
TONIGHT IS
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Refills:
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7.00-8.00 ... $0.75
8.00-9.00 ... $1.00
9.00-10.00 ... $1.25
10.00-11.00 ... $1.50
11.00-11.45 ... $1.75
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TICKETS:
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This time he's fighting for the life.
FIRST BLOOD
7:30, 9:20 Mat. Sat. 2:18
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Mat. Sat.
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CINEMA 2
CLASS REUNION
at Lumiere 3:00p
MISSOURI 37
Missouri tight end Andy Gilber will lead the Tigers' offense against the Kansas Jayhawks Saturday in Columbia, Mo., in the season finale for both teams. Gilber has caught 24 passes for 437 yards and three touchdowns this season.
This week's foe
By TOM COOK Associate Sports Editor
Bv TOM COOK
No matter how badly a team plays during the season, certain rivalties tend to bring out the best in the players. The Kansas-Missouri game Saturday should be no different, said Tigers coach Warren Powers.
Powers said he thought the game would be close despite poor records and inconsistent performances by each team.
"History shows that in this game, you throw out everything that's happened during the season," he said. "We need to come over here and play us tough."
Both squads are struggling with only one conference victory each. The Jayhawks are 1-4-1 in the Big Eight. Missouri's record stands at 1-3-2.
It has been four years since the Jayhawks finished with fewer than two conference victories in a season. Bud Moore was the KU coach and the Jayhawks went 1-10 with no Big Eight victories.
defense shines
MISSOURI HAS not experienced a one-victory conference record since 1971 under coach Al Onofrio.
But finding a permanent quarterback to throw to them has been Missouri's thorn. Marlon Adler, a sophomore walk-on from Winfield, Kan., is the first of four players pleted 69 of 123 passes for 1,044 yards, nine interceptions and six touchdowns.
But the Tigers have had their ups and downs this season, and it may be hard to tell which Missouri team will show up for the season finale.
CAVER, WHO leads the Big Eight with 37 catches, and Gibber, who has 24 receptions, have been two of Missouri's top weapons.
The Tigers, 4-4-2 overall, have shown signs of being a strong football team. However, they have been unable to secure starting roles for many of their players, and the frequent changes have burl
"I have the utmost respect for the program and the job done by Warren Powers at Missouri," said Fambrouch. "Defensively, they're strong. Their secondary, as a whole, is as good as any in the Big Eight."
offense to scare you to death. They have excellent receivers in James Caver and tight end Andy Gibler."
While the offense has fluttered, the defense has been more than good, according to KU coach Don Fambrough.
Bobby Bell, 6-3, 202, junior; Randy Jostes, 6-2, 257, senior; James Lockett, 6-4, 258 senior; Kill Skilman, 6-2, 259, junior; anchor the defense line.
THE TIGERS' SECONDARY ranks No. 1 in the country against the pass. The Tigers give up an average of just 114.9 yards a game through the air, 63 yards better than the Kansas secondary, which ranks No. 4 in the NCAA.
The defense, laden with seniors, is led by defensive backs Demetrius Johnson, Kevin Potter and Raymond Hairston Johnson. 6-foot, 185-pound Hairston Johnson, Hairston 6-2, 182-pound free safety, each have three interceptions.
Brad Perry backs up Adler at the signal-calling position, and the two often share time in each game. His statistics are nearly equal to those of Adler's, as he also has completed 69 of 123 passes for six touchdowns. Perry has thrown for 827 yards and eight interceptions.
"offensively, Missouri has had its ups and downs," Fambrough said. "But they have enough skill people on
In the starting backfield, sophomore fullback Tracey Mack and freshman tailback Santiago Barbosa have rushed for 399 and 363 yards.
In addition to his quarterback skills, Adler is also the punter. Since taking over the punting job in the fourth game, Adler has averaged 41.4 yards.
MARKETING YOURSELF
A WORKSHOP DESIGNED TO IMPROVE AND ENHANCE INTERVIEWING SKILLS AND RESUME WRITING TECHNIQUES
Friday, November 19, 1982 3:00-4:30 p.m.
Regionalist Room, Kansas Union
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION PLEASE CONTACT THE WOMEN'S CENTER, 864-3552.
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The University Daily
KANSAN
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
Thursday, November 18, 1982 Vol.93, No.64 USPS 650-640
Dan Bishler/KANSAb
Joe McGowan, Overland Park Leawood freshman, checked outside the Kansas Union for Senate elections. Ballot boxes.
freshman, left, and Scott Jury,
identification cards yesterday
students voting for the Student
will be at the Kansas Union, at
Wescoe, Lindley, and Green halls and on the sidewalk between Summerfield and Haworth halls. All polls will close at 4:30 p.m. today.
Militia leader denies role in killings
By United Press International
JERUSALEM - the commander of an Israel-backed Christian militia denied yesterday his forces took part in the massacre of Palestinians, saying survivors had been to see his troops' imagination.
Mai, Sad Haddad told an Israeli commission investigating the Sept. 16-18 massacre that survivors were confused because Christian killings were being killed were similar Israel-supplied uniforms.
"Some people said, 'We saw Maj. Hadj. himself inside the camp.' What kind of story (is that)?" Haddad told interrogators who are now in their fifth week of hearings.
HE SAID NO members of his "Army of Free Lebanon," who are supplied and paid by Israel
and based in southern Lebanon, were in the two Beirut refugee camps at the time of the slaughter.
He did acknowledge that three members of the civil guard, which he said was organized by Israel and was loosely under his command, went without his permission to West Beirut on a private visit, but were far from the Sabra and Chatila camps.
EGYPTIAN PRESIDENT Hosni Mubarak said yesterday he would welcome Palestine Liberation Organization leader Yasser Arafat to the United Nations and assured the need to address the Palestinian issue.
Haddad, a feared renegade Christian Lebanese army major, has controlled a strip of land in southern Lebanon on the Israeli border since the beginning of the war. The Jewish state from Palestinian guerrillas.
Mubarak told a six-man U.S. congressional delegation that Egypt was still committed to the Camp David peace process with Israel, but that it had been undermined with the participation of other countries.
Israel has been highly critical of Egypt's attempt to help the PLO diplomatically following its expulsion from Beirut, but Egyptian officials brushed aside the Israeli objections.
He said a similarity in uniforms would explain how his forces could be confused with the Phalangists, who are widely believed to have casually out the slaughter of old men, women and children.
In Tel Aviv, Foreign Ministry officials said yesterday they expected preliminary talks on Israel's withdrawal from Lebanon to begin as early as next week, Israel Radio said.
Weather
New work brightens holiday job outlook
By MATTHEW SCHOFIELD Staff Reporter
There will be a 30 percent chance of showers today with the high in the mid- to upper 70%, according to the National Weather Service, which will be from the southeast at 10 to 15 mph.
Lawrence's traditional Christmas season increase in unemployment may not be as large as usual this year because of the opening of two business colleges, director of Kansas Job Bank, under yesterdays
Tonight will be cloudy with a 30 percent chance of showers. The low will be in the
Ed Mills, director of the Lawrence branch of the job service, said agriculture and construction layoffs usually pushed the unemployment numbers up in Lawrence. But the opening of Wal-Mart, now under construction at 27th and Walmart streets, will help the Grand Opening of Aeropilot Corp., 2901 Lakeview Road, will create about 150 jobs in the community, he said.
It will be partly cloudy tomorrow with showers ending in the morning. The high will be in the mid- to upper 50s.
"THAT'S QUITE substantial," he said. "We've got about 1,400 unemployed people — 150 new jobs would take up quite a bit of that. One new job helps."
Lawrence had 4 percent unemployment in October, he said, and that figure should remain steady.
Draft evader argues causes for resisting
The Lawrence economy is pretty strong in light of the country's situation." he said. "Unemployment might be a little higher than it has been other years, but it is not all that bad."
DARWIN DACOFF, KU professor of economics, said the that the unemployment rate in Kansas was much lower than the national rate of 10.4 percent, but that this was traditionally true.
Christmas season hire and the newly created jobs should help stabilize unemployment during this period, which usually is accompanied by a half percentage point jump in the jobless rate.
"The structure of our economy is different from those of other states," he said. "We don't know."
Philip Cawrey, vice president of the Gustin-Bacon division, said his company had decided to expand its operation in Lawrence because of the strength of the Kansas economy.
"The business situation in California was not as good as it is in Lawrence," he said. "California has higher labor costs and a very high turnover rate. Kansas is much more stable."
"We get a very warm feeling from Kansans,
"blood is running, head bracing,"
A LITTLE WARMER
Cawrey said most of the 50 jobs his company's expansion would create probably would go to local people, but some salaried people would be transferred to Lawrence. Most of the positions will be hourly, as openings for spot welders, heavy press operators and some sheet metal workers.
By BONAR MENNINGER Staff Reporter
he said. They're a good, hard-working people,
and they do well, the Kansas economy is not doing well
Our airline industry is in serious shape, and the farmers are really suffering from the low commodity prices," he said.
AS THE NEW year approaches, the airline industry should improve, he said, because of lower interest rates, which will boost sales, and the effect on the third phase of President Obama's plan.
But the farm industry is a different case, he said.
"The farmer is being hurt by the price in other places," he said. "The rest of the world has to improve its ability to buy American commodities to the United States improving economy."
FARMERS ARE BEING hurt by the international strength of the dollar, he said, because the prices in other countries are lower than those in the United States. Although no immediate relief is in sight, a turnabout in the economy as a whole will eventually help the farmer, he said.
A Mennonite who has been indicted for refusing to register for the draft said yesterday that the military institution in the United States has become entrenched to the extent that any criticism of it results in calls of "subversive" and "communist".
Senate approves allocations in final meeting of semester
Staff Reporter
By DON KNOX Staff Manager
Charles Epp, a philosophy student from Bethel College in Newton, spoke as part of the University Forum lecture series to a group of architectural Christian Institutes building on campus.
The 1982 Student Senate, in its final meeting last night, spent more than $32,000 of its reserve money in a little more than three hours.
It was by far the most money allocated in a single night this fall by the 66-member Senate, which approved a supplementary budget of $150 million to essentially strapped Recreational Services program.
Early in the meeting, the Senate failed to override the supplementary budget veto of David Adkins, student body president. He is now leading a fundraising ban $14,282 after a dropout by the Women's
Transitional Care Services, Inc., a Lawrence shelter home for battered and abused women
Epp was charged on September 22 by the federal government for non-compliance with the draft registration law, which requires young drivers to be designated by the drafting process in the event of war.
QUOTING H.L. MENCKEN, Epp said that people like himself who were resisting the draft were "tossing dead cats" at the icons of the Pentagon and government in an effort to inspire doubt and thought about the philosophical concept of war.
HOWEVER, AFTER volunteers and supporters of WTCS attended the meeting to protest the possible dental of the request, the Senate approved $5,010 in emergency financing for the group.
concept of war.
The 20-year-old spoke for about 45 minutes about the anti-registration movement and the differing philosophical and moral reasons for non-compliance. He then answered questions and responded to comments from the audience.
It was the second time that supporters had spoken to senators about restoring the request of WTCS, which had been denied funds during the 2015 annual supplemental hearings in October.
"My background is Monmonite, so in a way my basic convictions have been shaped by all that."
"It seems that this is a life-and-death issue to us," said Ruth McCambridge, WTCS director. "I urge you to understand that we are dealing with a potentially lethal situation."
Religion is a major factor in the resistance movement. The Mennonite Church has issued a formal statement of support for Epp and another Bethel student and indicted register, Kendall
He said he felt the non-compliance phenomenon had become a recognized and valid method of expressing discontent with the policies of the government.
EFP SAID THE protesters were motivated by concerns of conscience, although the Selective Service had given several explanations as to the reasons behind their actions, including on the part of young people.
lazy to go down to the poor town. "Since the Vietnam war and Watergate, you find a lot of young people who are skeptical and enial about the government's motives."
See SENATE page 5
"I don't think a lot of (the resisters) are too lazy to down to the post office," he said.
"Mennonites have traditionally been opposed to military service and violence as a way of dealing with other people."
WERKS
KIPP SAID MANY Christians found it increasingly difficult to reconcile the teachings of Jesus with the actions of the military system, such as the acceleration of the arms race and the United States intervention into Third World countries such as El Salvador.
Outlining another reason for non-compliance, Epp mentioned what he called the libertarian position, which states that the government has
See DRAFT page 5
City's residents retain small town philosophy
By KATE DUFFY Staff Reporter
It is a city of contradictions. With its population stretching toward 200,000, it is the 93rd largest city in the United States. Although a part of a large metropolitan area, Kansas City, Kan., has retained many of its small town manners:
Outsiders who visit the city say there is not much to do in Kansas City, Kan. There is no night life, no museums and certainly no easily gone alcohol. The mayor himself will tell you that his city is the "biggest small town in the country."
But don't get him wrong, Mayor Jack Reardon loves his city. He likes its size.
"When I get up in the morning, it takes me only three minutes to get to work," he explained.
Kansas City, Kan., has often been referred to as the poor position to its namesake across the state line. City officials will be the first to admit others seem to suffer from an inferiority complex.
"HOW MANY OTHER cities do you know that voluntarily change their own form of government?" he asked, referring to a recent vote to adorn district representation.
And most of all, he likes its people.
“This city has a real image problem,” said Dean Katerndahl, director of economic development “Residents say ‘we’re only a lunch break’; they should weinfit to build a hotel downtown.”
"The city is small enough to be governable and personable, so that the average citizen knows he counts. He knows he has clout. And what's more, he knows he can make me believe it."
Even other Kansas residents ignore the second largest city in their state, Katerndahl said.
A few years ago, Katerndahl found out that other residents were not the only ones ignoring his city.
"They just don't think of us as part of the state." he said.
"When we were trying to attract industry, we contacted the industrial realtors. They told us they hadn't even considered sending companies over here," he said.
That has changed now, Katerndahl said, especially since the city formed a special economic development committee to attract outside business. The city has been attracting an average of $1 million in new business developments every two weeks, he said.
Katerndahl said he thought the city's main problem was its aging industry. Heavy industries such as the auto assembly plants and the meatpacking industry have dominated its work force for years. And those industries have not fared well recently, he said.
This is not a new problem for Kansas City, Kan. In the 19th century, the presence of Kansas City, Mo., just a few miles away, stifled the numerous smaller communities on the Kansas side.
TO GET AROUND this problem, Kansas Gov. John Martin signed a proclamation in the 1880s that merged several of these small towns. The governor renamed the area Kansas City, Kan., under the advice of local bankers and band speculators who held private investors in the East would confuse the two Kansas Cities and direct more money their way.
In the meantime, the communities of Argentine and Rosedale were still separate and developing their own personalities. In Argentine, blocks of saloons and bawdy houses were well visited by the railroad men and smelter workers who lived nearby.
Rosedale developed around the railroads and grain elevators, and the church-going, middle-class community had little in common with its wild neighbor.
TODAY, ARGENTINE, a part of greater Kansas City, Kan., appears to have laved much of its roughhouse image. A mixture of small and large homes on the hilly streets built along the old river bluffs.
At the top of 37th街 in Argentine sits the Cross-lines Co-operative Council. Since 1965, Cross-lines has been working in the city's oldest and lowest income neighborhoods, forming neighborhood groups, a health clinic, retirement homes and anything else the low-income residents need to be more self-sufficient, said program director M. Myron Dice.
Cross-lines' latest venture, Dice said, is a
CITY TV show.
ST JOHN THE RAPTIST
CHURCH
MASSEG
Buddv Manzina/KANSAN
St. John the Baptist Catholic church is an important landmark in Strawberry Hill, a Kansas City, Kan., neighborhood settled by Croatians and Slovenians at the turn of the century. Much of the neighborhood has retained its East European flavor over the years.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, November 18, 1982
News Briefs From United Press International
Jury convicts ex-CIA agent of smuggling arms to Libya
ALEXANDRIA, Va.—A federal jury, deliberating only 4 ½ hours, convicted multimillionaire ex-CIA agent Edwin Wilson yesterday of smuggling arms to Liba to aid Moammar Khadafy's terrorist forces.
The seven-woman, five-man man returned guilty verdicts on seven of eight counts accusing Wilson of illegally exporting four handguns and a Colt M-16 automatic rifle from the United States to Libyan intelligence and army officials.
Herald Price Fabinger, defense attorney, said he would appeal.
U.S. District Judge Richard Williams scheduled sentencing for Dec.
17 on the charges, which carry penalties of up to 39 years in prison and up to $240,000 in fines.
Herald Press Fahringer, defense attorney, said he would appeal. The former clandestine agent still faces three other trials in Washington and was acquitted of conspiracy to murder a Libyan dissident on a $1 million "bit" contract, illegally exporting 44,000 pounds of plastic explosives and bomb devices to Libya and recruiting former Green Beret specialists to teach terrorists in Libya how to use the explosives.
President renews war on drug traffic
HOMESTEAD AIR FORCE BASE, Fla.—President Reagan stood beside a multimillion-dollar cache of seized marijuana and cocaine yesterday and renewed his pledge to "break the power of the mob in America."
Reagan made a dramatic visit to the front line of the war on drugs as he toured a drug-hunting Coast Guard Cutter and examined a display of weapons, money and drugs seized by the South Florida Task Force.
Reagan created the task force in January to stop the multibillion-dollar influx of illegal drugs from Latin America into the United States.
"I repeat what I said when I announced this program. Our goal is to break the power of the mob in America and nothing short of that," he said. "We mean to end their profits, imprison their members and cripple their organization."
95 soldiers killed, Salvadorans sav
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador—Leftist rebels said yesterday they killed or wounded 95 military soldiers in two days of combat, pushing to almost 700 the total casualties they claim to have inflicted in a five-week offensive.
The insurgents, who also charged that two Honduran army battalions were aiding Salvadoran troops along El Salvador's northern border, were indicted on charges of espionage.
Honduran military officers have conceded that 1,000 to 2,000 soldiers backed by artillery were stationed on the border to prevent Salvadoran guerrillas from crossing the frontier.
Journalists visiting San Francisco Gotera, 72 miles northeast of San Salvador, reported that the International Red Cross received 52 prisoners of war on Tuesday from leftist guerrillas in Morazan province, leaving the rebels with only a few prisoners.
Aid sought for prairie fire victims
BROOKVILLE—Saline County officials are seeking disaster aid at the state and federal level to help farmers who suffered $250,000 in damages in last week's land-consuming prairie fire.
Elmer Kern, director of the County Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service, said yesterday he had asked for implementation of the disaster provision of the Farmers Home Administration to provide emergency credit loans.
The FmHA loans must be approved by the state FmHA office in Topeka and Gov. John Carlin.
Kern said he had also requested implementation of the emergency conservation measures program of the ASCS, which, if approved, would reduce the number of fire incidents.
Kern's office had received 26 damage reports by late yesterday listing 128 dead cattle, 77 miles of destroyed fences and other losses of feed, a
F-A-18 not up to par, official says
WASHINGTON—Navy Secretary John Lehman acknowledged that the costly new F-A-18 fighter-bomber could not perform some combat missions without aerial refueling and that an external fuel tank might be added, it was learned yesterday.
Lehman disclosed in a confidential letter to a key congressman that a Pentagon hearing on the $40 billion F-A-18 Hornet project would be delayed until an "extensive review" of the plane's performance by the Navy was completed in February.
Navy test pilots conducted a six-month operational evaluation of the Hornet in its role as a light bomber and concluded in a report submitted Oct. 4 that it was overweight and could not meet Navy range conditions by flying 580 nautical miles with a full payload without refueling.
Production of 138 of the $22.5 million planes, built by the McDonnell-Douglas Corp. and the Northrop Corp., was authorized in June, 1981.
Ramp collapse kills 24, injures 50
CALI, Colombia—A crowded ramp at a soccer stadium collapsed at the end of a match yesterday, killing at least 24 people and injuring 50.
Fans in the upper level of the Pascual Guerrero soccer stadium "sprayed urine" down in front of an exit, causing a back-up of fans on
The ramp broke under the weight of the crowd, standing on the ramp in an attempt to avoid being hit by the spray, the witness said.
The police, Red Cross, civil defense and firefighters rushed to the scene to aid victims, who were taken to a local hospital.
Police said at least 24 people died and 50 people were injured. Most of the deaths were caused by suffocation, a hospital spokesman said.
War internees may get reparations
WASHINGTON—The Commission on Wartime Relocation and Internment is moving toward recommending an apology and reparations for 60,000 surviving Japanese-Americans put in internment camps after Pearl Harbor, it was learned yesterday.
The Los Angeles Times quoted former Rep. Robert Drinan, D-Mass., a commission member, as saying the commission may recommend up to 100 members.
One Japanese-American group asked for a total of $3 billion in reparations.
The commission is scheduled to meet next Monday in one of its final meetings.
The commission, which was established two years ago as the first official inquiry into the relocation, opened hearings in July 1981. It heard hundreds of witnesses in Washington and on both coasts.
Budget main issue in lame-duck session
By BRUCE SCHREINER Staff Reporter
Two Kansas congressmen think that instead of making progress toward resolving the nation's chronic economic problems and curing Social Security, Congress' lame-duck session may lay an egg.
Staff Reporter
The lane-duck session, scheduled to begin Nov. 29 and last for about three weeks, became necessary when Congress, during its last session, failed to pass any long-term budgets to keep the government in operation.
If Congress does not reconvene to pass new appropriations bills, the government will run out of money on budget spending and latest stop-gap spending measure ends.
SOME CONGRESSIONAL leaders, including Kansas Republican Sen. Bob Dole, want to spend the lame-duck session discussing ways of reviving the Social Security system and putting Americans back to work in unemployed Americans back to work.
D-Kan, and Pat Roberts, R-Kan, said the chances of the lame-duck Congress coming to grips with those problems were slim because of their complexity.
But U.S. Reps. Dan Glickman,
Roberts, who represents western Kansas, said Congress needed time to review the options reached by the special commission on Social Security and the recommendations by the administration before reaching any decisions.
"You have to realize the commission is considering over 80 options," he said. "I look for a great deal of discussion, but you are talking about one of the most important entitlement programs and a politically sensitive issue.
"NO TO GET Congress to agree so soon is not very reasonable. I wish we could do it, because it would send a signal that Congress is serious about under control. That would be a good psychological boost to the country."
Glickman, who represents south-central Kansas, said any jobs bill would cost congressmen a lot of money. Congressmen would be weary of a bill composed so late in the year. He said
Dole and several Reagan administration officials want to create jobs in highway and bridge construction by increasing the gasoline tax.
this hesitancy could hinder a jobsprogram linked to a 5-cent increase in the federal gasoline tax.
"I don't see a decision made unless a bipartisan consensus is reached, and right now I don't see that happened." Glickman said. "I think there are some problems when we come up in December with an emergency jobs bill.
"WE HAVE TO make sure we construct one that will armark the skills of the jobs bill to the skills of the unemployed. In the past, we have created jobs bills that didn't make sense in the short term or long term."
The lame-duck session also may be unable to agree on a long-term budget, Roberts said, because the Democratic House leadership, with Speaker Thomas "as Tip" O'Neill Jr., D-Mass, at the helm, may play the numbers game.
"I don't look for any long-term budgets to be ironed out because Tip is going to wait until his 26 new members come on board," Roberts said.
The Democratic House majority was increased by 26 members after the Nov-
GLICKMAN SAID some of the less controversial budgets, such as the State, Judicial and Commerce, and the Treasury Post Office budgets, might pass. But he said ongoing differences in the House could force several budgets to be financed through new continuing resolutions.
"I see a couple of things happening in the lame-duck session," he said. "First, I see Democrats flexing their muscles, and I see moderate Republicans shying away from the administration.
"It could be the end of the last hurrur for the administration if it does not wake up and modify its economic program."
One showdown Glicksan sees brewing in the lame-duck session is over defense spending. Glicksan said House Democrats were preparing to push for a $1 trillion defense budget, which could include scrapping the MX missile system.
Solidarity leader's trial enters third dav
By United Press International
WARSA, Poland—The first major trial of an illegal Solidarity underground leader entered its third day yesterday with police guarding the red brick courthouse in Wroclaw to prevent demonstrations.
In Warsaw, the martial law government suspended classes at Warsaw University's psychology department until school officials explain "the circumstances of the lack of classes on campus" and the official news agency PAP reported.
The students staged a one-day strike Nov. 10, apparently in response to the underground Solidarity's unsuccessful appeal for a general strike.
IT WAS BELIEVED to be the first time the government had suspended
classes for such an action, although school officials Tuesday suspended classes at another university in north central Poland because students "disturbed due to excessive use of alcohol" on Nov. 10, officials said.
The first two days of the trial of Wladyslaw Frasynkus were overshadowed by the release of former Solidarity leader Lech Walesa.
Frasnjuki, the 28-year-old mechanic who formed part of the five-man national underground command, has pleaded not guilty to charges of organizing strikes and demonstrations or the impiration of martial law Dec. 13.
with broadcasting illegal radio programs and distributing underground leaflets.
He has also pleaded not guilty to a charge of contributing to death and harming the victim, 31 in which three men were shot in the Wroclaw area. He also is charged
The government said Tuesday that what it releases "way essential in its blueprint," and it said the government would not be bound by that.
It was expected that the decision to lift martial law will be either proposed or adopted at the parliament session of July 13 — the anniversary of military rule.
Frasynniuk, a member of the 107-member Solidarity national commission, escaped internment and, as a fugitive, built up in Wrocław one of the strongest underground operations in the country.
Police, fearing protests in his support, put a heavy guard around the courthouse during his trial.
Defense sources said they thought the
prosecutor would ask for an 8- to 10-year jail term.
FRASYNICK WAS arrested Oct. 5. The Wroclaw underground was death further serious blows by the arrest of his successor and the liquidation by police of Radio Solidarity and underground print shops.
A Warsaw daily, Kurior Polski, said, "Frasynik is not questioning the activity he is accused of; he is only told that if it is supposed to have been illegal."
The newspaper quoted Frasynik as telling the court, "After 16 months of activity within the democratic structures of the union, of the struggle for freedom and civil rights, I would not be able to live in any system forced upon me by martial law."
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University Daily Kansan, November 18, 1982
Judge doubles Bell's penalty
By CAROL LICHTI Staff Reporter
A Douglas County District Court judge yesterday ordered KU running back Kerwin Bail to complete 40 hours of community service work before Dec. 17 or be sentenced for drinking alcohol as a minor.
Bell, Huntington Beach, Calif.
junior, pleaded guilty yesterday to drinking under age at a private club.
702 New Hampshire St, on March 11.
The maximum sentence for consuming alcohol as a minor, a misdemeanor or a felon is three years.
Judge Mike Elwell said he would delay sentencing, but if the 40 hours of community service work were not completed by Dec. 17, Bell would have to accept the consequences of his actions.
BELL, 20, SIGNED a diversion agreement April 13 to do 20 hours of community service work in exchange for dropping the drinking as a minor
charge. The court granted Bell six months to complete the work at the Lawrence Arts Center.
Division agreements allow offenders to do community service work as payment for offenses. The charges against defendants who sign division agreement contracts are completed. The offense then does not appear on the person's record.
According to court records, Bell did not complete any hours of work during the six-month period. Ann Evans of the Lawrence Arts Center wrote on the form submitted to Bell's file, "I have never seen him."
tell was scheduled to enter his plea at 11 a.m. yesterday, but arrived at the courtroom before left the bench. Elkow was called back into the courtroom to hear the plea.
"YOU HAVE WASTED the court's time and everybody else's time by signing the diversion agreement and not following with it." Elwell
He asked Bell why he signed a
diversion agreement for the offense when he never intended to complete the work. When no explanation was given, he was instructed not to understand the agreement when he signed it.
Bell said that he understood the agreement, but that he was unable to receive it.
Bell's lawyer, Halley Kampschroeder, told Elwell it was the first time Bell had had a problem with the court. He said that Bell should have to take care of that problem but Bell did not aggravate the circumstances.
NO TIME EXTENSIONS would be granted to complete the work, Elwell told Bell.
The type of work Bell might have done at the arts center would have involved a variety of things such as office work, running errands, moving furniture and maintenance work, Ann Evans said.
Bell was scheduled for trial yesterday afternoon, but because he entered a guilty plea the trial was not necessary.
RAs won't have access to grades of residents
Resident assistants will not be able to see the grades of students on their floors next semester, but they will know which students are on academic probation, the head of the residential programs said yesterday.
"The focus of our endeavor is to assist students to reach their academic and personal goals, which I think is consistent with the rest of our efforts," said Fred McEhlenie, the director of ORP.
AT THE BEGINNING of the spring semester, the resident assistants and residence hall directors will meet to discuss the confidentiality of the information and applicable hall and campus resources for students with faltering grade point averages, McElhene said.
Then, within two weeks after
spring classes start, the RHDs will tell RAS which students are on academic probation. The RAS should approach those students to offer information about available resources. McElhene said.
"We want to make sure we haven't missed any opportunity to give out information students might need," McEhlene said. "Our motive is not to use probation as some kind of club, but rather as a help."
CARYL SMITH, dean of student life, said the emphasis of the program would be on freshmen and sophomores, because they often lacked adequate academic support and academic success records.
McEhlenie said that although some students might be offended by the RA's offers of assistance, it was a risk that had to be taken any time one person reached out to help another.
Crew suggests how to make shuttle more like home
By United Press International
HOUSTON—Crewmen from the space shuttle Columbia yesterday prepared reports on their flight, wrote in the shuttle a better home for a crew of four.
Meanwhile, experts from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration began testing two faulty spacecraft in the midst of the construction of the shuttle's planned spacewalk.
The space agency yesterday also unveiled a large communications satellite that will be launched in January or then in February. Russia officials said the satellite would revolutionize the way mission control kept tabs on spaceships.
The newspaper Soviet Russia, however, again charged yesterday that the United States planned to use the space of a nuclearization of space in preparation for war.
DESPITE U.S. attempts to emphasize the commercial aspects of the shuttle, the newspaper said, "It is no secret that the entire shuttle space program has, above all, military importance."
Astronauts Vance Brand, Robert Overmeyer, Joseph Allen and William Lenoir were back in Houston yesterday for observations of the five-day mission.
Among the things Overmier not were a need for better food trays. He also suggested that NASA include curtains in the shuttle to add a little
INVESTIGATORS SAID the shuttle, still at Edwards Air Force Base, Calif., where it landed Tuesday was in good condition. The number of more than 10 million miles in orbit,
Jim Harrington, ground operations chief, said the only obvious damage was a flat tire and the loss of four of the tanks. The insulating tiles covering Columbia's body
He said the inbound wheel on the left-hand landing gear apparently locked when the astronauts put on the brakes, shredding one side of the tire and causing it to go flat. One goal of Columbia's flight was to brake as hard as possible after landing.
Harley Stutesman, a member of the team investigating the space suits, said the $2 million suits would be flown from California to Houston tomorrow.
EACH SUIT WILL travel in its own plane, he said, because they are so precious that no chance can be taken where might be lost in a single plane crash.
On the mission, a vital fan motor in Allen's backpack did not run, and a regulator valve in Lenoir's backpack let oxygen pressure drop below NASA's standards. Neither problem had appeared during extensive ground tests, and Stutesman said it would be difficult to tell whether mechanical failure or some fluke of operating in zero-gravity was at fault.
and gold communications satellite received finishing touches. It will serve as both an orbiting tracking station and its mini-purpose radio switchboard in space.
At Kennedy Space Center, the blue
"IT IS THE most powerful, most sophisticated and largest communications satellite built to date," said Neville Barter of TRW Inc., the company that built the satellite in Redondo Beach, Calif.
The satellite, along with a twin to be launched in July, will replace most of the ground tracking stations now used to communicate with space shuttles and unmanned satellites. Once both of the new satellites are working, astronauts will be in contact with mission control for 85 percent of each mission.
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The university would be able to buy annual subscriptions to 1,000 periodicals and 2,000 books with the additional $100,000. Howard said.
"That would be a major improvement." he said.
If the library fund for acquisitions is not increased and the additional money is not granted, the library may request that these subscriptions and book buys, he said.
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The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts presents The University Choir, Choristers and Symphony Orchestra in a performance of Beethoven's MISSA SLEMNIS
Robert Shaw, Conductor
Sunday, November 21, 1982
3:30 p.m. Hoch Auditorium
Lawrence, Kansas
All proceeds benefit the KU Music Scholarship Fund
Robert Shaw, Conductor
Musical Director and Coordinator of the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra
Sylvia McNair, Soprano
Elizabeth Mannion, Mezzosoprano
Norman Page, Tenor
John Stephens, Bass
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office and, on the day of
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All seats reserved / For reservations, call 913/864-3982.
Special discounts for students and senior citizens.
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Clinton Howard, assistant dean for the libraries, said the libraries needed the money to keep pace with the rising costs of books and periodicals.
The Kansas Board of Regents had requested the money in its 1984 budget
A KU official says the KU library system surely needs $100,000 for additional periodicals and books. That $100,000 was not included in the 1984 fiscal budget recommendation of the Kansas Division of Budget.
HE SAID THE library's acquisition budget had not expanded enough in recent years to match the inflation rate of acquisition items.
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Page 4
Opinion
Universitv Dallv Kansan. November 18. 1982
KU's done its fair share
The seven Regents institutions are looking down the barrel of employee layoffs and more budgets cuts in the coming fiscal year.
The dismal news was announced this week at Gov. John Carlin's budget hearings, being conducted in Topeka.
The State Division of the Budget has recommended for fiscal year 1984 that more than 250 people in the Regents system be laid off — 82 from KU. This is in addition to a system-wide decrease in that year's budget from the requested $453 million to $424.7 million.
The layoffs and budget cuts are still recommendations. But given the fact that the state is facing a $63 million deficit and a $153 million shortfall in revenue, the proposals should be taken seriously.
For KU's Lawrence campus, the Regents were asking for $104 million, but state officials want to trim that back to $88 million.
James Pickert, chairman of the Regents, testified at the hearing that the schools were willing to do their fair
share to help Kansas out of the problem.
But, he added, there is a limit.
"To force our institutions to reduce the quality of the services they provide to Kansans because of a temporary financial problem will create an environment that will adversely effect Kansas for years to come." he said.
This is not the first time that that concern has been expressed. Nor should it be the last.
KU cut back earlier this semester when the governor announced that cuts were necessary to counter the first revenue shortfall. All the while the University was striving to maintain its high academic standards.
A sampling of the result of that has been already overburdened professors who have been forced to take on more duties, offices without telephones, unheated classrooms that are cold to the point of hampering education and course syllabuses being sold instead of given away.
KU and the other Regents schools already have done their fair share.
Reagan must consider public works program
By HELEN THOMAS United Press International
WASHINGTON—President Reagan likes to point out that he remembers the Great Depression and the personal hardships it inflicted.
He has repeatedly recalled that his father, Jack Reingen, was fired on Christmas eve in that
"I remember what it's like to be 21 and to feel your future has been mortgaged by the generation before you," he said in a recent radio address.
In a new Reagan biography by Washington Post correspondent Lou Cannon, it is noteworthy that the president's father, an ardent Franklin Roosevelt fan, never missed passing out government assistance to the needy.
In those days, it is doubtful that Reagan thought of the New Deal projects as "make work and dead end," but as life savers. Over the years, however, he has developed government sponsored jobs and programs that eased millions of the hump in those dark days.
With 11.5 million persons unemployed, many lawmakers on Capitol Hill are beginning to wonder what is the nation's tolerable level for joblessness, and when does it become less than tolerable. They also are seriously considering whether a program to put people to work building and repairing highways, bridges and dams is in order.
The House Democratic leadership has been in the forefront of such a proposal. The Senate will vote on a bill to change the law.
Whether Reagan can swallow it is not certain. His spokesman describe such programs as a "quick fix" and say that he is seeking an solution to the nation's economic plight.
But a "permanent solution" to unemployment requires a permanent prosperity for this country and no economist on the current scene has offered the key to that door.
So far, administration officials have tried not to get too far on a limb in rejecting moves to have the government create hundreds of new hospitals. "Don't know when they might have to commiserate."
Chief White House spokesman Larry Speakes told reporters that the New Deal projects did not work. He said that a job like that "plays out after six months and dumps the people back out on the labor market, sort of the type that the Democrats from time to time introduced, and very similar to those they have been putting out for 40 years that have not worked."
When he was asked why creation of jobs for building highways and other public projects should be abandoned.
"Let's just wait and see how all these things come out."
But while the White House appears to be trying to hold the line, the Senate GOP leaders are reading the midterm election results in a different way.
I are considering a proposal for a $ 8 billion program that would be offset by cuts in military spending.
The projected increases in defense spending so far are sacrosanct with Reagan, who claims that the United States has to catch up with the Soviets from earlier budget cuts.
He is asking the unemployed to hang in there while he stays the course.
With a long cold winter coming up, even temporary solutions may be better than none in sight.
Helen Thomas is the White House correspondent for UPI.
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Core curriculum plan needed
It may be too late for some who, like me, soon may graduate without knowing or remembering how to solve a simple chemistry problem. But there is a plan being studied that I think could curb the instances of students who leave the classroom with basic skills of reading, writing and arithmetic.
KU administrators are studying the possibility of a core curriculum for freshmen and sophomores. The committee, chosen this summer to study the feasibility of a core curriculum, will spend three hours Saturday discussing suggested requirements.
Inherent in the committee's discussion of a core curriculum is the need for college students to be skilled in basics. And the earlier this knowledge comes in one's career, the better. Too often I think students overlook certain building blocks that would take the time it were required of them.
I think a core curriculum will afford liberal arts students the technical skills they too often lack. And it could provide the more technically required courses with which to incorporate the liberal arts.
One of the committee's four subcommittees has recommended a 34-hour course of courses. I don't think it will win instant favor with too many students. But the courses are necessary. Included in this curriculum are eight hours of mathematics, nine hours of composition and literature, five hours of a basic physical or science and three hours of public speaking.
The committee has the right idea. Some seniors graduate without knowing how to solve simple percentage problems, find square roots
or define a prepositional phrase. Perhaps if KU required, freshmen and sophomores to take certain basic courses, the University would produce better rounded graduates.
English and mathematics, some of the administrators on the committee think, should be two of these core requirements. How right they are.
From personal experience, I can vouch that the writing skills of many college students are atrocious. Often, I can count myself among these students. I have had to go through the Kansan, many of the news stories and
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editorial columns in the unexcoried versions would set many an English professor's teeth on edge. Somewhere along the line, college students have forgotten, (or maybe they never learned) good writing habits. Many cannot express themselves.
"The ability to write clearly and effectively is essential and must be a primary focus for any curricular change," the committee reported in one of its position papers.
And mathematics skills are particularly in short supply. I have suspicions that if algebra, geometry and trigonometry do not pertain to a student's major, they are never taken seriously and learned properly. The same goes for many of the physical and natural sciences such as
geology and biology. Why would it, a journalist ever need to know how a crystal is formed? Or why would I even care? I would hope my poor attitude isn't a preventative one, but I'm afraid it is.
Some may look at the suggested core requirements and crime. Nine hours in composition and literature? You've got to be kidding! Yet, those same people who crine are probably the same few who can't write a decent English composition. No need to worry, though. No one already attended ATU will be affected by a core curriculum policy. More's the pity.
One of the proposed required classes is three hours in the arts or art appreciation. That has to be one of the better suggestions. How many of you could tell the difference between a Monet and a Renoir? Or who can define realism and impressionism? Maybe this kind of knowledge exists in fields, but I think it is necessary if one wants to take advantage of what the University has to offer.
Having these and similar classes serve as a core curriculum for freshmen and sophomores would enable these students to apply these skills as juniors and seniors. It's not that we need to require certain courses, because many already have the necessary skills, so they need to be taken early in a college career, where they can serve as a foundation for further education.
Sometimes, one can become too specialized in his field to the exclusion of other important elements of a well-rounded education. Perhaps not all students suffer from basic skills ignorance. But those that do could benefit from a core curriculum.
Stereotypes not just in comics
Beetle Bailey is on probation.
The Traverse City, Mich., Eagle-Record has put the traditional comic strip on probation because its readers have complained that characters in the strip portray scifi attitudes.
Specifically, the editor, Jim Herman, said readers complained about the way the GIs in the strip leered at the buxom Miss Buxley, Gen. Halltrack's secretary.
The strip's author, Mort Walker, responded with a letter to the newspaper in which he said, "I am strongly against sexism . . . I believe in women having the opportunity to fulfill themselves . . . But I don't believe girl-watching is sexist."
it's an interesting dilemma. How far should comic strips go in portraying reality versus the ideal? And how far should newspapers go in describing what comics their readers want or need?
Newspaper editors have found that the comic section is the most sacred in the newspaper. I had my own small taste of that when I was an intern in Springfield, Mo., two summers ago. The editor decided to solicit readers' opinions before eliminating strips, a cost-saving move. He put a survey in the Sunday comic section. The number of replies was awesome.
As interns and flunks, it became our job to read and compile the results of the survey. The replies were, by and large, predictable. Doonesbury was fanatically loved by a few and fanatically hated by the majority. We read letters from readers saying," Kill it or I'll drop my subscription!" and those saying "Drop it or I kill myself!" It was poisoning the minds of their youth, the parents said. It was a funny funnies survey.
And what were the results? The interns spent two weeks reading the surveys, after which the newspaper thanked the readers for their help. The interns then intended to kill. Let that be a lesson to readers.
Donesbury was not killed, of course. Prince Valiant was slain, which upset many readers. Prince Valiant is a beautifully drawn comic, but the audience could easily read quickly and as dull as dishwater.
"My colleagues report similar problems. Hagar and Andy Capp glorify alcoholism. Garfield encourages cruelty to animals." Lily is a terrestrial typing. Lucy depicts negative female traits in her treatment of Charlie Brown. Superman is a racist. Smuffy Smith is vulgar."
According to Walker, his strip is not the only one under fire. The controversy over Doonesbury is the most famous, perhaps, but there are as many objections as there are strips.
Funny, I always taught Garfield encouraged cruelty to humans. Oh, well. Many of the criticisms are comic, but some are valid. Blondie, when she grabs Dawgwood's wallet and goes off on a shopping spree, does little to exemplify the image of a working woman.
D. E. M.
TRACEE HAMILTON
Comics, by and large, haven't kept up with the times.
Strangely, one of the few strips to actually present the "real world" is the much-maligned Donesbury, Joan Caucus' law school adventures prove author Garry Trudeau's open-mindedness. But even Trudeau admits his characters are woefully out of date. Zonker, Mike and Megaphone Mark Skackneyer are taking a hiatus to come out of the 60s and into reality. I was further amazed to read last week that the Nixon staff of 72 had held a reunion. Mr. Dutton was so desperate to depict reunion of the Watergate Bunch? That's almost uncanny reality. But the objections to Donesbury prove people really don't want a stir that's too real.
Is all the debate over comics really that important? Think about your childhood to find that answer. Comics are one of a child's first exposures to the written word. If we anesthetize those images with injectionable stereotypes, images or even words, we're cutting off our noses to spite our faces.
Newspapers, unfortunately, are seen as the perpetrators of these unseemly stereotypes simply by publishing the strips. Yet some newspapers do more to promote sexual stereotypes in their news columns than the strips ever could
An example of this is some newspapers' outdated insistence on using Mrs., Mrs. or Miss when referring to women. The Traverse City Record-Eagle is not a hypocritical paper. The city editor there told me the paper refers to women by their last name on second reference, unless the use of the last name would confuse the story. This is much the same policy the Kansan
Other newspapers, however, need to make changes. Too often a prominent man's wife is identified as just that — "his wife." Old-fashioned newspapers will describe a woman's physical appearance. Do you ever read about "her husband, a trim blond, fortiful"?
Newspapers can make great inroads into the prejudices and stereotypes of today's society. But they must first change their style of news reporting so that they are starting a house-cleaning of the comics page.
The University Daily KANSAN
The University Daily Kanman (USP5 60-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 181 Fall Street, Lawrence, Kannan 6044; daily during the regular school year and Monday and Sunday, half days and final periods. Second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kanana 6044. Subscriptions by mail are $13 per month or $3 a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $1 a semester, paid through the student activity fee. Subscriptions are $1 a semester, paid through the student activity fee. The University Daily Kanman, 181 Fall Street, Lawrence, Kanana 6044.
Editor Business Manager
Gene Genre Susan Cooksey
Genre Editor Steve Robbins
Editorial Editor Michelle Dunay
Campus Editor Mark Zieman
Retail Sales Manager Haru Hara
Java Developer Jana Neumann
Campus Sales Manager Laurie Laagan
Classified Manager Laurie Samuelson
Oberliner Herbier John Rutgers
Artist/Photographer John Keeling
Pearce Boettersman Mike Bambert
News Advisor John Advertising Advisor John Obernan
University Daily Kansan, November 18, 1982
Page 5
City
From page one
model block rehabilitation project in the Armourdale district. Staff members negotiated with the city for a year to get the project backed by community development funds — off the ground. Residents have done much of the labor in keeping the cost lower.
“WE’RE GETTING much more out of the dollar,” he said. “We’ve already started the second block, I guess the most heartening thing is the large amount of private investment spin-off that has occurred because of the project.”
Dice said he thought the city's biggest problems had been the tremendously divisive culture.
"I'm not one to slyy away from a political fight, but these were extremely bitter and dirty fireworks."
DICE SAID HE thought the city's biggest strengths were its ethnic diversity and stable neighborhoods, and their emphasis on family and community ties. People do not easily move out of their neighbors, he said. He told of a 'resident he knew from the Argentine district who got a lucrative job on the West Coast. But he returned to Kansas City after a few months because he missed not only his family but also his neighborhood.
Dice not only works in the Argentine district, but also lives there. He said he liked the strong connection with the city.
Other residents agree. During the city's urban renewal days in the 1960s and into the '70s, when the Mexican-American community in Armoudale was displaced, those in neighboring Argentine told city officials that they intended to stay put. As if to further drive home their point, younger families began building their homes on lots next to far older homes.
ACROSS THE KAW River, past the industrialized river bottoms with their aging meatpacking plants and warehouses, sits the
primarily_Croatian Strawberry Hill neighborhood.
By 1890, five national meat-packing plants had settled in Kansas City, Kan. The companies needed tremendous amounts of labor and attracted immigrants to their doors.
Most of the immigrants working in the plants settled in the bottoms near the plants. They came from Ireland, Creatia, Germany, Sweden and Slovenia, a part of Austria. When the flood of 1930 wiped out their homes, many moved up to the mountains had once been covered with wild strawberries.
STRAWBERRY HILL, more so than other Kansas City, Kan. neighborhoods, has retained its ethnic flavor. Walking down Thompson and Barnett streets can send a visitor back to turn-of-the-century Europe. Old women dressed in black, their lined faces showing years of hard work, have made sidewalks. More than Hill's residents are elderly. Many have lived there all their lives.
Matt Gindrich, 504 Thompson St., 73, can remember a time when there were 200 children on his short block alone. At age 16, he went to work as a doorboy, opening and closing the big cooler doors at the Armour packing plant. He said he remembered 300 residents walking daily across the James Street bridge at 3 a.m. to go to work at the big packing plants.
THE NEIGHBORHOOD hasn't changed much over the years, he said, except that people were able to fix up and enlarge their houses. It's still a quiet and crime-free neighborhood. And, he said, he still knows almost everyone who lives near him.
In earlier days on the Hill, families used to raise chickens and pigs in their small backyards. To feed these animals, Cindrich said, he and his neighbors would go down to the tracks, pick up grain that had fallen out of the train cars and carry it back up the hill.
Cindrich said, "Back in the '20s, we lived
across the street from a family. They were making whiskey and got raided by the police, who threw the mash on the streets. The chickens ate it and ran around and around.
"After that, they went to sleep right awav."
REARDON SAID the ethnic neighborhoods are one of his city's strong points. Reardon, himself from fourth generation Irish immigrant roots, said he was surprised by the ethnic groups effects on the city's history.
"We have a real strong work ethic here," he said. "Nobody ever gave us anything. We've got the money."
And he says the city's ethnic groups have lived together peacefully, in perhaps one of the few places where the melting pot theory ever worked.
"There are four Orthodox churches here," Reardon said. "There's the Greek, the Russian and two Serbians. When the Russian pastor died, one of the Serbian priests took over their church for two years, until the Russian community could bring in another priest."
REARDON IS perhaps the city's biggest salesman. He pointed out his city's highlights, the way a good salesman does.
"We have an extremely promising future," he said. "We're on the verge of immense growth. When I-435 goes through, we'll have hundreds of thousands of developable acres."
Perhaps the biggest thirst in Kansas City's side is its downtown. Reardon predicted that it would never be the commercial center it once was, but that it would eventually be an office and convention center. Currently, a hotel next to the Constitution Convention Center, Fifth Street and Minnesota Ave., would be the answer to Reardon's prayers.
"If we ever got that hotel, the rooms would be full. Up people from the western Kansas would have to pay for it."
"But it's a tough time to build and I'm not to tell you once this is Lake Tahoe."
no right to force an individual to do work he has no desire to do.
Draft
HE SAID THAT the government has damaged its credibility by attempting to prosecute the Pegasus attack.
"Most of the time guys like me could not take the whole thing seriously," he said. "They're bluffing and threatening that they are going to go out and prosecute all of us."
Another government action aimed at cracking down on the resisters includes cutting off federal emergency aid.
"I get a little bit scared about how we seem to be moving toward Soviet-type limitations on educational and academic institutions," he said.
Saying he thought most resistors would be willing to serve their communities or others to
compensate not serving or registering for the military, Epp added that he planned to work in Memonite volunteer service programs in the future.
AFTER THE PRESENTATION, several members of the audience took issue with some of the comments.
Another older man spoke up from the back of the audience.
William Kuchier, professor emeritus of geography, said he felt the government was attempting to do what was right, as it was not just to individuals, but to the entire nation.
"If everyone acted like you, (Cuban leader Fide) Castro would occupy the United States and kill it."
Senate
From page one
McCambridge told the Senate that 15 percent of women who used the shelter were KU students. She argued that the Senate was being asked to pay only 6 percent of the WTCS budget.
THE SENATE ALSO voted to give nearly $11,000 to KU's Recreational Services program after its director, Tom Wilkerson, said Robinson center probably would start closing earlier in the evening if additional funds were not provided.
"We have not asked for a funding request in three or four years," Wilkerson said, "and I apologize for coming to you with this request. Not having these funds wouldn't close Robinson totally, but it would reduce the evening hours available for faculty and students."
A REQUEST TO EARMARK $5,000 for the James B. Pearson Lecture Series also was approved last night. The lecture series brought Senate Majority Leader Howard Baker to KU
Adkins, the author of the Pearson Lecture bill, said he had talked with Pearson, a former U.S. senator from Kansas, many times about financing the newly created lecture series, and even proposed earlier this year that as much as $20,000 be given to the forum.
More than $2,000 for student salaries was cut from the recreation program's budget earlier, in addition to $1,000 in supplies and equipment not financed by the University.
"THE JUST PROVIDES a unique opportunity for the students to provide this University with a fun and engaging experience."
Sen. Gary Hart, D-Colo., will give the second Pearson lecture at 4 p.m. Dec. 9 in the Kansas Union. Hart is considered by many to be a contender for the 1894 presidential election.
Former Kansas Gov All Landon proposed that KU begin a lecture series several years ago. Augusta
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3. Paul Gowen—AKΛ
4. Tom Burkhead—ΣX
5. Rick Worrel—ΦΓΔ
Bar lights for each
member compliments of
Budweiser
DINE OF DEVENY
Heineken Beer
Maupintour
Miller High Life
Budweiser Beer
Pizza Shoppe
Pizza Hut
Minsky's Pizza
Godfather's Pizza
Mauk's Screen Printing
Sub & Stuff
Francis Sporting Goods
Ichabods
LRM Industries
University Sport Shop
FMC Corporation
Stephen's Real Estate
Nabils West
Westside Phillips 66
Jayhawk Automotive
Coors Beer
Rick's Bike Shop
Southern Hills
Sporting Goods
Phi Gamma Delta
Rick Hall
Steve Seratte
Grant Newman
Walt Houk
Beta Theta Pi
Sigma Phi Epsilon
Delta Upsilon
Sigma Alpha Epsilon
Pi Kappa Alpha
Sigma Chi
Alpha Kappa Lambda
Phi Delta Theta
Kappa Sigma
Phi Kappa Psi
Tau Kappa Epsilon
Briman's Jewelry
PROCEEDS FROM TOURNAMENT TO BENEFIT LAWRENCE BOY'S CLUB
Page 6
University Daily Kansan. November 18, 1982
Panel hears campaign gripes
The five-member Student Senate Elections Review Board yesterday reviewed campaign election audits and numerous complaints filed against the Momentum and Consensus coalitions. But the board, meeting in a two-hour closed session, declined to announce the results of action taken at the meeting.
Elena Brito, chairman of the Senate Subcommittee on Elections, said the board would formally announce its meetings at a meeting 5 p.m. tomorrow.
HOWEVER, MEMBERS of both the Consensus and Momentum coalitions confirmed yesterday that the board voted to assess a $50 fine against Momentum for violating campaign rules.
Terry Frederick, the Senate's administrative assistant, filed the complaint against Momentum, a firm based in New York, which includes on its campaign audit a $25
fee it paid for a registered trademark on the Momentum name.
FREDERICK SAID HE called the Kansas secretary of state's office and was told that Momentum's trademark application was still pending. He argued before the Review Board, however, that the registration fee be added to Momentum's audit.
Frederick said the board fined Momentum $50 for the violation, but Brito declined to comment on the incident.
In addition, Frederick and Momentum vice presidential candidate David Teopteren said the board heard three other complaints. Two, however, were dropped before the board could take action.
TEPOORTEN FILED A complaint charging that Consensus excluded gasoline payments from its campaign audit. The Review Board ruled in favor of Consensus, he said.
College Life stresses relationships
By VERONICA JONGENELEN Staff Reporter
College Life came to the University of Kansas last night, complete with the message that students may not know as much as they think about relationships
The event, publicized for the past two weeks simply with the slogan, "College Life is Coming," stressed the importance of Jesus Christ in the lives of students. Over 300 people filled the Kansas Union Ballroom to see a variety of skits and to hear Warren Calwell, a former college student who now travels with the program, speak on "Three Threats to Relationships."
The program travels to college campuses throughout the United Stes, using music, humor, and the message of Jesus Christ to reach students.
CALWELL SAID, "I'm here because
CALmwell is life made of relationships. The quality of those relationships will determine the quality of your life."
Calwell cited rising divorce rates as indicative of three common problems
The first problem stems from structural changes in society and in the family, he said. Family ties are not as important as they once were. As a result, there are fewer models for children to look to for guidance.
"Why is it that we can begin relationships with such high expectations, with such high hopes, and after meeting them willing to throw in the towel?" he asked.
"And TV is no help. General Hospital gives you no hope for developing a cure."
MEN AND WOMEN enter into relationships with different expectations and motivations, he said. Men often date for status or attempt to find out how much they can get from the woman.
Women, for their part, look for friends in their relationships, he said.
The solution to this problem lies in taking the threat and turning it into an asset in the relationship, he said. This can be done in two steps.
First, both partners should realize that differing expectations exist, he said. Then they should learn how to anticipate and express these expectations.
The second problem that spells doom for relationships is the idea of a 50-50 performance ideal. In this partnership, it amounts to 30 percent of all that is needed.
"THIS IS THE relationship where performance is based on feelings," he said. "The only problem with a 50-50 relationship is that it never works.
"As long as individuals operate under
50-50 relationship, they're
doomed."
The third problem begins with improper perceptions of reality. Calwell said.
"When they come, they blow us out of the water," he said.
Many couples fail to prepare for the challenges and problems of relationship, let alone their success.
Underestimating the self-centeredness of man, and the capacity of that self-centeredness to hurt, compounds the problem. he said.
In the early parts of a relationship, emotions run high and cover up this self-concern, he said. Later on, the problem begins to show.
Downtown group seeks role in redevelopment
THE SOLUTIONS TO the last two problems stem from one source — Christ, Calvell said.
"God said, 'Because of that self-
centeredness, you deserve to die.'
This is not the case."
The Downtown Improvement Committee, which assisted the Lawrence City Commission in selecting a developer for the proposed redevelopment of the downtown area, will meet at 1:30 p.m. Monday at City Hall.
The future of the improvement committee has been in question since Sizeler Realty Co. Inc., Kenner, La., is as developer of record for the project.
A CITY OFFICIAL said yesterday that the improvement committee would discuss the role it should play in the next 90 days, the time Sizer has to present a basic design proposal and financing plan for the project.
"I am convinced, men and women,
that Jesus Christ saves lives."
Dean Palos, a planner in the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Office who has worked extensively on the development of this pre-provement committee also would discuss the schedule Sizerel presented during a public meeting last week.
Pete Whitenight, chairman of the improvement committee, said work on the proposed project had gone well so far.
"I feel like it's been an open and above-board process and I think we've made a lot of progress," he said.
The City Commission, which origina-
lly authorized the committee, will dis-
cuss it.
THE COMMISSION was scheduled to discuss the role of the committee earlier this week, but deferred such discussion.
Several city commissioners have said, however, that the improvement committee should work closely with the commission in reviewing Sizeler's proposals for redevelopment of the downtown area.
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LAPWERCEPT
EXCLUSIVE
Six killed in top floor of burning house
Bv United Press International
JERSEY CITY, N.J.—A fire engulfed a three-story wood and brick home yesterday, trapping and killing a pregnant woman, her four young children and her boyfriend on the top floor.
The building had been ordered vacated and was condemned in March by Municipal Housing Court Judge Kevin Davis, The New York Times said.
The paper said the building, owned
by the father of one of the victims, had been condemned after an inspection that found numerous fire and safety violations.
Turned back by the flames at the top of the second floor landing. Laurie and another neighbor returned to the street in time to see "a big cloud of smoke" coming from the room and infant "After that we didn't hear or see anything," she said.
Eight relatives of the victims escaped from the second floor unharmed.
"YOU COULD HEAR the kids crying and screaming but there was nothing we could do," said Ossie Laurie, owner of a nearby laundromat whose efforts to save the victims were thwarted by a "wall of fire."
Killed in the blaze were Myra Reeves, 26, her children Vernon, 7, Lamont, 6, Michael, 4, Steve, 2, and her boyfriend Pertiller, 33.
Laurie, who sounded the 7:14 a.m. alarm and rushed into the house before
firemen arrived, said the woman victim, clutching an infant in her arms, was leaining out a third floor window and yelling "Help me, help me."
FIRE BATTALION CHIEF Vernon Nacion said units that responded showered the burning structure with
thousands of gallons of water before the fire was under control at 8 a.m. and rescuers could get to the top floor to remove the bodies.
Fire officials said the blaze apparently started on the second floor and spread upward quickly, but its exact cause was not determined. A space suit was not adequately ventilated, but is bound near the origin of the fire.
THE FIRST Lite BEER BOWLING TOURNAMENT
THE LITE BEER ALL STARS
THE LITE BEER ALL-STARS STRIKE AGAIN.
When famous bowler Don Carter invited 23 Kingpins to the First Lite Beer Bowling Tournament, it seemed like a great idea.
It was the guys who drink Lite Beer from Miller
because it tastes great against the guys who drink it because it's less filling. And once again, the All-Stars proved they're in a league by themselves.
After a lot of pins (and quite a few Lite Beers) went down and the smoke finally cleared, the score was
tied, with only one man left to go.
Rodney Dangerfield.
All he needed to win it was one pin. A klutz situation, Rodney, in top form, got the same amount of pins as he gets respect. None.
Teammate Ben Davidson felt Rodney deserved a break, or at least a fracture. Billy-Martin didn't argue with that. Jim Honochick couldn't believe his eyes. Neither could Marv
EVERYTHING YOU AWAYS WANTED
IN A BEER. AND LESS.
Throneberry.
So the First Lite Beer Bowling Tournament ended in a draw. And the argument over the best thing about Lite was left unsettled.
But there was one thing everyone agreed on. It was truly everything you always wanted in a bowling tournament. And less.
From left to right, Bubbs Smith, Dick Burksus, Frank Robinson, Jim Honobick, Ray Mtschke, Ben Davidson, Don Carter, Billy Martin, Matt Shell, Rodney Dangerfield, John Madden, Mickey Spillane, Lee Meredith, Buck Buchanan, Mae Thromby, Tommy Hennons, Boog Powell, Rodney Marsh, Steve Mizerak, Deacon Jones, Boom Boo Griffin, and Dick Williams. © 1982 Miller Brewing Co., Milwaukee; Wis.
University Daily Kansan, November 18, 1982
Page 7
Search panel to reduce AD list
The search committee to select a new KU athletic director will begin narrowing its list of applicants next week, members of the committee said yester-
Tomorrow is the last day it will accept applications and nominations.
the eight-member search committee, composed of students, faculty and alumni, will recommend several candidates for the job, and Chancellor Gene A. Budig will make the final decision.
Del Brinkman, chairman of the search committee and dean of the school, said that students have a lot to learn.
know when a final decision would be made.
"It depends on whether we have good candidates among those that apply," Brinkman said. "We will take whatever we can make sure we choose the best candidate.
A deadline has not been set for making the decision, he said.
"We can't make any firm decisions until after Nov. 19, but after that we will work on it."
BRINKMAN SAID the committee had already received 40 applications, and they were still coming in. The committee received 47 applications
when it recommended Jim Lesig, former athletic director, last spring.
Lessig, who had served as athletic director since May, resigned in October to become commissioner of the Mid-American Conference.
Six of the eight people on the selection committee were on the committee that chose Lessig following the Jan. 22 announcement of his predecessor, Bob Marcum.
Brinkman said the committee had been meeting weekly during November to consider applications as they came in, having them all until after the deadline.
Donations to give library new home
By BRET WALLACE Staff Reporter
Private donations will help the School of Engineering eliminate library overcrowding by financing an addition to the dean of the school said yesterday.
Dean David Kraft said the University had raised between 70 and 80 percent of the $1 million in private donations he built the addition to the front of Learned.
The school decided last December to solicit donations to build the library because the current site in the Satellite Union is too small, Kraft said.
THE LIBRARY has about 60 feet by
45 feet of space for bookhelves, and
30 feet by 25 feet of shelves.
The engineering library was moved to the Satellite Union during the renovation of Marvin Hall, where the engineering library had been combined
with the architecture and geology libraries.
Allen Wiechert, University director of the office of facilities planning, said the library would be a two-floor addition with most of the space left open for bookshelves and reading spaces.
The library will only serve an interim need until the new science and technology library is built, Wiechert said. Requests for money for the science and technology library are a top priority because the New Legislative session, he said.
THE SPACE in the addition will then be made available for for an auditorium or offices and laboratories, Kraft said.
Kraft said any money left from the $1 million would be used to make needed changes after the library was moved.
Wiechert said the last expansion of facilities for the School of Engineering at Penn State University.
to meet the needs at that time. Since then the school's enrollment has increased and facilities have not, he said.
THE KANSAS BOARD of Regents are expected to approve plans for the addition tomorrow, Regents and University officials said.
Warren Corman, director of facilities for the Board of Regents, said minutes of the Regent's meeting called for a review of the school's plans to Corman's evaluation and approval.
The Regents check the plans to see if they violate any board policies, he said. The state architect also will review the plans for structural soundness.
WIECHERT SAID he saw no problems getting approval from the Regents for the project.
"Since the University has gone out and raised the money, the Regents should look upon the project favorably." he said.
By DEBORAH BAER Staff Reporter
Cramming no way to learn Sessions aid in exam survival
Final examinations loom closer.
The thought sends students crawling into bed and into bars.
It sends some into reverence of giving up and escaping to Florida and others into daydreams of contracting a serious allion just before exams.
And one professor says it makes for an inordinate number of dead grand-mothers whose funerals, of course, are consistently during final exams.
But the final exam period can be survived even by students who have put their studying on hold for part of the semester, Sara Martin, assistant director of the Student Assistance Center, said yesterday.
For students who end up cramming a semester's worth of learning into the two days before a final, the most important message of the workshop is that semester planning is essential, Martin said.
MARTIN AND LOIS Gerstenauer,
also an assistant director, give
workshops on preparing for exams.
Two workshops already have been
presented this semester, but a third
will be given at 7 p.m. Nov. 30 in the
Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union,
Martin said.
Although students at the workshop are given tips on what and how to study, she said that the first step to final results was deciding when to study.
Thus, the first part of the workshop is on time management, she said.
Martin advocates making "to-do" lists every day, so that class material is learned during the semester and final period is left for review.
CRAMMING, she said, is a good way to memorize a few facts, but is not the way to approach a large amount of material.
"I think cramming is overrated by most students," Martin said.
Susan Kemper, assistant professor of psychology, said that when students crum, they usually read and write, and not just respond. That constitutes passive study, she said.
"Any kind of passive study isn't going to help at all. Active studying is what has to be emphasized," she said.
Active studying involves outlining the main themes in a text or set of notes and finding relationships between them. In a history class, the relation is temporal; in a meteorology class, they might be causal, she said.
In the workshop, Martin and Gerstenlauer said they talk about where to study, how to study with study when to quit studying for the night.
"It shouldn't be too late to begin if they're willing to do it," she said. "You just don't sit there and move your eyes across the page."
STUDYING ACTIVELY can be helpful even for students who have put off studying all semester, she said.
"You have to consider the point of
diminishings returns for staying up late." she said.
able state of mind and body most students experience during finals — tension
"Tension is a barrier between your knowledge and your conscience," Martin said.
So to boost confidence and relieve tension, she suggests that students not allow pannyicky friends to influence them, and that they arrive at the exam on time and take short breaks to relax during the test.
THOSE WHO FIND themselves unable to prepare well for all exams should carefully choose a few exams to compete in, and depend on the course earned so far.
"That's important if you've backed yourself into a corner where you can't have the ideal situation happened," she said. Many who come to the Nov. 30 workshop may not have studied Spanish or French, but they vage their grades. Martin said, but they will have the opportunity to learn what to do next semester.
THE TEST SKILLS workshop was offered for the first time last fall, she said, when she realized that test-taking tips she gave out at general stores could be turned into a whole workshop offered near the end of the semester.
"We'll say to them. We're sorry that you didn't come sooner,'" she said.
She said she expected between 50 and 100 students to come to the workshop, which is free.
WS
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Win a beer party with all the beer your group can drink!!!
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Note: The TKE's said they're going to win!
RUSH REGISTRATION
Wednesday, Nov.17 Thursday, Nov.18
Centennial Room
10 a.m.-4 p.m.
Kansas Union *Rush Fees and Registration Packet Due
Any woman who has not picked up a Rush Packet may pick them up at the Panhellenic Office, 119 B Kansas Union, Monday-Friday 8:30-4:30.
Are you wondering about when to get an MBA?
Talk to us.
Our toll-free number is open and we're ready to talk, call or write a call to us.
more and more, recent college graduates think they should straighten into a work. We think that's not always the case. The 75% of our student body who have withdrawn without full-time work in their undergraduate years are the students who have worked fulltime for almost three years, who think their experience has made all the difference in how they approach their job, in training. We will be glad to discuss what you think
(continued)
800/847-2082
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800/752-6326
10:42
CORNELL UNIVERSITY GRADUATE SCHOOL OF BUSINESS & PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION
Announcing a
Announcing a TURKEY SHOOT
Contestants Can Shoot
Sponsored by KU Army ROTC Recondo
Contestants Can Shoot
FRI—11th Nov—10am 4pm
SAT—12th Nov—8am 10am
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1st Place-Turkey
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2nd Place—Ham
3rd Place—2 Chickens
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WEAPONS AND AMMUNITION
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JAYHAWK SINGLES HANDICAP BOWLING CLASSIC
First Annual
When? Tuesday Nov. 30, 1982
---
6:00 pm & 8:00 pm
Where? Jay Bowl - Kansas Union
Who?
K. U. Students/Staff (Part-time Students 3 hrs.minimum)
- Prize fund returned 100%
- Entry deadline Tuesday Nov. 23 at 5 pm
- For details call 864-3545 or inquire at Jay Bowl desk.
FREE BEER FOR CONTESTANTS!!
Sponsored by Budweiser Sponeored by Budweiser
Jay Bowl
KANSAS UNION
Jay Bowl
KANSAS UNION
Page 8 University Daily Kansan, November 18, 1982
VSA
Mark Arnold, Lawrence senior and member of the Phi Mu Alpha Sinifonia fraternity, reorganizes and cleans records and tapes in the Seaver collection at the Murphy Hall music library to help a pledge with his initiation. Because of the dust, Arnold must wear a safety mask.
ASK assembly seeks KU reps
By JULIE HEABERLIN Staff Reporter
Any student interested in being a delegate for the Associated Students of Kansas legislative assembly this weekend should contact the Student Senate office by tomorrow morning, the ASK campus director said yesterday.
John Keightley, campus director,
said that nine students were needed to fill the University's 29-member delegation.
Several times each year, KU delegates for ASK meet with delegates from the six Board of Regents schools and Washburn University to decide where students will be lobbying group based in Topeka, will focus upon in the Kansas Legislature.
"THE LEGISLATIVE assembly is the best way to find out what ASK is and does," Mark Tallman, ASK executive director, said. "And since it has been a controversial issue at KU, this is a good way to find out about the organization."
Every year since KU joined ASK, student senators have debated its effectiveness in the Legislature. This year, a student senator proposed a student referendum on whether the University should continue to participate in the organization. The proposal died in a Senate committee.
ASK members have maintained that criticism of their effectiveness is
"THE DELEGATES WE have right now are really representative of the camps as a whole, and include student senators and other students," Keightley said.
But he emphasized that any student, regardless of affiliation with a student group, was welcome to join the delegation.
The assembly will be at Fort Hays State University and begins tomorrow at 6 p.m. Committees will meet Saturday to study various issues before the commencement of the Western Hotel in Hays will off the assembly that night.
KEIGHTLEY SAID that students from the other universities had submitted resolutions on controversial, non-student related issues, but that the KU delegation would probably focus on increasing financial aid.
"I can't tell you how the KU delegation will vote, because it is a democratic process, but we are all ready to output (focal issues). Kouhliy said.
the last legislative assembly — that we will oppose any tuition hike that goes above the provisions of the 25 percent fee-cost ratio."
ASK is supporting what came out of
The 25 percent fee-cost ratio means that each student will pay 25 percent of the state's cost of his education at the University. ASK opposes any increase that would have students paying more than the 25 percent.
Mark Tallman, ASK executive director, said the ASK position on the fee-cost ratio could be controversial because students often misunderstood it.
TALLMAN SAID THAT by accepting the Regents' decision on the tuition increase, ASK demonstrated its commitment to improving higher education. He said the increase would make the Legislature more supportive of more student financial aid from the state.
Other resolutions the assembly will consider are; changes in the state rape laws, anEqual Rights Amendment to the state constitution, student financial aid for handicapped students, a state work-study program for students and the state scholarship program. The assembly will also discuss Social Security benefits and the state drinking age.
Military leading in Brazil elections
RI O D E J A N E I R O, Brazil--Opposition parties may win a few gubernatorial posts, but supporters of Brazil's military government yes. The winning control of the electoral college that will choose a president in 1985.
By United Press International
An estimated 50 million voters in Brazil, South America's largest nation, cast ballots Monday to elect 22 state governors, 25 senators, 479 congressmen and thousands of mayors and town councilmen.
The freest election since a military
THE OFFICIAL, hand-counted vote totals can take weeks but unofficial tallies on radio, television and in newspapers said the pro-government Democratic Social Party was winning in a majority of the races.
"The Democratic Social Party is confident of controlling the electoral college and is now starting to mobilize itself for the presidential succession." Carlos Castello Branco, leading political commentator, said in a column in the prestigious Jornal do Brasil daily newspaper.
The college, made up of 686 senators.
Weather slows center's construction
representatives and state legislators, will choose Brazil's next president in 1985.
First election returns suggested the government would win 14 of 22 gubernatorial seats.
Wintermere said that the cost of the building would not exceed the $5 million budget estimate for the alumni center, where he had been made to the building contract.
HOWEVER, BILL VALENTINE,
foreman for R.D. Andersen
Construction Co. Inc., the company
constructing the center, said 90 percent of
the roof was completed, and Winter-
land was most of the masonry was
completed.
Winnermote said that although the building might not be finished by late May, it probably would be dedicated during commencement.
By DAN PARELMAN Staff Reporter
Harsh winds and temperatures may push completion of the K.S. "Boots" Adams Alumni Center beyond the year. The Association association official said yesterday.
Dick Wintermote, Alumni Association executive director and secretary-treasurer, said the late May target, "always an ambitious date," but he added that the continued to slow completion of the bricks and construction of the roof.
Wintermite said that if temperatures dropped too low, the concrete might not be poured this winter. This could slow the project because the muddiness of the ground in spring could make pouring concrete difficult, he said.
H
ROCK-N-ROLL FRI & SAT OPERA HOUSE
coup in 1964, the vote was seen as a vital step in Brazil's return to democracy.
THE CENTER-LEFT opposition, the Brazilian Democratic Movement Party, clinched the gubernatorial race in the state of Sao Paulo, Brazil's richest and most populous state, with a victory for candidate Francisco Montorillo.
TALKING HEADS FEAR OF MUSIC Includes Cities Air/Heaven Animals
The first victorious opposition candidates said they would press for a constitutional amendment providing greater popular election of the chief executive.
SEX PISTOLS
NEVER MIND
THE BOLLOCKS
HERE'S THE
Sex Pistols
Includes: Backpack, Dust Sack the Dress
Attachment in the LR, Police Viscose
BIG SAVINGS
From Warner-Elektra-Atlantic and KIEF’S records
TALKING HEADS
FEAR OF MUSIC
Includes Cities
Air/Heaven Animals
SEX PISTOLS
NEVER MIND
THE BOLLOCKS
HERE'S THE
Sex Pistols
Includes Books, Documents, The Queen
Anthology by the UK (Purity Incident)
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SKLEETTONS FROM THE CLOSET
Include Pudgy
Uncle John’s Book of Charm and a Friend of the Devil
CROSBY, STILLS, NASH & YOUNG
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Furniture will be the next major expense, Wintormite said. The Alumni will continue their program.
THESE AND OTHER unexpected additions should be paid for by the $5 million that the Kansas University received from the university, raised for his center, Wintersmoke said.
Family and friends of Kenneth Adams, a former KU graduate for whom the building is named, donated $1.3 million for construction.
The original $2.9 million contract has risen to $3.2 million since Andersen made its bid in November 1981, Wintermute told. He said the additional $700,000 roof and the correction of unseasoned excavation problems.
in the next few weeks, he said. The firm of Kiene and Bradley Architects is now drawing furniture specifications, he said.
DAVID AMBLER, vice chancellor for student affairs, said his office had not decided which group would move into the office. The office recommended last summer that the office of student organizations and activities and the college center might moved to the Union when the Alumni Association leaves.
Meanwhile, the Kansas Union governing board and the office of student affairs, which have authority over the Union, are deciding who will move into the Union office that the Alumni Association now occupies.
Cuddl-Duds under your clothes keep you warm and still looking beautiful.
Cuddl Duds
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MICKS
Pedaling the BEST in outdoor FUN!!!
University Daily Kansan, November 18, 1982
Page 9
Telephone links professors to classroom
By BRET WALLACE Staff Reporter
The students gather in the classroom, armed with books, notebooks, pencils and scissors.
The lecture begins, but the professor is not in sight. In fact, he is not even in town.
The students are in one of 32 classrooms throughout the state offering a class through the TELENET program, sponsored by the Kansas Board of Regents, Gail Munde, director of the KU program, said yesterday.
Professors from the six Regents universities teach the classes through an open conference phone line. Munde said. Professors usually lecture to at the universities and the lecture is broadcast to the other locations.
A SPEAKER 18 is set up at the front of the classroom, and microphones are at their feet.
present to hand out materials, answer questions about the system and admin-
Wayne Osness, KU professor of health, physical education and recreation who taught his fourth TELENET class this semester, said teaching the courses was harder than teaching a normal class.
Materials have to be prepared at least two weeks in advance to get them to students in time, he said.
"I spend about twice as much time preparing for these classes as regular
"Preparing tests is difficult because you still have two class sessions left before the end of the day."
MUNDE SAID professors had to have personality in their voices or the classes could become boring. Usually, professors lecture, then the class discusses and asks questions. Students are asked to identify themselves and where they are from when they talk, she said.
Oness said he found that generating discussion was difficult, but Munde said she thought discussion in the classes was good.
The system will allow only one person to transmit at a time, so the first person to get to the microphone gets to talk, she said.
"This makes the discussion move pretty fast," Munde said.
More than 7,000 Kansans used the program last year. Many were professionals taking classes to retain their certification, Munde said.
ONNESS SAID MOST of the people taking his classes were professionals, such as teachers, allied health people, physical therapists and hospital personnel, taking the class to supplement their education.
Munde said the program was designed to aid people who were away from a university, but still needed or wanted to take college courses.
Few people use the program in Lawrence because most of the classes
offered also are taught on campus, Munde said.
Munde said she was taking classes to earn a graduate degree from Emporia State University. She has been able to teach all of the classes she needs through TELENET.
"I figure I save about $700 in driving expenses by taking classes through TELENET," she said.
ALTHOUGH STUDENTS do not get the personal touch of having the professor in the classroom. Maude Nebuchadnei would like to drive to Emporia for the classes.
Pictures of the professors are usually posted in the classrooms so students can at least see what they look like, she said. Professors are also encouraged to visit the out-of-town classrooms at least once during the semester.
"Sometimes they surprise you and show up and broadcast the lecture from your classroom," Munde said.
Alum director watches campus' growth
By BRUCE SCHREINER Staff Reporter
Gazing from his Kansas Union office across the sprawling and picturesque campus tinted with autumn shades of brown and yellow, Dick Wintermote has the satisfaction of seeing the results of his decades of work with the University of Kansas Alumni Association.
His 32-year affiliation with the Alumni Association, during which the group has surged to a membership of more than 50. Intermite the organization's patriarch.
"IT HAS BEEN fantastic and fun to
watch the growth." Wintermute said
It also has allowed the soft-spoken KU booster, who has been the Alumni Association's executive director since 2013, to opportunity to watch the University grow.
"When I was a student, the campus consisted of buildings on top of the hill. There wasn't much on the south part of campus and there was nothing on west
campus. And Iowa Street was just a dirt road."
As a 25-year-old graduate of the University in 1961, Wintermote did not envision himself playing a first-hand role in KU's prolonged expansion.
"It all kind of ironic, because I didn't have any particular thoughts about the Alumni Association, and I really didn't know much about it," he
"I was like many other seniors who didn't have any particular idea about what I was going to do."
SO WHEN ALUMNI Association officers approached the political science major about the possibility of his meeting with the group, the suggestion appealed to him.
"I had been involved in several student activities and knew a lot of people," he said.
"It's given me the opportunity to enjoy the university and the community. It also allowed me and my wife to remain close to our families and has allowed us to stay close to classmates here and return for visits."
His wife, Barbara, is also a 1961 KU graduate. She earned a bachelor's degree from the School of Fine Arts.
Wintermorte's office is filled with pictures of friends, including KU administrators and Kansas politicians, who have formed a team that has guided the University through its years of growth.
"IT TAKES involvement from a great number of people, administration officials, faculty; support staff and the Alumni and Endowment Associations.
"If any one thing has been the key, it is the partnership, cooperation and the loyalty of the alumni. I don't know exactly what it is, but when people testimonize than another student about this university than other students feel about their school."
Wintermorte said the arder of KU alumni had been an essential driving force for several projects now under way on campus.
The project Wintermorte pointed to with the most pride was the K.S. "Boots" Adams Alumni Center. The $5 million center will provide recreational
and meeting facilities for alumni and will be the organization's headquarters.
THE CENTER, which had been only a dream for several decades, became reality because of the determination of the support of alumni, Wintermute said.
"It had been talked about since 1968, but there were a great many other needs at KU, so it wasn't talked about seriously until 1978," he said.
"There was a great army of volunteers who gave an enormous amount of time and money to make it possible. The Endowment Association was also a foundation in a reality because donated the land and supervised the fund raising."
ABOUT ONE-HALF of the buildings on campus have been either partially or fully paid for with private funds, he said.
"And about 95 percent of the University's land was bought by alumni and then contributed by them to the state. I think if students knew that, it would shock them."
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Med Center meter bill may result in lawsuit
The state faces a possible suit from the Board of Public Utilities in Kansas City, Kan., if it does not pay a $3 million electric bill charged to the University of Kansas Medical Center's BPU spokesman said yesterday.
The shortage of funds occurred after the BPU discovered that a faulty meter installed at the Med Center recorded only about half of the electricity used by the center in 1981.
The committee did not act because the 1982 Legislature approved
The meter was owned by the Med Center, and there was an error made in the way the equipment was set, according to BPU official.
However, Jess Rodriquez, BPU spokesman, said that a claim to receive full payment was submitted to the legislative Joint Committee on Special Claims, but the committee ruled, claim was not appropriate.
Rodriquez said, "I'm not at liberty to talk about that and I can't talk about the legal action. This will wind up being an effort in litigation in the very near future."
set, according to B. S. THE STATE HAS paid $133,489 of the bill.
The state took responsibility for payment of the bill when the Med Center's budget could not cover it, she said.
Charles Otten, BPU president,
and Joe Calihan, BPU delinquent
accounts manager, reportedly sig-
nored releases that state officials have
said freed them from further
payment.
Coralso salida.
Callahan would not talk about the issue and referred comment to Rodriguez.
KATHRYN PETERS, assistant Kansas City attorney for the BPU, said only that they were looking into alternate ways to collect the money. She said the signed releases did not absolve the debt in the BPU's eyes.
partial payment of the bill, said Legislative counsel Robert Cold snow.
"The committee took the position that in view of Senate Bill 886 (approving partial payment) they could act on the claim," oddly said.
THE BPU CASHED the $133,498 check in mid-June after the releases were signed. Later the BPU tried to return the money to the state, but Patrick Hurley, secretary of administration, sent the money back to the BPU.
Profs given Fulbright grants
Two KU professors and a visiting British professor recently received Fulbright grants to teach and conduct research in Kansas, Poland and Africa.
John Janenz, professor of anthropology, will continue his sabbatical at the University of Chicago.
John Willingham, professor of English, will be the senior lecturer in American literature next semester at the University of Warsaw in Poland.
to conduct anthropological research and will visit Zaire, Tanzania, Botswana and Swaziland.
Richard Rodgers, KU visiting associate professor of history from the University of Leicester, England, is researching urban communities and their intersections between world wars, with emphasis on local administration of New Deal programs.
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This Fri. & Sat., Nov. 19 & 20 at 7, 9:30 in Downs Aud. (Dyche Hall next to the Union) Admission $1.50
Page 10
University Daily Kansan, November 18, 1982
Clergy unshaken by White House letter
By United Press International
WASHINGTON - The nation's Roman Catholic bishops will listen to — but not be intimidated by — Reagan administration criticism of a proposed statement condemning nuclear war. Joseph Bernardin said yesterday.
Bernardin, chairman of the committee that drafted the 105-page statement on nuclear war and peace
issues, said the bishops were "not unfamiliar with the points" made by the administration.
And, he told reporters, "We are not easily intimidated."
The criticism came in a seven-page, singled-sided letter by William Clark. President Reagan's national security adviser, to Bernardin and the White House, described morning as they continued debate on the proposed pastoral statement.
Clark, a Catholic, accused the
bishops of "fundamental misreadings of American policies."
CLARK'S LETTER said the bishops failed to offer "any information whatsoever" about Reagan's efforts to "preserve the peace while protecting the fundamental values of early civilization which you share."
Bishop Joseph Gossman of Raleigh, N.C., said the letter was unlikely to influence any bishops.
The draft statement, to be used by the nation's 50 million Catholics in forming their individual conscience on nuclear issues, condemns any first use of nuclear weapons, any use of such weapons against civilians, endorses a mutual freeze on development and deployment of nuclear weapons and questions the morality of the U.S. strategy of deterrence
Most bishops saw Clark's letter as an indication the administration is taking their concern seriously.
Ad Astra society reaches for outerspace
By MATT BARTEL Staff Reporter
William Adams' hobbies are reading, fishing and the further advancement of mankind into outer space, not necessarily in that order.
Adams, a Lawrence graduate student, is president of the Ad Astra L-5 Society, a group dedicated to space exploration and the promotion of human space habitation
The name comes from two sources, he said. Ad Astra, which means "to the stars," is found in the Kansas state motto, and L-5 is the name of the national society, based in Tucson, Ariz. of which they are a part.
According to Randall Clamons, the national society's administrator in Tucson, L-5 is the abbreviation for Lagrange libration point number five, which is the fifth of a series of points in outer space where the gravitational pull of the earth and the moon are equal.
THEOSE POINTS are significant, Adams said, because an object put into orbit around any of those points would have to travel at the speed them ideal locations for space colonies.
L-5 was chosen because that point could be reached from the moon with a smaller expenditure of fuel than any other rocket, best of the points for a colony, he said.
However, Adams said the prospect of those or any other space colonies being established in the near future was not likely.
"Probably we're looking at 100 years or more before anything like that happens," Adams said, "or maybe never."
He said the cost of such colonies was one reason for the delay.
"YOURE TALKING about a massive expenditure of time and money," Adams said. "I don't think you will ever build an government building anything like that."
He added that the prospects for private enterprise establishing such a
colony were much better, because of the potential for improving certain processes in the weightlessness and vacuum of outer space.
"For instance, the purification of pharmaceuticals works better in that
One pharmaceutical company already has sent experiments up in previous space shuttle flights, with good results, Adams said.
Another advantage of building in space is that very large structures can be built with fewer materials, and require less maintenance than buildings on earth, which become weathered and must be repaired, he said.
PERHAPS THE MOST pressing reason that man must explore space, he said, is the need for cheap and abundant supplies of energy and minerals, both of which can be found in space.
"In space there is a good supply of solar energy 100 percent of the time, which is not the case on earth," he said. Clamons said that L-5 had contributed to the Spacewatch camera fund, which is a project at the University of Arizona designed to locate asteroids near earth.
The next step would be to send a probe to the asteroids to take mineral samples, which would be analyzed for their usefulness to man, he said.
MIKE ALLEN, a Crescent, Iowa, graduate student and member of the society, said minerals such as silicates, which are related to silicon, an important inorganic mineral, were known to exist on the moon.
Adams said the national society also had a lobbyist in Washington.
That lobbying effort helped to defeat the United Nations Moon Treaty, which would have divided the moon in a manner similar to the way Antarctica is divided between the nations of the world, Allen said.
The Ad Astra chapter here was established in September 1981 by Adama, the group's first president, and now leads a graduate student, from Topeka.
Halls stop showing rented video movies
By JOHN HOOGESTEGER Staff Reporter
Students in four KU residence halls will temporarily be unable to watch movies rented from local video stores on hall video cassette viewers.
Fred McElhenie, director of the office of residential programs, decided this week to stop the showings in residence halls after he received word from the institute public viewing, which might be prohibited by federal copyright laws.
McCollim, Oliver, Eilworth and Joseph R. Pearson residence halls had been renting films such as "Animal Raging Bull" - from local video stores.
'WE WERE NOT aware of any legal action prohibiting using video cassettes
in dorms when we started showing them, but it has come to our attention that evidence has been produced that she is a student who can be used." McElheneis asked xestera.
A summary statement about the use of video cassettes, prepared by the Film Security Office of the Motion Pictures Association of America, cites the U.S. Copyright Act as prohibiting public showings.
"Even performances in semipublic places such as clubs, lodges, factories, summer camps and schools are 'public' copyright control," the statement said.
IT SAID THAT any willful infringement of copyright laws was subject to civil penalty, "even by innocent or inadvertent infringers."
Swank Motion Pictures Distributor of St. Louis, Mo., owns the rights for
public showings of several films in the Lawrence area and gave the summary to the University to encourage it to stop showing the cassettes.
The summary states that video cassettes are available for "home use only" and that owners of video cassettes must get a separate license from the manufacturer to show the film outside of the "scope of the family or social acquaintances."
ARCHIE TUCKER, national marketing director for Swank, said, "The fine line is that we have the public performance rights to anything shown outside the home for the films we control."
He said video stores had only home viewing rights, and that if a residence was in the building or a hobby or any high-traffic area, it would have to rent the cassette from his firm.
But Allen Robertson, owner of Servi-tronics, 23rd and Louisiana streets, who rents the cassettes to KU residence hills, said it was not illegal. He said the current state of copyright law was insecure.
"We buy the films directly from the companies, and the only restriction we have is that we can't rent them to people who will charge admission," he said.
But Tucker said he disagreed.
"The issue has nothing to do with charging admission," he said. "The law enters a gray area regarding show it in a dorm room with only a circle of friends watching, but outside of that it is illegal."
McElhene said that KU residence halls would discontinue showing the movies, at least until he received a legal ruling from KU's general counsel.
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Group's love for snakes surpasses strong stigma
A WORKSHOP DESIGNED TO IMPROVE AND ENHANCE INTERVIEWING SKILLS AND RESUME WRITING TECHNIQUES
Friday, November 19, 1982 3:00-4:30 p.m.
Regionalist Room, Kansas Union
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION PLEASE CONTACT THE WOMEN'S CENTER, 864-3552
"Pilot pens! You have to hold onto them with two hands." - Rodney Dangerfield
"Get your claws off my Pilot pen. I don't get no respect!"
"People just have a hunger for my Pilot Fineliner. You know why? They're always fishing for a fine point pen that has the guts to write through cartons. And Pilot has the guts to charge only $7 per it. People get their hands on if and forget if it's my pen. So I don't get no respect. You think I make out any better with my Pilot Pizza Point. No way it writes whip-cream smooth with an extra fine line. And its custom-tilt metal collar helps keep that pen from pilling squash. So people love it. But for only 89¢ they should buy their own pen and show some respect for my property."
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Barker said the groups provided valuable demographic information by collecting, photographing and cataloging of herpes before releasing the animals.
"The time is coming when all sorts of animals will be faced with extinction. We need the kind of information they can provide when we start looking at where we're going to put dams and where we're going to have forests."
"Ten years ago herps wouldn't breed in captivity," he said. "Now we have the techniques available to make it happen.
RUNDQUIST SAID KHIS and other groups that study reptiles had determined valuable techniques for saving endangered species of herps.
John Tollefson, outgoing KHS president, said the auction raised $275
TODAY
"Groups like this one have a very good land ethic, a very good conservation ethic," he said. "People tend to overlook the value of amphibians and
Rundquist made the comments while he watched a beer social and auction that were part of the KHS' ninth annual meeting in Lawrence this week.
By MATT BARTEL
"WE ALL HAVE our phobias," Ruquist said. "I don't like spiders, but I give them leeway — I don't bother them and they don't bother me."
Staff Reporter
"When other species start to be endangered, we will have the tech niques to save them."
through the sale of donated books,
cages, T-shirts and other herp-related
Joseph Collins, the new president of KHS, said the group currently supported conservation and research on reptiles, reptiles, scientifically known as herms.
GAY AND LESBIAN SERVICES of Kansas will sponsor a lecture, "Gays and the Law," at 7:30 p.m. in the International Room of the Union.
GERMAN CLUB will have lunch at
the Cottown Room of the
King's Room.
KU SWORD AND SHIELD will meet
at p.m. in the Oread Room of the
Union
Many people do not like snakes that they cannot be trained, they are not fun to pet and their bite can be downright nasty. But to members of the Kansas Herpetological Society, snakes are beautiful.
Eric Rundquist, a Lawrence resident who helped start the group while he was a student in 1974, said, "Ever since I was five, I was fascinated by reptiles. It is a definite stigma regarding snails, but still we must get the word out."
That reason, among others, is why KHS was created, he said.
DAVID BARKER, a professional herpetologist for the Dallas Zoo, said he learned a lot about herpetology from groups like KHS while he was growing up.
KU CONSERVATIVE FORUM will meet and officers at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday.
On campus
CHRISTIAN CARE GROUP will meet at 8 p.m. at the Ecumenical Center.
WILKES C. ROBINSON, president of the Gulf Coast and Great Plains Legal Foundation, will speak at 12:30 p.m. in 104 Green Hall.
KU MOUNTAINEERING ASSOCIATION will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Regionalist Room of the Union.
FOOLS FACE
OPENED FOR
ELVIS COSTELLO
CATHOLIC CENTER WORSHIP will be at 12:30 p.m. in Panforthe Chapel,
H
KU AMATEUR RADIO CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in 2029 Learned Hall.
ASTRONOMY CLUB will meet at 308 p.m. in 500 Lindley Hall if it is chosen.
BIOLOGY CLUB will meet at 4 p.m.
in the Sunflower Room of the Union.
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1
University Daily Kansan, November 18, 1982 Page 11
Board temporarily halts lake development plans
By DOUG CUNNINGHAM Staff Reporter
The Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission last night temporarily stopped plans for development of an area near Clinton Lake because it said more information was needed and possible growth in the area.
Septic tanks normally are not allowed in the area, about 350 acres north of Clinton Parkway, because it is in what is known as primary urban growth area of Lawrence.
THE PLANNING COMMISSION appeared willing to temporarily allow the use of septic tanks, but still disapproved the preliminary plat, which outlines the land and location of public water systems. It does not account for future city sewer lines.
Also, several commissioners said the plat did not allow for the area's future growth, which might require dividing the present lots into smaller ones.
COMMISSIONER MARGARET MICKINNEY said the lots, which ranged in size from one acre to 24 acres, were taken away if the area were annexed into the city.
Therefore, any plans for the area should allow for the placement of future roads, sewer lines and other improvements, she said.
However, John Selk, representing the people who want to develop the area, said that he had to give up on the project.
lines had been allowed for and that houses in the area could easily hook up to a city sewer line if one were extended there.
He also said the lots could be divided into smaller sizes without interfering with roads or other public improvements.
Commissioner Kurt von Achen said the preliminary plot of the area also needed more complete topographical information.
Commissioner Max Lucas said the commission had certain procedures for reviewing neighborhood plans, but the plan needed to be studied at length, and therefore should be reconsidered rather than just reviewed.
THE COMMISSION ALSO discussed the action it took last week to reopen consideration of the East Lawrence neighborhood plan.
The commission also recommended approval of a special permit for Cottonwood Inc., 2801 W. 31st St.
The permit, which must now be considered by the Lawrence City Commission, would allow Cottonwood to expand its present operation.
THE EXPANSION WOULD house offices and workshop areas for Cottonwood, a firm that trains and employs mentally handicapped people.
The commission also approved a special permit requested by the World Company for Sunflower Cablevision to store a storage站 at 2111-2151 E. 19th St.
HOPE finalist back in classes
HOPE finalist Joyce Jones, associate professor of occupational therapy, will return to the classroom tomorrow after his's absence due to a back problem.
Jones attended the HOPE award ceremony Oct. 30 in Memorial Stadium although she had to leave her hospital because of a broken leg Thursday, she underwent back surgery.
Janet Jordan, courtesy assistant professor of occupational therapy, who took over Jones' teaching duties in her absence, said she was impressed that Jones was returning to the classroom so soon after back surgery.
"She's kind of a tough act to follow." Jordan said.
JONES SAID YESTERDAY that she had wanted to return to the classroom much sooner, but she had to wait to rebuild her strength.
room," she said. "There's nothing fun about being in a hospital. I would have been back before now if I could have tolerated it."
Jones said she thought she would have no problems slipping back into her teaching routine, especially because she had been preparing lectures during
"The only difficulty will be the fatigue I'll experience," she said.
"I'd much rather be in the class-
FJ
FOOLS FACE OPENED FOR ELVIS COSTELLO
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Proposal would affect jucos, Washburn Panel may raise residency requirements
By DIRK MILLER Staff Reporter
A recommendation Tuesday by a special joint Kansas House and Senate committee to raise residency requirements to one year for junior colleges, community colleges and university colleges is caught many people by surprise.
Ed Walbourne, an official for the Kansas Association of Community Colleges, said yesterday that since he was admitted to college requirements had been six months.
"Personally, I think we'd be better off sticking with six months," Bunten said. "I think it could have the affect of discouraging people coming from out of state and going to community colleges."
William Bunten, R-Topeka, chairman of the interim Special Committee on Ways and Means, said he was surprised that the residency requirement proposed by the committee proposed. The committee voted 6-4 to endorse the change, he said.
BUNTEN SAD the committee was originally studying a Board of Regens request to lower requirements.
"I don't think it will fly in the Legislature," he said. "But the committee passed it by a narrow margin."
He said he expected the proposal to be debated in the next legislative session.
Walbourne said the association probably would oppose the legislation.
The Regents are scheduled tomorrow to discuss a bill already introduced that would reduce the
FRANK LOWMAN, chairman of the Regents legislative, bylaws and policy committee, said Regents schools already had residency requirements of one year. In the past, he said, the Regents have endorsed bills reducing the requirement to the six-month level of the other colleges in the state.
residency requirements at Regents schools from a year to six months.
Walbourne said there were only 1,400 students paying out-of-state tuition at community colleges across the state. The state would only save about $120,000 a year if the proposed new college is built when it meets in January, he said.
because more students would qualify for the lower resident fees.
He said that if the Regents residency requirements were lowered it could cost the state about $300,000.
Bunten said the change was made to standardize residence requirements at all the colleges in the state. He said that instead of lowering the Regents residency requirements, the committee should raise requirements at other colleges.
LOWMAN SAID that if a bill were passed to standardize residency requirements, there might be problems lowering requirements for Regents schools. The Regents already have the ability to consider lowering the requirements.
He said that situations in which people new to the state paid Kansas taxes, but still had to pay out-of-state taxes because of restrictions wanted to change the requirements.
3 American POWs return from Angola
By United Press International
NEW YORK—Three American prisoners of war freed by Angela arrived in New York yesterday to tearful reunions with family and friends and two said they had been treated humanely by their captors.
Geoffrey Tyler, 28, of Seaburro, Md., a pilot, and mercenaries Gustavo Tome River, Toms River, N.J., and Gary Acker, 28, of Salt Lake, a arrived on TWA jet from Paris.
The three were whisked away to private reunions with families and friends, but Tyler and Grillo later spoke to reporters. Acker told a State Department official he was too tired for an interview.
had been treated humanely by the Marxist Angloian government.
TYLER AND GRILLO both said they
"I don't feel that my treatment was inhumane, although my confinement in the jail was completely unjust," said Margaret. "I always knew with his mother, Marjorie, as tearful.
Grillo, who said he went to Angola for "romance and adventure," said he too "was treated humanely." Grillo was met by his stepfather and mother, Edmund and Laura Hewele, also of Toms River.
Tyler was captured Feb. 4, 1981, when he was forced to land a single-engine plane in Angola because of no airborne charges on his plane no charges ever were filed against him.
"I WAS NOT tortured or beaten in a war, although conditions were rough."
Tvler said he was arrested immediately after his plane landed and was taken to a "safehouse" for 30 days.
"For the next three months I was not allowed to talk to any of the other prisoners Taylor said. In after six weeks, I was able to and receive letters from my family."
He said his diet while he was imprisoned consisted "mainly of rice, beans and heavy starches" and that he loved it but said he never lost hope for release.
Tyler said he planned to return to living for Globe Aero Co of Lakeland,
Asked if any Americans were left in the prison, Tyler said he did not think
Grillo, who said he volunteered to fight for the F.N.L.A. guerrilla group, walked with a cane and said he suffered a leg injury in Angola.
"I was in combat. I was ambushed," he said. He denied he worked for the company.
Grillo said he was "very glial to be back home" but refused to talk at length with reporters, saying he was afraid of being physical condition to talk now."
THE NEW JERSEY man was taken prisoner in 1975 while fighting for the F.N.L.A., and was convicted of being a terrorist. He was executed seven years in prison and served seven years.
Grillo said he had not made any money as a soldier of fortune but that he might resume a career as a mercenary.
His stepfather said he learned from others who returned from Angola that Grillo went before a firing squad three times but his life was spared.
The shortest distance between two schools is Long Distance.
JUICE
With friends at other schools you can compare what's in...
...and what's out.
Discuss the itinerary for your next trip,
and encourage your friend not to be quite so well pre-
pared. ("I just don't think you'll need your skis in New York City..."
Solicit and/or provide solace and encouragement in the depths of a mid-term all-nighter.
The fact is, being away at different schools just gives you that much more to talk about
Luckily, when you call anyone in Kansas after 11pm weeknights, or anytime between 11pm Friday and 5pm Sunday, you can talk 10 minutes for $1.59* Or less, depending on where you call
Going away to school is even more fun when you share it with a friend. Especially a friend who's away at school!
Reach out and touch someone. Southwestern Bell
( )
*Price applies to calls dialed OnePlus without operation assistance. Tax not included.*
Page 12 University Daily Kansan, November 18. 1962
Lawrence violin crafter gives cello-making a try
By DAWN GRAHAM Staff Reporter
November wind slips under the workshop door, but Rick Dishinger doesn't seem to notice the evening chill in the room. He polishes onto the yet-to-be-celled cello.
Dishigner has painted for more than 20 years, and by day teaches drawing techniques.
This is his first try at cello-making, after four years of crafting violins and violas. He has been working on it since 2014 and he wants to finish by the weekend.
"My working habits are similar whether I'm painting or making violins," he said. "It's another form of creative activity — a visual, linear, dimensional thing. Maybe one's therapy for the other, or vice versa."
BAROQUE STRING music drifts from the radio, almost inviting the new cello to leap from Dishinger's knees and join the sound.
"It's just amazing, the sound a string quartet makes," he said. "They're so doggoned beautiful . . . the only thing that can really put chill bumps on the back of your neck. And all they are is trees, you know?"
Dishinger said he became interested in making violins about five years ago, when he "played badly and absolutely loved the instrument."
"I had been around a lot of people who made instruments, and decided to
He rented a workroom in the back of Michigan Street Music, a stringed instrument shop at 7th and Michigan streets where he still works.
PAPER, METAL and wooden patterns hang from the walls, and violins ranging from uncut blocks of spruce to tuned instruments line the tops of
counters. The unvarnished ribs of a new cello stand nearby, clamped
"That's the beginning of my quartet." Dishinger said.
He plans to make a matched set of so violins, a viola and a cello from the same instrument.
"I'm hoping to finish by April or May. I find some people and stage some sort of workshop."
Though he has completed only one cello, Dishinger has made 48 violins and violas. He averages 10 instruments per week for $1,000 anuece; his cellos for $2,000.
"Broken down, that probably gives me about 30 cents an hour for labor." Dishigner said. "But it's a labor of love rather than one of profit."
THE DEMAND for his instruments is to have he has sold or given away, all but few.
"I'd like to have one of these in every pawn shop in the Midwest in 50 years — plus a few in attics and back rooms," he said.
Violin-making and art are skills that Dishinger does not try to mix, though they can complement each other, he said.
"There's a very strict system for making violins. In art you've got all sorts of freedoms. It's interesting, like you can set them and then working with no rules at all.
Don Dalnhia/KANSAM
"IT'S DIFFICULT to figure out why I want to make violins. The world is full of violins, good and bad. Why don't I use them instead of this? I can't figure it out.
"I guess it's a matter of making one and deciding you don't like that, so you try to make a better one, and a better one . . . there's a real thrill in making one, in hearing it played, the wood coming alive."
Cello maker
Dick Dishinger, assistant professor of art, will soon finish making his first cello. Dishinger usually makes violins in his shop in back of Michigan Street Music, 647 Michigan St.
Shultz proposes new 'strategy for peace'
WASHINGTON—Secretary of State George Shultz yesterday proposed a "strategy for peace" for Central America calling for withdrawal of all troops in the region and agreement to keep major offensive weapons out of the troubled region.
"Clearly, no strategy for peace can succeed if those who take up arms
However, Shultz made clear that any such agreement must be based on "reciprocity and strict verification." Otherwise, he indicated, Washington must keep its security commitments to the region.
against their fellow citizens and neighbors go unopposed," Shultz told the Organization of American States "Peace is impossible without security."
By United Press International
SHULTZ ALSO said the United States could not remain neutral regarding the need for both Britain and Argentina to dispute over the Falkland Islands.
Shultz reaffirmed U.S. support for a resolution calling for resumption of Anglo-Argentine negotiations. Washington, over London's objections, voted to send a response to United Nations Nov. 4 and is expected do so again at the OAS this week.
his peace proposal also should be used to end foreign support for leftist guerrillas and other insurgent groups especially in El Salvador and Guatemala.
"FORTUNATELY." Shultz said, "not all of the conditions for war are present in Central America. Most states still lack the major offensive weapons 'that would be needed for an attack on their neighbors.
"Clearly that's only part of the solution, but it would be a start."
"That may give us our opening, 'Why shouldn't we encourage the governments of Central America to agree, all of them, on a basis of reciprocity and strict verification, not to import major offensive weapons?"
SHULT2 WARNED, however, there "will be danger to peace as long as foreign troops or military advisers are present" in Central America.
This was a clear but unstated reference to U.S. military advisers in El Salvador and Honduras and the presence of a large Cuban military contingent and other communist military advisers in Nicaragua.
He seemed to point directly at Nicaragua — again without mentioning names — when he spoke of the presence of foreign military advisers, which in one country are present in "very large numbers."
Oil field near California may be biggest find yet
By United Press International
HOUSTON-Texico U.S.A. yesterday announced it had confirmed the existence of a giant new oil discovery off the coast of Southern California.
THE CALSO-PHILLIES discovery is in the Point Argello field, south of Santa Barbara. The Texaco tract is west of the Point Argello discovery
Texaco's confirmation rate No. 3 tested at individual rates of up to 1,000 barrels a day. The well was drilled to a depth of 8,500 feet in 1,043 feet of water.
Texaco said a special platform was
Texaco, acting for itself, Sun Co,
Pennzoil and Koch Exploration Co,
said the discovery was in the Santa
Maria Basin, formerly called the Hueso area
Similar announcements have been made in recent days by Standard Oil Co. of California and Phillips Petroleum, and a spokesman for the American Petroleum Institute said the discovery be the biggest for the United States. The discovery of the Prudhoe Bay field on the Arctic Slope of Alaska.
being designed by Brown & Root Inc
eventual production in the new field. (It could be installed by late 1985.)
The confirmation well is the third well the Texaco group has drilled in the area. The first well flowed at up to 2,600 feet and was drained to 13,250 feet in 788 feet of water
All together, six wells have been frilled in the two areas.
No one yet is predicting that Point Arguello and Santa Maria will equal Prudhoe Bay in importance. The Alaskan field, found in 1968, now is delivering one million barrels a day through the Alaskan pipeline system.
TEXACO HAS 35 percent stake in the tract, PennZoll 25 percent, and Sun, and Koch 20 percent each. The Federal was paid $3.29 million for the block.
HOWEVER, THERE already are estimates that the new Southern California offshore field contains at least one billion barrels of reserves. The same Bay field was discovered, it was believed to contain no more than that.
The new Southern California discover-
field also is being described as rela-
tive to the region.
Staging of Sartre's 'No Exit' turns orchestra pit into 'hell'
The Murphy Hall orchestra pit will turn into hall at 1:30 p.m. Saturday for a one-time performance of Jean Paul Sartre's classic one-act play, "No Exit," the play's director said yesterday.
The play centers on the afterlife of three characters condemned to hell. They must sit in a room together for eternity.
"I WANTED TO get away from the usual spaces that are used, with this play in particular," said director Bonnie Cullum, Lawrence senior. "Being in the pit gives you the feeling of being closed in."
The first 45 audience members will be seated in the orchestra pit with the
During the course of the play, the characters make discoveries about themselves and what their lives meant. Cullum said.
THE CASTLE
TEA ROOM
1307 Mass. phone 843-1151
Despite its solemn setting, Cullium said, the plaid is not depressing. It has a light color and a pattern of dots.
actors, Cullum said. Others will be seated on the edge.
"WE SHOULD BE AWARE of what we are doing with our lives, because we will never be more than we make of our lives." "It's not going to change when we die."
Use Kansan Classifieds
Cullum is directing the play, which is open to the public, as part of a class assignment. No admission will be charged.
Classif
F
STANDS FOR
FOOLS FACE
FRI & SAT AT LOH
borgen's LIQUOR STORE
SHOWCASING THE FINEST IMPORTED & AMERICAN WINES, LIQUORS, CHAMPAGNES IN LAWRENCE
PICK UP YOUR FAVORITE:
- BEERS
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& LIQUEURS
VODKAS WINES BRANDIES & COGNACS 842-3990
917 Iowa 842-3990 IN HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER
Smokehouse
SMOKEY JOE
Wheel $2.00
Reg. $3.00
Log $2.75
Reg. $3.75
Came See Hoon the Monk!
PEPSI
No Compan,
Accepted
With This
Offer
OPEN Mon.-Thurs. 11 am-9 pm
Fri. & Sat. 11 am-11 pm
Sun. Noon-9 pm
This offer good Wed., Nov. 17
Thru Sun., Nov. 21
Downtown Lawrence
719 Massachusetts St.
Lawrence, Kansas
---
STUDENT SENATE ELECTIONS
VOTE ON NOVEMBER 17-18
Polling Places will be open from 8:30 to 4:30 at the following buildings:
WESCOE GREEN (LAW SCHOOL) UNION LINDLEY BETWEEN SUMMERFIELD & MALOTT
Students must bring K.U. ID to vote.
(Funded by the Student Activity Fee)
---
University Daily Kansan. November 18, 1982
Page 13
The University Dailv
CLASSIFIED RATES
Call 864-4358
two beds
ten queen beds
five double beds
four single beds
four twin beds
six king beds
ten ten bed
(5 yards or fewer)
$2.25 $2.50 $3.00 $3.50 $4.00 $4.50 $5.00 $5.50 $6.00 $6.50 $7.00
twelve twin beds
eight single beds
five double beds
four single beds
four twin beds
six king beds
ten ten bed
AD DEADLINES
ERRORS
Monday Thursday p.m.
Tuesday Friday p.m.
Wednesday Monday p.m.
Thursday Tuesday p.m.
Friday Tuesday p.m.
Friday Wednesday p.m.
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can placed in newspaper or simply to request the Kangan business office at m44808.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
The Kanana will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
KANSAS BUSINESS OFFICE
118 Flint Hall 864-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Do you need cash? Bring your unwanted merchant credit to the Lawrence University Auction. Every Wednesday, 7 p.m. Consignment accepted Tuesday, 4 p.m. Wed, 10 p.m. 2016 New Hampshire. Call
JAHOO, BOOKSELLERS HAS JUST BUILT 200
ALBUMS, APPERCIAH AT 100% SATURDAY
WORKSHOPS AT 100% SATURDAY.
Paid Staff Positions
Business Manager, Editor
The Kanas is now accepting applications for the Spring Semester Business Manager and Editor positions. These are paid positions and require some training in Microsoft Office forms are available in the Student Senate Office, 105 B, Kansas Union; in the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 220 Strong Hall; and in Room 200 and 118 Flint Hall. Applications due in room 200 by Friday, m. Thursday, November 18.
The University Daily Kansan is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Rights organization are sought from all qualified people regardless of race, religion, color, sex, disability, veteran or national origin, age, or ancestry.
SCHOLARIZED MOTHIES needed for Hager Juvenile Interstate Inpatient Center in Chicago to provide healthy, healthy meals (6 healthy, 21. Kauan resident must have given birth to healthy child or mother and received all required monthly paid. 813-233-3243. Hager Institute.
FOR RENT
Shop at Spartan Place烘焙 for feminine Lebanese, Arabic and Turkish cakes. Shop at Spartan Place烘焙 for women's masks, cardboard boxes, 100-litre jugs, all kinds of food and drinks. $3, Thurs. 8, bill but for our expanded holiday shopping. Spartan place is a feminine Lebanese children's store in New York City.
*or rent a new room! 3 bedroom apartment in nice
building. 288/month plus utilities. 489-160
keep tryin' up.*
Pedroment room. Quit. Modern appliances in-chairship dishware and dispenser. Living room, kitchen, laundry. Bedroom. Bachelor's 8-month. Utilities not included. Ideal for graduate or someone who like privacy. Call 617-459-8000 or visit www.pedroment.com.
Available Dec. 31, 2 bdmr, furn. apt. near campus.
Very nice. Front entrance $300 per month plus
$14. Deposit required. No pets. 842-4707.
SPRING SEMESTER
Enjoy carefree living at affordable prices. Spacious studios, 1 & 2 bedroom apts - Carpeted, draped and on the busline.
The Luxury of Meadowbrook Is Just Right For You
meadowbrook
XETRIA new apartments, large and small. Next to
campus. Utilities paid, responsibility payed. 443-615-493.
Female roommate needed in a two bedroom furniture
building. Available Date: 12. 10. 18. month. Date:
424-892-442
Energy Townhouses 2B1 furnished & unrenewed
heavy efficient townhouses / w/garage. Spacious
for three. Only 3 blocks from campus at 14th
& Knottbury. 855-6407
Housemate wanted Enjoy a relaxed coed cooperative living experience, reasonable rates and easy to campus too Call Sunflower House 892-9412
APARTMENT LIFE
GOT YOU DOWN ?
THINKING OF
MOVING BACK TO
THE CAMPUS
LIFESTYLE?
THINK OF
NAISMITH HALL
ON CAMPUS
CONVENIENCE WITH
AN OFF CAMPUS
LIFESTYLE!
NAISMITH HALL 843-8559
listed 4 mature students for a very special bedroom home, very quiet neighborhood $800 us apts. 841-8744
Ace appt. 2 bed. 1 bath, fully furnished, close to campus. 841-1012 or 749-5357
I just an apartment to sublease or rent. It is available for me. We have a 30% down payment and we would work something out. My phone number is (718) 259-2412.
Live in the CHRISTIAN CAMPUS HOUSE this fall and grow it. Become a part of a growing campus ministry. Call Alan Rosenak, campus minister 843-6092
Meadowlark Furnished studio available on sublease now through August. Water paid. No deposit if rented by December 1st.Call Jan. 864-597 or 841-4323, evening.
Nice, new 2 Bt. apt. next to campus. a c'; carpet.
drapes. Available Mid-Dec. %2 Dec. rent free.
841-8736
One one-bedroom, one hatch apt, with range refrigerator and dialwhaher. Good location, $85, all rooms are free.
One and two bedroom apartments. Move your belongings in after finals-spend the holidays at home with family-pay rent upon your return. In January, located next to campus, laundry facilities
PRINCETON PLACE PACET APARTMENTS. Now Available, 2 bedroom, 2 bath, perfect for roommates, features wood burning fireplace, 2 car garage with electric operator, washer/dryer hookups, fully equipped kitchen, large office space per month. Open house 9-30:00 daily at 2:00PM Principal Bld., phone 847255 for additional information.
Quirk Creek Apartments sublease Two bedroom; 18% balcony, balcony. Mid-December June $650
Roommate needed in a BR house. Own room, share kitchen, pool, kitchen color,烛纸 color $190/month $150/month
Rooms for rent plus utilities Kitchen privilages, washer dryer. References No. pets No smoker.
SMOKE HOUSE, contemporyl 3 BH, 13 mi SW
SMOKE HOUSE, contemporyl 3 BH, 13 mi SW
$450 plus bills. $135 plus no忧. 748-605-2599
SOUTHERN PARKWAY TOWNHOUSES, 90th & Ridgway in Rocky Mountains of northwest cramped apartment buildings. All appliances, attached garage swimming pool, patio, balcony. Call 254-781-3967 (evenings and weekends) for more information.
SPACIOS. Meadowbrook bookstore, available for busenose Jan 1 at REDUCEDRENT. Full carpeted and furnished. Close to campus. Water and cable TV paid. Enjoy the luxury of Meadowbrook at a low price.
STUDIO apt. for Jan-May sublease Car move in
Dec. 17 $450/mo, low utilities. Neighborhood
street.
Small $2 for house 1.b.1.6, campground. Completely insulated in garage. Available Dec. 1. Deposit $500. Shipping cost $75.
Special Low Rate. Gain male needed to spare space for training. Call 503-748-2100 seconds from the Union. Rent with utilities ONLY if you have a job opening.
Sablase newly decorated 1 bedroom,townhouse Reduced rate. Call 843-948-94
Sublase large, newly remodeled, 1B apartment
Four blocks from campus. $200/month. #35-107.
www.sublease.com
Meadowbrook store, one bedroom, one bathroom.
Meadowbrook hotel waived TV paid. Available
Contact 1. Contact 842-3906 or Meadowbrook 842-3906
Meadowbrook town studio. Newly furnished,
Meadowbrook hotel waived TV paid. $25/month.
(Meadowbrook charges $25) 749-3136.
Sublease 1 br. apr. Pursued. Cozy decor. Great location, good quality. Call 841-5932. Available
Sublease nice. 1 br. ap., completely furnished.
Available in Dec. or Jan. Close to伞房. 749-343.
Subleave beautiful 1-bedroom apartment in quiet SW location. Low utility bills. Avail. 1 Mar. Call
Sandwich Apartments Furnished one bedroom
room with kitchen, laundry, water
paid, $25/month. Call 841-793-2600 between 1-5
am or 6-8pm on weekdays.
Very nice 2 bedroom duplex on the campus edge.
Sublease starting in January. Call 942-8833, ask for Karen or Rita. At 864-3643, ask for Rita
Tired of doing all the housework? Check out
and inexpensively use **campus tool** 849-893-9211.
Unset. Unturns. Unturns.
Hanover Place - Completely furnished one bedroom apartments available immediately. Located between 1485 and 1525 on Mass. Only 3 blocks from KU and 7 blocks from $20 per month water rate: 841-1121 or 845-1445.
NICELY DECORATED space room 240
$98 utilities paid. Near university & downtown
BROOKLYN, NY.
SUBLEASE OUTSURFANDING TOWHOME 2. br./15'
bath., LR. dress, dorm. kitchen w/appliances, porch,
kitchen, patio.
MUST SUBLEASE - quiet 1 bedroom furnished apt on bus line i; deposit. Available Dec. 11, first payment not until January 1st. 851-2579
1963 VOLOSO 4, quad. radialis. Body good. Engine running but needs work soon.启发 offer over 6000. Call
1972 GMC 3/4马盘 pick-up, 4-aposed, power steering and brakes; brownie snow tires. Great gum! *1000 Call*
WARM guest room one block from Union. Clean
clean, no pets, after $ p.m. 1290 Ohio.
1690 Opn GT. Excellent interior, good exterior
AM/FM MP system. 78,000 miles. Call after 9:00 p.m.
FOR SALE
79.30XL ballast air, intermediate-carrier gas, gas
and fuel. 60 XL ballast air, intermediate-carrier gas,
NAD 20 air, high-prem air, $110, or best offer.
*cells with additional information are marked.* 8091 1944 1501
*7026 Islamabad 20, 21-25. every clean surface must be
cleaned.* 8091 1944 1501
Cloth dryer 308, Kenmore electric, brand new, white
Delphi KM4242E2 with 1.8 to 9 mPH
GS 105 Sunspark: Excellent condition, only 2000 ml
on it. Priced reasonable. B42-7043
1972 Oldsmobile, Culles, exclaims conditions,
last year, in which he said: "I will not
asked, asking $175, must sell; call 844-4691."
super mack. M max see! Call 749-2503. Keep trying.
1970 WK Babbitt 38,600 miles. new door, new micromotor
Pavilion Vintage Bevery Amplifier, 140 watt, 2 x 18"
speakers, new tubes, $30 best or buy, 841-739.
Pioneer SX-78 receiver and PL-514 turntable.
Avon mall or airlift 101.
1979 VW Rabbit 36,800 miles new, Michelin tires, fuel injection, $5,600. Call 414-875-2100.
PINTO SL. Wg. 1975 Engine rebuilt, Snow tires, $900
843-3296
Save! Government type writers. IBM electric. $150 service required. 841-4144
Pacific; new and basin lakes; Science Forest,
Spanish Coast, Spanish Islands; loe. WI, MW,
8437 729.
I get a deal for you. I want to sell you an II Stucca G, 200 miles, A/C interior, luggage rack, hairdresser & statero. Everything in real good condition. Call at 743-848-061 to use it and work out a deal.
HIV/AIDS Health Center, Mount Sinai
Quality Comics huge selection of Marvel, DC
Off-session shipment 1927.359 4 cyl. Hoods. Run well.
New paint. High back seal. Best quality. B141-8542.
System III IBM computer with printer & processor.
Model 6: IPG to language; 1 fixed cost, 2.6 million dollars.
Software includes 40 characters, 80 characters, 40 characters per sec. Indirection. Contact University State Bank, Idaho, law, Nebraska. www.library.edu
Scout Ski Boots. Ladies' size 8, great condition. Only worn 12 days. Call Mary 841-1012
FOUND
TV (IE 8) & WI 4.5K @ 18 speed 8.3-9.9 m. @ 640/480
TV (IE 8) & WI 4.5K @ 18 speed 8.3-9.9 m. @ 640/480
Desk Board Deck 76 @ 8 speed 8.3-9.9 m. @ 640/480
Front loading, excellent condition. Call MH 841 3714
Unused cameras K1000 8 flash! Visit www.mh.com.
Unused cameras K1000 8 flash! Visit www.mh.com.
1. pair prescription glasses found on 4th floor lounge
2. restroom of Worcester Hall. Monday. Call 603-5018 after
response.
Found Ladies' wristwatch, gold-tone Dyne Auditorium for UFS movie, Fuse call (800) 263-8985. Even &
Found Sunday on Watson steps one white longhair cat with a black collar on head, two black fur flock cats. Call 791-3011.
Found glasses in ladies' restroom on 2nd floor of Wesley St Thursday. Come to 288 Wesley St or call
Found last month a pair of soft contact lenses in case
I lost my prepy prescription glasses in a beating case with Maryron's 'glasses' on the case. Help!
Contact Nancy Burns @ 846-1370
Found white clip board with blank paper and English
script.
notes. 864-992-392
I lost my preppy prescription glasses in a beige case.
LAST® 10 gold chain with Delta Gamma lavender,
with subtle spin and diamond accent. Sub-
stantial value reward if returned;
LOST. A small dark book of addresses between
a large book and a small one. Includes any
own overdresses. If found missing, return to
the library.
LOST. Black & white 8 moth male spring squashed at Nicholson Friday Nov. 15. Cal Birch 644-823-2900.
LOST. Brown leather jacket, Inlayed Hall within last 3 weeks. Reward. Call 842-5719
Reward. 842.0183 eyes.
Male earlite with black strings & white collar.
Newark, NJ; New York, NY
Assist in design and estimate of Haworth Call Center and work from Home
on University Drive between Lever Hall and cam-
lege entrance. Then he went on to a 1997
JNFY brother burden in Learned Hall within
HELP WANTED
REWARD: Blue calefey glasses with
hirrotes. Please phone 749-0447.
EARN $250 this summer painting business in your
home studio. Visit www.sunsetmusiccenter.com
Center Interview will be Nov. 29. All毫
umn Center interviews are welcome.
NURSING: FULL-TIME/PARTTIME Are You Interested in Weekend work only - Either day, even day or night? We offer a one or 12 hour shift. These and other opportunities are on or 12 hour shifts. The Topo State Hospital. We provide a liberal range of nursing services away from nursing wahie, we can work you back in home to care for your child. We all work together and support each other.
And, we have increased salaries 61%. AND NEW SHIFT DIFFERENTIAL 60%. HOURLY. HOWELL Beverly Anderson, RN, director of Nursing, Topkapi Hospital, 9 W. 5th Street, Tampa, Florida 33617. 912-798-4726
OVERHELEN JOBS Summer annual round Europe, S
Santiago, Switzerland. info. write LDA box $251
Ship, shipping info. write LDA box $251
STAND TOGETHER. Special Kids need Special People. The STAND TOGETHER PROGRAM is currently seeking volunteers to serve as educational aid and mentors for children in the State of Kansas. There is a particular need for volunteers for children in Omaha State facilities, such as the State of Kansas' aspects of their special education programs. Parents are invited to participate with the child, reviewing the special education programs, and attending occasional school conferences with the child. Parents may be required or two hours per month to stand together with a hand-dicapped child, call our cell phone for more information.
Freshmen - Scholarships available, it is not too late to enroll in Naval HOTE, 649-381 681.
A Special For Students, Hairdresser - $7 Perm. - $22
Charme 103% Mass. 843-836. Ask for Deen Jernan.
A Strong Bengal For Benemit Retail Liquor. Clipped
Stadium. Bengal for North Memorial Stadium.
Bkg. Illinois. Bkg. 822/22.
Dear A.C. I; my ex-husband is threatening to take away my daughter in the grounds that I am leasing.
ENCORE COPY CORPS We.photocopy
emeraldite 213 W 75th W - Hallowell Plaza
Student technical wirt school half-time. The University of Kansas Academic Computing Center is seeking an individual to write and edit documentation or applied mathematics for KU. Apply by January 15. Also aid with seminars, workshops, and other educational projects. Position requires knowledge of English or related language, salary is $375-$475 per year. Requires some writing experience, sample of writing to Kim Ma尔德. Academic Computing Center, University of Kansas, P.O. Box 2805, Lawrence, KS 66042. Excellent WORKING CONDITIONS Join a first class team & have fun while you gamm'G. Hair waitresses. Must be possessible and 21. No previous academic experience is required and commission and tie, flexible hours. See Mike or Doug Men. Thurs., only 5-8 p.m. or 8-10 p.m. on campus on north side of building at east end. 160 W. 21rd, Southern Hills Shopping Center
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Classified Display:
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Page 14 University Daily Kansan, November 18, 1982
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NFL owners ratify agreement
By United Press International
NEW YORK—The 28 NFL teams last night unanimously ratified the previous day's collective bargaining agreement, which ended the 57-davail players' strike.
The 1,500-member rank-and-file of the NFL Players Association are to vote on the five-year $1.6 billion agreement by secret ballot next Tuesday. A majority decision is needed and ratification is expected.
Chuck Sullivan, president of the New England Patriots and a member of the Management Council's executive committee, said he hoped the settlement would mark a "new era of labor cooperation."
"We hope that the end of this bad story is the beginning of a good story," he said. "It's been a long struggle. We're glad it's come to an end."
Jack Donlan, executive director of the NFL Management Council, said he
expected the union to join the owners in ratifying the act.
"I THINK the 19-6 player rep vote is indicative that the players recognize there is a lot of money out there and they are willing to play ball," Domini
The only snag in the owners' ratification was overcome earlier in the evening when the New York Jets agreed to open camp today. Only the Detroit Lions and Jets failed to work out yesterday in preparation for the resumption of the season Sunday. The Lions voted not to return, but they met with player representative Stan White and heard the terms of the settlement.
A spokesman for the Jets said the club would end the lockout today "based on the fact that representatives from the NFL Management Council are in agreement to execute the document with representatives of the NFL Players Association."
Intrasquad game ends in tie
The Crismon and Blue squares battled to an 80-90 tie in last night's intrasquad (15-3, 11-4).
Head coach Ted Owens took his Kansas squad to Hutchinson last night so his young team could get some experience playing on the road. Owens said that because the Jayhawks play their first four games on the road, they team needed to get the "feel of playing on a foreign court."
Because it was an exhibition game and the Jayhawks faced a long trip home, the game was ended after regulation time.
Once again, Carl Henry led the blue squad, or starters. He scored 22 points to give him a total of 76 in the Jayhawks' three exhibition games. Freshman Kerry Boagni was right behind Henry with 21.
inson, where he played junior college basketball, scored 17 points and had 5 rebounds. Kelly Knight chipped in 10 points and Brian Martin led the Blue squad with 6 rebounds.
For the Crimson squad, freshman Calvin Thompson continued to shine. He scored 26 points, hitting 8 of his last 9 shots in the contest, and tied for the game-high in rebounds with 10. Freshman Kornell added 15 points and Mark Ewink had 14.
Jeff Dishman, returning to Hutch-
Jets president Jim Kensil, a member of the six-member executive council, had cautioned that the strike was not officially over until both sides signed the contract. He said the Management Council was prepared to do so yesterdays. The team's chief executive, NFLPA, was holding off for another day on signing.
Transfer Greg Dreiling, playing his last game in a Kansas uniform this season, scored 12 points and tied Thompson with 10 rebounds.
After the owners' ratification, NFL commissioner Pete Rozelle held a meeting in his office to discuss implications of the shortened season.
The Jayhawks will now turn their preparation to the season opener against U.S. International on Nov. 27 at 2 p.m. at Allen Field House.
THE NEW schedule calls for a nine-game season followed by playoffs involving the 16 teams with the best records, eight from each conference. The playoffs would begin Jan. 9 and lead to the Super Bowl, which will be played Jan. 30 at Pasadena, Calif., as scheduled.
"It's like the fall of France in 1940," said Marvin Powell, player representation.
The owners said the NFLPA negotiated a good contract but added a settlement could have been reached earlier.
Many of the NFL players were not happy with the agreement reached last week.
The union had demanded a contract that met five major criteria: substantial wage increases, an end to wage inequities, significant incentive bonuses, a fair share of future TV revenues and elimination of financial incentives to cut veteran players in favor of lower-paid players.
"The contract touched on all of the five points. It didn't meet any of them," admitted Garvey.
By United Press International
Murphy adds NL MVP to collection of awards
ATLANTA-Dale Murphy, the Atlanta Braves' slugging center fielder, got a big action weapon yesterday in his bid for a long-term contract when he was named the National League's MVP.
Murphy, playing under a one-year, $400,000 contract, hit 281 with 36 home runs and 190 RBI and won a Gold Glove for his fielding in leading the Braves to the Western Division title. He is eligible for free agency after next season but wants to sign a long-term pact with the Braves.
"The last two years we've tried to negotiate a multi-year deal but we
haven't been successful," Murphy said. "I enjoy living in Atlanta and playing for the Braves. I would like to sign a multi-year deal."
The 26-year-old Atlanta outfielder picked up 14 of 24 first-place votes in balloting by the Baseball Writers Association of America, easily distancing St. Louis outfielder Lonnie Smith.
Murphy finished with 233 points while Smith, who had eight first-place votes, had 218 points. Los Angeles outfielder Pedro Guerrero was third with 175 points, followed by Montreal first baseman Al Oliver with 174 and St. Louis reliever Bruce Sutter, 134.
Erickson leaps to new volleyball heights
By EVELYN SEDLACEK
Sports Writer
Lori Erickson is an athlete with a very special gift. She has a talent few athletes possess.
Erickson, a junior from Perry, has a 34-inch vertical tump.
"I didn't realize that I could jump that high," said Erickson, a third-year spiker for the KU vouleball team. "That is, no until I came to Kansas."
Erickson came to KU from Perry-Lecompton High School, where she lettered for four years in three sports -- volleyball, basketball and track. She made all-league first team for three consecutive years in volleyball and as captain led her team to an undefeated season and a state championship.
pecially enjoyed both volleyball and basketball."
"MY HIGH school had an excellent women's athletic program," said Erickson, who was named to the All-Big Eight second team. "I es-
Erickson said she seriously considered whether to participate in college volleyball or basketball after graduation from high school.
"After losing my final high school basketball game, I gave myself time to cool down and think realistically about my chances of making a college basketball team," Erickson said. "I thought, 'I'm only 5-9 and not very husky,' so I ruled that sport out of my plans."
Did her college plans include volleyball?
"There were a lot of places I could have gone to play volleyball," Erickson said. "It seemed that everybody, including my coach and my friends, wanted me to go to Kansas State, while my parents wanted me to go to KU."
LENTIC KNON, A Kansas State fan most of her life, decided to look into the Wildcats' volleyball program first. She
received her first chance to demonstrate her athletic capabilities during those tryouts.
"One thing that really upset me about Kansas State's program," Erickson said, "was that they hadn't decided to play." "We were going to be for the following year.
"Here we are at a tryout and last year's coach didn't have a thing to say about the impact we would have on next year's team. That made me mad."
After the trout, Erickson said the K-State coach informed her that if she were not a junior college transfer, she had little or no chances of making the team the next year. She also discovered they were allowed only one trout per school.
"That ruined my chances of playing at Kansas State, unless I made a film of it," he said.
volleyball coach. Lockwood said he saw talent that was "pretty extraordinary"
"SHE CAN LEAP 34 inches during a game," Lockwood said. "There is only one other person I can think of who can jump that high. That is Rita Crockett, a 1980 Olympian, and she could jump 38 inches."
Her freshman and sophomore years,
Erickson recorded a vertical jump of
only 28 inches. This year she increased
her vertical jump at $ \frac{3}{4} $inches.
Then how does she reach 34 inches?
Then how does she reach 34 inches? "Coach Lockwood usually adds two to the insets when he exercises Erickson satown. When an athlete gets caught in the excitement of things, she can jump higher, spike harder, even set more concisely."
One of the biggest goals in Erickson's life was to exceed the 30-inch mark, his achievement.
"Every year I would strive to go beyond that mark," Erickson said. "Then when I did, I was so happy."
Friends of
Friends of
RAY Q. BREWSTER
Are invited to a Reception
In Honor of His
90TH BIRTHDAY
Monday, November 22
Watkins Room, Kansas Union
2:00-3:30 PM
Chocolate Unlimited
Bring a gift of chocolates when you visit this Thanksgiving. For as little as $5.00 You can arrange a gift card for you (1.4) approv. $6.00).
Use Kansan Classified.
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MISS "EBONY"
— FINALISTS —
OF THE
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
PAGEANT WILL BE THURSDAY, NOV. 18 AT 7 P.M.
IN THE KANSAS UNION BALLROOM
Josie Washington
Janine Woods
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Let Naismith Hall take the "kassle" out of apartment living. Reserve a place now for spring 1983 or move in TODAY!
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The University Daily
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
KANSAN
Friday, November 19, 1982 Vol. 93, No.65 USPS 650-640
Consensus sweeps student elections
Strong voter turnout elects Ashner, Cramer to top seats
By DON KNOX Staff Reporter
The Consensus Coalition team of Lisa Ashner and Jim Cramer handsily defeated the Momentum Coalition yesterday in a student body presidential campaign that Consensus supporters proclaimed as a decisive vote to "stay the course."
Ashler and Cramer defeated Momentum Coalition candidates Kevin Walker and David Teopteon by 523 votes to step into the Student Senate's highest offices.
The final vote was 1.903 to 1.380.
"We had anticipated a close race," said Cramer, Prairie Village junior, as he was cheered by more than 100 Consensus supporters at the Sigma Nu fraternity house. "But the students were looking at two candidates that I didn't know about and say that I admire the taste of the students."
FOR ASHNER, the campaign was doubly sweet. Consensus candidates won 18 of the 22 seats that had been tabulated by 1:30 a.m. today, following a two-day Senate election that saw the largest voter turnout at KU in the past five years.
"We're just so happy and we're so proud of you," said Ashner, Mission junior, standing in front of a wall of blue-and-white Consensus posters. "It's so wonderful."
Momentum and two independent candidates took the other four Senate seats.
JOHN E. RYAN AND BENNIE WILSON
Champagne flowed freely among the Consensus winners, who chanted "Ashner-Cramer,
In their push for office, which began in early June, Ashner and Cramer had campaigned primarily on their Senate experience.
FOR THE PAST year, Ashner served as chairman of the Student Senate Executive Committee and Cramer was chairman of the Committee on Rights, Privileges and Responsibilities.
Momentum candidates repeatedly criticized the Consensus Coalition for being "a rebirth of the Perspective Coalition." That coalition, led by the year-old leader of the group, David Yearling, swore in office last November.
But Consensus supporters last night prepared Adkins' term as student body president and said: "I have no idea what the plan is."
Ashner and Cramer ran on the Perspective ticket last year as senatorial candidates.
"I felt at times that the campaign strayed from the real issues," said Cramer, who strongly advocated a Senate that would address the University's recent financial problems. "Bee in the stadium was just not an issue in this election."
WALKER PRIMARILY campaigned on his support of stadium beer sales. Momentum also proposed a sharp cut in financing for the team, which he says, a student lobbing group based in Toeckne
Many praised Walker for running a grassroots campaign that even Consensus supporters said was unique.
Walker, who spent part of the evening watching campaign results in a Lawrence bar, also praised Ashner and Cramer in a late-night visit to the Sigma Nu fraternity house.
"You guys ran a good campaign," Walker told Ashner. "And the students of the University of Kansas are the winners. Nearly 3,500 people voted."
TEPOORTEN, however, said he was amazed at the margin of vicinity, because he had figured it out.
"We knew it was going to be a big turnout, and even today, we thought that turnout was going to
See vote totals and related story, page 5
10:30 p.m. Ashner and Cramer celebrated Consensus Coalition victories with other candidates and supporters at the Sigma Nu house.
Student Body President-elect Lisa Ashner clasped hands in triumph last night with her vice presidential running mate, Jim Cramer, after learning that they had an insurmountable lead at
be in our favor," he said. "But I think we will have to examine some of these close races for Senate seats and the incredibly huge margin in the presidential race."
Walker agreed, saying that someone might have tampered with the election ballots. He declined, however, to say whether he would file a complaint.
In one of the closest races in the election, Robert Walker of the Consensus Coalition defeated Steve Chapman of the Momentum League 477/474 for the Senate's off-campus seat.
"Let me think about this for a day or two," he said.
CHAPMAN, however, immediately demanded a recount.
Robert Walker, who said he saw the vote for the off-campus seat as an indicator of the presidential race, said he was relieved after his victory by a scant three votes — was announced.
"We were very worried about this race," he said, attributing his victory to campaigning in laundromats, apartment complexes and off-campus fraternity houses.
The announcement of the off-campus victory by the Consensus Coalition — one of the first — was followed by repeated Consensus victories in the schools of Engineering, Business, Architecture, Education and Social Welfare. Consensus also won the top seat in the graduate school race.
"CONSENSUS was able to form a true coalition," Adkins said of the sweeping victories "They targeted voters in the traditional living
gected voters in the traditional living
See CONSENSUS page 5
Turnout highest since 1977, hits 14 percent
By DAN PARELMAN Staff Renorter
The turnout for yesterday's Student Senate election was the largest in five years.
The 3.283 students who voted for student body president and vice president this year amounted to 14.7 percent of the student body, compared with last year's turnout of 11 percent.
Lisa Ashner, the victorious Consensus presi-
dential candidate and Kevin Walker, Momentum
presidential candidate, both said that the issues
are more complex and larger numbers of
students to the ballot boxes.
The highest turnout on a percentage basis in the past seven years was 16 percent in 1977. Turnout had decreased from 1977 until last year, and increased one percent over 1800's 10 percent turnover
"PEOPLE BECAME very interested because
"PEOPLE BECAME very interested because they had several choices to make." Ashner said. She said issues such as student financial aid drew students to the election.
Walker said hot campaign issues and the differences between the coalitions had contributed to the election.
However, Walker was not pleased with the way the election was run.
"The whole election process needs to be revamped," he said.
Walker said votes should be tabulated by an independent organization instead of student senators. As of 11 p.m. he declined to say whether he would file an election complaint.
Three Momentum representatives oversaw the vote tabulation and were going to report to White House.
RUSS PTACKE, one of the representatives and a candidate for Nounmaker senator, said that he had filed a complaint because a woman was attempting to vote in a campaign button within 50 feet of a ballot box.
See TURNOUT page 5
Legal profession divided over plea bargaining issue
By CAROL LICHTI
Staff Reporter
In a burst of anger, Penny Hatchell called out to the woman who was being led from the courtroom.
"Hev Lisa, remember me?"
Hatchell's outburst was directed at her cousin who had just been sentenced in connection with the arrest.
Her anger was caused in part by a plea agreement that resulted in a five- to 20-year sentence rather than a life sentence for her cousin, Lisa Bigenwal, 18, Route 4, Lawrence.
vulnerable manslaughter for the June 5's laying of Donald Hatchell, 49, who also lived on Route 4.
Hatchell said she thought Bigenwal should have been tried on charges of first-degree assault.
"It shocked me that they didn't even try for second degree murder," she said. "It was open and shut so fast and quick. It almost seemed she was the one being protected."
PROSECUTORS IN THE Douglas County district attorney's office agreed to amend the charges against Bigwenn if she would enter a plea of guilty to a lesser charge. District Attorney Jerry Harper said the decision to plea guilty could have had no evidence it would have presented in a jury trial.
Plea bargaining reaches when the defendant's attorneys reach an agreement with the prosecutors to plead guilty to a reduced charge or to charges. A guilty plea eliminates the need for a trial.
The prosecutor also can bargain by granting immunity or a reduced sentence in return for cooperation.
Paddock said in a recent interview that about 80 percent of felony and misdemeanor cases in Douglas County assigned for trial were settled by pleas.
ADMINISTRATIVE District Court Judge James Paddock, who accepted Bigenwall's plea, gave her the maximum sentence for the amended charge.
The proper use of a plea agreement is when evidence does not prove the original charges but is sufficient to support lesser charges, Paddock said.
"We didn't think it would have been a wise expenditure of funds to have a trial that would have worked better."
changed his testimony during the preliminary hearing, saying he had committed the murder.
The state's evidence in the Bigenwalt case was weakened. Harer said, when the main witness
HOWEVER, Harper recognized Penny Hatche's frustration at the decision.
"That doesn't lessen the heartbreak or desperation that she felt because it was a burden," he said.
Hatchell was in Lawrence for the sentencing and walked through downtown wearing a sign board that said, "Let's make murder a crime again."
Her fight against the way the case was handled has not ended. Hatchet is considering using her own money to finance an appeal of the case.
Harper said his office had not received any calls about Hatchell's protests or about the handling of the case.
THE PROSECUTOR'S office must prove a defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt in a trial, Harper said. Although a prosecutor may be allowed to deny evidence or evidence to prove that guilt is not always present.
"Day after we watch people walk out of here that are guilty of serious crimes and that are not."
However, he said that he was unhappy with his office did not communicate better with Penny
"We were happy with the decision. We think it was the right decision"
Harper said she had decided what she thought
89 41
Kansas City Chiefs wide receiver J.T. Smith and safety Christopher kept their eyes on the ball as they concentrated on a pass route during yesterday's practice at the Arrowhead practice field. The practice was the first for the Chiefs after the 57-day National Football League strike.
Social Security is first order of business, legislators say
By BRUCE SCHREINER
Staff Reporter
Chances are remote that the lande-cuck Congress can put a revived Social Security system in the Christmas stockings of Americans worrying about the system's fate, two Kansas cities said.
But U.S. Rep. Dan Glickman, D-Kan, and Pat Roberts, R-Kan, said that sometime early next year Congress must shun partisan politics in the House and a package to repair the crumbling system.
"Yes, Social Security has been used as a political football, and yes, we can and should bury partisanship, or we will bury the system," Glickman said.
"I think a decision will be reached sometime during the first six months of the next session. But the crisis is not so acute right now that an answer is needed during the lame-duck session."
FOR THE NEAR future, both representatives said. Congress will take a cautious approach when reviewing the options available to bail out the sinking system.
I don't think anyone will be committed on any
The almost 40 proposals being banded about by the bipartisan commission studying Social Security reform.
option until we see the report by the commission on Social Security," Roberts said. "They won't say what options they are supporting until the commission decides, and then meets with the leadership in Congress."
- Accelerating payroll tax increases now scheduled for 1985, 1986 and 1989. One version calls for all three tax increases to take effect in 1984. Workers now pay 6.7 percent on the first $32,400 of income. By 1990, the rate will be 7.65 percent.
— Linking the yearly cost-of-living increase to wages rather than prices. Proponents of the proposal say this will shave up the system by enhancing benefit increases during times of high inflation.
See SOCIAL page 5
- Borrowing from general tax revenues when the payroll tax does not raise enough money.
- Incorporating new hired federal employees and non-profit institution workers into the Social Security system. This would generate added revenue to chin away at the estimated
Sunny day
Weather
CLOUDY
Today will be cloudy with a 20 percent chance of morning showers. The high will be 55 to 60, and there will be southerly winds at 10 to 15 mph.
Tonight will be clear with a low between 35 and 40.
Tomorrow will be sunny and mild with a high in the low 80s.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, November 19, 1982
News Briefs From United Press International
Official testifies he warned Israelis of Beirut massacre
JERUSALEM—An Israel Cabinet minister yesterday testified he told a top government official that Christian militiamen were "carrying out a slaughter" in West Beirut — a day before Israel moved to stop the killing.
Zippori said Israeli military correspondent Ze'ev Shift told him of reports of atrocities at the camps on Friday morning, Sept. 17, which were 17 hours after the Christian Phalanxists entered the camps.
Communications Minister Mordechai Zippori said he alerted Foreign Minister Yitzhak Shamir that the rightist militiamen were massacring civilians in West Beirut's Sabra and Chatila refugee camps the morning after the killings began.
The 15-minute appearance by Zippori, a former deputy defense minister, backed up previous testimony that the Israeli army had received reports of the massacre soon after the Phalange assault got under way.
Zippori said he passed on the information to Shamir after trying unsuccessfully to contact the chiefs of Israeli military intelligence and the secret security service.
GOP leaders say tax cut lacks votes
WASHINGTON—Top Republican congressional leaders told President Reagan yesterday that advancing a 10 percent income tax cut from July to January would face serious opposition on Canitol Hill.
House GOP leader Robert Michel of Illinois said he told Renagan bluntly that we just don't have the votes" to push the proposal through.
Senate Republican leader Howard Baker of Tennessee said he told Reagan, "It's going to be a difficult thing to do in the lame-duck game."
Reagan called Michel and Baker to the White House for an hour-long strategy, their first meeting since the Nov. 2 elections.
While the administration has been suggesting moving the tax cut forward, Democratic opponents have called for the tax cut to be
Polish workers' refusal called 'blow'
WARSAW, Poland-Poland's underground Solidarity leadership yesterday said workers' failure to respond to a Nov. 10 protest call to the ban on the union was a "serious blow to the authority of the underground leadership."
Tygodnik Mazowsze, Warsaw's main ground leaflet, said. Most members of the union decided that such a form of protest does not violate the constitution.
The Nov. 10 protest call was the biggest since marital law was imposed Dec. 13, 1981, and was part of a protest plan leading up to a court order.
"The defeat could mean either rejection of this program and the necessity to choose a strategy of long-lasting resistance or the acknowledgment that it was a lost battle fought at the wrong time." Tygodnik Mazowsze said.
Bishops draft anti-nuke statement
WASHINGTON—The nation's Roman Catholic bishops ended their annual meeting yesterday without backing away from the essential message of their proposed statement condemning the arms race and calling for a nuclear freeze.
After a two-hour debate involving about 30 prelates, the bishops agree to write a third and final draft of the pastoral statement on abortion.
The present draft condemns an immoral first use of nuclear weapons or the use of such weapons, even in retaliation, against civilian populations; endorses a mutual freeze on development and deployment of nuclear weapons; and questions the morality of the U.S. strategy of deterrence.
If approved, the statement will be used as a teaching instrument to help the nation's 50 million Roman Catholics inform their consciences on such issues.
Windfall tax ruling to be appealed
WASHINGTON—The Reagan administration announced yesterday that it would ask the Supreme Court to overturn a ruling declaring the windfall oil profits tax unconstitutional.
In a brief statement, the Justice Department notified a federal court in Cheyenne, Wyo., that it would appeal the ruling by U.S. District Judge Ewing Kerr. On Nov. 4 Kerr ruled that the tax was invalid because exempted Alaskaan oil and thus was not applied uniformly to all states.
The Windfall Profit Act, signed by President Jimmy Carter in 1980 is expected to bring the government $227 billion by the end of the decade.
President Reagan opposed the windfall profits tax during the 1980 campaign, but his administration now faces the prospect of a federal deficit that could reach $175 billion.
Jury hears recording, convicts rapist
The tape was played Wednesday despite the protest of defense attorneys who said it was too gruesome. But the judge said it was rare to have a recording of what actually happened in an assault and allowed it to be presented as evidence.
WICHITA—An all-woman jury, after hearing a tape recording of a woman being assaulted, yesterday found David Williams, 30, guilty of rape and aggravated sodomy.
Prosecuting attorneys said the tape recording was made by a dispatcher after the 23-year-old rape victim dialed the emergency number.
The woman of Tuba, Okla., testified she was staying at the home of a friend when the rape occurred April 19, 1982, and she said Williams was that woman's boyfriend.
The jury Wednesday listened quietly as the tape, filled with the victim's sacks, screams and pleas for help, was played. The woman was seated in the chair. The judge, who never saw the tape,
Drinks up, sweets down, report says
WASHINGTON—Americans guzzled more alcoholic beverages and soft drinks but nibbled on less sweets and bakery products in the late 1970s than a decade earlier, a government food consumption report said yesterday.
Americans also consumed fewer eggs but more cold breakfast cereal, fresh fruits and fresh juice than in the mid-1960s, the Agriculture Department said in findings of a nationwide food consumption survey taken in 1977-78.
The newly published report showed a dramatic increase in the consumption of yogurt and low-fat skim milk during the period, while the use of evaporated milk, butter and shortening decreased the most of any foodstuffs.
In contrast, consumption of sugar and sweets dropped about 25 percent in each region, and bakery products, including bread, dropped 20 to 26 percent.
Millions join 1-day Smokeout
A record 19 million nicotine friends — three million more than last year — took a break from cigarettes yesterday to watch the American Cancer Society said.
By United Press International
The society said it based its figures on random telephone calls to 2,277 households across the country between 4 a.m. and 10:39 a.m. in each time zone.
Thirty six percent of those reached said they were trying to stop smoking.
About 37 million others kept puffing away.
MORE WOMEN than men joined, the society said. Thirty-two percent of the men contacted said they were giving birth to babies compared with 41 percent of the women.
Society, said that smokers who didn't make the goal shouldn't feel bad because it was hard to quit smoking. It was a day of, crazy, bugs, are.
From Seattle, Wash., Willis Taylor,
president of the American Cancer
It was a day of crazy bets and light-hearted fun.
Somersworth, N.H., Mayor George Bald promised to march in. Dover's Christmas parade wearing red flannel underwear if Dover Mayor Raymond Hennessey and WTSN radio news director Donald Briand made it through to midnight without lightup.
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IN TULSA, Okla., the Excelsior Hotel offered headless matches, cold turkey sandwiches and a chance on a free carriage to those who made the Smokey goal.
know I'll get through the day. We am will."
Portland, Ore., Mayor Frank Ivance and the entire City Council swore off
Medical hypnotists scheduled free sessions for quitters at Baptist Medical Center in Oklahoma City and St. Francis Hospital in Tulsa.
"We will make it," council member Mildred Schwab, who has smoked for 40 years, said.
LYNN SMITH, publisher of the Montello Times in Minnesota, looked back on his D-Day campaign that led to an escape on a small scale almost ten years ago.
He tried to get subscribers to stop puffing in a campaign Jan. 7, 1974.
His idea was not accepted at first, but once it caught on nationally, six years ago the community of Monticello received acclaim.
In Washington, C. Everett Koop,
surgeon general of the U.S. Public
Health Service, cheered the stalwarts on.
Newly found star sets spin record
"At best, you may start on the road to quitting permanently. At worst, you may find out what kind of grip your habit has on you," he said.
By United Press International
Selling something Place a want ad.
BERKLEY, Calif. — A University of California — astronomer yesterday announced discovery of a star that rotated 642 times a second.
The star, which is called a pulsar,
spins many times faster than any
other pulsar scientists have ever
studied.
The new pulsar was thought to be only two or three miles wide, but its mass could equal that of two or three nuts.
The discovery was announced by Donald Backer, head of a research team that used the world's largest radio telescope, an instrument 1,000 feet wide at Arecibo Observatory. Puerto Rico. The pulsar's extraordinary rotation speed was calculated Nov. 7.
Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas invites you to attend our
Holiday Dinner Dance
on Friday, December 3rd in the Crystal Room of the Eldridge House Hotel.
Full buffet dinner, including vegetarian entrees,
full house dessert
Reservations must be made in advance with $5.00 deposit by Fri, Nov. 19th at GLOSK office, 3rd floor, Union.
Dinner, entertainment, dance—$9.00
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An exciting collection of
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Trench coats, all-water coats, and jackets.
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A shop full of quality brands you know and trust.
Shop
When the party is BYOB (Bring Your Own Brush) you find out who your friends are.
215U3
HOLLIS BROTHERS BEER FESTIVAL
Friends aren't hard to find when you're out to share a good time. But the crowd sure thins out when there's work to do. And the ones who stick around deserve something special.
UNIVERSITATI
Löwenbräu. Here's to good friends.
1
University Daily Kansan, November 19. 1982
Page 3
Towers' rent increased $15 a month next year
3y KIESA ASCUE Staff Reporter
Rent will increase $15 a month next year at the Jayhawk Towers Apartments, 1803 W. 15th St. in Denver. Advisory Board decided yesterday.
Furniture costs an additional $40.
Now, rent ranges from $390 to $435 a month, utilities paid. Next year, the cost will range from $450 to
The cost difference depends on the size, facilities and sun exposure in each apartment.
Furniture costs an additional $40.
Twenty percent of the apartments are vacant, although Towers C and D are accompanied by J. J. Wilson, director of housing.
When KU's department of housing took control of the apartments two years ago, they had 100 percent occupancy, although the occupancy had dipped to 50 percent in previous years. Wilson said.
BEFORE THE department began operating the apartments, anyone could live there. Now, to keep the apartment free, students can live there, Wilson said.
Caryl Smith, dean of student life,
said, "They are so strictly watched
that we can not even put a visiting
professor there."
The two towers that have vacancies, Towers A and B, are restricted to graduate students only and women only respectively. Wilson
said that although the idea behind restricting tenancy might have been good, it had not been financially rewarding.
To combit the lagging occupancy rate, computer facilities will be installed in Tower A in an apartment that now holds audio-visual aids, said Stephen Keel, assistant director of housing.
RESIDENTS OF Tower A will be expected to pay an additional $5 a month to pay for the special facilities, but he will be able to use them, Keed said.
Wilson said the department of housing was trying to improve the safety of the parking lots at Jay's Ranch. The owners cracked the corkroaches in the apartments.
"I don't think we ever have roaches under control," Wilson said. "We're working on it. We try to emphasize the importance of responsibility for landlord and tenants."
As soon as 10 residents have signed up to have their apartments sprayed, an exterminator comes to the Towers, Wilson said.
IN OTHER action, the board approved a $20 increase in rent for the Sunflower Apartments. 1021 Missi Hire Rent there next year will be $190 a month.
"We've got some problems over there," he said. "They're 40 years old, and we've got some maintenance to do."
SRS cuts may be chilling for some
By MATTHEW SCHOFIELD Staff Reporter
Some Lawrence residents may be in for a cold shock this winter because of drastic cuts in funding by the Department of Social and Rehabilitative Services.
The cuts, which take effect Jan. 1, may force some residents to live on the streets. Susan Beers, coordinator of the Community Services, said yesterday.
"Six weeks from tomorrow we're going to have people with no resources and no place to go," she said. "We can speak to people, people, but where are they going to live?"
Beers said private Lawrence groups would not be able to fill the void left by
"A LOT OF areas do have resources they haven't tapped yet, but we are now at the maximum amount we can give," she said. "We've checked every source. The churches are giving to full capacity; everyone is One hundred dollars per person and being terminated from their only source of aid as of Jan. 1."
the loss of SRS funding to all unemployed, able-bodied people under 51 because its residents already were giving about as much as they could afford.
Something unexpected will have to happen before the situation can improve, she said.
"Maybe 75 people could go out of state or find somewhere else to live," she said. "But if you are talking about 20, or even one individual with no
shelter and no where to go in January
— that's devastating."
STATE REP. Jess Branson, D-D Lawrence, said SRS reached its crisis because of the unusually high number of unemployed people in the state.
"Because of such an increase, it has impacted SRS, and now that SRS is looking at such a large deficit they're doing it by paying for the ones there isn't any money here," she said.
She said that SRS Secretary Robert Harder had to do something and that he had decided a lump sum of about $150 to cover the unemployed person was the best solution.
"He had to deal with with the problem some way," she said, "because there wasn't any money to help these people."
Branson said she had been predicting the situation for a long time, but nothing more could be done to trim SHS and make more money available.
"I KNOW SR8 has already cut down their personnel to the absolute bone, she's gone."
Beers said Lawrence was not accustomed to such situations and this made him nervous.
"The bottom line is what's going to happen to people who have no other place to turn. They could turn to the church, churches, but they are already swamped."
"It is extremely unusual. It's a sign of the times though," she said. "We just don't know what the answer is. We've never known it, and now all of a sudden we don't know."
South winds return for a short spell
Warm weekend could be last one of year
From staff and wire reports
Cold and rainy weather is expected to give way to a clearing sky today with brisk south winds returning for the weekend.
jet stream carrying warmer air in from the West Coast and damming up the flow of cold air from the North.
But the warm spell will not last very long as winter tightens its grip next week, bringing storms Monday and Tuesday. At temperatures plummeting soon after.
Randy Baker, student forecaster with the KU weatherman services, said the report was based on observations.
"There's a huge pool of cold air just north of the U.S.-Canadian border, but there is no way it can get down here we have westerly winds aloft." Baker said.
He said that storms were brewing yesterday over the Texas panhandle, slowly moving northeast to drench the city and make it rain, and this morning before moving thunder.
should reach the high 50s and low 60s.
Storms now in the Pacific Northwest will come over the mountains, and rain will lash them.
THE WEEKEND temperatures
"I's hard to tell what kind of storm it will be, possibly major." Baker said. "I'm afraid we need more information."
After that storm, Baker said, the area will be hit by an arctic wave. Baker said cold north winds from Canada would get past the shifting jet stream and tumble into the Midwest in time for a chilly Thanksgiving.
After that storm, Baker said, the area will be hit by an arid wave.
FOR HOLIDAY travelers moving through possibly inclement weather, Lt. Paul Wade of the Kansas Highway Patrol said it was best to stay tuned to the radio and television to keep tabs on weather conditions before starting out.
"They can't get any new information from the Highway Patrol than they can from the police."
Lows late in the week will be in the teens, he said.
Wade said the traffic the Thanksgiving second only to Christmas in terms of traffic.
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The Student Assistance Center
---
A LOCAL RESPONSE TO A GOVERNMENTAL FAILURE
The University Daily Kansan recently carried a story about a beneficiary of the United Fund, Women's Transitional Care Services (WTCS), and its training program designed "to counteract the effects of (domestic) violence on children who are injured to the WTCS) shelter." According to Bath Geyre, the WTCS member who organizes the time-wise training period required of each train is designed so every child in the shelter will have at least one advocate . . . to make their feel special."
Spouse abuse and child abuse are both national problems which are on the rise, yet when confronted with an instance of such violence our judiciary often ensures the recipient of more suffering by wringing its hands in felled helplessness. While the victim is not always able to recover safely helpless individuals are forced to endure frequent display of random savage.
However, the very exism which my WTCS acquaintances claim accounts for this domestic oppression they the (WTCs members) have always practiced by barring men from every WTCs venture. Although two of the thirteen child advocate trainees are not WTCs, one of them is on the house premises as the shelter is off limits to them because of their gender.
The WTCS members whom I know and are inspired, energetic individuals but these traits, even when molded by a three-week training session, don't qualify them for such a complex undertaking. Dealing with both the perpetrators and victims of this despicable practice is a governmental function because the victim's civil rights are being breached. A meaningful legal response to domestic violence is just part of the vital work in the public sector which must take place if this country is to remain free.
William Dann
2702 W. 24th St. Terr.
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NIGERIAN STUDENT ASSOCIATION GENERAL MEETING
WHEN: SATURDAY, NOV. 20*, 1982
WHERE: COUNCIL ROOM, KANSAS UNION
- Date on circular is incorrect
(Paid for by Student Activity Fee)
Bring a gift of chocolates for you visit this Thanksgiving. For as little as $5.00 You can arrange a gift card for you (1. f.b. approx. 60.00)
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan, November 19; 1982
Opinion
Boxing rules need study
Duk Koo Kim, the South Korean boxer who challenged champion Ray Mancini for the world lightweight title, was declared legally dead Wednesday.
The punch that was ultimately the death blow for Kim could have been any of the multitude that Mancini landed in last week's World Boxing Association bout. But the seriousness of Kim's injury was not known until after the referee stopped the fight. Mancini won in the 14th round with a knockout.
During the fight, Kim received a blow to the head that tore a blood vessel and caused a blood clot on the side of his brain.
Last Saturday's match has renewed calls to ban boxing. Critics say that boxing is not a sport, but an event where the participants' only goal is to intentionally inflict injury on each other.
An example of that could be the 1947 fight for the welterweight title between defender Sugar Ray Robinson and challenger Jimmy Doyle. Doyle died a
the Ring.
During an investigation of the fight, Robinson was asked whether he knew Dovle was in trouble.
few hours later of injuries sustained in the ring.
"They pay me to get them in trouble." he responded.
Injuries occur in all sports, but it is not reasonable to assume that a football, baseball or basketball injury is purely unintentional. Players in those games are paid to get their opponents "in trouble," too.
At this point, following Arnum's suggestion is preferable to banning boxing outright.
Bob Arnum, who promoted the match, has called for a suspension of professional boxing to give a committee of medical experts time to study ways of improving the sport's safety.
Such committees in the past have recommended changes in other sports such as college and professional football that led to new rules, better equipment — and a safer game.
All's well that ends, in case of Shakespearean theorizing
Rv DICK WEST
NOW! NO MORE
FOOLING AROUND!
ANDROPOV
THE NEW BOSS
UNIVERSITY
DAILY
HALLERAN
90
By DICK WEST United Press International
WASHINGTON — Calvin Hoffman, author of "The Murder of the Man Who Was Shakespeare," claims that new evidence uncovered in England supports his thesis that Shakespeare's plays actually were written by Christopher Marlowe.
I'm not enough of a student of Elizabethan drama to evaluate Hoffman's suspicions. On a pop quiz, I would have identified Christopher Hardy with individual private eye created by Raymond Chandler.
it occurred to me, however, that expert testimony on the subject could be found in the disputed works themselves. Here is how an interrogation of the Immortal Bard might read:
Q. Come now, Mr. Shakespeare, Tess up. Did you really write those plays yourself?
A. "An ill-favoured thing, sir, but mine own, I call the gods to witness."
Q. What about the claim that Marlowe was the augur?
A. "This is a very败 gallop of verses. Falser than vows made in wine. Stands not within the prospect of belief. What imports the nomination of this gentleman?"
Q. Well, Hoffman says it's been discovered that Marlowe was still alive five years after his reputed murder in 1833. That would at least physical harm him for the time frame of some archeological inscriptions.
A. "But this denoted a foregone conclusion.
Give me the ocular proof."
Q. Hoffman also wants to reopen the tomb of Marlowe's patron, Sir Thomas Walsingham, to locate a box that might contain conclusive evidence of Marlowe's authorship.
A. "That takes the reason prisoner. Poor
Q. Is there any connection at all between you and Marloe?
A. "They say we are almost as like eggs. He does it with better grace, but I do it more well."
Q. What about Francis Bacon, Edmund Spenser and all those other English authors who wrote Shakespeare?
A. No.
A. "Mechanic slaves with greedy aprons, rules and hammers. Cudgel thy brains no more about it. Nothing will come to nothing."
Q. Yeah, but where will it all end?
A. "Things at worse will cease, or else climb upward to what they were before."
Q. I didn't ask for a stock market prediction,
I wanted to know what your personal
recommendation is?
A. "I am tied to the stake, and I must stand the course."
Q. I wasn't asking you about Reaganisms,
is there anything else you wish to say in rabbit?
A. "Little shall I grace my cause in speaking for myself. Reputation is an idle and most false imposition; often got without merit, and lost without deserving. He that filches from me my good name robs me of that which not enriches him, and makes me poor indeed."
A. "Bid me discourse, I will enchant thine ear."
Q. That certainly is one way of looking at it,
small I pull you down as insisting you wrote the
picture.
Dick West is a columnist for United Press International
Mr. Hoffman, Mr. Cupcake, and Q. Thank you.
Mr. Hoffman, Ms. Shakespeare, Your witness,
Mr. Hoffman.
pray.
A. "No hinge nor loop to hang a doubt on."
Look out for those video games
I guess it had to happen sooner or later.
Just as I had pulled myself away from drinking diet soft drinks containing saccharin and from smoking cigarettes, the Surgeon General in the domain of my last unseen vice — the video game
The Surgeon General recently declared that video games, taken in massive quantities, could pose a serious health risk.
It seems that these games, just like diet drinks and cigarettes, were too good to be true. After all, life isn't supposed to be enjoyable, is it?
As an eager-to-learn freshman, I discovered the merits of video games while exploring Lawrence's many bars. It didn't take long to figure out that to six or seven bars and having a few beers at each of them could make for a serious hangover the next morning.
That's when I decided to take up video games and concentrate on wiping out enemy aliens.
The games were easier than pool and at the time seemed less dangerous. I figured that as long as I was playing Pac-Man or Asteroids, no one was able to break a cue over my head or stuff one of those ceramic balls where my teeth normally resided.
Video games were expensive and, I must admit, potentially addictive. The expense was easy to rationalize. After all, wasn't KU created to bolster the business community of Lawrence? It was all for a good cause. I believed I had been sent to school not only to pursue knowledge and scholarship, but to become part of the march against aliens.
I never became much good at video games,
and I eventually reconsidered my dreams I'd
ever had about becoming a fighter pilot in the Air Force. I would have gotten knocked down by an enemy plane long before I ever found the "hypersonic" button.
Maybe it was the realization that I would never get my initials up on the screen at the end of a game, or that another childhood dream had been shattered, that made me quit playing. Regardless, my penchant for playing video games tapered off, as did my bar-hopping in general.
P. K. BALAKRISHNAN
TOM HUTTON
On those occasions when I did get to a bar, I drank more beer. In my case, this became readily apparent in the lower belly.
really appear in the life of a child.
In that context, I guess video games could be considered hazardous to my health. Because I wasn't playing them, I gained weight.
The only other manner in which I can conceive of video games being hazardous is one that I叫Video Games.
When I was a video maniac, one had to go to a bar or arcade and drop 25 cents a game to play these amazing microchip marvels. But that's all the advent of the home television video game.
My first contact with these home model imposters came in June while I was working for a small weekly newspaper in suburban Kansas City, Kan.
The publisher, who also doubled as office manager, editor and photographer, was the father of a freckled and red-hairdied 10-year-old bundle of energy. She was a smart kid and she manipulated her father into buying one of the games to connect to the office television.
In most offices, the boss's kids aren't around much and they have little affect on the employees.
But my boss figured that between the television and its new attachment, his daughter would be kept busy, and he let her stay at the office all day.
Soon, even the smallest errands became something to anticipate and quibble over. All the employees wanted to get away from the sounds of aliens being blasted and falling from the ceiling.
What started as a semi-humorous joke nearly became grounds for manslaughter or, at least, bullying.
The sound nearly drove us all crazy, and once, when the sounds of aliens invaded an important telephone conversion, I came within inches of her. But the blaster that my boss's daughter held in her hand
Had I done so, it could have been hazardous to the health of both of us.
She would have had a broken hand, and I probably would have had a broken career on the job.
weekly newspaper
I'm sorry, but those are the only two ways I can think of that could make video games hazardous to one's health.
That is, unless the aliens got tired of losing and decided to attack.
Letters to the Editor
Changing names of buildings diminishes history
To the Editor:
While an advisory committee of the School of Journalism is considering the possibility of recommending changing the name of Flint Hall to Staufer Hall, I would like to express sentiments of concern about changing building names in general.
The dedication and naming of a building is always a commemorative event that links the environment we have built to the historical record. It then becomes part of our heritage and an element of tradition. Although traditions may change, and alterations may not change the record of the past without diminishing the significance of the future — and of history in general.
Soviet revisionist governments do this on a regular basis. Buildings, public squares and even entire towns and cities have their names changed to suit "current" political realities — to the point where there is hardly a trace left of Russian history and culture.
The original dedication and naming of Flint Hall was a commemorative event that made that building and the name Flint an important part of the heritage and tradition of this University. To change the name would only diminish that heritage and tradition. Furthermore, it would diminish the significance of re-naming it Stauffer Hall, because there would be no guarantee that it might not change yet again, at some future date.
Stephen Grabow Professor of architecture
if we try to erase the pant, we only succeed in shaping a less secure, a less meaningful and a less useful pant.
Link to KKK absurd
it would be better to commemorate both names by finding or creating another part of the environment to be linked with the name Stauffer
To the Editor.
I read J.D. Willhite's Nov. 8 letter to the editor with much amusement. The attack that he made on the KU Conservative Forum and me was very entertaining. Since I am no longer president of the KUFCF, I can only speak in my own name.
To the Editor:
When asked by friends what I thought about the letter, my only reaction was to say that it was "so ridiculous" and absurd that no thinking person can possibly take it seriously." That letter is typical of the illogic that reigns in this enlightened "democratic" and "liberated" system. The letter suggests that a common sense equate a lying smear with a statement of or reference to fact.
The "alteration" of "KKK" on the poster attacking the KUCF is an obvious, clever and subtle attempt to smear the name of that organization and create the illusion that conservatives are racists. The smear is a common tactic that is employed by leftists all over the world. I have seen it continually used against conservatives during my travels throughout Europe and Latin America. In Europe, leftists like to call conservatives Nazis or fascists. In the United States, they call conservatives racists.
Those who engage in such name-calling are incapable of intelligently answering their rightist opponents and merely display to the world their spiritual, cultural and intellectual impoverishment. They have no other means of defending the feminine or religious authority on the means of their weapon (which I equate here with the "big lie" of Josef Goebbels).
Leftrists need scapegoats. Communists and socialists hate capitalists, clerics and aristocrats. Nazis hate Jews, clerics and aristocrats. The KKK hates blacks, Catholics (I am a practicing Catholic) and Jews. However, a conservative by his very nature is motivated by love. He loves God, family, country, duty, honor, life, tradition, variety and diversity. He does not
There is no way, by any stretch of the imagination, that anyone can equate conservatism with racism, Nazism or fascism. I dare anyone to read the works of Kuehnelt-Leddin, Chesterton, Buckley, Salazar, de Maistre, Donoso Cortes, Habsburg, Burke, Morne, Kirk or any other rightist thinker and come up with a plausible answer to the question of racism. (You cannot include Hiller or Musolini in the rightist camp. Both of them were socialists.)
Now, as for the anti-freeze poster ("The Soviet Union needs You . . ."), it does not insinuate or even call anyone a communist. It does imply that the freezes proponents are useful to the purposes of the Soviets. Before World War II, the movement for national disarmament did not believe were not Nazis. However, their naivete助了 the Nazis and helped lead to war via the Munich agreement of 1938.
In closing, all I can say to Willhite is that he should be more careful in the distinctions he makes next time he writes a letter.
hate anyone for his race, beliefs, bank balance or blood color. His motto is "live la difference."
The anti-freeze poster, as offensive as it obviously is to the self-appointed guardians of "peace and justice," is based on documented facts (see "The KGB's Magical War for Peace"); but its real meaning is Phyllis Schaffly Report, October 1982; "The War Called Peace"; Western Goals, Alexandria, Va., et al.).
Those who complain about these facts have not refuted them. They have expressed doubts. However, doubts are not facts. If the facts are incriminating, it is not the fault of the people presenting them. Although there is no doubt that most of the freeze proponents are well-intentioned people, that does not change the fact that their movement has been infiltrated and is being used by the Soviets. This is not a smear. It is a statement of fact.
Jeffrey P. Johnson
San Juan Capistrano, Calif., senior
Jeffrey P. Johnson
Keep lawns beautiful
During the past few weeks, there have been quite a number of complaints about the campus lawns being watered, to which I would like to reply.
To the Editor:
I believe that the money spent watering the lawns is not that much, and it is a small price to pay to have a good-looking campus. It is true that the budget cuts have made us all suffer, but appalling conditions persist in many campus. So why ruin it by not watering the lawns? It really has not been raining lately.
It really has not been that cold in classes, and we have been told that the heat shall be on by mid-November — not too far off. So why complain?
Do you people feel not proud of KU's campus, or would you rather run it all to "save money"? The people managing the University budget are still in their right senses, and in my opinion, they made the right decision. I would have done the same if I were in their boots. So, stop being nasty and learn to be a bit considerate and understanding.
As long as you are at KU, you should be concerned about its reputation, even if it means wearing an extra pullover to classes until mid-November. Do you call that suffering? There are 10 million people in this country out of work and unable to bring home decorations that are we complaining about? A little water on the lawn! He W sound a bit "bourgeois."
Stephen A. Bass
West Berlin, Germany, Junior
The University Daily Kansan welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten, double-spaced and should not exceed 500 words. They should include the writer's name, address and phone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, the letter should include his class and home town or faculty or staff position. The Kansan reserves the right to edit or reject letters.
Letters Policy
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University Daily Kansan, November 19, 1982
Momentum party reacts to loss
By VINCE HESS Staff Reporter
Diebold was the word at Momentum head-quarters last night.
Members of the coalition for student government — including student body presidential candidate Kevin Walker and vice presidential candidate David Tepoorten — listened in disbelief to radio announcements of election results.
Walker lost the presidential race to Lisa Ashner of the Consensus Coalition by 523 votes, while several Momentum Senate candidates lost by smaller margins.
By shawn hammond
Asher was declared the official winner about 10:55 p.m. The vote was 1,903 for Asher and 1,380 for Walker.
"Six hundred seems to be quite a large sum," Walker said, citing informal surveys conducted on campus yesterday and Wednesday by Momentum volunteers.
"IT'S A SURPRISE," Walker said of the maroon
He said he had not decided whether to challenge the presidential results.
"We'll look into a challenge," he said. "I'll see how the results come to tomorrow."
studying. h named his victory story.
"If they have in fact won by 600 votes," Walker said, "the students have given them a clear mandate."
Walker said that he had no plans; other than studying, if Ashner's victory stuck.
Walker and Tepoorten went to the Consensus victory party about 1 p.m. to concede.
The Momentum election party met early in the evening at General's Quarters, 711 W. 23rd St., but left about 10 p.m. The group of about 10 supporters then gathered in Teporten's apartment, 1225 Tennessee St., around a radio and some six-packs.
WHILE WAITING for returns, Walker said, "I'm satisfied with the larger voter turnout," attributing the apparent increase to the Momentum campaign.
This year's turnout surpassed last year's by about 600 votes and was the largest turnout in at least five years.
But Walker said he was disappointed with Momentum's loss of Senate seats by slim margins.
"Geez, I can't believe we're losing by just pennies," he said.
Walker described the Consensus party as the incumbents, saying that he had expected the elections to be "tough" and that a realistic hope for Momentum was to win half the Senate seats.
Walker told the assembled reporters and Momentum backers, "Never get into politics."
An aura of gloom enveloped Kevin Walker, Momentum student body presidential candidate, left, and his running mate, David Teporten, as they listened to a radio broadcast listing preliminary results of the Student Senate elections.
Leslie Lane, who was elected to a graduate student seat on the Senate and as of 1:30 a.m. today was one of only two Momentum candidates to be elected to the Senate, said she would not work with the Consensus senators unless the voting was proven to be fair.
1985
The talk among Momentum supporters turned to what they called "election irregularities."
Walker said that he was not a sore loser but that he had heard reports that Consensus supporters told students, while they were waiting in line to vote, to vote for Consensus.
Dan Blehler/KANSAN
WHEN A REPORT on radio station KJHK at 10:45 p.m. said that Momentum had most of the Senate race and that Consensus presidential candidate Ashner bad won by about 600 votes, several Momentum backers said, "Six hundred votes! No way!"
she described the running of the polls as "not very professional" and said that she would support Momentum positions as a senator.
Student Senate vote totals
Student Body President
* Ashner/Cramer (C)
Honorable Promotion (M)
STUDENT SENATE
Allied Health
(one seat)
- Laura Lonborg (C)
Lisa Ferrari (M) .
Architecture (from english)
(two teams)
* Ano Marie Smith (C) 50
* Jim Pipe (ind.) 44
* Rachel Winkler (G) 62
* Julia Brittain (M) 41
One vote each for the coach Schulz, Kenson Knowles, John
Business (two seats)
Education
(two seats)
( two seats)
* John Goldstein (C) ... 93
* Roger Tigerstein (C) ... 86
* Mark Thill (M) ... 49
* Davido Shapiro (M) ... 45
- Amy Bush (C) *
* Marissa Kissling (C) *
Bozhman Reza (M) *
Shaire Carruth (M) *
David Allen (nd.) *
David E.
Engineering (five seats)
last two days, in accordance with the bill. This year five boxes were placed on campus. Last year boxes were placed at 25 points on campus and in living places.
Fine Arts (two seats)
- Shari Rogge (C) ...
* Nancy DeVore (C) ...
* Grady Pheian (M) ...
* Nick Vaccaro (M)
( five seats )
* Keith Syspert ( C ) 210
* Kay Lawrence ( C ) 183
* Kay Lawrence ( C ) 184
* John Conardy ( C ) 149
* Daniel Bellhain ( M ) 140
* Paul Reddick ( M ) 136
* Bob Tauber ( M ) 129
* Gregg Krekner ( M ) 124
* Larry Furst ( M ) 124
Journalism (one year)
- Leslie Lanne (M) 71
* Thomas Bengtson ind. 69
* Gunnar Bohren can be certified as graduate学生
- Chan Coeff (M)*
71
* Chai Coeff (M)*
78
One each of these Inose Link Arm, Ann Seymour; genera:
* Lepidochelys*
73
Law (one seat)
- Karen Schluter (C) 83
Gary Portery (vcrt-in) 87
Kristen Larson (C) 84
You vote each for: Maurice Mahoney, Mike Chuck, Wade Worman, Paul Keaton, Leigh McKenna, Fred Lochit, Michael Riggs, Gentleman Dave, Waltkin, Frank Zappo, John Welch, John Leblin, John Hebsh, Rob Bacason, Joe Horsagain, George Haper, Crimson Gymnics, Rob
David Adkins, outgoing student body president, said he was surprised that the turnout was higher this year with only campus polling places.
Off-campus one seat)
Pharmarcy
(one spot)
(one year) (one year)
*Scott Megafin (C)*
Janeet Graf (M)*
Marlen Hart (M)*
25
19
8
4
(Use table below)
* Robert Walker (C) 477
Siren Chapman (M) 474
Social Welfare (one seat)
"It's just a mystery to me," he said.
Turnout
Graduate Student Executive Council (seven senior executives, six junior executive race but is held simultaneously with Senate elections).
David Camastellia 67
Dafrey 67
Andrew Ward 77
David Martinez 69
Cornelius Paraskevis 68
Michael Palmer 62
Mary Louise 5
(the year) **Drew Malcolm (C)** 11
Connie Milner (M) 10
Alan McKinnon (writing in) 2
A
C Consensus
M-Momentum
ind—independent
l-liquid
But Ashner, who gave up a Senate seat to run for president, said election tabulation was not in the hands of the senators.
From page one
As the result of a Senate bill passed this year,
student senators could not tabulate votes. The
and because another candidate had spelled his name behind a ballot box.
same bill provided for a review board, made up non-senators, who will review the election results starting at 5 p.m. today.
All votes were not counted until early this morning. The final results for Nunenaker and Liberal Arts and Sciences senators were still being tabulated at 2 a.m.
BALLOTS WERE placed only on campus the
Consensus
group voting blocs, and they also got the posttraditional support.
From page one
"And they proved that the beer issue was simply not as important as Mementum wanted
Sarah Duckers, chairman of the Senate Committee on Academic Affairs, said, "The best people won. The students didn't buy the hype and the superficiality of Momentum's campaign."
Consensus supporters, led by Adkins, remained critical of an editorial that was published in Tuesday's Kansan. The editorial endorsed Walker and Teporten.
"NOW WE'RE going to give our endorsement for a Kansan editor," Adkins said during a ceremony in which he presented his office keys to Ashner.
But Adkins praised the old Senate in his last moments as student body president.
moments as student body president.
"The year has been very successful," he said.
"The year has been very successful," he said. "It was a good year in which we all grew a lot." Moreover, Adkins said the high voter turnout was especially pleasing.
'Last year, the turnout increased. This year, the turnout increased. And that trend continues. It is a very good signal that people are at least engaged in quality in their student government,' he said.
Social
From page one
$150 to $200 billion deficits facing the system during the next eight to 10 years.
Gleckman, who represents Wichita and south-central Kansas, said a final version drafted by Congress probably would contain a combination of several alternatives debated by the commission.
"The major components will probably include limiting the cost-of-living increases, bringing new people into the system, accelerating payroll and benefits," Gliekman said.
“One half of the Social Security benefits could be taxed under a system where the people are retrained and earn over $20,000 a year. I really know people say they really don't need all their benefits.”
BUT BEFORE a final package can be reached, Roberts said. Congress needs to decide the chief responsibility of the Social Security system.
Roberts, who represents the vast 1st District of western Kansas, said the system's role had changed during the course of its maturation.
"What we must do is define what we want the system to be," he said. "It was initially designed by a computer engineer."
program for those who are disadvantaged and peepy to live off of.
"But you can't tell to the elderly when that income decides whether they are going to make it or not. So it needs to be decided whether the elderly can have one of need or an income supplement fund."
ONE OPTION on which the two congressmen differed was raising retirement age requirements to keep more people paying into the system for a longer period of time.
But Glickman said higher age requirements wouldcommunicate an already dismal job climate
Roberts said people would accept an increase in the minimum age requirements if the changes were announced well before they went into effect
"Our workforce is already shrinking, and I'm not sure students would relish knowing that we might push back retirement three years," he said.
Despite the complexity, and deep-rooted emotions hovering over any decision, both congressmen are confident Congress will put the system back on sound financial footing.
"If I was a betting man, I would say the system is survivable," Clickman said. "I would say that taking care of the elderly is probably the highest priority of Congress."
First Annual JAYHAWK SINGLES HANDICAP BOWLING CLASSIC
When? Tuesday Nov.30,1982 6:00 pm & 8:00 pm
Who? K.U. Students/Staff (Part-time Students 3 hrs. minimum)
Where? Jay Bowl - Kansas Union
- For details call 864-3545 or inquire at Jay Bowl desk.
- Prize fund returned 100%
- Prize fund returned 100%
- Fees paid on Tuesday Nov. 28 at 5 p.m.
Sponsored by Budweiser
Jay Bowl
KANSAS_UNION
Jay Bowl
KANSAS UNION
FREE BEER FOR CONTESTANTS!!
HeroPlatter $1.99 reg. $2.60/with coupon
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The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Presents The University Choir, Choruses and Symphony Orchestra in a performance of Beethoven's MISSA SLEMNIS
S
SO
Sunday, November 21, 1982
3:30 p.m. Hoch Auditorium
Lawrence, Kansas
Records benefit the Kel' Music Scholarship Fund
Robert Shaw, Conductor
Saundra Surri, Soprano
Elizabeth Mannon, Mezzo Soprano
Norman Paige, Tenor
John Stephens, Bass
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office and, on the day of the performance, at the Hoch Auditorium Box Office. All seats reserved for reservations, call 913/684-3982. Special discounts for students and senior citizens
Page 6
University Daily Kansan, November 19, 1982
Entertainment
Four Georgia boys drive R.E.M. with hot rpm
Jurassic Park
The Band
Mike Mills, Michael Stipe and Peter Buck, members of R.E.M., played fast-paced music before a group of fans Tuesday night at the Lawrence Opera House. They met at the University of Georgia.
and have been playing together for two and a half years. R.E.M recently released the LP "Chronic Town."
The Lawrence Opera House sounded Tuesday night to the shadowy sound of R.E.M., a hot tub with a jacuzzi.
By BONAR MENNINGER Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
More than 300 people crowded into the dance hall to bactuver to galloping sound that made at least a few screechers laugh.
The concert, promoted by KJHK radio, opened with a solo ase by Peter Hobasik guitarist with a solo ase by Karen Hobasik.
But he soon slipped from the edge, changed his style of singing and settled into a monotonous,
Accompanied by only an electric guitar, Holsaple started strong with a love ballad called "Not Cool." His voice, for that song anyway, was a taut, powerful cross between John Prine and raspy Richard Bulter of the Psychedelic Furs.
apathetic delivery. With his songs draped in the languid remnants of folk rock, Holsiap indulged his ego for a little while longer before departing the stage.
Review
NEXT TIME he should bring his band, or play his soles at home for his parents.
After a restless interlude, R.E.M. took the stage around 11 p.m. The dance floor was filled with people dancing.
The fourstone is composed of vocalist Michael Stipe, guitarist Peter Buck, bassist Mike Mills.
The scruffy looking, grey, and black-clothed boys hurtled around the stage dancing with each other, grimming and crashing up and down, seemingly carried off by sheer joy.
The joint was rocking
R. E.M.'s music at its best has a spiritual clarity, honesty and leanness that reminds the listener of bands like U2, the Cure and the Psychedelic Furs.
The sound rolled along, soaring, ebbing, melodiously crashing in chords and words before regrouping to build again. The vocalist shouted, guitars rang out, drums thudded. The drummer stopped as the smoky dance floor.
The lyrics were hard to find, but words surfaceed as in one reasuring refrain, "I, I can
Out of context, such a phrase sounds pretty hokey, but coming from these unpretentious Georgia boys, it sounded as if it were about the best thing you could tell someone.
AFTER SEVERAL encores, the crowd filtered out to the street.
"I just think they're a fantastic band. I really enjoyed myself tonight," said Ethan Smith, city
"There is nothing weird or strange about this music. It is just good. This is what's going to eventually take over, this kind of music," said Kelly Dodd of Lawrence.
"I was real surprised by the turnout." Stipe said after the show, quailing a cold Guinness Stout. "It was a lot of fun. It seems to me that in the Midwest, you can't be guaranteed as many people, or as great of a PA system, but the people that do show up it seems to me a lot more sincere than the people who go out to shows in New York or Los Angeles
During the show, the band sometimes dropped into a listlessness that was probably due to the colds and flu that the members have had, according to a sniffing and hoarse Stipe.
The Georgians seemed to enjoy playing in Lawrence.
"I lived in the Midwest for five years and I know what it is like to be really dying to hear your voice," she said.
Guitarist Peter Buck said simply, "It's a real good scene here in Lawrence."
Said drummer Bill Berry, "The similarities between the Midwest and the Southeast are good ones. It's not the jaded thing you find on the coasts, where unless you play at mach 10 volume or look like you just walked out of a sewer or something people think you are weird."
Live theatre strong in China, actor savs
Live theatre is more important in China than it is in the western world, Ying Ruocheng, an actor from the People's Republic of China, said Wednesday. As a result, film actors are rare compared to stage actors in Chinese theatre.
Ying received international acclaim for his portrayal of Emperor Kublai Khan in "Marco Polo" a mini-series for television.
"There were five different languages on the set and many interpreters," he said about working on the series. "Differences in culture were also a problem."
Ving spoke to audiences yesterday and Wednesday in a series of lectures about Chimichangas.
"We found a common artistic language. We knew as we worked what we wanted artistically, and these things came out to be the same."
His lectures were titled: "Chinese Theatre Today," "Chinese Theatre in Changing Society: Its Role and Function;" and "My Experience in Working for 'Marco Polo.'"
IN HIS LECTURE Wednesday, Ying said that traditional theatre made up 80 percent of Chinese theatre today. It consists of singing drama, which began about 1,000 years ago.
Traditional drama is free of space and time on the stage, he said. It ignores the apparent limitations of the medium.
"In traditional drama, everything must be done by the actor," he said.
He said story telling was the reason that peasants knew about the history of China.
Ying also discussed the art of story telling in China. He emphasized that storytelling is practiced throughout China.
"We profit by studying our own traditions," he said.
Ying is known for his translating skills as well as his acting
ru used to translate Shakespeare into Chinese, he said. Now he devotes his efforts to reconstruct it.
Ying's visit to the University was sponsored by the Center for East Asian Studies and the International Theatre Studies Center in New York, Mid-America. State Universities Association.
Conductor applauds art as 'lodestar of humanity'
By DAWN GRAHAM Staff Reporter
Every man is an artist, whether he wants to be or not, and expressing art may be the only way to preserve the human race, the conductor of the Atlanta Symphony said recently in a speech at
Robert Shaw, who is world-renowned for conducting classical and orchestral groups, spoke to a crowd of about 250 as a guest speaker of the Humanities Lecture Series.
Shaw has been teaching KU students and lecturing on campus throughout a week-long
On Sunday, he will direct the combined KU choral groups and orchestra, with faculty and guest solists, in Beethoven's "Missa Sollemnis" at 3:30 p.m. in Hoch Auditorium.
The concert, sponsored by the office of academic affairs, the executive vice-chancellor's office and the Endowment Association for performance for KU's Music Scholarship Fund.
IN HIS SPEECH Tuesday, Shau said that the liberal arts, which he did not list or define because "there's a little uncertainty as to where in the world he was where the most powerful form of communication."
Shaw's deep voice rang with reverence as he spoke of the arts. He defined it in such terms as "flesh become word," and said that "man in all his glovy is clothed only by such as these."
"I believe that the arts are a lodestar of man's humanity, perhaps even more than religious or spiritual."
He added that art is "the most pervasive, persistent, powerful affirmation of the life force" of human beings, and said that it reached across differences in time and culture.
Shaw described a tour of Russia in 1962, where
"The tour corresponded precisely with the sharp edge of the Cuban crisis," he said, "but where we might have expected to meet with demonstrations or picketing, there were only affectionate greetings of 'bravo' and 'thank you.'"
Shaw said he had encountered similar experiences in other foreign countries, and expressed the hope that an international organisation could bring countries closer together politically.
he conducted a choral chamber group whose programs largely consisted of religious music
"My point in passing is certainly not that political and economic problems of the world are going to be solved by singing," he said. "But if we understand each other so warmly and naturally in these areas, we may one day be able to compose political and economic differences."
THE ARTS ARE not always used to pursue noble goals, Shaw said. He outlined recent trends in commercial art and music, and said that the business community is the art and shredded the essence of communication."
But Shaw said those who used the arts for commercial gain rather than the pursuit of truth had only learned to manipulate skills, and had not taken on art's "relentless and unreliable" nature.
Though humans are as capable of cruelty as of kindness, Shaw said, they were a "plus on creation's side," and could not undermine the true purpose of art: communication.
"Every man is an artist, whether he wants it or not," he said. "The only question is whether he's enough of an artist to fulfill his humanity — and to fill full his short mortality."
Shaw has been part of that attempt to communicate for more than forty years, and at Sunday's performance he will continue his musical conversation with fellow man.
On campus
TODAY
CATHOLIC CENTER WORSHIP will be at 12:30 p.m. in Danforth Chapel
BIOLOGY CLUB will meet at 4 p.m. in the Sunflower Room of the Union.
ASTRONOMY CLUB will meet at 8:30 p.m. in
500 Lindley Hall if it is a clear night.
SUNDAY
PRAYER will be at 10 a.m. at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center.
Robert Shaw, music director and conductor of the Atlanta Symphony, spoke on "The Conservative Arts" Tuesday in Woodruff Auditorium. His lecture was part of the Humanities Lecture Series.
'My Favorite Year' avoids cliches of era
Movie evokes laughter, but avoids glamorizing '50s
By VINCE HESS Staff Reporter
The song played during the opening credits is not a modern-day Top 40 hit but "Stardust," an old, familiar but still popular song.
The first four minutes or so of the movie, which is set in the year 1954, prepare the viewer for the surprises in the rest of the 90-minute film.
"My Favorite Year" is an unusual movie
However, the version used for the movie was
Review
sung by Nat King Cole — who died nearly 20 years ago.
Also unusual about the movie is its plot — or,
rather, combination of plots.
contemplative song by a deceased singer, the movie switches to bawdy comedy.
A group of comedy writers for "Comedy Cavalcade," a weekly prime-time show performed live for a national audience, joke among themselves as they prepare for the week's show.
After the rather somber beginning with the
Soon the scene changes to a luxurious motel room, where the showguest a guest of the week is staying.
ONE OF THE WRITERS, Benji Stone, portrayed by Mark Lim-Baker, is assigned to watch after the guest star, a famous movie star named Allen Swann. Swann, portrayed by Peter O'Toole, eventually leads the young, innocent Stone on a wild tale of alcohol, women and adventure.
Amid all the fun and games, however, is serious, thought-provoking dialogue between
Swain is an unusual figure. He has starred in numerous daring-do roles, fighting evil kings and monsters.
Indeed, in one of the movie's more touching scenes, Swann explains his greatest problem to Stone, even as a female admirer asks for Swann's autograph. Swann says he does not want it. Rather, they marry him — and they are disappointed when he does not live up to their expectations.
turns into a drunken, lewd temperament backstage. In addition, he is plagued by fame
Stone makes his own revelations to Swam — he changed his name from Benjamin Steinberg to enhance his career, and the woman he loves is his girlfriend. Stone swam during his first rehearsal for the TV show.
The sobriety of such a scene is mixed well with the comedy and satire of other scenes by director Richard Benjamin, who himself is known as a comedian actor.
IN ONE OF THE more clever scenes, Swann eats with Stone's parents and relatives in a Brooklyn apartment. Stone's step-father, a
The movie also saturates the television business as well as union bosses.
The cook replies, "Parrot!" The camera shifts to several horrified dinner guests seared near an oven.
former Filipino prizefinder, serves mealofat as the main course. Swann asks about the cooking process.
The ending of the movie — a grand finale that combines the bummer, drama and high adventure
Another strong point of the movie is its fabulous shots of scenery in New York City, especially Central Park and 30 Rockefeller Plaza, a near-palace of a building that still today is headquarters to NBC-TV, the network of "Comedy Cavalcade" in the movie.
The plot is entertaining, but the changes from seriousness to comedy are confusing at times. However, the acting by O'Toole and, to a lesser extent, Baker, salvages any weaknesses in the script.
present, but separated in the rest of the movie—will likely leave most viewers cheering.
VET ANOTHER interesting aspect of the movie is the moviemakers' reveling in the particulars of the 1950s — clothing fashions, mobilities and live national network television shows.
As the title suggests, "My Favorite Year" is a nostalgic look at a past time. Yet the movie's nostalgia is of the clear-eyed, not starry-eyed or dead-eyed. It was a period when history remembered, but the wars are not forgotten.
The movie might not win any awards, but it is entertaining, probably appeals to a wide and varied audience and will someday make an excellent late-night show on TV.
However, a question lingers — are the moviemakers merely projecting the attitudes of the 1950s onto a 1950s setting, or are they showing unusual insight in revealing the similarities today and yesterday? The 1950s generation needs to be heard from on this question.
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University Daily Kansan, November 19, 1982
Page 7
New Union director to be named today
By MATT BARTEL Staff Reporter
The associate director of the Virginia Polytechnic Institute Union will be the chair.
James Long, 38, today will be named by the office of student affairs as the new director, replacing Frank Burge, who will retire at the end of January.
Long will begin his new duties Feb. 1. Long, who was born in Newton, and went to school at Emporia, has held his current position for 10 years.
he said his first challenge would be to maintain the quality that he said had characterized the Kansas Union in the past.
"The University of Kansas has always been a flagship as a Big Eight school, and I'm looking forward to being a part of that," he said.
Kansas was the reason he decided to accept the position.
Long said the opportunity to return to
LONG SERVED as program director of the Memorial Union at Emporia State University from 1960 to 1971. He received a graduate degree in biology from Emporia State in 1968 and was admitted to education Degree from that school in 1975.
Long's wife, Phyllis, is a KU alumna and native of Pratt.
Burge, 60, announced June 28 that he would retire at the end of December for health reasons. Burge has since agreed to stay until the end of January.
The selection of Long marked the end of a five-month search that started in July. A search committee considered more than 80 applicants for the post.
David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said that Long was the unanimous choice of the search committee.
bier, Caryl Smith, dean of student life. students, faculty and Union staff members.
THE COMMITTEE comprised Am-
The committee narrowed the number of possible directors to five in October. Each of the five was invited to come to campus for an interview
Based on those interviews, the committee recommended hiring Long.
"He stood out head and shoulders above the others," Ambler said.
Warner Ferguson, associate director of the Union, said he thought the committee had made a good choice.
"He was very well qualified." Ferguson said, "He had a good grasp of student union goods and services. I'm forward to working with him, for him."
"I was impressed with the gentleman," said Steve Word, Union
Other Union staff shared his enthusiasm.
Bookstore manager. "Jim Long is such a capable young man."
GERHARD ZUTHER, chairman of the English department and a faculty representative on the search committee, said he hoped Long would have a lengthy tenure with the Kansas Union.
During his time at the Union, Burge, who became the Union's first full-time director in 1932, saw it grow to more than twice its original size. There were three additions in the 1950s and 1960s, and Satellite Union was constructed in 1979.
"I think he will make a good Union director," Zulufer said. "He is, in some sense, the best man for the party."
Burge had the Union rebuilt in less than a year after it was heavily damaged by fire in 1970.
"It will be hard to replace the spirit and dedication that Frank has brought us," he said.
Students to compete for top scholarships
High school scholars will gather on campus Sunday to compete for the Summerfield and Watkins-Berger scholarships for next fall, an official in the office of student affairs said yesterday.
Linda Beville, assistant to the vice chancellor for student affairs, said 227 high school seniors would be guests of the University while competing for KU's most prestigious freshmen scholarships.
The students will take a standardized exam, write an essay and interview with a 16-member committee
The students will have an opportunity to visit classes and to talk with faculty members in areas related to their academic interests, she said.
composed of faculty, staff and students,
she said. The six students on the
committee are former recipients of the
scholarships.
High school men compete for the Summerfield scholarship, an endowment by Solon Summerfield, former trustee. Kansas University Annual Meeting.
The Watkins-Berger scholarship for freshmen women is a combined en
dowment by benefactors Elizabeth Watkins and Arthur Berger. Berger's endowment is in memory of his sister, Emily, a former KU student.
The University identifies possible scholars by reviewing the National Merit seminomial list and by working with members of the high school counselors, she said.
Jerry Rogers, director of the office of student financial aid, said the scholarship amount varied, with each student being given a stipend for his freshman year. Students were awarded based on financial need and maintenance of a 5.8 grade point average.
To be considered for the scholarships, students have to be a National Merit semifinalist or National Merit commended, or have to have received a composite score of 30 or more on the ACT test, Beville said.
"It's the highest academic honor for freshmen," he said. "All of the students are top-ranking scholars in the upper 10 percent of their classes."
Rogers said last year's competition yielded 37 Summerfield scholars and 31 Watkins-Berger scholars.
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Local women's groups set legislative priorities
"The number one priority now is to establish a new tax mix, with an emphasis on the severance tax," said Mayer, co-chairman of the local chamber.
In a recent press release, the local chapter of the League of Women Voters announced that it would focus its lobbying efforts on solutions to the economic crisis.
After heavy involvement in the November election campaigns, local women's groups are gearing up for some battles in the next legislative
The League wants the state to maintain the current funding level for community corrections and will be watching how the state crisis is affecting health departments and school finances, Meyer said.
"It's not a new thing, we've been supporting a severance tax for twelve years."
Meyer said the League preferred a tax mix that included an increase in the sales tax, with the exception of food items, and an increase in the income tax for those in higher-income brackets. She also said the League had wanted a reassessment of property taxes for years.
At the state level, Meyer said, the League is studying the nuclear waste
The local chapter of the National Organization of Women is focusing its efforts on fund-raising activities so it will be able to finance a full-time job in government compliance in January, said Larry Smith, local NOW president.
The group is strongly supporting changes in the state rape laws, Smith said, which are measures that recently approved by an interim committee.
At the national level, Smith said, NOW is supporting lesbian rights, Social Security benefits and the Equal Rights Amendment.
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Page 8 University Daily Kansan, November 19, 1982
Musicians find fatigue, friends aboard "Bailey Bus"
By JEANNE FOY Staff Reporter
The KU bus system is rivaled by the "Bailey Bus," a bus patronized almost exclusively by music education and music therapy majors.
The "Bailey Bus" is not part of KU's official bus system, nor does it cost 40 cents to ride. All that is needed is a strong pair of legs and the desire to walk from Murphy Hall to Bailey Hall in 10 minutes or less.
The "Bailey Bus" is the nickname music education and music therapy bus. The bus is operated by the Musician's Academy.
For music education and music therapy students, life on campus consists of trudging endlessly between Murphy and Bailey because education classes are in Bailey and music classes are in Murphy.
make their frequent trips from Murphy to Railey together.
"Everyone usually walks back and forth together, and it's a good chance to meet people, except it's a hard way to friend." Carla Young, Colby senior, said.
JAYE GEORGE, Shawne sophomore, said, "Nobody told me my freshman year to schedule all my classes in either Bailey or Murphy, so I
spent my freshman year bouncing around."
George said that after class ended in either Murphy or Bailey, a student could arrive on time for class in the building only if the previous class was dismissed as soon as the whistle went off, no instruments had to be put away and the buses outside of Bailey did not have to be dodged.
Otherwise, forget it, she said.
Young said that when she got out of Bailey, she was late for class at Murphy, and when she got out of Murphy, she was late for class at Bailey.
JIM MAXWELL, Cameron, Mo. senior, said the problem of arriving on class to work was made more difficult during the week and Murphy kept the same time.
"There's nothing you can do about it," she said.
Young said by the time she made it to Bailey from Murpry, she felt as if she was going to die.
In Murphy, the opposite faces of one clock have different times. he said.
After reaching Bailey, she has to climb up another flight of stairs to reach the first floor, so she then can climb up the stairs to the third floor, Young said.
of my freshman year, I discovered the elevator in Bailey. If you're on time, don't take the elevator. If you're late, it doesn't matter."
STUDENTS could use the elevator in Bailey, but George and Young agreed that it probably was the slowest elevator on campus.
Young said she now was more physically fit than when she started attending KU.
"By the time you're a senior, your calves are rocks," she said. "The first three weeks I was at KU, I'd sit and rest on the bench at the top of the stairs."
Now I don't even notice the bench when I walk up the stairs."
She said a student sometimes could use the long distance between the two buildings to his advantage.
"If you wake up late, you can run to Bailey and people think you're coming from Murphy," she said.
AND TO AVOID boredom, the daily trek can be varied. Young said.
She said her favorite in cold weather was to walk to the bottom floor of Wescoe and take the elevator to the third floor.
"In cold weather, the elevator route is definitely the best," she said.
Water pollution cause unclear
By BRET WALLACE Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
The effect of industries and agriculture on ground water, the country's largest source of drinking water, is unclear, with some researchers saying they rubine the water and others saying no scientific evidence exists to prove
Ground water is the water that is trapped in aquaenes beneath the earth's
Jerome Welch, assistant scientist for the Kansas Geological Survey, said past farming and industrial practices had created problems in the quality of ground water through erosion and the introduction of harmful chemicals.
But Dennis Lane, a professor of civil engineering who has done research on ground water pollution for three years, said that the contamination of ground water had occurred.
JOHN HOYT, owner of O'Hoyt's RainSoft Water Conditioning, 409 N.
2nd St., said 86 percent of the water used in the United States was ground
Lane said the two kinds of contamination that occurred were natural and manmade. Natural contamination has gone on for millions of years. Concern for manmade contamination has increased since the 1960s, he said.
"The general ground water situation is not being impacted by manmade sediment."
Most of the problems created by agriculture and industry are in surface water, where the introduction of pollution is a serious problem, he said.
Welch said most practices that caused contamination of water had been stopped by Environmental Protection Agency regulations, but problems created by these practices still had to be solved.
HOYT, who agrees with Welch on the problem of ground water contamination, said the only way to solve the problem is through soil purification. Since the water is trapped
He said government studies showed that 46 percent of the ground water in the country was polluted beyond redemption.
underground, it cannot be flushed or treated.
Welch said purifying water was a costly process, but it was cheaper than using chlorine.
The biggest problem in Kansas comes from poor farming techniques, he said. Erosion and the seepage of chemicals used by farmers in fertilizing and pest and weed control are the biggest causes of the problem.
LAEI SAID studies of agriculture run- off he had done showed that little transport of contaminants through the soil occurred. He said his studies had measured the content of water running in fields and water seeping down in fields.
Lane said he had also studied other research over the past three years, and none of it had uncovered any problems with ground water contamination.
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On the record
BURGLARS STOLE A $1,100 custom-made bike bicycle between 3 a.m. and 9 a.m. Wednesday from a KU student's apartment in the 1700 block of Vermont Street, Lawrence police said yesterday.
BURGLARS STOLE STEREOS equipment and cassette tapes worth $45 from a car parked in the 500 block of West 23rd Street on Nov. 7, police said. The burglar was not reported until yesterday.
BURGLARS STOLE A $209 floor mat sat Sunday from the lobby of Oliver Hall, police said. The burglary was not reported until yesterday because hall authorities thought the mat would be returned.
THEVES STOLE A $350 leather coat between 2:30 p.m. and 5:30 p.m. Tuesday from a chair on the fourth floor of Green Hall, KU police said.
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University Daily Kansan, November 19, 1982
Page 9
University, committee ponder effects of Medicare proposals
By VICKY WILT Staff Reporter
KANSAS CITY, Kan. — Administrators and members of the Kansas Board of Regents health education committee yesterday discussed the damages the state could have made to our core reimbursement could do to the University of Kansas Medical Center.
The proposed regulations would limit the amount reimbursed to physicians who work in institutions that pay the physicians with salaries rather than individual reimbursements for billed charges.
"If there are no exemptions for teaching hospitals it could alter the fiscal integrity of the Med Center. It would hurt us more than other hospitals," said Norton Greene, chairman of the department of physiology.
"If enacted unchanged, we'd compromise fiscal integrity that depends upon physician fees to support the teaching programs."
THE TAX EQUITY and Fiscal Responsibility Act of 1982 made significant changes in the Medicare program. The Health Care Financing Administration recently published 10 proposed
regulations, including the limitations on reimbursement rates, which could increase costs.
The changes would affect the Med Center because the physicians are paid for services such as teaching and as well as their actual service fees.
In an outpatient setting, Medicare fees for physicians' services for which the hospital can claim Medicare reimbursement for overhead will be charged because the doctor does not have to pay any overhead costs.
THE COMMITTEE also discussed the suggested establishment of a $140,000 satellite outpatient clinic in Edwardsville, two miles east of Bonner Springs and 20 minutes from the Med Center. The clinic would be tied fiscally to the hospital's operation, Chancellor Gene A. Budig said.
The proposed location for the clinic is a shopping center across the street from a nursing home and an apartment complex for the elderly, said Charles Hartman, vice chancellor for clinical affairs.
Edwardsville is in an area designated as medically underserved, because recent growth has outstripped the
supply of doctors in the area, Hartman said.
"The intent is to attract people of Bomer Springs and Edwardsville to the community."
A PERMANENT position for the clinic would be filled by a medical student who has been on a Kansas Medical Scholarship, which pays a $4000 per year service for one year service in a medically underserved area. Hartman said.
Financing for the clinic would come from money allocated by the Legislature about a year ago for a satellite operation.
RICHARD VON ENDE, executive secretary to the University, told the committee that a vice chancellor search committee would begin interviewing candidates to replace David Waxman, executive vice chancellor for the College of Health Sciences, who will retire in July.
Joseph Meek, vice chancellor for academic affairs, reported that the Jay-Care Center was providing a significant service and that 68 children in his district attended January, he said, the center should begin to break even financially.
The center provides day care services for the children of Med Center students and staff.
Supervisor in Texas casts spell on bosses
By United Press International
DALLAS—a highly paid supervisor, afraid the county commissioners might replace her, had "magic dust" and broken eggshells that would need to cast a voodoo spell on the lawmakers, an official said yesterday.
Asked if the voodoo spell worked,
County Judge Gary Weber said, "All
I know is my back's been hurting."
A Dallas newspaper reported that the supervisor, Jan Iryb, who earns almost $7,000 a year, wanted to retire. Mr. Iryb, a new director for her department,
She reportedly ordered an assistant in the Dallas County Community, Corrections Department, Laude Rodriguez, to help her with the spell. Rodriguez reported the matter to County Personnel Director Allen Clemson and Community Corrections Director Robert March.
Rodriguez confirmed that she "unwillingly" sprinkled "magic dust" made with black pepper in the commissioners' chambers.
She would not provide any other details, but the newspaper quoted sources 'as saying Irby and Rodriguez wrote county officials' names on a hen's egg, crushed the shell and scattered the pieces in Turtle Creek.
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In addition to audio tapes and pictures showing the union leader with women in sexually compromising situations, the security agents had also been charged with criminate Wales in financial irregularities, NBC reported.
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The agents said the tapes and pictures were made before martial law was imposed in Poland and Walesa was interned last December, NBC said.
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NBC said church officials were thought to believe the evidence was weak that Wales accepted money from groups trying to influence union policy.
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University Daily Kansan, November 19, 1982
Men and women, from 20 to 45 years of age, are needed to participate in an exercise withdrawal study conducted by the KU exercise and physiology laboratory. The study will involve assessment of physical fitness and body weight during a six-week deconditioning period.
The level of fat in the blood has been found repeatedly to predict susceptibility to coronary heart disease. Exercise has been suggested as a positive way to preclude beneficial changes in the blood lipid (fat) values.
Previous studies at KU by the exercise and physiology lab have attempted to determine the type and amount of exercise required to reduce risk of heart disease by improving blood cholesterol ratios.
Because a high level of one form of cholesterol (HDL-CHolesterol) appears to offer a protective effect against atherosclerosis, an increase in this condition can promote cholesterol fraction can promote cardiovascular fitness.
The present study is intended to expand this theory by examining the effect of exercise withdrawal (detraining) on the blood cholesterol levels and percent body fat. The study will be conducted from mid-January through February 1983.
To qualify, subjects must be regular exercisers who currently participate in aerobic activity (running, cycling, swimming) and have done so for approximately two years. Only non- or smokers will be included. Injured individuals may qualify for the study.
Participants will receive a comprehensive cardiovascular fitness profile including a blood lipid (fat) level determination, percent body fat determination by underwater weighing, aerobic capacity assessment via oxygen consumption and diet evaluation recommendations.
Interested individuals should contact Courtney Thompson or Tom Sullivan to arrange subject orientation meeting will be scheduled for mid-December.
Residence halls to close for Thanksgiving
Many students without vacation housing
By SEEMA SIROHI
Staff Reporter
All KU residence halls will be closed for Thanksgiving break for the first time since 1979, forcing many foreign students to stay here for tempio- accommodations.
The halls also will be closed from 9 p.m. Dec to noon Jan. 9 for
concert.
The decision to close all the halls caught many students by surprise.
"I didn't believe it. People at home would not believe me if I told them," said Carsten de Vries, Germany special student.
He applied for the Home Stay program but was placed in the 13th spot on a long waiting list, he said. There are families participating in the program.
The Home Stay program places foreign students in the homes of Kansas and Missouri families over long vacations, such as Thanksgiving and Easter. It is a service of the office of foreign student services.
SOME STUDENTS will have to live
in motels because they have no other options, said Olusoga Awobajo, Nigeria graduate student.
"I don't know why they have this system. I come from a place where arrangements are made for foreign students for such breaks," he said.
The University can reduce costs by concentrating students in one section of the building.
"The number of foreign students should be high enough to allow that kind of arrangement," said Awobajo, who is one of All Seasons Hotel during the break.
"It's going to be $56 for four nights, which doesn't include board. This is a pretty steep amount for someone who can't call up parents for money."
THE UNIVERSITY housing system does not have enough money to pay for the halls to stay open during vacations, and the staff of the university is one of the office of residential programs.
"Our experience for the past two years has been that it's a big financial problem for the housing system. The contract does not cover holidays." he said.
The Kansas Legislature does not give
money for halls to stay open during holidays. Therefore, the halls have to support this program themselves, he said.
The office has had problems with students who want to stay in residence halls over breaks, he said. Often they wait to inform the office that they will stay until it is too late to make arrangements for them.
"IN THE PAST years we posted signs for people to come and sign up but until the day before Thanksgiving no one would come." McElhennie said.
The office then decided to ask the students to pay for their stays in advance of vacations. That did not work either, he said.
"On the last day we'd have an infu-
gence of people who wanted to stay no I would
have."
desk assistants and resident assistants who would have to be in the hall too, he
The staff includes security monitors.
Too few students stay in halls over vacations to warrant the expense of their stay, McElenie said.
THE MORAL obligation to find a place for students is felt by the office, he said, but "moral obligation doesn't feed the bulldog."
The office has made arrangements for the All Seasons Motel to lower its regular rates for students who need a hotel for Thanksgiving break. McKinzie said.
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University Daily Kansan, November 19, 1982 Page.1
Plea bargain
From page one
had happened and was upset when those facts were not brought in court.
"But," he said, "we're bound by what the evidence is and what we can show."
PENNY HAS negative feelings about the judicial process and plea bargaining in particu-
people get on with that, she said.
"It took me some time to get used to it."
"It's frustrating trying to explain to people at home that someone was viciously murdered and robbed."
"It took me some time to get used to it. She said she was notified about the plea agreement after it had been made and after Bigenwell had entered a guilty plea.
Harper said, "My assessment of the case was there was a lack of communication between our teams."
But, he said, his office requests information from victims, police officers, investigators, the defendant and the defendant's attorneys before a decision is made. The decision may not reflect exactly what each of those parties wants, but all opinions are valued by the prosecutors, he said.
KANSAS ATTORNEY General Bob Stephen said, "I have always advocated that the victim or the family of the victim be advised of what the victim is going to do, and the opportunity to be heard on their views".
"There have been too many instances where the system did not focus on the victim."
Stephan said that the state could pass a law that would require notification of the victim or his relatives before a plea bargain was reached because of their opinions and concerns with the prosecutors.
District Court Judge Mike Malone, who served as Douglas County district attorney for seven years, said notifying the victim before an agreement should be automatic.
MALONE IS a defender of plea bargaining, but he says he gets angry when the process is abused because those abuses taint plea bargainings. He expresses negative opinion about the process in the public.
"People only hear about the bad parts of it and thus the whole process has a bad name," he said. "There are horror stories to tell about the abuses happening, but there are more stories about the success."
Malone said the abuses were not the fault of the judicial system, but of individual prosecutors who misused it.
"All prosecutors shouldn't be punished for the few who abuse plea bargaining," he
Malone also is a member of the Criminal Law Advisory committee, which was formed during the 1982 legislative session to make a recom-
mendation for the judicial Council about new barring in Kansas.
The committee was formed, Malone said, because the judicial council was asked to study the issue by Kansas State Rep. Anita Niles, D-Lebo.
Niles said recently that she realized plea bargaining was an important tool of the criminal justice system.
"But it is sometimes abused, and when that happens, justice is not served," she said.
THE ADVISORY committee was made up of four district court judges, two defense attorneys, a state representative, a state senator, a Kansas attorney, and a county adversary and adviser and a county prosecutor, Malone said.
Conclusions drawn by the committee said that some abuse of plea bargaining existed in the state but that abuse was not widespread, said Dr. Sasha Marshall, research associate for the Kansas Judicial Council.
The committee said that changes should be made to improve prosecutors' offices, but the members said the Legislature should not pass legislation for prosecutors, who are executive government officials.
The committee members, who Lynch said drew their conclusions based on their own experiences, said plea bargaining was a necessary operation of the judicial system.
LYNCH SAID that improvements might be made by increasing eligibility requirements for county attorneys. Many now in office are young and work only part time.
these prosecution did not always know how facts might develop during a case Plea bargaining allows prosecutors the flexibility of changing their own claim what the facts warrant
An example of such changing facts was the estimate of damage caused by five Kansas State University students on the KU campus just before this year's football game between the two universities. Upon arrest, the students were charmed with a felony, Harper said.
AT THE TIME of the arrest, the estimated damage was thought to be several thousand dollars. Harper said Later, however, the damage amounted to only several hundred dollars — a misemdgeman.
As a result, charges against the K-State students will be amended. Harper said.
In the next several months, Harper said, his office will begin using a form that will tell it a plea agreement is made and the reasons that agreement is accepted. The form will be inserted
Harper said he got angry when plea bargaining was abused.
IN ALASKA, where plea bargaining has been banned for seven years, a study found that the
han had not overloaded the courts or decreased the conviction rate.
"It changed the way some types of cases are disposed of," said Wilson Condon, Alaska attorney general. "It has increased the number of felonies that to go trial. The sentencing is decided directly by judges. It is a much more visible process."
"It is the judge who makes the decision, not the prosecutor and defense lawyer over drinks."
Stephan also said the sentencing decision should be left to the judge. He said that during the 13 years he served as a district court judge, he was asked by the judge to recommend what the sentencing should be.
Paddock said that plea agreements to some extent left sentencing up to the defendant and the prosecutor. But he said a judge did not have to accept a plea made in a plea agreement if the judge thought the agreement would be unjust for the defendant or for society.
SUPPORTERS of plea bargaining argue that it helps to speed the judicial process, save the expense of lengthy trials and relieve the case load of the courts.
Condon said, "There is a small amount of truth to that, but 90 percent of that is nonsense."
The Alaska ban affects all felony cases and is enforced by the statewide prosecutor's office because Alaska's judicial system is not divided by county or districts as Kansas 'is', Condon said.
"It's a deception in pleading. It's a sham. It takes a valuable tool away from the executive branch and turns prosecutors into robots and non-thinkers," he said.
But Malone said the ban on plea bargaining in Alaska had resulted in charge bargaining. Instead of bargaining, thesecution are worked out on charges; the cases are worked out before the charges are filed.
THOSE WHO favor a ban on plea bargains assume that a charge is static rather than dynamic, that a victim or witnesses will continue to have good memories and that facts that change a case will not come up after the charge has been filed. Malone said.
The correct response to abuse. Malone said, is not a ban on plea bargaining, but for the public to vote out of office any prosecutor who misuses it.
Another remedy, he said, would be to make the county prosecutor's position more professional by giving it full-time status. He said that only four of 105 counties in Kansas had a full-time prosecution. The other 101 counties have part-time county attorneys.
"It's an awesome responsibility, and in most counties nobody wants it, so it goes to the county."
Lawyers are not interested in the job, because it is part-time, involves a lot of work and does not pay well, he said.
Condon said that he could not recommend having plea bargaining for other states.
"It ought to be considered on a juridiction by jurisdiction basis," he said.
BESIDES THE victims or the victims' families, others who are sometimes angered by plea bargains are police officers and investigators who arrest people and work toward a
"It can be devastating to an officer and extremely disappointing at times," said Lawrence Police Crime Analyst Mark Brothers.
the officer saw the victim when he was most distraught and saw the crime's influence on the victim's life and the family. He sees the animal who preys on his fellow man."
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Page 12 University Daily Kansan, November 19, 1982
Corps offers 135 acres for lease.
Corps offers 135 acres for lease City eyes land for future parks
By DOUG CUNNINGHAM Staff Reporter
The Lawrence Parks and Recreation Department has finished preliminary work on leasing about 135 acres of land near Clinton Lake that could provide land for city park use 10 and even 20 years from now.
Fred DeVictor, director of the department, said yesterday that he had made preliminary contacts with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and a local North Clinton Parkway and Dragstrip Road and about one-half mile from the city limits.
DeVictor said that if the Lawrence City Commission authorized leasing the land, it could be leased for only a small amount each year, such as a few dollars, and the city would not have to buy land for city parks in the area.
BUT IN EXCHANGE for being allowed to use the land, the city must maintain it and pay for any improvements, he said.
The commission is scheduled to discuss DeVictor's proposal at a study
session 3 p.m. Monday at City Hall
The city also would have to give the corps a general development plan that outlines any anticipated improvements or changes to the land. DeVictor said
DeVictor said that improvements to the area could include ball diamonds, hiking and jogging trails, tennis courts and picnic areas.
HOWEVER, DeVictor said that those uses were only possible ideas for the land and that the commission would have to appropriate money for any improvements.
City growth to the southwest makes it necessary for officials to think about finding land for parks now, DeVictor said.
During the 1970s the southwestern part of Lawrence was one of the areas that grew the fastest, he said, and the city's comprehensive development plan allows for more growth to the southwest.
"The Clinton Reservoir is a natural attraction," he said. "It's amazing how much that area has grown already."
IF THE CITY leases the land, it would not necessarily have to develop the area as a park now, he said, but the city at least has land available which needs goods.
One option the city has is to sublease
any undeveloped land to individuals for
their own use.
"In turn, that money that the farmers pay would come to the city and could be used to offset the cost of any maintenance required," he said.
If the commission wants to go ahead with leasing the land, it would have to place consideration of that on the agenda of one of its regular meetings.
DEVICTOR SAID he would recommend that to the commission Monday because the city now has a chance to ensure that future needs for parkland in the area can be satisfied.
Another benefit of the land is its low cost to the city, DeVictor said.
"There's an opportunity for us to get some land, at no cost to local tax payers, that we can use for future planning," he said.
Gay law talk rescheduled
Gays and lesbians who were worried about their legal rights and who hoped to find out more about what will have to wait awhile longer.
A speech on "Gays and the Law," which was supposed to have been delivered at 7:30 last night in the building where Mr. Bush rescheduled the Union, was rescheduled for Dec. 2.
The delay occurred when David Greis, a Kansas City lawyer who was to give the speech, received a message yesterday morning from that said he had a scheduling conflict and the meeting was canceled.
KU students, however, were not told of the cancellation, and more than 30 people waited 45 minutes for Greis' arrival.
The person who earlier had arranged the speech said that she had never talked to Greis' secretary any rescheduling or cancellation.
Strip-O-Grams latest
By KIESA ASCUE Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
The stripper swayed rhythmically to a disco beat, undulating seductively. She danced toward a shy customer in the dining hall of a fraternity house, wiggling her hips and stroking her thighs.
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"I'm 5 feet 7 inches and weigh 128 pounds, and I have competed as a body builder in Kansas. "Morse said. "As far as handling myself, I'm not the least bit
"THE ONLY thing I have trouble with is when the guys get the wrong impression. People don't think I'm a nice girl. That hurts my feelings."
Morae said the desire to undress in front of a group of men lurked inside her.
"I've often seen girls in bars with their blouses unbuttoned too low, and they wouldn't mind taking it off after they get a few beers in them," she said. "You got in us, too." In everyday's little bit crazy, and besides, it's fun.
Morse said most customers respected her for her work and she enjoyed doing it.
Hair Care
Morse said she had taken dates to her performances so they could see that they had nothing to worry about. Her current boyfriend hates what she does, but he understands that she needs the money for school, she said.
Womens Health
Care Services P.A.
During the day, *Morse* attends at Huntington, 1964-1/2 Massachusetts St.
urges them to help her strip and plays along with their reactions.
Complete Abortion Services
"There's no other way I could work part time and make as much money as you do."
When she slides the first piece of clothing off, the men look at her with a kind of disdain, but soon they loosen up and love it. she said.
She sits on men's laps, touches them and teases them without a word. She
SOME STRIPPERS try to get tips by kissing men, but Morse said she could never do that.
Awake or Asleep
"It's not the same as taking clothes all they way off and letting somebody touch you," said Morse. "It's just like being admired on the beach."
- As An Outpatient
- As AN Outpatient
- Free Pregnancy Testing
- Professional Privacy
- Surgery to 26 wks, LMP
684-5108
Lawrence, KS 66044
Campers
Hideaway
843-9111
106 N. Park
all you can eat includes pizza,pasta, soup, salad & fruit bar
from 5-10 p.m.
every Sunday night
5107 E. Kellogg Wichita, Ks 67218
ABBORTION CENTER OF KANAS
Saturdays & Weekdays
cut out and save this message!
DORMITORY SPECIAL
DINNER BUFFET
for $3.99
(Drink not included)
Let us help you plan your Holiday parties Meisner-Milstead Liquor 2104 W. 25th Holiday Plaza 842-4499
SATELLITE
BE IN THE
FOREFRONT
OF TODAY'S
TECHNOLOGY
Our scientific-engineering officers are planning and designing tomorrow's weapon systems today. Many are seeing their ideas and concepts materialize. They have the finest, state-of-the-art equipment to test their theories. The working environment experience duvice to research. And Air Force experience can be part of this dynamic team if you have a scientific or engineering degree. Your first step will be Officer Training School. Help us shape our future as we help you start yours. Be a scientific-engineering officer in the Air Force. Contact
(913) 749-5319
ENGINEERING OFFICER
FORCE A great way of life
AIR
ATR
MASS. STREET DELI
1941 MASSACHUSETTS
The Deli Sub
... for the hungry ...
Served Hot or Cold
Turkey, Ham, Salami, Bologna, American
and Swiss Cheese, Lettuce, Tomato
Super large French Roll
$1.95
Fantastically Good!
Served with potato chips and dill pickle spear
offer good
Wed. thru Sun.
Nov. 17-21
No Coupons
accepted with
this offer.
offer good
Wed. thru Sun.
Nov. 17-21
No Coupons
accepted with
this offer.
Mercenary comes home after Angolan jail term
By United Press International
SACRAMENTO—Soldier of fortune Gary Acker talked through the night with his parents and then slept last yesterday on his first day home from 6
"We stayed up and talked all night," said his mother, Joyce Acker. "He talked about his experiences, but he can't explain his feelings."
Mrs. Acker said that having her son home felt "absolutely marvelous."
The last time she and her husband, Carl, saw their son, he was a zealous. They would have never let him go.
"He looks so grown up. He looks good." she said.
Acker, upon arriving at the Sacramento Metropolitan Airport late Wednesday night, said he would do it all over again.
"It was partly for a cause. It was for a cause I could be in — against communism. But that's not totally all I needed." It went. It's very complicated," he said.
ACKER answered a newspaper ad to fight for a mercenary force. He said he was recruited by the CIA and paid $500 to perform against the Marxists in Angola in 1976.
With a $1,000 advance payment in his pocket, Acker was flown to Africa and
spent only four days in the Angolan civil war before he was shot in the leg during an ambush that left six other mercenaries dead. He was sentenced to 16 years in an Angolan prison for fighting as a mercenary.
Acker was one of three Americans released this week in a complicated exchange for Soviet troops held in South Africa.
"I suppose I was an angry young man," he said. "I had a short fuse. Now. I'm more patient, understanding. I worry about anything I cannot change."
cause damage.
"The longer we were there, the more lenient they became. I was never tortured. I was just verbally abused.
"They'd open the doors in the morning and after a while we could go outside to exercise. We'd get milk in the morning and if we were lucky, bread.
Acker, whose hair was thinning and who was suffering from receding gums as a result of his diet of meat and starch, said that when he woke up, he had based on his life. But, he said, the Angolans confiscated the manuscript before he left.
"We'd try to play soccer in the morning. In the afternoon, we'd lift weights that we made. We'd do other exercises and we'd read. My favorite book was Wilbur Smith's 'Wild Justice.'"
Sale
BORDER
BANDIDO
No. 1 Texas Burrito
Sale $1.39 Good Sat. Nov. 20
11 am-Midnight
Reg. $2.09
Video Games
1528 W. 23RD. Video Games Across from Post Office 842-8861
1528 W. 23RD. Across from Post Office 842-8861
"I want my MTV Weekend"
Quarter Flash
MUSIC TELEVISION
"I want my MTV Weekend"
Saturday Night QUARTERFLASH Recorded Live in Tulsa
Sunday Night THE I.R.S. SHOW The Best Of New Music
MUSIC TELEVISION
sunflower cablevision
10 pm on Channel 2 Available in Stereo
sunflower cablevision
Use Kansan Classified.
2
TENNIS AT ALVAMAR
Join the first session of Jayhawk Team Tennis
An exciting Indoor Activity January 13 thru February 17 Thursday nights 8-10
A fee of $45 includes: court time-balls-prizes plus professional organization
Call Now
842-7766
Jeff Henderson Tennis Professional
Ask about our new student membership rates
ALVAMAR
Alvamar Racquet Club 4120 Clinton Parkway
University Daily Kansan, November 19, 1982
Page 13
The University Daily KANSAN WANT ADS Call 864-4358
CLASSIFIED RATES
two seven three five two five five six eleven eight nine ten
$2.25 $3.00 $3.75 $3.00 $3.25 $3.50 $3.25 $3.50 $3.25 $3.50
nine ten eleven nineteen ninety twenty thirty four fifty sixty seventy
seventy eighty ninety ninety ninety ninety ninety ninety
AD DEADLINES
ERRORS
to run
Monday ... Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday ... Fridays 5 p.m.
Wednesday ... Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday ... Friday 5 p.m.
Friday ... Wednesdays 5 p.m.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or simply by the Callman business offer at 864-4358.
The Kaunas 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.
118 Flint Hall 864-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
no you need each! Bring your unwanted merchandise to the Lawrence Community Auction. Every Wednesday, 7 p.m. Consignments accepted Tuesday 6 p.m., Wed. 10 a.m., 2 p.m., New Hampshire, Call 800-359-4400.
J HOOO, BOOKSELLERS HAS JUST BUILT 2250
TRADE PAPERBACKS. REMEMBER ALL
PAPERBACKS are $1 PRICE at J HOOO.
Hippo Birthday Doh O'Brian, Laurie, Beth, Laurie
Larage, Deb.
Apprentices' Books for feminist, Lesbian
and other, alternative books.
Books by Anne Coulson.
Books by Alice Kline.
Book by John H. Bentley.
Making knitstamps. Hours currently run. Makestamps.
Skiers. A woman is a feminist & children are
sisters. Skiers. A woman is a feminist & children are sisters.
FOR RENT
1 Bedroom apartment, Quiet. Modern appliances including dishwasher and disposal. Living room has a large window. A full 2nd floor, 36-month. Utilities not included. Ideal for graduate or someone who like privacy. Call 877-459-1010.
i280 available for sublease Jan. 1. $850 ALL
UNITESPAID PAYS 91.0 Lousiana, pnay. 841.11900
Available Dec. 31. 31-dcm. turn i280 near campus
and pick up. Inventory plus 6% of
required payment required. No pnay. 841.11900
ENERGY EFFICIENT 328-hour apartment in more old duplex. $280/month plus amenities 486-192
PENTA campus apartments, large and small. Next to campus. Uses charges, qualified费, 842-4138. Premitate room needed in a two bedroom furnished double. Available Dec 17, 16 month. Debtible
Honorine Townhouses - 2 RH furnished & unfurnished
efficient townhouses w/ garage. Spacious
enough for three. Only 3 locks from campus at 14th
Kentucky. 843-667.
SPRING SEMESTER
Enjoy carefree living at affordable prices. Spacious studies, 1 & 2 bedroom apts. - Carpeted, draped and on the busline.
The Luxury of Meadowbrook Is Just Right For You
meadowbrook
15th & Crestline 842-4200
Housemates wanted: Enjoy a relaxed co-cognitive living experience, reasonable rates and close to campus not! Call Sunflower Homes. Huge 2 bapm apt $950. Utilities Close. Bldg #14, 837-465-2066. 842-206-2066.
campus. Potential of working out here?
I get an apartment to gaze at me, is it available
Dci & located on Phi 4168. Apt. Come
out, and we would work something out. Ph.
491-4168
Live in the CHRISTIAN CAMPUS HOUSE this
week. Become a part of a growing campus
ministry. Call Alan Rosenak, campus minister.
435-6929
Mendockbrook Furnished studio available on sublease now through August. Water paid. No deposit if rented by December 1st. Call Jan, 864-5567 or 841-4233, evenings.
Jayhawker Towers Apartments
- utilities paid
Now taking applications for spring and summer leases. KU students only.
2 Bedroom apartments on campus
2 Bedroom apartments on campus
- air condition
- on bus line
- swimming pool
- air conditioned
- on bus line
- cablevision
- cablevision
- laundry facility
- furnished or unfurnished
Tower A—Grad Students only
Tower B—Women Students only
Tower B - Women Students one
Tower D - A & All KJU Students
Office Hours
Mon-Fri 8:00-5:00
1603 W. 15th 843-4993
Need a suselease taken over starting Jan. 1.
1 bedroom, furnished apt. extra water, price paid
5 minute walk from campus. If interested and
willing to pay $190 per person, Adk.
About 100 Apt. I, 1 Hainesport place suselease.
Standard 4 mature students for a very special bedroom live, near village neighborhood $450
new apart, 2 bed, 1 bath; fully furnished, close to schools 841-1323 or 749-5373
What are your plans for next semester?
Houghton Place is full but we will have a few studios and one-bedroom apartments available for January occupancy. Why not call for an appointment to see now? We prefer graduate students or mature adults.
2400 Alabama
Nice, new 2 Br. apt. next to campus. a/c, carpet
drapes. Available Mid-Dec. $1 Dec. rent free
841-8733
one-bedroom, one-bath apt, with range
left(iterator and dishwasher. Good location, 800,
all rooms are equipped.
businessme. jc.) for a, completely furnished
available in Des. or Jan. Close to masturbator 740-3432
One-and, two bedroom apartments. Move your belongings in after final-spend the holidays at home with family-pay rent upon your request. Attend high-quality facilities. Paid cable TV: B21-218.
PRINCETON PLACE PATIO APARTMENTS. New Available, 2 bedrooms, 2 bath, perfect for roommates, features wood burning fireplace, 2 car garage with windows, large kitchen space, a mini kitchen, quiet surroundings. No plexa per 142 per month. Open house 9:30/5:30 daily at 26th Princeton Bld., or phone 412/2679 for additional pricing.
Quail Creek Apartments sublease. Two bedroom, 1½ bath, balcony,浴室 Mid December June Jane $250
HARLEE, HOUSE, contemporary 3 BIL. 13 mL $850
HAWKINS, HOME, contemporary 2 BIL. 15 mL $850
single graduate, $15 plus deposit, no interest. 88-900-6880
SOUTHERN PARKWAY TOWNHOUSES bath & kennels if you desire or dress & erase appartment paint boating, fishing, swimming, hookups, all appliances, attached garage, swimming pool, laundry room call 249-8257 (evenings and weekdays) for more information call 249-8257 (evenings and weekdays) for more information
MADIOUS. Meadowbrook studio available for sublease Jan 14 REDUCED $200. Pailly carpeted and furnished close to campus. Water and cable TV service. Call 631-749-2500 at a, j, i, or p价. 843-6453 from 5 p.m.
1. incuse in lot 1. bt its campus. Complete in-
tenure garage. Garage Available. Dept. Deposit.
Netspots: 920-354-6789.
Sulhasna species one bedroom apartment in Mechang, Mongolia. Contact B-837F at Maunslowbrook B-4290
Sulubane Meadowbreak studio. New furnished,
carpeted, patio and outdoor spaces for $255/month
charges $480, 794, 3136
Sublease 1 be apt. Permitted. Corp decor. Great,
location, good food. Call 641-5803. Available
Naismith Hall
Stay Warm This Winter With
*Private Baths
Individually - Thermostatically Controlled Heat
- Private Sleeping Study Areas
* Carneging
*Fourteen Meats Per Week
*Air Conditioning
*Versatility in Payment Plans*
*High Rise Living With A Pool
And An Active Social Calendar*
*Free Utilities
1800 NAISMITH DRIVE
843-8559
nautical beautiful 1:bedroom apartment in quiet $98 location. Low utilities, Availabe Jan., 1 Cell.
Sublease newly decorated 4 bedroom townhouse
Reduced rate Call 843-9248
We cater to student needs. Ask about our special arrangements for Semester Break 1 and 2 bedroom apartments available with laundry facilities and patel cable TV. Semester breaks. Walk to school.
Hampton Place - Completely furnished one bedroom apartments available immediately. Located between 14th and 15th on Mass. Only 25% from KU and downtown; see ahead! Areas from $20 per month water费.
nice nice 2 br. 1 plus 15 bath Matshewan
Water gas/cage p. Availability 3pm.
Sunday bedding available one bedroom
available for subtet beginning Dec. 16.
water paid, $245/month $845-525 between
dec. 16 and midnight.
BURSLE BUREAU. quest 1 bedroom furnished at
on bus line. base 1安慰园 Arecchie D. first pari
bedroom. base 2安妮丽亚园.
FOR SALE
Fireed of doing all the housework? Check out Sunflower cooperative secure, clean and inexpensive.
Kwaiity Cunei huge selection of Marvel, DC
Pacific new and back issues; Science fiction,
Ursula's Travels, Spanish comics, too. 701 W. 7th
845/220
1972. Oldsmobile Cutlass, excellent condition,
sealed with original leather interior.
awaited, asking $1757, mail call 641-8031.
VOLG V0.4, radials. Body good. Engine running
but needs work soon. Best offer over 6-8k.
Call
I got a call for you I want to tell you an SB208a
G 2500 miles, A/C interior, luggage rack,
radiators & stove. Everything in real good condition.
Call 704-7686 to see it and watch video.
1697 Fiat 144 Sport, Runs great. Winderized, new factory, retro alternator, new brakes $1000 to 1448. 1997 VW Rabin 38,000 miles. 4-door, new Michelin tires, fuel injection $3,641 Call 841-4752.
NICELY DECORATED spacious room. Furnished 8% utilized space in the downtown OFF-WEST corner with a student students area. SULEASE OUTSTANDING TOWHOME, 2 br,1½ bath, LK, DX, kitchen, w/appliances, patio, outdoor furniture.
Off-Season bargain! 1975 2004 a 4 yr cushion. Horn well used.
OFF-SEASON bargain! 1975 2004 a 4 yr cushion. Horn well used.
Wee. Wee. Wee. Reconditioned, show price, $900.
WARM alert room, one block from Union, Clean habit, no pets, after bath. 1090 Ohio
1000 Sunbird, 4 c.v. automatic, air conditioned,
PB, brand new AM/AMT cassette, 35,000 miles, $150
1
Pioneer XS729 receiver and PL-5130 turbelle. Askpe
$600.00 epi. mail. 841-3392.
1670 Old Delta Delta, 80% power steering, power brake,
automatic transmission. Good condition. Low mises
quality proof/legalize, vip. points.com
NAD 20 wait am/pm-app/ampl (i), or best offer,
www.nad20.com
PINTO ST. Wg. 1976 Engine rebuilt Snow trees $300
483-3296
Clothes, dryer, Kenmore electric brand new, white
Debbie 842-8642 between 8:10 p.m.
79 2000X Daxalun, air, stereo-cassette, reg. gas, exc.
cond. DDXF 50. Low miles. E64 = 1537
MACRO
Photo留名 time: 841-2933 after 6
procedure Photo留名(time: integer; PLAM: inatable; Ask:
var i: integer;
Cedda, 914-780-3265
phone number terminal, unable with KUJ. Must
work upgrades. Call Krual 764-9000.
Seoul SK18 Bode, ladies size 8, breast condition. Only worn
13 days. Call Mary B41-1012
79 Ford Truck V6 automatic, AM 42,000 miles, very clean.
415, 195-784 or 841-066.
img $50 or另支 mini-virtr. $75
Save! Government typeperitors, IBM electric $150
*sophomus IIIHIM computer with printer & processor*
*Model 6: RPG to language (5).*
*Model 7: PC to language (4).*
*full disc, unlimited storage, 15 characters per sec, directional.*
*University State Rank 855 law, Lawrence, KS 69044*
***
Adds 808 computer, must sell, doesn't work. Good
MADE TO SEEK
TYPE II-500, 1975 - 12400 miles, runs and looks
great, must sell 749-108.
TV (B & W) 845. Bike (6 speed) $23.99 m $64.600.
Technics Glassware Deck 76,抡 $79.00 of the line when new, front loading. Excellent condition. Call 841-3174.
Two female roommates for a beautiful new home. Call 841-3174.
FOUND
1 pair of prescription glasses found in 4th floor ladies restroom of Wesley Hall, Monday. Call 749-6186 after 5 and identify it.
Found Sunday on Watson steps one white longhair male cat, light green eyes, black on feet.
Found glasses in ladies' centrons on 2nd floor of Wesley Hall for Thursday. Come to 869 West or Call
Found last月 Night I pair of soft contact leses in case Contact Nancy Burns at 864-1700
Contact Nancy Burke at 646-1370
Found white clipboard with Blair paper and English
text.
I lost my prey prescription glasses in a help case
my lateyer's glasses on the case. Help me.
I lost my prey prescription glasses in a help case
my lateyer's glasses on the case. Help me.
I lost my prey prescription glasses in a help case
my lateyer's glasses on the case. Help me.
LORT: 10¹ gold coin with Delta Gamma baserail,
delta incremental value, reward if returned;
delta incremental value, reward if returned;
LOST. A small dark book of bookmarks between McCollum's bib and a 139-air mail address. It found 864-6470.
LOST! Black & white by a month male spengler apenard at Nicholas Hall Prevod New 15. Calif. B44-845-3600. Fax 972-692-2880.
LOST. *Blue "General Chemistry"* text. Believed lost in Malibu library. Needlessly despatched for finish, Reward. 843-749-ASK for Bryan or leave message. Brown. Lets brush leather in Jacketland Hall within 2 weeks.
LIGHT, HUE, nylon bibbon, Wednesday November 9 on University Drive between Lever Hall and campus. TICKETS AT:
www.universitydrive.org
LOST, brown/beige, cream striped scarf 11/12/02.
Reward, 842-865 eyes
Hawk
Bale gray kittens with black stripes and white collar
Mike 4306, 1311, KU, Kentucky. 842-3204
Reward offered 122th & Kentaion 842-329-0
One Ladies neckline outside of Haworth Call
244 REWARD. Blue cal-eye glasses with
ringlets. Please phone 789-00447.
HELP WANTED
EARN $6000 Isbn summer painting business in your
city. Apply online at earn6000.com Interviews will be Nov 29. All manag-
ment reqs include: Bach degree or equiv, Exp in art,
Interview with artists.
NURSING - FILL-UP/TIME/PART-TIME You are in-tended in *E-West* week only - Either day, even day or night. Please fill up the nurse's appointment per week, 8 or 12 hour shifts? These and other opportunities for registrars are now available at Topica on their website or by calling (805) 674-3960 or your orientation. So even if you have been away from nursing awake, we can work back in to you all week long. We all work together and support each other. SHIFT DFFERENTIAL 10 HOURLY. Contact Beverly Anderson, RN, director of Nursing, Topica State Hospital, 720 S.W. 8th Street, Topica, Rama Valley.
Student technical writer half-time. The University of Kansas Academic Computing Center is seeking an individual to write and develop computer applications, and general computer usage. Assist also with workshops, workshops, and other training sessions demonstrated skill in technical writing and student status at KU. Prefer applicants with degree or equivalent in computer science. 837-4575 per month. Send resume, letter of application, and cover letter to Student Writing Center, University of Kansas, P.O. Droor 2007; Lawrence, KS 60043 by Dec. 1, 1982 AA/EE/OC Freshman. Mail resume to Freshman
**OVERHEARNS JOURS**, Summer yearbook for Europe, Kuala Lumpur. Send resume to OVERHEARNS JOURS, Sibiguan free info, write JLC Job 52-9KJC. Mail resume to OVERHEARNS JOURS, Kuala Lumpur.
COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES: early & advanced outpatient abortion; quality medical care; confidentiality assured. Kansas City area. Call collection for appointments (813) 642-3100
A Special For Students, Harecus *7* $Perman. $22
Charmile 10333; Mass 843-3504 Ask for Dessertenknei
A Strong Keg outlet - Bennett Retail Laundry. Chilled
Wine-Kegs - Ice beer 2 lbs, northMemorial
**BRASS BALLS**. You know someone who needs them. Now you can give it to them. Send you name and address and $6.95 to Total Concepts, 2001 Church Street, Lawrence, KS 60944. For Christmas delivery.
Footlights have Pente for 20% off when you mention this ad Footlight, Holiday Plaza
PERSONAL
0117
CARTOON-O-GRAM from now thru holiday season,
special discount rate. Poster size, full color,
hand delivered. Put your friends in cartoon! The creative
inspirationary, gift-significant person. CARTOON-O-
GRAM 841-8353
Bud, Bod, & The Veg, coming tonight, the social event of the year. It's going to be a real "Killerr!" More action than the Jelzus is. So get ready to laugh at the Jelzus. So can't it come dlove, Love & Hooders, B. Bud
Every Thursday roll back the rock on 864. From 6-7 p.m. listen to West Coast Salon's all odd show, drink at the Jar at 10:00 price with All Bed
for good quality, clean, affordable next-to-
north for women shop KATY'S CELLAR SHOPPE
45 New Hamphire in the Marketplace. Tues.- Sat.
8:30- 5:30
DON'T FORGET
$1.25 Pitchers
Today
1-8 PM
Tomorrow
1-6 PM
at Murphy's
201 w. 8th St.
Don't get mad, get even. Send the "Bitter Bouquet"
will flowers deliver locally. Phone 614-8255.
841-7117
TRAVELING?
We'll Get You The
BEST AIRFARE!
841-7117
TRAVEL
CENTER
Southern Hills Center
1601 West 23rd
M-F 9:5-30 * Sat, 9:30-2
West Coast Saloon
TGIF
(a KU tradition)
25° Draws
every Friday
7 am - 6 pm
2222 Iowa 841-BREW
our customers or your favorite bottle of wine!
We use the wine inventory covered over both cellars of
the winery.
TRAVEL CENTER
TRAVELING?
We'll Get You The
BEST AIRFARE!
841-7117
TRAVEL
CENTER
Southern Hills Center
1601 West 23rd
for something special with a louch of charm from the past · step by step at Vintage's Home (915) MAH. 430-862-7000. www.vintagehome.com
Friday, Morgana $12.5, 7 HAPPY HOUR 1 for
Give your body a warm break this spring-go to Padre Island with SUA. 864-3477
HEADACHE, BACKACHIE, STIFK NECH, LEG PAIN FIND and correct the Cause of the problem! Call Dr. Mark Johnson for modern chiropractic care. Accepting Blue Cyan and Loan Star insurance.
If you need a fun milk or satin cumberfer for the land and trip by the Mk. Shop, Wd. 9th Sle. Park, or by the Mk. Shop, Wd. 11th Sle. Park.
You got it once now you can get it again!
All the Pyramid Pizza
you can eat at The Wheel Sunday, 5-8!
$2.50 Gals
$3.50 Guys
Need a restraint ride to St. Louis (Desper For Thanksgiving, will pay zip code.) Take the 20x16 booties, rubber boots, winter coats, sweaters, hats, scarfs, household goods, books, barbs. Barbs Second Hand Rock, 51 Indiana Street.
S. G. Let's get the payment for tomorrow. We're going to make a $50,000 donation to a charity, show it on a shirt, customize screen printing. T-shirt on it, a custom silhouette print.
Presentable, interesting (not so young) male professor seeks company of healthy young (18-24) students interested in communication, music (serious), sports, science, technology, science fiction, psychic phenomena, literature, music. Send resume to 5222. Include name, address, telephone, descriptive paragraph. A picture is helpful. Confidentiality statement required.
Schmierer Wine & Rig Shop The finest selection of
wines. The largest supplier of strong kegs.
W 201, W 381, W 491
Skillet's liqueur store serving U-Daily since 1949. Come in and compare. Waffle Sundaey since 1909. Man Moe.
SKI FEVER CURSES We prescribe 1 week in春班, Park Vail, Park, Steamboat, Brickeredge, or Butee with Summit Tours and The Doors Ski Team. For more info call 749-0123.
PYRAMID
PIZZA & DIP
PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTHRIGHT,
841-4621.
THE EXCHANGE
*sounden Televisions - Video, Recorders, Name brands only. Factory sealed cartons. Lowest prices in the K.C. area. Get your best price. call then Total Sound Distributors. 913-838-4000
FOR A SPECIAL TIME!
842-3232
I get sold two season basketball ticket. Discount available. Call Debbie at 842-1077
Imact passport, partifolio, resume, naturalization,
immigration visa, ID, and access to face portraits.
Mail: 850-241-9733.
CHEVY'S BAR
"In a Vernom
$5.00 for anything you want,
Highballs, Cocktails, Beer, Wine
"Get Trashed"
FRI. AFTERNOON
2:00 to 6:00
DRINK & DROWN
Our Specials
Kwaiity Campus hage selection of Marvel, DC,
Pacific, new comic and back issues; Science fiction;
Undergrounds, Spanish comics, too. 701 W. 7th
845-7228
Karen B! Happy 80th Birthday! Have a Super Day!
Lifestyle 5th Floor
and a brw) Tue. —Wine Night
Mon. — Schnapps & Beer ($1 for a chilled shot of Schnapps and a draw)
Tue. —Wine Night
(50* wine drinks all night!)
(50* wine drinks all night!)
Wed. Leder Night (FREE BEER)
Wed. —Ladies Night (FREE BEER for girls from 8-12 p.m.)
Thur. — Kamilazas night
(54 for 30 oz. pitcher)
Happy Your Daily 4-7 p.m.
B. C. Foster | Format your Apple Pie
The Kegger Weekly Specials on Kegg! Call 841-9450
/1600.7100.32rd
Honor to hire
Coach(s) with your lady? Send her the "Little Hug"
bagged with your lady delivered. 811-6245
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Make sense out of Western Civilization Notes. Makes sense to read in Western Civilization notes for exam preparation. "New Analysis of Western Civilization" available now at Town Crier. The
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Page 14 University Daily Kansan, November 19, 1982
Sports
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KU looks for win in finale with MU
By GINO STRIPPOLI
Sports Editor
The final chapter of the disappointing 1982 Kansas football season will be written tomorrow at Polson Field in Columbus, M. and the only question from players of the laybacks with wins over the Bie Eight game?
Kickoff for the KU-Missouri contest is 1:30 o.m.
Since 1970, there has been only one season when the Jayhawks failed to win more than one conference game. In the 1978 season the Jayhawks finished 1-10 and finished 6-2 in the big Eight. Following that season, head coach Jim Favre presented each Dodd Fambrough was hired.
"WHEN YOU play as bad as we did last week against Colorado, the only thing you can be thankful for is the opportunity to play one more ball game," Farrumbrough said. "It would be a shame to end the season on a performance like we had.
now Fambrough takes a battered Kansas team to Missouri in hopes of saving a little pride in this year's troublesome season.
"I am totally confused with our play. With freshman playing, you aren't going to be a great football team. But it's the missed tackles, poor blocking and lack of execution that makes you lose."
supporting a location that may be a lot easier said than done
poor tuffness that it's not the way we're going to do all that's in our power this week to reverse this style of play and finish this disappointing season on a positive note."
That may be easier.
The Jayhawks, fighting injuries all season long, go into the game with one starter out and possibly two.
Junior linebacker Mike Arbanas, who has been one of the most consistent defensive players for the Jayhawks all season, will not play because of a knee injury. Junior Bill Malavasi, who played his best game of the season last week against Colorado, will play in place of Arbanas.
THE OTHER injury situation may be a lot worse. Fullback E.J. Jones, who is second on the team in rushing and scoring, is questionable for the Missouri contest with hip and shoulder injuries. They are good at blocking but backstop. They take out last week and is still questionable for tomorrow's game.
If these players are unable to play, sophomore Harvey Fields will get the starting nod with senior Brad Butez as his replacement. These two would be carried out the ball 10 times for 50 yards this year.
This would put a big burden on the tailback position, but for once, this position is relatively healthy. Dino Bell Della's leading ground gainer, will get the startling position with freshman Dave Geroux back in the Kansas State game, who has not played since the Kansas State game, the trip and is expected to play.
make the tip up.
"We will use the tailbacks like we did this week in practice, rotating the three of them in," Fambrough said. "All three will see action."
Freshman Robert Mimbs, the third leading ground gainer on the team, will miss the finale against Missouri with a shoulder bruise.
GUIDING THE offense in the season finale will be Frank Searer, who apparently is in his best physical shape since he separated his shoulder against Oklahoma. Searer leads the Big Eight in passing yardage with 1,410 yards. He needs just two to win the Big Eight passlisting line. He could move all the way to the seventh spot if he passes for over 106 yards.
While only one starter (Russ Bastin, who shuttles plays with Bobby Johnson) on offense is a senior, three members of the Kansas defense will be startling their last game in a haystack uniform.
On defense, the Jayhawks are as healthy as they've been in a long time. Besides Arbanas, no one played last week is expected to miss the Missouri game.
Those three are defensive tackle Broderick Thompson, free safety Robert Gentry and strong safety Gary Coleman, one of the most consistent defensive players all season. Other seniors who will play on defense are defensive end TJ Muirkirk and defensive Mark Wilbers and free safety Roger Foote.
Other offensive seniors who may see some action are tackle Dave Wessling, center Grant Thierolf, flanker Wayne Capers and quarterback Mike John.
ONE SENOR will be ending one of the most illustrious careers in all of Kansas history tomorrow. That player is #8, Bucky Serbiener. He scored 167 points on patt on 80 backs and has a net average of 41.5.
Scribner, who deserves a lot of consideration for All-American honors, has averaged 44.4 yards a point on 210 punts during the career. He led the team in kickoffs and interceptions by Zach Jordan of Colorado from 1986-82.
"We've had a tough year, but Missouri is always a game that the two schools seem to get up for," Gentry said. "The seniors on our team only have one game left in their career, and this is it. I just hope we all reach down inside for a little extra tomorrow."
Predictions
| | Strippoll | Cook | George | Cooksey | Evans | Hamilton |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Kansas at Missouri | Kansas 17-14 | Missouri 24-10 | Missouri 35-0 | Missouri 24-10 | Missouri 24-9 | Kansas 24-17 |
| Arkansas at Southern Methodist | SMU 28-10 | SMU 21-20 | SMU 30-13 | SMU 28-24 | Arkansas 21-10 | SMU 41-10 |
| Stanford at California | California 31-28 | Stanford 28-7 | Stanford 42-10 | Stanford 21-10 | Stanford 35-7 | Stanford 17-7 |
| Colorado at Kansas State | Colorado 17-10 | Kansas State 21-14 | Kansas State 21-6 | Kansas State 21-10 | Colorado 21-14 | Kansas State 31-10 |
| Florida State at Louisiana State | Florida State 27-21 | Louisiana State 17-14 | Louisiana State 28-27 | Louisiana State 31-10 | Louisiana State 14-7 | Louisiana State 28-25 |
| Iowa State at Oklahoma State | Iowa State 14-10 | Oklahoma State 27-13 | Oklahoma State 42-35 | Oklahoma State 17-7 | Iowa State 10-7 | Oklahoma State 35-10 |
| Southern Cal at UCLA | Southern Cal 24-21 | Southern Cal 10-9 | Southern Cal 21-13 | UCLA 24-10 | UCLA 14-10 | UCLA 10-7 |
| Michigan at Ohio State | Ohio State 21-20 | Michigan 21-14 | Michigan 49-9 | Michigan 24-14 | Michigan 24-21 | Michigan 25-7 |
| Oklahoma at Nebraska (11/26) | Nebraska 35-14 | Nebraska 21-17 | Nebraska 21-20 | Nebraska 35-24 | Nebraska 18-15 | Nebraska 24-20 |
| Pitt at Penn State (11/26) | Pitt 28-27 | Pitt 17-10 | Penn State 13-10 | Penn State 35-28 | Pitt 10-7 | Pitt 31-7 |
| Season Totals | 59-35-6 | 65-29-6 | 61-33-6 | 67-27-6 | 65-29-6 | 62-32-6 |
The predictors are Gino Strippoll, sports editor; Tom Cook, associate sports editor; Gene George, editor; Susan Cooksey, business manager; Jim Evans, photographer; and Trace Hamilton, head copy chief and past Kansas sports editor.
Ladv's hoop team starts season
Bv.JEFF CRAVENS
Sports Writer
The last thing Coach Marian Washington wanted to see in the women's basketball opener was a team that had a dominating center, but that's exactly what the Jayhawks will have on their hands when they open their season against the Bulls in Des Moines, Iowa, tomorrow.
The Jayhawks do not have a healthy player who is over 6 feet tall, and they face a big challenge in stopping Lorri Bauman, Drake's 6-foot-3 center. Bauman led the Bulldogs in both scoring, 23.5 points a game, and rebounding, 9.2 a game, last year.
"Baumau is tough inside," Washington said. "We aul'd definitely have to front her."
Vickie Adkins, a 6-1 freshman who sat out last year with a knee injury, is still bothered by a bad right knee and will not play against Drake. Philicia Allen, a 6-4 transfer from South Carolina, will not be eligible until next semester, leaving the Jayhawks without a true center.
THE JAYHAWKS will be led by Angie Snider, a 5-10 junior. Snider was second on the team in rushing and scoring.
"Overall, we will try to take advantage of our quickness," Washington said. "We've been running the floor well lately and we will try to keep a lot of pressure on them."
Claxton. Snider averaged 13.5 points a game and led KU with 87 assists.
"Ange is a key, proven player," Washington said. "She is also able to reach and become one of the best players in the league."
Taylor will also provide the Jayhawks with strong defense. Taylor averaged six points a game last year, while splitting time between guard and forward.
One player that Kansas will surely miss against Drake is senior Chris Hurley, Hurley, a 5-8 forward who is expected to give the Jayhawks experience plus good outside shooting, will miss the game against the Bulldogs because she is still recovering from arthroscopic knee surgery. She probably won't be ready until the home opener Dec. 2.
Barb Adkins, a sophomore, will start at center for the Jawhayes — a switch from her usual forward position. Adkins averaged 3.5 points and 1.6 rebounds and she calls her the most improved athlete on the team.
"IT'S AN adjustment playing with my back to the basket." Adkins said. "I think the big thing about playing in is not how big you are, but how well you can get position underneath."
The Jayhawks will have to rely on their freshmen a lot early in the season.
"I think it will help us very much to give the young players some early experience that they wouldn't normally get," Washington said. "It
will give them a chance to see the ups and downs and it will help us when the conference race comes around."
once the tresman who will see a lot of playing time is Ann Schell. Schell came to Kansas after an impressive career at University of Oklahoma, and she color. The foothill will teacher with Adkins inside.
"Ann is a hard worker who is responding to the challenge." Washington said. "She is very intelligent and will see a lot of playing time early."
THE LAST starter will be either Mary Myers, Valerie Quarles or Tina Stauffer. Myers, a sophomore, was injured and did not play last year. She has good quickness and is a good outside shooter. Quarles and Stauffer are both freshmen. Quarles is a talented guard from Madison, Wis. Stauffer is an excellent outside shooter.
Besides Bauman, Drake returns Kay Riek, a 6-1 forward. Riek, an excellent shooter, averaged 11.9 points a game last year as the Bulldogs posted a 28-2 record.
Washington is beginning her 10th season as coach of the Jayhawks. She has a 167-99 lifetime record. This is one of the most inexperienced teams she has ever coached.
want to be here and get this first game under our belts". Washington said. "Drake won't underestimate us, because it's their first game also."
Talented men, women swimmers face big match
Sports Writer
By BILL HORNER
When you look at the Kansas swimming team, both east and present, it can be awe-inspiring.
The women's team has captured the Big Eight conference crown eight straight times. The squad finished 14th in the NCAA Championships last season, with six Jayhawks earning All-American honors. Seventeen of the 24 team or individual events in last year's Big Eight meet were won by Kansas swimmers, and team members set 10 Big Eight conference records.
The men's team features one of the nation's premier swimmers and, with a stellar group of recruits, is threatening to win its first Big Eight conference championship since 1979.
No wonder head coach Gary Kempf is so optimistic.
title, and be expects the men's team to strongly vie for the title.
THIS YEAR, Kempf expects to see the women's team capture their ninth conference
Kempf, a former Big Eight swimmer of the year while at Kansas, has coached the women's team for seven years, but it was not until last year that he took over the helm of both the men's and women's programs. He and his staff of coaches are intent on seeing the team reach its potential.
"Last year the women were rated in the top 10 and finished 14th," Kempf said. "We haven't been rated with the men, but we do anticipate scoring this year and doing very well."
The women's team features five returning All-Americaners. Senior Tammy Thomas, sophomore Stephanie Raney, junior Jenny Wagstaff, junior tri-captain Sugan Schauer and sophomore Jake Towne all represent a list of swimmers with an endless list of high school, AIAW and NCAA experience.
WAGSTAF WAS part of the two Kansas relay teams that earned All-American honors last season and finished sixth individually in the 100 butterfly. She owns the conference record in the 400 individual medley and won five events in last year's championships.
Arthur was named the outstanding swimmer Thomas was named the outstanding swimmer of last year's Big Eight meet, setting records in the 50- and 100-yard freestyle, 50 butterfly and
Senior Mary Kay Fitzgerald, other tri-captain, is a two-time AIAW All-American, earning honors in four events in the 1979 and 1980 meets.
On the men's side, Ron Neugent heads a team that Kempf thinks is ready to compete with the best. An Olympic and pending world record holder, Neugent missed last year's NCAA meet because of illness but has already qualified for this year's championships. A senior tri-captain, he holds conference records in two events, and figures to his best year ever in 1983.
Thomas, Wagstaff, Fitzgerald and Neugent are typical of the entire Kansas squad: Talented
4
Ex-Jawhawk Kyle McNorton, right, and All-Pro Art Still talked during a break in yesterday's Kansas City Chiefs practice. McNorton, who was on the injured list before the strike, has been taken off the injured list and may play in Sunday's game between the Chiefs and the New Orleans Saints.
Buddy Mangine/KANSAN
Both strike sides sit down to fix language of pact
WASHINGTON—Lawyers for the NFL Management Council and the players union yesterday began working out precise language of the contract the two sides tentatively agreed to Tuesday evening.
By United Press International
Nichard Berthelsen, counsel for the NFL Players Association, and Joseph Yablonski Jr., who has acted as co-counsel during the contract negotiations, met yesterday afternoon with NFLMCI Executive Director Jack Donlan, former NFLMCI director, and Dennis Curran, NFLMCI counsel.
Ed Garvey, NFLPA executive director,
remained in Washington to study the agreement.
"I have today initialled all aspects of the agreement where agreement has been reached," Garvey said. "Naturally, where agreement has not been reached, the attorney has not asked but the differences, Minor suggestions have been proposed to which Management may respond.
"We were surprised to find that in their latest document, given to us at 2:20 p.m., today they have not included the severance pay agreement for Mike Kadish and Herb Orvis, rep cut because of union action, and they continue to provide specific language on the annual guarantees.
"Prior to submitting this document to the union members for a vote, all the l's must be dotted and the l's must be crossed. It would be foolish to send an incomplete document."
hardworking, ambitious and ready to take on the conference and the nation in any event.
Last week, both teams proved their readiness. In Saturday's Oklahoma dual meet, the women and men each won impressively. The women scored a 71-42 score, and the men won by an 83-31 count.
"IT WAS a very successful weekend. I was very pleased with the performance of both squads." Kemp said. "We really didn't have any outstanding swims, but every swim we had was very strong and very consistent, which is what we're looking for at this time of the year."
Thomas paced the women's team, capturing the 110 freestyle and the 200 IM. Raney's victory in the 200 freestyle, Wagstaff's triumph in the 220 butterfly, Tammy Pease's victory in the 50 butterfly, Tammy Pease's victory in the 30 breaststroke were, in Kempi's opinion, the women's top performances.
"Every single lady on the team did a very good job." Kermof said.
Neugent's victory in the 1,000 freestyle, Bobby Vince's victory in the 500 freestyle and freshman Victor Hutchinson's victory in the 100 freestyle topped a list of 10 team or individual victories for
"Basically, on both the men's and the women's side, we're right at the point I thought we'd be at this time of the season." Kempf said. "We're swimming strong and consistent."
KANSAS' FIRST big test comes this weekend in a meet against Southern Illinois and Alabama in Carbondale, Ill.
"We definitely have our work cut out for us," Kempf said. "Both the men's and the women's teams were ranked in the top 10 last year."
"We need to see national-caliber competition if we're going to swim on that level. That's why we have this meet. We don't anticipate just going in there and swimming."
Boxer's remains flown to Korea
By United Press International...
Kim's funeral is 10 a.m. Monday (CST) at the Moonhua Gym in Seoul. He is to be buried in his hometown of Kojin on the east coast about 100 miles northeast of Seoul.
South Korea's president expressed condolences and the Korean Boxing Commission postponed all fights until the boxer is buried next week.
SEOUL, South Korea—Duk Koo Kim, who died of injuries suffered in a championship boxing match last week, was mourned in his native land today.
President Chun Doo Hwan cabied his condolences to Kim's mother, Mrs. Yang Sun-yun, who flew from Seoul to the bedside at Desert Springs Hospital in Las Vegas, Nev.
"With all our people at home and abroad, I would like to express a sincere condolence to the family of Mr. Duk Koo Kim," Chun said.
The 23-year-old fighter was declared dead Wednesday in Las Vegas where he had been in a coma since he was knocked out Saturday in a title fight with lightweight champion Ray Mancini. He was kept clinically alive with life support systems.
Kim's grieving mother requested that her son's body organs be used in transplants. A transplant team removed his kidneys yesterday, but his heart was refused by a candidate who feared public attention, according to a hospital spokesman.
His remains were sent to the Clark County (Nevada) coroner's office for autopsy, and were to be brought to South Korea by his mother for burial.
Tulsa shoots for bowl game
By United Press International
DENTON, Texas—Tulsa, which swept past Kansas early in the season, makes a bid for its first bowl, berth since 1976 tomorrow in its regular season finale against North Texas State, and Tulsa coach John Cooper is confident.
Tulsa, 9-1 and winner of the Missouri Valley Conference championship for the third straight year, is expected to receive an invitation to play in the Iowa Show in Browne in Sheboygan, La. It will be North Texas.
ter:
Florida, Tennessee and Miami of Florida have
belts you out. "I don't feel it's secure, but I have to feelings one of our competitors chooses to go elsewhere," said Cooper. "The Independence Bowl needs someone from this part of the country, and we're the only team in this area left."
been mentioned as possible opponents in the bowl.
1 uma clusado to a No. 17 ranking in the United Press International college football poll this week and staked a claim to a possible bowl bid and 48-44 victory last Saturday over Indiana State.
1
North, Texas, under first-year coach Corky Nelson, enters the game at 2-8, coming off a 22-13 loss.
The Golden Hurricane offense will regain the services this week of quarterback Skip Ast, who was sidelined against Indiana State with a knee injury. The offense will key around running backs Michael Gunter and Ken Lacy — only the 14th pair of players in the same backfield in NCAA history to both surpass 1,000 yards rushing in a season.
Gunter enters the game with 1,346 yards rushing. Lacy has 1,006 yards.
1
The University Daily
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
KANSAN
Monday, November 22,1982 Vol.93,No.66 USPS 650-640
Economy tough to predict, prof says
By JEANNE FOY
Staff Reporter
Economists are predicting that the recession will start to end next month, but those predictions are not very reliable, a KU economist said yesterday.
Even so, several economists have predicted an upturn in the economy by the beginning of next year.
Thomas Weiss, professor of economics, said that when the economy was following a normal course it was fairly predictable. But during a recession when inflation is high in which direction the economy will turn, he said.
"The economy is really at the bottom of the recession. I think the economy is now ready to recover." Martin Feldstein, chairman of the NBC Financial Group, said yesterday on NBC's "Meet the Press."
"NO ONE can put a precise date on when that recovery is going to begin, but I think the
recovery is going to begin and that is an opinion
that is shared by virtually every private
private company.
Commerce Secretary Malcolm Baldridge said yesterday on ABC's "This Week with David Brinkley" that he thought Christmas retail sales would increase because the business that would start the economy moving again.
Weiss said each economist looked at a different set of economic indicators, but the government predicted what it hoped would happen.
"They theorize that their economic policies will start having results. It is not particularly well done."
Treasury Secretary Donald Regan's famous prediction last year that the economy would come "roaring back" in the spring certainly has not proved true, he said.
"ECONOMISTS TAKE a lot of important numbers and make assumptions. It's fairly complicated," said Ronald Olsen, professor of economics.
Economic predictions have a probability of error, but no other means exists for determining how the economy will act, he said.
Weiss said, "They've been predicting a turnaround for quite some time, and they've been doing it."
Even though government figures show that from July to September the economy was stable, some economists think lower interest rates will cause the economy to pick up.
Friday, the Federal Reserve Board lowered,
for the sixth time since July, the rate at which it
lends money to banks and other financial
lions. The rate dropped from 9.3 percent to
9 percent.
If interest rates are low, according to economic theory, Americans will buy more goods, so producers will manufacture more goods and hire more people.
Weiss said that people might start spending more because of lower interest rates, but predicting when people would change their spending habits was impossible.
Plan spares KU from additional cuts
By DARRELL PRESTON
Staff Reporter
The University of Kansas and other Kansas Board of Regents schools will be spared more spending cuts under a three-point plan to avert a state fiscal crisis announced by Gov. John Carlin
Part of the plan calls for an allotment system, which will cut state aid to local school districts, community colleges and Washburn University by 4 percent, or $2.1 million.
Carlin's program also calls for plans to speed up collection of sales and income taxes and to delay disbursement of state money to municipalities.
The plan does not call for an increase in taxes. Spending reductions called for under the allotment system will take effect Jan. 1, 1983, but the allotment plan must first be approved by the Legislature.
1 FEEL confident that the legislators, once
they see the state's fiscal problems, will be happy to enact my plan," Carlin said.
Legislators must approve tax law changes that will require collection of income tax from employers twice a month, instead of quarterly, and collection of sales tax twice a month, instead
Legislators also must approve delaying part of the state's payments to cities for property tax relief, and its payments for city-county revenue-sharing funds until July 1983.
Carlin said the cuts would cause problems but would be the fairest for everyone in the state, and he said he hoped they would prevent the need for future reductions.
"The cuts should leave us in a better position to start out the next fiscal year," he said.
IF THE plan works as expected, Kansas will have a $95.6 million year-end balance at the end of fiscal 1983. If not, further cuts may be necessary.
When the group met last spring to revise estimates for fiscal 1983, which ends June 30, 1983, it determined that the Kansas economy had not performed as well as had been expected when the group made it original estimates, so it lowered estimates for fiscal 1983.
Kansas's economic consensus group, which measures forecasts to forecast revenue forecasts for the year.
The proposed adjustments follow an projected $61 million budget deficit for fiscal 1983 made by
The lower estimates prompted Carlin to ask for voluntary cutbacks from state agencies, including KU and other Regents schools.
Carlin said the allotment system would make $20.7 million of the $21.1 million in cuts permanent, and it would eliminate monies for merit pay increases for state employees.
State Rep. Mike Hayden, R-Award, chairman of the House Way and Means Committee, said
"You need to look at what the state needs, and how it can best generate revenue to meet these needs," Hayden said.
Report details energy conservation savings
Staff Reporter
Rv STEVE CUSICK
Energy conservation measures will save KU's Lawrence campus $333,000 this fiscal year, according to a report compiled by the Kansas Board of Regents staff.
conservation measures as well as additional projects the report said.
During a 10-year period, KU could save more than $68.3 million in energy costs using current
The report, presented to the Regents Friday, also said the University would have been able to save an additional $2.1 million through other projects that had not been financed.
However, the University would not realize $2.6 million of that unless officials approve $3.3 million worth of energy conservation projects, the report said.
Warren Corman, director of facilities for the Regents, issued the report, and said one of the projects was the renovation of KU's central power plant.
THE PLANT, which is losing large amounts of energy, could be renovated at a cost of $900,000.
By recirculating lost heat, officials could save
The report breaks down the energy savings into projects already completed or in progress and projects of an "administrative or operational nature."
45 percent on gas consumption and pay for the cost of renewals in two years, he said.
MISS BLAIR
Corman said one of the completed projects included the insulation of several attics on
Officials calculated that the University would save $472,000 from the completed projects and cost them overtime.
The administrative projects include the early curtailment of air conditioning use and delaying installation.
Janie Marie Tennant, Stafford junior, was crowned Miss Lawrence 1882 Saturday night at the pageant at Central Junior High School auditorium. The pageant, sponsored by the Delta Chi fraternity, was held for the first time in six years. Tennant received $1,175 in prize money and won the crown to Fratt next July for the Miss Kansas competition, where 25 local winners will compete.
Chaney, Langan to lead Kansan staff
Rebecca Chaney, McPhrison senior, will be the Kansan editor, and Matthew Langan, Winnetta junior, will be the Kansan business manager. The Kansan Board announced yesterday.
Applications for other staff positions will be available starting today in the Kansas business office, 114th Street, and of the student office, 200 Flint Hall; and of the office of student affairs, 214 Strong Hall.
Chaney is editorial page editor this semester, and Langan is campus sales manager.
Applications are due by 5 p.m. Monday,
Nov 29 in 900 Flint Hall
Interview times will be posted.
Prof says college is more than matter of degree
By United Press International
MANHATTAN, Kan.—Some people doubt that a college education is worth the time, effort and expense. But a professor from Kansas State University, if students pursue it with the right intentions.
people have to be able to think if they want to succeed.
Loren Alexander, a K-State professor, thinks a student should use college to gain knowledge and strength to make good decisions.
It is tough to make decisions, he said, but
ALEXANDER, WHO has earned four degrees himself, is an assistant professor of curriculum and instruction and of modern languages. He holds bachelor's and master's degrees in music education and a master's and doctor of philosophy degree in German. He formerly
And it is the application of knowledge that is so difficult. Alexander advises students to develop the general intellectual skill of finding, developing and presenting information while they are in college.
taught music in Kansas schools and has taught all levels of German and German literature.
Although he has his degrees only indirectly in his work now, he said he did not think that
Monday Morning
doors and create opportunities that otherwise might not be there.
getting those degrees was a waste of time because they have been a fulfilment of his
Students probably will not directly apply what they learn in classes to what they will be doing after graduation. Alexander said, but they will know that you will help them with help them what they will do with a degree.
Contact with interesting, innovative and perhaps controversial ideas through work with professors and fellow students is an opportunity for them to contribute their expertise concentrated on a university campus, he said.
Degrees are useful, he said, because they open
ALEXANDER SUGGESTED ways to measure
how much a college education would be worth to a particular student. College is worthwhile when
- make nothing else more important than human relationships.
- human relationships.
- have a purpose in their studies that is
- take only as many courses as they can handle well.
— choose, or change to, a major in a field that
teaches and that challenges them to continue
learning.
See COLLEGE page 5
一
Ambidivous ammonia, seeping from a semi-trailer truck, caused traffic to be re-routed about 9:15 p.m. yesterday near Nalsmith Drive and 23rd Street after a cap on the truck's delivery tank
dislodged. About 15 minutes later, when the fumes had dissipated, Bob Otting, a McPherson CO-OP employee, told fire officials that the cap was not tightened sufficiently after a delivery.
Momentum files list of complaints, wants recount of ballots for all races
Rv DON KNOX
By DON KNOX Staff Reporter
The Momentum Coalition Friday filed a list of 25 election complaints with the Student Senate's Election Review Board and demanded a public recount of the results for all of the races in last week.
The complaints, filed by Momentum presidential and vice presidential candidates Kevin Walker and David Teoporten, said the three people who counted the ballots in the presidential elections were biased toward the Consensus Coalition.
The Consensus队 of Lisa Ashner and Jim Cramer defeated Walker and Tepper on 328
Momentum also said one candidate, David
Heurey, illegally counted presidential ballots.
Heury' was a seat on the Graduation Student
Committee.
MOMENTUM'S OTHER 23 complaints charged Consensus supporters with election-earing within 30 feet of the polls, and also said blank ballots were illegally stored in the Senate office on Wednesday, the first night of the election. In a key to the office, Walker and Teoponen said
Asher said yesterday that she knew of no tampering in the election. Moreover, she said, most of Momentum's complaints were witnessed only by candidates from the Momentum ticket.
When asked about the unmarked ballots stored in Senate office Ashley said, "I didn't even know it existed."
She said Elena Brito, chairman of the Senate's
See REVIEW page 5
Weather
Today will be partly cloudy with the high in the lower 30s. Winds will be from the northwest at 60 to 80 mph.
Tonight will be cloudy and colder with a low of 29 to 25.
Tomorrow will be cloudy and colder with the high in the mid-30s.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, November 22, 1982
News Briefs From United Press International
Investigators say gas leak caused Lebanese explosion
TEL. AVIV. Israel—Investigators concluded yesterday that a gas leak — not a terrorist attack or sabotage — sparked the Nov. 11 explosion that destroyed Israel's military headquarters in Tyre, Lebanon, killing 75 Israelis and 15 Arabs.
In Egypt, Palestinian guerrilla chief Yasser Arafat, who condemned Egypt's 1979 peace treaty with Israel as treason, won conditional approval yesterday to visit Cario for the first time in five years.
However, no date has been set for the historic rapprochement between Egypt and the Palestine Liberation Organization.
"We have unequivocal evidence that explosives did not cause this blast," said reserve Gen. Meir Zorea, who headed the seven-member panel.
between Egypt and the Palestine Liberation Organization President Hosni Mubarak, in an interview published today in the Kuwaiti newspaper Al Siyasah, said Arafat would be welcomed only if he brought "specific solutions" for an overall Middle East peace settlement that "I can carry with me during my visit to the United States" next January.
THREE
WASHINGTON - The use of trade sanctions for political reasons is a mistake, and broader, not more restrictive, trade policies would help both the U.S. and world economy, three prominent Americans agreed yesterday.
Three call Soviet sanctions mistake
"Sen, Bob Dole, B.Kan, chairman of the Senate Finance Committee; David Kendall, chairman of PepsiCo; and Commerce Secretary Maleo Boldridge were interviewed separately on ABC's "This Week with David Brinkley."
The David trumpet. The three dwell especially on trade relations between the Soviet
Territory and the United States.
Dale, who was in Paris following a trade mission to Moscow said, "We've lost that market. It seems to me we are not going to recapture it" until President Reagan and new Soviet leader Yuri Andropov sit down and discuss it face to face.
Bush restates U.S.-Namibian policy
NAIROBI, Kenya—Vice President George Bush said yesterday the United States would stand firm on its approach toward Namibian independence despite widespread African criticism.
Preserve despite widespread Arab influence. The United States insists that 20,000 Cuban troops in neighboring Angola withdraw before the vast, barren territory of Namibia can receive independence from white-ruded South Africa. It is also important to supporting a peace plan for
Bush would not say whether nations negotiating a peace plan for Namibia were seeking to replace the Cuban presence in Angola with a pan-African peace-keeping force "because that is a little ahead of where the action is."
He said Angola's security would form part of any solution "but I won't go into details of what the security options are."
and not least of what the team did was to send a team to Namibia's jomo Kenyatta airport at the end of the visit to Kenya, one of the staunchest U.S. allies in Africa.
Walesa avoids supporters at Mass
GDANSK. Poland - Solidarity leader Lech Walesa fooled as many as 12,000 supporters yesterday by quietly going to Mass at a makeshift neighborhood chapel instead of the service he was expected to attend at St. Brigidas church.
St. Brigid's church,
his wife, and not an object to be displayed at an exhibition?
Walesley's wife, Danuta, said,
about 6:20 a.m.
The two church was packed with about 7,000 excited Wales supporters, eager to bear first view of the popular labor leader since his release one week ago from 11 months of internment in remote southeast Poland.
southeast F I 5,000 people overflowed onto the street outside the church. A number of people fainted in the crush.
most of people rainted in the crust.
Walesa, instead of facing the crowd, walked from his apartment to a small neighborhood chapel for a quiet period of prayer, undisturbed by crowds of well-wishers.
Unsuspecting clerk killed in holdup
DALLAS—A 17-year-old supermarket clerk, unwittingly trying to help a gunman escape through an electronic door, was shot through the forehead and killed Saturday night.
The clerk, Tammy Davis, had been a part-time worker at the supermarket for 18 months.
supermarket for 18 months.
She saw a man trying to leave the store through the wrong electronically controlled door, not knowing the man had just robbed the store.
Police said she told the gunman, "Sir, you need to push the button to open the door." The gunman then shot her through the forehead.
The man ran from the store and into a waiting car driven by a second man. Police caught up with the car and said five shots were fired by the robbers. Officers did not return the fire.
Michigan cops to watch bartenders
DETROIT—Plainclothes Michigan state troopers plan to patrol pubs and ticket bartenders who pour one for the road for those already too drunk to drive.
Starting early next year, officers will pose as patrons in pubs, looking for bartenders who serve intoxicated drivers, officials announced yesterday.
"We're targeting some areas where there are numerous accidents due to drinking," said Sgt. Joe VanOosterhout, program coordinator. "We want the bars to know and we want the drivers to know we'll be watching."
nothing." He said he hoped bartenders would be wary of how much liquor they serve patrons, knowing a state trooper might be watching them.
Spy may have delayed treaty OK
NEW YORK—Convicted spy Christopher Boyce may have delayed the Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty by selling the Soviets top-secret documents detailing America's satellite surveillance system. Sen. Daniel Moynihan told CBS yesterday.
Meynihan, vice chairman of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, told the CBS program "60 Minutes" that Boyce compromised the U.S. satellite system and made them useless because "the Soyets could block them."
"the Soviets caused them to believe that that would happen, had happened, permeated the Senate," Moynihan said.
Correction
Because of an editing error, a story in Thursday's Kansan about a meeting with the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission attributed several statements to Planning Commissioner Max Lucas. Lucas did not say that the plan for the East Lawrence neighborhood needed to be studied at length. Lucas said that if the plan needed to be changed, regular review procedures existed to allow that.
Small liquor dealers fear price decontrol
A decision last week by a state board to uphold Kansas liquor price controls may provide only temporary relief for smaller retail liquor stores in Lawrence.
By JULIE HEABERLIN Staff Reporter
But local stores fear another battle in January, because State Sen. Norman Garr, R-Westwood, is proposing legislation that will abolish the price
The Alcohol Beverage Control Review Board's decision means retail liquor stores are still forbidden from selling liquor below minimum mark-up prices set by the board.
contribute to the controversy surrounding liquor prices arose because retailers could not sell liquor below the minimum price, which critics of the price
store. THE price controls were lifted, larger stores could sell liquor at lower prices and drive smaller stores out of business.
controls consider too high. Retailers can set their prices higher, however
Joan Anderson, owner of Anderson Morton Retail Liquor. 1806 Massachusetts St., said the current price controls were the only thing keeping her store in business.
Lifting price controls could hurt smaller stores more, because they buy liquor in smaller quantities than larger stores.
business.
"I can tell you exactly what would happen if they lifted the price control," Anderson said. "The mom-and-pop stores would be wiped out by the bigger stores, who can buy in greater volume."
"I think the consumer would end up getting screwed to, because once the
"It's really sad, because my store has been in the family for years. I can remember my dad telling me, 'Joanie, if price controls ever go out, sell that store to the first sucker that walks in.' "
Carl Craig, owner of Craig Retail Liquor, 1910 Haskell Ave., said he supported the recent decision. His store, however, is larger than Anderson's and would be able to survive if price controls were lifted.
"I THINK the structure is adequate as it is," Craig said. "If the controls were lifted I don't necessarily think the market prices would go up, although there would be stores making some drastic changes."
Kerry Meisner, part owner of Meisner-Milstead Retail Liquor, 2104 B. W, 25th St, said, "We need to lift the
larger stores, were in control, they would sell at an even higher price.
Regents consider review plan
By DIRK MILLER Staff Reporter
TOPEKA-A Kansas Board of Regents committee Friday considered a proposal for reviewing the strengths and weaknesses of academic programs at the seven Regent schools.
The proposal, which the Regents have discussed for the last two months, will receive final consideration in December.
The proposal divides the schools' programs into five sections, to be reviewed once every five years. Following the proposal's tentative library, engineering, library science, educational science programs would be reviewed in 1982.
December.
It suggests that a program's enrollment trends, objectives, strengths and weaknesses, characteristics, requirements and projected needs be considered.
would be reviewed.
"The idea is that in the course of a five-year cycle, we will have a turnover of all programs offered by the universities," Stan Koplik, Regents executive officer, said Friday.
KOPLIK SAID the review would be
"no small task." The program reviews were scheduled to cause the least amount of disruption to the schools.
price controls if we are ever going to progress toward the future. I think it would be frightening, and it would hurt for a little while, but in the long run it will all work out."
"We have placed a great deal of work on the institutions, but it's not unreasonable. Many of these questions will not be asked for the first time," he said.
The proposal allows the universities to use existing methods and data gathered for accrediting purposes, Accrediting agencies, such as the North Central Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools already require Regents schools to review some academic programs.
democratize the review would have four objectives: to strengthen the Regents' role in the schools, to increase their knowledge of the programs offered to students, and to teach the schools a chance to consider the program's educational role.
the programs' educational role.
Most important, he said, is to educate
the Regents about what is offered at the
schools.
schools.
KOPLIK SAID the Regents would not use the review to weed out academic programs. The institutions would be responsible for correcting any problems uncovered, he said.
Chancellor Gene A. Budig, chairman of the Council of Presidents, said that
review proposal had been approved by the Council because it had taken into account suggestions from the schools' academic officers.
The Council of Chief Academic Officers is expected to consider the proposal at its next meeting, Koplik said. The proposal suggests that the council be responsible for monitoring the review process at each school.
In other action, the Regents approved final plans for an addition to Learned Hall for a temporary engineering library. The Regents' appeal to the Governor's office won Warren Corman, Regents facilities officer, and the state architectural services office.
Meisner, who said her store was medium-sized compared with other liquor stores in Lawrence, said that if the controls were lifted she could buy liquor at a bigger discount and also afford a "read" item to moderate cost as an advertising method to draw more customers to the
The Regents approved a $125,000 brick reconditioning project on Murphy Hall that will complete renovation of the building's roof.
AND, THE Regents approved a motion to continue seeking legislation to reduce the schools' residency requirements to six months. This action was taken despite a recommendation by a joint Kansas House and Senate Ways and Main committee to raise residency requirements for junior colleges, community colleges and Washburn University to one year.
Another retailer, Florence McNicoll, of McNicoll's Retail Liquors, 616 Arizona St., disagreed with Garr's theory that pricing regulations sent Kansas liquor consumers Missouri, when Garr and Garr moved Missouri's furnishing Kansans with liquor and in turn collecting the tax revenue.
coming McNicolls said Garr was exaggerating. She said people were discouraged from bringing liquor bought in Missouri across the state line because it was illegal.
Pedestrian struck by car on 23rd St.
A 39-year-old Willis man was receiving emergency treatment at the University of Kansas Medical Center last night after being hit by a car at 23rd Street and Barker Avenue.
Lawrence Police said the man, John W. Blacksmith, was crossing 22rd Street at the corner and apparently walked out in front of a car about 8:30 p.m.
Blacksmith was transported by ambulance to Lawrence Memorial Hospital and was flown to the Med Center about 9:45 p.m. by the Life Flight helicopter. An LMH spokesman said Blacksmith had a fractured left leg and a possible head injury.
No citations were issued to the driver of the car, whom police did not identify.
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At midnight, Blacksmith was still receiving treatment at the Med Center, and his condition had not been determined.
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University Daily Kansan, November 22, 1982
Page 3
Local jobless rate jumps 0.3 percent during October
Lawrence's unemployment rate jumped by 0.3 percent in October to 4.3 percent, yet remained less than half the national rate of 10.3 percent and exceeded the state rate of 5.9 percent, according to the state Department of Human Resources.
Darwin Dateoff, professor of economics, said the Kansas unemployment rate usually was lower than the national rate because Kansas' industries were much more stable than those of other states.
But Ed Mills, manager of the Lawrence branch of Kansas Job Service, said recently that outdoor jobs, such as construction and agriculture, traditionally started to lay off workers as the weather got colder.
"December will generally start the unemployment rate up again," he said. "Normally during that period you have a drop in the number of jobs available."
However, this year he will be a little different for Lawrence, he said, because of the creation of about 150 jobs in December and January with the opening of Wal-Mart, 23rd and Iowa streets, and the expansion of the Gustin-Bacon Division of Aerouq; Corporation, 2010 Lakeview Road.
"New growth sure can't hurt anything," he said. "It will offset the traditional winter layoffs and sure improve the market around here."
The state jobless rate registered at 5.9 percent for the second straight month. Both the total number of workers and available jobs dropped.
On campus
TODAY
TOMORROW
CATHOLIC CENTER WORSHIP will be at 12:30 p.m. in Danforth Chapel.
CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR CHRIST
will meet at 7 p.m. in the Big Eight
CAMPUS CHRISTIAN FELLOW-
SHIPS' Bible study and fellowship will be
held every Friday.
LECTURE, "Being in Tune. What the Piano Never Told Us." In a Murphy Hall
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1984 salary proposals analyzed Regents panel discusses cuts
By DEBORAH BAER Staff Reporter
TOPEKA—The faculty senate presidents of Kansas Board of Regents institutions want to remit the governor and the Kansas legislature that even during the lean years of the higher education was not ignored.
"Kansas is not suffering as much now as in the 39s, but faculty were funded better than they are now," John Watson, faculty representative for Hart's State University, said Friday at the meetings of the president.
James Seaver, KU's faculty representative and chairman of the presidents' committee, said yesterday that the committee was concerned about proposed reductions in Regents faculty salaries in fiscal year 1984.
"The recommendation from the governor's hatchet man was for a rather drastic reduction." Seaver wrote in the same column in Lynn Muchmore, state budget director.
A DOCUMENT from Gov. John
Carlin's office said that between now and the year 2000, 75 percent of the nation's industrial growth would be in technology industries. Watson said.
Kansas needs strong universities led by excellent faculty members to compete with other states in attracting high-tech companies, Watson said. High-tech companies typically operate near universities, employ as consultants and hire graduate students as research assistants.
But if the state does not offer large enough salaries to Regents employees, higher education institutions and keep top-level faculty, Watson said.
If the state wants to attract high-tech industry, it will have to support Regens institutions because the state is among the biggest in the state for research, he said.
"GOOD RESEARCH facilities and high level students aren't going to come from the junior colleges," he added, going to come from the Rogers' schools."
Seaver said the faculty presidents hoped that Muchmare's recommendation was for a "worst case" when students would not adopt such a harish policy.
To help convince the governor, the presidents decide to prepare a graph showing the Regents' share of state support since 1920.
They also planned to make a graph showing the changing faculty-to-student ratio at each institution during that period.
The ratio has changed from about one professor to four students to one professor to 15 or 20 students, on the institution, said Watson.
"Back in those tough times, they did find the financing to fund those classes with a good faculty to student ratio." Watson said.
The graphs will reveal a gradual decline in state support for higher education he said.
The presidents hope to show the graphs to the Regents in December and then bring them to the governor, Seaver said.
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Page 4
Opinion
University Daily Kansan, November 22, 1982
For tomorrow's elderly
Social Security reform continues to be one of the most vexing domestic political issues. It is an issue set with thorns, and congressmen are unwilling to risk getting pricked.
It had been hoped that the lame-duck Congress could devise a non-partisan means of reviving the wiling federal retirement program. But U.S. Reps. Dan Glickman, D-Kan., and Pat Roberts, R-Kan., discouraged those hopes last week when they said that little could be done before the next session.
That something must be done, few debate. Just what that something will be, however, has been the subject of heated argument. Many people fear that any changes will necessarily be to the disadvantage of the elderly. Given the political clout of the nearly 26 million senior citizens in the United States, this is no small consideration among politicians.
"What we must do," says Roberts, "is define what we want the system to be. It was initially designed to be an income supplement program and not a program for those who are disadvantaged and needy to live off of. But
you can't tell that to the elderly when that income decides whether they are going to make it or not."
It may be time to rethink the purpose of Social Security. The system is near the breaking point. Surely those retirees who continue to make more than $20,000 or $30,000 a year do not need to contribute to the strain. As far as the practicality of maintaining Social Security as an income supplement, there are many more efficient means of investing dollars, including tax-sheltered pension plans.
So long as Social Security remains politically untouchable, the problems associated with it will grow worse. Fewer and fewer workers are supporting more and more retirees. When the system grows too top-heavy, it will simply collapse.
It is well and good for legislators to consider what reforms will be least damaging to the elderly. But they should remember that the workers who are supporting the system today will be the elderly who depend on it tomorrow. And, in searching for fair solutions, they must protect this class of "elderly" as well.
HOWARD!
STOP IT!
THE STRIKE IS
OVER!
Compulsory voting might be one solution to low turnouts
Brazil, although not a model country on the whole, has a good idea to try to help make it a better country. In Brazil, elections are compulsory.
Logic says that with compulsory elections, there will be 100 percent turnout at the polls. Earlier this month, the United States had voted only was only a 33.8 percent turnout at the polls.
We pride ourselves on our democratic system, but when far less than half of the eligible voters cast their ballots
What's truly disgusting is that that 33.8
CATHERINE BEHAN
percent was considered a good turnout for an off-year election.
Students have one of the worst voter turnout records of all
When we finally won the right to vote and Congress passed the law that brought the legal voting age from 21 to 18, the voter turnout rate fell from 60 percent to 50 percent.
We must have wanted the privilege pretty badly.
Making voting compulsory in this country might give us greater reason to call the United Nations on it.
It might also solve a few domestic problems. Voting is a privilege U.S. citizens have striven to get and keep since this country began. It was a primary idea for the founding fathers, became an official religion in 1796, and were given the right, and was the source of a bitter struggle for women in this century.
Citizens 18 years or older, regardless of race or sex, have the right to vote. Less than half of voters have a valid ballot.
But as the saying goes, with every right, there is a corresponding responsibility.
In this case, we have the responsibility to elect those people we think would be the most capable of doing so.
Since so few exercise this responsibility, perhaps we should provide an incentive — a fine.
Fining eligible voters $50 for not voting would do two things — encourage people to vote and give the government some money that is not a tax and is very useful.
This money would not necessarily come from the rich or poor, the black or white, but only from the poor.
Employers are required to give employees time off to vote.
Facilities for the handicapped are required,
and if not perfect, should be changed so that no
Before you pick up your pens, there is not a single eligible voter in this country who has a
one has a physical barrier preventing them from voting.
Voting is free. It takes very little time, and
polling places are always nearby.
The money collected in fines possibly could go to provide better voting arrangements for the handcapped, jobs for the unemployed, or help with services like a service programs from the federal government.
In the 1978 elections, 155,682,000 people were eligible to vote in the United States and could have elected our congressmen and others. About half of three eligible, or 77,841,000, exercised
If the other half had been fixed $50, that would have brought $38,920,500 into the federal coffers — not a staggering sum by governmental standards, but certainly enough to hire a few unemployed people to build roads or to augment ailing social programs.
Some might say they have the right not to vote for bad people as well as the right to vote. But casting a vote, any vote, is telling people something.
In the 1972 election, many people voted for Communist Party candidates. Washington got the message — the people were not thrilled with candidates the Democrats and Republicans gave us.
Voters can also write in the name of any person they choose. Writing in the local garbage collector for president or congressman might tell voters that a ticket just what you think of political rhetoric.
Not voting tells them simply that we are lazy or that we do not care what goes on in our
People will not get elected or thrown out of office unless we decide to vote them in or out. You cannot be heard unless you make your views clear, in a small booth on a piece of paper.
Some say they do not vote because they do not know the issues or the candidates. This is an incomprehensible excuse — every person in this country should know the issues and the candidates. It is part of the responsibility we have as citizens.
The severely mentally handicapped should probably be excused from the compulsory vote, but those who simply choose to be handicapped shouldn't be excused from the presentation shouldn't, and our system lets them.
I once had a roommate who did not know who the president was — it was an election year. Neither did she know who Richard Milhouse Nixon was. No, she was not brought up in Guyana nor was she stupid; she simply did not care.
POLIS
Fining people who do not act as responsible citizens might not be the best idea in a "free" society, but unless more of us participate in this debate than we might, we might just end up without a free society.
All it takes to know about the people we are voting on is to pick up a newspaper or two or to
Plan would be 'academic eavesdropping'
A story in the Nov. 9 Kansan reports that resident assistants in the residence hull system shall soon have access to students' academic records, and if it passes, what good would come out of it?
To the Editor:
First off, I've been a resident of the hall system both of my years at KU. I have yet to meet or hear of an RA who was overly concerned with a student's problems with school. It's not easy to know what to do, but it worry about without having to hold 65 people's hands. He does have his own life to lead.
When I left home to come to college, I was excited about the fact that my mother would no longer be holding my hand. But soon, if something isn't done, RAS will have the power to take me away. If someone people just like myself. It seems to me that there is not a lot of personal growth involved in that.
I think that college is a place to learn and grow, a place where one can learn from his or her own mistakes. I would rather be left alone with my education than to have an unqualified counselor telling me when I'm screwing up. I want to learn from my own mistakes, even if it hurts. You don't have to lose what you have learned from my own mistakes, no matter how harsh a lesson it may be.
Individuals do have the chance to learn from their own mistakes. His or her school watches the grades, and if anyone falls below minimum, he or she is placed on probation. Once that occurs, the student knows that things have got to change — he has been warned. If it happens again, he's out. Maybe college isn't the thing for him.
When a person picks up his folder, the first thing he sees is the word CONFIDENTIAL in bold. black print. That sums everything up in one word; the folder is private. The only people who should have access to such records are the student and the administrators of his school. I firmly believe that anyone else who looks at this privacy policy has wrong right — the right of privacy. Anyone who violates this privacy is guilty of academic eavesdropping.
Michael Jewell Lake Quivira sophomore
Crusaders limit choice
To the Editor:
As a born-born Christian — a Southern Baptist one, no less — I thought that I would type a few lines to try to interpret Maramatha's recent speech. In 2014, I shared this story with Plavoy and Plavovire at the Kansas Union
First, they have decided that the students of the University of Kansas cannot exercise their free will in a responsible manner; therefore, they should not be given the opportunity to exercise it. They lament the fact that the Lord God gave Adam and Eve a choice in the Garden of Eden and that the poor couple chose to disobey God's command. They don't want another expulsion from Eden, so they have decided to remove all your choices. (They think that God would accept them.) They treat a tree of knowledge of good and evil just lying around with only a command to protect it.)
Second, they believe that after eliminating all sources of visual and written pornography from campus, the incidence of violent crimes of a sexual nature will decrease. They don't realize that Uthah has practiced that practice of censorship for decades, but that the divorce rate there is high (the national average and the rates of violent crime (including rape) are not at all below the average.
Finally, they believe that the grace of God is sufficient to save man from all his sins, but they don't think that the power of grace is sufficient go deliver man from his desire to sin. They aren't at all sure that the power of God Almighty and Jesus Christ, His Son, working through the Holy Spirit, is strong enough to keep a Christian from buying a Playboy if it is available to buy. They think that the Maranatha police force has got a little more bite than the Holy Trinity.
Now that I have helped the "heaven" in understanding Maranatha, I think that Maranatha needs a few lines from a Baptist minister. He is very passionate about the type of negative campaign that you are
waging. God gave man a choice to obey or disobey in the beginning, and He has never ceased to allow man a choice. The free grace that He offers in Christ is plenty powerful to remove the desire to sin from a man. Your censorship of people's freedom to accept something or reject it is nothing more than a form of torture. You cannot Inquisition Let people choose or reject Christ for what He offers to man, and not because you've made it the only choice that he can make.
John E. McLaughlin
John E. McLaughlin Brigham City, Utah, graduate student
Porn, rape not related
That Steve Mobley, director of Maranatha Campus Ministries, is opposed to the sale of "pornographic" magazines in the Union seems quite reasonable. That his followers choose to support him in his protest seems quite acceptable. What is neither reasonable nor acceptable is the causal inference he expresses, i.e., "If we take these things off the shelves, we we're going to see a lot of things happen, like a drop in rape and a drop in incest." His inferences reflect a total lack of understanding of the dynamics of rape and incest.
Rape is much less a sexual matter than an issue of power and control, a feature of the male-dominated society in which we live. Maybe that accounts for the fact that rape is decidedly an expression of what men do to women. If Mobley wanted to reduce the incidence of rape, he might be better off attacking the underlying sexism in our society. He might rather look at the biological roots of that sociological theological roots that he represents, a perspective that still subjugates women to men.
Incest (familial sexual abuse) is a product of family disorganization, the result of which is incest as a symptom. Mobley might be interested to know that one of the characteristics of incestuous families is that they often associate with fundamentalist theological groups. These families are usually closed systems, but one of the things they often do is attend church regularly. It is not uncommon to have the incestuous occurrence justified in theological terms.
I urge Mobley and his followers to protest all they want and, further, to choose not to read what they find "pornographic". His causal inferences should, however, be reserved to those situations where he has information to support his arguments, so people would take his protestations more seriously.
Dennis M. Dailey Professor of social welfare
Don't blame economy
To the Editor:
In "Money problems increase abortion rate" (Nov. 4 Kansan), reporter kissa Asue causes Merle Hoffman, a social psychologist and director of CHOICES, as saying, "The Reagan administration has viewed as having a direct effect on abortions in this country, now more than 1.5 million a year."
Whether the Reagan administration is to blame for the current recession is not the issue in question. Rather it is whether the difficult economy can be blamed for the increasing lack of respect for human life, denoted by the increase in abortions.
Hoffman also said, "Because of the reality of the economy, many women are sacrificing their desire for children." It seems, rather, that women are sacrificing their children for innocence.
I say "children" because it is a scientific fact that a developing embryo has a different and unique genetic makeup from both the mother and the father and is not simply an extension of the mother's body. It is also a fact that the aborted fetus suffers great pain during the abortion operation and afterwards, if it is not killed during the operation. Somehow, this is never mentioned to a woman who is considering abortion. Many aborted babies, those aborted by the saline injection method, for example, are left to die slowly in anguish.
Let us not blame the state of the economy for the increase in abortions, as this article does. The problem is not that the state is not doing anything.
more comfortable, the ever more convenient,
above everything else.
Lisa, the woman mentioned in the article who had had an abortion, said, "I didn't want to take time out of my schedule for a pregnancy." She didn't say she could not afford it because of hard times. So let's give credit/discredit where it is due: rather than coming from an exterior source, an increase in the abortion rate is a reflection of our own lack of respect for life.
Julie Erken Wichita graduate student
Abortion may be best
Lisa Guitierrez has decided that "money is a sad reason for abortion rise."
Why? If you can't afford to adequately care for a child, doesn't it make sense not to have one?
And if you find that you have become pregnant you must make sense to terminate that pregnancy?
Without getting into an argument regarding the moral implications of abortion, I would like to point out to Gutierrez that financial considerations are a valid reason for not bearing children. She says she is "saddened" by the women who opted for abortions, but when "the baby is born, the alternative women had at their disposal, that sadness quickly diminishes."
Well thank you, Miss Compassion! What viable alternatives? She doesn't mention any in her column, unless you consider the absolutely absurd statement in a later paragraph a viable alternative: "If these women truly wanted to bear children, they could carry the infants full-term and let someone adopt the child and pay the 'exorbitant expenses of child-raising.'"
I think Lisa Gutierez should come down out of her ivory tower and stop judging people from a position of ignorance. I have nothing but respect for a woman who is intelligent enough to examine her situation and make a realistic determination as to her ability to financially care for a child. I think the Lisa Gutierezes in this world are largely responsible for the fact that there are far more children born than can be adequately care for.
Never have I encountered a woman who was dying to experience the thrill of pregnancy and childbirth alone. Most women who want children look forward to caring for them, not to the morning sickness, the hemorrhoids, the back pain, the nausea. We don't need to mention the actual event of childbirth (which is high on my list of things that make me glad to be male).
Lisa Guitierrez is "certain that the women surveyed. . . would have found that the financial burden of having a child need not 'force' anyone into having an abortion."
Come on, Lisa. Drag out the common sense that I'm sure licks somewhere in the dusty corners of your mind. Take a look around you. Would you want to have a child if you were employed at $3.35 an hour and living alone; paying gas bills that exceed rent payments? Think about what's best for that potential child, and the answer should be obvious.
Keith Sessions Lawrence Junior
The University Daily KANSAN
The University Daily Kannan (USPS 500-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Hall Floor, Lawrence, Kan. *Paperback* $39.00 Thursday during the summer session, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final periods. Second-class postage paid at Lauverne, Kan. 40044 Subscriptions by mail are $15 monthly or $25 per month or $3 a year outside the county. Student subscription are in a semester, pass through the student activity fee. The University Daily Kannan, 118 Hall Floor, Lawrence, Kan.
Editor Business Manager
George Geerge Cookson
Managing Editor Steve Hoberman
Editorial Editor Steve Chang
Campus Editor Mark Zieman
National Sales Manager Dur巴桑
National Sales Manager Jake Wenderson
Campus Sales Manager Malcolm Langan
Campus Sales Manager Laurie Sammonsoon
Production Manager Harriet Harmon
Artist/Photographer John Kweling
Traveler/Manager Mike Bunberg
Manage Media and News Advisor Advertising Advisor John Oberman
University Daily Kansan, November 22, 1982
Page 5
Consensus Coalition wins 40 of 47 Senate seats
The Consensus Coalition won 22 of the 25 Senate Numenacker and Liberal Arts and Sciences seats, according to election results tabulated late Friday.
The Momentum Coalition won the other three seats.
independent candidates won the remaining two seats.
The final results in Numeraker and Liberal Arts and Sciences were;
Consensus womid 40 of the 47 total Senate seats, in addition to the student body presidential and vice president victories of Lisa Ashner and Jim Cramer. Momentum womid five seats and
Cathy Ormthee (C) 452
David Fidler (C) 453
Brett Palin (C) 454
Brian Raleigh (C) 442
Greg James (C) 449
Susan Jankowski (C) 450
Susan Ibanez (C) 487
Royton Wangy (C) 420
Melanie Corsini (C) 420
Court Brown (C)
Nominee maker
(15 awards)
* Blaire Thumble (C) 840
* Blair Thumble (C) 844
* Debt Hall (C) 838
* Jodie Kiddy (C) 826
* Tom Shields (C) 862
Christy Fleischer (C) 407
Kend Rakouski (C) 471
John Peterson (C) 61
Ann Cornwell (M) 450
Anne Palmer (M) 484
Raina Manure (M) 443
Eric Wall (M) 419
Martin Dalloway (M) 410
Karl Hunsar (M) 413
Patrick Jones (M) 408
Steve Sewater (M) 400
Hachel Pricher (M) 407
Mark Northman (M) 200
Mike Rowan (M) 300
Amy Smith (M) 201
Franc Seurat (M) 301
Energy
the use of heat, Corman said. Officials calculated that such moves would save the University $463,000 this year.
From page 1
WILLIAM HOGAN, associate executive vice chancellor, estimated that the University saved $144,000 in October, in part by not turning on the heat in mid- October, as was done in past years. The university also reported it came to $900,800, compared with $751,01 for 1980. He also compared the increase in gas
and electricity prices as a factor in coming up with the estimate.
The report also detailed the cost savings at the College of Health Sciences in the Kansas City, Kan., campus.
The College of Health Sciences will save $485,000 from energy saving measures this fiscal year, it said. The college could have saved an ad- ditional $75 million in energy savings projects that were not financed.
next 10 years with the present conservation projects and the non-financed projects, which would be funded by a taxation incentive.
The college could save $19.6 million over the
College
ALL OF THE REGENTS institutions could save a total of $145.9 million over the next 10 years through current and proposed conservation projects, the report said.
Corman said the report would be used to justify requests to the Legislature for utility appropriations.
From page 1
— can view their professors as knowledgeable but not infallible.
— can be their own best friend and final judge.
“Somehow, we have the idea that everybody should go to college, and that, if you do, you'll get more money. That’s not necessarily true,” he said.
"You must take a risk. No one can assure you that your course of study will lead to security, or that you will be safe."
From page 1
Review
Subcommittee on Elections, was the only person who had access to the blank ballot.
"Certainly the lock wasn't broken into or the office wasn't broken into," Ashner said.
Lawrence said there were "almost universal misconceptions" about the board's power over
MATT LAWRENCE, chairman of the Review Board, said the five-member board would issue a written opinion tomorrow on all of the elections there. But there would be a record of all Senate races.
The Review Board was set up to review alleged violations of electioneering and bribery, Lawrence said, and it has jurisdiction over campaign expenditures. But the preparation, supervision and the authority of election of Senate Subcommittee on Elections, he said.
"Counting the ballots is under jurisdiction of the elections committee," Lawrence said. "The Elections Review Board can only validate the accuracy or the non-accuracy of those ballots."
Lawrence said there definitely would be a recount of ballots in the Senate's off-campus race. Consensus Robert Walker narrowly defeated Momentum's Steve Chapman, 477-474.
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JEALOUSY BREEDS CRITICISM
We've recently announced a substantial increase in the amount of liquor we're pouring in our highballs. So, a competitor made a feeble attempt to belittle our solid image. Faddish bars will come and go, but Gammons will continue to be the best bar in town for conscientiously-crazy young adults who recognize quality in the form of good service, great atmosphere, excellent drinks, fine food, the hottest current music, a superb sound system, and the best clientele.
When you're doing everything right, you don't need to take futile pot shots at your competition. So, we would like to take this opportunity to thank Moodys for the fine compliment. We're flattered that they perceive us as the best bar in town. Likewise, we're flattered that they copy everything we do.
Have you ever noticed that if you don't have anything positive to say about yourself, you're only recourse is to try and knock the other guy?
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan, November 22, 1982
Lt. Gov.-elect to oversee tax strategy Docking predicting active role
By BRUCE SCHREINER Staff Reporter
When Lt. Gov.-elect Tom Docking predicts what his new duties will include, he stresses that history will not repeat itself in the second Carlin administration.
The lieutenant governor's position received criticism when Paul Dugan, the current lieutenant governor, became a forgotten man in the Capital of the United States during the job after he repeatedly was passed over for executive duties.
But Docking, who teamed with Carlin to soundly defeat the Republican gubernatorial ticket of Sam Hardage
Tony Doherty
and Dan Thiessen, said he would be active in forming tax strategy and creating a better business climate for the state.
842-0600
"There are particular areas that I feel I can make a contribution to the Carlin administration," he said Friday. "In some particular areas I intend to be very active. But I will be available in any area of public policy."
THE TAX committee, still in its embryonic stages, will map a long-range tax strategy, Docking said.
Docking, a Wichita attorney, said one of his biggest tasks would be to oversee a committee assigned to study long-term tax problems facing the state.
Tom Docking
"The committee will examine all sources of revenue at the state level," he said. "There will be an examination of all revenue sources, where our sources are common, now we make us take in the future, whether we have equity in the current system, and whether our system will be equitable in the future."
Another of Docking's ambitions is to establish a close working relationship with the Kansas Department of Economic Development. The KDED came under intense scrutiny during this fall's gub, material campaign after Hardage questioned Kansas' ability to attract new industry.
"The lieutenant governor has historically had a close relationship with KIDED." Docking said, "and I hope to work with him to prevent department heads on many projects.
"We must attract new businesses to the state. And a lot can be done to encourage businesses to stay in Kansas."
DOCKING SAID the tax committee's
recommendations could play an important role in building a business climate attractive to industry.
Other issues in which Docking expressed interest were agriculture, food and energy.
Docking, the heir to a rich political tradition, said that growing up in a political atmosphere gave him an advantage when preparing for his new job. His father, Robert Docking, served four two-year terms as governor, and his grandfather also was elected governor.
"I have known many of the people in government, and I understand how government operates," he said. "It is important the whole ball of wax, but it will help."
"Right now, I'm doing a lot of behind-the-scenes things. I've made some trips to Topeka to visit with Carlin administration officials and members of the Legislature. But I'm mainly getting my house in order."
MANY STATE Democratic leaders, including Jim Ploger, executive director of the state party, have called him a rising star in Kansas politics.
Those same observers have predicted that the "Building a New Tradition" campaign theme for Carlin and Docking means a Docking candidacy for the 2016 presidential election. Docking plays rumors that he is being granted to succeed Carlin in 1986.
"It is so early to talk about that when I haven't even been inaugurated to do the job I was elected to do," he said. "We are not even to the position where we are now." First, we have to see if I do a good job as lieutenant governor."
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Again we kick off the Holiday Season with our Annual
TRADE-IN SALE!
Monday, Nov. 22nd through Saturday, Nov. 27th
How many times have you wished that you could trade in that worn out or out-of-style clothing on something new! Well, this week you can. Come in and TRADE IN your old clothing and outerwear and get big discounts on fresh and exciting items from our regular stock.
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DOWN VESTS $15
& JACKETS $25
THOMSON CASUAL TROUSERS
$5
!
Zero King Trade-in value
WOOLEN COATS $40
"Trade-in value" means you will receive a direct reduction of that amount on your purchase of the new item listed for one on trade. Clothing traded will be donated to the Plymouth Thrift Shop.
SCHOOL
Come on in . . . this sale is really fun and you help others by putting your used clothing back into circulation.
Whitenight's Town Shop
Shop
839 Massachusetts Downtown Lawrence
University Daily Kansan, November 22, 1982
Page 7
On the record
BURGLARS STOLE $1,235 worth of items between 6 p.m. and 8:45 p.m. Saturday from a house on the 600 block of East 15th Street, Lawrence police said yesterday. Stolen were a black-and-white television set, two wrist watches, jewelry and a microwave oven.
THEVES STOLE A purse containing $823 worth of items early yesterday morning from Sgt. Preston's of the North, 815 New Hampshire St., police said. The purse contained $78 in cash, identification, a set of car and house keys and a strand of pearls worth $200.
BURGLARS STOLE A $200 motorcycle Saturday evening from the 1900 block of East 19th Street, police said.
BURGLAIR STOLE $352 worth of items Saturday night from a KU student's car parked in the 1000
block of Massachusetts. Street, police said. The burglarsts stole stereo equipment, a citizen's two-way radio and 12 cassette tapes.
A BURGLAR STOLE A $300 radar detector at 11:50 p.m. Saturday from a KU student's car parked in the 700 block of New Hampshire Street, police said. A witness detected a vehicle with police have not made any arrests.
LAWRENCE POLICE Friday arrested a 43-year-old Lawrence man for making terroristic threats.
Police said Charles Albert Carter Jr. was arrested after phoning the principal of East Heights Elementary School, 1430 Haskell Ave., and threatening to get a shotgun and shoot children.
Carter had reported to police earlier in the week that his son had
been beaten by other children at the school. Police said Carter was angry that nothing had been done about the car and had decided to call the police.
BURGLARS STOLE $1,275 worth of items Friday night from a car parked in the 1800 block of Arkansas Street, police said. The burglars stole store equipment, cassette tapes and two T-top windows worth $550 each.
THEVES STOLE $1,700 worth of
wheel covers Thursday night from
five cars parked in the used car
center. The police said and
Alabama streets, police said.
BURGLARS STOLE $355 worth of items Thursday night from a house on the 1300 block of New Jersey Street. The burglar's stole a color television set and a microwave oven.
Lawrence police yesterday were investigating an apparent arson that occurred Saturday evening at a house under construction at 1121 New Jersey St.
Police said they had a suspect in the incident and were continuing the investigation. The roof had been badly damaged, but the walls were still bare studs.
No estimate of loss was available, but police said the house was consumed by
the fire, which was reported by neighbors about 8:50 p.m.
Police investigating apparent arson
Witnesses told police they looked in and saw the fire burning on the floor. The fire then spread to the rear of the house.
Police said they also suspected arrest in a fire that occurred in a garage in the building.
A KU engineering student placed second in a national design contest held before the summer.
"I'm pleased that I took second," Macy said. "The talks there were just so good and the work (other contestants) had done was just so good, that
Johnathon Macy, Hoisington senior, beat 11 other finalists from across the country with a design and oral presentation of the "Universal Body Positioning System," an innovation of embalming techniques.
Macy's system involves a method of positioning corpses on embalming tables in preparation for burial. The corpses are placed in a larger or lower part of the body.
A NATIONAL mortician supply company has purchased the patent on the system from Macy and will begin manufacturing it soon.
Macy placed first at the regional competition in April at Wichita State
I'm surprised that I did that well."
University to advance to the finals. He said more than 2,000 people competed in semifinals in different areas of the United States.
The contestants were judged by representatives from academic, research and development groups and industry.
"I certainly think his project was unique," said Elmo Lindquist, associate professor of mechanical engineering and faculty adviser for the KU chapter of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers.
The University Daily
KANSAN WANT ADS Call 864-4358
CLASSIFIED RATES
one tie two three four five six seven eight nine ten
15 words or fewer $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.25 $3.50 $3.85 $4.25 $4.55 $4.85
15 words or fewer $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.25 $3.50 $3.85 $4.25 $4.55 $4.85
AD DEADLINES
to run
Monday ... Thursday 2 p.m.
Tuesday ... Friday 2 p.m.
Wednesday ... Thursday 2 p.m.
Thursday ... Tuesday 2 p.m.
Friday ... Wednesday 2 p.m.
The Kanans will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Sound items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These adds can be available to local schools like the $8 payment offer at www.AASD.org
KANSAS BUSINESS OFFICE
118 Flint Hall 864-4538
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Do you need cash? Bring your unwanted merchandise to the Lawrence University Auction. Every Wednesday, 7 p.m. Consignments accepted Tuesday through Saturday, p.m., 7:00 to 8:30 New Haven Hall, Call 212-421-2192 for information.
SURHOGATE MOTHERS needed for Hager Infantile cardiac couple. Official information should be available to residents, must have given birth to healthy child or infant, must have attended two months paid. Call 913-233-1444. Hager hospital,
shop at Spinners Books for feminist, Lehman,
women of color, alternative healing and apolitical
activism. Shop at Spinners Books for Mahachi-
school (85971) I currently居中 Towns ("Sat-
away") Spinners is a feminist women's & children's
hoops Spinners is a feminist women's & children's
hoops.
FOR RENT
Available Dec. 31, 21 bbmr. furn. apt. near campus
Very close. Entrance $400 per month plus $50
at the front desk.
1 bedroom apartment. Quiet. Modern appliances in
disposal and dishwasher. Living room kit.
Kitchenette. WiFi. Certified for $25/month.
Utilities not included. Ideal for graduate
student someone like who privacy. Call 800-476-
8933 or visit www.smiths.com.
br. apt. available for subsession $1. $30 ALLM
ULTITIES PAID $19 Louisiana, no pets 841-198-
$25 french house Unutilized. Dm. rent
Hillcrest shopping. Now $75 plus 1 mo deposit
shopping. Available now $75 plus 1 mo deposit
SPRING SEMESTER
15th & Crestline 842-4200
Enjoy carefree living at affordable prices. Spacious studios, 1 & 2 bedroom apts - Carpeted, draped and on the busline.
The Luxury of Meadowbrook Is Just Right For You
meadowbrook
ENERGY EFFICIENT 2 bedroom apartment in nice
2 year old duplex. $825/month plan incl. 440-192
360-745
EXTRA nice apartments, large and small. Next to
cuisines. Utilities paid, reasonably priced, 842-413-
565. 2-car garage. Energy efficient energy efficient townhouses w./ garage. Spacious
enough for three. Only 3 blocks from campus. 418
670. 2-story apartment.
Housemates wanted. Enjoy a relaxed co-operative party at Sunflower House 824-9321 Call Sunflower House 824-9321
Jayhawker Towers Apartments
Now taking applications for spring and
summer leases. KU students only
2 Bedroom dormitories on campus
• uses paid
• swimming pool
• air conditioned
• on bus line
• cablevision
• laundry facilities
• furnished or unfurnished
Tower A - Grad Students only
Tower B - Women Students only
Tower C D - At least 3 Students
Office Hours
Mon-Fri: 8:00-5:00
Sat: 8:00-12:00
1602 W 943 443 4993
1603 W. 15th
Liege in the CHRISTIAN-CAMPUS HOUSE this fall
with the Campus Director, Call Alan Houen; campus minister,
Michael Hutchey.
Sulfinose mice, 1 to 4, completely furnished
Available in Dec. or Jan. Class to camper 749-3425
Huge 2 bedroom apt. $265. Utilities included Close to campus. Possibility of working for free. 842-2580. Call (212) 327-5988. Attend Dee. Lt. & located on 8th St. at Gaillot St. Come and use and we would work something out. Pm.
Meadowbrook. Furnished studio available on sublease now through August. Water paid. No deposit if rented by December 1st. Call Jan. 844-9567 or 844-9233, evenings.
Need a deuble take over starting Jan. 1, 1-bedroom, furnished apt. Extra water, nice paid 5 minute walk from campus. If interested and need to work on this assignment, 408-454. about 108 Amt. 1 Hanover Place sublease
Needed 4 mature students for a very special 4 bedroomed room, very quiet neighbour, hamburg, #485
One one-bedroom, one bath apt, with range,
refrigerator and washer. Good location, $285, all
required.
PRINCETON PLACE PATIO APARTMENTS. Now Available, 2 bedrooms, 2 bath, perfect for roommates, features wine burning fireplace, 2 car garage with large windows and walk-in closet, kitchen pet kitchen, quiet surroundings. No pete please $42 per month. Open house 9:30-10:30 daily at 278 Princeton Village, or phone #8425 for additional information.
Quirk Creek Apartments sublease. two bedroom, 1½ bath, half bath. Apartment Mid-December thru June $500 per month.
What are your plans for next semester?
Houghton Place is full but we will have a few studios and one-bedroom apartments available for January occupancy. Why not call for an appointment to see now? We prefer graduate students or mature adults.
841-5775
2400 Alabama
Rooms for rent plus utilities. Kitchen privileges washer, dryer. References. No pets. Non-smoker 842-935.
SOUTHERN PARKWAY TOWHOUSES 80th & Kissel If you are of nice, stylish and cramped apartment or townhome, all appliances, affixed garage, swimming pool, deck, kitchen, laundry room, Carlyle 3207 wedding & evening rooms for more in-home fun. Weddings & evening rooms for more in-home fun.
Small 2 br. house 1 bl. so, campus. Completely insulated. storm garage, Available Dec. 1. Deposit. pns. 5295.龟版 4:32-686.
SPACIOUS Meadowbrook studio available for sublease Jan. 14 REDUCED RENT. Fully carpeted and furnished. Close to campus. Water and cable TV. Opening hours: Monday through Friday at noon, price $193-$453 after 5 mins.
APARTMENT LIFE
GOT YOU DOWN ?
THINKING OF
MOVING BACK TO
THE CAMPUS
LIFESTYLE?
THINK OF
Sublease 1 br. apt Furnished. Cox decor. Great
room, good deal. Call 841-3583. Available
Sublease beautiful 1-bedroom apartment in quiet
$94 location. Low siti width. Available 1-2. Call
866-555-1234.
Tired of doing all the housework? Check out Sunflower cooperate. Secure, clean and inexpensive!
NAISMITH HALL
We cater to student needs. Ask about our special arrangements for Semester Break 1 and 2 bedroom apartments available with laundry facilities and TV computer TV. Semester leaves. Walk to chapel-843-216
Hanover Place - Completely furnished one bedroom apartments available immediately. Located between 148 and 165 on Moss. Only 3 beds from KU and 2 from $80 per month water bid. 841-1232 or 842-4455.
Sublease newly decorated 4 bedroom townhouse
Baudette rate: C/NL4804@NW
Water/gae / cabal p/d available now. Call 789-1289.
Sunday Apartment - Furnished one bedroom apartment available for sobriety beginning Dec. 15.
Water pool, $42m annually. $64m between 1.58 and 3.08.
ON CAMPUS
CONVENIENCE WITH
AN OFF CAMPUS
LIFESTYLE!
NICELY DECORATED spacious room. Furnished
$81 requires补贴. Near University & department
building. Located at 4355 NE 81st St.
811-5000. SUBLEASE OUTSTANDING TOWNHOME 2 br, lr
bath, LDR, 1K, BBQ, Kitchenette, Wet Bar,
Beverage Station. $89 after 8/11-7/98
MUST SURPLACE: quiet 1 bedroom furnished apart
on bus line. deposit Available December 31, first pay
day of the month.
FOR SALE
WARM quiet room one block from Union. Clean habits, no pets, after 5 p.m. 1209 Ohio.
NAISMITH HALL
843-8559
1073 Macverick, good shape, run by engine needs some work, $350 or less, 841-7434 aftermoms.
1970 Old Delta 88, power steering brakes power brakes automassive transmission Good condition. Low motech reliability. Good condition.
100 Sunburst, 4 cyl. automatic, # conditioned $150
Sunburst brand AM FM桑瑟车, 30,000 miles; $150
brand new AM FM桑瑟车, 30,000 miles; $150
suncroof, AM/FM stereo, engine completely overhailed, asked $1275, must well, call 844-1403. 1978 Datsun 2002 Z plus 2 Extra clean, no surface rust, super nice. Must see! Call 746-281. Keep
60 g gas cook stove $5.00, bass guitar and 15 "pig"
suitcase $28.99, Willow $20.00, Separator
Bauer $43.99
79 Ford Truck. 78 automatic, AM, 40 miles, very clean, 41/198, 769-641, brand new AM/FM cassette
30" bac cook gas pot $5.00, bass guitar and 15" ply guitar, bass amplifier $20.00, will seale相处.
79 Ford Track. 9 v automatic, AM 42,000 miles, very clean, $145. 795-841 or 941-607
works, perfect works. Call Reshul 749-6800.
Adds 888 computer, must design, does not work. Good
work.
Adds 858 computer terminal, usable with KU. Must
adds work perfect. Call Roshi 749-6908.
Airline ticket, round trip to Chicago, midway coach from New York to Chicago, midway coach from new in March. Reservations needed 1 week in advance of flight.
I got a deal for you! I want to sell you an $8 Brianna radiatrix and an $100 cash adradiatrix. Everything in real good condition. I will pay $350, you will pay $250.
Mitsubishi MS-10 speakers. Odyssey XT-20 30-watt amp/tuner. Bass just one year old. 784-3354
Off season bargain 1979-54 era clyde. Horns well
fired. Sweep for 2011. #41, 341, 342.
Baseball history. Browns 1981, 1989 after clyde.
Pinto snow trees 814-2623 after 2
Savel Government typowriters. IBM electric. $150
Scott SKI Boats. Ladies size 8, great condition. Only worn 12 days. Call Mary B41-1012
FOUND
TV (B & B) 845 *Wide (8 speed)* 835 + 839 + 644-6034.
Technics Testance Dc76 - 768 on the line of the new, front loading. Excellent condition. Call 841-3174.
Two female rooms designed for a beautiful new home.
Systems III IBM computer with printer & processor. Model 6: IPM to language. 1 fixed盘 x 2.6 million storage. 5 character x 2.6 million storage, 85 characters per sec. direct contact. University State Bank 559 Iowa, Lawrence, KS 60044
Yamaha Champ moped. Excellent condition, only 8
months old. $400 or best offer. 749-0684
LOST. 18" gold chain with Delta Gamma lavarier;
lost approximately October 27 in Allen Field House;
dour sentimental value; reward if returned;
643-8770
I lost my prey prescription glues in a beagle with Marycyn's "glasses" on the case. Help
Found last month) pair of soft contact lenses in case. Contact Nurse Burgs: 848-1230.
Found on Thursday a long-bared white, male cat on Jayhawk Bld. Inquire at animal shelter, 843-6835
Found white clip board with blank paper and English ode, 843-6822.
LOST. Black & white half month spring spuned at Nicholas Hall Friday Nov. 15. Call M426 844-3232
HELP WANTED
LOST. Buse "General Chemistry" text. Beloved lost in Malibu library. Needed desperately for final. Reward. 843-7649. Ask for Bryan or leave message. Brown. Bless her jacket in Laken Hall within 2 hours.
EARN 8000 this summer, painting buildings in your
city. Earn $125 per hour. Time is free. Will be
available June 1-3. 9AM-1PM. AM管理
classes. Ticket value is $29. AM management
classes. Ticket value is $29.
*Mini pigs*
*Male gray kitten with black stripes & white collar.*
Ladies watch in Southern Hills parking lot. 749-2100 after 6 m.
NURSING: FULL-TIME/PART-TIME Are You Interested in Weekend work only? - Katherine, every day from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., or on weekdays 10 or 12 at hourly shifts? These and other opportunities are available at the Topcape State Hospital. We provide a liberal nursing facility where you can be away from normal routines while you work you become part of a professional treatment team. We all work together and support each other as we learn new skills. HOURS SHIP DPENDENTIAL @ HOURLY Contact us
One laden' package outside of Haworth Call
8412000 and ask for Dr. Dennis
**REWARD:** Blue cal-eye glasses with rhinometis. Please phone 784-0047.
OVEREANS JOBS: Summer year round. Europe, US, UK, Switzerland. High performing lighting firm. Write info. Lose MK-85N
Assistant Administrators, DDS, Director of Healthcare, Breast
Hospital Hospital 200% S.W. With Health Services, Triangle,
WA.
Part-time sales clerk wants. Only hard workers need apply. Wine experience preferred. Inquire in person please. Green Fine Wine, 800 West 23rd St. Wine available. It isn't too late to enroll in Naval HI Tech.
PERSONAL
A Special For Student, Haircuts, $7. Ferris, 438
Charine 1033! Mass 84-380. Ask for Dearen Jensen.
A Strong Keg Out, Bennett Retail Liquile, Chilled
Wine-Kegs - ice-cold Ice 2 lukks north of Memorial
"BRASS BALLS." You know someone who needs them. Now you can give it to them. Send you name and address and 46-95 to Total Concepts, 2008 Broadway, Lawrence, MA 69044. Before Christmas delivery
RESEARCH PAPERS
TOLL-FREE HOTLINE
800-621-5745
IN ILLINOIS CALL 312-922-8000
AUTHORS' RESEARCH ROOM 800
* 7 S. Bearham, Chicago, IL 60055
COMPHE IRELATIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES: early & advanced outpatient abortion; quality medical care for newborn babies; quality area call collection for appointments [932-648-3100]
Can't seem to find your favorite battle of war!
Can't seem to find your favorite bottle of wine? Bennett's wine selection overcomes 600 bottles of white, red, and pink.
Dear Douglas: Happy 21st to the IMP who makes cloets worth opening! All my love, Kathleen
Don't get mad, and send the "Bitter Bouquet."
Willfields flowered locally. Phone 814-6245.
Brian
Pat & Susan
You're finally legal! Happy 21!
For good quality, clean, affordable text in-print
newspaper, visit www.harpercollins.com.
New Harper is the marketplace. Turn:
www.harpercollins.com
For something special with a touch of charm from the past - stop by Barb's Vintage Rose, 918½ Mass. We'd upstairs downstairs, 841-2451.
Give your body a warm break this spring-to padre Island with SUA. 804-3977
HEADACH, BACKACHE, STIFF NECK, LEG PAIN FIND AND CORRECTION OF THE CAUSE of the Cause. Mark Johnson for modern chiropractic care. $450.00 Accepting Blue Cross and Lone Star insurance.
West Coast Saloon
POOL TOURNAMENT
EVERY MONDAY
1st — Trophy
2nd — $10.00
3rd — 12 pack
Register by 8:30 P.M.
tournament starts at 9:30 am!
What to wear over
the Thanksgiving Holiday
2222 Iowa 841-BREW
I gotla sell two season basketball tickets. Discount available. Call Debbie at 842.1077.
Hee Georgia Building. I'm the Land of Abis
and Bayahays. I'm really glad you live here. Love ya.
It's so beautiful.
If you need a fun silk or satin cumberbunk for the holidays, stop by Shop CK. Shop 10, W9th St. See below.
Instant passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization,
immigration, visa, ID, and of course fine portraits.
Sweile Studio 749-1611
$1.75 for filled Bud
Mug—you keep mug
$1.25 for filled Bud
Pilser glasses—you
keep glass 35* refills
we will be open over
Thanksgiving
West Coast Saloon
Glassware Special
KAPPA PHI Ceramics Classes for University women Sponsored by Spraker Phi. Phi 843-967-8871
2222 Iowa 841-BREW
Looking for that imaginative Christmas gift. Try
their new service, which sends a special card,
dressed up that special person in earphones
for you.
Monday - Kamikazas 50, 7-3. HAPPY HOUR 2 for 1,
7-5 Up & Under above Jahn's Tavern.
Used a nudist road to St. Louis (The Very) one of the most beautiful streets in New York, neder nuber winters, boots cawwares, hats, scars, household goods, books. Records: BARBIES Second Hand Rose, 31/1 Indiana
PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTHRIGHT,
843-6021.
SKIP THE GENERAL CUIDES. We presume a week in Arsenal as we travel to Liverpool and Leeds, followed by Chelsea Cited States with Summit Team and The Queens Cup. Visit the website www.chelsea.com.
Schulder Wine & Kit Shop. The finest selection of wines to laurevity - larger supplier of strong kitchens.
Say it on a shirt, custom silicone printing. T-shirts,
sweatshirts, Seart印务 by Swella 749-161.
Skiffler's liquor store serving DU since 1994. Cans in and compare. Wilted Skiffler 1062. Mass Turnover
**Boston:** *T. Walgreens* - Vidme Hordeurres, Name
Boston - T. Walgreens - Give your best gift, then call T.
the K.C. store. Get your box receip
Tumorrose is T.L.? birthday, and I just wanted to tell her that she has a wonderful day. Happy Birthday! She has a wonderful day. Happy Birthday!
Trouble with your lady?" Send her the "Little Hug"
bounty. @ 60.00 dll. #412-8258.
Western Civilization Notes. Now on sale! Make sense out of Western Civilization! Makes sense to use them: 1) As study guide, 2) For class preparation, 3) For homework, 4) For extra practice, 5) The *Civilization* available now at Town Crier. The *Civilization* is $1.99.
The Koger Weekly Specials on Keggs! Call 841-9506
18:00 W. 23rd
Skill Stills Workshop Emphasis on preparing for exam: Tuesday, November 9, 7 to 10.00 p.m. at the Student Assistance Center, 844-994. The student quired. The Student Assistance Center, 844-994.
THANKSGIVING Holders are great! Burgers and desserts available with their renters' insurance—and have a residual vacation. Bil丹保险大厦 841-Kenari
What makes the birthday boy happiest on his birthday is the kind of dress he wears. **FORWARD ROW The Wha Wanes, Flowerwall Mac, Rod Stewart, GO GO SOS, Rush, Starship, Sly, Bemara, ELTON JOHN, Heart, ZJRT, Van Halen, Tull, Zap groupes, groupes de mode, groupes and more captured live in concert. For top quality shots call Front Row Photography #847-7288. 881 etc., presents ski trip every weekend. Sheepier groupes, group rates and box chartable calls. Call #841-6891.
SERVICES OFFERED
ENCORE COPY CORPS. Full color copies from slideon and photo: 842-200.
Improve my dissertation, etc., with technical illustrations (charts, small insignals) by 8xrs.
Alteration, tailoring and dressmaking. Experienced seamstress. No job too small or large. 842-5644.
Alternator, starter and generator specialists. Parts, service and exchange units. BELL AUTOMOTIVE
MATH Cs. STATISTICS Experiment Tutor Math
MATH Cs. STATISTICS Experiment Tutor math
math
bs = 9260 - 8600
bs
Encore Copy Corps
2112 A West 20th Lawrence Kannan
(Holiday Plaza)
918-745-6730
University of California
Quantity Discounts Quality Service!
MATH TUTOR. Bob Mora. patient professional
M.A. 56 for m.p.m., group diagnosis. 843-9094
RACQUETTAL RACQCT STRINGING Teams,
squash. Specializing in new graphic/brute-string-
ing techniques.
Students call April to have all your typing needs done fast and very reasonable. Day 40 - Evenings
trouble with your lady. Send her the "Little Hug"
*bunnie* July 8th, 2015 delivered. #A44545
Tutor - English 601, 101, 102 Three years teaching experience at NK $75,000 Will also proofread and edit text online.
TUTOR with good teaching experience in MATH
Science. Call 811-648-9235 or FRENCH (Native)
Caller. Speak to 811-648-9235 or FRENCH (Native)
WRITE BERT. Editing. Typing Library Research, Vince Clark, 860-254-3900
TYPING
OFFLOADABLE QUALITY for all your typing needs.
Call Judy, 842-7945 after p. e.m.
ANNOUNCING "TYTING INK" - A professional typing service for your important papers, themes, and documents. Correction - rewrite assistance. Professional IBM Correcting Selective Pickup/Pellivery 841-1390
ATTENTION TOPEA COMMUNITIES 16 years experience. Reports, interviews, dissertations, the electronic Computer Typewriter. Student discount. Call Pam Summerville. 354-8933.
Absolutely LETTER PERFECT typing - editing
Better - faster - experienced Joan, Lisa, Sandy
843 605 anytime.
Clean and fast typing assured. Call 843-418-9446. **DONNIE PANTIC. Quick Brown Fox types and edits them, dissensiones, papers. Call Barbara 843-609-959. Excellent typist will do your typing. HM Selects**
Excellent (typing does quickly). Will help you with your job.
Experienced typist will type letters, these, and
other documents. IBM CRecording Selective Cell
at 843-724-74.
Experienced typist will type dissertations, thesis,
term papers etc. Call 842-3200
Experienced typist. thesis, dissertations, term papers, miac. IBM theses selective. Barber, after 5 years. IBH.
Experienced typists. Term papers, theses, all miscellaneous. IBM Correcting Selective, Elite or Pica, and will correct spelling. Phone 843-9544 Mrs. Wright.
EDUCATIONAL
(PEAK)
Word Processing Services
Supported by 7311 West Lafayette, LA
or call 803-4895
ESU INC. for more information
to perform research, case analysis and preparation of
research paper.
* DIPHASES: TIMEPAIRS TIMES PAIRS
* LEVEL 1 ITEM/PROCESS DOCUMENTS
* LEVEL 2 ITEM/PROCESS CUSTOMIZED MASSE
* LEVEL 3 ITEM/PROCESS MANAGED MASSE
* LEVEL 4 ITEM/PROCESS OPERATION MANUALS
* LEVEL 5 ITEM/PROCESS PROCESSING
* DIRECT PROCESSING PROCESSING
* DIRECT PROCESSING PROCESSING
Experienced typist will type term papers, theses,
dissecuations, books, etc. have HI self-incorrecting
Selective II. Call Terry 842-4754 or 843-3671. 8 a.m. to
10:30 p.m.
PAST, ACCURATE, AFFORDABLE, TYPING All kinds 10 years experience. Call 843-8531 after 6pm.
Experienced typist for all your typing needs. Call Mary, 841-6073. Overtight guarantee under 25.
Former Harvard Med. School research secretary will type, edit English, Reasonable rates. Call Nafn.
Have Seleciv,型 type. Professional, fast, afford-
able. Betty, 842-6877, evenings and weekends.
For PROFESSIONAL CALL MyRu. 841-4960.
For a good touse call DYBING 749-4736.
Typept- Xerox 0150 Memorywriter, Royal Correcting
SE0000CD 043-0670
Report*, dissertations, resumes, legal forms,
graphics, editing, self-correcting Call.
Select
Shakespeare could write. Elvis could wiggle; my talent, typing. Call 824-943-14 after 5 and weekends. Call TIP TOP TYPING -1200 Iowa. Experienced TIPX -Tenor X65忆 memory, Royal Correcting X65忆 memory.
It is a Fact, Fast, Affordable. Clean Typing 841-5820
Overnight Express 40 ppm or under, 10 years exp.
Ethernet Cables 600MHz.
TYPING I do good work. Available for the holidays.
Call 304-3111
**TYPHING PLUS:** Thems, dinnerware, paper tents, etc. **TYPHING THEM:** Thems, grammar, spelling, or English训读, grammatical spelling, or English训读.
TYPING - Term Papers, Resumes, Theses,
guardians, pro�nals 816-235-8901; after 5:00
morning.
WANTED
Female roommate, open minded but studious
woman. Born home south campstiff $150 plus
utilitys. No reservations needed.
Female roommate needed to share spacious 6 bedroom apartment $116 plus one third low utilitarian unit
I will pay $100 for someone to take over my contract for next semester at Naismilh Hall. Call 749-2228 by Dec. 1.
Male co-memorate needed to share 2 bibm. apt. for session.
Web, mail in correspondence 8153 8153 pltp. 7490 6490
**ink Walk to campus:** 314 West 8th Street, non-SMOOKING MALE ROOMS, unattended by NO SMOKING. Room is open 1 January in through July 31. Note 2 Bedroom apartment in 2-year doubled. Duplexes 54+ good utilities. 842-1920 Keep
Need furnish, apartment for visiting mother and sister. Need furniture
Non-smoking female roommate wanted to share an apartment with a friend. The roommate has $50, plus one-third of utilities. Call
Roommate wants to share large house close to campus.
101. Ohio Call now 841-8407
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1
F.210
University Daily Kansan, November 22, 1982
KU finishes 2-7-2 Missouri beats 'Hawks
By GINO STRIPPOLI
Sports Editor
COLUMBIA, Mo.—The Kansas football season ended Saturday the same way it started as the Jayhawks dropped a 16-10 decision at the hands of the Missouri Tigers here before a crowd of 49.041 at Fauntry Field.
As it did in the opener, a long pass beat the Jawhaws.
After Kansas tied the Tigers, 10-10,
midway through the fourth quarter on a
22-yard touchdown pass from Frank
Seurer, to Wayne Caprese, Missouri
started on its own 20-yard line. Marlon
Adler, Mississippi's sophomore quarterback,
hit Trace Mack for a four-yard
gain on a screen play.
On second and six, Adler connected with James Caver near the right sideline. Caver then pivoted, and Gary Coleman, the Kansas defensive back covering on the play, slipped and Caver to a 76-yard touchdown reception.
"FOLLOWING OUR touchdown, I had no doubt we were going to win," said Seurer, who was 16 of 35 for 209
yards. "Then they came right back with that 75-yard or whatever play. That kind of thing has hurt us all year."
But this did not appear to be the same Kansas team that took the field in Kansas' 10 previous games.
"This is a game only coaches can appreciate," said head coach Don Fambrough, fighting back tears following the game. "All I've asked this team all week long was to play as hard as they could and they did.
"I'm proud of this team. The seniors can go out with their heads up."
The defense was the big factor in keeping the Jayhawks in the game. Allowing 107 yards on the ground in the first half and letting the Tigers take a 10-3 lead, the Kansas defense tightened. Despite being ranked next in run, the team run, Kansas held Missouri to just 47 yards on 27 carries in the second half.
SENIORS BRODERICK Thompson and Tim Friess led the way for the Jainyah defense. Both players fought injuries all year long, but he missed the season-high 14 tackles and Friess added 10, but they were their harassing of Adler that gave
Kansas something it lacked all season — a russ rush.
"On defense today (Saturday), we had 11 guys who wanted to win." Thompson said. "We just went all out. We were two and a half goals. Too bad it's the end of the season."
When asked why it had taken so long for the defended Thompson could say something.
Tom Batta, defensive coordinator, said, "Our kids gave a great effort. It's been a struggle all year, but the players gave it all they had. It's just unfortunate we couldn't finish with a victory."
THE DEFENSE, however, wasn't alone Saturation. The offense, led by Suerer and Capers, kept the Jayhawks out, but they just came up one naval shot.
Drake defeats Kansas, 98-65
Capers, who has had problems holding on to the ball all season, ended his career at Kansas on an up note with four catches for 96 yards and the lone Jayhawk touchdown. Kerrwin Bell had three receptions and Darren Green, Sylvester Byrd and Ernie Wright each had two.
By JEFF CRAVENS Sports Writer
Size and experience were two things that Coach Marian Washington knew the Kansas women's basketball team had. She was the opening opener with the Drake Bulldogs.
Drake took advantage of both as they whipped the djayhawks 98-45 Saturday in a 2-1 victory.
ANGIE SNIDER led KU with 20 points and nine rebounds, while Angela White had 16 points.
"Our inside game was lacking," said Washington. "We definitely got out-rebounded and there's not much you can do when you don't, have the ball."
Lorr Bauman, Drake's 6-foot-3 center, led the Bulldogs with 27 points. Kay Riek, a 6-1 forward, added 16 points, 14 rebounds and 14 assists.
"Angela Taylor shot well," Washington said. "Snider did not have a great shooting night, but she tried to keep the team constantly going."
Besides getting outrebounded 55-31,
KU shot only 37 percent from the floor,
while Drake hit on an impressive 58
percent of their field goals. The 'Hawks'
also hit only 47 percent of their free
throws.
"One thing we have to remember is that we have to be patient." Washington said. "We are going to be small until we get Vickie Adkins back.
"The thing we are shooting for is the conference season so we just have to grow from the mistakes that we are going to make early in the season."
Kansas started one freshman, Ann Schell, who scored two points. Tina Stauffer, another freshman, also added two, while Cindy Platt added one.
"The younger players gained confidence as the game went along," Washington said. "They became aware of what we have to work on."
The brightest spot for the Jayhawks was the play of punter Bucky Scribner. Scribner punted seven times for a 49-yard average. Two of his kicks went out of bounds inside the 10, one of those kicks hint that rolled dead on the 1-yard line.
The Jayhawks will travel to Plainview, Texas, this weekend to play in the NFC championship game. It is hoping that Adkins will be able to play in KU's second-round game.
Scri伯en helped his career at Kansas as the all-time Big Eight punter with a 43.3-yard average on 217 career punts. He holds the record previously owned by Zack Jordan, who played at Colorado from 1950-52.
NFL results
New York Jets 27, Baltimore 0
Cincinnati 14, Philadelphia 14
Detroit 18
New Orleans 25, Kansas City 17
Nashville 17, Miami 17
Miami 9, Buffalo 7
Green Bay 26, Minnesota 7
Pittsburgh 24, England 7
Pittsburgh 24, Houston 10
Tampa Bay 13, Washington 27, New York Giants 17
San Francisco 31, St. Louis 29
Today's Game
All Times CTS
San Diego at Arizona State
8 p.m. Thursday's Games
New York Giants at Detroit, 11 a.m.
New York Jets at Philadelphia
MASSON 6
KANSAS 70
Wayne Capers hauled in a Frank Seurer pass for a 49-yard gain against Missouri defender Ray Hairston on Saturday's 16-10 loss at FAunfield Field in Columbia. Mo. Capers ended the day with four receptions for 96
KU swimmers lose to Alabama, SIU
By MIKE ARDIS
Sports Writer
When swimming coach Gary Kemp put Alabama and Southern Illinois on this year's schedule, he knew his men's and women's teams were facing a big challenge.
He didn't quite expect what he saw this weekend.
Born teams were defeated by SIU and Alabama. The women lost to SIU, 100-49, and to Alabama, 97-51.
The men lost 83-31 to Alabama and
71-43 to SLU. Both of Alabama's teams
won their games.
Last year the KU women's team beat SIU in a close match, and the men lost to
"We ran into a buzz saw this weekend and got wounded, but we're ready to come out fighting," Kemp said. "SIU and Alabama men's and women's teams are two of the best teams in the nation."
SIU's and Alabama's men's teams finished in the top 10 last year, and the SIU women finished third in the AIAW national meet. Alabama's women's team finished seventh in the NCAA championships.
"REGARDLESS OF the results, we competed pretty well." Kempf said. "The men did what I consider an outstanding job."
Ron Neugent had three top races,
finishing second in the 1,000-yard
freestyle in 9:13.4, second in the 200
metres and third in the 500
metres in 4:32.8
"Those were three of the toughest swims," Kempf said. "He pulled off that triple as good as any swimmer in the nation."
For the women, Tammy Thomas turned in a top performance in winning the 50 freestyle in 23.4 and the 100 freestyle in 21.9, well below national qualifying times.
staff and Thomas finished second in a time of 3.144 h, three seconds under the watchful eye of the police.
The 400 medley relay team of Celine Cerry, Maureen McLeay, Jenny Wag-
Kempf put Alabama and SIU on the schedule to give the Jayhawks more experience in facing the nation's top teams.
`HUW HAS been a `predominate
`MKU power. Kempt said, "We
would like to be more
`powerful."
Susan Schaefer also had a good meet with a career best in the 400 individual Medley in 4:37.2 and third in the 200 and 100 butterfly.
"We were a consistently strong team," Kempf said. "We lacked the little incentive to win. There were a lot of close races.
"If we're going to be a national caliber team, we have to control these races. We have a young team, but youth is no excuse. We have to learn very
The women will have a tough meet the next time out in the Nebraska Invitational Dec. 2-4.
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The University Daily
KANSAN
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
Tuesday, November 23,1982 Vol. 93, No.67 USPS 650-640
President supports MX system
By United Press International
WASHINGTON-President Reagan said yesterday America needed the MX missile system to force Moscow to negotiate arms cuts, and said he had sent the new Soviet leaders ideas for ending "mutual ignorance" that might trigger an accidental nuclear war.
He said his "dense pack" deployment recommendation for 100 MX missiles was "absolutely essential," and called the weapon "the most powerful." "No peepeeper!" — the "right missile at the right time."
REAGAN, referring to the arms control speech he delivered one year ago to a worldwide audience, repeated, "The United States wants deep cuts in the world's arsenal of weapons."
The president delivered the nationally televised address several hours after announcing his decision to seek congressional approval of a controversial $26 billion plan to place the MX ballistic system in hardened silos in a narrow field near Chevonne, Wyo.
Speaking from the Oval Office, Reagan said, "It still takes weapons of war to prevent war," and insisted his plans for a massive military invasion order in order to bring Moscow to the harbring table.
Reagan said that with his five-year, $1.5 trillion defense program, "It will still take five years before we come close to the Soviet level." THE PRESIDENT said he had sent a "special
"Unless we demonstrate the will to rebuild our strength and restore the military balance, the Soviets, since they are so far ahead, have little incentive to negoziate." Reagan said.
THE PRESIDENT said he had sent a "special letter" to Moscow outlining his proposals — including an unprecedented exchange of "basic data" about U.S. and Soviet nuclear arsenals — to leave "less room . . . for surprise and miscalculation" when a nuclear war threatened
In the hour following Reagan's speech, the White House reported receiving 240 favorable telephone calls and 175 calls opposed to the president's stance.
The president also disclosed for the first time
that he believed the Soviets had made serious proposals at the Strategic Arms Reduction Talks in Geneva.
"Their opening position is a serious one and even though it doesn't meet our objective of deep reductions, there's no question we're heading in the right direction," he said.
"ONE REASON for this change is clear," he added. "The Soviet Union knows that we are now serious about our own strategic programs and that we must be prepared to negotiate in earnest."
Reagan said the suggestions he sent to Moscow also were sent to American negotiators at Geneva so they could be aired at the bargaining table.
Reagan said the proposals included:
—To relieve "some of the mutual ignorance and suspicion between our two countries, I will propose that we both engage in a broad-ranging set of basic data about our nuclear forces."
REAGAN SAID preventing war and reducing weapons "are the most important public issues of our time," but "on no other issue are there more misconceptions and misunderstandings."
"The result is that many Americans have become frightened and, let me say, fear of the unknown is entirely understandable. Unfortunately, much of the information emerging in this debate bears little semblance to the facts," he said."
"The most upsetting letters I receive are from schoolchildren who write to me as a class assignment. It evident they we discussed the most nightmarish aspects of a nuclear holocaust
"Our children should not grow up frightened. They should not fear the future."
Senators split on dense pack
WASHINGTON—Senate opponents of the MX missile predicted yesterday that Congress will refuse to provide the nearly $1 billion President Obama has proposed as an strategic weapon in a "deepsep" bomb, basing国务卿
But the announcement of the president's decision was welcomed by congressional "hawks" who support his attempts to shore up America's military might.
Sen. John Tower, R-Texas, chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee commended Reagan for reaching a "courageous and decisive judgment" and choosing dense-pack bessing in
Tower said that "the Soviet economy is on a wartime footing," and added that Russia had nothing in its arsenal that could defeat the MX at this point.
However, Sen. Ernest Hollack, D-S.C., said he was certain Congress would back his amendment to kill funds for the first five nuclear-tipped MX missiles.
Hollings, speaking with reporters before the official announcement, said the $988 million sought by the administration for MX production stood "no chance" when Congress reviewed the $201.3 billion Pentagon weapons program in the lame-duck session beginning next month.
He said he was convinced his amendment to cancel the production funds would be passed and said, "That means the production money is dead for the moment, but we will still go forward with the research and development" for which the administration requested $2.5 billion.
Sen. Malcolm Wallop, R-Wyo., said the administration had assured him and other members of Congress from Wyoming that it can impact it to mitigate the impact" on their state.
DOWNSHIP GAMES
Brian Ritter, Overland Park senior, kept the ball in play during the KU Raquetball Tournament held last night in Robinson Gymnasium. About 36 people participated in the tournament. First place in the advanced division was captured by Ritter's opponent, Jon Machalek. Fairway junior.
Fiscal, organizational troubles plague KU on Wheels
Bv DON KNOX
Staff Reporter
It was not an unreasonable request, she thought, and after mentioning the idea to a friend, she decided to talk with the coordinator of her campus bus system run by KU's Student Services.
All Pam Sellen wanted was a night bus that would take her from her Lawrence neighborhood to the KU campus.
on Wheels' faecal and organizational problems burst into public view.
Yet after nine months of repeated
So the 27-year-old Lawrence senior went to the Senate office last January with her request. Senate leaders told her to propose the idea to the Senate's judicial board in a boarding Board or, better yet, apply for a position on the board.
MeMurry
attempts to work with the board, no appointments had been made by the student body.
"I felt as if I was being strung along and tied to," Sellen said.
On Sept. 15, Steve McMurry, coordinator of KU on wheels and chairman of the Senate's Transportation Board, was arrested on five counts of embezzling bus system funds. He is charged with stealing $39,425, all of it allegedly to the sale of student bus passes at the Annas Union.
SINCE JANUARY, Selfen said, she thought something was wrong with KU's campus transportation system. Others associated with the incident were not available much earlier than that. But only recently did KU
McMurry, a 27-year-old Lawrence art history
McMurry's future will be left for the courts to decide. But the bus system he leaves behind, a'ter surviving a stormy first decade, faces an uncertain future.
THE HISTORY of KU on Wheels can be traced to 1791. In that year, the Lawrence Bus Co. announced that it would curtail service to the KU
campus unless the University or the city of Lawrence provided financial assistance.
But the idea of no bus service did not appeal to many KU students. So on Dec. 5, 1971, the Senate approved an emergency $15,184 bus system subsidy
Since then, the tie between the Senate and the awrence Bus Co. has continued unbroken. This win would not be enough for any governor.
THE MCMURRY arrest triggered structural
History of KU on Wheels
- Nov. 16, 1971: The Lawrence Bus Co.
announces plans to halt bus service to the KU
campus.
- Nov. 17, 1971 Chancellor E. Laurence Camerons announces that KU will not subsidize the学费.
- Feb. 6, 1972: The Student Senate Executive Committee approves recommendation to run for the senate.
Dec. 5, 1971: The Student Senate votes to give $13,684 to the Lawrence Bus Co. to resum
— Oct. 14, 1975: McMurry proposed that Student Senate and the city of Lawrence consider studying the transit system.
— Oct. 13, 1972: The Senate reports that it is paying nearly $1,000 each week to support the campus-wide bus system, though some $35,000 in losses were expected to be made up with an increase in ridership during the winter.
changes within KU on Wheels. David Adkins, who until last week's election was student body president, named himself acting chairman of the service and reactivated the Transportation Board. The 11-member board had not met since March 1981.
— March, 1973. Steve McMurry, becomes coordinator of KU on Wheels.
— Oct. 27, 1977: McMurry says KU students will suffer financially if the Senate approves an Omaha consulting firm's recommendations. "I don't want KU students, frankly, to get screwed by paying the most money if it's a city-wide system."
— Nov. 7, 1977: A spokesman for an Omaha consulting firm completing a $20,000 survey says the Senate has no governing body controlling KU on Wheels.
Adkins said the board had not met because of McMurry's control over it.
— Dec. 7, 1977: The Senate Communications Committee announced it would study the "mystery of the University of Kansas transportation system."
created Senate Transportation Board, saying:
"We cann't have a quarter-million dollar operation resting on the shoulders of one student."
- Oct 1, 1978: Mike Harper student body president, appoints 11 members to the newly
— Sept. 14, 1982: David Adkins, student body president, says the Student Senate never approved a $5 increase for KU on Wheels bus passes.
- McMurray says of the unapproved fare raise, we should have gone through the Senate, but
I didn't.
- Sept. 15, 1982; McMurry is arrested at his Lawrence office on charges of embezzlement
— Sept. 20, 1982: The reactivated Transportation Board, in its first meeting, rolls back bus fare prices to their previous levels.
"Steve McMurry's personality allowed him to dominate many of the board's activities." Adkins said. "In some ways, that may have been good. We had an efficient system. But in a lot of ways, for the Transportation Board, that was bad."
fare prices to their previous levels.
— Oct. 20, 1982: Harry Warren, Douglas County associate district attorney, says that "at least $30,000" is missing from bus system funds.
Senate records also indicate that KU administrators and the Senate had reorganized the board just five years earlier — for much the same reason.
IN OCTOBER 1975, and several times after that, McMurry proposed that an outside firm evaluate KU on Wheels, with particular emphasis on extending service.
In November 1977, an Omaha, Neb., planning firm that eventually conducted a $20,000 study said the Senate was not really equipped to handle such a large system.
"They have one person grappling with a system equivalent to the bus system in Omaha," said Jim Morley, a planner with the firm. "That one person is Steve McMurry."
The 1978 Senate created a transportation board after the study suggested the replacement of the transportation subcommittee, which they were tasked to replace in the study also suggested several route changes.
Student body president in 1977
See WHEELS pau 5
CHILLY
Weather
Today will be cold with decreasing cloudiness, according to the National
The Thanksgiving Day outlook is partly cloudy, with a high in the 40s.
cloudiness, according to the National Weather Service. There will be a high in the mid- to upper 30s and northerly winds at 10 to 20 mph.
Tonight will be clear and cold, with a low near 10.
Tomorrow will be sunny and cold, with a high of 35 to 40.
Kuralt says higher awareness symbolic of healthy country
By PAMELA THOMPSON
Charles Kuralt, CBS news correspondent and "Sunday Morning," anchor, was on the road yesterday to deliver the 59th Landon Lecture at Kansas State University.
Staff Reporter
After traversing America's backroads for 25 years, Kurali said the country's most noticeable change was the heightened consciousness of the public.
"Today there's no such thing as a silent majority," he said. "Everybody's talking all the time and that's a sign of a healthy society."
Kurall said that when he was a student at the
University of South Carolina in the mid-1950s civil rights, equal rights and environmental protection were not national concerns.
By covering the church supper and county fair beat, Kuraft, with his shuffling brand of grassroots journalism, received a rousing ovation from the audience of about 1,800 people.
"OUR SLEEPING country has awakened to its needs," he said.
Even with the boom in telecommunications, Kurault said, he believed modern technology is changing the way we do business.
"This type of rural format will always survive," he said. "My kind of stories are when people are living."
See KURALT page 5
City staff to investigate proposed site
Bus depot move stalled by ordinance
By DOUG CUNNINGHAM
Staff Reporter
The interpretation of five words — "an existing lot of record" — could make or break plans to move the city's bus depot from its downtown address at 638 Massachusetts St. to a new site at the southwest corner of Sixth and Michigan streets.
The Lawrence City Commission approved a site plan for the bus depot's proposed location two weeks ago. That plan was put on hold last week after the commission received a letter from the Old West Lawrence Association that said the site plan had been approved in error.
The commission then directed the city staff to investigate the allegations contained in the letter.
The commission also decided that no building permits for the depot should be issued until the status of the proposed site for the depot had been settled.
MAYOR MARCIL Francisco said yesterday at a commission study session that one reason the plan had been approved was that the lot was then thought to be an existing lot of record.
An existing list of record is one that was on file with the Register of Deeds office before January 23, 1973, said Price Banks, director of the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Office.
To be an existing lot of record, the lot also could not have, in 1873, any undeveloped land
next to it that was owned by the same person, Banks said.
City Commissioner Nancy Shontz said at the study session that the city staff had incorrectly interpreted city ordinances. Because of that, the site plan had been incorrectly approved.
She said the approval should now be rescinded because the lot is not an existing lot of record and
doesn't comply with the lease.
City Manager Buford Watson said he disagreed that the staff had incorrectly interpreted the city ordinances and that it was unwilling to change its recommendation.
'We try not to make errors, but we're dealing with a lot of different subjects and a lot of people.'
Commissioner Don Bins responded, "You're saving you don't trust the staff."
"There was a decision made (Nov. 9) that the staff would like to see continued and not terminated."
BUT ONE woman at the study session said she thought some commissioners were letting their
Shontz said that the staff had made an error. Commissioner Tom Gleason said that according to the ordinances, the lot had to be interpreted as an existing lot of record.
Banks said the lot was first listed separately in 1939 on a sherif's deed. Therefore, because the lot was listed before the 1973 date, it should be considered an existing lot of record, he said.
desires to keep the bus depot downtown interfere with their decision.
Sharon Watts, who works at the depot and who also is married to Gary Watts, local franchise agent for the three bus companies serving Lawrence, said, "I'm getting the funny feeling that some personal feelings are going to be involved in this."
Shontz said after the meeting that although the commission had discussed earlier whether the bus depot should stay downtown, it now was only about the site plan and the status of the lot.
THE COMMISSION tonight will discuss the controversy surrounding the plans to move the nuclear site.
The commission also heard a report from Watson about insulation in the train at Central Plaza.
The city decided to remove the insulation, which contains asbestos, because kids had been exposed to it.
However, Watson said that because of the hazards involved, the city should now hire a firm to remove the insulation rather than try to have members of the staff to remove it.
The commission is expected to set a bid date tonight for firms who want to remove the insulation. Removal is expected to cost several thousand dollars. Watson said
The commission also discussed an ordinance that allows taxicabs in the city to charge a flat rate.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, November 23, 1982
News Briefs From United Press International
Judge throws out state law prescribing creation theory
NEW ORLEANS—A federal judge yesterday declared unconstitutional the only law in the nation that requires teaching the biblical account of creation in public schools.
account or creator in public schools U.S. District Judge Adrian Dupliantier ruled favorably on a motion by the state Board of Elementary and Secondary Education to throw out Louisiana's creation science law.
The act, passed by the state's Legislature in 1800, required the teaching of the biblical version of creation in schools that taught the evolutionary version.
The state's board of education joined a suit by the American Civil Liberties Union challenging the law, claiming the lawmakers overstepped their authority by ordering equal time in the classrooms.
The state panel said it, not the Legislature, had constitutional authority to decide curriculum matters. The board also maintained that the Legislature was dictating content rather than merely prescribing a course of study.
Duplantier agreed, saying lawmakers had no right to bypass the state board.
BERLIN—A Polish militiaman assigned to guard against hijackings hijacked a Polish LOT airliner to West Berlin yesterday and shot his way to freedom in a gun battle with other security guards, West Berlin police said.
Pole hjiacks airliner to West Berlin
P
A police spokesman said the militiaman diverted the prop-driven AN-24 airliner with 31 passengers and a crew of four on a domestic flight from Wroclaw to Gdansk via Warsaw to West Berlin's Templehof U.S. Air Force base.
He said as soon as the plane touched down, the militiaman jumped from the plane but was fired on by two other security guards aboard. He was wounded in the right foot.
was wounded in the right foot. The spokesman said the hijacker, armed with two pistols and two hand grenades, fired back at the security guards but aimed his shots away to avoid hurting anyone.
The militiaman and four passengers took the opportunity to request political asylum, the spokesman said.
He said the militiaman would appear today before a court to face blinking charges.
FBL agent fired after indictment
WASHINGTON—An FBI supervisor who specialized in court-ordered break-ins and safecracking was fired yesterday after his indictment on perjury, tax evasion and obstruction charges in an investigation of stolen diamonds.
FBI Director William Webster dismissed H. Edward Ticket Jr. hours after the agent was charged with a variety of offenses, including trying to prevent a grand jury from discovering he allegedly sold stolen jewels.
In a statement, Webster said Ticket, 42, was fired after a thorough FBI criminal investigation that resulted in the agent's surrender to U.S. District Judge James Cacheris in Alexandria, Va.
Federal grand juries in Alexandria and Washington returned the indictments, which also accused him of entering the FBI's credit union April 16, 1980, with the intent to steal.
Ticket told reporters he was innocent of the charges and intended to fight them in court.
Baker. O'Neill push gas tax boost
WASHINGTON—House Speaker Thomas O'Neill and Senate GOP leader Howard Baker agreed yesterday to seek passage next week of a highway job bill that could raise gasoline taxes 5 cents a gallon
Administration officials said President Reagan also was "leaning toward" supporting the S-2c increase in the federal gasoline tax and energy taxes.
The tax, currently at 4 cents a gallon, has not been increased since 1959
The government also said yesterday that job openings for auto mechanics, restaurant cooks, insurance sales agents and secretaries are available in most areas of the nation.
in its monthly employment bank report, the Labor Department said 73,000 jobs were available Oct. 1 out of more than 190,000 listed with state employment banks during September.
Thompson's win declared official
SPRINGFIELD, Ill.-The State Board of Elections certified yesterday that Republican Gov. James Thompson narrowly won re-election by 5,074 votes. However, Adalai Stevenson, the Democratic challenger, will seek a recount.
The official count showed that Thompson beat Stevenson by just over 0.1 percent of the vote. More than 3.8 million ballots were cast. It was the first time that Stevenson had won a majority.
Thompson had 1,816,101 votes to Stevenson's 1,811,027. Elections Chairman J. Phil Gilbert said that the 64 percent vote turnout "exceeded the expectations of everyone" for a non-presidential election year.
Thompson said that, as far as he was concerned, that the election was over.
Stevenson's attorney, John Schmidt, said the former senator would seek a partial "discovery" recount in 58 counties. Requests for a limited canvass must be filed within five days.
Andropov selects KGB man for post
The appointment of Geydar Allyev, 59, who has been an officer for the Soviet secret police for 41 years, was announced after the Central Committee met to discuss high-level party changes.
MOSCOW—Communist Party chief Yuri Andropov, consolidating his control over the Soviet leadership just 10 days after rising to power, yesterday promoted a career KGB colleague to the ruling Poliburo.
The changes are considered crucial to Andropov's efforts to gain a better grip on the party structure by replacing the Kremlin's aging leadership with a younger generation loyal to him.
In a lengthy speech to the Central Committee, Andropov also warned the United States not to expect any Soviet concessions at the Geneva arms control talks and said U.S. negotiators were seeking "unilateral disarmament" from Russia.
He also said Moscow was looking for a "positive response" from China to improve relations between the Communist neighbors.
Anniversary of JFK's death marked
WASHINGTON—Green Berets placed a wreath on the grave of John F. Kennedy yesterday, the 19th anniversary of his assassination, as his family members watched the 10-minute ceremony.
The late president's brother, Sen. Edward Kennedy; his sister-in-law Ethel Kennedy; 70 members of the Special Forces Association; and 200 other people attended the ceremony.
It was business as usual at the John F. Kennedy Library in Boston. There were no special exhibits except for a spray of 19 roses beneath the president's portrait in the library foyer. Outside, an American flag rippling from a ceiling where Kennedy often saluted his wife — dwell at half staff.
Daniel H. Fenn Jr., director of the library, said, "We don't mark the assassination in any special way. It's not a happy time for us."
Israeli colleges drop anti-PLO oath
By United Press International
TEL AVIV, Israel—In response to U.S. criticism that Israel stifled academic freedom, the Mideast country yesterday dropped an anti-Palestine Liberation Organization effort to educate educators at Arab universities in the occupied West Bank.
At least 22 foreign lecturers, including Britons and Americans, were expelled this fall for refusing to sign the old loyalty oath, but Israel radio said they could be invited to return under the new arrangement.
A new permit requires foreigners to register with civil administrators in the occupied area and pledge they do not support "hostile organizations," without specifically naming the PLO as the old permit did.
of State George Schult criticized the regulation, and said that "many thoughtful Americans" believed "loyalty oaths and political pledges from educators are an abridgment of academic freedom."
"It's a positive step, certainly, that the State Department sees that everything Israel does is not correct and democratic," a Palestinian source said of American pressure on Israel to alter its work permit.
THREE TIMES last week Secretary
Also yesterday, the Israeli Ma'ariv newspaper quoted Israeli military sources as saying that a 1,200 Palestinians disappeared during a two-week government sweep for illegal aliens in West Beirut at the end of September; "and it appears they were murdered by Lebanese Army troops."
The State Department first labeled the newspaper report of a massacre "absolutely false," then it said it was "not accurate" — indicating a handful of Palestinians rounded up may have died.
"WE ARE confident that it is not correct and are refuting that statement." State Department spokesman John Hughes has the Ma'rev report.
"I don't know what the facts are, but certainly a large number of people, to our knowledge, have not been killed in Iraq," Mr. (multinational force) was present.
The Ma'ariv newspaper, quoting Israeli military sources, did not present any physical evidence to substantiate its report.
Pakistani in Beirut said they knew of no mass killings since the Sept. 16-18 shaghter by Israeli-backed Christian militants, the Sabra and Chattia refuge camps.
Yesterday in Beirut, military troops, brass bands and flag-waving children hailed Lebanon's 39th Independence Day in a burst of patriot fervor that overshadowed the occupation by foreign armies of two-thirds of the nation.
HUNDREDS OF Lebanese soldiers atop U.S.-made armored cars paraded past a Beirut review stand for salutes from President Amin Gemayel, Prime Minister Chefik Wazzan and Parliament Speaker Kamal Assad.
At one point a pipe band moved past
and struck stand playing "Yankee
Doodle Dandy."
In Cairo, the Egyptian government moved yesterday to ease its strained relations with Israel, and accepted a U.S. compromise for a meeting within
There was no immediate response from Israel, although Israeli Ambassador Moshe Sasson described a meeting with Egypt's Foreign Minister Hassan Ali on the compromise solution as "positive and constructive."
RELATIONS between Israel and Egypt, the only Arab nation that recognizes the Jewish state, deteriorated following the Israeli invasion of Lebanon on June 6, and declined further earlier this month when Israel opened a luxury tourist hotel on the Sinai beaches at Taba.
three weeks to resolve a border dispute, in the Sinai, diplomatic sources said.
The Taba is a 1,100-yard-wide stretch of coast along the Aqaba Gulf near the Israeli port of Eilat.
Cairo, which reclaimed nearly all of the Sinai following the Israeli withdrawal from the desert, claimed the hotel violated an agreement last April to freeze the status of the embassy and negotiations determine its sovereignty.
Brier blames negative campaigns
Voter turnout lowest since '70
By BRUCE SCHREINER Staff Reporter
Negative campaigning kept almost 40 percent of all registered voters away from the polls during the Nov 2 runoff, the purity of State Jack Brier said yesterday.
The official results of the election, certified yesterday by the state Board of Canvassers, showed that only 763,236, or 61.6 percent of Kansans registered, voted. That was the lowest voter registration for mayor election was instituted in 1970.
No outcomes changed during the final tabulation, which included certification of the election by the board. Brier, Gov. John Carlin and Attorney General Robert Stephan compose the board.
BRIER, who soundly defeated State Sen. Billy McCray, explained how negative campaign tactics made many voters disenchanted with the election.
"I've said the primary reason for the low turnout was that the negative tactics did not give people a reason to vote," he said. "People were not given a reason to vote for someone but against someone.
"There was a lot more paid political name-calling in this election. Maybe it's becoming a trend, but I hope candidates realize negative campaigning is counterproductive. It's no way to appeal to the voters of Kansas."
Brier looks back on the 1980 election
as the ideal election for high voter turnout, and the Republican official says he hopes the next presidential election also will hire more voters to
A SENATORIAL election and the presidential race will highlight the 1984 election. Sen. Nancy Landon Kassebaum, Kansas' junior senator and a Republican, will campaign for re-election.
The record for voter turnout was in 1980 when 979,000 Kansans helped sweep Ronald Reagan into the presidency. He became a Republican, to another six-year term.
"Turnout is normally high in a presidential election coupled with a Senate race. I'm hoping to get close to another record," he said.
"People need to be given a reason and an incentive to vote," Brier said. "The candidates need to draw clear contrasts in their views, and people saw how that worked." People have choice that year with their Kegan and President Carter."
IN THIS PAST election's main attraction, the race for governor between Carlin and Wichita Republican Sam Hardage, voters could perceive a difference by the two hopefuls' tax proposals.
Carlin campaigned for a severance tax on the production of oil and natural gas, while Hardidge lobbied for a reduction in gas taxes. A cent-a-larm gasoline tax increase.
But Brier said a few people involved in the election overplayed the severance tax issue. He said the severance tax did not tend to excite voters living in counties that did not produce oil or that had low property taxes.
"I think the severance tax was a bigger issue for the candidates and the reporters than for the people of Kansas," he said. "It's an extremely complicated issue, and it was a bigger issue for the advertising people."
When the official results were announced, a Lawrence resident had garnered the largest vote total of any statewide race.
REPUBLICAN Insurance Commission Fletcher Fletch, who was opposed by two minor-party candidates, received 576.839 votes.
In the gubernatorial election, Carlin won 406,772 votes to Hardage's 339,356. In the bitterly contested 2nd Congressional District race, Democrat Jim Slattery defeated Republican Morris Kay by an 86,286 to 94,942 vote count.
Stephan, a Republican, handily won re-election as attorney general over Lawrence resident Lance Burr, 508,020 to 229,725. Brier won a second term by receiving 435,429 votes to McCray's 418,429 votes. Brier folded the upset hopes of Republican Douglas Holt by winning 418,428 votes to Holt's 294,980.
Repeated tabulation and verification work by the 105 Kansas counties and the secretary of state's office is the reason the official results are not announced until three weeks after the election, Brier said.
Vandals damage information booth
By BONAR MENNINGER Staff Reporter
The information booth in front of Bailey Hall was vandalized with spray paint and entered sometime between the morning, KU police officials said yesterday.
The booth has recently housed a display sponsored by the American Israeli Friendship Organization. Vandals tore down posters inside the booth and scribbled black and yellow spray paint across the outside of the windows.
KU police Lt. Jeanne Longaker said evidence indicated the building was not forcefully entered. Jim Denney, director of KU police, said there were no suspects in the case. A damage estimate was not available.
She did not rule out the possibility, however, of a copy of the key being duplicated by a group that had used the booth in the past. But she said the key was marked as University property and was illegal to copy.
PAT KEHID, coordinator of the University Information Center, called the act disconcerting. The University Information Center schedules the displays in the booth by various groups. She said the information center had a kid's room where that used the booth, but that they were "safely careful" about who got it.
The Israeli display went up Thursday afternoon, according to a spokesman for the AIFO. Travel posters and flags of Israel, as well as posters urging students to study in Israel, were tapped to the windows of the booth.
Ellen Sherman, Overland Park junior, who helped put up the display, said
"THE DISPLAY was non-political and it was not anti-anything," Sherman said. "In fact, everything was very positive. It was like a travel brochure." In the past, she said, there have been displays up in the booth that were anti-israel, but they not been molested
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"THEY PAINTED over Israeli flags and they destroyed a poster with the Star of David and a dove on it," she said.
JOHN TOLLEFSON, dean of the School of Business, said, "The we are very grateful to have support for our students. We also are honored by work on a tribute to Odd Williams and on the work he did for the school."
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Beach said the scholarship would go to a student with an emphasis in banking because of Williams' interest in that area.
Sherman said she did not think the vandalism was a random act of destruction, but that it was directed specifically at the content of the booth.
David Katzman, faculty advisor to the group and professor of history, said he thought the vandalism was deplorable.
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Joseph Kelly, executive vice president of the bank, said, "Odd was very active in the School of Business and the board of directors felt this might be a good way, along with the Williams Fund, to give recognition to Odd for his interests in the University."
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Beach said Williams remained interested in the School of Business after his graduation from KU, and had served several years on the business school advisory committee.
The Douglas County State Bank has created a scholarship for students in the School of Business in Williams, Illinois, bank officials said recently.
Ross Beach, chairman of the board of directors of the bank, said; "The board of directors of the Douglas County Bank determined that we wanted to do something in the bank because of our long-term service to the bank."
Williams, who along with his father, Dick, and brother, Skpper, started the Doughes County Bank in 1922, died Nov. 12 at the age of 56. He graduated from the KU School of Business in 1949.
THE WILLIAMS family also started the Outland Club in 1949, which in 1973 became the Williams Educational Fund. The fund provides athletic scholarships for the University of Kansas.
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University Daily Kansan, November 23, 1982
Page 3
Lawrence invaded by cold weather
By VICKY WILT Staff Reporter
Students driving home in Kansas will not have to worry about snow-packed roads or slick highways because snowfall predicted for today will not amount to more than a few flakes, a weather forecaster said yesterday.
But students were caught off guard yesterday as morning temperatures near 50 gave way to north winds and cooler temperatures yesterday afternoon, leaving many students burrying between buildings.
The next two days could be bitterly
cold for Lawrence residents, said Ron Crandall, lead forecaster at the National Weather Forecast Center in Miami. He expected to dip near 10 degrees tonight.
CRANDALL SAID yesterday's rain was a result of a low pressure system in the
Crandall said, "It's doubtful that we'll see snowfall here. In northern Kansas, there could be some snow and possibly sleet."
Another low pressure system moving across the northern part of the country should hit northern Nebraska within a week, bringing snowfall to northern Kansas.
Jim Penny, manager of the Farmers
LOCAL FARMERS welcomed yesterday's 16 inch of rain as they watched their dry fields soak up the few raindrops that hit the ground.
Co-op Association, 325 Locust St., said that snow would help to insulate the wheat.
Dave Smith, Douglas County extension agent, said the winter wheat crops had been dry for a long time and needed rain, but yesterday's spikiness were not.
But farmers with milo and bean crops still in the field were happy that the rain stopped so they could finish their harvest, he said.
The KU Weather Service predicted
that by. Thanksgiving Day temperature's should warm to the high 40's.
Students traveling across the country may find more hostile climates.
SNOW, SLEET and slush covered highways yesterday from southern Montana and northern Wyoming to Lake Superior. Most of the snowfall was light, but up to 7 inches was reported in a band from southwest Minnesota to the tip of Lake Superior to Duluth.
Afternoon temperatures were in the single digits or teens from Montana to Northern Minnesota, with readings in the mid-60s as far south as central Nebraska.
Fraternity to offer limited escort service
By KIESA ASCUE
Staff Reporter
The Theta Chi pledge class hopes to alleviate some KU students' fear of nighttime violence on campus, the fraternity president said recently.
"They plan to offer escorts home from the library, late night tests, anywhere on campus," Lindsay Olsen, the president, said. "With all the things that could happen on campus, I think it's a good idea."
Rick Hays, Derby freshman and Theta Chi bledge, said the encort service was ready to serve any sorority woman from 6 p.m. to 12:15 a.m. Sunday through Thursday, an enrollment was made with the sororities.
"We can't offer a shepherd service to the entire school, because we're just not big enough." Hays said. "For it to work well, we need to try it with a group of our peers."
THE THETA CHI pledge class contains 14 members and the fraternity has 37 active members.
A woman wanting an escort has a choice of three phone numbers to call, Hays said. She should give her name, location and sorority affiliation when calling, he said.
If the weather makes it dangerous to drive a car on campus, a Theta Chi pledge will walk to wherever the woman is and walk her home, Hays said.
Only sorority members will be given the escort phone numbers, Hays said. However, if an unaffiliated woman does gain access to the phone numbers and needs an escort, she probably will not be rejected, he said.
HAVS SAID he hoped people in residence halls and scholarship halls would follow Theta Chi's example and demonstrate programs for women in their living groups.
KU Campus Safety Services created an escort service in November 1979 to provide escorts for students walking alone on campus, but the program died because few people volunteered to be escorts.
The service was re-born in March 1903, with shortened hours, but it
eventually succumbed to the same problem.
David Willett, Theta Chi pledge trainer, said he thought the Theta Chi escor service could thrive if it were resisted to a limited number of applicants.
"At first glance, it looks like we're being discriminator," Willett said. "We're just protecting ourselves. We need to kill the program before it gets started."
"I think it's absolutely terrific." Fink said. "It's really needed, and I think it's gotten a terrific response."
TV contracts may benefit team
Staff Reporter
Rv DARRELL PRESTON
Two new contracts will put more KU basketball games on TV during the next basketball season, and they are expected to offer a large number of coffers of the KU athletic department.
"In the future, we will make substan性地 northeast basketball." Wilson said.
Sid Wilson, KU sports information director, said recently that he was pleased with the two agreements, one a Big Eight contract with Metrosports and the other a statewide cable contract with Multimedia Cablevision.
the past from basketball, said Sawid.
MULTIMEDIA announced last week that it had contracted to broadcast five to seven KU basketball games during the 1983-84 season, and possibly more during the next five years.
KU will be paid a percentage based on the number of cable subscribers who sign up for the service. KU will also be paid a flat rate of $25,000 a year.
Don Sharris, president of Multimedia,
said the contract could earn KU at least
$10 million.
"It all depends on how well the marketing goes," Sharra said. "If a lot of cable subscribers sign up for the package, it could be worth quite a bit of money."
HE SAID the "Shocker Sports Superchannel," which he started last to broadcast Wichita State games, petted over $100.00 for Wichita State.
Sbarra said the contract was part of a statewide cable system to broadcast KU. Kansas State University and Kentucky's basketball games to cable subscribers.
Wilson said he did not know which games would be broadcast under the
contract, which takes effect during the 1983-84 season.
"Only one of the games will be a home game." Wilson said. "Last year, we thought TV might have kept some fans away from home games, so we're going to limit the number of homegame broadcasts this year."
The Big Eight Conference's recently negotiated three-year, $3 million contract with Metrosports will put the Jayhawks on TV Feb. 17, 1983, against Missouri. Wilson said he had not known all the stations would broadcast the game.
BILL HANCOCK. Big Eight service bureau director, said the contract would be for weeknight games and it would include some live and some delayed broadcasts. The schedule for each year will be determined during the summer preceding the season, he said.
Off-campus seat decided
Stephen Chapman won the Student Senate's off-campus seat by just one vote after the office of student organizations and activities recounted ballots in the off-campus race yesterday.
The Senate's Subcommittee on Elections announced last week that Robert Walker, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore, had defeated Chapman, Tulsa, Okla., sophomore, by three votes, 477-474.
But Chapman immediately demanded a recount, and Karen Jeltz, assistant director of student organization, marched the students to Harvard Charter Chapman the winner. 474-473.
Chapman was vacationing in Oklahoma and could not be reached for comment.
Scripts for Encore selected by BOCC
Kansan staff spots open
Applications, including a resume,
are due by 5 p.m. Monday in 200
Flint Hall. Work samples may be
included with the application.
Applications for Kansan news and business staff positions will be available through Nov. 29 in the Kansan business office, 118 Flint Hall; the office of the Student Senate Office, 101 Flint Hall; the Student Senate office, B105 in the Kansas Union; and the office of student affairs, 214 Strong Hall.
Staff selections will be posted after Dec. 2.
These applying for the news staff should arrange for an interview. Interview time will be posted in the Kansan newsroom, 111 Flint Hall.
Staff Reporter
By KIESA ASCUE Staff Reporter
The Board of Class Officers selected scripts last night for Encore, a show similar in format to the traditional Rock Chalk Revue, the president of the festival.
Although every living group was encouraged to submit scripts, only fraternities and sororities participated, the BOOCO senior class president, said.
The five scripts selected were by Kappa Kappa Gamma and Sigma Nu, Gamma Pi Beta and Beta Theta Pi, Pi Beta Pi and Delta Upsilon, Alpha Chi Omega and Phi Gamma Delta, and Phi Gamma Pi, and Kappa Sigma, Pryor said.
LAST YEAR, BOCO received approval from the University Events
Committee to produce a show similar to Rock Chalk.
Like Rock Chalk, the show will consist of short skirts interspersed with musical performances. However, the skirts will be limited to 17 minutes each, Pryor said.
In previous years, proceeds from Rock Chalk went to KU-Y. The living groups were not reimbursed for their efforts, Pryor said.
This year, 40 percent of the profits from Encore will be returned to the living groups and 50 percent will be given to a charity. Pryor said. The percentage will be used to perpetuate the program for next year, he said.
tone auditioning should bring dance clothes and a prepared song. An accompanist will be provided and one dance will be taught at the auditions.
AUDITIONS for players in Encore in
Between Acts will be at 6 p.m. Nov.
29 and 30 in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union.
Group auditions will be from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. Dec. 4 in the Big Eight Room. People interested in interested should sign up in the BOCO office, Room 110B
Groups who submitted scripts that were not accepted can choose to perform part of the script as an In Between Agent, Pryor said.
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Groups give heaters to help aged, poor
KU's Interfraternity Council and Panhellenic Association are giving Kansas City 70 space heaters to city pumps who have had their gas service cut off.
About 30 more space heaters also will be distributed in Lawrence, Rita Moley, Overland Park junior and coordinator of the project, said yester-
Representatives of the IFC and Panheilenic will present the heaters to Kansas City Mayor Richard Berkley tomorrow morning, she said.
Moley said the heaters were a Thanksgiving offering from the two groups. Money to buy the heaters was $14,000. The sororites skipped one meal, she said.
"It was a rushed idea, but it's working out well," she said.
THE IDEA for the project did not occur until two weeks ago, when someone heard Mayor Berkley's plea for space heaters on the radio, she said.
Dorothy Brown, project coordinator for the distribution of space heaters in Kansas City, said 400 heaters had been given away in the city so far.
She said the donation by IFC and Pannelienc was terrific and hoped other college students would be motivated to do the same.
"Even though I'm an alum of KSU, I'm proud of them," she said.
Brown said over 4,000 people in the metropolitan area were without gas to heat their houses, but response to the program had been strong.
Kansas City is receiving the money to buy the heaters from individual donations, Brown said, and companies are selling the heaters at wholesale prices.
PEOPLE requesting the heaters have to go through a lengthy selection process, she said, and priority is given to older children, elderly and people with small children.
Moley said the IFC and Panhellenic also were buying their space heaters at
Committee to examine Sizeler's initial report
Five members of the Downtown Improvement Committee will meet in mid-December to review the preliminary findings of the developer chosen and Commission to organize proposed redevelopment of the downtown area.
The Dec. 17 meeting, which may be held in private, is scheduled to be followed by a public meeting of the full committee on Dec. 20 to hear a report about the findings of Sizerel, Inc., the Louisiana-based developer.
The DIC, which assisted the Lawrence City Commission in selecting Sizelier, met yesterday to talk about its role in the downtown project.
Pete Whitenight, chairman of the DIC, said the committee's decision to hold the meetings would be forwarded to Commission for its review and approval.
Richard Kershenbaum, a member of the committee, said that at least one public meeting should be held, during
THE DIC was created about a year ago by the commission to assist in recruiting and selecting a developer and in reviewing the development proposals submitted.
Public comment at such a meeting is needed before Sizerl chooses a pro-
Public comment at such a meeting is needed before Sizerl chooses a pro-
which Sizeler would present several proposals for redevelopment of downtown Lawrence.
However, several other members of the committee said that the opportunity for a private meeting should exist in the future. These findings Sizeler was expected to present.
THIGSE FINDINGS are expected to deal with the land to be involved in the redevelopment and with ways of acquiring that land, they said.
I just have a feeling that they're not going to want to talk about their preliminary ideas in a public forum." Writtenen said.
On the record
The committee also will meet in mid-January to arrange a Jan. 28 meeting, at which Sizerel will make a public presentation of its basic design and its concepts for the redevelopment project.
Wittenight also asked that the commission clarify what role it wants the DIC to take until March 5, the date a formal proposal for redevelopment is submitted by Sieber to the city, and after that when the project is being implemented.
BURGLARS STOLE $825 worth of stereo components Thursday night from a storage room in Murphy Hall, KU police said yesterday. The burglaries stole a $350 cassette stereo and a $475 reel-to-reel player.
THEVIEWS STOLE $250 worth of tires and wheels Saturday night from a car parked in the Joseph R. Pearson Hall parking lot, police said.
POLICE WERE CALLED to the fifth floor of Columl Hall early Sunday
THEVES STOLE A TROMBONE worth $500 Friday afternoon from a practice room in Murphy Hall, police station and left the trombone in a practice room.
morning because hall security monitors could not keep several residents from toilet papering the hall. The students stopped when officers arrived.
VANDALS CAUSED $250 in damage
Saturday night to two cars parked in the Oliver Hall parking lot, police said. The rear end of one vehicle was lifted and dropped on the left bumper of another vehicle, police said.
BURGLARS STOLE $600 worth of items Saturday night from a house in the 1800 block of Brook Street. The burglar's stall a gallon jar of pennies, jewelry and other items from the residence.
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Page 4
Opinion
University Daily Kansan, November 23, 1982
Energy plan will pay off
Sometimes the state has to spend some money in order to save some money.
This appears to be the case with energy conservation plans at the University of Kansas, Warren Corman, director of facilities for the Board of Regents, issued a report last week that said KU would save $2.6 million in the next 10 years if $3.3 million worth of conservation projects were approved.
The report, issued to the Regents Friday, also said that the College of Health Sciences in Kansas City, Kan., would save $10.1 million in the next 10 years if $1.1 million worth of projects were approved.
In addition, KU could have saved $2.1 million more than it did this fiscal
year if other projects had been approved, the report said. As it was, the Lawrence campus saved $938,000 and the Kansas City, Kan., campus saved $485,000 through conservation.
The plant, which has been losing a large amount of heat energy, could be renovated for $900,000, he said. The renovation would allow that lost heat to be recirculated, cutting the University's gas bill by 45 percent. The repairs would pay for themselves in two years.
Corman told the Regents that an important project that had not been financed was the renovation KU's central power plant.
Yes, money is tight right now. It is likely to be even tighter tomorrow. Deciding not to implement the needed projects would be shortsighted.
Senate outlook scarier still with plans to stay the course
I probably could have better stomached the news that Consensus had won the student body elections had the coalition members not proclaimed the victory as a sign that they should
Dyed-in the-wool conservatives are an unattractive political force anywhere, but at the college level they seem to be the most nauseating. Consensus' victory was certainly not surprising, but it was, to say the least, more than a little dishearing.
My initial reaction to the whole election mess was to look at the bright side. It's over. But
---
TRACEE HAMILTON
Riemany
unfortunately, it isn't. Not really. And although I realize that this campus has a rampant uncontrollable case of apathy, I raise my uncontrollable case of apathy and sit radically. I realize — that things need to change.
It seems to my old eyes that there's been a rash of posterior-kissing between Strong Hall and the Student Senate for quite a long time and that this is not what I consider healthy. I was hoping the Momentum candidates would be elected, simply to get new blood in the Senate.
Instead, we are handed a nice Xerox of last month's Create, attenuated and ready to roll.
Senate Meeting 1: Victors Lisa Ashner and Jim Cramer stand before a mob chanting, "Ashner-Cramer. Adkins-Welch. The meeting little can be done and the meeting is adjourned."
year's Senate -- starched and ready to roll.
So I begin to speculate, "What if these new (actually old), but they like to think of themselves as new) senators really do stay the course?"
Senate Meeting 5: The Senate agenda includes methods to alleviate the current budget crunch at the University and the adoption of new Senate legislation in the senators show, so the meeting is adjourned
Senate Meeting 8: Half the Senate is ousted for not showing up for meetings. The Senate congratulates itself because the student workday is in session and he is in his office. The meeting is adjourned.
Senate Meeting 11: The skeletal remains of the Senate meet, pass 13 self-governing rules and commend last year's equipment to equip a new equipment through an inventory and for finding that more than $20,000 was
missing from KU on Wheels. The meeting is adioursed.
Senate Meeting 13: The Senate wrangles for three hours over the controversial Senate election ballot box issue before deciding that the boxes should, in fact, be painted green instead of blue. The senator who proposed the measure said, "It was a difficult fight, but we made a concerted effort and did what we felt best for the student body as a whole. We are drained emotionally, but at least this Senate will not end its term without having passed at least one bill. We have been fortunate to have the Amendment, Ashen, in an effort to translate, said, "We tried to avoid making the issue a political football." The rest of the Senate nodded sagely and adjourned.
Senate Meeting 16. The Senate discoverers that its supplemental budget, which it was hoarding until its last meeting so that it could give it all away in a burst of glory, has vanished. The Senate, in connection between the missing $100,000 and an errant senator now living in the Bahamas.
Senate Meeting 17: The Senate challenges the Kansas Open Meetings Law by barring Kansan reporters from its meeting. "The Kansan people are just meanies," one senator, who wished to remain anonymous, said. "They just have to tell them they hear, you know?" I mean, really.
Senate Meeting 18. The Senate, in an effort to prepare for upcoming student body president elections, passes a resolution requiring candidates for student body president and vice president to submit a petition with 500 signatures, to be U.S. citizens, to be able to talk consistently, ever looking anyone in the crowd, even if they are not actually candidate would never argue with Chancellor Gene A. Budig. The resolution is overwhemmingly approved. The meeting is adjourned.
Senate Meeting 20: The Senate once again approaches Budg with a proposal to sell beer in the stadium. The Senate conclusively proves that one year's sales would erase the Union's reputation for being relied on. "I don't think that at this point in time . . ." and the Senate slinks back to the Union.
Senate Meeting 21: The Senate culls its membership and finds two people who look and talk just like almost everyone else in Senate. It selects the two to run for student body president and vice president. They campaign on the fact that the Senate had passed a ballot box resolution to draw more voters in the stadium. The student body overwhelmingly elects the two to office.
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Letters to the Editor
Kansan endorsements should be prohibited
To the Editor:
I was surprised and disappointed to see your editorial endorsing the Momentum Coalition Nov. 16. I am not finding fault with your choice. In fact, I thought your arguments were reasonably sound. What disturbed me was the question that you decided to support a coalition at all.
The Kansas is the only newspaper we have for KU students. The Kansas City Times is just not going to spend a lot of time writing about a KU election. Consequently you are going to have a major influence on every KU election. An editorial like that could be the deciding factor for whether or not you think that the Kansas should be prohibited from reporting KU candidates in the future.
Before you respond with cries of First Amendment and freedom of the press, consider the following arguments: Freedom of the press was established to protect private citizens or groups from government control of communication with the public. This is certainly a worthy goal.
David W. Davis
Eagle, Idaho, sonhomore
However, the Kansan does not fall under the category of private newspapers. In essence, each student pays for the Kansan out of his own pocket. You are simply a student government paper. Now, obviously, the First Amendment does not protect press that is funded by the government. We would be quite upset if President Reagan look some money out of general federal revenue to pay for a few political ads. But the public is much different. Should Lisa Ashner have to pay some of her student dues to see the Kansan defeat her in an advertisement for Momentum? Isn't it unfair to use general student funds to support one student over another student?
Independently, I would ask why you waited until the day before the elections to voice your crucial opinion. Surely you realized that Consensus would never get a chance to respond before the elections took place. You stifled any chance for them to give a rebuttal. Were you so sure in your decision that no further debate would be needed on the issue? Neither coalition made major changes in its platform in the last week, so why didn't you print that editorial three days before so we could see if you really were right? Isn't that the democratic way?
David W. Davis
RAs' concerns sincere
To the Editor:
I write this in response not so much to whether resident assistants should have access to grades, but rather to the adverse publicity and misconceptions that have risen from the controversy. Personally, I am ambivalent on the issue, and its outcome will be decided later. I feel varying degrees of resentment when reading articles on this topic during the past several weeks.
Gly Dyck, dean of educational services, doesn't understand "how RAS could construe themselves to have a legitimate educational interest" in student records. Something else Dyck apparently doesn't understand is that this idea was not conceived on the RA level.
As Fred McEhennie has often pointed out, nothing concrete has come of it. It is merely an idea conceived in the high offices of student affairs, students' residence halls, etc., rather than a real thing. No input.
Also, I don't think that Tracee Hamilton's bad experience with one RA justifies her sarcastic labeling of RAs as "enlightened people" or her question: "How informed and interested are you?"
"You are joining a group of outstanding individuals who share a common commitment to assist students of the University of Kansas in their personal and academic development."
In terms of an education interest, I quote from a letter that David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, sent to residence hall staff earlier this year:
Yes, Trace, the selection process is fairly "rigorous." In addition, RAs come to KU two weeks before the halls open for a training session and are then required to take a specific counseling course during the first semester of the year.
I would like to suggest that there are many ideas that are more deserving of our time and energy than this issue. Not one RA at KU is about to point to an individual in a crowded cafeteria and yell, "Ha, ha! I know you're getting a D in English!"
Sure, grades are "personal information." But
Christopher M. Followell
Hashinger Hall resident assistant
Prairie Village sophomore
our future employers will have complete access to our entire academic history. Besides, I wonder what the KU faculty, administration and staff felt when their names and individual salaries were published in the Kansas last spring.
Registration needed
To the Editor:
This is in reference to a Nov. 16 column by Hal Klopper.
Hal, I did not see "All That Jazz," but I do understand what you are trying to say. I do like it.
There are few people in our world who want to die. You and I both wish not to die. Those crazies who do have a need for death are, I hope, in rooms so they cannot hurt themselves or others.
The reason for the draft registration, as I see it, is so that in a time of war, the United States can muster a fighting force to defend ourselves. We fight not just for the soil that we and our brothers stand on, but also for the rights that are given to us in our Constitution.
Honestly, there is no other country in the world that gives its citizens as much freedom as the United States. To ensure that I can keep these freedoms, I would go fight for my country, for the Constitution of the United States, and for my government, so that they will have the same rights I have.
If everyone refused to fight in a time of war, we would eventually surrender to another power. Our biggest threat these days seems to be the Soviet Union. We would certainly have to take that majority of the freedoms that we now take for granted, freedom of speech being one of them.
I hope the day never comes that we must use the draft registration system for war. Even more, though, I fear the day we have to go to war and have no means to defend ourselves.
David A. Danner
David A. Danner Gary, Ind., sophomore
Defense upholds rights
To the Editor:
Having completed a honorable period of service in the military, I pledged myself to defend, to the death if need be, the right of Klopper or anyone else to hold whatever trenchant political views to turn them on. It depresses me that Klopper did not do this for me, or even for himself.
I am extremely sorry Hal Klopper takes his responsibilities as a citizen so lightly. Let me assure him that the thousands of people killed in World War II did not die willingly — they, too, had an "unyielding will to live." But they took their responsibilities seriously: blacks, whites, right-wings, homosexuals, etc., and if they had not I dare savage G101 would be compulsory.
I am going to forward a copy of Klopper's column to some buddies of mine who, at this very moment, are freezing their butts off in a M61A1 from the Slovakian frontier. They don't want to the idea.
And tonight, when he is all wrapped up in his jammies and about to hop into bed, would you have Klapper say a little prayer to send them some reinforcements? It looks like they are going to
H. T. Rogers Lawrence senior
View of draft cowardly
To the Editor
The Nov. 16 column, *Death, the draft, and 'All That Jazz',* by Hal Klupper was further proof that a great war is better played than it ever was.
I know you're probably shocked to find yourself still alive after registering for the draft, but, believe it or not, registration does not imminently lead to death. Shocking as it may seem, Hal, neither does joining the Army, as you would have your readers believe.
I do share your views on the values of life and the serious tragedy of war-related injuries and deaths, but I, for one, would help to protect this country if called upon, as our forefathers have done. We should enjoy the freedoms that we now have if all of our forefathers were as courageous as you?
David Herren
Osage City sophomore
To the Editor:
Dylan's music timeless
Concerning Newsweek's recent On Camp-edition and its article, "Rock and Realty," I must admit I'm not surprised. I realize that genuine ignorance persists virtually every day.
The article's authors, Bill Barol and Ray Sawhill, failed to convince me that, as they phrased it, "The gritty discount of money, jobs, race and war are bringing pop music into tune with hard times." I watched MTV, and it brought me an obese, bare-chested fellow named Ozzie Osborne. I failed to attach any social importance to his appearance, aside from possibly admonishing his viewers, by his fatigue, slow movements on stage, not to abuse drugs.
Now, one might argue that Oz is an unfair comparison. Hence, let us look at "Rock the Cashh" by the Clash, described in the article as "the most exciting and brilliant scene here is where Bob Dylan comes into the scene."
How astute! Thus, we understand Dylan as retaining similar beliefs to Joan Baez's. Meanwhile, Chuck and Billy retain entirely different wardrobes of beliefs!
First, I want to say I felt no need to rebut this article until it quoted some record company exec who said, "Charlie Daniels and Billy Joel both did songs about Vietnam victims but I don't know that they share any other beliefs, while Bob Cain, Sean Dexter, seemed to share a whole body of beliefs."
1
But I think it only fair to direct the reader's attention to the back cover of Dylan's "Bringing It All Back Home" album, in which the middle-aged druggist now up for district attorney work (and Dylan), you see one, you're the one that's the one that's causin' all them rioters over in Vietnam."
That was written in 1965. In light of that, the songs of Billy and Chuck appear quite outdated. But then again, Dylan always seems well ahead of the times. Getting back to the Clash's "witty essay," well, they appear to be a few years behind Dylan. For instance, Dylan wrote about the Mideast oil crush in 1978 in the title song of his "Slow Train Coming" album: "Sheils walking around like kings -- deciding America's fate from Amsterdam and Paris."
The authors of this sorry "Rock and Reality" also attempted to show how a musician's new song, "Johnny Can't Read," is freshly rebellious. Dylan, 1965; "Johnny's in the basement, mixin' up the medicine." This seems to me much more profound than the repetition of an old cliché.
I'm not arguing that today's music is not rebellious, but let's face it—the only musician headed for shows in China, Poland and Russia next year in a cultural exchange is Bob Dylan. That's why I'm asking him to play centuries from now is Bob Dylan. If your idea of rebellion is clashing an alligator with army pants, I hope you grasp the Lord—dylan has so that you are ready for libertarianism and
atrebion in 1864.
P.S. See you at the protest!
Wilmette, Ill., sophomore
Letters Policy
The University Daily Kansan welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten, double-spaced and should not exceed 500 words. They should include the writer's name, address and phone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, the letter should include his class and home town or faculty or staff position. The Kanasan reserves the right to edit or reject letters.
University Daliv Kansan. November 23. 1982
Page 5
Wheels
From page one
and now an attorney in Kansas City, Mo., said he didn't remember why the transportation subcommittee was inactive during the year.
I knew part of the thing we were waiting for was this consultant study," he said. "I had discussed it with Steve that year, and I know we had intended to make the board more active."
I’m sorry I botched it. ”Leben said. “And I’m sorry that others did the same.”
BUT THE transportation subcommittee was not reorganized into a board during Leben's term, and today Leben regrets not having worked more with the bus system.
But Leben said he thought other accomplishments during his term, including the formation of KU's Student Legal Services office, overshadowed the problems of KU on Wheels.
"I felt that student government was accomplishment a great deal at KU. Leben said." And I'm not sure those things would have been accomplished had the Senate been distracted by the transportation system. In hindlight, we don't know and now we are paying the huge financial cost."
IN FEBRUARY 1978, the Student Senate on Communications launched a formal inquest into what it called 'the mystery of the University of Kansas transportation system'.
Committee members said they were unsure about the status of the transportation subcommittee. Furthermore, they questioned the time McMurray had been directing KU on Wheels.
Senate leaders say today that the committee's proposed study probably was never completed. There is no record. The inquiry itself, however, has been a topic of much debate. Certain how the bus system ran and who ran it.
IN ADDITION, late in his term as 1978 student body president, Mike Harper told the Senate's Committee on Services to improve KU on Wheels. Harper criticized the contract with the university that was based on Mr. McKurry's friendship with Diane Ogle, the owner of the bus company.
"It's not really a business relationship," Harper said.
At time, McMurry had been coordinator of KU on Wheels for an unusually long time — nearly five years. He was to be reappointed five more times before his arrest.
"I think many senators would have been surprised if I had not reappointed McMurry," Leben said. "But in reality, I didn't want to take responsibility. My easiest thing to do was leave Steve in there."
Others said they also felt obligated to reappoint McMurry.
ADKINS SAID, "I regretted appointing Steve McMurry when there was no one in the office to handle phone calls about the bus system. I regretted appointing Steve McMurry when there was no one in the office to explain the procedures about lost or stolen bus passes."
But Adkins said that when he made appointments last November, "Steve was the only option available."
David Ambler, KU's vice chancellor for student affairs has criticized the selection process of his class.
"It got to the point where they didn't reappear Steve — they just assumed he was on. You can't tell," she said.
During Harper's term, a working Transportation Board finally became a reality. Matt Davies, who later became body vice president in 1880, was a charter member of the board.
"MOST OF THE SYSTEM was just fine," Davis, now a law student at the University of Texas at Austin, recalled. "The Transportation Board was working on deciding the routes and figuring what expenditures needed to be made."
And Steve Memory. "He just continued on." Davis said.
Senate leaders cannot explain exactly why the board died in 1881. But Adkins said McMurry exercised a great deal of influence over the board, and his predecessors have theorized, the bus board became unnecessary.
"Steve McMurry was seen as the board's equivalent, in that he exercised a great deal of efficiency in the bus system," Adams said. "But Steve's personality was not one which would openly accept suggestions about how he could run the system better."
THE LACK OF Senate supervision may have resulted in one of the largest embezzlement of funds in the country.
"I am worried about the future of Student Senate at KU," Leben said. "I'm really concerned about what the average student thinks about this problem. I wonder if they say, 'Wow, these Student Senate people are idiots. How could they let this happen?'
The McMurray case also has raised questions about responsible student government. Can the administration, or for that matter, the state, expect students to have complete control over a bus system with an annual budget of $ 5 million? The answer, Senate leaders say, is a
"Yes, this is a large embezzlement. Yes, these
are state funds. But I am very strongly committed to the idea that students can run programs and do a very good job at it," Leben said.
KU INTERNAL auditors now studying a decade's worth of bus system records probably not all of which are within reach.
But Ambler said the administration did not want to assume control over KU on Wheels, despite the fact that the university earned senators to tighten up the transfer of money within its auxiliary boards.
The last such warning came from Ambler in a July 2 to Adkins.
"It is obvious that the Student Senate does not scrutinize budget requests in great detail." Amber wrote, "indeed the budget of the state must be examined even included in the total Student Senate budget."
Despite such observations, Ambler remains confident that students can handle such services.
"We're not telling them how to run their bus system," Ambler said. "But we are setting the parameters for the operation. We don't want what has already happened to happen again."
IN A SKEPT, 21 meeting of the Senate, Ambler provided a three-point plan to prevent future problems.
Ambler called for the creation of a student activities center, which would house the Senate office and the administration-run office of student organizations and activities.
In addition, Amber said, a student accounts office should be created to store the financial records of the Senate and all student organizations. The student organizationizations should be audited yearly.
But financial matters have not been so quick to change.
Money from the sale of bus passes at the Union is still being counted by Senate leaders and others. And in Competee in Carruth O'Leary Hall, just as was done when McMurry was in charge.
However, Ambler said that, too, would change. "THE FIRST PART of reform is with the organization, the second on financial methods," he said. "But so little money is taken in now from the sale of bus passes that financial changes won't be necessary until next semester."
Now, more than 60 days after McMurry's arrest, the Transportation Board meets with regularity. And Sellen, who will graduate in May, said they will take the bus for the night bus route she sought 11 months ago.
But for the Senate's Transportation Board, which has been reorganized twice in less than a year, the state is now "on track."
Picking up the pieces . . .
"My greatest fear was not that Steve McMurry would misuse bus system funds, but that there would be a great, great loss when he left KU on Wheels."
David Adkins
"It got to the point where they didn't reappoint Steve — they just assumed he was on. You can't do it that way."
David Ambler
That's the sad life. Alkins said it had always been difficult for the
The board probably will carry out the responsibilities assigned to it. And few senators are questioning the board's ability to govern KU on Wheels.
BUT ADKINS said he was worried that future Senate leaders may never know what happened under McMurray, just as the 1977 criticism of McMurry's one-man show has fallen by the
"Student Senate history does not last more than two years," Adkins said grimly. "We have no comprehensive review of what went on five years ago."
"That's the sad fact."
Senate to run a bus service when its membership changed every one or two years.
HOWEVER, Ambler was more optimistic about the Senate and its newly-reactivated Transportation Board.
"I'm one who believes we learn from everything," he said. "Not only student government has learned, but the University has learned. I think that there will be positive changes from all of this, and that those changes will be permanent."
Margaret Berlin, 1979 student body president,
said she was confident, too.
"What has happened was nobody's fault and it's everybody's fault," she said. "But student
Kuralt
From page one
Kurall traveled to Manhattan to take part in the lecture series on public issues, which was started by former Kansas Gov. Alfred M. Landon.
BEFORE IHS hour-long address in K-State's McCain Auditorium, Kuralt conducted a small press conference. He was then scheduled to have breakfast before taking the students' before visitation with K-State honor students.
President Reagan was the last London lecturer to speak at K-State. Kurall joked that
perhaps he was not as serious or as well-known a lecturer as his predecessors.
"some probably wish Cronkite were here," he said. "CBS never let me cover many of them."
Kurait has been with CBS News since 1957, and was transferred to the East coast in 1964 after a stint as the network's chief Latin American and West Coast correspondent.
EVEN THOUGH KURIL conceded that fame and fortune in television came with an immense cost, and that the cost was
remain in a job where he had the freedom to wander.
"I enjoy the romance of the road — feeling what any traveler might feel.
"Sometimes when we've planned where we're going, I almost hope we never get there," he said.
Switching from life on the road to days spent dodging New York City tax cabs, Kurall said he knew nothing of it.
"I feel the variety and richness of the country we live in," he said.
Seminar to stress marketing
Area small business owners will learn competitive marketing strategies at a seminar Dec. 1 at the Holiday Holidone, 200 West Turnipke Access Road.
The seminar is co-sponsored by the School of Business and the First National Bank of Lawrence.
"Not every owner or manager of a business has the benefit of a strong background in management," he said.
requirement for success," said Lynn Anderson, president of First National.
The seminar, which will be led by John Welsh, director of the Cararth Institute of Owner-Managed Business, Southern Methodist University, Dallas, will study competitive forces, strategic competition, record keeping, profit and cash flow and audits.
Registration for the seminar can be made through Dan Winter, marketing manager for First National, until Dec. 1. There is a registration fee.
First Annual
JAYHAWK SINGLES
HANDICAP BOWLING CLASSIC
When?
Tuesday Nov. 30,1982 6:00 pm & 8:00 pm
Where?
Who?
Jay Bowl - Kansas Union
K. U. Students/Staff (Part-time Students 3 hrs. minimum)
- Prize fund returned 100%
- Entry deadline Tuesday Nov. 23 at 5 pm
FREE BEER FOR CONTESTANTS!!
Sponsored by Budweiser
Sponsored by Budweiser
Jay Bowl
KANSAS UNION
For details call 864-3545 or inquire at Jay Bowl desk
YVES
ST LAURENT
BRITCHES CORNER
LAWRENCE
Page 6
University Daily Kansan, November 23, 1982
Entertainment
McShann's Jazzhaus concert comes alive on KANU
By VINCE HESS Staff Reporter
An impromptu live jazz concert.
That is what a crowd at the Jazzahus — as well as listeners of radio station KANU-92 FM — were.
Kansas City jazz pianist Jay McShannon played music ranging from "Georgia on My Mind" to "Kansas City, Here I Come" for three hours Saturday at the Jazzzah, a private club at 928 1/2 Massachusetts St. The last two hours of the concert were broadcast on the campus station.
The program, the first of a proposed series titled "Live at the Jazzhaus," went on the air at 10 p.m. and lasted until midnight. McShannon performed for about 30 minutes before the broadcast and took a 15-minute break during the broadcast for an on-the-air interview.
Richard Wright, KU associate professor of music history, was host for the broadcast.
"It's a shot in the arm that live jazz needs," he said.
Al Berman, development director for KANU,
said the series had been discussed for several
years, but the proposal became possible when
the structures constructed a remote pickup
last year.
In the past, he said, KANU used telephone lines to relay signals from remote places. However, the new remote pickup unit uses a van mounted on an on-location spot to a tower to the station.
perman said the broadcast went well.
"We're just pleased now to have the technology capable to do something of high quality," Berman said.
THE COST is less because the unit uses only two frequency channels, not four as with the telephone lines. Berman said. In addition, the system provides in-ear stereo audio quality than with the phone lines.
"No problems whatsoever," he said.
Renowned Kansas City jazz pianist Jay McShann played Saturday night at the Jazzhaus during a KANU-92 live broadcast. McShann's performance was the first in a proposed "Live at the Jazzhaus" series.
However, Wright said that Saturday night's show had two problems. He said he had noticed some feedback on the air for a short time after the broadcast began at 10 p.m.
In addition, he said, the broadcast lasted longer than planned, the music stopped about a minute.
Jazz
"We had planned to get off at midnight, of course," Wright said, "but you can't help it. The crowd seemed to like it, and I think our radio audience enjoyed it."
Performing with McShann were Mike White, a Kansas City resident who played the tenor saxophone, and two Lawrence residents, Johnny Moore on the drums and Paul Miller on the bass
Moore said that he and the two other backup musicians had not practiced with McShann and that the trio did not even know beforehand what songs McShannon wanted to play. Instead, he said, McShann yelled out the name of each song before he began playing.
"You have to watch him carefully," Moore said. "He's really good about not pulling any
ONE SONG. "Confessin' the Blues," had several places of "stop time," Moore said. However, McChann motioned with a hand to indicate the stop times, which are pauses before notes.
"He's not doing anything off the wall, or else he wouldn't have three musicians."
"I'm really fortunate to have KANU just down the block, so to speak, with all their technical facilities," he said.
McNelyn said he went outside for a short while to listen to the radio broadcast.
Rick McNeely, owner of the Jazzhaus, said he enjoyed the music, both live and on the air.
McNeely said that the cooperation of KANU, McSham and the Jazzahus was needed for the
"It only works as well as everyone lets it work" he said.
The next live broadcast is to be Jan. 15, when sax player Richie Cole is scheduled to perform, McNeely said.
"It just going to depend on the booking and the scheduling." Mr Neely said.
He said that he and the KANU management would like the series to be monthly.
the schooling. Darrell Brogdon, program director for KANU,
said the station had no specific plans for a live broadcast after the Colec concert.
"I don't think there's any doubt that we'll continue this series," he said.
McNeely said that the sell-out crowd of 130 people at the Jazzhaus and the radio audience heard a rare performance in the Midwest by McShann.
McShann, 73, lives in the Kansas City area and plays mostly in Europe. McNely said. McShann ran his own jazz band in Kansas City in the 1930s and early 1940s, then directed a band in Hollywood before returning to Kansas City in the late 1940s.
THE CROWD at the Jazzhaus seemed to enjoy the performance, which began about 8:15 p.m. with the Duke Ellington song, "Take the 'A Train."
McShan played on a baby grand piano on the left side of the stage. A mirror hung above him and was angled to let people in the back of the room see him play. The other musicians were at
the right of the stage. The only signs of a live broadcast were microphones on the stage and sound equipment in the middle of the room.
THE AUDIENCE clapped along during a few songs, and a couple in the back of the room danced to a few songs. Occasional yells came from the crowd.
"Cinon, Paul!" "That's it, now you're workin'!" "Way to go, Mike!"
Moore, the drummer, said that he had performed for a live broadcast on KANU several years ago and that the live broadcasting of a performance did not bother him.
"If you make a mistake, it's too late anyway," he said.
McShann said after the performance that the crowd had been enthusiastic.
"Everybody seems to be diggin' what's happenin'," he said.
McShann said that during the performance he kept on the piano a list of the songs he wanted to play. He said he did nothing different for a live broadcast.
"Yes. it was a gas!"
Art exhibit shows foreign influence on Japanese
By SUSAN O'CONNELL Staff Reporter
Everyone has an image of what people of different nationalities are supposed to look like. An exhibit at the University of Kansas Spencer Museum of Art, "Images of Foreigners," shows how people from a fishing village in Japan and new foreigners in their village in the 1850s.
The exhibit opened Sunday and will run through January 2 in the Raymond W. White gallery.
The city of Yokohama, located 16 miles west of Tokyo, was once a Japanese fishing village. It is now a major commercial center.
because of Commodore Matthew Perry's demands on the government to increase the country's trade. As a result, foreigners surged into the community.
"The artists were not trying to be 100 percent realistic. They were using symbols to to express things." Stephan Addass, associate professor of art at UCLA, said Sunday in a gallery talk about are exhibits.
ONE OF THE PRINTS. "An elephant from India shown in Tokyo, 1862," by Ichiyushi Yosihito, shows how the Yokohaman art was not completely realistic.
The elephant in the print is rounder and has more hair than a real elephant has.
G. Cameron Hurst, professor of history and co-director of East Asian studies, also spoke at
the exhibit. He said the Japanese artists painted what they thought an elephant looked like, and he added that it was a
Addis said that the artists, in dealing with the foreigners, picked up certain kinds of conveniences.
The interest of the people was to depict a typical foreigner, he said. This was done in the paintings by showing people with longer noses, pinker skin and different clothing.
Another way to show a foreigner was to have one sitting in a chair — something the Japanese did not do, he said.
The villagers were afraid the foreigners would interfere in Japanese affairs, he said.
countries would cause trouble, he said. They were curious about the foreigners.
Carol Shankel, exhibition curator for the museum, said the artists who designed the Yokohama prints were the photojournalists of their day. Publishers in Tokyo commissioned them and others to work on bourbons for curious Japanese people, most of whom were isolated from the new port.
They also thought the traders from other
THE PRINTS COULD be found everywhere in the local markets soon after the port opened, she said. There were 33 artists who made the 832 Yokohama prints.
Addis said that the people tired of this type of art after it bit its high point for a few years.
TODAY
"The art was produced in a rush, similar to disco music today," he said.
On campus
CAMPUS CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP'S Bible study and fellowship will be at 7:30 p.m. in the Union.
CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR CHRIST will meet at 7 p.m. in the Big Eight Room in the
A LECTURE, "In Bute in Tune: What the piano Never Told You," will be at 1:30 p.m. in
TOMORROW
DUNGEONS AND DRAGONS CLUB will have a games meeting at 7 p.m. in the Trail Room of the Union.
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JEALOUSY BREEDS CRITICISM
Have you ever noticed that if you don't have anything positive to say about yourself, you're only recourse is to try and knock the other guy?
When you're doing everything right, you don't need to take futile pot shots at your competition. So, we would like to take this opportunity to thank Moodys for the fine compliment. We're flattered that they perceive us as the best bar in town. Likewise, we're flattered that they copy everything we do.
We've recently announced a substantial increase in the amount of liquor we're pouring in our highballs. So, a competitor made a feeble attempt to belittle our solid image. Faddish bars will come and go, but Gammons will continue to be the best bar in town for conscientiously-crazy young adults who recognize quality in the form of good service, great atmosphere, excellent drinks, fine food, the hottest current music, a superb sound system, and the best clientele.
HOULIHANS ANNIE'S SANTE FE
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WHY?
Because there is nothing worse than a bartender ruining (due to human error) what should be an excellent drink. We will stake our reputation on every drink we serve. You are guaranteed a strong, high quality, consistent drink every time you order. And, if you would like to see how this amazing system works, just ask MIKE or DOUG for a quick little tour. We'll be glad to remove any misconceptions you might have.
YOU'RE #1 AT
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Tues: SCHOOL'S OUT PARTY: $1 KAMIKAZES ALL NIGHT THIS MUCH FUN OUGHT TO BE ILLEGAL
University Daily Kansan, November 23,1982
Page 7
Women more world-weary today, psychologist says
By DAN PARELMAN Staff Reporter
Conflicts between what women learned as children and what they have learned the past 15 years have contributed to higher suicide rates among women and higher divorce rates, a group psychologist said yesterday at the Lawrence Holdeme.
Matti Gershfeld, president of the Couples Learning Center and the Pennsylvania Council on Family Relations, said women could handle the
side-effects of the women's movement and the sexual revolution if therapists used adult life cycle theories to help adolescents, as she has in her workshops.
GERSHENFELD spoke to about 70 representatives of the social fields at the second day of a three-day conference, "Developing Through Relationships," sponsored by the KU division of continuing education.
"There is nothing so practical as a good theory," she said, quoting Kurt Lewin, one of the first social psychologists.
Gershenfeld said women were raised to be sexually submissive and to work as housewives, training that handicapped them in the business world.
She said that while women now have earned between 33 and 45 percent of the master's and doctoral degrees in law, business, medicine and psychiatry, the rate of alcoholism among women has increased by 500 percent and the rate for women she has increased eightfold during the past 15 years.
"VALUUM HAS superseded aspirin as the No. 1-used drug in America," she said.
In a panel discussion after Gershenfeld's speech, Sam Keen, contributing editor to Psychology Today, said he thought mental illness among women had increased because they had entered the world of the multinational corporation.
She said that women had become "more confused, more ambiguous and psychologically not feeling so good" when opening a bigger part of the workplace.
He said that women, in their attempts to gain freedom and happiness, had discovered the destructive rhythm of
"It doesn't necessarily make you feel happy, it just gives you another boss," he said.
HE SAID society was sick because 5 percent of the population lived off the work of 85 percent of the people. More people, he said, need to consume the food.
work to which men became desensitized long ago.
Gershengfeld, author of "Groups: Theory and Experience and Marriage: Public and Private Responsibility," said researchers also had recently faced new strains.
She said that research had shown that, after a divorce, the average male remarries within five years, but only 33 percent of divorced females ever get married.
*All you have to do is go to the typical singles bar, and see 200 attractive couples at night.*
The University Daily
SIE SAID that in 1967, 25 percent of all marriages ended in divorce, but that the divorce rate has risen to almost 50 percent. The divorce rate is especially high for couples, whose divorce rate rose from 4 percent in 1960 to 40 percent in 1980.
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$102.65 $102.75 $102.85 $102.95 $103.05 $103.15 $103.25 $103.35 $103.45 $103.55 $103.65 $103.75 $103.85 $103.95 $104.05 $104.15 $104.25 $104.35 $104.45 $104.55 $104.65 $104.75 $104.85 $104.95 $105.05 $105.15 $105.25 $105.35 $105.45 $105.55 $105.65 $105.75 $105.85 $105.95 $106.05 $106.15 $106.25 $106.35 $106.45 $106.55 $106.65 $106.75 $106.85 $106.95 $107.05 $107.15 $107.25 $107.35 $107.45 $107.55 $107.65 $107.75 $107.85 $107.95 $108.05 $108.15 $108.25 $108.35 $108.45 $108.55 $108.65 $108.75 $108.85 $108.95 $109.05 $109.15 $109.25 $109.35 $109.45 $109.55 $109.65 $109.75 $109.85 $109.95 $110.05 $110.15 $110.25 $110.35 $110.45 $110.55 $110.65 $110.75 $110.85 $110.95 $111.05 $111.15 $111.25 $111.35 $111.45 $111.55 $111.65 $111.75 $111.85 $111.95 $112.05 $112.15 $112.25 $112.35 $112.45 $112.55 $112.65 $112.75 $112.85 $112.95 $113.05 $113.15 $113.25 $113.35 $113.45 $113.55 $113.65 $113.75 $113.85 $113.95 $114.05 $114.15 $114.25 $114.35 $114.45 $114.55 $114.65 $114.75 $114.85 $114.95 $115.05 $115.15 $115.25 $115.35 $115.45 $115.55 $115.65 $115.75 $115.85 $115.95 $116.05 $116.15 $116.25 $116.35 $116.45 $116.55 $116.65 $116.75 $116.85 $116.95 $117.05 $117.15 $117.25 $117.35 $117.45 $117.55 $117.65 $117.75 $117.85 $117.95 $118.05 $118.15 $118.25 $118.35 $118.45 $118.55 $118.65 $118.75 $118.85 $118.95 $119.05 $119.15 $119.25 $119.35 $119.45 $119.55 $119.65 $119.75 $119.85 $119.95 $120.05 $120.15 $120.25 $120.35 $120.45 $120.55 $120.65 $120.75 $120.85 $120.95 $121.05 $121.15 $121.25 $121.35 $121.45 $121.55 $121.65 $121.75 $121.85 $121.95 $122.05 $122.15 $122.25 $122.35 $122.45 $122.55 $122.65 $122.75 $122.85 $122.95 $123.05 $123.15 $123.25 $123.35 $123.45 $123.55 $123.65 $123.75 $123.85 $123.95 $124.05 $124.15 $124.25 $124.35 $124.45 $124.55 $124.65 $124.75 $124.85 $124.95 $125.05 $125.15 $125.25 $125.35 $125.45 $125.55 $125.65 $125.75 $125.85 $125.95 $126.05 $126.15 $126.25 $126.35 $126.45 $126.55 $126.65 $126.75 $126.85 $126.95 $127.05 $127.15 $127.25 $127.35 $127.45 $127.55 $127.65 $127.75 $127.85 $127.95 $128.05 $128.15 $128.25 $128.35 $128.45 $128.55 $128.65 $128.75 $128.85 $128.95 $129.05 $129.15 $129.25 $129.35 $129.45 $129.55 $129.65 $129.75 $129.85 $130.05 $130.15 $130.25 $130.35 $130.45 $130.55 $130.65 $130.75 $130.85 $130.95 $131.05 $131.15 $131.25 $131.35 $131.45 $131.55 $131.65 $131.75 $131.85 $132.05 $132.15 $132.25 $132.35 $132.45 $132.55 $132.65 $132.75 $132.85 $132.95 $133.05 $133.15 $133.25 $133.35 $133.45 $133.55 $133.65 $133.75 $133.85 $134.05 $134.15 $134.25 $134.35 $134.45 $134.55 $134.65 $134.75 $134.85 $135.05 $135.15 $135.25 $135.35 $135.45 $135.55 $135.65 $135.75 $135.85 $136.05 $136.15 $136.25 $136.35 $136.45 $136.55 $136.65 $136.75 $136.85 $137.05 $137.15 $137.25 $137.35 $137.45 $137.55 $137.65 $137.75 $137.85 $138.05 $138.15 $138.25 $138.35 $138.45 $138.55 $138.65 $138.75 $138.85 $139.05 $139.15 $139.25 $139.35 $140.05 $140.15 $140.25 $140.35 $140.45 $140.55 $140.65 $140.75 $140.85 $140.95 $141.05 $141.15 $141.25 $141.35 $141.45 $141.55 $141.65 $141.75 $141.85 $142.05 $142.15 $142.25 $142.35 $142.45 $142.55 $142.65 $142.75 $142.85 $143.05 $143.15 $143.25 $143.35 $143.45 $143.55 $143.65 $143.75 $143.85 $144.05 $144.15 $144.25 $144.35 $144.45 $144.55 $144.65 $144.75 $144.85 $145.05 $145.15 $145.25 $145.35 $145.45 $145.55 $145.65 $145.75 $145.85 $146.05 $146.15 $146.25 $146.35 $146.45 $146.55 $146.65 $146.75 $146.85 $147.05 $147.15 $147.25 $147.35 $147.45 $147.55 $147.65 $147.75 $147.85 $148.05 $148.15 $148.25 $148.35 $148.45 $148.55 $148.65 $148.75 $148.85 $149.05 $149.15 $149.25 $149.35 $149.45 $149.55 $149.65 $149.75 $149.85 $150.05 $150.15 $150.25 $150.35 $150.45 $150.55 $150.65 $150.75 $150.85 $150.95 $151.05 $151.15 $151.25 $151.35 $151.45 $151.55 $151.65 $151.75 $151.85 $152.05 $152.15 $152.25 $152.35 $152.45 $152.55 $152.65 $152.75 $152.85 $153.05 $153.15 $153.25 $153.35 $153.45 $153.55 $153.65 $153.75 $153.85 $154.05 $154.15 $154.25 $154.35 $154.45 $154.55 $154.65 $154.75 $154.85 $155.05 $155.15 $155.25 $155.35 $155.45 $155.55 $155.65 $155.75 $155.85 $156.05 $156.15 $156.25 $156.35 $156.45 $156.55 $156.65 $156.75 $156.85 $157.05 $157.15 $157.25 $157.35 $157.45 $157.55 $157.65 $157.75 $157.85 $158.05 $158.15 $158.25 $158.35 $158.45 $158.55 $158.65 $158.75 $158.85 $159.05 $159.15 $159.25 $159.35 $159.45 $159.55 $159.65 $160.05 $160.15 $160.25 $160.35 $160.45 $160.55 $160.65 $160.75 $160.85 $161.05 $161.15 $161.25 $161.35 $161.45 $161.55 $161.65 $161.75 $161.85 $162.05 $162.15 $162.25 $162.35 $162.45 $162.55 $162.65 $162.75 $162.85 $163.05 $163.15 $163.25 $163.35 $163.45 $163.55 $163.65 $163.75 $163.85 $164.05 $164.15 $164.25 $164.35 $164.45 $164.55 $164.65 $164.75 $164.85 $165.05 $165.15 $165.25 $165.35 $165.45 $165.55 $165.65 $165.75 $165.85 $166.05 $166.15 $166.25 $166.35 $166.45 $166.55 $166.65 $166.75 $166.85 $167.05 $167.15 $167.25 $167.35 $167.45 $167.55 $167.65 $167.75 $167.85 $168.05 $168.15 $168.25 $168.35 $168.45 $168.55 $168.65 $168.75 $168.85 $169.05 $169.15 $169.25 $169.35 $169.45 $169.55 $169.65 $170.05 $170.15 $170.25 $170.35 $170.45 $170.55 $170.65 $170.75 $170.85 $170.95 $171.05 $171.15 $171.25 $171.35 $171.45 $171.55 $171.65 $171.75 $171.85 $171.95 $172.05 $172.15 $172.25 $172.35 $172.45 $172.55 $172.65 $172.75 $172.85 $172.95 $173.05 $173.15 $173.25 $173.35 $173.45 $173.55 $173.65 $173.75 $173.85 $173.95 $174.05 $174.15 $174.25 $174.35 $174.45 $174.55 $174.65 $174.75 $174.85 $174.95 $175.05 $175.15 $175.25 $175.35 $175.45 $175.55 $175.65 $175.75 $175.85 $176.05 $176.15 $176.25 $176.35 $176.45 $176.55 $176.65 $176.75 $176.85 $176.95 $177.05 $177.15 $177.25 $177.35 $177.45 $177.55 $177.65 $177.75 $177.85 $178.05 $178.15 $178.25 $178.35 $178.45 $178.55 $178.65 $178.75 $178.85 $179.05 $179.15 $179.25 $179.35 $179.45 $179.55 $179.65 $179.75 $179.85 $180.05 $180.15 $180.25 $180.35 $180.45 $180.55 $180.65 $180.75 $180.85 $181.05 $181.15 $181.25 $181.35 $181.45 $181.55 $181.65 $181.75 $181.85 $182.05 $182.15 $182.25 $182.35 $182.45 $182.55 $182.65 $182.75 $182.85 $183.05 $183.15 $183.25 $183.35 $183.45 $183.55 $183.65 $183.75 $183.85 $184.05 $184.15 $184.25 $184.35 $184.45 $184.55 $184.65 $184.75 $184.85 $185.05 $185.15 $185.25 $185.35 $185.45 $185.55 $185.65 $186.05 $186.15 $186.25 $186.35 $186.45 $186.55 $186.65 $186.75 $186.85 $187.05 $187.15 $187.25 $187.35 $187.45 $187.55 $187.65 $187.75 $187.85 $188.05 $188.15 $188.25 $188.35 $188.45 $188.55 $188.65 $188.75 $188.85 $189.05 $189.15 $189.25 $189.35 $189.45 $189.55 $189.65 $189.75 $189.85 $189.95 $190.05 $190.15 $190.25 $190.35 $190.45 $190.55 $190.65 $190.75 $190.85 $190.95 $191.05 $191.15 $191.25 $191.35 $191.45 $191.55 $191.65 $191.75 $191.85 $191.95 $191.
ERRORS
AD DEADLINES
to run
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Thursday Wednesday 5 p.m.
The Kaana 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.
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These adults can be placed in person or simply by the Kameron business office at 804-4358.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Business Staff Positions
The Kansan is now accepting applications for Spring Semester business staff positions. Application forms are available in the Student Services Center, in the Office of Student Organization and Activities, 220 Strong Hall, in Room 119 Filt Hall, and in Room 200 Filt Hall. Completion of applications are due in Room 200 Filt Hall by 3:00 p.m. Tuesday, November 30.
The University Daily Kanran is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer. Applications are sought from all qualified candidates by the University, color, sex, disability, veteran status, national origin, age or ancestry.
FOR RENT
Do you need cash? Bring your merchandise to the Lawrence Community Auction. Every Wednesday, 7 p.m. Commitments accepted Tuesday, May 26, 7 p.m. - 9 p.m. New Hampshire, Call 842-421-8120 for information.
ENERGY EFFICIENT 2800 sheet bedroom in once
2 year old duplex; $225/month plan; 849-1928
www.energydirect.com
Jayhawker Towers Apartments
1 bedroom apartment. Quiet. Modern appliances includes dishwasher and refrigerator. Bathroom has shower with bathbower $25/month. Utilities not included. Ideal for graduate or student use who like privacy. Call 800-469-7000.
Available Dec. 31, 21 barns, near campus.
Vice nice. Front entrance btw. 4pm per month plus
$75 per week.
2. brt. apt. available for sublease Jan. 1. $30 ALLM
ULTITIES PAID. $95 Lousiana, mon. bp. 141-796
3. brch ranch unfurnished. Dim. inn. enclosed
bathroom. Available now $75 plus 1. mo. deposit
shopping. Available now $75 plus 1. mo. deposit
Now taking applications for spring and summer leases. KU students only.
2 Bedroom apartments on campus
low taking applications for spring and summer classes. KU students only.
Bedroom apartments on campus
• utilities paid
• swimming pool
• air conditioned
• on bus line
• cablevision
• laundry facilities
• furnished or unfurnished
Tower A - Grad Students only
Tower B - Women Students only
Tower C & D - All KU Students
Office Hours
Mon - Fri 8:00-12:00
Sat. 8:00-12:00
1603 W. 15th 843-4993
ENTRIA six apartments, large and small. Next to campus. Utilities paid, reasoned preservation, this building is a quiet, calm place. Energy efficient two stories' w/ garage. Spacious enough for 8. Only 2 stacks from atrium with a large walk-in closet.
What are your plans for next semester?
Houghton Place is full but we will have a few studios and one-bedroom apartments available for January occupancy. Why not call for an appointment to see now? We prefer graduate students or mature adults.
2400 Alabama
Humansmates wanted. Enjoy a relaxed coed cooperative living experience, reasonable rates and benefits.
Huge 2-bedroom apt. $300. Utilities included. Case to
carry on in the apartment or move out. I
I got an apartment to rent or lease. It is available
Dec. 1st. & located on 8th St. at Gaugeft Ap.
Come and we see what work could put off.
$4,500.
LUXHUB LIVING NEARK RUET West Condo Suite 201
*zip code: refrig. C/A, carport, dishwasher, two-
room.
Live in the CHRISTIAN CAMPUS HOUSE this fall at The University of Chicago's College Hall. Call Alain Honore, campus administrator.
Meadowbrook Furnished study room available if rented or paid if rented by December 1st. Call Jax 864-829-5011.
Need a. suelbox taken over starting Jan. 1;
1-bedroom; furnished卧房. Extra price, water paid;
5 minute walk from campus. If interested and
more info call 841-3644 or Humber Place Apk. Ask
One bed-room, one bath apt with range,
refrigerator and dishwasher. Good location. $285, all
rooms.
PRINCETON PLACE PATIO APARTMENTS. Now Available, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths for roommates, features wood burning fireplace, 2 car garage with windows, outdoor lighting, 6 additional pet-friendly quiet surroundings. No p lease. $425 per month. Open house 9:30-10:30 at 2286 Princeton Rd., or phone 424-2527 for additional details.
Quirk Creek Apartments residence. Two bedroom, 1½ bath; hale balcony. Mid December first $650. Second $650.
Rooms for rent plus utilities. Kitchen privileges.
washer, dryer. References. No pets. Non-smoker.
842-9635
APARTMENT LIFE
GOT YOU DOWN ?
THINKING OF
MOVING BACK TO
THE CAMPUS
LIFESTYLE?
THINK OF
NAISMITH HALL
ON CAMPUS CONVENIENCE WITH AN OFF CAMPUS LIFESTYLE!
NAISMITH HALL
3. 2 small b store l b1 so campus. Completely insulated storm garage garage Available Dec 6. Deposit $150.00 per month.
SPACIOUS Meadowbrook studio, available for sublease Jan 14 to 1 REDUCED BUY. Pully carpeted and furnished. Close to campus. Water and cabby tile. Enjoy the linen of Meadowbrook at a low rate.
Sublease nice. 1 bc apt, completely furnished
Available in Dec. JAN to Closet 740-345-86.
Sublease beautiful 1 Bedroom apartment in quiet
area. Low activity. Allow adults in, 1 CAL
740-329
SOUTIENE PARKWAY TOWNHOUSES, 36th & Kasdell. If you are tired of worrying & crising on Sunday, try the following: Woolwich, all appliances, attached garage, swimming pool, gymnasium, weekend packages (for more info: 749-7507, evenings & weekends); for more info: 749-7508.
Hauser Place. Completely furnished one bedroom apartments available immediately. Located between 14th and 15th on Mass. Only 3 beds from KU and 1 room from $250 per month water paid. 841-1213 or 842-6455.
Tired of doing all the housework? Check out
Safewater cooperative. Secure, clean and insure
We cater to student needs. Ask about our special arrangements for Semester Break 1 and 2 bedroom apartments available with laundry facilities and paid cable TV. Semester breaks. Walk to class.
Water/gas table pdl. Available now. Call 791-2100.
Sundance Apartment - Parnished one bedroom apartment available for sublet beginning Dec. 15.
4 Bedroom, 3 Bathroom, 250 sq ft. 1600 Lynch Court, 4 next to Sanctuary.
Sublease newly decorated 4 bedroom townhouse
Radrade rented C0U 849-928
FOR SALE
Subside nice pice a he i plus t bath Meadowbrook
Subside nice pice a he i plus t bath Meadowbrook
726-1381-808
NICELY DECORATED spacious room. Furnished
fully utilized. Near University & downtown Off-
shore. Walk to the shopping center.
SUBLEVEL OUTSTANDING TOWNEH, 2 hr, he/
lh, LR, kitchen, kitchen & appliance,
bathroom, laundry, carport.
1970 Gold Delta 88, power steering, power brakes,
power steering, good condition. Low mall.
Weight: 425 lb.
WARM quiet rooms one block from Union, Clean
habits, no noise, after 9:30 a.m. 1290 Ohio
1973 Mayerick, good shape, run but engine needs some work. $350 or less, 841-7443 afterward.
1. 2014 Handi CityCycle, economic runs great. AM/FM
storage, snowes, new tires, price negotiable. Mail
to: 855-637-9300.
19.76 Datamaster 2002 p 4 & 2 Extra clean, no surface
ruper nice Mant see! Call 7-254-2541 Keep
them out!
1970 Oldsmobile Caddis, 6 engine
surround, 1980 Pontiac Firebird, engine completely
removed, buy $125, must sell, call 814-489-345
1974 Honda Civic, economic, runs great, AM/FM
radio, napspee, new tires, price negotiable. Call
1000 Sumbur, 4 cyl, automatic, air conditioned, PS.
bring new AMF/AAME cassette, $300,里程 $150,
60% gcac stock offer $5.00 basis price and 15% pity
gcac stock offer $5.00 basis price and 15% pity
71 Ford Mercury "Marquis" 'THE BEST DEAL IN TOWN' A reliable, affordable, and in excellent condition car. Excellent v6 engine, brakes, new tires, new tires, new tires, new tires, new tires, new tires, new tires, new tires, new tires, new tires, new tires, new tires, new tires, new tires, new tires, new tires, new tires, new tires, new tires, new tires, new tires, new tires, new tires, new tires, new tires, new tires, new tires, new tires, new tires, new tires, new tires, new tires, new tires, new tires,
first come, first get. Tel 794-3158 $ p.m. - n.m.
Adds 580 computer terminal, usable with KU. Must
work, works perfect. Call Roshi 749-0900.
79 Ford Truck, VRT automatic, AM, 4,200 miles, very good. $4,135,7041 or BJ-8007.
Adds 800 computer, must sell, doesn't work. Good
mature. Price per tablet K790-7490-800.
Airliner ticket, round trip to Chicago, midway coach
from New York. Flight 1363 departed from now to
March. Reservations need 2 weeks in time.
For trade Sale Intel SDK-30 cytomask design bill
documentation $950,000 to $1,760,000 McDonald's
documentation $950,000 to $1,760,000 McDonald's
For sale, i n reel to reel and cass, tape deck. Must
nail tilt (74). 891-7243
I get a deal for you! I want to sell you an NH Habitat Brewery and I don't care if it's a bar or a store. I'm really good condition and it looks great. I'll give you a deposit.
Mitsubishi MS-15 speakers. Onkyo TK-20 30-watt
amplifier. Both unit just one year old. 794-335.
864-232.
Save: Government typetwitters, IBM electric: 150 recently serviced: b1-414-4
Sootl Skis Bodies. Ladies use ≥ great condition. Only worn 12 days. Call Mary 841-1012
Systems III IBM computer with printer & processor model. 6 (iRp) RP to language. 10 discs, 24 million characters. 8 hard drives, 24 million storage, 85 character storage, 85 character per sec, bidirectional. Contact University State Bank 915 maws, LAWS 6904
Two female roommates needed for a beautiful new made triple tie. Call Ronihi in the evenings. 749-0808
Yamaha Champ moped, Excellent condition, only 8 months old. $400 or best offer. 749-0804
FOUND
Found on Thursday a long-haired white, male cat on Jayhawk Blvd. Inquire at animal shelter. 843-6855 I kept my prey prescription glasses in a breeze with Maryrose's 'glasses' on the case: Help!
LOST $10^{th}$ gold chain with Delta Gamma lavender
diameter, 3.9 mm depth, deep seminal值 value reward if returned;
LGST. Black & white 6 month male springen spruce at Nicholas Beach Presbytive 15. Cal Bcah 84-843-2670, Nicholas Beach Presbytive 15. Cal Bcah 84-843-2670
LOST. November 15 days **prescription eyeglasses**, LOSH. November 15 days **gold case**. Reward. Call: 1-828-2004 after 5.
LOST. Off-white leather jacket in Green Hall. Reward. Offered, $149.11.
LOST on November 18th a HP-34C calculator
hoped for. Phone number: 954-2756, ask for KYR
Ladies - watch in Southern Hills parking lot. 749-2500
after 3 h.
Male gray kitten with black stripes & white collar;
Reward offered, 12th & Kentucky; 842-304
$32 REWARD: Blue cat-eye glasses with rhinestones. Please phone 749-0447.
HELP WANTED
NURSING- FULL-TIME/PART-TIME Are You In interested In Week-on-WEEK work only? Either day, evening or on Saturday or Sunday for 8 or 12 hour shifts? These and other opportunities for registered nurses are now available at our NURSING- FULL-TIME/PART-TIME three-week orientation. So even if you have been away from nursing awake, we can help you back in. We all work together and support each other. We all work together and support each other. SHIFT DIFFERENTIAL $ HOURLY Contact Bevierly Anderson, RN, director of Nursing, Topka State Hospital, 7700 S. 9th street, Kansas City, KS 66103.
EARN $300 this summer painting houses in our
Kids' Art Center. Interviews will be Nov. 29. All manage-
ment centers open Monday through Friday.
OVERSEAS JOBS: Summer year round Europe, USA,
Germany, and Switzerland. Write info. Write LC Box 22-894,
Siglettet to: info. Write LC Box 22-894
Part time sales clerks wanted. Only hard workers need apply. Wine experience preferred. Inquire in person. Email resume to freshman.Scholarships available. It isn't too late to enrol in naval HOVE. Bottle # 861-361.
A Special For Students, Haircuts, *7* Perm. $82
Charles 133% Mats. Mass. 843-850 Ask for Dewenne.
A Strong Kog outfit - Benitail Retail Launder. Liquid
Wine - Gags. ice-cold Jeans. 2 lukas. mem of Memorial
PERSONAL
Derma Care
---
Can't see to find your favorite bottle of wine! When wine %10 selection includes over 600 bottles of chilled wine, you should go to the wine shop.
The Ultimate Skin Care Therapy
The Ultimate Skin Care Therapy
* Deep Foreal Cleansing
* Botulism Treatment
* Extraction
* Toning and Firming
Dry, Oily, Elastomeric Skin
Bleaching and Aphirities
Men, Women, Children
For appointment or information Call
morris's 842-9500
COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES: early & advanced outpatient abortion; quality medical care; confidentiality assured. Kissan City area. Call collect for appointments 913-624-3100
Congratulations Dena Moles. Ms. Senate! Good Luck in your next job. Love, love your sisters in Alpha
**"BRASS HALLS." You know someone who needs them. Now you can give it to them. Send you name and address and 46-385 to Total Custody, 2008 Lawrence, Lawnerville KS 60364. For Christmas delivery
842-8500
Official Representative
We're An
ALL Airlines offering the Lowest Air Fares Possible
CAMPUS LOCATION In the Student Union
ON
Flights Filling Fast
Now is the time to make your Thanksgiving and Christmas travel plans . . .
See Us TODAY!
Maupintour travel service
749-0700
Don't get mad, get event. Send the "Hitter Bouquet"
Wilmed flowers delivered locally. Phone 814-6285.
The past - step by step in Vintage Rose, 91%; Mass.
Give your body a warm break this spring-go-to.
Give your body a warm break this spring-go to Padre Island with SUA. 864-3977
RESEARCH PAPERS
TOLL-FREE HOTLINE
800-621-5745
IN ILINCALL CALL 312-822-0300
AUTHORS' RESEARCH, ROOM 800
407 S. Dearman, Chicago, IL 6007
HEADACHE, BACKACHE, STIFF NECK, LEG CHAIN Find and correct the CAUSE of the problem! Call Dr. Mark Johnson for modern thoracic care. 840-6560. Accepting Blue Crane and Lone Star
If you need a fun silk or satin cumberbend for the holidays, stop by the E.O. Tech. Shop 10w. 9th St. See www.eo.com for details.
I gets a sell two season basketball tickets. Discount available. Call Debbie at 842-1077.
TGIF on Fri. 25° Draws
West Coast Saloon Wed. Manager's Special 2 for 1 Coors Light cans TGIF on Fri. 050 Brent
we will be open Thanksgiving Day
2223 lava noon-midnight 841-BREW
Instant passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization,
immigration ID, and of course fine portraits.
Looking for that imaginative Christmas girl? Try her at the library. You won't be disappointed. Put that special person in cartoons for a holiday treat.
New york bags, men's rugby shoes, winter coats,
snow pants, workwear and outdoor gear. Birthday Hand Outs 15% Indiana
State Road 206.
CONGRATULATIONS LISA ASHNER
We're Proud of You!
PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTHRIGHT.
845-3621
SKIFFER CURSES. We prescribe 1 week in Alaska and 2 weeks in Hawaii. We teach Curses, a Combined Course with Summit Tours and The Ice House. Call (866) 437-0500 for details.
Sail the Bahamas! Back in sunshine, pip palmade,
take out the casino, for your most untoldable
Christmas break ever! Package price is
week/month. Bahamat of W. K.C.
784-736-366
Skilled's liquor more serving U.S. daily since 1940. Cause in comparison, Skilled's Skilted Elder. 1600 Mass.
Sharon S. Takahashi Video Recorders, Names
Sheraton Tokyo Hotel in the K.C. area. Get your best price. call them Call
TEL 800-632-7455.
Schneider Wine & Keg Shop - The finest selection of wines in Lawrence - largest supplier of strong kegs 1830 W, 23rd, 443-9212
Say it on a shirt, carton复印 printing T, shirts, jeans and caps. Shirttrap by Swella 749-1611.
Susan - The you'll be here for a but a week, the memories of the good times that together we seek willinger for a long, long love. ya! Patrick Keeley Specials on Kings! Call 841-956-0100 / wltdw.org
Trouble with the lady? Send her the "Little Hug"
bouquet. Only $6.00 delivered. 841-6245.
BEST WESTERN HALLMARK INN
Special discount rates in effect now thru holiday season. All rooms feature cable TV, Home Box Office movies, free local telephone calls, in-room coffee.
Tuadaye" Lady's Night. 81 Highbush, H3. 7 Up &
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KANSAN
The following are the results of a clinical investigation.
Take advantage of this form and save yourself time and money while still receiving the advaluation of placing your ad in the Kannan, the University of Hawaii. Mail payment to the Kannan to: University Daily Kannan, 118 Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS 60043. Use rate below to figure costs.
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan, November 23, 1982
B. C. D. E. F. G. H. I. J. K. L. M. N. O. P. Q. R. S. T. U. V. W. X. Y. Z.
avsa afa lolc
Jim Evans/KANSAN
Final farewell?
Head coach Don Fambrough bids farewell to senior Tim Friess following the Jayhawks' loss to the Missouri Tigers Saturday in Columbia. A decision is expected soon on whether Fambrough will return to coach the Jayhawks next season.
Another athletic season is finished at Kansas and once again the cry for the head coach's job has been heard loud from the alumni to the students.
Will Don return as coach? Action on Fam expected
Four years ago, it was Bud Moore's job the fans wanted.
Two years ago, it was head basket-ball coach Ted Owens whose job was on the line.
He's still here.
And now it is Don Fambrouch, who led the 1981 Kansas football team to the Hall of Fame Bowel and was named both United Press International and Association of Football Coaches, who is being asked to step down as head coach of the KU football squad.
FAMBROUGH WAS expected to have one of the top teams in the Big Eight and a lot of people thought the Jayhawks would return to a bowl game. But something happened along the way.
The Jayhawks were tripped in their opponent across cross-state rival Wichita State and never really recovered from that loss. They went on to a miserable 2-7-2 season, the worst by a Fambridge-coached team in either of his two, four-year stints as the head man at Kansas.
The cries have been heard ever since the loss to WSU. Kansas was supposed to have an explosive offense and it never nanned out.
Under Fambrough, Kansas always had bad close knit teams.
Fambrough has taken a lot of heat for the present situation of th KU football team, but it is not all his fault. There are a lot of reasons for the collapse of
This one wasn't.
the program since last year's 19-11 victory over the Missouri Tigers, which propelled Kansas into its first bowl game since 1975.
IT STARTED with Chris Emerson, the player who was to add "thunder" to Kerwin Bell's "lightning." Emerson died just after KU's loss to Mississippi State in Birmingham, Ala. Then two KU players pleaded no contest to felony theft charges, but were later reinstated to the team.
MILA G. SHELLER
GINO
STRIPPOLI
Sports Editor
Then the Kerwin Bell fiasco started.
first with the irregularities in his high school transcript that cost him the first three games of this season, and then the injuries that forced him to miss many more. In all, Bell played in just a handful of games for the Jayhawks.
The worst situation of all, though, was the "injury" situation that riddled the Hawks. Many players were injured during the early going, and the injuries seemed to get worse as the KU record did. Granted, some of the players were hurt, but a lot of them could have played.
Fambrough finally tired of this and played the players who wanted to play, a tough decision for a coach whose job was to run a bunch of 18-to-22-years-olds.
Now, a decision must be made on whether Fambridge will be kept on as host.
MANY OBSERVERS have looked to Chancellor Gene A. Budg make to the next move. But Budg, as he has said all along, will not act. He said that his job was not to hire and fire football coaches because he noo is qualified to make such a decision.
By then it may be too late.
The process of picking an athletic director is underway and although as soon as possible as quickly as possible, no announcement is expected until mid-December.
Everyone at Kansas has argued over the past few years that if the Kansas football program is to establish any type of base, it must have some continuity in its football staff. A change in coaching would once again hurt that continuity and, even more so, ruin the KU recruiting year.
IF A NEW coach is named, he would have only a short time to choose his staff and by that time, a little more than a month would be left to recruit — not nearly enough time in this day and age.
Recruiting is the life blood of a football program and Fambrough has proven that there aren't too many people in these parts that can do a better job than he. If Fambrough and his coaches can come up with another idea, they should add to the veteran talent, Kansas should have a good team next year.
Don Fambrough, a man who has given over 30 years to the KU athletic department and loves this University unlike anyone else, deserves another chance.
It is time for a lot of thinking about the KC football team, but a coaching change would be necessary.
Scribner selected to All-Big Eight squad
By United Press International
KANSAS CITY. Mo.-Five members of the Nebraska's national pace-setting offensive unit, including two-time Outland Trophy winner Dave Rimington and record-setting halfback Mike Rozier, were named yesterday to the 182 United Press All-Big Eight Football team
Another Cornhusker — defensive end Tony Felicit — was also named to the first team to give Nebraska a league-high six selections. Rounding out the Nebraska first-time contingent were tackle Randy Theiss, guard Mike Mandelko and quarterback Turner Gill.
The nation's leading rusher, Ernest Anderson of Oklahoma State with his
1,731 yards, joined Gill and Rozier in the backfield and the other offensive skill positions were manned by wide receivers Mike Wallace of Kansas State and James Caver of Missouri and tight end Andrew Gibber of Missouri.
Joining the Nebraska trio on the offensive line were guard Steve Williams of Oklahoma and tackle Karl Nelson of Iowa State. The specialists named to the first team were place-kicker Larry Roach of Oklahoma State and punter Bucky Scribner of Kansas.
SCRIBNER SET the all-Time Big Eight career mark with a 43.3 yard career average on 217 points.
Defensively, Oklahoma led the way with three selections: defensive end Kevin Murphy, defensive tackle Rick Bryan and linebacker Jackie Shipp.
Okiahoma State was represented on the defensive unit by two players, linebacker Mike Green and nose tackle Gary Lewis, as was Kansas State with tackle Reggie Singletary and cornerback Greg Best.
the remainder of the first-team defense consisted of backs Victor Scott of Colorado, Ronnie Osborne of Oklahoma and Demetrious Johnson of Missouri.
Rimington and Wallace were the only unanimous picks on the team with Rimington, Nelson, Rozier, Roach, Singletary, Lewis and Scribner all repeat selections from a year ago. Scribner became a three-time all-conference pick, having also earned the 1980 team.
"Nebraska's offensive line, running backs and quarterback are probably
the best combination I've ever seen in this league," Kansas State Coach Jim Dickey said.
THE CORNIHKERS also had three second-season defensive selections in nose tackle Jeff Merrell, linebacker Steve Damroger and defensive back Allen Lyday. Oklahoma had six second-season picks: running backs Stanley Wilson and Mackenzie Pilgrim and defensive end Darryl Goodow, defensive back Keith Stanberry and punter Michael Keeling.
No other Kansas players except for Scribner were selected to the All-Big Eight first or second team. Wide receiver Tim Friesen and safety Gary Coleman all were tabbed as honorable mention selections.
Georgia holds grip on No.1
By United Press International
NEW VORK-Georgia, the nation's only unbeaten and untied major college football team at 10-0, strengthened its grip on the No. 1 rating yesterday, while its Sugar Bowl opponent, Penn State, replaced Southern Methodist in the No. 2 spot following balloting by the UPI Board of Coaches.
Cotton Bowl-bound Southern Methodist, 10-0-1 after securing a 17-17 tie against Arkansas in its regular-season final fell two places to No. 4 with 816 points.
Penn State, 9-1, received two first-place votes and 558 points, while Nebraska also moved one position to third place. Iowa maintained first-place votes and 543 points.
Pittsburgh, headed for the Cotton
Bowl, moved up to No. 8. Orange
Bush won by 12 points.
Raiders edge Chargers
LOS ANGELES -Marcus Allen scored two touchdowns in a triumph return to the Coliseum and the unbeaten Los Angeles Raiders made their regular-season debut in their new home a memorable one last night, rallying from a 24-0 deficit to a 28-24 triumph from the San Diego Chargers.
By United Press International
Returning to the field where he starred for four years as the Southern Cal tailback en route to winning the 1981 Heisman Trophy. Allen rushed for 25 yards and caught five passes for 37 more yards to spark the Raiders' ground attack.
After Allen's second touchdown pulled the Raiders within 24-21, Los Angeles, 3-0, began its winning scoring drive after San Diego's Rold Beniischem missed a 33-yard field goal attempt.
Jim Plinket completed three passes for 50 yards and with 5:54 left in the game, running back Frank Hawkins crashed into the end zone from two yards outs. The winning TD capped an 80-march, highlighted by Plum-
San Diego came right back, with Dan Fouts directing a drive to the Los Angeles 18 with two minutes remaining. But on second down, his errant pass under a heavy rush was intercepted by Vann McElroy in the end zone. The Chargers got the ball back and would move to the Raiders' 30), but Fouts drowned down pass into the end zone was batted down as time expired.
kett's 25-yard pass to Todd Christiansen
to the Chargers' '15.
Only 42,162 fans attended the game, with 12,898 no-shows in the 90,000-seat Coliseum. The attendance figure was the fourth-flowest in the 14 games played since the two-month players' strike ended.
Plunkett hit 18-of-25 passes for 163 yards while Fouts completed 25-of-42 for 357 yards as the Chargers fell to 1-2. It was the 15th time Fouts had passed tightening his yards in a game; tying Johnny Unitas on the all-time list in that category.
Alen scored on runs of 3 and 6 yards while the Chargers scored on Ben-Hur field goal, a 29-yard pass from Foley to Evan Bouchard and runs and of 1 and 2 yards by Muncie.
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West Virginia, 9-2 and headed to the Gator Bowl, improved three positions to No. 11, followed by No. 12 Washington, which dipped seven places after losing to Washington State 24-20. No. 13 Florida State and No. 15 Maryland.
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University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
The University Daily
KANSAN
Monday, November 29, 1982
Vol.93,No.68 USPS 650-640
New athletic director sets goal of consistency
By DARRELL PRESTON
Staff Reporter
The University of Kansas's new athletic director said yesterday that he was eager to start his new job and that he wanted to "establish consistency" in KU athletics.
Monte Johnson, who will take over the duties of athletic director Dec. 15, deferred additional comment on issues he would face until a press conference scheduled for Dec. 2 in pearltown in Parrott
Johnson was named to the post Saturday by Chancellor Gene A. Buidg.
"Monte Johnson is uniquely qualified to serve as athletic director at the University of Kansas." Budig said. "His association with, and commitment to, the University of Kansas is a long-standing one."
JOHNSON, A LAWRENCE businessman with a 27-year tie to KU as student, employee and alumnae, replaces Jim Lessig, who quit after six months to become commissioner of Mid-
American Conference: Del Shankel has been acting athletic director since Lessig resigned.
Student leaders contacted yesterday would not comment on the choice of Johnson, but KU would.
Bud Gallier, a KU alumnus who wrote a letter calling for the abolishment of the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation board, said yesterday that although he still wanted the board abolished, he was pleased that Johnson was hired.
"I'm interested in uncircling the wagons and getting the athletic department straightened out," said Gollier, with wrighted a planned contribution to the Williams Fund because Lessig resigned. "I think under Monte Johnson we can have a successful program."
"I think he's going to lend some continuity to the program because he is dedicated to it."
JOHNSON WAS one of four candidates nominated by an eight-member selection committee composed of students, faculty, staff and alumni.
On Wednesday, Budig and the committee met to interview the four finalists, and Budig made
the final decision after that. The job drew 86 applicants.
Del Brinkman, chairman of the committee and dean of the William Allen White School of Journalism, said Johnson's management and marketing skills, in addition to his background in athletics, made him an attractive choice for the committee.
"There were other candidates who would have been good athletic directors, but the feeling was that someone close to the KU situation and who had worked there could be able to take over quickly," Brinkman said.
"I don't think he has any interest in in going anyplace else or doing anything else," Brinkman said. "I think he is a long-term athletic director."
MEMBERS OF the committee, which Budg appointed in October, said Johnson's involvement with KU was one reason he was recommended for the position.
Johnson's KU ties go back to 1955 when he came to the University as a student and played on the basketball team. In 1961 he became public relations director for the athletic department,
and from 1964 to 1971 he was assistant athletic director and business manager.
Shankel, a member of the search committee, said Johnson's loyalty as well as his ability as a fundraiser were primary considerations in the decision to recommend him.
"I believe he is going to stay around for a while and do a good job for us," said Shankel, who also served as interim athletic director after Bob Marcum resigned in January. "I've known him since he was here in the '60s, and one of his strongest features was his demonstrated ability to raise funds. He has been active in fund raising in Wichita and elsewhere."
FROM 1972 to 1981 Johnson worked at Fourth National Bank of Wichita. While in Wichita he was a member of the KU Alumni Association and the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation board of directors, and also helped raise funds for the University of Kansas Athletics and the Fellowship of Christian Athletes.
Since 1981, Johnson has been president of R.G. Billings Enterprises, Inc., an investment and land development company that owns the Alvamar Hills Golf Course in Lawrence.
COLUMBIA
Monte Johnson
Wilderness program offers equipment for 'discovery'
By DIRK MILLER Staff Reporter
The sun dipped below the treepops and the forest grew dark. I passed the 2 1/2 milepost, racing to beat the night back to my truck before the forest became an impossible
Wilderness Discovery, located in the Satellite Union, is a Student Union Activities' program that offers the "thrill and excitement of outdoor camping and backpacking" to KU students and faculty, according to an SUA brochure.
SUA, through the discovery program, rents hiking, camping, picnicking and canoeing
"We provide equipment to use to discover the wilderness," said Gene Wee, SUA
1 LEFT to discover the wilderness the day before Thanksgiving, and headed for a 24-mile hiking trail near Berryman, Mo., for my own wilderness adventure. I snapped photos of the stumping horse, a sleeping pad and a cook kit from SUA. The rest of the equipment — sleeping bag, tent,
and rain poncho — was borrowed from friends.
Wilderness discovery also rents ice chests, water jugs and life jackets. Canoes and kayaks are available. Call (605) 212-7980.
My friend and I loaded our gear in my truck and headed for Berryman, located deep in southcentral Missouri in the Mark Twain National Forest. After a 300-mile drive, we arrived at the trail just as the sun was beginning to set. The trail wound from the parking lot into a gloomy, misty grove of oaks and blue sorues.
Hurriedly, I hoisted my pack and started along the trail, which almost disappeared under a carpet of dead leaves. After hiking for about a quarter-mile I found a flat section of ground on which to pitch the Eureka two-man tent, the same kind rented by SUA.
The cold winter air chilled my fingers as I attempted to set up the tent. In the dark, I misplaced three tent stakes, allowing the tent to flan in the wind.
AN OW l screeched somewhere in the dark, semiprongly learing at me.
Dinner that might was cold bagels, peanut butter and gorp. I crawled into my sleeping bed.
1
Builtv Mannina/KANSAN
Student Union Activities Wilderness Discovery offers the rental equipment needed to experience the adventure of outdoor camping and backpacking. The essentials for an overnight hike, including a sleeping bag, mattress and cooking utensils, fit neatly into a handy 4-pound backpack.
Wet, icv roads take toll over holiday
By Staff and Wire Reports
A wet and icy Thanksgiving weekend claimed at least 11 lives on Kansas roads and left up to six inches of snow across parts of the western half of the state.
Freezing rain covered highways with glare ice from Nebraska to the Appalachians yesterday as thousands of people headed home after the holiday.
Treacherous highway conditions along Interstate 70 Saturday night forced the opening of the National Guard Armory in Russell when a two-story road closed to allow road only to find area motels filled to capacity.
"The roads are getting better now," Sgt. French, of the Russell Police Department, said yesterday. "It's slushy in the passing lines, but it is a lot better than it was. The sun's starting to
In Douglas County, a Topeka man died Thanksgiving evening four miles east of Badwin after his car went off a county road and rolled over, according to a spokesman for the Kansas Highway Patrol. Coffman said the vehicle was in serio condition at St. Francis Hospital in Topeka.
the patrol said. Three people died in an accident north of Hartford Saturday.
By yesterday evening, 344 people had died in traffic accidents, according to United Press International.
As of last night, California had reported 45 deaths, Florida 25 and New York 22. Michigan had 19 traffic deaths, Tennessee 15, Ohio and Alabama 13 apiece, and Illinois, Georgia, and Oklahoma.
The National Safety Council estimated in traffic accidents during the four-day weekend. It estimates and predicts that to 23,000 people, it must disable injuries.
Cold winds turned wet bridges in Waterloo, Iowa, into ice death traps, triggering multiple vehicle pileups. In one hour, Waterloo police and fire responded to the pileups and injuring 22 people, according to UPI.
Icy roads were blamed for deaths in Iowa, Illinois, Minnesota, South Dakota and Ohio. Interstate highways had to be closed in Minnesota and Ohio. In the Cleveland area, dozens of accidents were attributed to slippery roads.
SOUTH OF the ice belt, rain fell from the Mississippi Valley to the Appalachians, turning to snow on the western fringe of the storm system.
Meteorologists said the brutal weekend storm was the result of a "very confusing weather pattern," in which a moisture laden low pressure system moved northeast from Texas late Friday through South Carolina, causing the system over the Dakotas, causing freezing rain and snow across western and central Kansas.
"The storm was no organized weather system by itself. The low provided the precipitation. It had a lot of moisture coming up from the Gulf of Mexico, and it brought the rain with the National Weather Service in Topeka.
Liesel said part of the colder high extended southwest across Kansas, chilling the surface temperature and leaving four to six inches of snow in the valley. The state is central to the southwest portions of the state.
"The HEAVY snow generally went from Elkartin in southwest Kansas near the Oklahoma border to Dodge City up to Ness City and Long Island near the Nebraska border." Alessi said.
Alessi said temperatures should rise quickly today, with highs in the 40s and 50s and a partly sunny day. Tongtai's low should be around 25 to 30 degrees Celsius, but he would be on Wednesday with a chance for more rain.
Prof savs radio counseling helpful, popular
Eastern Kansas and the northwest corner of the state escape most of the snowfall, although Topeka awoke yesterday to roughly a half inch on the ground as the fow moved into Missouri.
"Hello. I've got a problem."
By MATTHEW SCHOFIELD
For centuries, that was a common utterance between friends or lovers, and since the mid-1970s it has been a common phrase on the radio.
Radio psychology is a phenomenon in which a
professional psychologist takes calls from troubled people, and then gives answers over the air. It has brought the personal problems of many individuals into the living rooms of thousands.
Although looked upon as suspect in traditional psychological circles, C.R. Snyder, professor of psychology, said the radio, or "pop psycholo-therapy," served a useful role in contemporary society.
Snyder said that listeners ranged from the voyeuristic to people who merely wished to know that others shared their misery, but callers were usually very serious.
"PEOPLE CALL because they have a problem," he said. "Maybe they call in to a radio program because they know about it, whereas they don't know about other places to go."
Nuisance, or prank callers, exist, but usually
SE PVSCHOLOGY nage 5
By KIESA ASCUE
Staff Reporter
Although the federal government pays for her tuition and books, Marilyn Jesup works 20 hours a week at a two jobs to afford to attend classes at Haskell Indian Junior College.
She struggled to get money from federal sources, but she said she wanted to give up trying to get federal aid because even when the money was in her hands, it was not enough.
Jessup, a Horton sophomore who lives off-campus, said she received $250 a month from the school.
"I figure they owe that money to us," Jessup said. "They stole our land."
GERALD GIPP, Haskell president, said that although a record number of students applied for admittance this year, actual enrollment figures at Haskell plummeted because of federal budget
Gipps said that 1,250 of the 1,750 American Indians who applied for admission last fall were accepted. But because budget reductions left them with less money, living expenses, only 87 students enrolled this fall.
Louis Taylor, counselor for Haskell's off-
campus students, said that enrolment at Haskell had climbed to more than 1,200 since it was accredited in 1971, and that about 25 percent of Haskell students usually lived off campus.
Last year, 925 students attended Haskell, and 20 percent of them lived off campus.
This year, only 125 students, 14 percent of the total enrollment, off-campus, said Limda Khatri. In fact, about half of the students
"ITS DIFFICULT for them to get funded to stay off-campus. And our on-campus numbers were cut, too, when we put two students to a room instead of four students to a room."
William Brown, acting superintendent of the Kansas agency of the Bureau of Indian Affairs, said that any student who was one-quarter American Indian could attend classes at Haskell without paying for tuition or books. Students who live on campus also get free housing and $50 a month to pay for laundry and other personal expenses.
Benny Smith, assistant dean of students, said Haskell had to reject many late applicants because the school could not provide housing for them.
"We have had to ask several agencies not to send students," Smith said. "We could probably
fill another good-sized dorm. We can't even accommodate the interest that out there."
RuthSilversmith, resident director of Winona Hall, said that Haskell residence hall staffs do nightly bedchecks to make sure that people in the halls use their beds, because if they do not sleep in the hall often, the space can be used for others.
IN 1976, a new residence hall, Bailock Hall, was built for $2.3 million. The money was supposed to build two residence halls, but inflation and construction of the building Smith said.
Gipp said he still hoped to be able to see another residence hall on campus, but it could be several years before anything was done about it.
seven years before and after, we made the Kansas agency the BIA gives the most applicants for aid, Brown said. The agency's budget was cut by about 15 percent last year, so fewer students from the state can attend Haskell or other colleges.
Taylor said that every tribal agency handled its funds differently. Each agency has at least one person in its education department to decide how many people a tribal community can afford
Kansan applications due today in Flint Hall
See HASKELL page 5
Applications for Kansan news and business staff positions are due at 5 p.m. today in 200 Fint
Applications are available in the Kansan business office, 118 Fint Hall; the office of the School of Journalism, 200 Fint Hall; the Student Affairs Office, 214 Fint Hall; and the office of student affairs, 214 Strong Hall.
Those applying for the news staff should arrange for an interview. Interview times will be provided.
Staff selections will be posted after Dec. 2.
running
Weather
Today will be partly cloudy and warmer, according to the National Weather Service. There will be a high at 50, and winds will be west to southwest at 5 to 15 mph.
Tonight will be partly cloudy with a low in the low to mid-30s.
Tomorrow will be partly cloudy with a high in the 50s.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, November 29, 1982
News Briefs From United Press International
Rescuers look for missing after Mexico flood kills 21
MANZANILLO, Mexico - Rescuers scoured mud and debris yesterday for people fearful buried by flash floods and mud slides that killed at least 12 children and three adults in the Pacific port of Manzanillo, officials said.
Felipe Lopez, a spokesman for Manzanillo's General Hospital, said as many as 5,000 people were left homeless by the flooding and landslides, sparked by a rare flash flood late Friday.
One state newspaper said 300 people were missing but Lopez said the report was an exaggeration.
Report was an exaggeration. Telephone communication to the Manzanillo police headquarters, city government offices, a refugee shelter and the Red Cross was knocked out.
"There's never been anything like this in Manzanillo," Lopez said, noting that the downpour turned streets into waist-deep rivers that washed through residential neighborhoods.
washes through residential neighborhoods.
He said rescue workers were continuing their search for additional bodies in the neighborhoods of Buenavista, El Rocio, Bonanza, 16 de Septiembre and Punta Chica.
Increase in hijackings worries Poles
WARSAW, Poland—One day after Poland's second hijacking in a week, the government said yesterday it was concerned by the growing number of air piracies and cited a "difficult economic situation" as a possible cause.
in the latest hijacking, a gunman in uniform and posing as a security agent was arrested after he attempted to take over a Hungarian TU-154 flying from Leningrad to Budapest when the aircraft made a stop in Warsaw Saturday night.
Details of the takeover were sketchy, but an airport source said the hijacker demanded that the plane, with 50 passengers and crew aboard, be flown to West Berlin or Vienna, Austria.
The hijacker held everyone aboard hostage for almost three hours before releasing them, unharmed in small groups.
Before focusing on him he tried to change planes, the official said. He was captured when he tried to change planes, the official said.
Legally dead child's heartbeat stops
MAYWOOD. Ill.—Despite his parents' opposition, a 7-month-old child declared legally dead more than a month ago was taken off a respirator yesterday when his heart stopped beating.
yesterday when his heart stopped beating.
An autopsy was ordered to determine whether he had been abused. A doctor who admitted him to the hospital told police the child was a possible child abuse victim.
Alex B. Haymer, son of Albert and Karen Haymer of south suburban Justice, had suffered a head injury and brain hemorrhage. He was declared brain dead on Oct. 23, but his parents began a court fight to keep the child hooked to the machine.
The legal struggle was brought to an end early yesterday when the child's heart stopped beating, his doctor, Timothy Scarff, said.
In June, Alex was taken from his parents and put in a foster home after he was hospitalized for a similar injury. He was returned to his parents on Sept. 10.
Missile test site not harmed by blast
TULLAHOMA, Tem.—A television camera was lowered yesterday into the shaft of an MX missile testing facility where four workmen were killed Saturday while attempting to recover fuel. No structural damage was found in the shaft, an Air Force spokesman said.
A technician wearing an asbestos suit and special breathing apparatus was to be lowered into the shaft last night to determine if she had contracted asbestosis.
Thirty thousand pounds of solid rocket fuel exploded at 6 p.m. CST Saturday, killing four men.
Sixteen people attempting to put out the fire suffered smoke inhalation
injunction. Authorities were attempting to determine whether more fuel remained hidden under 4 feet of water at the bottom of the 250-foot deep testing cell.
Brig. Gen. Kenneth A. Johnson said a spark set off the fire, but he did not know what caused the spark.
Germany may deploy more missiles
WASHINGTON-West German Ambassador Peter Hermes said yesterday that unless the Soviet Union dismantles its intermediate rockets aimed at NATO, his country will deploy new American missiles capable of delivering nuclear weapons.
Explore an interview with Cable News Network, Hermes said, "Within NATO, we have agreed on a schedule for the material preparations of deployment" of U.S. Pershing II and cruise missiles.
But, he said, West Germany still hoped the United States and the Soviet Union would be able to negotiate a "zero option" in Geneva. That means the Soviets should dismantle their rockets, he said.
meets beginning this week to discuss key political and military issues.
Officials said the alliance is certain to reaffirm its December 1979 decision to deploy 572 new cruise and Pershing II missiles beginning late in the coming year.
Israel agrees to U.S. compromise
TEL AVIV—The Israeli Cabinet yesterday accepted a U.S.-sponsored compromise on long-awaited peace talks with Lebanon but held fi'm en a demand some of the negotiations be conducted in Jerusalem.
"The heads of the two delegations will be properly authorized representatives," Cabinet Secretary Dan Meridor said, reading a government communique after the weekly Cabinet meeting.
The compromise was sponsored by U.S. special envoy Philip Habib and his assistant Morris Draper. Both are crisscrossing the Middle East to secure the withdrawal of Israeli forces and 40,000 Syrian and 10,000 Palestine Liberation organization soldiers from Lebanon.
The statement was seen as a retreat from the Jewish state's former position that talks on the withdrawal of some 30,000 Israeli forces from Lebanon include ministers representing both nations.
Irish official urges end to violence
BELFAST, Northern Ireland—The outlawed Irish Republican Army yesterday claimed responsibility for killing a policeman in front of his young son, and Ireland's prime minister-elect warned that the ongoing religious strife could spell disaster for all of Ireland.
Police said James Martin, 34, the owner of a gasoline station in the southwestern city of Armagh, was shot to death in his office Saturday by one of two men who had stopped their car at the station.
one of two men who had stopped them to take a picture. A police spokesman said the IRA, in a telephone call to a Beifast radio station, said it was responsible for the shooting. The IRA claimed Martin had been working for the Ulster Defense Regiment, Northern Ireland's mainly part-time security force. But police denied the IRA claim.
Baker expects passage of jobs legislation
By United Press International
WASHINGTON—Senate Republican leader Howard Baker yesterday forecast bipartisan cooperation in the lame-duck congressional session that starts and is all but certain to enact a public works-jobs bill.
Democrats may press to add housing, sewer and other public works construction to the highway, bridge and repair repairs included in the legislation.
But, Baker said, there would be considerable agreement this year and in the next Congress because "stimu-
ce" is a state law that gives a Democrat or Republican concept."
Moreover, he said in an interview on CBS's "Face the Nation," most Republicans now agree federal social programs "cannot be cut significantly again," and most Democrats agree the national budget "must be got under control."
The lame-duck session, which will last about three weeks, was called mainly because President Reagan wanted Congress to deal with appropriation bills for the remainder of the current fiscal year.
But a surprisingly strong consensus developed over the past two weeks, favoring enactment of an increase of 5 cents in the gasoline tax to finance the needed public works and create jobs in a depressed labor market.
Secretary Drew Lewis, the proposal would create 350,000 direct and indirect jobs. With 11 million people out of work, he said that a more serious nation's 10.4 percent unemployment.
ACCORDING TO Transportation
PETER B. KROCHER
Howard Baker
The Associated General Contrac-
And a key senate source acknowledged to United Press International that the bill will produce 'very little' of needs with areas of high unemployment.
gen. estimate that each $1 billion in additional revenue would create 13,100 on-site jobs paying an average of $21,000 a year, 13,200 on-site jobs paying $22,000, and 36,700 indirect jobs with no specified wage.
Reagan is expected to announce details of his plans for the $5.5 billion legislation before leaving on a Latin American trip tomorrow.
Another focus will be on the $201.3 billion defense appropriations bill. The key disputes are expected over Reagan's plan to deploy 100 MX missiles in a "dense pack" and calls for a token of American GIs from Europe.
The MX fight will center around proposals by Rep. Joseph Addabbe, D-N.Y., and Sen. Ernest Hollings, D-S.C., to eliminate $988 million requested for the production of the first five of the ten-10-ward interconti-
nental missiles.
MORE THAN $3.2 billion has been requested for the MX in the 1982 defense budget. The Hollings and Addabo amendments leave intact the nearly $2.5 billion requested for research and development.
President Reagan announced the $28 billion basing plan last week, hailing the new weapon as "the right missile at the end of the world to close the 'window of vulnerability.'"
Hollings, whose similar amendment failed by only two votes in September, is certain of victory during the lame-duck session. "It's a terrible decision. It's money down a rat hole," he said of the MX
In an interview yesterday on ABC, Hollins said flatly. "We have the votes" to block the plan.
Ted Stevens, assistant Senate Republican leader, has proposed that troops in Germany be cut by 20,000 — about two U.S. divisions — as an economy measure. The US Congress to Europeans that they are not doing their share for allied defense.
THE FIGHT against the cut of NATO troops is led in the Senate by Charles Percy, R-III, Foreign Relations Committee chairman, who warned earlier this month that withdrawing U.S. forces Europe would sequestrate NATO unity.
Also, members of the House Armed Services Committee returned from a
tour of U.S. and NATO bases in Europe convinced that trimming the number of GIs in Germany was a bad idea.
In another defense-related issue, a House investigations panel plans to probe the security measures at the Electric Boat Shipyard in Grotau, Conn., where Trident missile carriers, nuclear submarines are being built for
Because not all the pending money bills can be passed during the short session, Congress also will have to pass legislation that would require government operations in the interim.
It is certain to include a continuance of the ceiling on top federal pay members and other top members of Congress and other top officials would get a pay raise.
THEIR ANNUAL, salaries frozen since 1977 at $80,602.50, House and Senate members would get an automatic 4 percent cost-of-living raise of $2,426 on Dec. 18. If the four-year cap comes off retroactively, the raises would amount to 27 percent or more than $16,000.
But Congress has repeatedly voted to freeze their own pay.
"Especially in this difficult economic period, such a pay increase just doesn't make sense." Sen. Nancy Kassebaum, Kanser, said.
Since their last pay raise, inflation has risen 60 percent, and government white collar workers have received increases of 30 percent.
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University Daily Kansan, November 29, 1982
Page
Legal services offer help to students
ly DONNA KELLER staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
Students who do not know where to turn for help with a legal or consumer dispute have at least four services available to them.
Legal Services for Students, the Douglas County Legal Aid Clinic, the Consumer Affairs Association, and the University Ombudsman all offer assistance to students who seek professional advice in solving a problem.
In some instances, the services overlap, and some distinctions among the four are drawn by the legal or authority each does or does not have.
But the directors of each program said the offices worked in cooperation.
LEGAL SERVICES for Students, in the Satellite Union, is funded by the student activity fee and generally provides free legal assistance to students.
Cynthia Woelk, director of the service, said recently that since Legal Services was organized in 1979, it had handled consumer and legal problems of students, such as landlord-tenant disputes, problems with insurance policies, patents, copyrights and trademark laws.
The staff of five includes two attorneys, two student interns from the law school and a legal secretary, but only one attendant on the filing received, Woelk said.
Ayone said the service often was confused with that offered by the Douglas County Legal Aid Clinic, but Legal Services had been used on behalf of the law as legal aid.
"We're not competitive," she said.
"We have similar services, but we aren't associated with the law school, and we're Student Senate funded."
SHE SAID her office handled less litigation than legal Aid, in some cases acting more as an adviser and making referrals to another service.
Legal services takes approximately 1,200 clients a year, Woelk said.
Bob Wason, director of the Douglass County Legal Aid clinic, in Green Hall, said that low-income county residents were the main clients of the clinic.
Most of the work done by the 25 law school interns, under the supervision of professionals, is in domestic relations, which includes divorce, adoptions, child custody or support; and criminal misdemeanors, such as drunken driving, criminal trespass and petty theft, Wason said.
Students often seek help in one of those two areas, he said. Other student problems are often referred to Legal Services.
WASON SAID that of the 1,490 people interviewed from January through October of this year, approximately 620 became clients of the clinic.
To be eligible for the clinic's services, people must meet the Legal Aid Act requirements.
People may not become clients either because they do not meet the economic guidelines, or they have a bad credit. We just give them advice," Wason said.
He said Legal Aid worked cooperatively with other student and community services, such as the Consumer Affairs Association or Legal Services for Students, and would make the appropriate referrals.
The Consumer Affairs Association, with offices in the Kansas Union and at 819 Vermont St., has no legal authority, although it generally acts as mediator in disputes between the consumer and a business.
CYNTHIA HARIS, consumer affairs specialist, said the biggest areas of dispute the office handled were landlord-tenant, auto repair, mail order problems, faulty merchandise, contracts and billing errors.
The office gets approximately 3,000 inquiries a year. Harris said.
The staff often will encourage an individual to handle the problem himself, but if the consumer wants to file a complaint, the office will act as a
mediator between the two parties, she said.
Harris said that if the problem involved possible litigation, her office generally referred the person to one of the legal services in the community.
The association emphasizes consumer education, and among the literature on consumer rights and responsibilities is information on state and federal regulations, new and recalled products, and brochures on current consumer issues.
BRETT TURNER, consumer counselor at the Union office, said students did not use that office as much as the association hoped they would because often students did not think of themselves as consumers.
"We're hoping this office becomes more student oriented." Turner said. "We have a problem being recognized on campus."
or campus.
Much of the literature available in the campus office would be of interest to students, Turner said.
He said most of the students came into the office with questions about lease agreements or landlord-tenant issues.
"If we can't help them, we'll refer them to another agency," he said.
WILLIAM BALFOUR, who has held the position since 1977, directs students, faculty and staff through the appropriation that can help with special exigencies.
As ambudsman, Balfour does not have disciplinary or legal authority, but does have direct access to administrative officials and often will act as moderator with the other party, he said.
He said he talked with about 150 students each academic year, and saw how the students responded.
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JOIN A SENATE COMMITTEE TODAY
Committee applications available in the Student Senate Office, 105 B Kansas Union, for the following committees:
Legislative Affairs
Minority Affairs
STUDENT SENATE NEEDS YOU
Budget cuts may cost KU jobs
Communications
Budget
Cultural Affairs
Sports
"We'll have that much less money — we'll have to leave positions open longer," said Ward Zimmerman, KU budget director.
Academic Affairs
Finance and Auditing
The University of Kansas may not be able to fill vacancies resulting from employee turnover if recommendations from a state agency for KU's 1984 budget are adopted, a KU official said recently.
Elections
Student Services
By DIRK MILLER Staff Reporter
He said the Kansas Division of the Budget had recommended reducing Gov. John Carlin's lowest budget request for KU by about $130,000.
Applications are due by 5:00 p.m., Friday, December 3rd, in the Student Senate Office.
Student Rights
Zimmerman said that the budget division's calculations of FICA withholdings and retirement benefits also would leave the University about $261,600 short of the amount needed to make these benefit payments.
David Dallam, an analyst in the budget division, said the division inside the cuts because it "had some cost savings" and the fringe benefits were calculated."
THE BUDGET division is recommending $89 million in general-use funds for KU. The Rogers' recommendation was for $104 million.
Zimmerman said the division also had made more money available by raising the shrinkage percentage for unclassified salaries by 1, percent to 3.
Carlin asked KU to prepare two different general-use budget request levels, below the Kansas Board of Regents' authorized level.
If you would like more information or have any questions about the Student Senate Committees contact the Senate Office at 864-3710.
ZIMMERMAN SAID that 54 classified and 28 unclassified full-time equivalent positions would have to be held by the budget division's recommendation.
HAMILTON IS a member of a committee of state employee studying alternatives to layoffs. The committee has discussed several options open to the schools, she said. These include furloughs, job-sharing, voluntary leaves without pay and early retirement.
Full-time equivalent positions are determined by the Regents. They are derived for each position considering hours, enrollment and job require-
"We had to make it some way," Dallam said.
Budgeted funds usually are saved during the time a position remains vacant and because new employees are usually paid at a lower wage scale than the former employees. The state keeps the percentage of money figured as shrinkage and appropriates the rest to the state agency.
percent. The shrinkage percentage is an estimate of money saved by employee turnover.
THE BUGETD division recommended shifting the money saved by increasing the shrinkage percentage into unclassified salaries.
Keith Nitcher, University director of business and fiscal affairs, said, "We're hopeful that the governor will recommend a level higher than the current benchmark."
Dallam said that the shrinkage percentage was "larger than we've ever had before." Raising the percentage was necessary, he said, to reduce KU's budget to the governor's level.
The budget division's recommendation includes 16 more full-time equivalency positions than Carlin's lowest-level budget request, which eliminated about 98 full-time equivalent positions.
Instead of laying off employees, KU probably will allow positions that are
But, she said, "These alternatives are only temporary."
Nitcher and Zimmerman both said the budget would not be set until April.
Gail Hamilton, president of the KU Classified Senate, also said, "There are alternatives to layoffs."
(paid for by the Student Activity Fee)
"We have 1,130 classified general-use positions and 1,800 unclassified general-use positions. We have attrition."
"This isn't cut in stone," Nitcher said.
left open by resignations and deaths to remain unfilled. Zimmerman said.
"I know of no plans for layoffs," he said.
HAMILTON SAID that she was optimistic that the state's financial problems would be solved.
Stanley Kopil, Regents executive officer, said last week that if the budget division's recommendations were adopted, 245 positions would have to be eliminated from the seven Regents schools.
BACK BY POPULAR DEMAND
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MAD HATTER
Opinion
Page 4 University Daily Kansan, November 29, 1982
Jobs bill alone no cure
Easing unemployment and bolstering the nation's economy will be the top items on the agenda for the lame-duck congressional session, which convenes today.
And while Democrats and Republicans may differ on the finer points of the proposed public works jobs bill, it appears that both parties are willing to cooperate to enact some version.
There has been growing support in the Congress to pass the 5-cent increase in the federal gasoline tax, which would generate the money needed for the public works bill.
Enacting the legislation appears to be a sound — and politically wise — decision. But in the end, it could only give the 11 million people who are jobless a temporary illusion that things are getting better.
The bill calls for generating 320,000
jobs in public works projects for highway, bridge and mass transit repairs. The Democrats want to include housing and sewer projects.
Transportation Secretary Drew Lewis said that because it would create relatively few jobs, the bill would barely affect the 10.4 percent unemployment rate. And Senate sources have told the media that the bill would do little matching of new jobs with areas of high unemployment.
The situation today has been compared to the Depression of the 1930s. And it may be that programs similar to the New Deal are needed. But the New Deal was the watershed for a bundle of programs, not just one. The public works jobs bill is a step in the right direction. But if Congress wants to make a dent in the problem, more programs must follow.
Semester has wasted away; time to pull out study tricks
That's all folks!
My last block of time to study just passed. I had all kinds of good intentions for spending Thanksgiving break studying, but, of course, I spent my time making up for lost sleep, preparing for a traditional Thanksgiving dinner with my guests, making that dinner, then cleaning up and recovering from that dinner.
Study? Make me laugh.
We now have eight days of classes and one extra day in which to cram an entire semester of classes. I envy those who didn't follow in my footsteps.
The rest of us are going to have to use some interesting tactics to do well this semester and.
I am a student of Chinese language and culture. I study Chinese at the University of Beijing and I am proficient in Chinese.
CATHERINE BEHAN
at the same time, avoid having a nervous breakdown.
It can be done:
I have some suggestions from three years of experience that might help those of you who find yourselves in similar predicaments.
First, decide that this is the best time to clean up, repaint, remodel or in any way refurbish your house or apartment. I swear, the plants HAVE to be repotted before finals.
Secondly, it is true that going out the night before a final and getting extremely drunk will solidify facts in your mind and relax you. In some circumstances, it might even be the only way to survive a final. You will have no idea how badly you are fainting said final.
Thirdly, drugs can help. So what if they're illegal? Who cares if they've been shown to make you do worse on tests? You will be different. And if you're going to flunk anyway . . .
Fourth, have a monstrously huge fight with your roommate. Fight about repetting the plants. Maybe it will force you into the library to escape him or her. It might also get him or her to leave you in the room alone so that you can repot your plants in peace.
Fifth, decide to write a novel. It will put you in a studying frame of mind, even if it does not give you the ability to write.
Finally, take up an exercise program. In the time that it takes to go to Robinson Gymnasium,
take off your clothes, put on a swimwear, go swimming, take a shower, get dressed and walk home again, you will have spent a lot of study time, but it will relax you so that you can study
Come now. Everyone knows that these will not help you do well on finals. A few of them, however, have some merit to them, even if the merit is burden.
Study in a group if you want. This can lower your anxiety about the test and help you remember the material. You might also make a few friends.
her it is buried. Real experts suggest these tactics;
If you already have an exercise routine, keep it. It will make you feel better and more relaxed. If you do not have a routine, light stretching or a shoe lacing up and up and relax you so that you can study better.
If you know all the material very well, and go over it a few times the night before, to go bed early and do well on the final. If you do not know the material very well and you will be surprised when you get the test back. Review as much as you can, and get a good night's sleep.
Study in a place that is quiet, if you like quiet, or in a place with some background noise, if you like the comfort of sound. I am one of those people who is distracted by silence. However, loud noise can be distracting, have finals on Friday, or day can be distracting. Avoid the problem and go somewhere else.
Drugs, including caffeine, will probably not help you. In fact, they might hurt your chances of doing well. Doctors say that speed, caffeine and nicotine can make people feel as if they are doing better than they actually are. When the drug works, you may be less likely to just how much he does not know.
Stimulants also make people feel more tense. And that is one of the last feelings most people have.
Finally, do not try to escape the inevitability of studying. If you watch television, go to see a movie or have a long involved talk with your roommate, you might feel better while you are escaping, but you will probably feel worse when you end up with too few hours to study.
Eat the usual amount of food at the usual times. The more you stick to the schedule of eating and sleeping maintained during the rest of the semester, the better you will feel during
Besides, the plants probably won't mind if you wait until after Christmas.
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Fam's dedication should be repaid
We were walking off the practice field, Coach Don Fambrough and I, after one of the Jayhawks' final workouts. The players had been climbing around, and Fam was in a good mood — laughing as he had seldom laughed during the dismal 2-4-2 season.
Fam began humming as we walked through the bitter November wind, and, recognizing the melody, I grinned vryly. We was crouching on the rocky shore, apparently oblivious to the irony of the lyric.
Rumors were — and are — flying about his impending dismissal, whether it be a firing or a resignation. No one is more aware of the second time through the KU coaching wringer.
Rest assured, those of you who believe that a new athletic director will determine Fam's fate, that the alums control destiny, at least in this tiny world. Certainly, either the AD or the chancellor will have to do the dirt work. But the decision will be made in plush offices and country clubs in lawrence, bakers, bankers, business mans and real estate agents who sport scotch-and-water paunches, smoke big cigars and spout big theories as to the methodology of football.
by finishing 4-5-2. It was a fun season; there was no pressure.
The old argument that the alums pay for it, and therefore should have a say in the football program, is tantamount to the absurd. We've seen what wonderful influence alums can have on athletic programs. More NCAA investigations reveal wronggoing by alumni than by all the coaches in the country rolled together. And when the NCAA slaps on the penalties, you'll pay? Certainly not the alums, who will instead spend more on greens fees and less on buying players.
I first met Fambridge when I was assigned to cover the Jayhawks' practices three seasons ago. They were picked to go nowhere, and they surprised everyone — especially themselves
My first afternoon at practice was no picnic. The players stared, the coaches stared, and the other writers were openly hostile. And after practice, I asked what may go down as the dumbest question in sports history. Another couch probability would have snorted in derision — not Don Fambrough. He grabbed a football from one of the managers, and he and I ran through plays and discussed strategy until the sun sank behind the Daisy Hill dorms.
A Coach Fam were a professor, his future would be assured. He'd be tenured many times over — he's been at the University for 30 years. But coaching is not a career for those seeking job opportunities. It's his first to confirm that. He already had this job and led it. He's heard the death keening before.
Fam would have laughed had he realized the grim humor his song implied. Years from now, when I think of Dam Farrbrough, I'll think of laughter. I think of the times, when I was left standing outside the locker room door while the other writers were inside, and Fam would come
BILLY BARRIN
TRACEE HAMILTON
over and crack a joke and answer any extra questions I might have. I'll think of the way he teased me about taking Abnormal Psychology "we get some work for you around here," he said.
But I'll also remember some sadder times — the day, last season, when David Lawrence tore up his knee and it looked as if he'd never play football again. After the game, Fam's voice broke as he told the press about David's injury. I'll never forget the look in his eyes when he told the team, upon landing in Teopae then the Hall of Fame Bowl, that fullback Chris Emerson had died. I had to interview him about Chris nearby a week later, and he was still silent by the sound of his cry. He had never played a down of football at Kansas. It didn't matter to him, you see, whether the player was a starter, as David was, or a redshirt, like Chris. He cared for them in the same way.
Fam's ideas about coaching and discipline
have been described by some as soft. That may well be, depending on your definition of that term. Fam is a great believer in self-discipline. He believes that if you treat a player like a man, you are going to lose and respond for his own actions; he will grow and mature as a person and he will be successful.
If that's soft, then I submit to you that we should all be soft. But, of course, there is a flaw in that logic. Today's players are less likely to take self-discipline seriously. Most are serious, dependable, hard-working players. But a small group have caused far more trouble than they have been worth. Oddly, some of these players are the fan's favorite. Some overloaded players who have brought nothing but pain and embarrassment to KU's program.
So Fam got fed up, midway through the season with her prima dona lying around the training room, grooming. And he decided to play the men who most wanted to play. A lot of freshmen got valuable playing time this season. The best players, the jailwives will be better, much better.
Fam will be around to cheer them on. Some say he'll do his cheering from the stands. That remains to be seen. But the University definitely owes him more than a pat on the back and an escort to the door. At a time when a win-at-all-costs attitude prevails, KU has a chance to prove it is an institution that cares for more than just the end-of-season record. Honesty, integrity, courage — do these old-fashioned values no longer matter?
Several years ago, Fambrough lost his job. Bud Moore came in, had one great season and took the team to a bowl game with, as many people later pointed out, Fambrough's players. The same will be said next year if the University lets Fambrough go.
There is no greater salesman for the University of Kansas than Don Fambrough. There is not a kinder, more sincere couch in the classroom than the kindest professor. The University should show some class in return
- by refusing to bow to the pressures of the monied, manipulating alums.
Letters to the Editor
Vote for Ashner not a vote to stay course
To the Editor
It was with great interest that I read in the Kansan about the turnout and results of the student body presidential-vice presidential elections. I agree with your staff that the higher turnout, and possibly the results, were affected by increased participation of non-traditional students.
It is my belief that I am just such a voter; 29 years old, an off-campus dweller, a returnee from the world of work, a final semester senior, a graduate, in business or in and I have had five previous opportunities.
the reason I am writing is that one of the opening sentences of the lead article was a quote from some members of the Consensus group claiming that the election results were a mandate for the president to leave them unchanged as we move from Atkins-Wich to Ashner-Cramer.
Why did I vote for Ashner-Cramer? This is the easy part. In a year in which the on-campus news is dominated by financial cutbacks, faculty and staff dissatisfaction on an unprecedented level, disintegration of academic quality and theft of $200,000 from the university. The memorial thought that the most important issue in the 1983 elections was the sale of beer in Memorial Stadium.
Nothing could be further from the truth, and by explaining my participation in the election I hope to ferment an "outsiders" manifesto," the outcome being those responsible for this year's income.
Only an idiot, or a combined group of idiots, would even consider such an absurd proposition. I voted for Consensus because I did not want Student Senate run by a group of idiots.
Did I vote to "stay the course?" Hell not!
Arkins, Welch and the old Perspective coalition
have done nothing for the students of this school, and a maintenance of those policies by Consensus will be a disaster.
What has Perspective done in the face of fiscal crisis and a renewal of this state's traditional academic hostility? Nothing! Perspective insisted on playing by the rules, being nice boys and girls (marketable boys and girls), smiling at and appeasing the people within and without this school that both play an important career part and are committed to solving real problems that must be conquered. Paid administrators of this place maintain their position and power by seeing that policy is unchanged.
In a time when changing conditions require changing policy, administrators must be gone around, not worked with. The individuals in this state who possess wealth and power and who are the ones whose wing is sought by these junior politicians are often the staunchest opponents of the measures that can protect this institution. In other words, when these aspiring young members of tomorrow's upper-middle class are faced with a choice of siding with their school or a future benefactor, they choose the benefactor.
Furthermore, the theft of bus pass funds points out what Student Senate cannot do: It cannot provide day-to-day supervision over business operations. Adkins, the largely unpaid policy maker, had no ability to control the situation, because he, like all unpaid policy-making personnel (including myself), is at the mercy of the day-in and day-out paid employee who is supposed to carry out the policy that the unpaid volunteer has established.
More often than not, it is the administrator who sets policy and so controls both facets of his responsibility. Until the office of Student Senate president is severed from administration and
dedicates itself to policy, this type of thing will continue, and we will never know, because no one will get caught.
The important question is: How much personal hot water is she willing to get into, how many potentially personally helpful arms is she willing to twist to help this school instead of her own future, how much trouble is she willing to cause to get those problems fixed? Is she willing to chop the power of her own office and turn certain functions over to others who can take care of those tasks? Her predecessors and mentors were not, and just because we voted against a gung of mindless lops does not mean that we approve of that way of doing things.
In conclusion, I must allow that Lisa Ashner did admit that some of the problems I have delivered into do exist. More power to her. That is not the important question.
Brace Epperson
Witchita senior
SUA Board of Directors
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University Daily Kansan, November 29, 1982
Page 5
Hiking
From page 1
nag fully,clothed and blew out the tiny candle that had lit the tent.
The program that made mine and many other adventures possible started in 1974, with SUA funding. Because the rental pays for the care and maintenance of the mine, the Wilderness Discovery program is practically self-supporting now. Wee said.
The pack I rented for the hike was a Trailways frame pack. It showed quite a bit of use, the bottom of the pack had been patched three times and it was missing a
Wee said that SUA did not have a lot of fancy camming equipment.
any fent also was not n fancy; when I awoke, the underside of it was covered with a thick layer of frost from the moisture of my breath.
THE SVEA one-burner stove fired up on the second try and soon water for oatmeal and hot chocolate was boiling. One water bottle had frozen during the night, leaving only half
the water supply. But five miles ahead, the trail lee to an artesian well where there was
After packing up the tent and sleeping bag, I started back on the trail, planning to reach the well by midday.
My pack weighed about 40 pounds when loaded with gear, most of it heavy clothing to fight off the cold.
The trail wound its way across dry riverbeds, up hills and down valleys. The tip of winter had frozen streams of water in fall and had stripped the trees lining the path.
The air was still and it seemed as if everything was dead, the stillness being broken occasionally by breathing and bird-calls.
The pack seemed to grow heavier with every step. Its stiff frame had curied my spine into a knot. Its shoulder straps pulled at my chest. The right shoulder strapped slipped often, and had to be pulled tight whenever I stopped for a rest.
SUA'S EQUIPMENT has withstood even adventures overseas, Wee said.
Although rentals usually decline in the winter, "On a weekend like Thankgiving it's hard."
I prepared my Thanksgiving dinner of hot macaroni and cheese when I finally reached the well. I had to boil the water to kill any bacteria.
The fuel bottle that came with the stove developed a leak after dinner and I lost a whole day's fuel. Instead of continuing with only enough fuel for one more meal, I decided to cut the hike short and backtrack to the parking lot.
I wondered if I could make it before darkness made the trail almost invisible.
I had 2 $ \frac{1}{2} $ miles to go when the sun had already begun to set. The forest was before it.
It was with some relief that I set foot on the paved surface of the trail's parking lot. I had hiked 11 miles that day and was tired and exhausted. I had accomplished something worthwhile.
are cut off early and are not really disruptive to the programs, be said.
Psychology
From page 1
Solutions to the caller's problems cannot be in-depth, but can be helpful in other ways. See below.
"I don't think you can give analysis in such a short time," he said, "but it's all right to give some general information, such as where to get help."
The shows are commercially successful, he said, but the radio psychologists would not exploit the content or participants of the show to gain listenership.
"ONE WOULD hope the radio psychologist operates under the same code of ethics other psychologists do," he said. "If a radio show did not include such content, it would be in serious leach and ethical trouble."
Most American cities have at least one call-in show, and Snyder said the popularity of the show is due to its reach.
"The popularity of these shows comes from an interest people take in the lives of other people," he said. "It's like an Ann Landers column. The vast majority of the people who write her are
serious about getting solutions to their problems."
Richard Rundquist, director of University Counseling Center, said the popularity of radio psychology programs might have spring from a lack of people to admit a problem to another person.
"To some extent there's greater anonymity to it," he said. "People have trouble coming into a counseling center. Some people have responded to the telephone whereas they won't respond face to face. A telephone is more impersonal; in that sense the shows serve a useful service."
BEST PSYCHOLOGY by radio is too brief to be actual psychology, he said.
"I's certainly not counseling," he said. "It's asking an opinion from anybody I really care about."
Snyder said psychology's popularity in all forms of the media had grown immensely in the last decade.
"You can't pick up a magazine without seeing some sort of psychological analysis of something," he said. "Understanding human actions happens to be something that interests people."
Haskell
From page 1
to send to college each year. That decision often is made by tribal leaders.
He said students had to prove to their agencies that they had high grade point averages to receive funding last year. Students who demonstrated insufficient academic progress were out
RETHA MASQUAS, Shawnee, Oka, sophomore, said, "I have to keep a 2.0 average. If I get below that or stay out of school for a semester, I won't be funded again."
Jerry Jaeger, director of the education department of the national Bureau of Indian Affairs, said more students were applying to BIA for aid because many scholarships available from other federal agencies had fallen victim to budget cuts.
However, fewer students are receiving federal funds. Although the BIA budget has not been cut recently, it has not been increased to keep pace with inflation. Jaeger said.
Dave Bennett, acting financial aid officer, estimated that 75 percent to 80 percent of the students at Haskell relied on federal aid to meet
their living expenses, despite the low cost of attending classes there.
HASKELL HAD to discontinue participation in two federal aid programs for students this year because the school's financial aid staff was cut from six staff members to three, Bennett said.
These programs, College Work Study and the Supplemental Education Opportunity Grant, provide matching funds to students who work. The programs brought in $23,273 and $13,494 respectively to students at Haskell in 1975-76. Bennett said.
"We felt when we did we have the programs that there was too much paperwork involved and not enough money for students to warrant the paperwork," Bennett said. "The staff was overwhelmed by the problems with testing problems and the monitoring systems these programs require, we had to drop them."
"Now, we would like to try them again. Since the other budget cuts were made, we'd like to get it done."
ALTHOUGH EIGHT more students qualified for Basic Education Opportunity Grants this year than last year, Haskell students received
$20,424 less from that fund. Student need had not been reduced, but the money available to them was cut. Bennett said.
The Comprehensive Employment and Training Act, which provides the minimum wage to students for every hour that they attend class, brought $25.497 to Haskell students in 1977-78.
So many students participated in CETA that it was given its own representative on campus when the financial aid office could not handle the paperwork, Bennett said.
However, the representative is no longer necessary. The program provides money to only two Haskell students this year because the CETA budget was drastically reduced, said Rose McKinney, CETA Manpower development specialist.
Masquas said she came to Haskell because she had heard that the nursing program was good. However, the program was eliminated from the Haskell curriculum this semester.
GBP SAID that people who taught nursing classes probably could make better wages elsewhere, and that Haskell was unable to hire competent instructors.
The program was started without qualified teachers in key positions and to continue it would have been unfair to students who expected to be nurses if they needed to know to become nurses, he said.
When Haskell began experiencing financial problems last year, Gipp tried to avoid cutting costs.
Haskell's budget was reduced by $300,000 in the last fiscal year. Congress has not decided what the budget will be for this fiscal year, but it does include funds for the school would not be reduced again.
The federal funds given to Haskell are designated as either educational funds, which are used for teachers' salaries; the development of new programs and other academic expenses; facilities funds, which are used for maintenance of the buildings and grounds at the college.
THE EDUCATIONAL budget was reduced from $4.7 million to $4.4 million and the facilities budget was reduced from $1.5 million to $1.4 million. Gion said.
Congress waited until March to inform Gipp of
the reduction, although a fiscal year begins Oct. 1 and ends Sept. 30. Consequently, Gipp said, he has to return the funds to his employer.
"Our only option was to lessen our personnel allocations," Glipp said. "We so saved our dollars."
All Haskell employees were converted to furlough status this summer, which means that every employee will be required to take at least two weeks off each year without pay. Although Haskell employees filed a class-action suit in protest of their change in status, they are still classified as furlough-status employees, Gipp said.
To further reduce expenses, students and staff members were encouraged to conserve energy.
"LAST SPRING, the campus was blacked out. There weren't any lights on," Blissmith said. "Everybody in the halls had to turn their radio televisions, stereos and lights out at alarms."
During the night bedchecks, security monitors also checked to be sure that energy was stored in the battery.
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encourages you to attend our sixth general meeting of the 82-83 school year
Wednesday, December 1, 1982 Satellite Union Conference Room
7:30 p.m.
(be prompt)
Tuesday, November 30
7:00 to 9:00 p.m.
Javhawk Room, Kansas Union
Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union
THE STRONG DEFENSE
DEPT. 346 - WASHINGTON
A WALK to the meeting will start at Engel and Irving Hill Road (between Ellsworth and Hashinger) at 7:00 p.m.
Study Skills Workshop (Emphasis on preparing for exams.)
Sponsored by The Student Assistance Center
BLACK STUDENT UNION
the organization designed with YOU in mind
Funded by the Student Activity Fee
JEALOUSY BREEDS CRITICISM
Have you ever noticed that if you don't have anything positive to say about yourself, you're only recourse is to try and knock the other guy?
We've recently announced a substantial increase in the amount of liquor we're pouring in our highballs. So, a competitor made a feeble attempt to belittle our solid image. Faddish bars will come and go, but Gammons will continue to be the best bar in town for conscientiously crazy young adults who recognize quality in the form of good service, great atmosphere, excellent drinks, fine food, the hottest current music, a superb sound system, and the best clientele.
When you're doing everything right, you don't need to take futile pot shots at your competition. So, we would like to take this opportunity to thank Moodys for the fine compliment. We're flattered that they perceive us as the best bar in town.Likewise, we're flattered that they copy everything we do.
HOULIHANS ANNIE'S SANTE FE
SAM WILSON'S FRED P. OTT'S
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YOU'RE #1 AT
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan, November 29, 1982
Awareness helps abused children
Bv DONNA KELLER
By DONNA KELLER Staff Reporter
The memories most people have of their childhoods are happy memories, often in contrast to the realities of adolescence.
The memories of some people are a blur of fear, pain, tears and feelings of rejection. In the lives of many children today, those memories are being created in a familial cycle of child abuse.
The number of reported and confirmed cases of child abuse increases yearly; each figure nearly doubles that of the previous year.
Community awareness of abuse in recent years has caused agents of child welfare — the schools, the state agencies and the courts — to consider the needs of the family, as well as the needs of the child.
THEATING THE symptoms of abuse is part of a community effort to prevent abuse.
Donna Swail, a social worker for the Lawrence school district, said that teachers were in the best position to detect signs of child abuse because of the large amount of time they spent with children.
The Kansas Child Protection Act, passed in 1972, mandates that professionals in daily contact with a child report any suspected abuse.
Swall said that since the law went into effect, there had been an increased awareness of the signs of abuse and of neglect by teachers and other school professionals.
"WHAT REALLY makes the teacher willing to report suspected abuse is knowing the child may be hurt more seriously if it is not reported," she said. "The law enables the teachers to be the advocates for the child's well-being."
The state Department of Social and Rehabilitation Services received 2,394 abuse reports during the first half of 1982. Of those, SRS confirmed 865 cases of physical abuse of children under the age of 18.
Those figures are more than four times the totals in 1977.
Douglas County ranked eighth among Kansas counties. There were 99 cases of abuse confirmed of the 346 reports received.
Approximately 58 percent of suspected abusers are the mothers of the children, double the percentage for fathers.
Almost 27 percent of the reports were anonymous calls, 14 percent from schools, and 10 percent from neighbors.
GARY HAWORTH, director of elementary education for the school district, said the increase in the number of cases reported and confirmed could be related to a greater public awareness of the problem, but that stress on parents caused by economic conditions also could be a factor.
Swall said one of the most useful tools in educating local school professionals about child abuse was a filmstrip that could be used to show the signs that signal possible child abuse.
Physical indicators include numerous or identical bruises on the child's body, burns, bite marks or swollen joints. Extreme passive or aggressive behavior or abrupt changes in behavior require the teacher reason to suspect abuse.
Donna Flory, social services supervisor at the Douglas County SRS office, said abuse could encompass the physical, sexual or emotional mistreatment of a child and included the way a child was spoken to or disciplined.
SHE SAID a fine distinction was made between child abuse and child
"Some people distinguish the two by saying neglect is an act of omission, and abuse is an act of commission," she said.
WHAT WERE acceptable methods of discipline earlier in this century no longer are acceptable, she said. Attention has turned towards efforts to prevent abuse by teaching parents positive methods of discipline.
"What are you teaching the children when you hit them? If you're bigger and you hit harder, you win." Flory said. "It's been said that the first hit is for the rest are for the parent. I strongly believe the difference is in self-control."
Protective-services workers represent the state in looking after a child's welfare. Workers investigate each abuse report to determine whether a child has been abused, and if so, what action they can take in the child's best interest.
Floy said one of the most frustrating things about protective services was suspecting that a child was being abducted. He evidence to remove him from the home.
"You hope you don't end up getting proof by having a damaged child," she added. "And you're not supposed to."
very personal thing. But maybe you have stopped a cycle that would have gone on with the family."
MANY TIMES it is up to the courts to decide whether a home is safe for a
Mike Elwell, associate judge in the specialized division of district court, said that two types of cases came before the court: those to sever a child from the family and those to seek the help to keep the family together.
Elwell said the philomophy of the courts concentrated on attempting to find a suitable solution.
He said that when working with families the court used a plan that could include removing a child from the home for long periods of time (for filling in parents, the child or both.
"The approach is in the spirit of cooperation, and the goal is to reunite the family," he said.
ELWELL SAID that although child welfare codes had been made more specific, they did not help with the situation and was when to intercome on a child's behalf.
Most of the children involved in the court's actions have been reunited with their families, he said.
"You're giving the parents a chance to fail or succeed. As long as the successes outweigh the failures, the approach is favorable," he said.
Nationwide, communities have recognized the need for education and support services for parents, looking for a cure through prevention.
Parents Anonymous of Lawrence is part of a national peer-support network, founded by a former abusive mother, which recognizes the frustrations of child-rearing and offers parents positive alternatives to dealing with those frustrations without losing control.
JEWELL NORRIS, Lawrence sponsor and facilitator of Parents Anonymous, said she organized the local chapter two years ago after realizing the community need for the support group.
"Many parents have never been instructed on child-rearing," she said. "We're all just human. It doesn't come easily." She said many extra support from outside resources."
She said that because the group was not a government agency, it was seen as less of a threat to those who participated.
Norris said that prevention of child abuse was as important as treating it.
fortable, where society has made them feel uncomfortable." she said.
"WE HAVE to the breaking point," she said. "A mother who comes home and screams at her children can be that one who is one who physically abuses her child."
"Its anonymity makes them com-
Sue DeVoe, Lawrence senior and mother of a 7-year-old boy, participates in the Lawrence chapter of Parents Anonymous.
She is from a middle-class background. The stories that portray abusive parents are ignorant, lower-status minorities as exceptions, she said
No one wants to talk about child abuse, DeVeo says, but she speaks so that other abusive parents will know they are not alone and will seek help, she said.
"I repeated my mother's mistakes. I was screaming, my expectations were unrealistic, and I knew I was out of control." DeVoe said. "I was mad at her for being so angry and I wondered why people were telling me stay like that."
DEVEO SAID she called the national child abuse hotline after watching a television show sponsored by Parents Anonymous.
"The man on the program talked about his feelings before he had killed his child. I realized those were my feelings, too." she said.
She was referred to the Kansas City chapter of Parents Anonymous, and died in 2016.
The group, which acts as both a support and therapy group, is much smaller than the group of people.
"They supported me until I could stand on my own and take control of my life."
SHE SAID she, like most parents, had unreal expectations about child-rearing because she was taught to behave and not to nurture the child.
Abuse is cyclical, passing from generation to generation, she said. More women than men abuse their children because the women were more violent when they married men who were verbally or physically abusive to them.
"I had no idea of what a decent relationship was. I know now it's respect and consideration for the other persons involved." Devoe said. "My mother doesn't always do as I wish, but because I've given help, he won't have to."
Anti-protectionist trade plan reached in world conference
By United Press International
GENEVA, Switzerland-World trading nations, many of them voicing reservations, adopted a weak declaration early today on fighting protectionism and re-engaging a basic commitment to free trade.
A 17-page document was adopted at 3:50 a.m. (8:50 p.m. CST) by the 88 member states of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade.
The compromise package called on GATT nations merely to "reduce trade frictions and overcome prostrate measures" as best they could
The European Economic Community said it had reservations, especially on sections dealing with
agricultural trade, while Third World countries had reservations on the issue of freer trade in service industries, banking, insurance and shipping.
COUNTRIES EXPRESSING reservations refused to be bound by language in the document, which was drawn up in six days and nights of often bitter bargaining — two of them had been scheduled.
"I don't think Congress will be happy with some of the elements of the document," U.S. trade representer William E. Brock told reporters.
Congress is pressuring the Reagan administration for protectionist measures against countries in poor nations, good, especially farm products.
Rebels say they possess plans of U.S. action in El Salvador
By United Press International
SAN SALVADOR, EI Salvador—Rebels said yesterday they captured U.S. military documents saying that Green Berets should be used to lead combat operations in El Salvador.
The rebels' Radio Venceremos reported that the documents captured from the U.S. Southern Command in Panama recommended using the Green Berets because the Salvadoran military "has been exhausted."
It said one document was from Gen. Wallace Nutting, who allegedly said that U.S. "military advisers must assume command of the operations."
Nutting, commander of all U.S. forces in South and Central America, was not immediately available for comment on the recommendation, which would contradict congressional rules that U.S. advisers stay out of combat zones.
The rebels did not say how they obtained the documents.
And a spokesman for the Roman Catholic church said yesterday that Pope John Paul II would visit El Salvador in the spring.
short trip to El Salvador at the end of February or beginning of March.
Salvadoran priest Gregorio Rosa
Chavez said the pope would make a
IN NEW YORK, former U. S. Ambassador to El Salvador Robert White said in a taped interview that he feared the United States was so deeply involved in the Central American nation's internal affairs that it could never get out.
White, ambassador under Jimmy Carter, said he felt that "in their innocence, or ignorance," strategists in the Reagan administration thought they could wrap up the El Salvador crisis in a couple of months.
But he said, "Nothing has come out right for them; and rather than beating an honorable retreat, or changing their lives so much decided to take one more step.
"And I'm afraid that we're in so deep now, we'll never get out."
Venceremos said rebels had overran all important villages in northern La Union province, about 120 miles east of San Salvador.
A NATIONAL guard officer disclosed that as many as 5,000 soldiers, including at least one U.S.-trained battalion, might be ready to retake the area.
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University Daily Kansan, November 29, 1982
Page 7
AMERICANS, ISRAEL AND PEACE
The peoples of the United States and Israel share common ideals, values, and spiritual roots. Both governments are committed to democracy, justice, human rights and freedoms. WE AFFIRM OUR UNYIELDING SUPPORT FOR THE STATE OF ISRAEL and recognize its right to live within secure and recognized boundaries free from threat or act of force. We feel that it is essential for the Congress and the Administration to continue the bi-partisan policies which enhance the economic stability and the military security of the State of Israel. These policies are clearly beneficial to both Americans and Israelis.
In light of this consensus, we commemorate the November 29,1947 United Nations resolution which resulted in the establishment of the Jewish State. We regret the continued state of war that has enveloped the nations of the Middle East for more than three decades. We call on Israel's neighbors to end their continued rejection, and invite them to join all peace-loving people in an effort to make the dream of peace a reality.
We believe the rights of the Palestinian people should be respected and we support negotiations with Palestinian representatives who openly acknowledge the legitimacy of the State of Israel. We feel that this condition is the essential prerequisite to sincere negotiations designed to guarantee Palestinian rights while simultaneously securing Israeli borders.
A genuine peace between Israel and her neighbors must encompass full diplomatic relations, the end of hostile propaganda, and the termination of political and economic warfare. These objectives can only be attained through mutual understanding and respect by all peoples who live in this troubled region. When these goals are realized, Israel and her neighbors will live in peace and tranquility.
Eric Flescher Marci Koffman Ben Sax Troy Trulock
Anne Flescher Ellen Kort Harry Shaffer Shari Lilla
Becky Gallas Lisa Ashner Gary Shapiro Shari Ford
Herbert Galton Eddie Goldberg Lynne Shapiro Kent Stone
Anne Golboro Ann Lindenbaum Sidney Shapiro Lisa Lynne Walter
Carla Gershon Larry Fry Joyce Shapiro John Gillard
Nolan Goldberg Lisa Maley Larry Sherr David Granly
Micah Goldstein Lori Pawley Suzanne Sherr Ken Davis
Frances Degen Horowitz Heidi Schlozman Sheldon Vile Dana Lerner
David Jampolsky Steve Kirschbaum Stanley Lombardo Eli Kanarek
Mark Kaplan Nancy Levit Judy Roitman Missy Taylor
Tamar Fedder Jane Lyss Giora Slutzki Susan Krause
Elizabeth Ellis Ed Lyss Rina Slutzki Vicki Nummun
Cathy Ullrich Phil Gohn DeAnne Rosen Pam Rubin
Jordan Fedder Roy Goldberg Karl Rosen Ann Fleischman
Bruce Cohn Gail Polinsky Marc Schlosberg John Fink
Marci Koffman Myles Scrinopskie David Pozezynski Loren Joshn
David Poisner Steve Sherman Susan Lending Craig Krueger
Adam Rice Hadassah Singer Moshe Oppenheimer Michael Birger
Bruce Schleicher Jane Kleinberg Sabrina Oppenheimer Cynthis Barrows
Ellen Sherman Cheryl Holland David Gottlieb Marna Goldstein
Lori Shifter Gary Shore Sig Lindenbaum Howard Hurwitz
Rich Steinizeig Terry Banta David Paretsky Rosanna Hurwitz
Igor Uchitel Marcee Bratman Lewis Bernstein Peter Ivory
Eran Yakar Michal Shaffer Sharon Bernstein Morris Kleiner
Ruth Berger Pam Haag Lynne Faiman Herman Leon
Denise Snavely Ellen Eder Janice Friedman Susan Ivory
Missy Miller Beth Wallace Pat Bavel Louise Leon
Vic Finkelstein Carline Cutler Michael Slotsky Alan Lichter
Stephen Kort Cari Griffitt Shirley Yochim Howard Lichter
David Katzman Sharon Birnbaum Marvin Fine Robin Hart
Nick Chacko Jacob Kleinberg Gwen Aronoff Beverly Rosenfeld
Naomi Abrams Stephen J. Shawl Adam Herman Hagar Erez
Rachel Abrams Jeannette P. Shawl Michelle A. Walter Shlomo Shmuelov
Leah Fedelman
The above names are representative of students, faculty, and friends of The University of Kansas who paid for and support this ad.
Page 8 University Daily Kansan. November 29. 1982
Early drop/add period scheduled until Friday
The early drop/add period for students who want to change their classes for next semester begins today, according to the spring timetable. Students can drop and add classes until Friday.
The early drop/add period applies only to those who had enrolled by Nov. 23.
The procedure for dropping and adding classes has changed little with early enrollment, although students now will receive a revised copy of their schedules when they change their enrollment.
To add or drop a student, a student should pick up a drop/add form, fill it out, and obtain his adviser's stamp, and dean's stamp, if necessary.
THE FORM then should be presented at the enrollment center, 111 Strong Hall. The student then will have a printout of his revised schedule.
A student also may change a section of a course at this time. Drop/add slips are not necessary for section changes. Students should simply go to the enrollment center and request the change. A revised schedule also will be presented then.
After this week, the next day to change enrollment will be January 13.
When adding or changing a course section, students should use their copy of the revised schedule as proof of attendance for the course, according to the timetable.
The enrollment center will be open from 8:30 a.m. to noon and 1 to 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday.
Undergraduate students in the fol'awing schools are not required to obtain their adviser's signature: School of Journalism, School "Z" and juniors, seniors, and special guests. College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
Undergraduate students in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and School "Z" will not need their dean's stamp during the early drop/add period. Occupational Therapy undergraduates must get a dean's stamp from the department chairman.
Group seeks donations for white elephant sale
The Emergency Service Council, an organization that provides relief for needy families in Douglas County, will hold a White Elephant Sale from 9 a.m. to sunday at the Lawrence Community Building, 11th and Vermont streets.
The sale is a fund raise for the council, which gives financial support to families who have economic emergencies.
All donations are at tax deductible and an appraiser will be at the Community Building on Friday from 3 p.m. to t.
p. for providing documentation for tax purposes.
ITEMS CAN be taken to one of the following locations until Thursday:
First Presbyterian Church, 2415 W. 23rd St.; Trinity Episcopal Church, 10th and Vermont streets; Babcock Place, Sacramento St.; First Southern Baptist Church, 19th Navasota; and Presbyterian Manor, 1421 Kawai Drive.
If anyone is unable to transport an item, the Volunteer Clearing House will pick it up. Call 841-5059 in the morning.
For further information, contact Dagmar Paden, the coordinator of the council, at 843-3757.
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On the record
A 20-YEAR-OLD LAWRENCE man was arrested by Lawrence police Friday in connection with a burglar at Gregg Tire Company, 814 W. 23rd St. Police said a $469电视 set was stolen from the company about two months ago.
THEIEVES STOLE A $2,000 tractor and a snow blade worth $300 between 1:30 and 7:30 p.m. Saturday from a driveway in the 3000 block of West Ninth Street, Lawrence police said yesterday.
BURGLARS STOLE $300 worth of
stereo equipment Thursday night from
a car parked in the 4500 block of Oak
Kingwood belonged to a KU
student, police said.
BURGLARS STOLE $360 worth of stereo equipment early Friday morning from a car parked in the 900 block of East 11th Street, police said.
BURGLARS STOLE $4,800 worth of home computer equipment Thursday from a duplex in the 400 block of Greenwich Village to computer and a printer were stolen.
Pollice said they arrested John J. Sullivan, who charged of burglary and grand theft.
BURGLARIS STOLE £380 cash about
i.p.m. Friday from the house in the 900
Suite at 212 Fifth Avenue
THEIVES ALSO STOLE2 two stands belonging to the Wichita Eagle and Beacon Tuesday night from in front of Dillons Super Market. 2108 W. 27th, and 3109 W. 2004 Louisiana St., police said. Both stands were worth $200 and had $5 in them.
THEVES STOLE FORE newspaper stands worth $600 between Nov. 21 and Wednesday from in front of the Lawrence Journal-World, 609 New Hampshire St., police said. Money inside the stands was estimated at $60.
BURGLARS STOLE $1.515 worth of items between 11: 50 a.m. and 11 p.m. Thursday from a mobile home in the 1900 block of West 31st Street, police
THEVES STOLE A 1978 Chevrolet Caprice between 3 and 1:35 a.m. Wednesday from the Hillcrest Shopping Center, police said.
BURGLARS STOLE $7.485 of Little Casino video games Wednesday from a car belonging to a salesman from Summit Amusement, Lee's Summit, Mo., police said. The car was parked at the corner of Second and Locust streets. Police said a camera also was stolen from the car.
THEIVES STOLE a ladder and a paint spray worth $750 Wednesday night from the back of a pick-up truck in Manhattan, block of Kentucky Street, police said.
said. The burglar's stole a $40 telephone vet, set a $50 stove, a $20 citizen's wallet, and a $10 cellphone.
BURGLARS STOLE two television sets and stereo equipment worth $795 Wednesday night from the 900 block of East 138th Street, police said.
On campus
TODAY
TOMORROW
AUDITIONS for an hour-long Mikado, sponsored by Concerts for Young People, will be from 4:45 to 7:45 p.m. in 328 Murphy Hall.
CATHOLIC CENTER WORSHIP will be at 12:30 p.m. in Danforth Chapel.
CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR CHRIST
PRE-MED CLUB will meet at 8 p.m. in the Council Room of the Union.
will meet at 7 p.m. in the Big Eight Room in the Kansas Union.
CAMPUS CHRISTIAN FELLOW-
study and fellowship will be at 7:30 p.m.
ARMY ROTC'S BASIC CAMP information will be from 12:30 to 1:20 p.m. on
He's Back IGGY POP
WITH GUEST NASH THE SLASH Thursday, December 2
Tickets on sale at Better Days Records
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TIME: 3:00-4:30 P.M.
PLACE: International Room, Kansas Union
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University Daily Kansan, November 29, 1982
Page 9
Overloaded computer causes night work
Rv.DAN PARELMAN
Staff Reporter
Early enrollment has overloaded one of the two KU computer systems, forcing some administrative employees to work nights and weekends.
But the office of information systems has identified the main problem and is working to correct it, Rich Bireta, the assistant director of the office, said.
bereta said the IBM computer, which controls the computer terminals used for administrative purposes, licked the keyboard in a way that early enrollment terminals added to it.
CONSEQUENTLY, terminals responded slowly to employees' commands, causing them to get less work done.
Next month, Bireta said, his office
will add memory to the IBM computer that controls the administrative terminals. he hoped he would help spring enrollment go more smoothly.
Early fall enrollment ended last week.
The early dropout period begins
"Response time was so slow during the day, it was hard to get anything done," said Nancy Keighingham, the assistant director of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences' word processing center.
Patsy Elliot, assistant director of records for the office of educational services, said that because fewer terminals would be used during the dropout period and because less students expected to respond response time should be faster this week than it was during early enrollment.
Kreighbaum said that during early
enrollment, she and two other employees in her office split up four night shifts.
"The response time was so slow during the day, you might as well have not been there," she said.
However, she said, the system overload caused a lot of anxiety.
KEIGHBAUM SAID by working nights and working from 7:30 a.m. to 8:30 a.m., when the office was open but they had no desk, they got caught up with their work.
Employees of Liberal Arts and Sciences departments that use the center's word processing system worked nights and weekends. Kreighbaum said that people in the sociology department worked weekends, and others in the physics department worked nights.
Dick Winternote, executive director
of the University of Kansas Alumni Association, said employees in the Alumni Association's records department worked during their regular lunch breaks when students were not enrolled in lunches or break when commuter time was up.
Early enrollment put the Alumni Association a little behind on correcting alumn records, but there is always a record updating to be done by UPVA.
LINDY EARIN, assistant to the dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, said that early enrollment put a pressure on the program's budget preparations for the College.
He said he was planning on working at the Academic Computer Center during the three days the University would be closed. Dec. 27 to 30, so he could finish his salary calculations for professors.
Legislators sav budget crisis may force decisions
Fears of an empty state treasury may produce one of the most productive legislative sessions in recent years. Three state legislators said yesterday.
The budgetary crisis, which many observers call the result of a prolonged national recession, has forced legislators to increase studies in preparation for improving the state's revenue sources.
By BRUCE SCHREINER Staff Reporter
To avoid a long-term budgetary crunch, the Legislature will have to choose one of two options when it meets with the laid State Rep. Mike Hayden. R-Atwood
"I think the immediacy of the situation will force us to be more productive in this session than in past meetings," he expected to be elected House Speaker.
"There are two ways we can approach this. One side of the alternative is no new taxes, which will mean substantial cuts in several programs. The other side is to increase taxes, or reduce them, with gasoline or tobacco," he said.
IN THE PAST, Hayden has said he would support a tax package that
included a severance tax on the production of oil and natural gas.
One local legislator said the continual draining of revenue might force the Legislature to enact several tax measures, including a new $20 million wait through lengthy debates as usual.
State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, said several ailing programs, especially in the Department of Social and Rehabilitation Services, should give legislators more incentive for their conservation of revenue-raising proposals.
Accelerating withholding tax payments made by employers is one option Branson thinks will pass early in the session. Payments now are made on a quarterly basis, but a majority of employers are monthly payments, Branson said.
"ONCE THE payments were on a monthly basis, it would bring in a great deal of revenue at a faster rate," she said. "During this year's first quarter, $60 7 million was raised, but it came in only about $15 million we would pull in about $30 million."
"Several other states are already doing this, and I don't anticipate any problems when we consider it."
Branson said other options awaiting legislative action included a severance tax, on which Gov. John Carlin is expected to center his recovery program, and increases in the sales and incomes taxes.
SRS's severe budget squeeze may persuade legislators to step up consideration of the severance tax, which may seal the controversial tax's passage after two years of failure, Branson said.
"I think the great needs of the poor, with the lack of food and the need for warmth, may put more pressure on the Legislature to pass a severance tax," she said.
STATE SEN. August Bogina Jr., R-Leneca, also said an attempt to speed up withholding tax payments would pass early in the session. But he said he will prevail in intense legislative scrutiny, destroying chances of a quick passage.
member of the Senate Ways and Means Committee. "This requires a lot of study and research before we do anything. No one likes to pass taxes, but the fact of the matter is that we have to."
He said major tax bills would not be decided on before late February or early March.
"People are cautious about increasing taxes," said Bogina, who is a
Another quick way to shore up the budget, Bogina said, is for the Legislature to review appropriations made in the last session. He said such scrutiny could save SRS a substantial amount of money.
"We will probably resort to reappropriate work early. We are probably going to look at other agencies, such as Parks and Recreation and the Historical Society," he said. "These programs are desirable and necessary, but they are not as critical for life-sustaining like SRS."
Alan Blinder, Princeton professor of economics, will give his assessment of current national economic policies and predictions on the economy. He is benedict. He will address the 12:30 luncheon in the Union Ballroom.
of the KU Institute for Economic and Business Research, said Blinder was a middle-of-the road Keynesian economist. John Keynes, a British economist who led the government's fiscal policies that would increase employment.
Conference registration will start at 9 a.m. in the fifth-level lobby of the Union, Chancellor Gene A. Budig, at the opening session at 9:45 a.m.
Redwood will speak at 10 a.m. on Kansas economic developments. His speech will focus on problems inhibiting further growth and on potential policy measures that could encourage further expansion.
Redwood said that although he did not know what either speaker would say, an effort had been made to invite speakers with differing views.
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One of President Reagan's economic officials and a Princeton University economics professor will give their views on the economic situation Dec. 10 at the annual Kansas Economic Outlook Conference in Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union.
KU to host conference on future of economy
ANTHONY REDWOOD, director
Manuel Johnson, assistant Treasury secretary for economic policy, will speak at 11 a.m. on the administration's projections for 1983 and will preview national economic plans.
FALL
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Now buying back Books!
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On top of Naismith Hill
The event will be at 6:30 p.m. in the Kansas Union Ballroom, and will feature Voice di Camera, a madrigal singing group from Lawrence, and the Plymouth Congregational Church bellringers in a program of feasting, singing and ringing in Christmas, said Irene Carr; SUA program advisor.
Student Union Activities will celebrate the holiday season with its annual Madrigal Dinner on Thursday, SUA officials said recently.
Carpenters Hall in London still is the site of regular meetings of the Madrigal Society, founded there in 1741.
Madrigal singing combines several
independent voice parts so that each is its own song and yet all the parts combine for a pleasant sound. It originated in Italy and was brought to England during the 1500s, where it became a popular Christmas tradition.
SUA schedules Madrigal Dinner show
Carr said the dinner also would feature another Christmas tradition, the wassail bowl and flaming plum pudding.
Tuesday Night Special
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Offer good November 30 only, 4pm - close
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Compare to $96.00 for general public season tickets. Tickets may be purchased at Allen Field House Ticket Office.
STUDENT SINGLE GAME TICKETS
Student single game tickets may be purchased on Monday the week of the game. Only 500 student single game tickets, at $3.00, will be sold for each game. After the 500 tickets are sold, tickets will be $6.50 or $7.50 for a doubleheader. (This includes Kansas State and Missouri)
BUY A SEASON TICKET AND BEAT THE LONG LINES AND HIGH PRICE OF A SINGLE GAME TICKET
For information call: ATHLETIC TICKET OFFICE 864-3141
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1
Page 10 University Daily Kansan, November 29, 1982
]
Four held in jewelry store robbery
Four St. Louis residents were being held in the Douglas County jail yesterday on charges of aggravated robbery in connection with an armed robbery Saturday at Kizer-Cummings Jewelers, 800 Massachusetts St.
Claudia Lane, 26, was held on $25,500 bond with an additional charge of possession of marriana. Delvin Larry Burton, 37; were held on $50,000.
bond for aggravated robbery charges, a jail official said.
Jail officials said the four would be arraigned today or tomorrow.
Police said the store was robbed of jewels and cash about 5:15 p.m. Saturday after three people — two males and a female — entered the store at 3:28 p.m., the 357-caliber revolver to rob the store. Police would not estimate the value of
the jewels and cash.
No shots were fired and no one was injured in the incident.
After Lawrence police released descriptions of the suspects to other law enforcement officials, the Kansas Highway Patrol apprehended the four suspects on Kansas Highway 7 and 10 about 6 p.m. Saturday.
Police said the cash and jewels were recovered.
Plans continue on bus depot move
By DOUG CUNNINGHAM Staff Reporter
The Lawrence City Commission last week allowed planning to continue on a proposal to move the city's bus depot from its present location at 638 Madison streets St. to a site at the Baltimore corner of Sixth and Michigan streets.
The decision followed a lengthy discussion about the city's "existing list of record" ordinance. The proposed site was planned for 1984, and it not been an existing list of记录.
An existing lot of record is one that was on file with the Register of Deeds Office as a separate piece of land before January 23, 1973, the date an amendment to city ordinances went into effect, said Price Banks, director of the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Office.
To be an existing lot of record, the lot also could not have, in 1973, any underdeveloped land next to it that was owned by the same person, Banks said.
THE COMMISSION three weeks ago approved a site plan for the bus depot, which meant that plans to move the depot could proceed.
The commission then received a letter from the Old West Lawrence Association that said the site plan had been approved and that what the approval should be rescinded.
The neighborhood association contended that the lot was not listed separately in official records until 1978, therefore was not an existing lot of record.
Dennis Constance, 817 Tennessee St., representing the neighborhood association, said at last week's meeting the group will be considered an existing list of record.
Mayor Marc Francisco said recently that one reason the site plan had been approved was that the lot was then thought to be an existing list of record.
The commission accepted the staff report that said the lot was first listed separately in 1939, and therefore met the requirements of the ordinance.
Commissioner Nancy Shortz asked that the ordinance be reworded to be more consistent.
Banks said he thought it would not be difficult to do that if the commission wished.
The commission also discussed the proper height for curbs on city streets. Duane Schwada, representing the Mastercraft Corporation, 1927 Moodie Rink, 805 East 6th Street, two weeks ago to accept a final plat of 10 acres on 22nd Street Court.
A FINAL plat outlines access to the land and shows when he lets the mob move.
The commission two weeks ago deferred action on the plat because if the plat had been accepted, the street right-of-way, including the street and curbs that had already been privately built. would also have been accepted.
The street has four-inch curbs, known as roll-back curbs, which can be driven
City Manager Buford Watson said that those curbs were not standard according to city regulations.
Shontz said the four-inch curbs should not have been put in without prior commission approval.
THE COMMISSION, however, last week accepted the plat, which means the curbs will not have to be replaced because the curbs found in other parts of the city.
The commission also approved, on emergency passage, an ordinance that will allow taxicabs in the city to charge a flat rate without using a meter.
City ordinances presently state that all taxicabs must have meters.
The commission also heard a report from Watson that it will not have to advertise for bids to remove the train from the train in Cental Park.
The city decided several weeks ago to remove the insulation, which contains a small amount of asbestos; because then had been pulling it out of the train.
HOWEVER, PLANS to have city workers remove it were shelved after the city discovered that removing it might be too hazardous.
But Watson said last week that Fire Chief Jim McWain had investigated the site and had determined that city firefighters could remove the insulation using special hazardous-material suits the fire department recently acquired. In other business, the commission authorized the expenditure of up to $5,000 of Community Development money to provide kits for low- and moderate-income people to weatherize their homes.
Boysd Coins-Antiques
Clara Bags
Boysd Cake Pads
73
Gold-Silver Coins
New Hampshire
New Jersey-Watchdogs
Lewisburg, Kansas 842-8773
ACADEMY
IN MAIN
ECONOMICAL CARS & ECONOMICAL RATES
OUR BRIETLY
15 PASSENGER VAN AVAILABLE
808 W. 24
841-0101
The
COMPUTER STORE
1000 Iowa
841-0366
ACADEMY
ARNIM NATHAN
ECONOMICAL CARS * ECONOMICAL RATES
OUR SPECIALTY
15 PASSENGER AVAILABLE
SOR W 24
841-0101
MS
IGGY
POP
THURSDAY
842-9549
Prepare For: Jan. '83 EXAM
GMAT
"Magic is the Music"
Soft Rock, Less Talk FM 108
For more information call Kathie Funk 272-2122
Prepare For: Jan., '83 EXAM
GMAT
For details and references:
Stanley H. KAPLAN
Educational Center
1271 PREPARATION
WASHINGTON, DC 20024
For information on the GMAT:
Classes begin 1st week
at: 12120 W. 61st St.
Austin, TX 78705
Prepare for: Jan. '83 EXAM
GMAT
Stanley H. KAPLAN
Educational Center
1250 Shrimp Drive, KS 68204
Fax Preparation
(705) 832-3934
For information call (705) 832-3934
Telephone: 917 7147 Fax: 705 832-3934
A Singing Chocolate Delivery
Surprise someone with a gift of chocolates delivered by a singing elf!
The perfect touch for a special person or family.
A gift that lasts longer than the candy itself.
For only $112, you can have a singing chocolate delivery between 1-8pm and 7-9pm any day before Christmas.
Call us or stop in for more information.
Chocolate Unlimited
1601 W. 23rd • Southern Hills Center
749-1100 Open Evenings
KMAJ
MAJIC
108
Rent it. Call the Kansan.
Chocolate
Unlimited
1601 W 23rd • Southern Hills Center
749-1100 Open Evenings
A Singing Chocolate Delivery
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from
HEWLETT-PACKARD
the best suprises come
in small packages
HP 41C
$164.95
HP 41CV
$224.95
limited quantities—shop early! sale ends 12/10/B2
HP 41C $164.95
HP41CV $224.95
limited quantities-shop early! sale ends 12/10/82
KUY
kansas union bookstores main union level 2, satellite shop
Cars should be ready for cold
Although November temperatures have been unseasonably mild, car owners should not neglect preparing cars for the cold winter months ahead.
By DONNA KELLER
Staff Reporter
Engines are harder to start in cold weather, snow and sleet reduce visibility, and slippery roads interfere with normal tire grip.
Jim Warren, owner of Straight Arrow Auto Service, 920 E. 28th St., said there were several parts of a car the owner could get to fix. The firm works for the freezing temperatures ahead.
"The main thing is to check the antirefire," Warren said.
IT SHOULD be clean, and the concentration should be from 50 to 60 percent to protect the radiator from
temperatures to 34 degrees below zero,
he said.
An insufficient amount of antifreeze can cause permanent and expensive damage to the engine, such as a crack in the engine block.
The owner should test the battery for its charging strength and make sure the terminals are clean, he said. The owner should be sure the lights and windshield wipers were working properly, Warren said.
He said the automatic transmission fluid level should be checked four times a year. The fluid should be changed yearly, he said.
Car owners should also check exhaust systems for holes in the muffler.
A car's oil and oil filter should be changed every 2,000 to 3,000 miles, and the car should b lubricated, he said.
CARBON MONOXIDE fumes can come up through the floorboard and get trapped inside a car when the windows are rolled up, Warren said.
Daryl Dwyer, owner of D and D Tire,
1000 Vermont St., said car owners
should do seasonal preventive maintenance.
Warren said snow tires were more convenient than tire chains, but that either one would help drivers get around on slippery roads.
Dwyer said all of a car's belts and hoses should be checked for wear, and replaced if necessary.
Car owners may want to have these checks by a professional mechanic.
GAWWONS
GAWWONS
GAWWONS
"If you don't have snow tires, you'd better think about it," he said.
WELL WHAT DO YA KNOW? THERE THEY GO. MOODY'S COPIED US AGAIN.
WE REST OUR CASE . . .
. . END OF DISCUSSION
"Most people aren't able to do everything themselves," he said. "But you know whether your car is in good shape or not."
- SMAGORKIN -
THE CASTLE
TEA ROOM
commodore
COMPUTER
Computerark 841-0094
808 W. 24th
phone: 643-1151
comprehensive health
comprehensive
for first pregnancy test
memorize
for first abortion treatment
remember
referral
overland Park, KY 45210
Overland Park, KY 45210
POWER PINCH
A film about Sexual Harassment
Tuesday, November 30 7:30 pm Walnut Room Kansas Union
火警电话
Learn how to identify, prevent, and confront unwanted sexual advances in working and learning environments.
PRESENTED BY THE EMILY TAYLOR YOMEN'S RESOURCE CENTER 864-3552
Applications are now being accepted for the University of Kansas Student Senate Staff
- Administrative Assistant
- Executive Secretary
- Chairperson, Student Senate Executive Committee
- Treasurer
- Associated Students of Kansas Campus Director
If you are interested in working in student government, if you have organizational and leadership skills, if you have the desire to serve in a student leadership position, investigate these opportunities.
Applications are available for these salaried positions in the Student Senate Office, 105 B Kansas Union and are due by Friday, December 3, at 4:00 p.m. Interviews will be held December 6, 1982. If you have questions call 864-3710.
(paid for by Student Activity Fee)
1
1
University Daily Kansan, November 29, 1982
Page 11
Winless Rams defeat Chiefs
Wendell Tyler tushed for a pair of touchdowns and former Kansas Jayhawk LeRoy Irvin turned in a dazzling 62-yard punt return for another score yesterday to lead the previously winless Los Angeles Rams to a 20-14 victory over the Kansas City Chiefs at Anaheim, Calif.
The triumph marked just the second victory in the last 11 games for the Rams, 1-3, dating to last season. The Chiefs are also 1-3.
Irvin's punt return at 11:06 of the period turned out to be the winning touchdown. He fielded the ball on one hop on the Rams' 37, swept around right end and sprinted untouched into the end zone to make the score
KANSS CITY made the score 20-14 with 11-07 left in the game when Steve Fuller drilled a perfect pass through three defenders into the arms of J.T. Smith in the end zone for a 35-yard scoring play.
Elsewhere, Minnesota ripped Chicago, 35-7; Washington topped Philadelphia, 13-9; Cincinnati defeated the Los Angeles Raiders, 31-17; the New York Jets edged Green Bay, 12-13. St. Louis upset Atlanta, 12-13; Buffalo blanked Baltimore, 20-0; New England downed Houston, 29-21; New Orleans shocked San Francisco, 23-20; San Diego defeated Denver, 30-20; and Seattle blanked Pittsburgh 16-0. Beaten Miami is at Tampa Bay tonight.
o7.7 The Chiefs blocked the extra point attempt.
Kramer, who entered the game with a paltry completion average of 49.5 percent and just three touchdowns, ripped the Bears for five scoring attempts, leading three to White, in leading the Minnesota Vikings to the rout.
turned at Minneapolis, Tommy Kramer
at his season abroad with the help
of some porous work by the Chicago
defense.
IN THURSDAYS' games, Dallas
wrapped Boston and the New
York Giants in Detroit. 137
and 128.
Ken Riley raced 56 yards for a touchdown with the first of his three interceptions and Pete Johnson rumbled for 123 yards to spark Cincinnati past the previously unbeaten Raiders. Marc Allen, the Lauren's prize rookie back, was limited to zero yards in eight rushing attempts.
Charlie Hawkins and Moseley added field goals of 45 and 43 yards for the
Pat Leahy, who earlier missed two extra point attempts and a field goal try, hit a 25-yard field goal in the final quarter. The Rangers defeated the Fakers their first loss.
Ottis Anderson topped the 100-yard mark for the first time this season with 122 yards, including a 20-yard touchdown, to spark the Cardinals. The
EX-BALTIMORE running back Roosevelt Lea scored twice and Joe Cribs ran for 103 yards to pace Buffalo, 3-1, over the winless Colts before a turnover in the Colts. The Colts, 4-4, failed to cross midfield during the entire game.
cardinals, who evened their record at 2-2, withstood a last-minute Atlanta drive that saw the Falcons Mick Cawley and the Giants go goal attempt with a second left to play.
Ken Stabler passed for one touchdown and set up two other scores in a driving rain at Candlestick Park to snork, the Saints.
Dan Fouls connected with tight end Kellen Winslow for three touchdowns and passed for more than 300 yards for a record 27th time to lead the Chargers.
The University Daily
KANSAN WANT ADS
Call 864-4358
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five six seven eight nine ten eleven twelve thirteen十四十四十五十六十七十八十九二十二十三十二十四五十六七十八十九十一十二十三十四十四十五十六十七十八十九二十二十三
AD DEADLINES
ERRORS
to run
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Friday 5 p.m.
Thursday Friday 5 p.m.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or simply by calling the Karma business office at 804-4358.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Do you need cash? Bring your unwanted merchandise to the Lawrence Community Auction. Every Wednesday, 7 p.m.; Consignments accepted Tuesday through Friday, 8 a.m., p: 700, West Calligan Hall; 642-211-92 for information.
Business Staff Positions
The Kansan is now accepting applications for Spring Semester business staff positions. Application forms are available in the B. Kansan Office, 320 South Dearborn Union; in the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 220 Strong Hall; in Room 119 Flint Hall; and in Room 200 Flint Hall. Completion may be by November 20, 200 Flint Hall by 5:00 p.m. Tuesday, November 30.
The University Danish Kansan is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Employment Employee. Applications are sought from all qualified people with a foreign national origin, sex, disability, veteran status, national origin, age or ancestry.
ENTERTAINMENT
For those special unique gifts, shop at SPINSTER'S BOOKS. Lawrence's women womens and children's books are in stock. We have books, records, cards, buttons, pockets, 18ths, etc. December hours are T-14-8.
SURROGATE MUTHERS needed for Hagar institute for infertile couples. Artificial intracranial process. Women must be healthy, 71. Kansas residents, must have given birth to healthy child or children. Medical expenses and liaison fees. Children. Call 318-235-134. Hagar Institute, Topeka.
SEE
BLAKE EDWARDS
VICTOR
Victoria
P/G
Reprint from
NCM Limited Artists
810 232 6050
012345 ABCDEF GHIJKLMNO PQRS TUVWXYZ
IN CINEMASCORE
THIS WEEKEND
FROM UFS
FOR RENT
1 bedroom furnished apartment for sublease
December 18, 2012/month, cable for $5, water paid
Swimming pool, ample parking, close to shopping
1770 W. 2nd; Call 340-9014
2 br. kitchen for sublease in J. 1000 $4LL
UTILITIES PAID 915庐溪庄, no pets. 841-1900-
seat. PAID 915庐溪庄, no pets. 841-1900-
seat. porch porch yard. Crestine Dr. nr. Hillier
shopping. Available now $750 plus (1) deposit.
SPRING SEMESTER
Enjoy carefree living at affordable prices. Spacious studios, 1 & 2 bedroom apts. Carpeted, draped and on the busline.
The Luxury of Meadowbrook
Is Just Right For You
meadowbrook
15th & Crestline
842-4200
SPRING SEMESTER
COX2 3 bedroom apartment Most sublease Jan 1
caught to curb; April 8, 7208 or 749-2094
**NZNEWS REPLIANCE** 52 Bedroom apartment in investment year old duplex. $800/month placement. 942-763-1211.
EXTRA space apartments, large and small. Next to campus. Utilities paid reasonably. 843-415-835.
Efficiency apartment 2 blocks from Union. All utilities paid. Call 841-6377 5 p.m.
Female roommate needed in a two-bedroom furnished duplex. Available Dec 17, $16/month. Debt月末
Hamlet Townhouses. 2 HI furnished and a unfurnished
room available. Only three beds from campus at 1986
for three. Only 3 beds from campus at 1986
for one.
Homeowners wanted. Enjoy a relaxed co-operative living experience, reasonable rates and close to campus too! Call Sunflower House 823-9421.
*srv.* Utilities included. Close to
to campus apartment. Visit www.House-842-931.
Huge 2 bedroom apt. 800s. Includes cloze to campus. Possibility of working for rent. 842-296.
I got an apartment to sublease or rent. It is available 1st & 1st located on 6th St. at Gaightap! Apartment 79-4168.
We and we would something out, 79-4168.
Jam suburban - beautiful, new two bedroom duplex on edge of campus $235 plus utility bills (killing the noise)
LUXHYIX NEAR KU RW Meadow Condo 2.
KBT, LYING, coring, UERA, dustwasher, food-
dispenser.
Lease app. C4 Applicant: 3-bedroom, heat/AC and water leak C4-8162200 814-5138
What are your plans for next semester?
an appointment to see him We prefer graduate students or mature adults.
2400 Alabama
Houghton Place is full but we will have a few studies and one-bedroom apartments available for January occupancy. Why not call for an appointment to see now? We prefer graduate students or mature adults.
841-5775
Male rooms must be used to share 2 bedroom apart at
cost of $165 a month. Room will be $180 a month,
water & gas paid cath.
Metacrawlwork. Furnished studio, available on
Metacrawlwork if rented by December 18th.
Tickets if rented by December 17th.
One one-bedroom, one bath apt with range
refrigerator and dishwasher. Good location $850, all
rooms have a window.
PRINCETON PLACE PATIO APARTMENTS. Now Available, 2 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms for roommates, feature wood burning fireplace, 2 car garage with windows and outdoor furniture, a kitchen, quiet surroundings. no p lease $425 per month. Open house 9-30:30 daily at 220 Princent Inn, or phone 812-2575 for additional rates.
Quail Creek Apartments suitesailen Two bedrooms, bath, balcony, quilt. Mid-December December 1968 $600
For rent for plus utilities. Kitchen privileges, washer, dryer. References. No pets. Smoker is not permitted.
Naismith Hall
Stay Warm This Winter With
1800 NAISMITH DRIVE
843-8559
- Private Sleeping Study Areas
* Counseling
Individually - Thermostatically Controlled Heat
*Fourteen Meals Per Week
Air Conditioning
SPACIOUS Meadowbrook bookstore available for sublease Jan. 1 at REDUCED RENT. Full carpeted and furnished. Close to campus. Water and cable TV. Meadowbrook. Meadowbrook at a low price $82.634 after 5 months.
Rooms for women in nice room, share utilities. No pets, no smoker, no kink room. KU # 823-683.
Sublease nice, 1 br. apt., completely furnished
Available in Dec. or Jan. Close to Jane. 749-365-
Sublease beautiful 1-bedroom apartment in quiet
Location. Low利率优惠. Bills available. I Call
749-626
*Private Baths
Versatility in Payment Plans
Wish Pricing With A Real
SOUTHERN PARKWAY TOWNHOUSES, with a kiosk if you need to buy or swap equipment. Room 1509 has all appliances, attached garage, swimming pool, full kitchen, and weekly call. Call 749-2630 (evenings) or weekend (for inquiries).
High Price Living with A C
And An Active Social Calendar
*Free Utilities
Sublue newly decorated 4 bedroom townhouse
Reduced rate. Call 843 9248.
*High Rise Living With A Pool
smash 2 l house t b! bl, no camp, Completely in-
side. storm garage storage Available Devil. Deposit
on delivery.
Sublease nice 2 br 1 plan 1½马地暮bowland Water/gas/kapl pd. available now Call 749-1210 Sublease large 1 bedroom apartment. One to two people on bus route, B543-859-259.
Sundance apartments - furnished one-bedroom apt for sublet beginning Dec 15 or earlier. Water paid, $245/mi. 841.3255 1-3. 1609 Lynch Court 4, next to the Sanctuary.
Thief of doing all the housework? Check out Sunflower cooper, secure, clean and keep it tidy.
Vacations for Spring semester in the Kokomo Christian College will be available for information contact the CEM Center 1203.
We cater to student needs. Ask about our special arrangements for Semester Break! 1 and 2 bedroom apartments available with laundry facilities and paid cable TV. Semester leaves. Walk to class.
NICELY DECORATED spacious room. Furnished
8pt utilities paid. Nearest University, Downtown,
Oakland. FREE WiFi. SALON SUITE OUTSTANDING TOWNHOUSE 2 br.1/8ft.
LBH, DLH, BM, kitchen, w/gardens, appliances.
FREE WIFI. A/C. $59/month.
Hawser Place - Completely furnished one bedroom apartments available immediately. Located betw. 14th and 15th on Mass. Only 3 beds from KU and 2 beds from $30 per month water bid. 941.1212 or 824.450.
FOR SALE
WAM! room quiet, one block from Union. Clean habits, no pets, 5 a.m. p.m. 1209 Ohio.
1973 Maycerr, good shape, run but engine needs
rebuilding. 1974 Gahman, excellent condition.
1975 Gahman Curtiss, excellent condition.
suxetro, AM/FM stereo, engine completely overhailed, asking $1275, moll tell, call 84-409-9143. 1944 Hosta Civic, economic runs great, AM/FM stereo, cassette, new trees,价位 acceptable
1976 Dutton 2002 Z Plus 2 Extra clean, no surface
super mic M must see! Call 749-2631 Keep 1976
1000 Sturni, 4 cyl., automatic, air conditioned,
new arrival AM/FM cassette, 35,000 miles, $150
to rent.
1981 Honda Civic Hatchback (1300 DX). Like new.
Must sell $49.80 842-1500
60' gas cook oven $50.00 bass guitar and 15' piggy bank bass amplifier $200.00 Will sell separate instruments
71 Ford Mercury "Murquio" THE BEST DEAL IN TOWN A Reliable, affordable, and in excellent condition car. Excellent x8 brakes, new brakes, high mileage, 20" tires. First care. Call 749-3311 s p m . f t.
79 Ford Truck, VW automatic, AM 42,000 miles, very
clean. $419.75 749-041 and 814-607
Add 500 server terminal, usable with KU. Must
sell works perfect. Call Rollback 768-9000.
Addin 892 computer, must sell, doesn't work. Good quality.
Price negotiable. Call Roohi 749-9600.
fortem 10 a.m. THEE FARM Beautiful Pill Hill Farm will be open the week after Thanksgiving and will be open from 10 a.m. to county high Bldg. cut your own free tree from our pine forest. Drive at highway 10 $4 mi. to county High Bldg. turn right and drive
Closely dryer. Remonture电器, brand new, white Debbie 842-8642 by 6:10 p.m.
For Sale Trade-To-Order Intel SIDK 86 system design kit
for sale. **£595** (SAVE £175) + £100 off **$300** offer
* $200 offer * 1-798-6286 * McLeatha
dial it for you, I want to sell you an $18 Suitcase
and a dress. Everything in real good condition.
$250 & store credit.
KWALITY.COMICS Heavy Metall, Cerebus,
Undergrounds, thousands of Marvels DC$, new arrivals every week, science fiction, gift certificate, extra low price on store specials. 822-780-911.
Olivetti electric typewriter w/ half space correction
key. (Like new) 841-7433
New crate amplifier in excellent condition and gold
titanium (Lee Paul copy) Three sidelocks used.
10" x 7" speaker.
FOUND
Scott SKi Boots. Ladies size 5, great condition. Only worn 12 days. Call Mary 641-1012
Two female roommates needed for a beautiful new made triples. Call Roshi in the evenings. 749-6080
Yamaha mk4 champion. Excellent condition, only 8 months old. Idle or best offer. 749-6084
TERMS NEGOTIABLE Two Naimain contracts for
both meal plan available. Call 844-1127 before
arriving.
LOST. Off-white leather jacket in Green Hall.
Reward offered: $41.794
$18. Calvin Klein $22. Jordache & more
$30. John Lewis $42. Jordache & more
$39. Nike & nightwear Good quality name brand
$50. H&M
2 keys on safety pin keyhacking. Found outside McColum Hall Call 843-7660 to identify
Ladies' watch in southern Hills parking lot. 749-2700 after 5 p.m.
LOST 10$ gold chain with Delta Gamma lavender brie-
lson. With deep sentimential value, record if returned.
With deep sentimental value, record if returned.
LOST on November 18th a HP-34C calculator
left for request. Phone 843-5421, ask for Terry
On Thursday, long-earl hound, male cat on Jafayek Bldg. Inquire at animal shelter, 645-885
Crypt-Types II. Duplicate inclusion receptionist, typing
40 wpm and record-kicking. 86-4758
HELP WANTED
NURSING: FULL-TIME/PART-TIME Are You Interested In - Weekend only work? - Elder day, even daytime. We offer one-hour shifts or a week or two week of 8 or 12 hour shift? These and other opportunities for registered nurses are now available at our location on Wednesday through three-week orientation. So even if you have been away from nursing we can help you be in your job as a registered nurse. We all work together and support each other in our careers. SHIFT DIFFERENTIAL BOURLY. Contact Beverly State RN, director of Nursing, Topka State Hospital, 270W 8th st. Worth, Tampa, Kansas
Graduate teaching assistant, 20 per week for stipend, and partial waivers of fees. Appointment with the Wichita State University A.J. Program located on the KU Campus, spring semester 1964-65. (806) 375-7500. www.wksu.edu
PERSONAL
Junior/Senior fraternity member to sell to other traitors and厌事ors Work own hours. Pew hours, excellent compensation. Steve Scott, at O.U., New York. Job offered by Unlimited. 18301 Daniels, Dallas, Texas. T3534
OVERSEAS JOBS: Summer/年假 Europe, USA,
Australia, Antigua. All Fields. Fees $1290 one-mon
day.
Part-time sales clerks wanted. Only hard workers need apply. Wine experience preferred. Inquire in person or call 516-876-2309. Freshmen. Scholarships available. It is not too late to enroll in Naval ROTC. Call 864-1361.
A Special For Students, Haircuts - $7 Perms - $82
Charmel 1631%! Max. 843-854 Ask for Dennie Jeeps.
A Strong Keg outlet - Bemit Retail Magnet Chilled
Wine-Kegs - ice-cold beer. 2 links, north of Memorial
A healthy body glows with invisible (to most eyes) energies at 8:30 a.m. on Friday and at ECKANKA open discussion group "Health and Spiritual Well-Being." Thursday, December 7, 2:30 p.m. Government's Room, Kannai
"BRASS BALLS." You know someone who needs them. Now you can give it to them. Send you name and address and 6636 to Total Concepts, 2008 Lawrence, LA; Lawrence 6634. Guillem's Christmas delivery
Battens, buttonage style, custom made for any occasion. 1 to 1000. Button art by Swells. 794-1611.
COMPENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES; early
recovery and discharge of patients who are
confidently assessment Kansas City Area City
plans.
ken's PIZZA
the pizza that brings you back
FREE DELIVERY
COUPON
offers expires 12/6/92
843-7405 27th & Iowa
can't see it to find your favorite bottle of wine? Benedictine Selection includes over 100 bottles of wine. Selection
Don't get mad, get even. Send the "Bitter Bottle"
Wilded, delivered downloads, Phone 81-6255.
for something special with a touch of charm from the past - step by step at Vintage's Vintage Mass. Museum in New York City. $75.00
Friday, Margarita $1.2% HAPPY HOUR 9:34!
Saturday, Margarita $1.5% on P/O only, Up & Under
Johanna's Johnsons & Dave's
trailing edge of the college, student seats occupied by a female instructor. student confidency to Boss 905 (G) D'Anna is confirmed to Boss 905 (G) D'Anna.
HEADACH, BACKACHE, STIPF NECK, LEG PAIN! Find and correct the CAUSE of the call! Dr. Mark Johnson for modern chiropratic care! Accepting Blue Cross, and Lone Star
West Coast Saloon
POOL TOURNAMENT
EVERY MONDAY
1st — Trophy
2nd — $10.00
3rd — 12 pack
Register by 8:30 P.M.
tournament starts at 9:00 sharp!
2222 Iowa
841-BREW
July Olero now styling hair at the Charmy Salon,
1035 Masse, or 2 for $14.92 or 102.86
for $18.92
fast-tassel passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization,
immigration visa, ID, and of course fine portraits.
KAPPA PHI Ceramics Classes for University women. Sponsored by Kappa Phi: Call 043-8657 Tuesday, 7 p.m.
Looking for that imaginative Christmas gift? Try CARTOON-GRAM. Posterize, full color, hand-delivered. Put that special person in cartoons for Christmas! #41-8335.
Monday, Kambazas 70, 5:3 PAYM HOUR 2 (or 1,
7 Up & Under above Johnny's Tavern.
KWALITY COMICS Heavy Metall. Cerebus Undergrounds, thousands of Marvels DC's, new rivals every week, science fiction, gift certificates, extra low prices on in-store packages, 847210 W21
New nylon bag, men's rubber book, winter coats,
hatts, hats, scarfs, household books, books,
bartz, Barts Second Hand Rose, 515 Indiana,
402-876-346
PICTURE FRAMES. LARGE stock of pre-made and photo frames. Look for 15% off coupon in Wed, Dec. 1. Kaman. LANDIS DAVIS PAINT 918 Mass. 8436141.
PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTHRIGHT
843-8921.
a student wanted from JEEM concert 11-16-82 at
Birmingham Public Library 1452-7600
SKELETER CURSES. We present a 1 week itinerary for SKELETER CURSES. We preserve the Classic Course, the Continental Course with Summer Tours and the Coastal Course with Summer Tours.
the Bahamas? Rask in sunshine,ipina pina
cadruy, let us the casinos; for your most unfortunate
Christmas break ever! Package prices
personal week, Bahamas Went of KC.
764-756-1
Say it on a shirt, custom silicone printing. T-shirts, team and coats. Swirl by Sturtles 794-1611.
Strainer Wine & Keg Shop The finest selection of wines in Lawrence. largest supplier of strong kegs
Skillset's finger swear U-Daily since 1949. Come in and compare. Wilfried Skillset 2006 Max
Dorsten Tellemanne. Video Recorders Name:
Dorsten Tellemanne. Video Recorders Name:
Dorsten Tellemanne. Video Recorders Name:
Dorsten Tellemanne. Get your passport, then call Toll
and leave in the K.C. Airport. Your passport, then call Toll and leave in the K.C. Airport. Your passport, then call Toll and leave in the K.C. Airport.
Thursday : House Stuart "Down & Out" 7:15-10:49 HA-IP for 1 or 8.9, Up & Under above Johnny Tavern.
The Knotger-Weekly Species on Reqn! Call 841-9450/
100% W/ $300.
Friday, January 7 Night 11 Highlands 7.3, Up &
Ground above Johnsons' Hayward HAIPV 8.2
Saturday, January 8 Night 12 Highlands 7.3, Up &
Ground above Johnsons' Hayward HAIPV 8.2
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KANSAN
Take advantage of this form and save yourself time and money while still receiving the satisfaction of placing your ad in the Kanasa. Just mail this form with a check or money order payable to the Kanasa to: University Delaware, 118 Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS 60845. Uses below to figure costs.
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eve.
Page 12 University Daily Kansan. November 29. 1982
Ben Bieler/KANSAN
KANSAS 13
Junior Carl Henry goes up between two U.S. International defenders for two of his 31 points in Saturday's 91-74 victory. Henry will lead the Jayhawks tonight when they face Bowling Green at 7:35 at Allen Field House.
Tigers' victory over Tar Heels tops Big Eight season openers
By United Press International
Missouri's Greg Cavener found the key to making free throws and locked North Carolina, which won the NCAA in a shootout, into its second loss of the vince season.
"I've worked hard on free throws," Caverner said after sinking five in the final three minutes Saturday to lead No. 14 Missouri to a 64-60 upset triumph over North Carolina, whose record fell to 0-2.
At Las Vegas, Nev., Larry Anderson had 18 points and Sidney Green added
16 to lead the University of Nevada-Las Vegas over No 18 OKlahoma, 65-34, in a best-of-three series.
At Manhattan, Lafayette Watkins scored a career-high 16 points and returning starter Les Craft added 14 points to give Kansas State a 72-87 season-opening victory over Southern Colorado.
At Ames, Iowa, forward Barry Stevens scored 28 points and got help from the Iowa State bench to lead the victory over Nebraska Maha.
'Hawks host Bowling Green Kansas wins opener over USI
The Cyclones won their seventh straight home opener.
By GINO STRIPPOLI
Sports Editor
The Kansas Jayhawks, coming off a 91-74 victory over the U.S. International Gulls on Saturday, host the Bowling Green football tonight at 7:35 at Allen Field House.
Coach Ted Owens said that this game would be just another stepping stone for his young team.
"We have an eight-day period coming up where we play four games at home." Owens said. "It will give us a chance to grow into a basketball team. With as many young people as we have, we need the experience."
points and had a game-high eight rebounds, probably will be the first Jayhawk off the bench.
Owens will use the same starting lineup tonight that took the court on Saturday, Junior Carl Henry, who scored 31 points in 31 minutes against U.S. International, will lead the Jayhawks. He will be joined in the starting lineup by Michael Davis and Dishman and freshman Kerry Boagni at forward and Brian Martin at center.
In Bowling Green, the Jayhawks will face a more experienced team than they did in U.S. International. Head coach John Weinert's Falcons, who won their season onion on Saturday, 50-48, beat Detroit Pilkers, latermen, led by David Jenkins, 6-foot 5-inch guard, who averaged 13.7 points in game last year.
KELLY KNIGHT, who scored eight
The other two starting positions will be filled by Colin Irish, 6-6 junior forward, and Joe Harrison, 6-8 sophomore center.
Also returning for the Falcons are David Greer, 5-9 senior guard, 9.7 points a game; and Bain Fille, 6-7 junior forward, 9.4 points a contest.
In Kansas' opener, the Jayhawks struggled early, but had too much talent for the Gulls, who were playing their second game in two nights.
THE JAYHAWKS trailed 16-10 with just over 10 minutes left in the contest, then Henry, who was spectacular in the race, returned to 8:47 mark until Henry came out of the
The Gulls weren't done, however, they came out in the second half and closed the gap to 47-46 with 13-17 left in the contest. But then Henry took control again as he scored eight of Kansas' next 12 points and the rout was on.
game with 2:18 left in the first half, he scored 13 of the Jayhawks' 23 points to put the Jayhawks in the lead for good.
Henry ended the game with 12 of 19 shooting from the field and 7 of 10 from the line. He was joined in double figures by Andoagi and Boogni, who had 12 points each.
Nigel Lloyd, U.S. International guard, scored a game-high 34 points on 15 of 21 shooting from the field and four of five from the free throw line. Bill Morales added 13 points for the Gulls, who are now 0-9 on the season.
"It was obvious we didn't play as well as we can play." Owens said following the game. "I felt we weren't sharp warming up and when you let a team get in the game, it builds their confidence.
"There were some good things in the game. It just took some time."
DESPITE THE victory, there wasn't
much joy in the Kansas locker room following the game. Calvin Thompson's father, Horace Young, who was attending the game with his wife Katie and several family members, suffered a heart attack and died.
Young suffered the apparent heart attack in the first half and paramedics worked on him in Allen Field House for more than 20 minutes before he was moved to Lawrence Memorial Hospital, where he died.
Thompson, who scored five points and grabbed two rebounds, did not know of his father's condition until the conclusion of the game when he was notified that his father was seriously ill. He was then taken to the hospital, where his mother told him that his father had died.
"We didn't talk much basketball," he didn't in basketball just didn't seem that much.
Jayhawks drop two in Classic
"It it's obviously a pretty quick locker room," said Dishman, one of the Jayhawks co-captains. "We just have to sive Cal all the support we can."
By DAVE MCQUEEN Sports Writer
Thompson will not play in tonight's game with Bowling Green.
Sports Writer
Injuries continued to plague the KU women's basketball team as it suffered two lopsided losses last weekend at the Plainview Queen's Classic tournament in Plainview, Texas.
After receiving a first-round bye in the six-tournament, the Jayhawks, 0.3, were clobbered by host Wayland Baptist, 83-54, Friday. In theolation game Saturday, nationally renowned Stephen F. Austin punted KU, 94-62
But these weren't the only losses KU suffered. The Jayhawks added another name to their already long list of walking wounded when 6-foot-1 center Vickie Adkins, who sat out last season with a knee injury, separated a shoulder in the Wayland Baptist game. She is expected to be out for two weeks.
"We really got hurt on the boards." Washington said. "We just can't cut into their offense if we can't control the boards.
KU women's basketball coach Marian Washington said that inexperience and lack of a strong inside game hurt the Jayhawks. This was especially true in the Stephen F. Austin game, when he out-rebounded the Jayhawks, 63-33.
petition early in the season. We knew we were going to have some weakness inside, but our objective early in the season was to experience for our young players."
Against Wayland, Baptist, 5-10 guard-forward Angie Snider and 5-9 guard Angela Taylor scored 13 points each to lead the Jayhawks. In the Stephen F. Audubon game, Snider and 6-0 guard Barbara Adkins each scored 10 points.
behind these losses," Washington said. "We're getting a lot of experience in early, and we still have a conference call on Monday that has to keep everything in perspective.
Despite the scores, Washington didn't seem discouraged about her team's performance.
"I can't tell you how much progress this team has made so far. Stephen F. Austin hurt us early in the first half (they led 58-27), but we played them really well, and they're considered one of the quickest teams in the nation this year."
KU will play one more game in Plainview tonight when they take on Wayland Baptist in a regularly scheduled game.
"We had some pretty stiff com-
"There are some positive strokes
McEnroe notches 26th Davis win
GRENOBLE, France (UPI)—John McEnroe established himself as the second most successful Davis Cup player ever to perform for the United States when he won his match yesterday to complete a 4-1 American victory over France.
McEnroe defeated Henri Leconte, 6-2, 6-3. In the final match to boost his record in Davis Cup singles to 26 victories and three defeats. This moved him ahead of Bill Tilden's 25-3 record.
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M aadrigal dinner
M
The 9th Annual
madrigal dinner
Come with us to the 16th Century in Merrie Oide England and enjoy the charming dinner traditions of the Wassail Bowl, the strolling minstrels, and the madrigal singers.
Dressed in authentic costumes the members of the Lawrence Voci di Camera will bring to you the songs and traditions of medieval times.
The evening will begin at 6:30, December 2, 1982 Kansas Union Ballroom.
Cost is $10.50 General Admission and $10.00 with KU Student ID. For additional ticket information, please contact the SUA office at 864-3477.
We hope you will join us in this festive Christmas celebration.
Place a Kansan want ad. Call 864-4358.
---
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1
The University Daily
KANSAN
University of Kansas Lawrence. Kansas
Tuesday, November 30,1982 Vol.93,No.69 USPS 650-640
Poor of Lawrence quiet in daily struggle for life
Staff Reporter
By STEVE CUSICK
"For ye have the poor always with you ..."
Jesus Christ said in Matthew 26:11.
Within blocks of KU's topsider-trodden sidewalks, some people are eating dog food, and others are going without heat, social workers sav.
NOT ALL of Lawrence's low-income residents face such dire circumstances, but many do face a long, cold winter because they don't have the money to pay their bills, the workers said recently.
They are Lawrence's poor. Some are elderly—their limits weighted down by the yoke of poverty.
Although Lawrence has all the soci-economic trappings of a college town, with the University spread atop Mount Oreand like a middle-class dream, the poor are there, one of the workers
Susan Beers, coordinator for the Council on Community Services of Douglas County, regulates beers.
"Lawrence basically has no visible ghetto," she said. "Poverty is pretty well hidden in the community — being closed doors. Therefore, we have a hard time realizing there is poverty."
And she is not talking about student poverty.
SHE IS QUICK to cite examples: the elderly woman who before she died this year at one time lived on peach juice and bread — the day-old variety that costs a quarter a load.
Or a man in his 80s who receives $260 a month in Social Security but whose gas bills last winter were $150 to $200 a month. He was able to pay the bills only with the help of a local agency, the City of Chicago.
The man, who had lived his whole life in the
same house, had two choices: move to a senior citizen high-rise or no without heat, she said.
"For a man who spent a whole life in that house it would have killed him to move," she
"What's he going to do this winter? I know he's still alive."
And then there is the mother sending her children to school with bowls of flour-and-water gravy for lunch.
BEERS AND OTHER social workers in Lawrence have many anecdotes about people scraping to get by.
scraping to get by.
Capt. Robert Thomson of the Salvation Army Church said the poor often ended up at his church as a last resort to avoid going hungry.
And about 15 percent more people are seeking the Salvation Army's assistance this year than
Uniceen Beeches, who works at the church, said 43 people came to the church for help during a war.
Susan Beers, whose organization is an umbrella for 40 agencies, said the heads of some of these agencies were making similar reports more people need help.
Unfortunately, she said, the agencies may not be able to deliver this time as they have in the
"We CAN'T DO it anymore," she said. "We don't have the resources, the funds or the manpower."
Budgets of churches and social agencies are "strained to the maximum," she said.
The contributions from the community and the network of social agencies have made Douglas County one of the most progressive counties in the state, she said.
But "we've tapped everywhere," she said. "It's going to be real hard to go back to the city."
I think you're going to be seeing a lot of
Brad Bond, Lawrence senior, rescued a stray cat that was stranded in a tree in front of Strong Hall yesterday afternoon.
108
Paramedics treated Diane Mah, Topeka freshman, who was injured yesterday afternoon in a two-car accident at the corner of Naismith and Field House drives. Mah was taken to Lawrence.
Memorial Hospital, where she was treated for cuts on her head and released.
City staff sees hope for federal funds
By DOUG CUNNINGHAM Staff Reporter
Lawrence city officials who are attending the National League of Cities meeting in Los Angeles reacted favorably yesterday to President Reagan's suggestion that general revenue
The federal government now provides money through the revenue-sharing program to smaller units of government, such as Lawrence and other cities
Unless Reagan supports it, the revenue-sharing program probably will end Sept. 30, 1983, at the close of the 1983 fiscal year.
"IN THE 1896 campaign, I pledged support for general revenue sharing." Reagan said at the meeting. "I proposed full funding of general revenue sharing in fiscal years *$2 and $3*. And while I have made any final budget decisions, I will look at revenue sharing in the same light."
Lawrence City Commissioner Don Bims said, "I think that's the only positive statement
that he really made. But that in itself was encourag."
Brands, commissioner Tom Gleason, Mayor Marci Francisco, City Manager Buford Wafson and Mike Wilden, assistant city manager, are attending the meeting in Los Angeles.
Francisco said many city officials thought revenue sharing should be the start of Reagan's New Federalism package, which would return responsibility and money to state and local governments, and therefore were encouraged by Reagan's comments.
"I THINK HE WAS deeply cryptic in his remarks," she said. "I think he understands the lobbying effect that can be generated by him, but he also is not making a definite commitment."
Revenue sharing, if it is continued, needs to be more clearly outlined. Francisco said. A resolution asking Reagan for more specific ones to provide for the Finance Committee of the League, she said.
For example, the program should be authorized for a certain number of years so that cities will know whether they can expect revenue-sharing money, she said.
Both Binns and Francisco said that the League delegates had given Reagan only a polite reception.
"I DON'T THINK anyone is denying at this conference that there are problems," Francisco said.
Bims said, "I don't think he answered all of the questions of the National League of Cities."
Although Reagan said his administration would work actively early next year to enact the New Federalism package, Bimsa said many were apprehensive about its possible effects.
League delegates also discussed Reagan's proposal to increase the federal gasoline tax by 5%
Binns, however, said even that portion of the proposed increase might not be sufficient.
Some delegates thought that 1 cent of that proposed increase should be allocated to mass education.
FEDERAL MONIES for mass transportation already have been decreased by 25 percent, Binns said, and any money from an increase in the gasoline tax might not take up the slack.
Adkins prepares to leave presidencv
By DON KNOX Staff Reporter
There are no more Student Senate committee meetings these days for David Adkins to attend.
Adkins' Jawhay regalia no longer hangs from the walls of his office in the Kansas Union. A mound of letters has been neatly tucked into a few cardboard boxes. And a glass jar — filled with jelly beans — sits empty on the edge of his old desk.
It was only been 11 days since the 21-year-old Topeka senior officially finished his term as student body president at the University of Kansas.
BUT ADKINS SAID yesterday that he had few regrets about leaving KU's highest student office.
"Former student body presidents are interesting things," he said in the barren office of the student body vice president. "You have to tell a woman for a while tell the new people how they should run things."
'But my better judgment tells me to pull back
For Adkins, the past 12 months has been anything but calm.
It was a year in which a police investigation revealed that $20,423 was missing from KU on Wheels, the campus transportation system run by the Senate. Moreover, the Adkins administration announced earlier this semester that $4,000 inventory owned by the Senate could not be found.
AND ADKINS WAS widely criticized last spring for his support of a 20-percent tuition increase that will take effect next fall.
"The bus situation overshadows much of the year in many people's minds," he said. "Any time you have any hint of corruption, then you are going to have a serious image problem."
"But we faced those challenges head on. And I think we dealt with the problems on the most open and fair level possible."
Regarding the scheduled tuition increase, Adams said simply, "I think it is reasonable.
"I know many people would be shocked to hear that coming from the student body president.
And I don't deny that times are very, very tight. But students have to be willing to pay their fair share or else they jeopardize some of the best educational programs offered here."
BUT DESPIE THE problems that cropped up during his administration, Adkins praised the work of his office staff, as well as the support of the KU administration.
"There have been complaints that we have been nudging the posterior of the powers that be."
"The mission of this University is the training of young minds. But a lot of people feel threatened by the titles of the administrators. Students should be cautious, but they should also be encouraged to work with the likes of our chancellor."
The next Senate faces a myriad of financial problems compounded by a budget process that is far too complex to solve.
AMONG THESE PROBLEMS, Adkins said, is the inability of the Senate to stay within budget guidelines. He called the budget situation a serious mismanagement of Senate resources.
See ADKINS page 5
Town fights for chance to rebuild school
Rv MATTHEW SCHOFIELD
Staff Reporter
DORRANCE—Before Dorrance's three churches, two blocks of paved road or lone cave come into view, a brightly painted sign tells visitors of the town's pride in its high school.
'Home of the Fighting Cardinals'
However, the city of Dorrance and the fighting Cardinal are involved in a fight that is one of the larger
About 1 a.m., last March 8, Dorrance High School junior Eugene Watkins sets a small fire in the school building. He left the building, but intended to return, put out the fire and be seen as a hero, according to Dorrance Mayor Duane Sloan.
They are fighting for their lives.
HE SAID WATKINS fell asleep in his favorite chair at home, however, and did not awaken until the flames of his small fire had engulfed the building and damaged it beyond repair.
"The teachers are constantly having to move their classrooms out on the weekends," said Lee Terrant, principal and assistant superintendent. "Most of the time one of the teachers are starting to get frustrated."
All that remains of what was formerly the heart of Dorrance is a gymnasium, a vocational agriculture building and a patch of dirt and concrete.
So far this year, classes have been held in the City Building, the American Legion building and the Teen Center — all in downtown Dorrance — which is a school building, the gym and the yo-ag building.
FEN WITHOUT A school building, education trudges on in Dorrance. But because only 37 high school students live there, the school district has to ship them to Russell, about 18 miles away.
"You take the school out of any little town and it'll just dry up and blow away," said Athol Betts, a shopowner who has lived in Dorrance for 55 years and attended high school there.
Bets said Dorrance residents were willing to put forth the effort needed to build a new school in town, but the school district would not go along.
"We proposed that if they would let us have the insurance money, we would build a new school," he said. "We've already had enough pledges
from graduates to build a new building, but we're probably going to get nothing out of this.
THE INSURANCE on the building was worth about $160,000, and the town has raised another $60,000. The new building would cost about $220,000. he said.
The school board decided just an hour before the fire was set to allow the school to operate for another year. However, Betts said, many school officials have been against the school for many years.
"They've been proposing to close the school for years," he said. "They're going by this cost per pupil stuff. All the people that are really involved believe we should have the school back
But, Tarrant said, statewide reductions in education budgets have forced the district to move.
"If the building was here it would be a different thing," he said. "But it's not, and from the financial aspect it's not worth it to build a new one.
"ITS THE TYPICAL plight of the small town and the small school. Districts like 407 are going to have to look at whether they can keep these buildings in shape, but in this case we don't even have a building,"
Slian, also the high school's head teacher, said the quality of education was better this year than in 2015.
Tarrant also said the building that Dorrance's residents had opted for, which would be an insulated steel building with a brick front, no windows, and built into each room, would not be an adequate school.
DORRANCE WOULD LOVE its identity if the high school left, he said. He said he did not know how the closing of the school would affect the town in the long run.
"The community wouldn't be as close if we lose our high school," he said.
Jerry Brown, a senior at the high school who participated in all three of the school's sports for boys, said the smallness of the school made its students closer
"It's a job to get us all together, but I really believe it is a good school," he said. "We have good kids, they're trying really hard, and we are trying really hard to give a good education."
"I know every student in the school very well," he said. "If we lose the high school there will probably be a lot of disappointment. There are a lot of memories down here. The grade school kids are even involved with it. It's just like one big family."
Weather
STILL WARMER
STILL WARMER
Today will be partly cloudy and mild, and the high will be in the mid- to upper 55s.
individual service.
Tonight will be partly cloudy with a low in the mid- to upper 30%.
Tomorrow will be mostly cloudy with a chance for showers and a high in the 80s.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, November 30, 1982
News Briefs From United Press International
Crews start pumping water from damaged MX test cell
TULLAHOMA, Tenn—Air Force crews began pumping 600,000 gallons of water out of an underground MX missile test cell yesterday in order to recover the remains of three of the four men killed in a rocket fuel flash fire.
"We're pumping some water out now, but it's a very slow process," said Air Force Sgt. John Blackburn, spokesman at Arnold Engineering
The large pumps at the test site were damaged in the fire, he said, and smaller pumps were being put to use to drain the water used to fight the fire.
The men were killed while trying to remove 30,000 pounds of solid rocket fuel that fell into the cell after an MX missile stage II motor engine.
Air Force officials said the test cell was severely damaged and estimated it would take from one to three months to repair it.
Technicians had recovered about 20,000 pounds of the spilled fuel in the test cell Saturday when the volatile, rubbery substance ignited, causing a fire.
Court says Nixon can't silence tapes
WASHINGTON—The Supreme Court refused yesterday to help Richard Nixon keep the public from listening to 6,000 hours of his secret Oval Office tape recordings.
Without comment, the justices rejected Nixon's appeal of a ruling allowing the never-before-heard White House tape to be played for the
Nixon and others named or involved in the recorded conversations can still try to block their release on a tape-by-tape basis if they think that releasing the tapes would violate privacy rights or executive privilege.
Nixon has waged a lengthy legal battle against the General Services Administration's plan to let the public listen to the tapes, which cover his last 2½ years in office.
Only 31 tapes have been made available to the public so far. The tapes were introduced at the Watergate trials.
Court to review nuclear waste issue
WASHINGTON—The U.S. Supreme Court intervened yesterday in the controversy over waste from nuclear power plants, agreeing to consider a new regulation of atomic waste.
The justices made their announcement as Congress renewed debate on legislation to create a nuclear waste disposal system.
The House approved an amendment that would make it tougher for a state government to overturn any presidential selection of a place as a capital.
Some congressional sources thought the amendment weakened chances of House approval of the bill. The house version is a much more costly measure for industry than a Senate-passed version.
At issue is a Nuclear Regulatory Commission rule that assumes no radiation would leak from nuclear waste buried in salt mines, although none of it is being buried there now.
Mine explosion in Poland kills 18
BYTOM, Poland—A pre-dawn gas explosion tore through the most dangerous coal mine in Poland yesterday, killing 18 people and injuring nine others, officials said.
PAP, the official Polish news agency, said 16 people were killed immediately in the blast in Dymytr mine. Two victims died later in Ukraine.
A senior mining official said a fire broke out late Sunday in a passage about 2,648 feet underground, and rescue workers from five mines in the area received help.
Miners and officials consider Dymitrow, which has a bad safety record, the most dangerous coal mine in the country. Accidents have been reported.
"It is a dead man's mine," said one miner.
It is a dull man's name, and the image
The blast was the third serious accident at Dymitrow this year.
Power line falls on crowd, kills 29
NATAL, Brazil--At least 29 people were killed yesterday, some electrified and others hurried onto a barbed wire fence, when a high tension wire fell on a crowd watching rescuers pull bodies from a crashed van.
Another 80 people were injured, four or five of them seriously hospital reports showed.
The accident happened shortly after 5 a.m. in Igape, an industrial suburb in the northern coastal town of Natal.
An official in the police technical department said the accident happened when a small van belonging to the Esparta textile company crashed into a power post just outside its factory. Both the driver and his companion were killed.
Police arrived and a crowd of onlookers began to gather.
Senator says he wasn't offered bribe
One report said the line was carrying 69,000 volts when it fell, and the power company took three hours to turn it off.
CHICAGO—Sen, Howard Cannon testified yesterday in the bribery-conspiracy trial of Teamsters President Roy Williams and four others that he was never offered a bribe to stall trucking deregulation legislation.
Cannon, D-Nev., was the first defense witness called on behalf of the five men.
He said he met with Williams, co-defendant Allen Dorfman and Teamster attorney Edward Wheeler on Jan. 10, 1979, and mentioned he wanted to buy a piece of Las Vegas land that the Teamsters owned.
The meeting is a key in the case. Prosecutors argue Cannon was assured of the chance to buy the land if the trucking bill was sidetracked. Defense lawyers say Cannon merely was assured of a fair chance to bid on the land.
Cannon, Wheeler said, outlined Teamster concerns over Interstate Commerce Commission action on trucking deregulation.
Spy suspect enters not guilty plea
LONDON—A Canadian who allegedly once dined with then-KGB chief Yuri Andropov pleaded not guilty to spy charges yesterday while a former British diplomat was given a light sentence for passing official secrets to her Egyptian lover.
Canadian Hugh Hambleton was charged under the Official Secrets Act with two counts of spying — supplying a Russian agent with information from NATO and a more general espionage charge. He pleaded not guilty to both charges.
Earlier, Rhona Ritchie, 30, a former diplomat at the British embassy in Tel Aviv, was given a nine-month suspended sentence on charges she passed the contents of confidential telegrams to her lower, an employee at the Egyptian Embassy.
Sunday, Lance Cpl. Philip Aldridge was arrested for spying. Aldridge allegedly visited the Soviet Embassy and could have passed secrets that reached Argentina during the 74-day war in the Falkland Islands.
Legislators prepare to push budget
By BRUCE SCHREINER Staff Reporter
The final version of the KU's fiscal 1984 budget will depend on the Legislature's ability to boost the state's economy, local legislators said yesterday.
Three local legislators said the job of selling the University's budget requests to their House colleagues might be substantial revenue shortfalls this year.
MANY LEGISLATORS have supported a tax package that could include passage of a severance tax on the production of oil and natural gas. It also could consist of increases in taxes on sales, gasoline and income.
But they said some sort of tax package, which could draw new revenue into near-empty state coffers, could ease the job of navigating the University's budget through a frugal Legislature.
"Unless we can come up with new or additional revenues, it will be difficult to get an adequate budget for the Regents, said State Rep. Jessie D. Dailey. "It's going to no revenue is raised, it's going to be loomy for the entire state."
Another proposal that could help meet KU's budgetary needs is an acceleration of the payment of personal taxes on taxes to reduce cash-flow problems.
"It's going to be difficult to get revenue to come in soon enough to get KU's budget up to where it was before the cuts. I think it's going to be a tough session, but the case must be made for higher education."
One legislator said it might be harder to lend support to the Regents budget this year because of a change in House leadership.
LOCAL LEGISLATORS are sharpening their salesmanship abilities for the challenge involved in sponsoring a budget in the upcoming session.
State Rep. Mike Hayden, R-Atwood, who is expected to become the new House speaker, has not always been a strong supporter of higher education financing, said Rep. Betty Jo Charlton, D-Lawrence.
"It has always been hard to sell the regents budgets to people from certain states."
"What you do is work on the
leadership and members of the Ways and Means committee. We are all hoping Mike will be reasonable. He is always tried to be fair, but he has always tried to be fair."
CHARLTON SAID she would remind legislators of the 4 percent cut the University and other Regents schools had to swallow last summer.
The Regents system carried a large burden of the first round of reductions because it was one of the agencies Gov. Merrick helped within constitutional constraints.
When listing priorities within the budget, the legislators repeatedly have said they would closely follow the wishes of KU administrators. But the legislators said they had their own preferences in the budget.
"It ites to me that my main interest is that no academic programs are cut." Charlton said. "I think we should be more willing to squeeze on order operating expense budget in order to preserve academic programs."
BRANSON, WHO also opposes cuts in academic programs, said the stagnant economy might make legislators more generous with the operating expenses
budget, which includes library acquisitions and equipment.
"I think we have a good argument now concerning the needs for scientific equipment so the state will be more competitive to entice business into the state," she said. "The Legislature will understand the need for equipment more than the needs in any other area of the budget."
Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, said it was premature to specify how large a pay increase classified and unclassified employees could expect
He said once the revenue shortage was addressed successfully, the Legislature would turn to salaries and merit pay.
LAST YEAR, the state gave the Regents a 7.5 percent faculty salary increase and a 6 percent increase in operating expenses.
Gas tax tops lame-duck session agenda
Despite the state's shaky economic footing, the legislators still were optimistic about the chances of passing a new law that might satisfy KU administrators.
"If all things fall into place, then it looks like we will make it," Branson said. "I believe if a nux packages goes through, the budget will do well very well."
By United Press International
WASHINGTON—Congress returned yesterday for a lame-duck session that will be dominated by efforts to ease unemployment, beginning with a 5-cent-a-gallon hike in the gas tax to upgrade roads and transit systems.
Speeches and private maneuvering rather than action on substantive legislation opened the session.
President Reagan is expected to play only a bit part in the session, although it was called at his request to handle additional fiscal 1983 money bills. The only possible new request he might make would be to reduce his 1983 tax cut by six months — appeared doomed in advance by congressional opposition.
REAGAN'S PLAN to deploy the new MX missile also is in trouble. The defense appropriations bill, which could provide MX funds, is tentatively scheduled for House action next week and not even be considered in the Senate.
in the House yesterday, the first order of business was to swear in Rep. Kerry, who replaced the late Rep. Adam Benjamin and also took up legislation to provide nuclear waste sites but was not expected to sit it yesterday.
The opening day was routine in the Senate, which adjourned after only two hours and four minutes. First, a controversial antitrust relief measure expected to touch off a filibuster was introduced.
HOUSE AND SENATE leaders
agreed they would pass the gas tax and some of the 10 fiscal 1938 appropriations bills still pending. Only three have passed although the fiscal year is not known if the government is operating under a temporary, stopgap funding solution.
But a squabble is likely over a planned $5 billion Democratic plan to create more than 250,000 jobs by repairing veterans hospitals and public buildings. Details of the plan still were being formulated yesterday.
Senate Republican leader Howard baker predicted that no additional votes would be needed.
"I do not rule out the possibility of other federal-type jobs programs but I do suggest we're not going to be able to move those through Congress in the three weeks of the lame-duck session." Baker said.
THE LAWMAKERS also must deal with an embarrassing automatic $16,000-plus increase in their own salary on Dec. 18. They are expected to cancel the raise by routinely continuing a pay cap.
A number of bills, dubbed "fillers" by House Speaker Thomas O'Neill, were ready for consideration, including an immigration bill, bankruptcy legislation, a coal slurry pipeline amendment domain bill and numerous special bills. The Senate made it clear that the gas tax and money bills were the only "mills" bills.
Even as the lame ducks prepared to cast their last votes and pack up their congressional careers, the new crop of freshmen began arriving. The five new students began orientation, and new House numbers are to arrive later in the week.
Soviets use chemical weapons, U.S. says
By United Press International
WASHINGTON—The State Department said yesterday it had evidence, including two contaminated Soviet gas masks, that the Soviet Union had used illegal deadly toxins against insurgents in Afghanistan, Cambodia and Laos.
"The world cannot be silent in the face of such human suffering and such cynical disregard for international law," he wrote. "It is the role of George Shultz in a letter accompanies
"The use of chemical and toxin weapons must be stopped." Shulzt said.
nying a report charging the Soviets, for the first time, with using the toxins in food.
THE REPORT, which the department said was based on 350 samples collected from the field, expands on earlier charges that the Soviets routed enemy aircraft or fired them in rockets against resistance groups in Southeast Asia.
The new evidence, including autopsies and samples of the toxins, led U.S.
officials to report, "Our suspicion that mycotoxins have been used in Afghanistan," said Shahryad Khan.
The officials cited as evidence two Soviet gas masks acquired from Afghanistan that showed traces of several different kinds of toxins.
One mask was obtained from a source in Kabul, according to State Department officials. The other was obtained from a dead Soviet soldier by insurgents.
THE FIRST MASK. a gray canvas headpiece connected to a connector, was
displayed or reporters inside a plastic case that prevented the toxins from leaking.
The physical evidence supports eyewitness reports that Afghan resistance fighters died after being sprayed with black or white gases, officials said.
According to the report, several different kinds of gases may have been used in combinations that are "100 percent lethal." One of the poisonous chemicals might have been a nerve agent, it said.
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University Daily Kansan, November 30, 1982
Page 3
Tests on humans get close look
Group keeps experiments safe
By STEVE CUSICK Staff Reporter
The advisory committee for human experimentation could easily be an Orwellian invention coming from the pages of the book "1844."
But it isn't. It's a committee at the University of Kansas that reviews proposals to use human as subjects in research, and that's the man of the committee, said recently.
Federal law requires that the committee exist to make sure that potential subjects know what they are exposed to in an experiment, Braddt said.
THE 14-MEMBER committee, composed of mostly faculty members and students, reviews 600 to 700 research proposals a year, giving its stamp of approval to most of them, he said. The proposals come from several departments, including education and psychology.
Most of the experiments take the form of questionnaires or psychological probing, but the committee also reviews proposals for experiments on
"We have some experiments that call for the drawing of blood," he said, and sometimes researchers will ask them to codes to humans to gain skin responses.
"But those are very limited," he
said. "There are very few people doing those."
When the committee receives a proposal to experiment on a body, he said, "it must make sure the instrument is working order and no one is goofing off."
A SIMILAR COMMITTEE EXISTS at the University of Kansas Medical Center to screen research projects there, he said.
Brandt said the committees must follow guidelines set by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services in the Federal Register.
The use in the past of "some pretty shoddy research procedures" prompted the federal government to expand on human experimentation, he said.
In the 1930s, some researchers in the South deliberately infected some uneducated black males with syphilis (a sexually transmitted disease without treating them for it)
"Some of them, indeed, died," he said.
"It was that kind of activity in the guise of research that required the federal government to impose the regulations."
THE CLOSER scrutiny of human experiments also stems from the horrors uncovered at the Nazi Germany concentration camps, where
prisoners frequently were used as guinea pigs, he said.
The regulations also were designed to protect children, he said, because "they don't have experience to know that they're going to be hurt or not."
Brandt said that about 40 percent of the proposals must be modified by the researcher before the committee approved them.
The most common problem is that the "informed consent" forms that go to potential subjects are in language un familiar to the layman's ear, he
"It might be difficult for a subject population to know what is going on," he said. The committee often asks researchers to rewrite the form in
"Occasionally we will find a risk," he said. "We will see a risk that the investigator doesn't."
The committee reviews 50 to 60 applications a month, and there were eight in a recent day's mail, he said.
"We have on rare occasions turned down research proposals," he said.
For example, the committee turned down the proposal of a student investigator who wanted to ask the members of a rock band about their use of drugs and such details as where the drugs came from, he said.
"She could not assure those people that she would not just walk out the door and give the information to the local police," he said.
Students may still early enroll
Students who did not complete the early enrollment process before Thanksgiving can enroll this week.
through the usual early enrollment process.
"We realized that there would always be someone who forgot to enroll," Gary Thompson, director of the office of student records, said yesterday.
Because the enrollment center in 111 Strong Hall is open this week for the first add-drop period, students can bring in their enrollment cards and go
THOMPSON SAID SOME students had asked to enroll early because they were leaving for Thanksgiving vacation before their scheduled enrollment
Rather than tell them enroll early, they were told they could enroll later, Thomson said.
Gil Dyck, dean of educational services,
he and his staff had talked to
50 to 60 people who were unable to enroll before Thanksgiving.
Thompson said anyone who tried to enroll before Thanksgiving could have, because the enrollment center never reached all everyone had gone through the process.
THOMPSON SAID HE thought early enrollment had gone well and said he was hoping that fewer students would benefit with the add-drop process than in the past.
Kansans set for third lunar eclipse
Kansas sky watchers will have their third opportunity this year to view a total lunar eclipse, the Astronomy Associates of Lawrence said recently.
On Dec. 30, as the earth moves directly between the sun and the moon, the shadowed moon will be darkened for more than an hour.
Steve Shawl, professor of physics and astronomy, said that although a lunar eclipse was slow in its change, it was very bright. The moon, to be observed, to watch the moon disappear.
The eclipse will be visible throughout North America, beginning at 2:52 a.m. CST. The moon will be completely dark from 4:58 a.m. to 5:59 a.m., but the rising sun will block the view of the eclipse's end.
SHAWI. SAID THE number of solar and lunar eclipses varied each calendar year. Generally, there are not more than not more than seven each year, he said.
It will be more than 500 years before three total lunar eclipses will again be seen in Kansas within one year.
A partial solar eclipse will occur Dec. 15, but will be visible only to parts of Europe, northeast Africa and western Asia.
"They can be predicted 100 years in advance, within a second," Shawl said.
SHAWL SAID THAT although summer was the best time of year for watching meteors, mid-December's monsoon season is reasonably good night for meteor watching.
On Dec. 13, a large meteor shower is also predicted to peak. The Geminids, meteors that appear to come from the
Gemini constellation, is one of the best meteor showers of the year.
Meteor watchers do not need an observatory or a telescope, Shawl said. Standing outside will allow individuals to enjoy the few seconds of light from the meteor; but some individuals may want to use a pair of binoculars he said.
"the best time to watch is after midnight," he said. "You've got to be quick because the spot of light moves quickly."
Johnson says KU needs to win
The University of Kansas must win consistently to be recognized as a school with a winning tradition in athletics, KU's new athletic director said yesterday at a news conference in Parrrot Athletic Center.
"People know that we have the potential to win, because we have in the past," said Monte Johnson, who was appointed athletic director last weekend. "We around here hope that we can be competitive each year."
"If I have a major concern, it's attendance, and that translates into red flags."
JOHNSON, WHO has a 27-year tie to KU as a student, employee and alumun, also commented on ways to ensure compliance with rules of athletics associations, on the unknown fate of KU football coach Don Fambrough and
By DARRELL PRESTON Staff Reporter
the need to increase attendance at athletic events.
Universities with winning traditions consistently have good attendance, he
"The successfulness of a team is so important that we have to build good foundations for all of our programs," he said.
KU'S WINNING TRADITION should not be limited to basketball, as it has been, said the 45-year-old Johnson, the head of R. G. Billings Inc. in Lawrence.
"I want the same winning tradition in
"t want. And football is the starting
team."
But Johnson said he had not reached a decision on the fate of Fambrough,
PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES
Monte Johnson, KU's new athletic director, announced in a press conference yesterday that his main objectives for the future of the KU athletic program were attendance and winning teams.
who has come under fire from alumni
after this year's losing season.
Johnson said that when he was interviewed to be athletic director, no conditions were set on Fambrough's future.
"I HAVE NO preconceived ideas on the football program," he said. "I met this morning with Fambrough, and I will have an answer in the near future."
Johnson said he would emphasize the need for coaches and athletic administrators to be abreast of the voluminous rules created by the University, the National Collegiate Athletic Association, and the American Institute of Football to regulate intercollegiate athletics.
He said he would consider hiring a compliance officer to interpret and keep track of KU's compliance with the rules.
He also acknowledged the need to ensure that alumni involved with the program were engaged.
THE COMPLIANCE OFFICER may be a current staff member, someone outside the athletic department or from outside the University. Johnson
Johnson said he had not received any official information about the NCAA's preliminary inquiry into KU athletics, which began last spring.
He said he expected to stay longer than his predecessor, Jim Lessig, who resigned in October after fewer than six months at KU.
"My interest is in helping the University of Kansas," he said. "If we ever have another press conference before we can't not be for another job in athletics."
JOHNSON HAS ALREADY started his new duties, although he does not officially take over until Dec. 13. He is expected to be not much lower than his current pay.
"It's a lateral move in terms of pure salary," he said. "However, the salary really wasn't that important."
Johnson's salary, the same as
Lessig's, will be $4,825
Staff Reporter
By JULIE HEABERLIN
In an effort to combat vandalism and University budget reductions, KU police supervisors and others in specialized divisions will leave their desk jobs and do uniforms to increase patrols during the Christmas break.
$ ^{1} $This is the first time the University police office will be shut down in order to almost double the campus police patrol during the four-week period, according to Jeanne Longaker, KU police lieutenant.
"Our reports don't increase but the potential is definitely there, and we like it."
KU police decided to reinforce the regular patrols because fewer faculty members and personnel will remain on campus once the University lowers building temperatures on Dec. 23, Longaker said.
TO SAVE A projected $160,000, the University will lower temperatures in many campus buildings to 45 degrees during the winter break.
Longaker said that vandalism did not usually increase when students left for vacation. He also said the police
During the usually quiet and often boring eight-hour shifts, Longaker said the police devoted their time to working with lots of lots and checking campus buildings.
years the police had kept constant 24-hour vigils.
December
"It's lonely." Longaker said, "because those out patrolling would also like to be home celebrating Christmas with their families."
THE POLICE WILL watch the campus day and night, Longaker said, with increased patrol squads between Christmas and New Year's Day.
Longaker said that thefts usually increased during the week that students were leaving for semester break. While packing motor vehicles, she said, students should lock both room and car doors between trips.
For added safety, Longaker said, students who live off campus should ask neighbors to check their residences often.
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Bob Porter, associate director of facilities operations, said that on Dec 23, the University would lower the temperature in about 30 buildings to 45 degrees. The temperature will be increased to 60 degrees on Jan. 3 so faculty members can use the buildings to plan for next semester, he said.
However, Porter said, most of the department personnel would be encouraged to take days off during the holiday period that the University could save money.
PORTEER SAID facilities operations would also be forced to schedule around the-clock "skeleton" crews to move in and freeze in the 45-degree buildings.
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Page 4
Opinion
University Daily Kansan, November 30, 1982
No time for haggling
State legislators are predicting a most productive legislative session come January. What their statements imply about past legislative sessions is, at this point, moot, but it is heartening to know that our representatives in Topeka realize that a typical legislative session could spell disaster for Kansas finances.
A few relatively painless moves will probably be made at the beginning of the session. One of those will likely be the acceleration of withholding-tax payments to bring in that revenue on a monthly rather than quarterly basis.
From there, things get increasingly difficult. Some legislators expect reappropriations of funds from non-nivital agencies to be considered early. That may alleviate some emergency needs, but it cannot bring the state into long-term fiscal health. In the end, if the programs affected by reappropriations were worthwhile in the first place, it may only prolong the need for drastic changes in state financial policies.
Some combination of increased taxes and smaller budgets, then, will
become the unavoidable focus of battle for most of the remainder of the session. Proposals should get proper consideration, but legislators should keep in mind that the sooner that is decided, the more time those agencies affected by cuts will have to recoup.
That is a particular concern in regards to higher education. KU and other Regents schools must be willing to make their fair share of cuts. If more cuts must be made, the schools can be expected to do everything possible to adjust to those cuts.
But when funds prohibit replacement of administrators, when work is continually being forced onto fewer and fewer employees, when tuition is allowed to climb while academic and physical conditions deteriorate, legislators may expect fewer faculty and students to find these schools desirable places to work or learn.
Sufficient notice, preferably a good bit more than was given last summer, would at least give the state's universities time to seek additional private funds and to think of ways to deal fairly with employees and students.
Innovative visuals of MTV addictive coping mechanism
Fleetwood Mac, the Clash, Adam and the Ants and Billy Joel are going to help me through finals this semester. No, they're not going to tutor me for my social problems exam. But I am going to gear up for finals by spending a few hours with them via MTV.
One 12-year-old who shares my passion for music television predicted not long ago on national television that MTV's popularity signalized the demise of radio. That, perhaps, is
P. R. S.
LISA GUTIERREZ
an overzealous statement. However, MTV is spelling "boom" for promoters, recording artists, cable systems and their lucky coincidences when televised to television since Erwin Kovacs and blackouts.
Almost every well-known popular and rock recording artist can be seen and heard over any of nearly a dozen cable and broadcast television music programs. MTV is the most successful so far. It is a 24-hour cable channel produced by Warner Music Entertainment, a joint venture of Warner Music Group and American Express Co. MTV currently joins revenue from 7 million subscribers.
Video is clearly a successful marketing device. These seven million don't stop at shelling out the bucks for yearly subscriptions. They buy the albums from which many MTV "clips" are taken. Clips are the mainstay of MTV interleaved between interviews with rock stars and artists, where they can as well as a taped session or as complex as mini-movies. Often, musicians act out the words to their songs. Record promoters are finding these clips to be irresistible teasers.
A recent nationwide survey by Billboard magazine indicated that record stores were reporting sales increases of 15 percent to 20 percent in the last quarter, artists in particular garnered increased sales.
The survey helped indicate that, increasingly, video promotion can make the difference between a hit album and a mediocre one. Take, for example, sales of an album by the group Def Leppard on the Mercury label of Polygam Record Records. According to a recent Wall Street study, the music company peaked at 100,000 after its release last year six months later, a video clip from the album began running on MTV. Sales surged. The album has now sold almost 500,000 copies.
Clips may be expensive to produce, costing anywhere from $2,000 to $20,000. A clip may require a script, director, cast, on-location filming and special effects. But the benefits of successful clips can be plentiful. A CBS spokesman told the Journal that its staff on MTV would use the clips in MTV they ask for a record." Others are more direct in attributing their record successes to MTV.
An album by a group called Steel Breeze, RCA Records, sold more than 100,000 copies within four weeks of its release in August. "It didn't get me into this business" is said of MTV," an RCA spokesman says.
MTV is also bringing rock music to small towns where radio is a weaker medium than in larger cities. Record companies depend on radio stations, especially FM, to promote new artists. Consequently, punk and new wave rock are not given substantial airplay in places where there are few radio stations. An entertainment company might be "the only way kids in places like the Dakotas, the Carolinas, Montana and Wyoming are going to be exposed to new rock music."
This exposure through MTV may prompt a few parents to begin screening the television habits of their children, MTV, avant-garde and pornographic videos, and some parents rather tasten video clips. Video clips know that sex sells. MTV and cable television allow record companies to promote their artists in ways that would be accepted on radio or over the airwaves. Various forms of sadomasochism and adultery are subtly, and often more severe, video clips. More such clips are on the way.
For example, an RCA group known as 805 recently finished a video clip of the song "Young Boys." The clip features the 1982 Penthouse magazine Pet of the Year. According to RCA, it shows the "pet" skating scenes with the rock group both in bed and in the back seat of a car.
But to those parents who start patrolling TV sets for fear of exposing little ones to MTV, I say MTV is generally a great way to escape daily pressures. At the same time, MTV viewing actually advanced this country has become. The special effects are often beyond description.
Where else could you see Fleetwood Mac performing in a desert surrounded by hundreds of broken guitars? Where else could you see dream-challenge sequences of Paul McCARTNEY and Stevie Wonder traipsing along the keyboard of a piano?
where else but on MTV. Try it to relieve some of those final wittries. Be warned, however: MTV is addictive. Cramming may become secondary when the Clash is rocking the cashah.
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Andropov fluent in U.S. issues
By HARRISON E. SALISBURY New York Times Special Feature
NEW YORK—An argument already has erupted in Washington over the new Soviet leader, Yuri T. Andropov. Some say that he is a brutal "moral" alter; others that he is a brutal hard-liner.
This seems like the wrong argument at a moment when we should be concentrating on analysis of the character, personality and background of the man with whom President Reagan must share responsibility for war and peace in a nuclear world.
The first thing to know about Andropov is that he speaks and reads English. A casual visitor to his country house nearly a decade ago found him talking in English, and the audience of America broadcast — a long-standing habit.
"He's the best-informed man in the world." a Russian said a few months ago, "about your country and ours." As head of the KGB for 15 years, he should be.
Andropov is the first Russian leader since Czar Nicholas II to be comfortable with the English tongue. His interest in the United States antedates Leonid Brezdin's naming him head of the KGB. He is a longtime reader of our news magazines and newspapers. He doesn't have the money to buy books now, but he has many on his shelves — and not just detective stories and fashionable novels.
His conviction that relations with America are the single most important factor in Soviet foreign and military policy impelled him more than 20 years ago to direct his son, Igor, into the newly formed Institute of U.S.A. and Canada Studies. Igor has long been a specialist there, devoting more attention to Canadian than American affairs.
However, Arbatov is expected to continue as chief adviser to party leaders on the United States, although he may share this role with Vadim M. Zagliadin, a policy expert with a wide background in U.S. affairs, particularly in arms and nuclear matters.
Georgi A. Arbatov, founder and director of the institute — probably the best-informed Soviet expert on the United States — has been a close associate of Andropor since the early days of the institute. Since Ronald Arbatov became president, the Andropor-Arbatov link is said to have been strained a bit, probably because Arbatov was much stronger than the intensity of Reagan's anti-Soviet attitudes.
Because of his intimate grasp of American affairs, Andropov is perfectly competent to check the views of Arbatov and Zagladin against the latest issues of leading American newspapers. It is as if Reagan could balance Central Intelligence Agency reports against his personal perusal of Pravda and Izvestia. This does not ensure that Andropov's assessments will be
accurate, but it means he can make a personal contribution to Soviet-American policy that transcends that of any predecessor.
Andropov's lifestyle is simple and by Soviet leadership standards comparatively enegging. His principal residence (this may change now that he has become a general secretary of the Communist Party) has been a villa, 15 or 20 miles outside Moscow's city limits, in a community where many high officials live. While he was KGB chief, there was little visible security, but access was only by excellently policed secondary highways. In Moscow, he has an apartment in the same building in which Breznev lived.
If modest by leadership standards, his country house was not the ordinary Russian's. It was a spacious stone-and-stucco mansion, very well furnished — Oriental rugs on the parquet floor, good paintings including contemporary abstract and non-representational works, a fine television set, a first-class short-wave radio, an audio system and an excellent tape and record collection. Andropov likes gypsy music — a favorite of Russians since the 18th and 19th centuries, and he also has a collection of American classic jazz of the 1930s and '40s.
One of the books in his library is my novel "The Gates of Hell." It was published in 1973 and revolves around two characters: Andropov, in his own name and role as head of the KGB, and a hero somewhat like Aleksandr Solzeniyan, somewhat like Andrei Sakharov. Andropov appears as tough-minded, intelligent, educated; he is interested in, even somewhat sympathetic with others; he performs an ace of his security duties, and he expels the hero from the Soviet Union.
"What are you trying to do Andropov?" asked an old Soviet friend who had read the book.
"What do you mean?"
"Well," he said, "you present him as a human being. You're going to ruin his standing in the parlor."
Apparently, the idea of showing Andropov as something more than the conventional cardboard billain was considered a danger to his political career. The remark had some foundation. Already Andropov had staked out a position opposite in many respects to that of Stalin's old ideologue, Mikhail Suslov, and it would be Suslov's death last February that would propel Andropov's successful drive to the top.
"How did you happen to write that book?" a man close to Andronov asked.
I said I wanted to vividly show how the system limited the extent to which even the most intelligent bureaucrat could change the ground rules of communist politics — a lesson to be kept in mind in evaluating Andropov's personal effect on basic policy, particularly considering the
vested interests of military and party bureau crats.
As KGB chief, Andropov courted the intellegentia. He and his lieutenants, expressing sympathy for creative individuals, insisted that they wanted to separate the "good" from the "bad." One of Russia's leading musicians was regularly invited to Andropov's flat for private recitals; even after the artist came to the support of dissidents, there was no break, but eventually the artist went abroad and stayed abroad.
It was Andropov who devised the tactic of arresting writers and poets, sometimes sending them to psychiatric institutes and labor camps. At the same time, he or his assistants were encouraging other artists to express themselves "any way you want — except for pornography or s.subversion." It was also Andropov who ordered Solzbitsenx expelled.
Andropov was ambassador to Hungary during the 1956 revolution. He is usually blamed for its bloody suppression; in fact, he had warned Moscow of the possibility two months earlier. He was rebuked for sensationalism — until the uprising started. He has, since then, taken credit for the Janos Kadar regime, the most successful, relaxed Eastern European regime.
Some associates have suggested that he would like to apply the Hungarian solution to Poland. The release of Lech Walesa may be his first act toward that end.
His second major political act may be to apply the Solzheniism precedent to Sakharov, exiled by his order to the city of Gorky. His third almost certainly will be a move to end the Afghan situation, possibly by pulling the Soviet armed out and replacing them with "volunteers."
What does this mean to the United States? A dissident now in the United States as a result of Anropov's actions said a few months ago: "You must be very careful. Don't judge his man only as a policeman. He is formidable." It seems clear from what is known about Anropov that the Soviet Union has gained a leader of the United States an opponent who knows American strengths and weaknesses as well as he knows those of his own country.
His conduct cannot be predicted, but he is the kind of man who could move with remarkable swiftness to liquidate weak Soviet positions — in domestic society, in Poland, in Afghanistan, even vis-a-vis China — in order to bring Moscow's diplomatic strength somewhere near its military strength in preparation for global talks.
Harrison E. Salisbury, former Moscow correspondent and associate editor of the New York Times, is author of the forthcoming "A Journey for Our Times."
More choices would encourage more votes
To the Editor:
First, a fist is not an incentive. A tax credit of $50 is an incentive. A $50 fine is a penalty. There is a difference between using a carrot and using a stick.
Though Catherine Behan's Nov. 22 column on election turnouts shows some insight, she is way off base to suggest that the way to cure low voter participation is a $50 fee.
Secondly, high voter turnout is no guarantee of good government. The highest voter turnout in the world is in the communist countries, where it approaches 100 percent. Furthermore, many of the people who don't vote are political illiterates and know little or nothing about the issues in the campaign. 1, for one, don't want these people to vote.
Third, the fact that students vote less than any other group is no reason to suggest that we don't want that privilege very badly. I know that I want it very badly indeed. Students don't vote too strongly because they really usually see are mindless Democrats and Republicans who offer nothing but more of the
status quo. Students are simply too smart to buy their lines.
Encouraging more alternatives to our present party system is a good way to improve voter turnout. It's far better than taxing people $50, which would only make people more antagonistic toward voting and further damage an already bad set of election laws.
There are ways to improve voter turnout, however, that don't involve compelling anybody to do anything. For one, make it easier for third-party candidates to get on the ballot. Most states require expensive petition drives just to get on the ballot. Florida, for example, requires 144,000 valid signatures. then these states require ridiculous percentages of the vote just to stay on the ballot. Another way to improve turnout is to abolish the Federal Election Commission, which subsidizes Democrats and Republicans but no one else.
Finally, the media should cover alternative parties such as the Libertarians, the Citizens Party and, sure, even the Prohibition and Communist parties and should at least report their vote totals when they run. In the most recent election, there were five candidates for governor in Kansas. You would never have to vote for a Republican who insisted on ignoring everyone but Sane Hardage and John Cardboard. Even though the Kansan did a better job than most papers, it was
still heavily biased toward the Demopublicans and failed even to report the final votes of totals.
John Reher
Grand Island, Neb., sophomore
John Reher.
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The University Daily Kansan welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten, double-spaced and should not include a header. Letters should include the writer's name, address, and number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, the letter should include his or her home town or faculty or staff position and reserves the right to edit or reletter.
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University Daily Kansan, November 30, 1982
Page 5
Adkins
From page one
"In one word, it's a mess," he said. "The Senate has to decide whether it is willing to fund community service organizations. Do we want to be a mini-United Way?"
Adkins also said he was unaware of the future of several committees that were created in part by him.
"There is some bureaucracy to deal with that addressed some important needs this year," he said, citing the newly created dean advisory committees as an example. "But two years from now, I can't guarantee the viability of those bodies."
ADKINS WAS CRITICAL of low student support of University governance bodies. He said that although KU's board had five students, only one student had chosen to sit on the board.
And students are needed on the libraries board particularly now, Adkins said, because it is considering a user fee for all students in addition to regular tuition costs.
"There are committees that are literally begging us for student members." he said. "It's a challenge."
Still, Adkins remains confident.
"I CAN SEE why the perception of Senate as a club is a useful analogy for those on the outside," he said. "But the students elected some leaders that will provide some continuity."
And Adkins' future?
"It will be nice to attend some classes for a change," says Aldkins, the only Harry S. Truman Scholar produced by KU. The Truman Scholarship, given to train students for a career in public service, offers up to $20,000 for both undergraduate and graduate studies.
ADKINS SAID he also hoped to continue planning a short-term course for KU on Wheels, while helping former U.S. Sen. James Pearson with the newly created Pearson Lecture Series. "Of course to give advice to next year's Senate," he said. "But I won't dominate the discussion. My advice will be from just one of many."
Poverty
From page one
visible poverty this winter. I think you are going to see people out on the streets. There are going to be people who freeze this winter if we don't do something."
TWO POSSIBILITIES for help that she cited were low-energy energy assistance and Lifeline rates, which would mean lower rates for residents who use less than a certain amount of gas.
Tim Lewis of the East Central Kansas Economic Opportunity Corp. estimates that 1,500 Lawrence families will receive low-income energy assistance from the federal government this winter, compared with 1,200 recipients last winter, he said.
That 20 percent increase does not represent the full need, he said, because many more people are buying new cars.
The program's guidelines have been tightened so that many people who need help paying their rent can find them.
The changes included lowering the income guidelines, checking income level for six months instead of three and making sure an applicant is paid monthly on payment on bills in two of the last three months.
LEWIS ESTIMATED that 20 to 25 Lawrence families were unable to have heat last week because they had not paid gas bills from last winter.
He said he knew of one family moving in with friends to keep warm until enough money could be saved.
Thomson said he knew one older woman who was using an electric skillet, a small electric heater and an electric blanket to avoid high gas bills.
"She's not going to turn on the gas," he said. "She says she can't afford it."
Gas users recently were hit with an increase when the Northwest Central Pipeline Co., the major supplier to most gas utilities in Kansas, increased natural gas prices 29 percent.
THE FEDERAL ENERGY Regulatory Commission refused last week to reconsider the
1,000 cubic feet of gas. The 20 percent increase will add about $100 to the annual gas bills of a house.
Thomson said that the poor must mark alternate days on the calendar — one for eating, one for cooking.
But, he said, "I think it's beyond the joking stage."
Pearl Dover, 79, who lives in East Lawrence, has not had to choose between eating and keeping warm, but her winter gas bills are draining her pocketbook, she said.
"It takes every nickel I make to get by," said Dover, who receives $366 a month in Social Security. Her monthly payments for rent and other utilities other than gas total about $200.
Her heat is on now, and she is dreading that next nas bill, she said.
SHE DELAYED turning on her heat this year and she "like to froze."
Susan Beers said that although the poor of Lawrence might have trouble keeping warm this winter, she did not.
Nevertheless, she said, social agencies are considering setting up soup kitchens to make
Thomson said the food pantry at the Salvation Army was well packed, especially after a food drive at the KU-Yugoslavia basketball game netted about 8,000 cans of food.
Despite the availability of food, many people, especially the elderly, would rather skimp on food than swallow their pride and ask for food, the workers say.
THE ELDERLY woman who lived on peach juice and bread lived only two blocks from a church, but neither the church nor the neighborhood organization knew of the woman's plight.
"They often eat dog food." Beers said of some elderly who do not have enough money for food.
Thomson said that although he did not know specific causes of people eating dog food, he had
Dover said she had no trouble keeping food in her kitchen.
"I've got some friends who will bring me stuff," she said.
But, she said, she doesn't like asking the government for help.
"I DON'T ASK nobody for nothing, I try to manage myself. I think the good Lord will prepare a way for you somehow or another."
"I've always worked night and day for everything I ever got," she said. "I always held
Social workers point to the weak economy and rating unemployment when they search for
The October unemployment rate in Douglas County was 4.3 percent, up from 4.0 percent in September.
Ed Mills, director of the Lawrence Job Service Center, said defining and counting the number of discouraged workers would be extremely difficult.
Susan Beers said those figures did not include discouraged workers, those workers who had run out of unemployment benefits and given up hoes of finding a job.
ERNEST DYER, an official from the Social and Rehabilitation Services office in Lawrence said the number of cases at the SRS office was due to a case in the number of discouraged workers.
The SIRS had 55 cases of such aid in October, compared with only 26 cases a year ago October.
Dyer said aid to dependent children of unemployed parents had increased 111 percent.
As of the beginning of November, 412 cases, representing 1,141 people, in Douglas County were receiving aid to dependent children, he said.
"MOST OF THOSE recipients will have one or more children under the age of six," he said. The average household consists of a mother between 18 and 25 and two children.
Food stamps were going to 2,645 people, or 1,057 cases, he said. Students make up only a small part of both the food stamp and ADC figures.
Several of the families receiving aid live in North or East Lawrence, he said.
Besides these types of aid, Dyer said, 172 people were receiving general assistance in the wake of the earthquake.
Under a recent SHS proposal to help resolve the state's fiscal crisis, 110 of those people or 64 million others may be displaced.
THE PROPOSAL, which came under attack from local agencies, was withdrawn last week to be reconsidered, said Robert Harder, state secretary of SRS.
The proposal was slated to take effect Jan. 1, but local agencies would not have been able to take the place of the general assistance, social workers saw.
Susan Beers said that the agencies were structured to handle emergencies and that they would be unable to sustain that aid for a long period.
A story, a statistic or a proposal cannot pretray poverty. Beers said. Poverty is a reality.
"You see it in the faces of the adults — a desperation," she said. "I think you can see it in the children — not adequately fed, adequately clothed, being labeled 'poor' in school."
Thomson said desperation showed itself in many ways.
THERE ARE those who seek help regularly, be said.
"It becomes a game to him," he said. "You have others that come in angry, not so much at them."
There are those who have wrangled with their pride to ask for a handout.
*µ* should to ask for a ladubur:
"You almost break down and cry," Thomson
SUSAN BEERS said, "People are made to be ashamed because they don't have a lot of money."
"We aren't as poverty stricken as New York and Chicago. . . but as far as I'm concerned any poverty in this town is unspeakable. Lawrence should not have poor people."
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan, November 30, 1982
Entertainment
KANU adds movie music, folk humor to its schedule
By SUSAN O'CONNELL Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
When people see "Kramer vs. Kramer" or "Murder on the Orient Express," they do not usually pay much attention to the music in films. KANU radio's program director said the movie.
KANU recently began broadcasting a new program, "Cinema Soundtrack," at 7 p.m. Mondays. The program takes a serious look at the work of artists in picture, the director, Darrell Brogden, said.
Another new program on KANU is "A Prairie Home Companion," which deals with a mythical
The host and producer of "Cinema Soundtrack," John Capse, tries to help listeners gain an appreciation for an art that does not get a great deal of attention. said Broudon.
"By removing the visual aspect, the program tries to demonstrate what an important element music is to cinema. The program's intent is to help the listener acquire an appreciation of and enjoy this material."
He said that people tended to concentrate on watching a movie rather than on listening to the
"CINEMA SOUNDTRACK" is new to KANU, but it has been available for at least three or four years, he said. It is hosted and produced by Caps at WBJ radio in Baltimore.
Brogdon said that the program was very well done and that Caps had access to many rare JRDs.
The nour-long program includes interviews with composers and dialogue from films as well as soundtracks.
Sometimes the entire program is devoted to just one movie, Brogdon said. In January, one show will feature music from "E.T.: The Extra Terrestrial."
At other times, Caps discusses a composer's works. In one show this month he talked about the works of Richard Rodney Bennett, composer musical for "Murder on the Orient Express"
The next program, which will be broadcast Dec. 13, is titled "Cityscopes." It shows how music is used to sketch the city backdrop in film, Brodgon said. The music is used to create an
A feeling is created through music, he said. It is important in helping create the atmosphere, it can help to calm down.
For example, he said, the kind of music used in Fast Driver is 'different from the kind used for Karaoke'.
THE MUSIC in "Taxi Driver" creates an evil, sinister feeling, he said.
A second program that KAUN recently began broadcasting, "A Prairie Home Companion," is a popular two-hour show that provides the latest news about the mythical town of Lake Wobegone, Minn. Brogdon said. It is a variety show that features folk humor and country music.
"A Prairie Home Companion," which is broadcast from 7 p. to 9 p.m. Saturday, was aired on NBC and ABC.
"We received lots of letters and phone calls from people about the show," Brogdon said.
FM·AM
BILL WILLIE
KU Dance Company to give annual fall concert
By VINCE HESS
Staff Reporter
Members of the University Dance Company will exhibit their choreography and dancing skills in the company's annual fall concert this weekend.
The company will present two programs that will last about 90 minutes each. All performances will be in the dance performing lab in 240 Robinson.
The first program will include dances designed and performed by students. The second program will feature dances choreographed by the co-directors of the dance company, Janet Hamburg, associate professor of health, physical education and recreation, and Joan Stone, assistant professor of health, physical education and recreation.
The first program will be presented at 8 p.m.
Friday and at 2 p.m. Saturday. The second
program will start at 8 p.m. Saturday.
"There's a wide variety of dances," Hamburg said yesterday.
Hamburg said that the members of the dance company had rehearsed the dances often and had performed some of them before various University living groups.
Hamburg said the some of the groups had been working on their programs since last September.
THE FIRST program will open with "Twisting and Knotted." Hamburg, who choreographed the dance, described it as an abstract modern dance that used some familiar dance forms, such as the square dance. It will be performed by a quartet whose members are Michael Grobe, Lawrence graduate student, Mary Marshall, Plano,
Texas, sophomore, Allison Baker, Lawrence senior, and Douglas McMinimy, New York City sophomore.
A quintet will express elements of Paul McCartney's music in the dance "Electric Fugue." Duane Ellis, Derby junior, choreographed the dance and will perform it. Other performers are Mary Cummick, McPherson senior, Virginia Morrison, Leavenworth sophomore, Diedre dePattan, Evanson, Ill., freshman, and Marshall.
Michelle Hade, Prairie Village junior, is to perform a solo in 'Can't Dance Tonight.' The dance, an injured dance, involves slow sound from a band accompanied by oecasional sound from a radio.
perform in a quartet dancing to the music of baroque composer Arcelangelo Correli. Also performing in the dance, which Lenoir and Marshall, david, Marshall, Karla Flott, Topaka senior
ALSO IN THE FIRST program will be "Concerto Corell," in which Willie Lenoir, Kansas City, Kan., special student, will
The first program will end with two dances choreographed by Stone, "In the Field at Dusk," featuring a solo by Lenoir, and excerpts from "Grass Variations." Martin Oison, a local professional composer and musician, will accompany both dances on the electric organ.
The second program will feature the full-length, 45-minute version of "Grass Variations," in which a quintet portrays the motions that grasses make in the wind. Quintet members are Baker, Cunnick, Flolt, Francese, Groner, Huckleberry, Nixon, Sirare, Prairie Village sophomore. The other dances to be performed are "In the Field at Dusk" and "Twisting and Knotting."
On campus
TODAY
CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR CHRIST will meet at 7 p.m. in the Big Eight Room in the Kansas Union
CAMPUS CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP'S BIBLE study and fellowship will be at 7:30 p.m. in the
PRE-MED CLUB will meet at 8 p.m. in the Council Room of the Union.
ARMY ROTC'S BASIC CAMP information will be at 12:30 in. on April 4, Worcester Hall
TOMORROW
CATHOLIC CENTER WORSHIP will be at 12:30 n.m. in Danforth Chanel.
DUNGEONS AND DRAGONS CLUB will have a games meeting at 7 p.m. in the Trail Room of the Union.
ARMY ROTC'S BASIC CAMP information will be at 12:30 m. in 4064 Wescoe Hall.
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BLACK STUDENT UNION
the organization designed with YOU in mind
encourages you to attend our sixth general meeting of the 82-83 school year
Wednesday, December 1, 1982
7:30 p.m.
(be prompt)
Satellite Union Conference Room
A WALK to the meeting will start at Engel and Irving Hill Road (between Ellsworth and Hashinger) at 7:00 p.m.
Funded by the Student Activity Fee
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922 Massachusetts
Lawrence, KS
842-2700
University Daily Kansan, November 30, 1982
Page 7
Avenida
Jon Petree, Overland Park junior and treasurer of the Interfraternity Council, helped unload space heaters in the Ballard Community Center, 708 Elm St. The IFC and the Panhellenic Council donated 20 heaters to the Lawrence community and 70 heaters to Kansas City. Mo. The community will be distributed to agencies throughout the communities to give to the needy, said Susan Beers, coordinator for community center.
Gannett continues to endow journalism teaching program
The School of Journalism recently was awarded $65,000 to continue its newspaper professional-in-residence program for the next school year.
The Gannett Foundation of Rochester, N.Y., has been financing the program since 1976. The Gannet professionals have taught reporting, editorial and interpretative writing and newspaper management and have been advisers to the University Daily Kansan.
Gerald Sass, vice president for education of the Gannett Foundation, said, "This program has far-reaching benefits for journalism education and professionals. Our foundation is raising students since believe KU has one of the outstanding journalism education programs in the country.
The present Gannett professional is Charles Waminger, editor and publication manager.
MARY WALLACE, acting assistant dean for the School of Journalism, said the school was very grateful for the gift that the school has not renewed automatically each year.
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Del Brinkman, dean of the School of Journalism, said a search committee would start looking soon for a successor to Waininger. The chairman of the Journalism department John D. Oscar S. Stauffer Distinguished Professor of Journalism.
THE POSITION will be advertised nationally, and individual journalists and officials of newspaper groups and organizations be contacted to identify candidates.
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Rent it. Call the Kansan.
Applications are now being accepted for the
University of Kansas Student Senate Staff
- Executive Secretary
- Chairperson, Student Senate Executive Committee
...
- ^ Administrative Assistant
- Associated Students of Kansas Campus Director
If you are interested in working in student government, if you have organizational and leadership skills, if you have the desire to serve in a student leadership position, investigate these opportunities.
Applications are available for these salaried positions in the Student Senate Office, 105 B Kansas Union and are due by Friday, December 3, at 4:00 p.m. Interviews will be held December 6, 1982. If you have questions call 864-3710.
(paid for by Student Activity Fee)
Two Lawrence men will stand trial tomorrow in Douglas County District Court on charges of aggravated battery in connection with the Oct. 17 beating of two University of Oklahoma students, one of whom was the son of OU president William S. Benowsky.
2 Lawrence men to be tried in beating of OU students
William Banowsky Jr., 21, and Bernard O'Hara, 22, both of Norman, Okla, received treatment for injuries at Lawrence Memorial Hospital. O'Hara was treated and Banowsky was released Oct. 16.
TWO OTHER women, both from Norman, were involved in the incident but were not taken to the hospital. Ann Erosion, 20, and Jan Newton, 19, were walking down Massachusetts Street with the two men when they stopped a car to ask reactions to friend's house, police said.
Court records show Steven Howell, 19, and Merie Wales, 25, will stand trial at 9 a.m. for the incident.
18. also of Lawrence, was sentenced to 30 days and granted probation after she pleaded guilty to an amended charge of disorderly conduct. She had been originally charged with battery.
ANOTHER INDIVIDUAL accused in the incident. Victoria Miles.
The women told police the driver of the car got out and started beating one of the men. The others in the car were arrested. Police visited visitors from Oklahoma, police said.
Officials don't foresee further closings of S&Ls
By BRET WALLACE
Staff Reporter
Although the recent closing of the North Kansas Savings Association in Beloit has caused concern in financial circles, leaders in the financial industry in north central Kansas do not foresee further closings.
"Anytime we see anybody go under in the finance industry, it is bad," Dean Haddock, president of Guaranty State Bank & Trust Co., Beloit, said yesterday. "The closing of a cousin institution shakes the confidence of the public."
North Kansas Savings, which has a branch office in Phillipsburg, was closed by the Federal Home Loan Bank Board Nov. 19. It was the first closing of a financial institution in Kansas in a year and a half.
FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS and Loan Association, Osatovia, bought North Kansas Savings from the government. This association is a branch office of association as a branch office in Beloit.
When officials announced the closing, they said North Kansas Savings had made an investment.
Dave Douglass, supervisory agent for the home loan board, said another reason for the closing was a lawsuit brought against the bank by someone who overcharged it after the bank had agreed to lend money to the prospective borrower.
Clem Abercrombie, president of the United Bank, Minneapolis, Kani., said, "The closing has caused a great impact on our financial institution closing will have repercussions on other financial institutions."
PEOPLE SEE savings and loan associations as banks, so the closing one reflects on the others, said Phil Hines, president of First National Bank, Beloit.
He said people who had accounts in the defunct association were taking their business to other savings institutions in the area, although insurance would cover losses resulting from the closing.
"A lot of people think the money will go to Osawatime. Most of the money put in branch banks is channelled back to the headquarters," he said. "If it had been taken over by Beloit this problem would not have occurred."
But Thull said he thought the association would be able to regain credibility and become a profitable business.
Haddock said he thought fewer people than expected would withdraw money from the savings association because of insurance provided by the Federal Savings & Loan Insurance Corp.
"THE INSURANCE gave people a lot of confidence," he said.
Marvin Steinert, commissioner of the state savings and loan department, said North Kansas Savings was investigated in May and July. Mr. Steinert, a federal investigation, which brought about the decision to close the institution.
Steinern had his department not aware of any other institutions in the city, but he was one of them.
Abercrombie said North Kansas Savings had been making low-interest real estate loans and paying a higher interest rate on the money.
Scientist to talk about sexual diseases
"Major and Minor Sexually Transmitted Diseases; A Societal Problem" will be the topic of a lecture at 7:30 p.m. in Kansas Room of the Kansas Union
The speech, by Sandra Larsen, a senior scientist from the Center for Disease Control in Atlanta, is sponsored by the honorary scientific research society.
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Hearing set for suspects in jewelry store robbery
By CAROL LICHTI Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
A preliminary hearing for four St. Louis residents accused of robbing a Lawrence jewelry store and kidnapping two employees is scheduled for to a.m. Dec. 8 in Douglas County District court and district court judge said yesterday.
the four appeared in court yesterday on charges of aggravated robbery and kidnapping in connection with Saturdays' murders. Jewellers, 800 Massachusetts St.
The district attorney's complaint alleges that the four stole a numerous amount of rings, diamonds, watches and jewelry, along with $804.78 in cash
THREE OF THE ACCUSED, Lawrence Lane, 32; Delvin Trotter, 27; and Larry Burton, 37, were being held on double bond of $50,000 because they are convicted felons. Judge Mike Elwell increased the bond of Claudia Lane, 26, from $25,000 to $50,000. She was charged with possession of marijuana as well as aggravated robbery and kiddnapping.
The kidnapping charges were added
because the district attorney's office contended that two employees were confined in order for the robbery to take place.
Robert Cummings and Steve Sublet, both jewelry store employees, were the only people besides the robbers inside the store during the robbery. Police said two males and a female entered the store about 5:15 p.m. Saturday.
According to court records, a man forced Cummings and Sublett to the back of the store with a 30-caliber rifle. The others grabbed the jewels and money.
The Kansas Highway Patrol arrested the four suspects at 6 p.m. 15 miles north of Fort Worth.
DETECTIVE MIE HALL said a Lawrence police officer talked to a man who had backed a car into a parking stall while the three were in the store. The officer later gave the description of other law enforcement officials.
Detective Hall said he thought most of the jewels that had been taken were
THE GUN USED in the robbery was not in the car when the highway patrol officer stopped it. Hall said the gun had not been recovered.
On the record
Denney said he did not think the thefts were related to earlier bicycle thefts that plagued the campus. Several students were arrested for thefts or scared them away, he said.
THEIVES STOLE FIVE bicycles from the bicycle rack in front of Hashinger Hall between 1:30 a.m. and 3:25 a.m. Sunday, KU police said yesterday. Three frames and other bicycle parts were found behind Hashinger, Jim Denney, KU police director said.
LAWRENCE FIREFIGHTERS responded to a one-alarm fire Sunday night that caused $8,500 damage to the Little Sunshine Country Market, 906 N. Second St., a Lawrence Fire Department official said yesterday.
A spark from a heating stove apparently caused the fire, firefighters said.
LAWRENCE POLICE and a fire investigator continue to investigate an apparent explosion that caused a treehouse fire Saturday night near the Sigma Nu fraternity on Sigma Nu.
Place, Lawrence police and fire department officials said yesterday.
Fire department officials said an explosive device was used to start the fire but said they had not determined what materials were used.
Witnesses told firefighters they heard a large explosion before the fire started. When firefighters arrived at the scene, the faint, the frouhous was emplaced in Alarms.
Lawrence police said a gas container was found underneath the treehouse
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Career Exploration for Women
A WORKSHOP DESIGNED TO EXPLORE VALUES, PHILOSOPHIES, AND LIFESTYLES AS THEY AFFECT YOUR CAREER CHOICE.
DATE: Wednesday, December 1, 1982
TIME: 3:00-4:30 P.M.
PLACE: International Room, Kansas (Union
PLACE: International Room, Kansas Union
FOR FORTRIGHT INFORMATION CONTACT THE EMILY TAYLOR WOMEN'S RESOURCE CENTER, 864-3552
M
M
M agrigal dinner
Come with us to the 16th Century in Merrie Olde England and enjoy the dinner traditions of the Wassu Bowl, the strolling minstrels, and the madrigal singers.
Dressed in authentic costumes the members of the
Lawrence Voci il camera will bring to you the songs and traditions of medieval times.
The evening will begin at 6:30, December 2, 1982 Kansas Union Ballroom.
Cost is $10.50 General Admission and $10.00 with KU Student ID. For additional ticket information please contact the SUA office at 864-3477.
We hope you will join us in this festive Christmas celebration,
---
1
Page 8
University Daily Kansan, November 30, 1982
Henry leads Kansas
Jayhawks beat BGU by 29
By GINO STRIPPOLI Sports Editor
For Carl Henry it was business as usual, but last night he got a lot of help from his teammates, as the Kansas Jayhawks put on a basketball clinic with coach Dana Holmes and Green Faleons before a disappointing crowd of 7,762 at Allen Field House.
"This was obviously a much better performance then our first game," he coach Ted Owens said. "I could tell them we were in a good frame of mind."
"Coming in, we didn't know how good Bowling Green would be, but we thought they'd be tough. I'm happy with the way the players responded.
"The Jayhawks jumped all over the Falcons at the start of the game as Henry and freshman Kerry Bogani, who struggled in the sensor opener, command. The two scored Kansas' 10 points to give Kansas an early 16-4 lead.
HENRY AND Boagni continued to dominate the first half, but they were joined by teammates Kelly Knight, who got his first start of the season, and freshman Ron Kellogg. Boagni led the Jahawks in the first half with 16 points and Henry added 14. Knight had nine points, while Dishman added Kansas' only other basket as the Jahawkes led 48-30 at the intermission.
"We knew they'd be a tough team because they're ranked 1.0 in their conference and they were that good." We were not just a matter of us playing that well.
"We can jump on a lot of teams like we did tonight. We got them down and
And the Jayhawks didn't let Bowling Green up as Kansas came out and outspected the Falcons, 11-2, to start the second half. The Falcons, who switched defenses the entire first半, opened the second half in a zone, and the Jayhawks used outstanding passing to outclass the Falcons.
The star of the second half had to be Kellogg. He hit for six points and had five assists, including a behind-the-
back pass to Henry for a stuff on a two-on-one break.
HENRY LED the Jayhawks in scoring with 22 points, on 10 of 15 shooting from the field and two of two from the line, to give him 53 points for the young season. He was joined in scoring by Josh Greenbeam with 18, and Kellogg with 13. The Jayhawks shot 45 of 74 from the field for a 60.8 shooting average.
The Jayhawks also outbounded the Falcons, 38-31. Boagli led the 'Hawks in rebounding with nine and Henry was right behind him with seven.
The Falcons were led by David Jenkins with 18 points, David Greer, and Paul Aberdenth each chipped in 11 points, Mike Ickens, who dropped to 1-1 on the season.
One amazing statistic for the Jaya-
hawks was their 36 assists on 45
baskets, a fantasy ratio for any team.
Once again, it was Kellogg who led
the Hawks with seven. Tad Boyle and
Knight each had six and Dishman had
"Overall, we attacked the zone well." Owens said. "In the first half, we scored 13 out of 14 times in transition situations."
ANOTHER HIGH point was the defensive play of Knight, who totally dominated the defensive end of the court for the Jayhawks. He blocked four shots for the Jayhawks in the first quarter, which immediately intimidated the Falcon players.
"That was the best all-around game I've played," Knight said. "I got really pumped up because I knew it was my first start of the season."
The Jayhawks, now 2-0 on the young season, won't have much time to rest. They play Mississippi Valley State on Thursday at 7:35 p.m. Owens said the early eight games were a positive thing for his young team.
"With as many young players as we have, it can only help to have these four games," Owens said. "As I've said all along, in time we will have a good team. We're doing some things well, but we'll be spotty for a while."
JAYHAWK NOTES—Calvin Thompson, whose father died at the game in 2013.
Southern Cal football officials asking to use Dodger Stadium
By United Press International
remain at the Coliseum, its home since 1923.
LOS ANGELES-University of Southern California officials, angered by the Coliseum Commission's deal with the Los Angeles Raiders, have asked Los Angeles Dodgers President Peter O'Malley that the Trojans can play in Dodger Stadium next season.
USC President James Zumberge said yesterday that his request to O'Malley was preliminary and emphasized that he strongly hoped USC would be able to
But Zumberge said the Coliseum's plan to allow the Raiders to build 174 luxury boxes on the rim of the Coliseum and control them for all games — including Southern Cal games — was unacceptable to the school.
Dodger Stadium has never been used for football, but Bob Smith, director of Dodger Stadium operations, said that it was quite feasible. He said that Dodgers officials had sketched out three possible positions for a football field — from home plate to center field or down either sideline.
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game last night, but he will be in uniform Thursday. Thompson will miss Saturday's game because of his father's funeral services.
Head coach Ted Owens said he was leaving the decision to Thompson about a potential free agency move.
Jim Evans/KANSAM
Although there is no category in the Kansas record book, the 36 assists by the Jayhawks would have to be a record, or at least close to one. The 45 field goals were just five shy of the KU record set by the 1974 team against Missouri in Lawrence. The Jayhawks shot 50 of 60 in that game.
34
The Jayhawks also came close to breaking their shooting percentage record for a single game. The Jayhawks shot 60.8 percent on 45 of 74 shooting, just below the record of 63.4 percent on 33 of 52 shooting set in the first half of last night's game, but in the first half of last night's game.
Carl Henry, who has been nothing short of spectacular in his first, two outings for the Jayhawks, now has hit on 22 of 43 shots from the field for a 64.7 percentage. He is followed closely in that category by Kelly Knight, who led the Jayhawks in field goal percentage last year, with 61.1 percent; Ron Kellogg, 58.3 percent; and Kerry Roagli, 56.5 percent.
If Henry continues this pace, he would easily break Ken Kesen's single
Kansas forward Kerry Boagni attempted to steal the ball from Bowling Green's David Greer in action last night at Allen Field House. Boagni scored 18 points, hauled in nine rebounds and dished out five assists as the Jayhawks defeated the Falcons, 97-68. The Jayhawks, 2-0, face Mississippi Valley State at 7:35 p.m. Thursday at Allen Field House.
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LAWRENCE OPERA HOUSE
STUDENT SENATE NEEDS YOU
JOIN A SENATE COMMITTEE TODAY
Committee applications available in the Student Senate Office, 105 B Kansas Union, for the following committees:
Academic Affairs
Budget
Communications
Cultural Affairs
Elections
Finance and Auditing
Legislative Affairs
Minority Affairs
Sports
Student Services
Student Rights
Applications are due by 5:00 p.m., Friday, December 3rd, in the Student Senate Office.
If you would like more information or have any questions about the Student Senate Committees contact the Senate Office at 864-3710.
(paid for by the Student Activity Fee)
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---
University Daily Kansan, November 30, 1982
Page 9
Tampa Bay downs Miami
Bv United Press International
TAMPA, Fla.—Dou Williams and James Wilder scored on short touchdown runs in the second half last night, and Miami Bay give Miami its first loss, 23-17.
Bill Capice added field goals from 27, 28 and 36 yards and the Buccaneers won their first game of the season against three losses. The defeat left the Tampa Bay in five other teams for the lead in the American Conference 3-1.
Miami scored in the second quarter on a 29-yard field goal by Uwe von Schaumann and fourth-quarter pass of Joel Dixon from Don Strock to tight end Joe Jee.
After the second touchdown by Rose, Miami gave Tampa Bay its final scare. The Dolphins recovered a fumble after an onside kick at their 47 with 30 seconds left. The ball made his second interception of the game at the 2-yard line on the game's
final play, sealing the victory for Tampa Bay.
WILDER. A second year pro out of Missouri, put Tampa ahead 23-10 with his 2-yard touchdown run in the fourth quarter. The play was set up when Stroker and Colah intercept Strock's pass and colah hit 53 yards to the Dolphins' 14.
The Buccaneers scored their first touchdown since the players' strike ended when Williams scored late in the third period.
The Bucs victimized Miami quarterbacks Strock and David Woodley, the starter, for five interceptions, four off Strock. Colizie and Washington had two interceptions and Cedric Brown got one.
Tampa Bay had pinned the Dolphins in a hole, punting out of bounds on the 15 and then pushing the Dolphins back to their 6. Miami was forced to punt, giving Tampa Bay good position on the Dolphins' 38.
SEVEN PLAYS later, Williams rolled to the right on a misdirection play and scored untouched from 3 yards out.
The Bucs stayed with their running game. Williams attempted just 19 passes, completing seven for 81 yards. James Owens led the Bucs' runners with 82 yards on 10 carries and Wilder carried 10 times for 36 yards.
Strock, who played quarterback in the second half for the Dolphins, completed 17 of 34 passes for 201 yards and Woodley was seven for 13 for 40 yards. In the Dolphins, Wasda Franklin, who gained 84 yards on nine carries.
Neither team was able to score a touchdown last week in the first game after the strike ended. Cappe kicked three field goals in Tampa's 14-8 loss to Miami, who knocked three for Miami in the Dolphins' 79 victory over the Buffalo Bills.
Tampa Stadium, which seats 72,000,
was sold out. The game was played on
a clear night, under a nearly full moon.
The temperature was 72 degrees.
The Dolphins' loss left the Washington Redskins, 4-0, as the only undefeated team in the National Football League.
YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio - World Boxing Association lightweight champion Ray "Boom-Boom" Mancini, recovering quickly from the physical and emotional wounds suffered in a title fight that billed his name to critics. "The fire is still there," and that he would resume his boxing career.
Mancini says he will resume boxing career
Mancini said it was while sitting at ringside of the Bogner-Montello fight in Atlantic City, N.J., Saturday night that he decided he would be able to put to death of Korean boxer Duk Koo Kim behind him.
Barring unforeseen circumstances, the 21-year-old Youngstown native plants to return to the ring early in 1963 for a non-title figMt
After that, Mancini and his manager, David Wolf, said at a news conference yesterday that he hoped to make a third defense of his WBA crown against Kenny "Bang Bang" Bogner, possibly in March or April.
By United Press International
Wayland Baptist defeats KU for second time in four days
After losing to the Wayland Baptist Flying Queens for the second time in four days, the Kansas women's basketball team returns for their first home game Thursday when they take on Delta State at Allen Field House.
By JEFF CRAVENS
Sports Writer
The Jayhawks, who fell to Wayland Baptist in the first round of the Plainview Classic Friday, were outshot 84-64, 80-64, in Plainview, Texas, last night.
Tipoff is set for 5:15 p.m.
"It noticed a big improvement," Coach Marian Washington said. "It was extremely noticeable that we are going to be playing on rookies are coming along quickly."
Angie Snider led KU with 18 points, and Barbara Adkins added 17. Angela Taylor and freshman Ann Schell had 10 points each.
Darla Armes led the Flying Queens with 20 points. Cornie Beckhill scored 17 points.
Wayland Baptist shot 55.6 percent for the game while KU hit only 40.4 percent
of their field goals. The Jayhaws also trailed on the rebounding chart, 35-28. Kansas fell to 0-4 on the season, and Wayland Bardot went to 3-1.
"Oviously, we don't like to lose," said Washington. "We had problems with turnovers in the first half, and that's when they took advantage of us."
Kansas trailed by only three with six minutes left in the first half before the Flying Queens took over and extended their lead to 42-28 at halftime.
"Until we can get Vickie Adkins and Philiace Allen back, our young people are going to be hard. It's hard to get Washington and Washington in an area that has hurt us in every game."
Washington said that Chris Hurley should be available to play in Thursday's game. Hurley did not make the trip to Texas but stayed in Lawrence to continue rehabilitation on her knee.
"We looking forward to getting back home," Washington said. "Our patience on offense is improving, and to be effective, we have to be patient. Judge has a great tradition, and I'm sure they will try to take it to inside."
KANSAN WANT ADS Call 864-4358
Call 864-4358
CLASSIFIED RATES
one ten-inch table two ten-inch table three ten-inch table four ten-inch table five ten-inch table six ten-inch table seven ten-inch table eight ten-inch table nine ten-inch table 15 words or fewer $2.55 $2.55
AD DEADLINES
ERRORS
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Friday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
The Kansan will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
FOUND ADVERSE ISSUES
Found物品 can be advertised FREE charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be posted on www.gap.com or by contacting Gap Business office 484-6358.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Business Staff Positions
Do you need cash? Bring your unwanted merchandise to the Lawrence Community Account. Every Wednesday, 7 p.m. Consignments accepted Tuesday through Friday, 7 a.m., p. 760, New Hampshire Hall; Call 821-2423 for info.
The University Dalian Kansan is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Employee. Applications are sought from all qualified people eligible to attend the University, sex, disability, veteran status, national origin, age or ancestry.
The Kansan is now accepting applications for Spring Semester business staff positions. Application forms are available in the Student Union, in the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 220 Strong Hall, in Room 119 FliHall; and in Room 200 FliHall. Competition applications are due in Room 200 at 8:00 p.m. on Tuesday, November 30.
For those special gifts, shop at SPINSTER'S children's bookstore, collectively operated by Liesen. We have books, records, cards, buttons, pants, beltings, etc. December hours are T-3-6 F-1-6.
ENTERTAINMENT
SEE
BLAKE EDWARDS
VICTOR
Victoria
PG
MCM United Arabian
Theatres
0123 4567 8901 9123
IN CINEMASCOPE
THIS WEEKEND
FROM UFS
FOR RENT
Hanover Townhouses 2 RH furnished & unfurnished energy efficient townhouse w. garage. Spacious enough for three. Only 3 blocks from campus at 14th & Kentucky BD-607.
2 br. hr, available for subsale 1), $800 ALL
UTILITIES PAY $193 815 Naples, no pets. 841-1300
3 br. ranch home Unfurnished. Dr. rm. unwelcomed
3 br. ranch home Unfurnished. Dr. rm. unwelcomed
Availability now $275 plus 1 mo. deposit
1. bedroom furnished apartments for sublease
2. two bedroom apartment for sub lease
3. Sneaking pool simple apartment, close to shopping.
4. Fully furnished apartment.
ENERGY EFFICIENT 2 apartments in nice 2 year old apartment 1325+ monthly plus insurance 942-1928
EXTRA nice apartments, large and small. Next to campus. Utilities paid, reasonably priced, 842-4135.
Efficiency apartment 2 blocks from Union. All utilities paid. Call 841-787-0-4-m.
COZY 2 bedroom apartment. Must sublease Jan. 1.
close to campus. 842-720 or 749-309.
Female roommate needed in a two bedroom furnished
digital double. Available At 17, $69/month. Debt
assessed.
Housemates wanted: Enjoy a relaxed cooperative experience with friends and family. Camp at Sunflower Houses Lakewood. 2 beds 1800 square feet. $305. Utilities included to Campus. Possibility of working for rent. $42,290. Jan sublease - beautiful, new two bedroom duplex on campus. $325 up. low utility bills. Call 617-421-1234.
LUXURIOUS LIVING NEAR KUW Went Mondays Ende
June, red/grey, rdgtg, CA/carport, dinette, onlne
July, green/blue, rdgtg
What are your plans for next semester?
2400 Alabama
Houghton Place is full but we will have a few studios and one-bedroom apartments available for January occupancy. Why not call for an appointment to see now? We prefer graduate students or mature adults.
Lease apt. C-9 Applicant: 2-bedroom; heat/AC and water cpd. Call 851-0229 or 811-9338.
Live in the CHRISTIAN CAMPUS HOUSE this fall at Christ Church University. Call Alas Bouez, campus minister. Call Aila Absoue, campus minister.
A female roommate should to share 3 bedroom apt at a rate of $200/month plus utilities, water & gas paid $4
One one-bedroom, one bath apt with range,
refrigerator and dishwasher. Good location, $250,
per night. 12' x 8' room.
SOUTHERN PALWAY TOWNHOUSES, mth & Kandahar If we're not busy of 8 am & cramped apartments, then our suite is available. Hoopla room, all appliances, attached garage, swim pool, laundry room, private stairway. Call 790-582-1367 (evenings and weekends) for more info.
NAISMITH HALL
APARTMENT LIFE
GOT YOU DOWN?
THINKING OF
MOVING BACK TO
THE CAMPUS
LIFESTYLE?
THINK OF
PRINCETON PLACE PATIO APARTMENTS. Now Available, 2 bedroom, 2 bath. perfect for roommates, feature wood fireplace with 2 car garage with 180 sq ft. kitchenette with kitchen pet kitchen, quiet surroundings. no pete please $42 per month. Open house 9:30-5:30 daily at 2:28am Princeton Plain, or phone 482257 for additional details.
ON CAMPUS
CONVENIENCE WITH
AN OFF CAMPUS
LIFESTYLE!
NAISMITH HALL 843-8559
Rooms for kids in nice home, share utilities. No pets, no stroller, hotel ROU. #82-683.
SPACIOUS. Meadowbrook studio, available for sublease Jan 14. REDUCED COST! Pailly furnished and furnished to close to carpets. Water and cable IVT. Bathroom. Bathroom. Bathroom. at a. low cost. 843-6453 after 5 m.
Quail Creek Apartments sublease. Two bedrooms, 1 bath, halfway up. Quilt December three $500.
Sublease newly decorated 4 bedroom townhouse;
Radium rated. Call 843-9248
Sublease space 3 bdr. plus 1 bath. midbrook room.
Sublease space 2 bdr. plus 1 bath. midbrook room.
Sublease space 1 bedroom at heatherland Valley Apts.
Carpet, drapery, diwishroom $500 a month events in
Dec, Jan, Feb, Mar, Apr, May, Jun, Jul, Aug,
large large 1 bedroom apartment. One to two people on bus route 1. $285-84-2599
Sandwich appartment, 100ft², in one-bedroom apt with
outdoor patio. 890-257-6011. 841-257-6012.
841-257-6013. 1999 Locale Chrysler 4, next to the
Sandwich building.
Tired of doing all the housewarming Check out Sunflower cooperative, Secure, clean and inexpensive
Vacancies for Spring学期 in the Kokomo Christian School District. For information contact the ECM Center 2014-03-07.
Hauser Place - Completely furnished one bedroom apartments available immediately. Located between 148 and 152 on Mason. Only 3 blocks from KU and 9 blocks from $80 per month water payment. 841-1212 or 842-4655.
We cater to student needs. Ask about our special arrangements for Semester Break 1 and 2 bedroom apartments available with laundry facilities and TV. Semester Leaks. Walk to class. BM-2116
NCCLY DECORATED spacious room. Furnished $94 utilities paid. Near University & downtown, OFFICE AVAILABLE. SUSSEX BAY RESORTS.
SUBLEASE OUTSTANDING TOWNHOME 2 br lr suite, LDR, BR, kitchen, dishwasher w appliances, patio, pool, sauna.
WAKM quiet room one block from Union, Clean hubbub, hotels, after 3 PM, 1280 Ion.
FOR SALE
1973 Maverick, good shape, but engine needs some work, $300 or less, or 81-7443 alternators.
1973 Oldsmobile Cutlass, excellent condition, sunroof, AM/FM stereo, engine completely
success, excellent, excellent condition,
surround, AM FM (97.5), well, will call 844-4402,
overasked, asking $127, will call 844-4402
1974 Honda Civic, economic, runs great, AM/FM
802-644-2920, new tires, new price negotiable
802-644-2920
1980 Sundar, 4 cyl., automatic, air conditioned,
PBR. Brand new AM/FM cassette, 35,000 miles; $150
Honda Civic Hatchback (100-DX). Like new.
Must sell. 842-1583 842-1583
36" gas cook stove $0.00, bass guitar and 15" piggy-back bass amplifier $200.00 Will sell separate Eudora 542-2230
10 Ford Mercury "Marquap" THE BEST DEAL IN TOWN* 'A reliable, affordable, and in excellent condition car. Excelve v engine, new brakes, new tires, 2 plus 1 wheels. Price to sell $650. First $800. Second $1100.
79 Ford Truck, V8 automatic, AM, 42,000 miles, very clean. $4,195. 749-5041 and 841-6067.
clean. $4195 749-0541 and 841-4067
Adds 380 computer terminal, usable with KU. Must
call user perfect. Call KU 265-9090
Adds 868 computer, must sell, doesn't work. Good quality. Price negotiable. Call Roshi 749-0800.
CHRISTMAS TREE FARM. Beautiful Pine Hill Farm will open the season after Thanksgiving and bring you back to our farm to cut your own fresh trees from our pine forest. Drive on highways 44, to county Halt. Ekt. Turn left onto U.S. Route 35.
New crate amplifier in excellent condition and gold electric guitar (Les Paul). These seldom use an amp.
KWALITY, COMICS Heavy Metall, Cerebus,
Undergrounds, thousands of Marvels DC's, new
arrivals every week, science fiction, gift certificates,
extra low prices on in-store specials. 8497209 70 W
Clothes dryer, Kemore electric, brand new, white,
Boulder 842-8422 for 8.10 p.m.
For Sale Trade License incl SDK-86 system design kit
and installation for SysNet 2.10 documentation
$500 offer (1:296) 736-4881 McMullen
documentation
Two female roommates needed for a beautiful new wedding. They will be in the evening at WOMEN'S WORKSHOP, 645 Church St., Chicago jeans (11). Calvin Klein ($28). Jordache & More. Jeans $30. Nike ($39). Skirts & sigh nightwear. Good quality name brands.
TERMS NEGOTIABLE Two Nannuth contracts for
both Salai food plam available. Call 641-127 if
needed.
good Gold with Joan Gossam in lavender
little approx. 150g/5 oz deep sentimental value reward if returned,
wrapped in a gift box.
Olivetti electric typewriter w. half space correction
(key) Like new) 841-7435
HELP WANTED
LUST. Offered white leather jacket in Green Hall.
Reward offered. 841-7794
LOST on November 18th a HP-362 calculator
Reward for return Phone # 843-452, ask for Kerry
2 keys on safety, pin keying. Found outside McCollum Hall. Call 421-6460 to identify
Clerk-Typist H. Dutton include receptionist, typing 40 wpm) and record-keeping. 664-7538.
NURSING: FULL-TIME/PART-TIME Are You Interested In - Weekend only work? Either day, even day or night. Visit us at our weekly or per week - 3 or 12 hour shifts? These and other opportunities for registered nurses are now available at TPCD. We offer a three-week orientation. So even if you have been away from nursing awake, we can help you back in on time. We will help you work together and support each other. We all work together and support each other. SHIFT OFFERMENTAL: 8 HOURLY. Contact Beverly Anderson, RN, director of Nursing, Topteca State Hospital "700 S. 9th St. School, Kansas City."
**9:40 am** (until 10:30am) bookings, 626-449-278
Graduate teaching assistant, 20 hours per week with the Wichita State University department is with the Wichita State University A.J. Program located on the KU Campus. Spring semester 1863-449-278
Junior/Senior fraternity member to sail to other universities in the U.S., 150 hrs per week, excellent compensation; Steve O. at U.C. has earned over $1000 in two months. Write: C.I.E. Unlimited. IBD Pandas, Dallas, Texas 75225
**OVERHEARTH JOBS** - Summer year round. Enterprise II.
Apply now to overhearth.com. Info, write GS box, NC 2015.
Slightly different job info. Write GS box, NC 2015.
Part-time sales clerk wants: Only hard workers need apply. Welcome experience. Inquire in person please. Green's Fine Wine, 800 West 32rd. Freshmen will receive a valid WA. it is not too late for applications.
PERSONAL
A Special For Studens, Haircuts, *P*7, Perms 428,
Charmed 1332); Mass. 843-850; Ask for Deen Jensen.
A Strong Kq outlet: Remem Betital Liquid Lequired
Kq Stadium, 843-Illinois, north of Memorial
Stadium, 843-Illinois, 843-722.
A healthy body glows with invisible (to most eyes) energies at ECKANARK, open discussion group "Health and Spiritual Well-Being"; Thursday, December 2. 7 p.m. on *Covering a Room*, Kaisas
“BRASS BALLS.” You know someone who needs them. Now you can give it to them. Send your name and address and $6.95 to Total Comcept, 2008 1010595, La Warrens, LA 63044. For Christmas delivery
i, to 1000. Button art by Swells 749, 1611.
COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES; early & advanced outpatient abortion; quality medical care; confidentiality assured. Kansas City area Call 212-533-8122.
Can I learn to find your favorite bottle of wine? Wine Selection includes over 600 bottles of wine.
Will get flowers, add get. Send the "Bitter Bouquet." Will送花赠送 locally. Phone 814-6245. For something special with a touch of charm from the past; step by step: Vintage Rose; Hilo; Massa Rose.
ken's pizza
the pizza that brings you back FREE DELIVERY COUPON
843-7405 27th & Iowa
HEADACHE, BACKACH, STIFF NECK, LEAP
PAINT Find and correct the CAUSE of the problem!
Dr. Mark Johnson for modern chiropractic care
849506, Accepting Blue Cross and Low-Stear
Graduate eng. student seeks position of a female graduate eng. student with responsibility to write confidentially to Hox 2005 C/Daily Write confidentially to Hox 2005 C/Daily
instant passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization,
immigration, and of course fine portraits
290-8411-611
Joley Oler is now styling hair at the Charmie Salon,
1035 Mass. Haliroucres, c-2 cuts for $142.95 or 1065.
www.charmiesalon.com
Looking for that imaginative Christmas gift? Try something special. The company delivers. Put that special person in cartoons for a little price.
PICTURE F!AMES. LARGE stock of pre-murder
fiction by the late J.R. Holliday (1934) in
Roman. LANDIS-DAISS Paint #818 Mac.
125 pp.
New mylar bags, men's rubber boots, winter coats,
sweaters. Barbie Second Hand Rose $15 Indiana
Barnes & Noble $20.
West Coast Saloon
ПКФ Arm Wrestling
Tournament Tonight!
Register by 9pm
PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTHRIGHT
847-261-9000
trophies for 3 divisions
all division Light wt.
winners Middle wt.
Heavy wt.
2222 Iowa
841-BREW
Photo wanted from ILE M. concert 11-19-82 at O'Neil House 842-456-8237
Trouble with your lady? Send her the "Little Hug"
bouquet. Only $6.00 delivered. 841-8243.
SINCE 1983 CURSES. We prescheduled a week in Aguascalte,
Spain for four hours of theater, drama and dance
Dance with Rommel Toussaint and The Closers
Shakespeare with Renee Mackenzie.
Sail the Bahamas! Back in sunshine, pip pina cele
outside the cruise; for your most unfortunate
Christmas break—ever. Package prices
compare/person/week. Bahamas West of KC
749-762-8111
Searles Televisions Video Recorders Names
the channel you want to see in the inbox. Get your best price, then call TALK
TELEVISION at (718) 254-6900.
Simmonds Wine & Tea Shop. The finest selection of wines from the largest supplier of strong wines. W 101, Ward 267. (800) 345-3700.
Sit it on a shirt, custom silicone fabric. T-shirts, jerseys and cap. Stirrart by Swells 740-1631.
WOODEN TOYS, MATERIALS AND ASSorted toy items in storage. POWERS ON A LANDIS-DAISSY PAINT HOME.
Western Civilization Notes. On sale. Make a sense out of Western Civilization. Makes sense to use in your classroom. Prepare for exam preparation. New Analysis of Western Civilization. Available now at Town Crier, 1000 W. 57th St., Chicago, IL 60611.
What makes the birthday boy happiest on his birthday? Seed him a Strip-O-Gram and see 80-500 songs to play. Have him experience experienced musicians, please. Ability on piano, organ, synthesizer preferred. Call 414-8437 after 6pm.
The Reagan Weekly Specials on Kagel! Call 841-84560/
10109, W. 23rd.
NMI etc. presents ski trips every weekend. Sleeper
nii, reasonable price, Group rates and bus charters
Skilker's Iqnare saved from arrest. Uldaily since June Cume and compare. Wilfred Skilker Ecally. 100th
SERVICES OFFERED
Alterations, taloring and dreaming. Experienced in:
*designing for animation*
*altering, starting and generating specials*
Study skills Workbook Emphasis on preparing for the Job Search. Workbook emphasizes job search skills. Jayhawk房 Krasma Unison. No registration required. Job search. (2)
MATH TUTOR, Bob Means, patient professional M. 46, for 16 min. group discouns. 945-202-3820 Specializing in new graphic STRINGING, squash, Specializing in new graphic Hybrid stringing. 945-4712 8 p.m.
MATH1 CS. STATISTICS3 Expert Tutor, Math1
MATH2 CS. STATISTICS4 Expert Tutor, & pay, & math
Callouts Callub. 842-650-9200
Students call April to have all your typing needed done and very readily reasonable. Day 84-0310 - Election
Tutor - English 901, 101, 102. Three years teaching experience and also proofread and edit exam materials. Call 749-8600.
Trouble with your lady? Send her the "Little Hug" buoy. Only 60 delivered. 841-624-625.
TUTOR with good teaching experience in MATH
002-212 CS 580 Mohr Egger. ENGREY | FRENCH NATURAL
WRITE BETTER: Editing Typing Library
Research, Victor Clark: 842-4340
TYPING
AFFORDABLE QUALITY for all your typing needs.
Call Judy. 843-7945 after 6 p.m.
ANNOUCING: "TYPING INK" A professional typing service for your important papers, themes, resumes, and dissertations. Spelling and grammar corrections; re-write assistance. Professional IBM
ATTENTION TOPRIX COMMUNITIES, in ours experience. Reports dissertations; their electronic Memory. Typewriter. Student discount. Call Pam Somerley. 504-8633.
Absolutely LETTER PERFECT typing - editing
Better - faster - experienced. Joan, Lisa, Sandy
643-668 anytime.
DON'T PANIC Quick Brown Fox types and edits them, dissertation papers, paperbacks B48-9286 800-751-2331. All materials are revisions. Any paper under 75 pages does in 24 hours; 75 to 1$0 page maximum. Call 848-3858 anytime.
Experienced typist will type dissertations, theses,
tterm papers etc. Call 842-3200.
Experienced typist will type letters, theses, and dissertations. IBM Correcting Selector. Call Donna K. Moyer.
Experienced typeb - these, desertations, term papers, misc. mihc IB correcting thesaurus, Harp. after B.
Experienced instructors. Tear papers, dossiers, all
types of manuscripts and booklets. Send proofs,
Pica, and will correct spelling. Phone 843-6543 Mrs
Margaret B.
Experienced typist. Reasonable rates. Na jb 500 job
full. All custom assignments and workshops. 841-7250
Experienced tystit. Fast, accurate. IBM select PCaic. (pcaics) requested on request. Keychipping and editing services available Call Fait, 8424300. Experienced tystit will type your papers. Fast, accuracy.
Experienced typist for all your typing needs. Call Mary, m41-8032. Overnight warranty under $85.
FOR PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myra 841/4600
For a good call dept. Bell 749-4736
Experienced typist Reasonable rate. N3 job too small. Call emailings and weekends. 841-763-0070.
FAST, ACCURATE, FOOD, AFFORDABLE TYPING. All-day experience. Call 843-958-204 & 4 p.m. and weekends.
former Harvard Med. School research secretary
Richard Levine, Associate, Reasonable Loads. Call Nattu
841-693-7200.
16" Pant Fax, Affordable, Cheap Tanning 95-8200
Overnight Express, 40 ppm, or under, 10-years old.
$79.99 for 16" Pant Fax, Affordable, Cheap Tanning 95-8200
Have Selective, betty type. Professional, fast, affordable. Betty, 835-6997, evenings and weekends. It's a Fact. Fast, Affordable. Clean Typing. Overnight Express 40 pp. or under 180 years ex-
HONEST ANNIE'S Custom Clerical Services. Typing and tutoring. 843-7708
Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms,
graphics, editing, self-correcting Selective. Call
Ellen 841-2172
TYPING PLUS Theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications, resumes. Assistance with composition, grammar, spelling, etiquette. English tutoring for foreign students or Americans: A142-824
Female roommate to share nice 3 bedroom apartment in the beautiful Meadwick township. $106 plus one-third low utilities. Other two roommates are KU students, willing to work with you. Call 912-847-5542
Shakespeare could write. Elvis could wiggle, mytaping, typing. B4 842-0943 after 5 and weekends.
CALL TIP TOP TYPING -1200 Iowa. Experienced typers. Xerox 615 memory writer. Royal Correcting
Female roommate needs to share space in
room apartment $116 plus one third low utili-
tity room. Roommate is not required.
WANTED
Female roommate to share nice 2 bedroom first floor of house. $125 plus $_2 low utilities. 749-5418. Keep trying!
Male roommate wanted to share 2 bdrm apartment for spring. Walk to campus H4.16 plus 0% utilities.
**Male teammate should up to share 2 bedroom apt at**
**10% minimum plus $10,000; water, water & gas补贴**
**10% minimum plus $10,000; water, water & gas补贴**
NEEDI 5 TH ROOMMATE to share five bedroom house $125 plus utilities paid. Quit cooper, make roommate/responsibilities for evening meals. Male preferred. B4 749-6026. If no answer leave message.
NDSMOKING MALE ROOMATE MATCHED by graduate student for December 1 or January 7 through July 13. Nice 2 Bedroom room in a 19-year lease. $842.50 plus utilities. #430.186 Keeps
Non-standing firm executive wanted to share information with SES. Reqs: BS or higher from SES plus one-board of Calif. Citizenship. 551 phone number.
Non-smoking male needed to share large 4-bedroom
house, close to campus. $106.00 plus one-fourth low
utilities. Call 841.0727
Non-smoking male housemate for a clean quiet room. Close to WiFi, $150 plus meals. No pets. Two bedrooms, $475 plus 3 units, 794-2411. Roommate wanted to share a room close to ours. Please call 794-2411.
Roommate needed! Immed or beginning of December. One fourth utilities plus 94 month fee.
Kennetha: Feminist, liberal woman or man. Must
fill 2qid fgir. Must have 40 yrs of exp.
Needs to be a public health specialist. Must like 60-80% after-
sex. Must have MS in social sciences or nursing.
Take my place in newly reconstructed 4 bedroom
townhouse. Share with 3 girls. No depend req
for payment.
BUY, SELL, or FIND your pot of gold with a KANSAN CLASSIFIED.
with a check
Just mail in this form with a check or
money order payable to the Kansan
to:
University Daily Kansan, 118 Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kansas 66045. Use rates below to figure costs. Now you've got selling power!
Classified: Heading:
Write Ad Here:
Name:
Address:
Phone:
Date to Run: to
| | 1 time | 2 times | 3 times | 4 times | 5 times |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 15 words words | $2.25 | $2.50 | $2.75 | $3.00 | $3.25 |
| Additional words | .02 | .03 | .04 | .05 | .06 |
2.
1
Page 10 University Daily Kansan, November 30, 1982
COUPONS
COUPONS
ONS
COUPONS
10% Off Everything!
Get 10% off anything in our store only with this coupon, until Sat., Dec. 4th.
RICK'S BIKE SHOP
1033 VERMONT • LAWRENCE, KS. 66044 © (913) 841-6642
--kansas union bookstores main union level 1-2,3, satellite shop
HOLIDAY SPECIAL
Club Steak Dinner $199 Includes: choice of potato & roll
HOLIDAY HAIR
Southern Hills Center 749-1100
Bring a friend and SAVE! (Call 843-8808 for details). Offer expires 12/11/82.
SIRLOIN STOCKADE
10.5 LITERS
Good all day Mon.-Thurs. the entire month of Dec.
Headmasters.
You'll Love Our Style.
809 Vermont, Lawrence
843-8808
Shampoo, Cut & Blowdry
$1000
"Let us get you ready for the Christmas Season."
Create a New You for this Holiday Season.
SANTA'S CHRISTMAS
Ask for:
Mary, Kim
Connie or Nancy
villages and places
25% off, A Perm, highlighting, or a Haircut and Styling.
Open Monday through Saturday
Genne's 842-5800, call for your app't. today.
Impress them over the holidays
ONE FREE SESSION
TANLME
Chanel Hair Fashions 842-7900 expires 12/15/82 10 East 9th
$5
OFF
MEMBERSHIPS
Relax in our safe, effective tanning beds.
Also offering Jane Fonda & Aerobic tummies tumbling also available FOR APPT. B41-8232 (bring in this coupon) HOLIDAY PLAZA 25th & IOWA
C-41 FILM PROCESSING
CINEMAS
Chocolate Unlimited
- Lord West
4.19 with this coupon
Expires Dec. 31, 1982
For those special occasions, be sure to see us for the latest in tuxedo rentals.
with this coupon
armondale
- Pierre Cardin
Looking for temporary relief from stress?
Derma Care
The Ultimate Skin Care Therapy
Men, Women, Children
For appointment or information Call
Genne's 842-8500
Spend 3 days and
$2.000 at a Health Spa
--with thousand island, lettuce, tomato, W/chiece
SIXTH & MISSOURI
offer GOOD NOV. 30-DEC. 7, 1982
843-2139
BICYCLE PAWNIRES CYCLING GLOVES
SADDLE BAGS SLEEPING BAGS
JACKETS PARKAS
VESTS TENTS
Karen's
A Private Club
Or
--with thousand island, lettuce, tomato, W/chiece
SIXTH & MISSOURI
offer GOOD NOV. 30-DEC. 7, 1982
843-2139
10% OFF
You can get a relaxing facial treatment at Derma Care for only $12, (reg. $20)
Derma Care
MICKS
ending the BOSS in juvenile FED
$2.00 off the cost of
a CHOCOLATE Delivery
From our one and only
singing elf. (with this coupon)
20% OFF ON ALL CANNONDALE PRODUCTS
BICYCLE PANNIRES CYCLING GLOVES
SADDLE BAGS SLEEPING BAGS
JACKETS PARKAS
VESTS TENTS
1339 MASS. 842-3131
MICKS
MILK
This Coupon worth $8.00 off one Derma Care (facial Treatment).
BUY ONE DRINK. GET ONE FREE UP&UNDER
"Above Johnny's"
--with thousand island, lettuce, tomato, W/chiece
SIXTH & MISSOURI
offer GOOD NOV. 30-DEC. 7, 1982
843-2139
842-0377
Buy A Draw
Get one FREE!
at
Johnny's Tavern
401 N. 2nd 842-0377
(cash & carry)
401 N. 2nd
HENRY'S RESTAURANT
ORNAMENTAL MARKETING BILLION
ORNAMENTAL OUT
FILM CONSERVATION MUSEUM
742-03038A
ALL AMERICAN QUARTER POUNDER GET ONE FREE
FUJI LOTION
SAVE
25¢
GIFT YOUR NEXT
ROLL OF FUJI FILM
ON AUG 30, 24, 24 @ 12:17. COLOR FILM
SAVE
25¢
OFF YOUR NEXT
ROOM
ON ANY ART OR COLOR FILM.
Census The census can be used to
count the number of people in a
area and to determine what
you cannot be sure about.
919
lowa
419 Iowa 7ERCHER 1102 Mass.
20% off Any Item
--over $10.00 with this coupon
--with purchase of any coupon expires
Combination Sandwich Dec. 15, 1982
SOUTHERN HILLS
Floral & Gift
749-2912
1601 W. 23rd
Southern Hills Center
Greenbrier's OLD WORLD DELICATESSEM Chance Emporium Holiday Plaza Shopping Center
French Onion Soup
2449 Iowa
841-8271
--with purchase of any coupon expires
Combination Sandwich Dec. 15, 1982
gallery
The First For Men Management
Phone 842-8372
TRAINS & MODELS
FREE
Bucky's
Coupon good through
Dec. 5, 1982
2120 WEST NINTH
come as you are . . . hungry
Buy 1
SUNDAE
Get 1
FREE
15% DISCOUNT
5208 WEST 23RD STREET
across from the post office
Mens', Womens', and Youth.
With compass... before Dec. 15, 782
1 TEXAS BURRITO
get the second one for 50¢
with this coupon
BUY ONE
1TEXASBURRITO
20% off Warm-up Suits
BORDER
BANDIDO
RESTAURANT
f
Hours:
T-Sat.—10-15
Sun.—1-5
On All Special Orders, Models,
Trains & War Gaming Figures
expires Dec. 24, 1982
230 Locust St.
841-4204
Mon.-Closed
$10^00 off Perm with Haircut with Lisa, Lori, or Low
--expires 12/17/82
Bucky's
Buy 1
ROAST BEEF
Get 1
FREE
Our Kinky December Special!
rancis sporting goods
731 Massachusetts 843-4191
Lawrence, KA.
2120 WEST NINTH
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Ladies & Gentlemen At
ALPINE
(expires Jan. 31, 1983)
2120 W. 25th Holiday Plaza 842-1822
On Any Purchase
1601
W. 3rd.
749-2630
(with this coupon)
Open 9:30-8 weekdays
9:30-5:30 on Saturday
1-8 sunday
SOUTHERN HILLS
SPORTINGOODS
$10 Gift with Lisa, Lort, or Larry
Coupon good Mon.- Sat. & Evenings (by appointment) until December 31.
1601 W. 23rd St 9:30 AM on Any Purchase Open 9:30 AM-5:30 Saturday
Body by Lamborthgiun. High fidelity by Alpine.
FAMOUS ALPINE LAMBORGHINI POSTER
$1.50 at OUR NEW LOCATION NEXT TO KIDS IN THE HOLIDAY PLAZA
RIVER CITY
CAR STEREO
29TH IOWA
Silver Clipper
10% Discount
Bocky's Coupon good through
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O
hair
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Get $5 OFF haircut, blowdry or $10 OFF Perm
BRING COUPON
LIMIT 1 PER COUPON. Fees per 12/7/82
PIZZA Shoppe
FOR SALE BY THE KOSLID
KINGSIZE
TRIPLE TOPPING
AND
32 oz PEPSI
$7,95 DELIVERED
842-0600
PIZZA Shoppe
6th & Kasold
Westridge Shopping Center
KINGSIZE
TRIPLE TOPPING
AND
32 oz. PEPSI
$7.95 DELIVERED
Fast Delivery Available
PIZZA Shoppe
6th & Kasold
Westridge Shopping Center
FREE
2 Large Pepsi's
with any Queen or
King Pizza
842-0600
PIZZA
Shoppe
Fast Delivery Available
FREE
842-0600
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Uppercut 1031 Vt, Lawrence, KS. 66044 • 841-4894
“Our Success Goes to Your Head”
Christmas Special
Get a Perm at Regular Price and Receive
1 FREE HAIRCUT
Offer Good on tues., Wed., Thurs. Call Bobbie or Karla
Limit one to Customer * Offer expires 12-20-82
VISIONS 806 Massachusetts 841-7421
30% OFF
CONTACT LENS POLISHING
Offer good through December 7,1982
1
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