STILL WARNED
The University Daily
KANSAN
University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas
Vol. 93, No. 154 USPS 650-040
Friday, July 1, 1983
Weather
Today will be mostly sunny with mpg around 90 to 95, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka. Winds will be from the south at 10 to 20 mph.
Tonight will be partly cloudy with a 20 percent chance of thunderstorms. Lows with
Tomorrow will be mostly sunny with bighairs around 9 to 15. The outlook for the rest of the holiday weekend calls for warm temperatures and a chance of thunder-
Students who want aid must now file for draft
By MARY ANN COSTELLO Staff Reporter
The Solomon Amendment, linking draft registration to federal student financial aid, becomes effective today, after a long, tug-of-war legal battle that finally ended Monday in New York.
The new law requires all males who file a Family Financial Statement for student aid to prove that they have registered for the draft.
ENFORCEMENT OF THE LAW is retractive, which means that Family Financial Statements that were processed before today for next year must have the draft question on them answered.
"At this time of year, it's a real blow. But its something you come to expect from the federal aid program. They don't show much respect for financial aid administrators."
See DRAFT page 5
Education issue useful tool for president, professor says
President Reagan acknowledges the applause of the crowd in the Shawnee Mission Northwest High School gymnasium Wednesday before delivering his speech on the importance of education.
2
By DAVID SWAFFORD
Staff Writer
In reaction to President Reagan's speech Wednesday at Shawnee Mission Northwest High School in Shawnee, Earl A. Nehring, KU professor of political science, said that the president was definitely making education a political issue.
"It's obviously a hot item right now and he's capitalizing on it," he said.
Nehring said that people were always concerned about how to improve education and that when the President of the United States expressed that concern, everyone loved it.
DURING HIS SPEECH, the president maintained that the federal government should not interfere with the nation's school systems. He
He strongly recommended that each school system adopt the Five New Basics plotted out in the Commission on Excellence's report, "A Nation at Risk."
told the student leaders at the conference that they should go back to their communities with a desire to turn their school systems around and "make American education great again."
The new basics are four years of English, three years of mathematics, three years of science, three years of social science and one-half year of computer science. For those considering higher education, two years of a foreign language are recommended.
foreign language REAGAN WAS GREETED with a thunderous round of applause following his recommendation that the Five New Basics be adopted.
Nehring said he agreed with the president's
I will accept any apologies. I am sorry to have missed your reply.
Higher 'sin taxes' to start todav
By ANN REGAN Staff Reporter
A tax increase going into effect today on gas, liquor and cigarettes is expected to generate $94 million in additional revenue for the state of Kansas, the public information officer for the Kansas Department of Revenue said yesterday.
The liquor enforcement tax imposed on beer, whiskey and wine will double today, going from 4 percent to 8 percent.
BARB CLARK SAID the Legislature thought it could easily justify increasing the "sin-taxes" on liquor and cigarettes.
For beer drinkers, this means that six-packs will cost about 10 cents more today than they did yesterday, according to a local merchant.
Cigarettes will cost an extra five cents a pack. This will mean that pack-a-day smokers should expect to pay about $1.50 more a month.
The gas tax increase, two cents a gallon now and an additional one cent Jan. 1, is expected to generate an additional $70 million for the state, Clark said.
She said the money was necessary to pay for repair and construction of state highways.
"There are no adequate funds elsewhere," she said.
SEVERAL LOCAL GAS stations began pumping-up prices earlier this week, much to the dismay of motorists who had planned on filling-up before today's tax increase.
The early price increase was justified, Clark said, because gas station owners were charged an inventory tax on whatever gas they had in stock on July 1.
Other new legislation going into effect today includes:
- A law making it more difficult for minors to obtain a duplicate of an older person's driver's license by spelling out what documents are necessary to prove identity.
- The law also prohibits lending any identification to another person that would help them obtain a fake identification card or reproduce a driver's license.
- A law prohibiting insurance companies from considering speeding convictions for drivers going between 35 and 65 mph when deciding whether to be stopped or when setting automobile insurance rates.
- A law reducing the state medical student scholarship program that pays the tuition of students at the College of Health Sciences who agree to practice in Kansas after they graduate.
- The number being granted has been cut in half. Only 100 will be granted in the coming year and they will be reduced by 25 in the following years until they level off at 50.
- A law creating an Advanced Technology Commission in the Department of Economic Development that would coordinate and promote higher education and education programs at state universities.
*The Kansas Age Discrimination Act, apply to persons between the ages of 40 and 70. It will prohibit employers and unions from discriminating against someone because of age in hiring, membership, salary, promotion or other work.
*A law recognizing that rape can occur between husband and wife and eliminating an existing requirement that rape victims must prove that they tried to resist their attackers.
- A law limiting the amount of federal income taxes that Kansans can claim on their state returns to $5,000 for individuals and $10,000 for couples filing joint returns.
Money woes on tap for fall semester
By GUELMA ANDERSON
Staff Reporter
Though one budget woe has been averted in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, students still will face crowded classrooms and fewer course selections in the fall, an official of the college said yesterday.
Michael Young, associate dean of the college,
said that on the positive side, almost $150,000 for teaching assistants had been retrieved from unexceeded faculty leaves.
THE COLLEGE'S RUDGET for teaching assistants was cut by $175,000 last summer.
"We were worried that with the economy being the way it is not as many faculty members
Although the TA crisis had been avoided for the coming school year, Young said, budget cuts have made it necessary for some departments to
cancel upper level courses to allow room for freshman-sophomore level courses this fall.
He said the departments of computer science and economics were especially hit hard because they handled projects that were difficult to complete.
Thomas Weiss, chairman of the economics department, said that five 'to six graduate courses were canceled for fall as well as four elective courses.
"THE PROGRESS OF some students' programs will be delayed because some of the canceled graduate courses are requirements." he said.
"Things will be worse in the spring because some of our staff members are scheduled to leave after the fall. If they leave, we will have to cut four more courses."
Victor Wallace, chairman of the computer science department, said the department's course load had not been keeping up with demand.
He said that demand for computer science courses had increased 60 percent during the past two years.
"We HAVE TO STRETCH things." he said.
"Class sections are larger than they should be. Normally, classes would have an average of 30 students, but now there are 50 to 60 students."
Gharam Zuner, chairman of the department of English, said his department would not be able to meet the demand for introductory courses because of the lack of money available.
"We have not had to cancel any literature classes," he said, "but we had to cancel classes in grammar and usage, advanced composition and technical writing."
Norman Saul, chairman of the history department, said there had been a loss of staff and a decrease in graduate seminar courses in the department during the past two to three years.
A fest of fun, food, fireworks begins Sunday
Staff Reporter
By PAT COONEY
The University of Kansas will be the scene of two significant events during Lawrence Independence Days this Sunday and Monday — a bluegrass concert, which will be broadcast by KANU-FM Sunday, and a fireworks display in Memorial Stadium Monday.
KANU will broadcast a live bluegrass concert 7:30 p.m. Sunday from Burcham Park, according to Alan J. Berman, development director at KANU
THE CONCERT WILL feature performances by two nationally known bluegrass quartets by
Masters of ceremonies for the concert will be Mike Allen and Rick Desko, co-hosts of the
regular Sunday evening program on KANU's "Flint Hills Special." Berman said.
The broadcast will last until about 10:30 p.m. and admission to the concert will be free with the purchase of an Independence Days button, available from local merchants for $5 in advance or $5.50 at the park. Admission for children under 12 is free.
In addition, Memorial Stadium will be the site for the annual fireworks display, sponsored by the Lawrence Jaycees. The fireworks will begin about 9:30 p.m. Monday.
Horizon, a band from Lawrence, will perform in the stadium at 7:30 p.m. Monday before the fireworks display.
A separate admission price of $2 will admit people who do not have Independence Days buttons to the activities in Memorial Stadium, said Rick Bellinger, Jaycees president.
BELLINGER SAID THAT $6,300 had been spent on fireworks this year.
"This year's program will feature a salute to John Riggins, former KU football player, and will last from one to one-and-a-half hours," Bellering said.
Bingham Jr. Riggins was thrust into the national limelight last January when he earned the Most Valuable Player award in Super Bowl XVII.
The stadium gates will open at 6:30 p.m., and parking near the stadium will be free.
Lawrence Independence Days is sponsored by the Convention and Visitors Bureau of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce and will take place on April 15, 2013 in Kansas River. This is the first year for the event*
"This is something we are trying to do to illustrate the history and the heritage of the world."
Sec FOURTH page 5
Retiring assistant dean of Liberal Arts prepares to put ruby slippers to rest
BY GUELMA ANDERSON Staff Representer
Staff Reporter
Much of Dorothy Haiglund's life parallels that of the legendary heroine in the "Wizard of Ox."
Haglund, a native of Lawrence, began her trip down the "yellow brick road" of the University.
Today her journey officially ends. Haglund is retiring as assistant dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and director of its graduate division.
ACCORDING TO HAGLUND, her career at the University was a "Duke" — a surprise occurrence, just as was the tornado that swept the fictitious Dorothy to the Land of Oz.
Haglund started at KU in 1938, filling in for a vacationing friend who was a secretary for the Bureau of Information.
Later, she took the place of another secretary who worked in the graduate school. She faced a "wicked witch" the first day on her new job—organizing summer enrollment. She survived and went on to spend the rest of her career with the University in the graduate school.
when she came back nothing was said about my leaving, and so I just stayed on," Haglund
Then in 1972, the graduate school was decentralized, but she continued her work in the same office, which was by then the graduate school of the College of Liberal Arts and Science.
As an enrollment in the school increased, assistants in her office were added to help with
"The first year, nobody paid any attention to me at all in the College, but I just carried on as usual," she said.
"THE NEXT YEAR, I sort of gained a reputation on campus of being the grad school. Even now, other graduate deans will call me because they'll come to a problem they've never
bad. Students from other schools are told to come in and talk to me."
Ruth Hillers, a clerk for the College's graduate division, said that Hagland had the most organized office in the College and that she admired Hagland's fairness toward students.
Haglund said, "There are about 28,000 graduate students who've gotten degrees, and of that number, 75 percent have gone through my course. We've influenced the lives of some 21,000 students."
She said that during the 1960s, student behavior was frightening and difficult to handle.
"Now students are not nearly as aggressive as they were then. We always been, generally, on the students' side because they need it," she said.
"I LIKE DEALING with students, but I don't like the people who come in and to try put something over on me as though I'm a stupid scumb-bunny. They didn't get anywhere with that."
"If she did something for one student, she did it for them all," she said.
"I've had people that I told what I thought was the best thing for them to do and they went on and did what they wanted to do. And later, Well, you were right, I never do that again."
"I know a lot of people probably don't like me because I bad to say 'no' sometimes. But, I do."
"Students have difficulty in meeting the rules sometimes, quite often in fact. So I try to help them meet the requirements without really having to. Many times there's an out that they don't see."
Haglund was guided by so many chancellors over the past 45 years that she has trouble remembering their names and order.
"Let's see, Linden was in office when I came, and there was Malot, Murphy, Chalmers, Dyche and
was another one, a little short one — Wescoe — and now Chancellor Budg."
TODAY, HAGLUND HAS fond memories of her unexpected stay at the University and of the friends she has met along the way. She said she had received many letters wishing her well, bouquets from professors and thank you cards from students.
"I'm going to miss my contacts with students and the faculty," she said.
Louise Byrd, a secretary at the graduate school, said she respected Haglund's dedication and her ability to answer anyone's questions about graduate procedures.
"We're all going to miss her," she said.
Haglund said that she had received a pin, a plaque and a portable electric typewriter as going-away presents and that about four parties had been given in her honor.
At one of the parties, friends and co-workers put on a coat and guard of Oe" and followed them.
"They gave me a darling, little, fluffy dog with Toto on it," she said.
Haglund now has a new challenge — finding activities to keep her busy.
"I'M NOT WORRIED that I won't find things to do." she said.
"I hope to travel, and I'm going to get into various activities. Maybe I'll work as a hospital volunteer or maybe I'll get into the Meals on Wheels program."
She said that now she would have time to go shopping downtown and attend activities on the Hill, such as concerts, plays and basketball games.
"Of course, I'll be back at the office for a couple of months in the fall to help out. I told
me it would be a bit more difficult."
Like the child star Dorothy in "The Wizard of Oz," for Dorothy Haglund, there's no place like home.
Steve Zuk/KANSAN
Dorothy Haglund, assistant dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, retires today after 45 years at the University.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, July 1, 1983
News Briefs From United Press International
Court rules strikebreakers can sue after being fired
WASHINGTON — Strikebreakers won a legal victory yesterday when the Supreme Court ruled 6-3 that they can sue to recover damages in state court if they are fired after a strike is settled.
Upholding a Kentucky appeals court's decision, the ruling gave 12 strikebreakers the option to sue their employer for $6 million for promising that they would be hired as permanent replacements for their members, but then discharging them when the strikes were recalled.
In siding with the strikebreakers, the justicees rejected arguments that the right to sue was an unacceptable attempt to strip an employer of one of his primary weapons during a strike — the right to hire permanent replacements.
The strikebreakers sued Belknap Inc., for misrepresentation and breach of contract after a 1978 strike in Louisville was settled and they were discharged to make way for returning Teamsters' union workers.
NOW says it won't support Reagan
WASHINGTON - The National Organization for Women yesterday launched a campaign to defeat President Reagan's bid for re-election in 1984.
Judy Goldsmith, president of NOW, said the campaign would include a "truth squad," to publicize Reagan's record on women's issues, and picketing of the president wherever he traveled and at the White House every weekend during the summer.
Goldsmith said polls indicated fewer women than men supported Reagan. She predicted the gender gap would have a major impact on
Goldsmith said she expected NOW's political action committee would make contributions to candidates in excess of the $3 million it spent on the 1982 elections.
She said NOW was not ready to endorse any of the six Democratic candidates for president.
Sudan rules out hostage rescue raid
NAIROBI, Kenya — Sudan yesterday ruled out a military rescue operation to save five Western hostages, including two Americans, held under threat of death by guerrillas in a remote mission station.
The two American hostages are John Haspels of Lyons, Kan. and Ron Pontier of Clermont, Fla.
Porter of Election, 2014.
The guerrillas said they would kill the captured aid workers Wednesday if they were not given $189,000 and 150 sets of clothing, plus radio time on the Voice of America and the BBC World Service to broadcast their protest against the government of the east African nation.
The hostages were captured June 23 by 15 guerrillas saying they belonged to the Southern Sudan Liberation Front, be able to be demanding autonomy for the mainly Christian and black southern section of Sudan, splitting it from the predominantly arab, Moslem north.
Withholding tax decision delayed
WASHINGTON — Uncle Sam has put on ice some changes in federal law and practice, including tax withholding on interest and dividends, that were to mark the middle of the fiscal year on July 1.
The controversial tax withholding law was to take effect on that date, but a flood of protest orchestrated by bankers lead Congress to move toward repeal of the rule that financial institutions hold back 10 percent of income from interest and dividends for tax purposes.
Treasury Secretary Donald Regan authorized a delay in the withholding rule until Aug. 1, pending congressional action on a compromise between House and Senate versions of the repeal.
Officials predict end of martial law
ROME - Polish church leaders visiting Pope John Paul II predicted yesterday that martial law might be lifted in their homeland next month.
Cardinal Jozef Glemp, the Roman Catholic primate in Poland, when asked whether he thought the military government would end martial law July 22 — the Polish national day — as a result of the pope's recent visit, said. "We think so."
Asked whether Lech Walesa was being eliminated from the scene, Glemp said, "No", but was non-committal about what role Walesa might have.
One high-ranking member of the clergy with Glemp said the church was talking with the government about "establishing some kind of new union based on the 1980 Gdansk accords" but said the church would not run the government.
Arrests on rise in Peruvian unrest
LIMA, Peru — More than 7,000 people have been arrested halfway through the government's 60-day anti-guerrilla crackdown. Many of them were grabbed off the street or hauled from their homes by masked government gunmen at midnight, witnesses and police sources said yesterday.
Judges, students, union leaders, journalists and even the Peruvian representative of the Amnesty International human rights group have been taken into custody since the two-month state of emergency began.
Civilian President Belaunde Terry ordered the crackdown a month ago to curb the Maoist "Shining Path" guerrilla group which has campaigned to overthrow the government.
The state of emergency suspends many civil rights, including that of free assembly, and gives police broad powers of arrest, search and seizure.
Greek leader wants U.S. bases out
Referring to the deadlocked U.S.-Greek negotiations over the U.S. bases and 16 other U.S. installations on Greek soil, the demonstrators carried banners which read, "Stop the negotiations, begin the closure of the bases."
ATHENS, Greece — Prime Minister Andrea Papandreou insisted yesterday the four U.S. bases in Greece should be closed and 10,000 demonstrators marched through Athens to protest the U.S. military presence in their country.
the bases. Speaking to reporters, Papandreou said Greece did not want the bases on its soil but would give the U.S. government "a reasonable period of time to move their bases somewhere else."
Sources close to the Greek government say Papandreou has proposed a five-year limit on any new agreement and an 18-month period following expiration of the accord to close the bases.
Asbestos found in 10,800 schools
WASHINGTON — About 10 percent of the nation's public schools have crumbling asbestos insulation that is a potential cancer risk to 4 million pupils and school employees, a union survey released yesterday showed.
38
The study by the Service Employees International Union also found that at least 20 states are in violation of federal regulations that require records on what schools have inspected for asbestos, a known carcinogen. Kansas was included in the list of states.
In addition, the union noted, a government task force to monitor state asbestos detection efforts in schools has not met since shortly after it was established in 1980.
The task force said 3.2 million pupils and 648,000 employees could be affected by dangerous asbestos insulation in an estimated 10,800 schools nationwide.
Not only the University of Kansas Alumni Association have a new building, it will be getting a new dearest building. B. Williams takes care in mid-August.
Alumni Association names new director
Dolph C. Simons, Jr., retiring alumn association president, said that Williams was offered the job yesterday as an adjunct in evidence for the final selection process.
strong, enthusiastic choice of the members of our executive committee," Simons said.
Williams is now director of alumni affairs and development at Slippery Rock State College, Slippery Rock, Pa.
"WILLIAMS EMERGED As the
"I'm sure he'll do a first class job." Williams will succeed Dick Wimotem, who resigned yesterday to become special projects director for Kansas University Endowment Association and the Alumni Association.
SIMONS EXPRESSED regret at losing Winternote, who has been director of the Alumni Association since 1963.
"He's done a tremendous job and played a significant role in helping to develop the Alumni Association to its mission of national stature." Simons said.
Williams received his undergraduate degree from Indiana University, Bloomington, Ind., in 1970. He also received his master's degree in college personnel administration in 1972 and
his doctoral degree in higher education administration in 1977 from Indiana.
His wife, Linda, is also a graduate of
Indiana University with undergraduate and graduate degrees in elementary education. They have one son, Christopher, 18 months.
While at Indiana University, Williams was assistant to the executive secretary of the Indiana University Alumni Association from 1972 to 1977.
After leaving Indiana he became executive director and then director of alumni relations and development at George Mason University, Fairfax, Va.
City leaders tour downtown development area
By GENE HUNTER
Staff Reporter
City leaders yesterday took a walking tour of downtown and later discussed the proposed plan for the redevelopment of downtown area.
The plan, called Scheme Four, was discussed by members of the Downtown Improvement Committee, the Lawrence City Commission and representatives of the city's developer, Sizer Realty Co. Inc. of Kenner, La
The redevelopment plan will cover a four-block area from Seventh to Ninth streets and from Massachusetts to Rhode Island streets.
An agreement to proceed with
Scheme Four will be discussed further
at tuesday's City Commission meeting. But according to Mike Wilden, assistant city manager, the agreement cannot be given final approval until the city staff draws up a proposal.
THE COMMITTEE ANDcommission also gave tentative approval for Sizeret to find a major retailer to occupy a proposed department store on the northeast corner of Ninth and Massachusetts streets.
Members of the improvement committee and commission told Sizelier representatives that they preferred a department store as part of the shopping center.
Sydney Lassen, chairman of the board of Sizeler, said most large
department store chains had a set format for their stores' designs.
He said a major retailer probably would not build a two-story department store.
SIZELER AGREED, however, to offer retailers only a two-story department store, which the committee prefers. Then, if no one accepted the order, it would be able to offer a one-story structure, provided the commission approved.
Members of the committee and the commission debated with Sizerel about the department store companies' audits; choose the final design of the structure.
Lassen said Lawrence was not in a position of power in dealing with the issue.
"We are not the ones who will decide the criteria for the building," he said. "The department store will."
Lassen said JCPenney officials had already told him they did not think Lawrence would go ahead with the project.
Commissioner Ernest Angino agreed with Lassen that Lawrence should be flexible.
"WE NEED THEM a hell of a lot more than they need us," he said.
But Mayor David Longhurst disagreed.
"Lawrence is unique. We don't have to roll over and say, 'Do whatever you want,' because we want their department store," he said.
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University Daily Kansan, July 1, 1983
Page 3
Area churches work for peace
Raven Church 2013
By DOUGLAS FARAH
Staff Writer
"Journey into Peace," reads a poster at the entrance of West Side Presbyterian Church, and that is what an ordained minister is doing in churches are working toward today.
The question of how to achieve peace during a nuclear age is prompting many denominations to reconsider their stands on the issues of peace, nuclear disarmament and the church's role in the world.
"THIS IS A HISTORIC turn for the church, and is reaching a wide range of Christian churches," Rev. Jack Bremer, the campus pastor for Ecumenical Christian Ministries, said recently.
Bremer said that many Protestant churches were following the lead of the Catholic Church.
He said that the United Methodist Church was studying the Roman Catholic bishops' letter released earlier to describe how he hopes to see whether it wanted to adopt it.
Rural churches and local members of congregations, who several years ago didn't question the need for an arms training to question it now, Bremer said.
"Jesus teaches non-violence. His own life was a clear example of that. He taught that to be a man, you must be a man."
person, and chose the path that allowed cruxifexion." Bremer said.
BREMER, WHOSE MINISTRY is sponsored by the United Methodist, Presbyterian, United Church of Christ and Brethren churches, said Christians could make a difference in the nuclear arms debate by studying the issues, writing their congressmen and analyzing the relationship between individual faith and the acquirement of peace.
On the individual level, Christians should refuse to give any support to the arms race because it is contrary to the truth as exemplified by Christ, Brémer said.
Rev. Robert Frettet of West Side Presbyterian Church, 1124 Kasold Dr., said the peace movement was a grassroots movement within the church.
There is a genuine yearning for peace, and this has led the Presbyterian Church to adopt the peace movement as the issue for the 1980s. Frettag said. The idea is to be part of a movement, not just the nuclear freeze.
"WE ARE TO LIVE in the world as Christians. The church has an obligation to speak out. If something has moral and ethical implications, who's going to if the church doesn't't?" Freitag said.
The West Side church wrote and adopted a statement calling for a
"mutual nuclear moratorium with adequate verification," that is slightly different from the one issued by the European Commission, requiring for a nuclear freeze, Freitag said.
"Our statement was trying to bring in the idea that we are not opposed or trying to condemn our nation. We wanted to make that clear," he said.
Rev. Mark Hoelter of the University Lutheran Church, 2014 West 15 SL, said his denomination hadn't issued an official statement on the arms race.
HOELTER SAID CHRISTIANS must make up their own minds on whether to participate in the production of nuclear weapons and other issues, but that the church should be involved in the peace debate.
"We can't have all those decisions made by technicians." Hoeller said. "It isn't just a political issue. There is the sanctity of the principle of the sanctity of human life."
John Linsheid of the Lawrence Mennonite Fellowship, which is part of a traditional peace-seeking church, sees the mainline Protestant denominations taking a much more serious look at pacifism than before.
"After the Vietnam War, within the Christian movement, people realized that wasn't the end of the issue. There was an ongoing feeling that we have to address the whole question of militarism and how we can be Christians and live in this society," Lisscheid said.
LINSCHEID, WHO IS active in the Lawrence Coalition for Peace and Justice, said several churches had sponsored specific events with the coalition, but that the church's most direct role was educational.
In the past year, the First United Methodist Church, 946 Vermont St., offered a class on parenting for peace and justice.
In addition, the First Baptist Church, 1330 Kasold Dr., had a forum on war and peace and the Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont St., has a peace-making emphasis, Linscheid said.
"This is the first year I know of that a bunch of churches are doing this all at the same time. There used to be small churchs. Now it is the whole church," he said.
"There are grass-root kinds of efforts in schools and families for peace on all levels, not just a something between nations."
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Hot, sticky summer days finally have come to Kansas.
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By JUDITH HINDMAN Staff Writer
Students keep cool with know-how
Computerark
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808 W. 24th 841-0094
(behind McDonald's... next to the Phone Co.)
But with a little ingenuity, KU students can keep their energy bills down when the temperatures go up, according to two officers of the KU Solar Energy Club who are involved in energy conservation.
Bob Isaacson, club president, said that going underground could be one solution.
"But it's kind of hard to bury a house," he said.
AS A MORE PRACTICAL method, he said, students could build shutters that would insulate against the heat and reflect the sunlight.
The shutters are held in place with velcro strips put around the edge of the shutters and the inside of the window.
The shutters can be made out of rigid Styroform insulation cut to fit inside the window and then covered with fabric, he said.
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The insulation also has a shiny surface that helps to reflect the sunlight and minimize heat gain.
Isaacson said that window comforters also would help to minimize heat gained through the windows.
WINDOW COMFORTERS are insulated quilts designed to seal tightly around the window, locking out the sunlight and locking in the cool air when an air conditioner is being used.
He also said that attic fans, which are useful whenever the outdoor temperature is less than the indoor temperature, should be about 11 cents to operate for four hours.
If air conditioning becomes necessary, however, students can minimize the expense.
JENSEN SAID THAT because moving air feels cooler, fans, which use much less energy than air
Hal Jensen, energy consultant for the Kansas Power & Light Company, said that students could take several measures before turning their air conditioners on high, including the use of fans and the reduction or re-scheduling of the use of heat-producing appliances.
Information on making window
Jensen said that using heat-producing appliances like the stove, clothes dryer and dishwasher in the morning or evening would also help to keep reduce interior temperature gains.
comforters and the necessary supplies are available from Bluestem Energy Co-op, a Lawrence organization concerned with energy conservation.
Kenton Knowles, vice president of the KU Solar Energy Club, said that students trying to stay cool without air conditioning could either use a fan or simply take advantage of the Kansas wind.
JENSEN SAID THAT because an air conditioner removes humidity, a person could put his thermostat at a high setting and still feel cooler.
"An attic fan is by far one of the best investments," he said.
Jensen said that because an air conditioner cycloned on and off rather than ran continuously, the cost of running it would probably be less than 84 cents.
STUDENTS WHO WANT to take advantage of Kansas' winds could open a few windows on the windward side of the house and all of the windows on the opposite, or leeward, side, be said. This causes air movement because of a natural pressure differential.
He also said that a furnace fan could help to circulate cool basement air throughout the house.
The windward side of the house is the side exposed to the wind.
He also said that students considering buying an air conditioner should try to purchase a unit with at least an 8.0 Energy Efficiency Ratio.
State law in Kansas requires a minimum EER of 8.0. The higher the EER, the more efficient the air conditioner.
An EER is the amount of heat the unit can extract from the air in one hour, in British thermal units, divided by the electrical input, in watts.
"Running a fan continuously for four hours costs about 4 cents," he said. "Running a small window air conditioner, for four hours costs about 84 cents."
conditioning, are a relatively cheap way to keep cool.
Academic and professional experts
U.S. security policy under league's scrutiny
The League of Women Voters is studying the pros and cons of the U.S. national security policy to plan for future changes. The official official of the league said yesterday.
"I learned that there aren't any easy answers." Mever said.
briefed Meyer and 50 other league leaders from around the country on the war effort.
Janet Meyer, first vice president and national security chairman of the Kansas League, attended a conference on U.S. national security last month as a participant.
She said that the group wanted to lobby more effectively in Congress for social programs, such as the environment, unemployment and welfare.
She said that the league thought that social programs were being neglected,
but said, "You can't lobby for money without knowing what the demands are."
The Lawrence League of Women Voters will hold public discussions in September and October about U.S. national security issues.
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Opinion
Page 4
University Daily Kansan, July 1, 1983
Allen is not big enough
Ah, life around the University can be so interesting and educational. Just recently, an announcement was made about building another structure on campus.
Athletic Director Monte Johnson said that plans were in the works for an indoor training facility. A splendid idea, but hasn't this idea been kicked around before?
Indeed it has. Five years ago, similar plans are made. Those plans even got as far as an architect's scale model. But the money never came in for the project.
This time, we're told that money is not going to be a problem. Instead of a fund drive, the athletic department will use some private donations.
But there isn't any money yet.
Although the lack of tangible funds disturbs us slightly, we want to wish the athletic department the best of luck. The proposed facility can only improve the current situation.
Allen Field House was never built to be an all-purpose sports facility. It comfortably houses basketball, and you could easily squeeze one track team in there. But KU fields two
basketball teams and two track teams.
basketball teams and two track teams. The list of teams that use Allen Field House doesn't end here. During the late winter and early spring months, the baseball, softball and golf teams need to practice indoors. It must look like an artillery range at times. Or a bus terminal during the Christmas holidays.
The cramped quarters create other problems besides lack of space. The scheduling of practice times must be the work of a magician. Plus, one can only go so far with "creative use" of a building that was primarily intended for basketball.
And while the sporting troops have made the best of the situation, we can't help but wonder whether our performance on the field wouldn't improve with better housing in which to train.
But these plans go beyond the construction of a building that meets the needs of our athletic teams. The landscape should be taken into account. It should it not look as if it dropped from the sky.
We hope that, this time, the plans are on solid ground and not built of dreams.
VETO
SUPREME COURT
GONGRESS
©1983 WILLIAM L. HARRY
Power battle shifts as veto is vetoed
When all the smoke has cleared and all the bickering is over, one fact will remain clear — Congress has been relieved of some of its power, for its own good and the good of the country.
In what an Associated Press article referred to as "a momentous shift of political clout from Congress to the presidency," the Supreme Court ruled that, by declaring the "legislative vote" unconstitutional,
The process worked like this: Congress would pass a law, allowing the president or certain agencies like the Federal Trade Commission or U.S. Department of Justice to make recommendations to the law.
Congress then had the option of vetting those recommendations within 30 days before they
The "legislative veto," developed in 1932, played a major role in the 1973 War Powers Act.
peeled a major role in the 1973 War Powers Act. Overriding President Richard M. Nixon's veto, Congress passed a law giving it the authority to withdraw American military troops from hostilities if both houses of Congress approved such an agreement.
Following last week's court decision, officials from both political parties disagreed in their views.
Rep. Elliot J. Levitas, D-GA, said in a New York Times Service article that the decision would "cripple the things that this president or any president will be able to do."
At the same time, an Associated Press story quoted Deputy Press Secretary Larry Speakes an saying that President Reagan was "pleased" with the court's decision.
Is it possible that Reagan would be happy with a measure limiting his power?
It remains true that within the political arena, varying opinions on issues seem about as common as clowns at a circus. And, it is also true that; since the origination of the separation of powers, a continuing battle of power has existed between the executive and Congress.
However, the issue of who has the most power
should be placed aside in an effort to accommodate both sides and the country.
WARREN BRIDGES
The court's decision abolishing the congressional veto, while temporarily appearing to create more conflict than resolution, should prevent one thing that sets aside the power struggle.
Despite Congress' loss of power, it is not without means of protecting its interests.
Theodore Olson, assistant attorney general and head of the Office of Legal Counsel, said last year that Congress can "place specific and precise limits" on those agencies that issue rules. According to Olson, Congress can override those rules with legislation.
It can also authorize a federal agency to work within a specific amount of time, he said.
Regardless of its alleged power, some officials feel the decision has a direct effect on law enforcement action.
For example, Stanley Brand, chief counsel to the House of Representatives and the lawyer who lost decision, said as long as Congress possessed the power to veto, it was more lenient with the recommendations made by the agencies.
Now, according to Brand, Congress may be more strict in developing original laws.
"And that might not make for good government in many instances," Brand is quoted as
All too often, disagreements between Congress and the president resemble a childish argument over who owns the toy the two are playing with at the time.
Maintaining a checks and balances system of government should be of utmost importance to the people.
That system should be ensured with the new decision
Both Congress and the executive will have to work together to develop more concise, less
And that folks, makes for good government in mary instances.
Doubtest, additional reports will come from officials, voicing different opinions.
But, perhaps when Capitol Hill has settled down to do its job, it will realize that the most important job in running a country, is not who owns the toy, but rather, who is willing to take the first step toward mutual ownership of that toy.
White students learning truth about blacks
By RUTH YOUNGBLOOD
ACTON, Mass. — When a third-grade teacher asked her students what they knew about black Americans, the youngsters in the all-white school said they made good athletes, dancers and musicians.
United Press International
One no knew a single black professional, one girl said her father would never hire a black
"I wanted to determine what they were thinking and the degree of awareness," teacher Terry said.
The old stereotype that educators thought they had lied after the civil rights movement of the 1960s was now widely accepted.
The children's perception of blacks as fit for mental jobs "obviously came from their parents or television," said Quinton Brathwaite. He is with Citizens for Multi-Cultural Awareness, a group of teachers and minority parents formed to remedy the situation.
Braithwaite said the lack of a single black teacher, administrator or staff member in the
Acton and neighboring Boxborough school
outcome independently reinforced a stereotype
The 24-member group is working with school officials to effect changes.
"It was not a case of overt bigotry but the type of problem that sneaks in." Brathwaite said, noting black and Hispanic students make up only 2.6 percent of the area's school population.
Educators and parents cite Jacobs as a positive example of responsiveness. After starting a unit on black history, she *brainwav*ed ways to get the children aware of blacks.
"We talked about what contributions they were making, famous black Americans, and read poetry by black authors," she said. Each child did a report on a prominent black
Braathwaite said, "There has been a real lack of sensitivity." He cited inadequate educational materials, omission of formal black history instruction starting in the early elementary grades, and lack of contact with blacks of stature.
"Awareness does not come from lecturing," she said. "1 let sensitivity evolve within the class."
Assistant Teacher Superintendent Gary Baker described the initial views of the 3rd grader as
He said school officials were seeking qualified black teachers and other staff members for the fall.
There are 162 blacks in Acton out of a population of 20,000.
Rubin Williams, the father of two elementary school girls, said, "There is a real concern that black children learn who they are.
"How many youngsters know of black participation in the space age? They learn about John F. Kennedy, but what about Martin Luther King?"
"There is a need for black history instruction from kindergarten on up," said Williams, who is the editor of *The New Yorker*.
The citizens' group's goals also include sensitivity training for teachers on the needs of minorities, introducing textbooks that more fairly represent the role of minority groups, raising awareness among speakers and organizing career days in which minority professionals would participate.
Reagan sidesteps questions about briefings
WASHINGTON — Much as the White House wishes it will all go away, the furor over the purported Carter debate briefing papers is not expected to die down immediately.
UPI White House Reporter
Rv HELEN THOMAS
in news conference. President Reagan was bombarded with questions about the propriety of his aides in obtaining and using documents that were prepared for President Carter for his administration.
But he defyly sidesteped the issue of whether it was right or wrong.
Around Washington, speculation runs rampant on who might have passed the documents to the Reagan camp.
At the same time, Reagan said politics "should be above rework."
Meanwhile, Carter aides are suggesting that "dirt tricks" may have been involved.
reign camp.
So far, no one has come forward to claim the honor. Nor has the White House identified, publicly at least, anyone who might have had a
Reagan himself said that he did not know that they existed and only learned about them from the government.
White House aides are chagrined. Deputy press secretary Larry Speakens first dismissed the briefing book questions, saying there was no inquiry in the White House. He then passed off the issue as something that is "done in politics," and not too unusual.
The mystery is how four administration officials could have received such papers as these.
hand in securing the secret papers on strategy and tactics.
On that score, the president got a boost from Speaker Thomas O'Neill who agreed that Reagan would have won the election because Carter was unpopular, he said. He also seemed to agree with the president that it was "much ado about nothing."
But some aides wish they had never seen the papers. They insist that they did not aid Reagan in the debate with Carter and that he would have trumped anyway.
Nevertheless, questions remain unanswered.
and with the Justice Department conducting an inquiry, it appears the White House will be indicted.
Carter aides are saying they believe that more than the debate books left their campaign premises. If that is true, the plot will thicken.
The president, meanwhile, says of the ethical question, "I think that campaigning has always, in the eyes of the people, had a kind of a double standard and I have deplored it. And there are the people who've said — people that are otherwise totally honest — have said, when they hear about something, they've said, 'Oh well, you know, politics.'
"Well. I don't happen to believe politics should have a double standard. No, I think it should be above reproach. And there shouldn't be unethical things done in campaigns, even such things as accusing the other candidate of being a racist, and things like that."
Reagan indicated he was still chafing a remarks made about him in the last campaign.
With another campaign coming up, all candidates will have their work cut out for them.
Letters Policy
The University Daily Kansas welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten, double-spaced and should not exceed 500 words. They should include the writer's name, address and phone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, the letter should include his class and home town or faculty or staff position. The Kansas reserves the right to edit or reletter.
Letters to the Editor
Americans should open eyes to other views of our world
I have just returned from a year of study abroad in Bordeaux, France. My fellow student abroad, Brad Jordan, LA&S senior, and I would like to share a few comments with you about the experience of studying at Elvius Costello sang in 1979. "what's so funny about peace, love and understanding?"
To the editor:
Brad writes from Bordeaux: "I still have our copy of 'Delusions about Soviets dangerous,' (April 26 Letter to the Editor), which was sent to us a while back. I read it just yesterday, and the little gem still has that same rapt, gripping quality to it. John Andra, its author, clarified a few points which more than a year in Europe had clouded for me:
"1. The Soviet Union is a very bad place.
*22* Nazi Germany was a very bad place, bad. *23*
Nazi Germany are well, two real bad places.
"Besides an unusually ill-placed quotation from Patrick Henry, most of the letter stressed this 'worldview' which is shared by many Americans (John did not invent phrases like 'the initial American fight to overthrow oppression . . .'). John said a lot of things about a great many people, which would not bother me in real life. I remember our armament vision of the world, based on catchwords like good, evil, liberty, oppression . . ."
let's contemplate instead the worldview of individuals who do not possess John's frightening attitude. I mention Brad's worldview as he prepares to study July studying Russian in the USSR; the worldview of Slava, (the step-father of Lena, a Bordeaux resident and a friend from the USSR) as he prepares to make his first trip to "a capitalist" country, France; the worldview of Timi, a Finn who teaches high school in Sweden and who is visiting Chicago to see friends and to absorb the Black-American jazz and dialect; the worldview of Nathale, a Jewish French medical student who plans to spend a year studying medicine in the United States.
Before we throw ourselves into that bottomless and pointless abyss we call politics. Brad warns,
Brad writes that the most important thing he was able to do in his last days in Bordeaux was perhaps to attend with Jill Conley, a Colorado University student, a pre-school end-of-the-year gala the other night: "There were, of course, the obligatory dancing flowers and trees who did a terrific 'Nutcracker Suite' for a captive audience. The evening's program included a rather surrealistic beach set with festive waves and a sea of chapels, where Janus who were clad in bathing suits and dark glasses. The whole thing came off mightily well, but for the DJ who showed a great affection for David Bowie's 'Let's Dance,' which has its merits but which nevertheless failed to catch the spirit of the occasion. Some things you never get used to."
Daniel Shaw
Graduate student
The University Daily KANSAN
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The University Daily Kannan (USFS 60-6400) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Flint Street, Kansas City, MO 64105. Subscription fees are $10 for the year and Wednesday and Friday during the summer session, excluding Saturday. Sunday. Pay as follows: Lawn Care, Kan. 6044, Subscriptions by mail are $15 for six months or $24 for a year to Douglas County, Kansas City, MO. Postmaster: be contacted through the student activity email POSTMASTER. Be contacted changes to the semester pay through the student activity email POSTMASTER.
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University Daily Kansan, July 1, 1983
Page 5
Draft
From page 1
Rogers said the KU financial aid office would have to go through all the forms on file and check to see whether the draft question had been answered.
The controversy created by the Solomon Amendment has prompted litigation that will continue after today, according to spokesmen of groups that oppose the new federal law.
A FLURRY OF LEGAL activity arose during the past two weeks after U.S. District Judge Donald Alop of Minnesota placed a permanent injunction against the plaintiff's investment in two district court decisions on June 17.
As reported on a National Association of Financial Aid Administrators telephone hotline, on June 20 the Justice Department requested Alsop to stay his decision.
Ahoi denied the stay, which would have rendered the injunction ineffective and allow full rehab.
The Justice Department requested a stay from the U.S. Supreme Court on June 21, and it was granted Justice Harry A. Blackmun temporary custody of the child in response by the American Civil Liberties Union.
The Minnesota CLU represented several Minnesota college students who were draft resistoris in a case against the U.S. Department of Education and the Selective Service System.
AFTER HEARING ARGUMENTS by the ACLU on Monday, Blackmun ordered a perma-
ture to the ACLU.
Richard Hastings, deputy assistant secretary for Student Financial Assistance at the Education Department, said the stay made the Solomon Amendment fully enforceable.
Therefore, all males who complete a Family Financial Statement application for financial aid may apply.
Matthew Stark, executive director of the Minnesota Civil Liberties Union, said that the Minnesota ACLU was against the Solomon Amendment because it was a bill of attainment, meaning it deprived people of rights without a guarantee to their Amendment right to avoid self-incrimination.
PAUL SIEGEL, executive director of the ACLU of Kansas and western Wisconsin, said that he was "extremely disappointed" by the Supreme Court's decision to grant the perma-
"The ACLU will continue, along with others, to fight the Solomon Amendment," he said. "This is only a temporary setback. We haven't lost vet."
Siegel said the matter would probably be in litigation for at least another 18 months. The Supreme Court will have to make a final decision on the constitutionality of the law, he said.
He said the ACLU was opposed to the Solomon Amendment for three reasons.
First, he said, the ACLU saw the amendment as an attempt by the government to return to a peaceleture draft, which the ACLU considers unconstitutional.
SECOND, HE SAID, students would not be given an opportunity to claim conscientious objection.
"They say that in the event of an emergency they will contact everyone and give them opportunity to say whether they are a conscientious objector at that time," be said.
"Then there will be something like 10 days for them to determine whether they will honor a request for concientious objector status. We hardly think that allows enough time for due process."
Third, Siegel the ACL does not think universities should be required to police their crimes.
Siegel said he was dismayed by a lack of reaction to the situation on the part of many students.
CHRIS GRAVES, legislative director for the Associated Students of Kansas in Topokan, said, "I have never felt so strong in my career."
She said that ASK's reason for opposing the Solomon Amendment was that it discriminated against men.
recommendation that school systems adopt a program such as the Five New Basics. He said that university students themselves were saying that a system of this type should be implemented because many of them did not make the right course decisions in high school.
Reagan
"Whether they are going on to college or not, there is a need for these types of programs in school. This is a highly sophisticated world and a solid education program that can survive the tough times." Nehring said.
Reagan expressed only what was wrong but did not give any firm solutions to the problem, he said. That is because a solution would cost money, according to Nehrring, and no one wants to spend that kind of money right now.
HE SAID EDUCATION was a good political issue because it could be addressed on a similistic level.
"This also keeps him on the offensive. It gives him something to shoot back to the Democrats since they've always been involved in educational issues." Nebring said.
Reagan told the crowd of nearly 1,800 delegates of the National Association of Student Councils/National Association of Teachers that he wanted to abolish the U.S. Department of Education
because of all the needless bureaucracy it created.
He maintained throughout his speech how the federal government was too involved in the nation's school systems — that it needed to give the authority back to the state and local levels.
The president, however, made no mention of merit pay for teachers as he had done during previous speeches on education. The National Education Association, the nation's largest teacher organization, opposes merit pay for teachers.
Several questions were asked of him by student delegates after his speech. One student asked him why he reduced college loan programs.
TO THAT STUDENT he answered: "We really didn't cut that many loans. We found that many were getting loans who really didn't need them. What we did was reorganize the system and make loans available to many of the truly needy who weren't getting them before."
Nefhering said one of the reasons the president was creating an issue out of education was because people always supported education and hadn't gotten from his economic policies to dissipate.
some of the students said the president was well-received because it was the first time many of them were given a job.
Fourth
From page 1
area," said Judy Billings, organizer of the festival.
THE $70,000 CELEBRATION is being funded mainly by contributions from local businesses and Independence Days button sales, Billings said. The buttons entitle the wearer to all activities in the parks and the fireworks display in Memorial Stadium.
"The goal is to have as many people as possible in the parks for those two days, so that we can see them."
celebration, but to make it a success takes people," she said.
Entertainers will perform Irish, Dixieland, bluegrass, gospel, ragtime and country music, with dance, a circus and a dance. A magician, storytellers and other wandering performers will also be at the parks.
Entertainment will begin at 10 a.m. each day from stages set up in both parks. The performers will alternate between the two stages giving three to four performances during the two days.
to four to five percent marks during the en-
In addition to the entertainment, people will
demonstrate and sell their crafts. Food and beverage vendors will sell everything from "Quantrill" s turkey legs and licorice whips to homemade ice cream and snack器鸭。
The highlight of the crafts, food and entertainment is that it must all conform to the turn of the century — no electric guitars or canned soda cans. It also dress in turn-of-the-century costumes.
FOR THE KIDS, there will be a petting zoo,
wagon and pony rides, races, clowns and
a petting zoo.
Other events will include a seed-sitting contest every hour from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Sunday and from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Monday; a bucket brigade by the city firefighters using a vintage 1901 water cart; The Walking tour of the museum; the tour departs at 10:30 a.m. and 2:30 p.m, each day from the drinking fountain in Central Park, 7th and Tennessee streets.
Parking for the expected 20,000 visitors will be limited at the parks. But free shuttle buses will
operate to transport people between the downtown parking areas and the park.
K
Buses will run at 10-minute intervals from stops along a rectangular route that runs along New Hampshire, Sixth, Vermont and 11th streets. Stops will be marked along the route, Billings said.
ONE & TWO BEDROOM APARTMENTS
CLOSE TO CAMPUS
$225
STARTING AT...
KBYSTONE PROPERTIES
Phone 843-1118
BUSES WILL DEPART every 30 minutes from Constant Park after the KANU concert on Sunday until the parks are empty, but they will not operate for the fireworks display on Monday.
$225
HERITAGE MANAGEMENT CORP
MORE THOUGHTS ABOUT THE KANSAS RELAYS FIASCO
Because I've met Bob Swan, whom I described in an April 28th adverbial as "the likeable co-founder of AUP" (Atheletes United for Peace), only once, most of what I know about him has been gleaned from our local newspaper. The information gained has led me to question his judgment, not his motives or character. Consider for a moment Mr. Swan's post-Relays statement to the press. Said Mr. Swan: "There were no demonstrations and not one single negative question . . . asked" (of the Soviet contingent). How can such a flaccid exchange—which ignores the fact of Soviet oppression both within and without its borders—promote peace?
The arms race and Cold War resulted from and has been prolonged by the Soviet Union's unwillingness to submit to such inspection requirements as those of the 1946 Baruch Plan and President Eisenhower's 1955 Open Skies proposal. The Soviet government's response to the popular uprisings in East Germany (1953), Hungary (1956), Czechoslovakia (1968), and Poland (1980-83) has been surpassed by its recent conduct in Indochina and Afghanistan.
In 1975 the Soviets began using toxic chemical substances in Laos. By employing such agents against the native population in Laos during the last decade and Afghanistan today, the Soviets have violated both the 1925 Geneva Protocol and the 1972 Biological and Toxin Weapons Convention. Surely such activity is a more convincing expression of Soviet intentions than any short-lived display of cooing and coddling by Yuri Andropov.
To ostracize is "to cast out from social or political favor or fellowship"; ostracism is sometimes used to induce change. The desire of many countries to effect a change in South Africa's treatment of most of its populace has resulted in its (South Africa) being barred from the Olympic Games.
In the spring of 1975 Dr. Kenneth Kaunda, president of Zambia, chose a White House dinner to say this about the efforts to achieve majority rule in Rhodesia and Namibia and end apartheid in South Africa:
If the oppressed peoples fail to achieve these noble ends by peaceful means, we call upon America not to give any support to the oppressors. Even now we call upon America to desist from direct and indirect support to minority regimes. For this puts America in direct conflict with the interests of Africa i.e. peace deeply rooted in human dignity and equality and freedom without discrimination . . . we are fighting an evil and brutal system.
Although Dr. Kaunda was discussing the misuse of power in southern Africa eight years ago, he could have been referring to the oppressive practices of the Soviet Union today.
By maintaining an economic system which is increasingly unconcerned with principled action, our government has lost influence and power both at home and abroad. While the Soviet Union sends arms, advisers, and soldiers to various countries to foment violence, we reluctantly give token assistance to Afghanistan's heroic defenders and sometimes appear willing to tolerate the loss of access to the Caribbean Sea and the Panama Canal.
This nation has the resources with which to peacefully stop the Soviet juggernaut. Although millions of people around the world are in dire need of food, clothing, shelter, medical assistance, and education, our so-called free-enterprise system often continues rewarding the tawdry (gambling, television, and those trashy tabloids), tyrannical (pornography and prostitution) and downright destructive (abortion). Dr. Kaunda put it this way:
Realism and moral conscience dictate that those who believe in peace must join hands in promoting conditions for peace. We cannot declare our commitment to peace and yet strengthen forces which stand in the way to the attainment of that peace.
William Dann
2702 W. 24th St. Terr.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan, July 1, 1983
'ZIP plus 4' system to make codes longer, sorting quicker
At 3 a.m. the Lawrence Post Office
clocks begin to sort first-class mail.
The mail is delivered in a box.
At 6:30 a.m. the mail carriers come in to send the mail by carrier routes. It is up to them to identify and route the mail.
But this time-consuming task of manually sorting the mail will be improved soon when the "ZIP plus 4" system goes into effect later this year.
Lawrence Postmaster Jack Harris said yesterday he expected nine-digit ZIP codes to be used by this fall, or January 1984 at the latest.
The first five digits of the code will remain the same, while four additional numbers will be added. These four numbers form a new number in the graphical area than the five-digit ZIP.
The area covered by a nine-digit ZIP could be anywhere from the size of a quarter to the size of a basketball.
The Academic Computer Center will conduct three informational seminars on Zenith microcomputers this month and provide an official of the Center said yesterday.
Herb Harris, assistant director of user services, said that the free seminars would give information about how the machines work and how to buy them and that participants would get to use the microcomputers.
Zenith computer seminars start today
The seminars will be held at noon today, Tuesday and Friday, July 8.
KNOWLEDGE SERVICE EDUCATION
COMMODORE EPSON MORROW DESIGNS
VICIOR 9000 KAY PRO ORIDATA
WB. 80 W. 23th St. a11-0994
Computerark
1912 W. 25th 842-3416
9-5 Monday-Friday
PARK PLAZA SOUTH APTS.
*on bus route *close to shopping
One and two bedrooms start at $190
of an apartment complex, Harris said, depending on the number of people involved.
KATY'S CELLAR SHOPPE
14 kt. Chain
Repair
Kizer
Cummings
jewelers
800 Mass. 749-4333
---
Machines then will be able to sort the mail down to the point of these smaller areas. This would eliminate many types of problems by the clerks and carriers. Harris said.
NEXT-TO-NEW CLOTHING FOR WOMEN
745 NEW HAMPSHIRE
THE MARKETPLACE
(BEHIND THE HARVEST)
842-7456
He said that the additional four digits had not yet been assigned to specific parts of town. He intends to notify residents and use the new-digit codes are definitely established.
COMMONWEALTH THEATRES
GRANADA
DOWNTON
TELEPHONE 514-7680
STARWARS
RETURN OF
THE JEDI
TICKETS AT COMMONWEALTH THEATRE
Date at 2:00 - 9:30 A.M.
Another change awaiting is the addition of a third ZIP code for Lawrence. Beginning Jan. 1, 1884, the area of Lawrence served by the Jayhawk station, 1519 W. 23rd St., will have the new ZIP code 60046.
COMMONWEALTH THEATRES
GRANADA DOWNLOADED
STARWARS RETURN OF THE JEDI
CHINA 2:00-7:30, 8:30
VARSITY DOWNLOADED
CHRISTOPHER REEVE RICHARD PRYOR
SUPERMAN III Daily at 1:15-7:15-9:45
HILLCREST 1 STATE AND TOWNS WARGAMES DVD
Eve. 7:20-9:30; Mat. Sat. Sun. Mon. 2:15
TRADING PLACES DAN AYKROYD EDDIE MURPHY
Eve. 7:35-9:40; Mat. Sat. Sun. Mon. 2:15
HILLCREST 3 James Bond's all OCTOPUSSY time action high.
Eve. 7:35-9:40; Mat. Sat. Sun. Mon. 2:15
The Jayhawk station serves the area south of 19th Street and the Alvamar area in West Lawrence.
The third ZIP code was reserved for Lawrence when the ZIP code system began 20 years ago. Harris said the three zones correspond to another 16 years.
Another Zip code, 66047, still is reserved for Lawrence.
HILLCREST 17TH AND JONA
BAY 28TH AUGUST 2014
WARGAMES PLUS
Rv. 7:20-9:30, Sat. Bat. Sun. Mon. 21:15
ZIP system still perfecting after 20 years
LAUGHING UP ITS sleeve, the article went on to "Suppose grudgingly" that the new code would improve service. "We say this hopefully, having stopped trying to dial information on our telephones."
HICCREST 3 19TH ODWN
James Bons' all day
time action high.
Eve. 7:58, 04:00, Mat. 5:10, Sun. 2:15
PKG
Art Fry, KU postal clerk and long time guardian of Lawrence's other zip code, 60645, agreed with Smith that the codes early years were relatively calm.
HILL CRESST 2
TRADING PLACES
DAN AYKROYD
EDDIE MURPHY
Eve, 7:35-9:40, Mat. Sat, Sun, Mon, 211
CINEMA 1
TICKETS & MORE
PORKKISS II
Eve.
7:48-8:40 PM
The Next Day
Sat. Sun.
Mon. 2:00
Patreus
"Starting today, more of our lives will be by the numbers," the editorial writes.
A July 1, 1963 New York Times editorial titled, "DearMr. 10036," mirrored the skepticism of the people who believed that news media as communication services in general.
"Residential consumers will eventually follow suit as they did in the 1960s, because they'll see how well it works," he said.
"Before you knew it, it was like knowing your own house number."
HE SAID THAT there was some confusion at first, especially during the first two Christmas seasons, but that the problems worked themselves out.
"Although it took awhile to settle in, the transition was smooth and the mail certainly has gotten faster because of it." Smith said.
He said the primary objective now was to get voluntary compliance in the use of the new code primarily by giving incentives to industries.
The postal zip code celebrates a birthday today, and even though it's now 20 years old, it's still growing.
ACCORDING TO HARRIS, further bypassing of present hand-sorted steps in the mail cycle will be the biggest advantage of the new system.
The incentives will be in the form of lower postal rates for those businesses, industries and other heavy mailers who have been issued their added zip numbers.
The widely accepted five-digit Zone Improvement Program code began voluntary compliance on July 1, 1963, and has since gained four extra digits.
Staff Writer
Survival: 9:20 Panky: 11:15
Fry said he guessed the new nine-digit code would help and he had no doubts as to the success of the 20-year-old model.
"No doubt about it, the zip helped speed.mail sorting a lot," he said.
Back in 1963 it took the average letter a day or two longer to go from front porch to delivery, but with the institute's recent effort to curb entering entered the age of enlightenment.
PLUS "HANKY PANKY
"It will allow us to sort mail right down to each carrier's route," he said.
Bv. GARY SMITH
THE SURVIVORS
The nine-digit number is being used under voluntary compliance by heavy mail users around the country and in Lawrence.
SUNSET WATERFRONT HARBOUR WATERFRONT
"THE NEW NINE-DIGIT code will be voluntary, just like the five-digit zip was in 1963, and still is today," said John B. Harris, Lawrence postmaster. Harris explained the process that he said leads to another smooth transition.
Harris said the post office isn't quite ready for full implementation of the plan.
"EVERYBODY COMPLAINED back when the zip started because they, had five more numbers to remember," said Lester Smith, veteran of more than 26 years of postal work in Lawrence.
He said the reaction was similar to present day complaints and anxieties concerning the new "ZIP plus four" program.
Eve, 7:30-9:30; Mat. Sat.-Sun.-Mon. 2:00
"It itdn't seem too bad back then,
he said. "The post office had a big push
WIGHT ONE
"First we've got to get all the machines installed to optically read and sort the nine-digits automatically," he said.
Smith said people worried about the zip 20 years ago but were slowly
convinced of the added benifit of faster delivery.
Harris added that the system would start going on line by the end of this year and that it should lead to faster, more efficient delivery of mail, just as the 20-year-old five-digit zip code seems to have done in the past.
in the first few years to be sure people used it, and it worked."
C-90
RENTS RECORDS
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YELLO SUB DELIVERS 841-3268
the GROSSING
4-7 p.m.
$1.50 pitchers
1 block N. of Union
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phone: 843-1151
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843-8808
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8424200
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Friday & Saturday Nights
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Carol Lee Donuts
"The best coffee and donuts in town."
Donuts
Sandwiches
Drinks
5 a.m. to 6 p.m. 7 days a week
1730 West 23rd 842-9109
COOKIES
HERITAGE MANAGEMENT CORP
Valentino's
Ristorante
Secrest Leather
Leather . . . The American Tradition
914 Massachusetts
842-6046
PARTMENT
---
Friday & Saturday Nights
5-9 p.m.
$3.95
VALENTINO'S
SPAGHETTI BAR
SALAD BAR • 6 SAUCES • 2 LASAGNA • DESSERT PIZZA
Valentino's
Ristorante
544
W. 23rd
749
42nd
Secrest Leather
HAPPY BIRTHDAY, AMERICA! I WANT YOU!
To Try Minsky's
FRENCH BREAD PIZZA NITE (Every Tuesday and Thursday Night)
- Eat all the French Bread Pizza you want for just $2.95
— 4 p.m. until close —
you want for just $2.95
- All pitchers of beer only $1.50
2228
iowa
842-0154 We Deliver
THE ORIGINAL
Minsky's
PIZZA
No Carry Out or Delivery on this Special
SUMMER INVENTORY CLEARANCE GREAT MEN'S WEAR BARGAINS:
- Suits
- Wash Trousers
- Ties
- Swimwear
- Knit Shirts
- Shirts
- Sportcoats
- Pajamas
- Dress Trousers
- Light Sweaters
- Sport Shirts
- Dress Shirts
- Jackets
- All Weather Coats
AS MUCH AS
33% OFF
THE CENTRAL STREET OFFICE
Whitenight's Town Shop the men's shop 839 Massachusetts... downtown
University Daily Kansan, July 1, 1983
Page 7
On campus
SENIOR HIGH JAZZ ensembles will present a Midwestern Music Camp recital at 7:30 p.m. today in Swarthout Recital Hall, Murphy Hall.
SENIOR HIGH BANDS, a chorus and an orchestra will present a Midwestern Music Camp recital at 8 p.m. tomorrow Crafton-Preyer Theatre, Murphy Hall
CAMPUS CRUSADE for Christ will meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union. The group will meet every Tuesday evening through July 25. Everyone interested is welcome to attend.
On the record
RICHARD REBER, pianist, will present a faculty recital at 8 p.m. Wednesday in Swarthout Recital Hall, Murphy Hall.
THE GASLIGHT GANG with Claude "Fiddler" Williams will present a Midwestern Music Camp recital at 8
p. m. Tuesday in. Swarthout Recital Hall, Murphy Hall.
LAWRENCE FIREFIGHTERS put out a small fire in a trash dumpster near a loading dock at Oliver Hall Wednesday afternoon, police said. The fire started after unextinguished charcoal brigttes were discarded in the dumpster and the police said that the dumper was not close enough to the residence hall to cause any damage. The fire has been treated as an accident, police said.
FACULTY AND STAFF will present a Midwestern Music Camp recital at 8 p.m. Thursday in Swarthout Recital Hall, Murphy Hall.
A 1979 MOTORCYCLE, worth $700, was stolen from a Lawrence resident late Wednesday night police said. The motorcylist stopped near the intersection of University and Crestline after he saw a man crossing the street.
As the rider stopped, another man pushed him off the motorcycle, police said, and then got on the motorcycle and drove away.
A $125 BLACK BRIEFCASE containing personal papers and checks was stolen from an unlocked car parked near 8th and Vermont streets late Tuesday night, police said. They have no suspects.
A THIEF STOLE $292 from an apartment in the 1000 block of Haskell Avenue Wednesday night, police said. Police have a description of a suspect.
Common-sense tips for a happy 4th
Independence Day celebrations never fail to inflict injury on someone, whether it's powder burns, eye injuries, heatstroke or sunburn.
Eye injuries are another July Fourth problem, the official said. Treatment depends on how badly the eye is injured.
By MELISSA BAUMAN
Although the best solution for July 4 injuries is care with fireworks and moderation in the sun, once an injury occurs, certain measures should be taken, local hospital officials said Wednesday.
If the eye has a powder burn, she
FOR POWDER BURNS, a Lawrence Memorial Hospital official, who asked not to be identified, recommended cold water or a cool compress. Although ice is really too cold, she said, it can be applied if the burn is wrapped in a
Staff Reporter
said, irrigate the eye with a sterile solution, if available, or water for about five minutes.
But for a more serious injury, such as a scratched or cut eye, a sterile compress or clean towel should be put on the injured physician can be reached, she said.
Heatstroke and sunburn become concerns at outdoor celebrations during the summer.
She said not to rub the eye because increased pressure could cause its contents to leak through the cut. She also was possible, to close the eyelid gently.
RAYMOND SCHWEGLER, acting chief of staff at Wattkins Memorial Hospital, said that anyone who came to Wattkins with an eye injury was usually given temporary care and then sent to a emergency room at Lawrence Memorial.
The Lawrence Memorial spokesman said that a heatstroke victim should
drink as much liquid as possible and stay in the shade, or take a cool bath
SEVERE HEATSTROKE involves collapse and coma, fever as high as 110 degrees, a rapid heartbeat and hot, dry skin
Schwegler said that it was important for people to wear well-ventilated clothing and that drinking electrolyte solutions, such as Gatorade, was
The official said that last year was an atypical July 4 because the hospital had been closed.
To help prevent sunburn, the Lawrence Memorial official said that sunscreen or sunblock lotions should be used.
Schweigler said that Watkins treated few injuries last year and did not expect many this year because students only went elsewhere for celebrations.
"Common sense could cover what we see here," he said.
The University Daily
Call 864-4358
CLASSIFIED RATES
name two three four five six seven eight nine ten
15 weeks on vacation $2.25 $2.75 $2.75 $3.00 $3.25 $3.50 $4.55 $6.50
unlimited meals $8.50 $9.50 $11.50 $13.50 $15.50 $17.50 $20.50
ten weeks on vacation $2.25 $2.75 $2.75 $3.00 $3.25 $3.50 $4.55 $6.50
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.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
The Kanaka 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 items can be placed in person or simply by calling the Kansas business office at 864-4358.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE
118 Flint Hall 864-4358
- LUNCH SPECIAL *
Hamburger, French Fries, $2.00
Milkshake, $4.99
Time Out
bar and grill
Kansan classifieds get results
FOR RENT
For Item 1: 2 HH dispenses, AC, dishwasher, W/D,
towel cart, trash bin; for Item 2: 5 HH dispenses,岁
tiles,岁 of parking, parking bldg, 6/43/93 - 8/43/94 -
8/43/97.
Aperiment complex completes it to campus. Brand new classrooms and large master bedrooms. Laundry facilities & off-street facilities.
Jayhawker Towers Apartments
On Campus
* All Utilities Paid
* Ten Month Leases
* All Condition
* Swimming Pool
* On Bus Line
* Free Cablevision
* Hardware Fees
* Furnished or Unfurnished
Tower A - Grad Students Only
Tower B - Women Students Only
Tower C & D - M.K.U. Students
Ocean Beach
Mon-Fri 8:00 to 5:00
2 Bedroom Apartments On Campus
Now taking applications for summer and fall leases. KU students only.
1603 W. 15th
843-4993
For Rent 3 Bedroom house Appliances
Acqurrage On 8th, west of Worthey's Hillcrest
For Bant immediately. Four bant special finish but
not superior. Five bant regular finishes plus
deep platters. Would consider to own to cool
Bant.
KU STUDENTS
&
FACULTY
Still looking for that perfect home?
Consider these completely furnished studios
1 br . 2 br . & 3 br . apartment locations . . .
Consider these completely furnished studios
1 br, 2 bhr, 4 ahr, 3 apartment locations . . .
HANOVER PLACE
between 14th & 15th
on Massachusetts
841-1212
SUNDANCE APARTMENTS
7th & Florida
841-5255
TIBURON
9th & Emery
841-5255
SUMMIT HOUSE
1105 Louisiana
841-8280
COLDWATER FLATS
413 W. 14th
841-1121
4 - PLEXES
922 Tennessee '916 Indiana
841-8280
All offered by
Matured Management
Professional Management &
Maintenance
841-8451
For rent in excellent location, 12 bedroom apartments
in penn. central air conditioned studio. Call
608-543-6700. Phone: 608-543-6700. Cell: 608-543-6700.
Newly decorated 3 bedrooms house just west of Hasty's Hilborst. Priced married couple, $285.
Lease with option to buy: 2 year old duplex in peaceful neighbourhood, apartments and flats. Fees include tenant terms as usual, 12%, 842-643 days, 841-4139 evenings.
Hard Less - $10.50 no utilities I need a housemate.
Wide Less - $10.50 no utilities I need a housemate.
Brand New Sunrise Place
9th & Michigan
- Walking distance to K.U.
* Two bedroom, slightly open.
Walking distance to R.C.
* Two bedroom highly energy efficient units, finished
basement available.
* Townhouse living.
- Townhouse living.
* Free cable TV.
- Free cable TV.
* From $375-$475 a month.
Low summer rates available Call
MANAGEMENT SERVICES
(813) 841-5797, 842-1876
MED. STUDENTS . NURSES . THERAPISTS
OTHERS. Are you coming to the KU Med. Center in KC this Spring or Fall? We have a beautiful duplex available. Completely returned with app. acw, app. wc, and wc. All rooms are fully furnished and private. Free rent incentive for early birds. Call Sharley 1 913-381-2678
APARTMENT LIFE
GOT YOU DOWN?
THINKING OF
MOVING BACK TO
THE CAMPUS
LIFESTYLE?
THINK OF
NAISMITH HALL
Plan Above! Isomats for spring, summer
eco-tourism and community based co-
operative education close to campus
ON CAMPUS
CONVENIENCE WITH
AN OFF CAMPUS
LIFESTYLE!
NAISMITH HALL 843-8559
New Houses for rent. $35 and $70 plus share of
home. Amazing water and wonderful people to live with. $25
and $40 plus share of home.
Rent now or reserve for full furnished apts, or room on one university or deanown, with either 2nd floor or second-floor unit.
SOUTHERN PARKWAY TOWHOUSES spacious, quiet, 3 bedroom duplexes. Located at 28th & 6th Aloha. Featuring all appliances, washer-dryer hook-ups, an en-suite bath, sauna, and award-winning pool. Call 749-8501 for an announcement.
Nice apt, 11th. to M. 2. large rooms, lots of window,
quality carpet. 749-0166.
One HR house. Appliances - adjacent to O zone parking.
Preferred married couple. 825-943-8050.
ACORN APARTMENTS
start at $285
water paid
Crescent Apartments
TRAILRIDGE
OARS & GASLIGHT
APARTMENTS
start at 6240
water and gas paid
air and heat paid
CRESCENT
APARTMENTS
start at 4265 - utilities
TRAILRIDGE
- Studios, Apartments,
ALL ON BUS ROUTE!
2357 Ridgecount
842-4481
Professional management
Harrisburg Management Corp.
- Furnished or Unfur-
- Townhouses
- Furnished or Unturnished
- Laundry Facilities
- Excellent Maintenance Service
- 3 Pools, Tennis, Athletic Club
- KU Bus
2500 W. 6th 843-7333
Static. 1 & 3 bedrooms still available in quiet
apartments, with large patio and landscaped
patio. Prices per room live. Call between 9 a.m. and
4 p.m. for details.
FOR SALE
AVAILABLE TODAY Large scale apartment in
the heart of Chicago. Also cheap room
savings - share kitchen & bath.
Free Wi-Fi. $50 a night.
1970 Maverick 3-door, 6 cylinder, AC power,
well. 845-297 after $6, $1,100.
1977 Pontiac Sunbird Sunfire, PB, PS, AC new rebuilt engine. $1,100. Call 843-1382 after s.p.m.
1979 Brown Chevy Chevette. That care is good. Owner standard transmission. AM-PM radio. 1209-729-5800
but never if it is no answer, for 94,381.
1977 Postal Sunbird, Suncrew, PB, PS, AC, new
*Vivaldi Wavershells Beetles, 30,000 miles. AM-FM stream.*
*1957 Plato Flute Waverly. Needle work. It runs well.*
4-speed manual transmission, factory rotary; 4-speed manual transmission, factory rotary; 2-speed manual transmission, defroster; and 54 miles per hour.
1897 LD LANDA, P/S/P, B/A/C, power seats,
power windows, cruise control, excellent comfort.
1980 Kawai 500 Cycle, 6.500 miles, great shape, lots of fun,
$1,500 firm, 842-288, eannons.
Always portable cassette player/brand new Auto,
New, Met cap $100.849.990
Hemette, 12' x 30', BRL W/D, New CA/skirted, tied large, down wood floored 62w, or will consider as a partial payment on a small raunch in NWN (452-4591), Lt. 9 and 2 Arkansas, or weekends
for sale by owner, 3 b ranch, C/A, woodburning fireplace, fence yard, reasonable call. Call 615-748-2292.
Full Size MATTRESS and METAL springs. Like New! Slimming brand. Just need a bed frame. Cotton-like material. $599.99
New, RM, cup $100 -349.59
Queen SLEEPER SOFA $249 -COFFER TABLE & 2
SOFA
HARDWARE COMMUNICATIONS ANALYST QUALIFICATION
ENGINEERING or CS, four years experience as
Engineering or CS, four years experience as
Electronic Technician, experience in documentation
management projects and support of manag-
age project and staff, prefer experience in
design of real time communication systems,
systems, and B.S. in E. S. Submit resume by
communications and B.S. in E. Submit resume by
Services, University of Kansas, Illinois and
Summerville, Lawrence, KS 60415 (913) 862-9191
Three-bedroom house in desirable neighborhood;
built-in shelves for books. Large backyard,
with flowers and garden. Price determined by ind-
staurant location and garden. Between 2. and 4
m. or between 15 and 16 p.m.
Trainee 14605, 4 bedrooms, bath, living room,
kitchen, laundry area, outdoor patio.
Insurance: whether洗衣 & dryer. Call 849-360-2700.
Honda Express II (moped), low mileage, basket
top condition, $225.00, #84-7390.
IBM SELECTIC TYPEWRITER - Excellent contract.
Under IBM service contract. 641-6930 - keep
email.
Pepi Coordinator. Almost new. Call 843-8492
Honda Passport. Almost new. Call 843-8492
Male Liberian Hump pack. Black and white, intuitively suggestive medication immediately.
Call: 879-219-9149
FOUND: Small black female dog. Meadowbrook
area: 843-5719
This Blake is For You. Your SR_25' frames, many ascariess, fine tresses, $20,000 budget. DAVE-10325-087
COMING SOON
HELP WANTED
EAST COAST ADVENTURE - BOSTON Family loved Nest child care workers. Live in safe, live on campus. Flexible starting dates, many opening one month early. Flexible starting dates, many opening one month early. 16, Bucknell Road, Roadway, MA 02346 MA 02346
Pet ferret, found on campus 26. If anyone has a pet ferret, the animal care unit, 844-5847.
LOST AND FOUND
GRADUATE ASSISTANT, Office of Student Financial Aid Peer Counselor. The Guaranteed Admission to a graduate program at the University of Kansas in Higher Education, Administration, and Research through 6/20/84 at salary of $500 per month. Application deadline is 15/15/84. Complete job description, contact information, resume, letter of application and names of three references in the subrang "Associate Director of Student Affairs" of the University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 65093. Applications accepted until 7/15/85 EEO/AA/UA.
A New Refreshing Private Club
So If You Are
1. Have Work
2. Dependable
3. and Like A Chance To Grow
4. In Corporation,
Apply In Person
5. July in 6, 11:30 - 7pm
at 101 West 7th, BASEMENT of
The Eldridge House.
Association
Scholarship Hall Director, Pearson Hall Live in position with food management and student affairs at Penn State. Graduate degree and student status for 1885-84 academic year. Job descriptions available in the "Office of Research" office. Position requires resume, official transcript, and three letters of recommendation. Application deadline: July 1, 1983. EOE/AA
PERSONAL
Work Study positions available in the office of Student Organizations and Activities, 220 Strong Hall Application deadline: Friday July 1, 1983 Applications are available in 220 Strong Hall EOE.
College sophomore, 19, needs female companionship to girlfriend problem. Contact Job 646-858-3270.
Perm Sale
reg 450 . NOW $ 35
A Cut Above
Mall Stores Center
Female vicious wanted Enthusiasts, with good sense and a strong spirit. Wanted to JOI LETTE, ALLIANCE vicious is home, need ride or help, and wants someone to lead her on the road.
--immigration passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization,
immigration, visa, ID, and of course fine portraits.
INDIAN EARTH
The all in one, non-cosmetic cosmetic
521 mass.
FREE 24 oz. drink in a "BEST BUNS" cup w/every purchase of a GIANT ¼ lb. sandwich or LARGE salad. Now through July 3. AND we'll refill the ANTIME for only 25% ZEIGFELD'S ICE CREAM PARLOR. 10th and Mass.
Say it on a shirt, custom silicone printing. T-shirts, jereses and cups. Shirtz by Skipper 749-1011.
Leaving Town?
Shop Infilation Fighter 8. E. 7th; Feature Vintage Dresses, tops, skirts, men's suits, men's, M-F 13-5/10, Sat. 10-5/10
Sat. for students. Haircuts $7 and prices $25.
Airline Tickets
At airline counter prices
no extra service charge
Make your travel
arrangements
See Maupintour Travel Service for:
Special for students, Haircuts $7, and perms $55
Charm, ask for Deena Jenna; 843-300-300
Service for:
pwest airlines Com
travel arrangements
* Eurail and Japan Rail Passes
* Car rental—Hotel confirmations
* Student-weekend break holidays
The Elc. Shop
- Vintage
- Classic
10 W. 9th
843-0611
Closed Wed.
* Contemporary
* Formal Wear
ON CAMPUS LOCATION in the Student Union and 900 Mass.
Maupintour travel service 749-0700
BONUS: long stem, assorted colors, $3.00 each.
Bonus: short stem, assorted colors, $1.50 each.
$1 each; $6 per Unscrambled Florist, 212 W. 350s. #1049.
Used furniture bought and sold. Pick up available.
Everything But Ice 10 and 9th Vermont.
Western Civilization Notes: New York State 1 Make a sense to them. 1) As study guide, 2) For class preparation, 3) For exam preparation. *New Analysis of Western Civilization* New York City own Cities. The Bookmark, and Great Bookstore.
KWALITY COMICS
For Comics You Can't Find Anyplace Else.
New Arrivals Every Saturday.
107 W. 7th
843-7239
M-F 11-7
Sat 10-5
$1.50 PITCHERS 4-7 p.m. everyday. Also enjoy submarine scrimmage sandwiches, great tunas, video & pinggall games, and the sunshine on our front porch. Walk on over, just one block north of the beach.
NEW YORK
$1.58
CANE MONDAY'S PRODUCTS
Get a "taste" of New York 9th & Mass., in Downtown Lawrence. All beef hot dogs, super dogs and fabulous沪萨 sauisages in pita bread garnished with your choice of N.Y. kraut, spicy brown mushrooms, freshly chopped mushrooms, ketchup, mayo, cheese and celery salt at no extra charge!
Cool down with a Dr. Brown's cream soda, black cherry, root beer, orange or a unique Cel-Rey—all direct from NYC.
Deliciously served from an authentic N.Y. vendor's cart.
10:30-3:30. Tues.-Sat., weather permitting. Chadwick
Phyllis
Fabulous
Franks
Wholesale Sound Rental Microphones, public
guarders, guitar and bass amps, dac system
SERVICES OFFERED
*Auto Service - Quality Import & Domestic Care.* We work on impressions. We discount customers' insurance costs.
Custom Photographic Services. Companies,
portraits, and reproduction by appointment call
Graduate English student, rapid reader, excellent research skills, 14 years teaching experience, preprofessional, editorial & grant writing experience, etc. Betty H. 811-6677 grad student with research, etc. Betty H. 811-6677
KOOL youveil and your car with quality SOLAR
device REFLECTIONS, 849-8043
DEVINE REFLECTIONS, 849-8043
MATH TUTOR very experienced, specialize in
calendar 123 113, t/h/per hour or 65/per half hour
24/7. Contact us at 800-263-9555.
MICRO COMPUTING EDUCATION CLASSES
Computerart is now offering beginning classes in the programming language BASIC. Advanced classes include object-oriented coding on Dum, and Thurs. evenings. Build 81-10494-81-04.
MOPED & MOTORCYCLE REPAIR - Honda,
Yamaha, Kawasaki, Sanki, Suzuki & Motobecane
or up & delivery available. Work by appointment only.
Please enquire 416-235-8200 noon to pm, Tues. frs.
Thurs. suns.
Need a tutor? Specialize in Math, Physics and CS with two years experience. Sam 841-4102
ON TIME, PAPERS TYPED, FAST & EFFICIENT
841-3510
Learn Tennis this summer from experienced
professionals in private lessons for
428-755 students day 749-377 evenings.
Racquetball, tennis, squash racquet stringing,
specializing in new graphite/hybrid stringing.
Tennis Racquet for sale also. Head, Presson
cars. New, unused. 842-585-700, 749-873-9
evidence.
Library Research - Editing - Typing 841-8209
TUTUHING, M. (Scribner, CS-200, individual)
JOHNSON, R. (O'Connor, CS-200)
Absolutely LETTER PERFECT editing - editting
business. Professional/Expert-
based 843-610-6199.
TYPING
AFORDABLE QUALITY for all your typing needs.
Calludy, 842-7945 at 6 p.m.
24 Hour Typing, Fast, accurate, dependable. All day,
weekdays. Microsoft Alpha 3.0; Baja 849-6012.
**AATI TYPEING SERVICE** Unlimited storage, with easy retrieval and
transferability. Prints themed, dense and dispersation. Call 849-1949 after 5 p.m.
Call TIP TOP TYPING + 1203 Iowa. Experienced
TIP TOP TOP TYPING in memory-monitoring, Right correcting
TIP TOP TOP TYPING
It's a Fact, Fast, Affordable, Clean Typing, Word Processing; you can afford it! 843-829-0600
Elvin could wiggle. Shakespeare could write. My terminal, *taping* *Call 8042* after 5 a.m. & 6 weeksend. Experienced typist will type letters, theses and dissertations. IBM Corrective Selecting. Call Elvin.
Experienced legal typist. Tern paper, these are all types of legal papers, so you will be able to Plaes, Pics and correct spelling. Phone 814-352-8944.
Professional secretary will do your typing. themes
dissertations 843-8072; 5:00 a.m.
and weekends.
TYPING PLAUS. Theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications, resumes, Assistance with composition, grammar, spelling, etc. English tutoring for foreign students — or Americans. 841-6254
word processing. .90/cp page. Experienced secretary,
spelling correction. 841-6342
Bass Player looker for musicians to do covers of the Jam, Clam, Contelo, etc. 843-3803
Female student for private room or girl twin gairn room in house. Washer, TV, dishwasher, c/s.
Male roommate for house near campus. $120 plus
utility. Proffer service student. 748-0069.
preferred For 2-bedroom spacious apartment 4 blocks from campus. Pool, laundry, dishwasher, heating/cooling paid. B175, Call 82-901-264 after 6 p.m.
LAX
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan, July 1, 1983
Gottfried uses computer to analyze Javhawks and opponents
Bv ED GROM
Staff Reporter
KU football coach Mike Gottfried not only brought in a new regime to lead the Jayhawks, he brought in a new computer program system to help break down and analyze future opponents, and the Jayhawks, too.
Defensive coordinator Ron Zook said that Gottfried had brought in new computer programs and would use them to manage the Computer Center's Honeywell system.
GOTTFRIED IS IN Cincinnati visit
ing his family and could not be reached for comment.
Zook said that Gottfried first used computers to analyze teams while coaching at Murray State University in 1978 and then again at the University of Cincinnati before carrying the system over to KU.
This will be the first year a KU team has ever used a computer to analyze itself and opponents, Zook said, but several schools around the country use them.
"The computer has been a big help to us through the last five or six years."
said Zook, who has been an assistant under Gottfried since 1978.
"It gives us information like percentage of passing downs and running downs, number of runs on first down and things like that.
"IT IS USED MORE as a time saver than anything else."
Zook and the defensive staff had been busy the past two weeks viewing game films of teams on KU's 1983 schedule. Zook also played plays for the computer to analyze.
"What we do is look for tendencies," he said.
The coaches then write down information concerning every play which will then be transferred to computer punch cards ready to enter into the computer. Zook said.
The computer analyzes the information and conveys percentages and other valuable information on a print-out sheet.
"IT IS A MAZING how much time you save with the computer," said offensive coordinator Buddy Gels, who was hired in 2015 by security where a computer was not used.
'In the past you had to hire somebody to figure percentages and touch details.'
"Now, the computer tells you all you need to know in a minute's time," he said. "Instead of a person doing that every week, you just have to break down the film and slip the information into the computer."
Geis and his offensive staff had been using the same process as Zook and his staff, but with other results. Geis said that his staff looked at a team's defensive formations at certain position on the field and on different downs.
'IT ALL HAS TO do with tendencies and how often a team calls the same defense on a certain down and distance," he said. "That way it gives us some idea what defense our opponents will call when we fall into that situation."
Zook said the computer would be used to analyze the KU team as well.
"We will know if we have any tendencies and that will be beneficial to us." Zook said. "That is the worst thing that can happen. If we do fall into a tendency, other teams will pick that up and key on it."
In the future, Zook said, the KU football program will use the computer to compile a mailing list and to keep track of prize recruits.
KU professor hired as assistant AD
When Monte Johnson became the KU Athletic Director last year, he announced he would hire an assistant to help interpret NCAA rules and regulations to the athletic department's staff.
Johnson lived up to that promise yesterday when he appointed Laurence "Lonny" Rose, KU law professor, as assistant athletic director.
"This is a good position for me to practice the legal training I have received." Rose said.
"WITH ALL THE RULES and regulations the Conference and NCAA
have now, I feel a position like this is needed."
Rose said he would remain at the School of Law as a part-time professor and act as a part-time assistant in the athletic department. The athletic department position becomes fulltime during the summer, he said.
Rose, who has been at KU for seven years, will begin his new position
Johnson said Rose will receive $30,000 a year.
Rose will also be in charge of long-range planning, the implementing of television and radio contracts
and act as a liaison to University boards and committees, Johnson and
"With myself formerly in business and banking, I would like someone full-time who can interpret legal aspects to me," Johnson said.
"I BELIEVE HIRING a person who canINTERMIBE the ever-changingrules and regulations of the Big 8 Conference. AWA will benefit our athletic program."
"Loony has the legal background that this job requires and I think he
Rose said, "It looks like it will be a lot of work, but I think I can do both.
KU athletes to compete in Colorado
Several top KU athletes are warming up for the 1984 Olympic Trials by competing at the National Sports Academy in Colorado Springs, Colo.
Three track athletes, one basketball player and one swimmer are repre-
sentative.
Kerry Boogni, Los Angeles sophomore, playing for the Northern college division basketball team, scored 16 points in a losing effort to the South Wednesday in North's final preliminary game. North takes a 2-2 record into today's bronze medal game against West.
yesterday to compete this weekend as members of another North team.
Pole vault Jeff Buckingham, Gardner senior, will attempt to better his career best of 18 feet, 7 and 1/4 inches at the meet Sunday.
Owen Buckley, Sioux City, Iowa,
senior, will compete in the decathlon
tomorrow and Sunday. Tudie McKnight
Brown, Bronx, NY. Were your mom's long jump
KU swimmer Ron Neugen, Wichita
senior, placed fifth in the 400 Freestyle
and sixth in the 800 Individual Medley earlier this week at the festival.
Mike Wolf, who this spring signed a KU letter of intent to play tennis, swept all three events in which he competed.
THE THREE KU track athletes left
Scott Perelman, KU tennis coach,
said that Wolf was the first person ever to win the men's singles, men's doubles and men's singles in the five year history of the festival.
This year 2,700 amateur athletes
from across the United States are at the
US Open.
Local DELIVERY Available
PIZZA Shoppe
PIZZA EATEN WITH YE FINDERS
Meal for 2
Single Topping
Prince Pizza
2 Dinner Salads
2 Small Soft Drinks
$5.50 Plus Tax
DINE-IN ONLY
6th and Kasold
Westridge
Shopping Center
842-0600
ZERCHER Photo
Cards &
Stationary
919 Iowa 1107 Mass
---
Local DELIVERY Available
PIZZA Shoppe
6th and Kasold Westridge Shopping Center
MEAL FOR 2
Single Topping
Prince Pizza
2 Dinner Salads
2 Small Soft Drinks
$5.50 Plus Tax
DINE-IN ONLY
842-0600
ZERCHER Photo
Cards &
Stationary
919 Iowa
1107 Mass
Now the friendly store,
Can offer you more!
Meisner-Milstead Liquor
Come in and see us for the 4th!
25th & Iowa Holiday Plaza
The Jazzhaus
926 1/2 Massachusetts
Friday, Saturday, & Sunday July 1,2,3
Safety Last
MidWest's Premier Rockabilly Group
July 8 & 9
CELEBRATION SALE
1/3 to 1/2 off
entire Spring & Summer stock
• Shorts
• Swimsuits
• Coordinates
Selfests
841 Mass. 842-5200
FALL RATES
1 Bedroom
start at $205
2 Bedroom
start at $235
• On bus route
• 10 month lease
• Water and Cable paid
IRREGULAR & RECYCLED
LEVIS & LEE SALE
Levis
Recycled Jeans
Straight Legs & Boot Cuts
$9.99
Levis Recycled Cords
$7.99
Slight Irreg. Lee Jeans
$14.99
Shrink-to-fit Gals "501"s
$19.99
Levis Cutoffs
$3.99
Declare Your Independence From Paying Too Much For Jeans at
KING of Jeans
740 Massachusetts
2 PAIRS OF GLASSES FOR THE PRICE OF ONE
Look into fashion. Come in to Hutton Optical and get aquainted. We have the lenses you need with the frames you want. Get two pairs of glasses for the price of one.
Bring in your prescription and save: pay full price on a pair of high fashion glasses and get a second pair of single vision glasses for free. Multi-focals on the second pair additional.
• Oleg Cassini
• Anthony Martin
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Offer expires July 16th
HUTTON
842-5208
OPTICAL CO.
742 Mass.
Mon.-Fri. 10-5
Sat. 10-2
The Jazzhaus
926 1/2 Massachusetts
BLUEWINE
Friday, Saturday, & Sunday July 1,2,3
Safety Last
MidWest's Premier Rockabilly Group
July 8 & 9
Salad Bar
Special
$3.75 ANYTIME
All you can enjoy
(Includes honey-sweetened bread
& homemade soups)
Cornucopia
RESTAURANT
1601 Mass. 842-9637
Open
Tues.-Fri. 11am-10pm
Sat. & Sun. 10am-10pm
Closed Mondays
ZERCHER
Photo
Cards &
Stationary
919 Iowa 1107 Mass
CELEBRATION SALE
1/3 to 1/2 off
entire Spring & Summer stock
• Shorts
• Swimsuits
• Coordinates
Selfports
841 Mass. 842-5200
Irregular & Recycled
LEVIS & LEE SALE
Levis
Recycled Jeans
Straight Legs & Boot Cuts
$9.99
Levis Recycled
Cords
$7.99
Slight Irreg.
Lee Jeans
$14.99
Shrink-to-fit
Gals "'501"'s
$19.99
Levis Cutoffs
$3.99
Declare Your Independence From Paying Too Much For Jeans at
KING of Jeans
740 Massachusetts
WE'VE EXPANDED!
Now the friendly store,
Can offer you more!
WE'VE EXPANDED!
Now the friendly store,
Can offer you more!
Meisner-Milstead
Liquor
Come in and see
us for the 4th!
25th & Iowa Holiday Plaza
SOUTHRIDGE PLAZA APTS.
1704 West 24th (913) 842-1160
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
FALL RATES
1 Bedroom • On bus route
start at $205 • 10 month lease
2 Bedroom • Water and Cable
start at $235 paid
2 PAIRS OF GLASSES FOR THE PRICE OF ONE
Look into fashion. Come in to Hutton Optical and get aquainted. We have the lenses you need with the frames you want. Get two pairs of glasses for the price of one.
Bring in your prescription and save; pay full price on a pair of high fashion glasses and get a second pair of single vision glasses for free. Multi-focals on the second pair additional.
• Oleg Cassini
• Anthony Martin
• Jordache
• Zsa Zsa Gabor
• Arnold Palmer
• Mary McFadden
HUTTON
842-5208
OPTICAL CO.
742 Mass.
Mon.-Fri. 10-5
Sat. 10-2
The University Daily
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
KANSAN
Vol. 93, No. 155 USPS 650-640
University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas
Wednesday, July 6, 1983
Weather
Today will be sunny with highs around 90, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka. Winds will be from the south at 5 to 15 mph.
Tenight will be mostly clear with lows in the middle to upper 80s.
Tomorrow will be mostly sunny with highs in the lower 90s.
Regents approve funds for salary, merit raises
By ANN REGAN Staff Reporter
The Board of Regents approved a $2.5 million increase for salaries and fringe benefits for the University of Kansas during a tele-conference meeting, said KU budget director Ward Zimmerman.
The funds will go toward merit salary increases for unclassified employees and salary incentives.
UNCLASSIFIED EMPLOYEES include faculty members and administrators. Classified employees are part of the state civil service and include custodians, secretaries and laboratory workers.
The increases approved by the Regents will affect the six state universities in Kansas and the
- A 2.25 percent average annual increase for new aircraft procedures.
- The $2.5 million approved for KU will be used to fund:
- 4.2.25 percent average annual increase for student hourly help.
- A 2.25 percent average annual increase in classified salaries
OF THE $2.5 MILLION allocated for KU, the College of Health Sciences in Kansas City, Kan. will receive more than $1.2 million in increases, another director of business affairs, said yesterday.
No other figures on salary increases were available.
During the conference, the Regents authorized KU and the other Regents institutions to prepare an operating budget for fiscal year 1984, which began Friday, based on allocations announced last week by the state Finance Council, said Zimmerman.
The Finance Council approved a total increase of $5.2 million for all the Agregions institutions
THE FINANCE COUNCIL is composed of a group of legislators that conducts the business of the Legislature when it is not in session, Zimmerman said.
The seven Regentia institutions have a week to prepare a 1964 fiscal year budget based on the data in Table 2.3.
The Regents will meet again by a teleconference call on Friday to approve the budgets.
The increase in funds also will cover the rising costs of existing benefit benefits. Zimmerman
KU has been allocated more than $7.2 million in state general use funds for the 1984 fiscal year to cover salaries, benefits and other operating expenses. Zimmerman said.
OTHER OPERATING EXPENSES include photocopying, office supplies and office equip-
Faculty members working on a 12-month contract basis should expect to receive their merit salary increases starting Dec. 18, Zimmerman said.
Those with a nine-month contract will receive theirs Jan. 1, be said.
Students to show compliance with draft law at enrollment
Students who receive federal loans this fall probably will have to sign a statement of draft registration compliance when they pick up their loan. At the same time, RU director of financial aid, said yesterday.
Signing such a statement would comply with a ruling last week by Justice Harry A. Blackmun of the U.S. Supreme Court requiring that male federal officers be required to sign the draft to be eligible for federal financial aid.
Rogers said he thought it would be easier to ask all students to sign the compliance statement at enrollment before they received their diploma. Rogers said that who had not already signed a compliance form.
Rogers said that he thought most students had already signed the compliance forms and that it would be simply a matter of signing them again at enrollment.
The compliance forms ask male students whether they have registered for the draft. Female students can check a box that says they are exempt from the draft.
But students who applied for Guaranteed Student Loans were never asked whether they had registered for the draft, he said.
He said students who had applied for campus-based federal financial aid — such as National Direct Student Loans, the Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grant and College Work-Study programs — received the grant. And they were notified of the amount of their award.
He said students applying for Pell Grants were asked whether they had registered for the draft on the Student Aid Report, the application form for Pell Grants.
Steve Zuk/KANSAN
PUBLICITY PRESS RELEASE
Lawrence Mayor David Longhurst emerges from the dunking tank mayor into the tank during the Independence Days celebration after a sure-shot contest pegged the bull's eye, sending the Sunday and Monday in Lawrence. See related story, page 7.
Wanted: volunteers to help local groups, organizations
By MELISSA BAUMAN
Staff Reporter
Lawrence volunteer program notice dot the bulletin boards of campus buildings, asking students and others to donate their idle hours to volunteer work.
Although most of the services recently have completed their summer training sessions, many are accepting volunteers and will begin training this fall
THE UNIVERSITY OF Kansas gives credit for one of three such programs operated by Volunteers in Court, which is operated and financed by the Douglas County Court Services, according to Mark Gleason, court services officer and juvenile director for Douglas County.
Gleason said that accredited volunteer positions were limited.
The Offender Follow-Through Program gives college credit to volunteers in certain fields for being what Gleason describes as an extension of volunteering. The program requires truancy or other problems the youth might have.
Workers are given a casework of three to five children, Gleason said, and are asked to donate five to 10 hours each week working with juveniles who have been in legal trouble.
GLEASON SAID THAT male volunteers were needed almost constantly for another Volunteers in Court program, called One-On-One, which asks volunteers to spend time with troubled children. He said that One-On-One was similar to the Big Brother and Big Sister programs.
Glesson said that most volunteers for this program were female and that males were always needed because, according to Glesson, boys are juvenile offenders more often than girls.
Gleason said that One-On-One volunteers spent about three hours a week working with youths and that four events, as picnics, were planned each year.
The Alternative Home Program, also a part of Volunteers in Court, places children in emergency situations in the care of volunteer families for up to two weeks, he said.
A COUNSELING GROUP that needs volum-
se VOOLUNTER page 5.
Association official expects compromise on withholding tax
Staff Reporter
By MARY ANN COSTELLO
An official of the Kansas Bankers Association said yesterday that he expected Congress to reach a compromise that would eliminate a proportion of perishable tax on interest margin.
AS THE PROPOSED bill is now written, it would require financial institutions to withhold 10 percent of the interest earned by a savings account depositor for tax purposes, said Maag.
Jim Maeg, director of research for the Kansas Bankers Association, said members of a House and Senate compromise committee would probably meet next week and that he expected a compromise bill would be passed by them and signed by President Reagan.
He said the compromise bill would replace the withholding tax on interest with stricter reporting requirements for interest on tax forms. Under the stricter requirements, the tax authorities could impose a percent withholding requirement on people who fail to give a full report of their interest.
The bill was originally scheduled to become law last Friday, but it may now be reviewed by the committee until Aug. 1. If a compromise is reached, the bill would become law Aug. 1 as it now is.
The enactment of the withholding tax was postponed a few weeks ago by Donald T. Regan, secretary of treasury, so that the House and Senate could reach a compromise.
MAAG SAID THERE were several reasons this some bankers were opposed to withholding of the funds.
Under the proposed withholding tax law, $5 of that interest wi ld be withheld by the bank for the government. Therefore, for the last six months of the year the investor would be earning interest on only $45 of the $50 the certificate had earned.
He said it would deny an investor the use of compounding on the interest he had earned on a time deposit. For instance, if someone were to invest in a $1,000 certificate of deposit that earns 10 percent interest compounded semiannually, and used of six months it would have earned $0 interest.
Maag also said that the statistics he had seen show that 90 percent of the people filing income tax returns report all the interest they have earned.
AN ARGUMENT FOR withholding interest has been that it would prevent people from lying on income tax forms about the amount of interest they have earned.
Watkins Museum seeks funds from county for storage room
AUGUSTINE BORNLEY
Dotty Daugherty, administrative assistant at Watkins Museum, shows some of the clothes the museum wants to store in a climate-controlled room which, if completed, would be used to slow the deterioration of museum pieces.
By MICHAEL PAUL
Staff Reporter
After being turned down by the Lawrence City Commission for a share of federal revenue funds so that it could construct a temperature-controlled storage room, the Elizabeth M. Watkins Community Museum now has turned to the Douglas County Commission.
Steven Jansen, director of the museum, said last week that the museum would ask the Douglas County Commission tomorrow for $3,500 of any federal revenue sharing funds that the county might receive in 1984 so that it could construct such a room.
JANSEN SAID THAT quilts, clothing, guns and other 19th century museum pieces at the museum, 1047 Massachusetts St., would not deteriorate as fast if the museum had a temperature-controlled storage room in which to keep them.
He said that the City Commission last year had allocated $2,000 in 1983 federal revenue sharing funds so that the museum could purchase air conditioning equipment for the storage room.
This year the museum requested $3,500,
Jansen said. Last month, however, the Commission decided not to allocate any 1984 revenue sharing funds to the museum.
City Commissioner Howard Hill said the decision not to allocate any 1884 federal revenue sharing funds to the museum "was not a slap in the face at the museum."
HE SAID THAT one reason the decision was that the Commission had always thought it was the city's responsibility to allocate funds for improvements to buildings but not to allocate funds for improvements to the interior of buildings in kind of work, he said, should be raised privately.
Jansen said another reason for the decision might have been the competition from social service agencies for funds that had been withdrawn because of federal budget cuts.
"We recognize that funds are limited," Jansen said. "And we appreciate the past support of the Commission. But we feel that we have made a legitimate application for the money."
Last year the County Commission had allocated $2,000 in 1983 federal revenue sharing funds to the museum so it could purchase air conditioning equipment for the room.
Jansen said the museum had needed a temperature-controlled storage room since it
JANSEN SAID THAT the museum had central air conditioning but that there was no air conditioning in the subcatic, where some items are stored.
He said that because of the museum's 16- to 21-foot cellings and its 11-by-8 windows, the museum was unable to keep the temperature at 65 degrees and the humidity in the 40 percent to 60 percent range necessary to prevent deterioration of materials.
See WATKINS page 5
City to draft plan to allow Sizeler to find retailers
Staff Reporter
By GENE HUNTER
The Lawrence City Commission voted 3-2 last night to direct the city staff to draft an agreement that would allow the city's downtown developer to begin searching for a tenant for a proposed department store as part of the downtown redevelopment plan.
Mayor David Longhurst and Commissioner Mike Amyx voted against the agreement that would allow Sidelity Realer Co. Inc., Kenner, La., to continue as the city's developer of record.
Sizer has proposed a plan, called Scheme 4, for downtown redevelopment. Scheme 4 calls for an enclosed shopping center to be built in an area within the city. The new project is Island streets and Seventh and Ninth streets.
The commission will decide next Tuesday whether to ratify the agreement drawn up by the
THE AGREEMENT WOULD also allow the city to begin work arranging financing for the project.
The agreement, if passed, would permit Sizerel to represent itself as the developer of record in seeking a prominent retailer for a store that would become the best copor of North and Massachusetts streets.
Longhurst be a sometimes heated debate by reading a four-page statement outlining his
He also said that the proposed financing plan, which includes a projected $8 million federal loan, is under consideration.
Longhurst said that taxpayers would have to pay between $9.5 million and $10.8 million and not the $3.5 million that some estimates had projected.
Amyx said he thought the downtown area worked well just the way it was and that he was not willing to take the financial risk of redeveloping the downtown area.
Commissioner Ernest Angino disagreed sharply.
"Lawrence is not unique enough to escape to the fate that has befallen other cities that have witnessed such a loss."
ANGINO ALSO SAID that Lawrence needed Sizerel as much as Sizerel needed Lawrence.
"You have to face up to the fact that If Sizeler backs out, the Lawrence merchants will have to pay you. You will not be able."
"In the past, they haven't had the capital to do this."
Commissioner Nancy Shontz said that she agreed with Angino.
"I have worked with this too long and put too much into this project to see it go down the drain
Longhurst, however, warned that many unforeseen expenses might arise, such as the legal costs of acquiring property and added insurance. In some cases, the increased traffic flow in the downtown area
LONGHURST, LISTING six items on which he said Sizeler would not compromise, criticized Sizeler for not being sensitive to the needs of Lawrence.
"I get the distinct impression that the Downtown Improvement Committee would accept something they are not particularly happy with rather than risk losing St.蒜." he
Commissioner Howard Hill said he favored going ahead with the project but emphasized that the Commission was not yet committing itself.
City Manager Buford Watson said that Lawrence would not be committed to actual construction until the financing was set and the construction team had been assigned, which would not be until early next year.
Amyx said that he was prepared to make a motion for a referendum to let voters decide the
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, July 6, 1983
News Briefs From United Press International
Blast at the NEA backfires; president bombs with AFT
LOS ANGELES — President Reagan got an ice reception from the American Federation of Teachers yesterday as he sought to woo the group by attacking a larger rival union, the National Education Association.
Albert Shanker, president of AFT, told reporters after yesterday's address that "areas of disagreement still remain and aren't mild disagreements in our view."
More than 100 delegates of the AFT, the nation's second largest teacher's organization with 580,000 members, silently left the hall as Reagan began a speech urging the group to join his excellence-in-education campaign.
While Shanker has supported about Reagan's proposal for merit pay for outstanding teachers, the federation strongly objects, for instance, to tuition tax credits backed by the administration. And Shanker has said the president deserves no more than "an F-plus" grade on education issues and has no chance of receiving the group's political endorsement.
White House aides had predicted Reagan's cause would be aided by speaking to the AFT, even if he met protest. They reasoned a bad reception would help him paint teachers as an obstacle to needed reform.
Salvadoran officers attack U.S. aid
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador — A group of junior army officers criticized growing American influence in El Salvador and said their country has become a "guinea pig" for U.S. foreign policy. The charges came in a letter distributed among the ranks and obtained by UPI yesterday.
"Everything is designed from the north (Washington), with veiled orders to fulfill or suffer the consequences " a cut in aid, et," the
The letter was issued by the "Blue and White Movement," a newly created and little-known group of junior military officers.
The letter said that the U.S. continued to follow foreign interests which "undoubtedly do not concern the solution of our internal problem, but rather involve us as guinea pigs within their geopolitical conceptions."
Reagan increases steel import tariffs
WASHINGTON — President Reagan yesterday ordered four years of import relief for the specialty steel industry and called for talks with other steel-producing nations to work toward free and open steel trade.
U. S. Trade Representative William Brock said at a news conference that the two moves were designed to enforce U.S. laws against unfair trade practices but to do so in a way that led toward more open trade rather than protectionism.
The relief will take the form of additional tariffs on flat-rolled specialty steel products and quotas on all imports of stainless steel bar, rod and alloy tool steel.
The Commission of the 10-nation European Communities said the U.S. industry's problem was not imports but "the overall economic situation which led to a severe slump in steel consumption worldwide."
CIA was target of bomb, story says
LONDON — The explosion that devastated the U.S. Embassy in Beirut was an inside job carried out by 16 Islamic fundamentalists hoping to disrupt a CIA meeting, Britain's Independent Television News said yesterday.
In a report quoting diplomatic and intelligence sources, ITN said 16 non-Americans who worked as office cleaners and cafeteria workers planned the attack, which killed some 60 people and injured more than 100 others.
The ITN report said none of the 16 embassy workers involved in the plot was killed or captured.
It said the group of plotters included two Lebanese and 14 persons with Iranian or Syrian connections.
ITN said the explosion was timed for maximum effect — to disrupt a CIA meeting going on in the building. Several key CIA employees were killed in the explosion.
Steep tortilla prices anger Mexicans
MEXICO CITY — Mexicans yesterday bemoaned a 40 percent hike in the cost of tortillas and a doubling of the price of bread, and some irate consumers stomping around the counter to register their complaints.
But although some protested in the small bakeries where the pancake-like tortilla corn bread is made, most cash-strapped vendors have kept their bakery business.
The Commerce Ministry authorized the hike after a five-month campaign by the National Association of Tortilla Makers and Corn Millers.
Inflation estimates in Mexico are running from 80 percent to 114 percent a year.
Italian police face charges of torture
PADUA, Italy — Four of the special anti-terrorist policemen who freed U.S. Brig. Gen. James Dozier from his Red Brigades captors went on trial yesterday on charges of torturing one of the kidnappers.
The men are charged with torturing convicted Red Brigades terrorist Cesare Di Lenardo, 23. A fifth policeman was removed from the trial because of parliamentary immunity gained when he was elected to Parliament last week.
Di Lenaro, who was sentenced to 27 years in prison for his part in the 1981 kidnapping of the U.S. general, charged that the five policemen used electric charges on his body, forced him to drink gallons of salted water, burned his hands, cut his calves and staged fake executions.
Nuke tests erode island, study says
PARIS — Although French scientists denied yesterday that Mururuca Atoll, the French nuclear test site in the South Pacific, is sinking because of repeated explosions, they admitted the blasts have created a risk of tidal waves.
A report delivered to the Defense Ministry said the underground nuclear tests had triggered sediment erosion and shaken its infrastructure.
French vulcanologist Harou Tazieff, who headed the research team, admitted that shock waves rippling through the core of the atoll by the blasts could cause landslides and erosion.
Government starts hot line for AIDS
WASHINGTON — The government opened a toll-free hot line for questions about AIDS and is publishing new leaflets for the public and professionals on the deadly disease, Health and Human Services Secretary Margaret Heckler said yesterday.
AIDS, which stands for Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome, is a disorder in which the body's ability to ward off infections is reduced, clearing the way for invasion of certain cancers and other lethal infections.
The hot line number is 800-342-AIDS, and will be open weekdays from 7:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. CDT.
The government is also publishing a new leaflet — "Facts about AIDS" - intended for the public. Copies are available by writing the Public Health Service, Office of Public Affairs, Room 721H, 200 Independence Ave. S.W., Washington, D.C. 20201.
Court OKs legislative prayers
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — Legalitaries may pay a chaplain to open their sessions with a prayer, the Supreme Court ruled 6-3 yesterday, because such appeals for divine guidance are "part of the fabric of our society."
Chief Justice Warren Burger, writing for the court, said the prayers were simply an "acknowledgment of beliefs widely held" by the people and not an unconstitutional entanglement of church and state.
THE HIGH COURT'S decision in the case of the Nebraska Legislature's chaplain apparently will allow Congress to continue its practice of paying House and Senate chaplains to begin its sessions — a tradition that began with the first session of the Continental Congress in 1774.
Rather than a strict constitutional test, Burger relied heavily on tradition to justify upholding the invocation practice and the use of tax money to pay for it against charges that it violated the First Amendment.
A group of atheists has filed suit against the congressional practice of having permanent, appointed chaphares, who are paid $52,750 a year. Similar challenges have been raised about military chaphaples.
Every state legislature, except the Massachusetts Senate, opens its daily sessions with a prayer, usually offered by the governor. The governor directly affects Kansas and 17 other
Justice William Brennan, one of three dissenters, said a ruling striking down legislative prayer "would likely have stimulated a furious reaction. But it would also. I am convinced, have the right to speak in religion and the spirit of freedom."
THE CHAPLAINS OF the Kansas House and Senate are paid $349 a month for the four months a year that the Legislature is in session.
states with permanent, salaried chaplets.
Justice Thurgood Marshall and John
Stevens were the other two
officials.
Breman, noting he voted the opposite way in a case 20 years ago but has changed his mind, said such an invocation "intrudes on the right to conscience" by forcing legislators to agree with him or "make their disagreements a matter of public comment."
NEBRASKA'S LEGISLATIVE PRAYER practice was challenged in 1979 by state legislator Ernest Chambers, the son of a fundamentalist minister.
He said he did not share, or agree with, the Presbyterian religion of the Rev. Robert Palmer, who served as the Nebraska Legislature's chaplain for 16 years until January 1981 when a court ruled against the practice.
Burger rejected arguments that Palmer's long tenure amounted to
"The content of the prayer is not of concern to judges where, as here, there is no indication that the prayer opportunity has been exploited to advance any one, or to disparage any other faith or belief," he wrote.
establishing an official religion and showed a preference for one denomination over another.
PRESIDING OVER THE court's meeting, Burger said today was likely to be the last day of the court's 1982-83 term. Several major cases are still awaiting decision, including the Betamax case about videotaping the debate in a US court and the penalty dispute and a controversy over sex discrimination in pension plans.
In other rulings handed down Tuesday, the justices;
- Voted 6-3 that police did not need a warrant to search a package delivered to an Illinois man after customs officers discovered it contained illicit drugs.
- Splitting 5.4, narrowed the right of non-union workers to seek money damages from unions under the 1871 Ku Klux Klan civil rights law.
- On a 7-2 vote said lawyers appointed to represent poor criminal defendants may ignore some of their suggestions on how to handle the case.
*Condemned 6-2 a Texas property tax on bank shares that included no deduction for tax-exempt federal obligations held by the banks.
Student aid to be topic at hearings
The public will have an opportunity to evaluate federal student aid programs at hearings tomorrow and Friday at the Hilton Airport Plaza Ima, 8801 NW 112 St., Kansas City, Mo.
Duncan Helmick, public affairs specialist for the U.S. Department of Education, said yesterday that the department will conduct the public financial aid programs from the educational community and the public.
The hearings will be from 8 a.m. to
5 p.m. tomorrow and from 8 a.m. to
noon Friday in the Litton South
Room of the Hilton.
The Higher Education Act of 1965, which governs all federal student aid, expires in September 1985. Before that time, Congress will review changes to the act suggested by the Education Department.
Helmrich said the Guarantee Student Loan program had received the greatest attention at past hearings.
He said that suggestions made at past hearings included simplifying student aid application forms, speeding up the application process for Guaranteed Student Loans and expanding the Pell Grant program.
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University Daily Kansan, July 6, 1983
Page 3
Mental health center to offer workshops in interrelationships
By MELISSA BAUMAN
Staff Reporter
A series of summer workshops ranging from self-assertion to child development will be conducted by the Bert Nash Community Mental Health Center, a spokesman for the health center said yesterday.
The center will offer the first of the workshops, "Mothers and Infants," from 10 to 13:30 a.m. tomorrow at the center, 336 Missouri St., Suite 202.
PAT DAVIS, community education information specialist for the center, said that because of low enrollment some of the classes, including "Mothers and Infants," might be rescheduled and that people could call the center at
843-9192 for enrollment and confirmation of dates.
"Mothers and Infants" is a discussion group for mothers of babies six months or younger. It will meet today, July 14, 21 and 28.
"Parents, Toddlers and Preschoolers" is a workshop offered for parents with slightly older children. It is held on Tuesdays from 9 p.m. Aug. 9, 12, 30 and Sept. 6.
Davis said the class was designed to give basic child development and child reshaping information and to form an understanding of how children within that age bracket.
Davis said that the workshop would teach parents what was normal for children of these ages so that they could guide their children more easily.
FOR INSTANCE, she said, learning
that rebellion is normal for a two-year-old child might help the parent understand him and deal more effectively with the child.
She said that instructors would try to pick problem areas specified by the group and to find ways to help parents deal with the problems.
Another class aimed at parents is titled "Helping Your Child Adjust to Divorce," and will meet Aug. 9 and 16. Times for this class will be announced later, Davis said.
Davis said that the class consisted of discussion and films that dealt with problems that children of divorced parents faced during arrangements, anger or anxiety.
Not all of the center's classes are designed for parents, Davis said. Some
are aimed at helping adults solve personal problems.
"SELF-ASSERTION" meets in two sections. The first will be from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. July 12, 19, 26 and Aug. 9. The second will be from 8:10 to 11 p.m. Aug. 12, 19 and 26, Sept. 2.
"Self Assertion" teaches people to use the most appropriate communal language.
She said the class showed both timid and aggressive people how to express what they want in a direct way to help avoid misunderstanding.
The health center also will offer a class on how to clarify goals, titled *Choices and Changes*. It will meet on Tuesday, June 14, 21, 28, and Aug. 11, 18 and 25.
Davis said this class helped people who were at a transition in their lives to
assess their goals, to analyze their strengths and to use these strengths to their advantage.
APPROPRIATE MEMBERS for "Choices and Changes," Davis said, would be middle-aged women going back to work or someone wanting to change jobs. But, she said, it is not really a career counseling class.
Dealing with stress is the subject of "Imagery, Music and Relaxation," which will meet from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. Aug. 16, 23, 30 and Sept. 6.
Davis said the course taught participants to relax by using music and guided imagery — a technique that teaches people to visualize a place or situation and imagine that they were there.
A family weekend workshop for
divorcing or divorced families is scheduled for Sept. 9 and 10.
Interested people must be interviewed, and the cost will be assessed according to a family's income, number of dependents, and need for counseling. Davis said
"By next July the program will have to be able to make it on its own," she added.
THE HEALTH CENTER has been offering the summer workshop program since last July, Davin said, when received a two-year federal block grant.
Davis said that the center decided what classes to offer through community feedback.
Grad student recieves music award
By MARY ANN COSTELLO Staff Reporter
When he got the first hint last May that something good was afoot, Charles Foerschlerr, Kansas City, Kan., graduate student, was putting gas in his car. A KU professor of music sanctioned by on his way to campus.
Seeing Foerscher at the gas station,
the professor called out, "Congrat-
ulations!"
Each of the workshops has a registration fee, Davis said.
“As soon as he realised I didn’t know what he was congratulating me for.”
POERSHILCH, A TENOR who is studying voice in the School of Fine Arts, son learned that he would be the first recipient of the Kathryn L. Nelson
The $4,000 award was established in May by Nelson and the KU Endowment Association. Nelson is the widest of the three schools, and the Graduate School from 1944-63.
The award goes to a KU senior or graduate student majoring in music.
Foerschler said he was nominated for the award by a committee of KU music and voice professors.
He said the award was intended to help further the career of the recipient.
Foerscher, who will complete a master's degree in voice performance this summer, said he would use some of his training to cover expenses when he travels to auditions.
KU professor emeritus publishes autobiography
Fritz Heider, KU professor emeritus of psychology, recently had his autobiography, "The Life of a Psychologist," published.
The University Press of Kansas last month published the book, which was compiled from journals that Heider had been keeping since
Heider is famous for developing
the attribution theory, which is now used in social psychology.
That theory states that when something happens, such as a loud noise, people react to what they see. That is why the noise of the noise, not the noise itself
Heider taught at the University of Kansas from 1947 until 1966.
A 12-year-old girl was thrown from her bicycle in front of Allen Field House about 10 a.m. yesterday and was taken to Lawrence Memorial Hospital for suspected head injuries, Capt. John Courtney of the Kansas University Police Department, said yesterday.
Girl falls from bike on Naismith Drive
The girl, John Godinez, daughter of Caroline Godinez, 1001 Holiday Dr., was treated and released yesterday from Lawrence Memorial Hospital.
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OUR INTERDEPENDENCE:
AN IDEA WHICH CAN TRANSFORM
I, a self-conscious failure in the floundering free-enterprise system, am often treated with disdain by both the we-gollers-generate-jobs group and the catharsis-through-carrots-and-cocaine crowd. My inability to adapt—a conscious choice, I'm told—has given me plenty of time to marvel at the system's flexibility.
For instance, while money and effort are expended recruiting high school athletes so that they can receive financial favors, special living quarters, meals, tutorial assistance, etc. in return for their participating in college athletics, the rest of the student body must endure cancelled class sections, larger classes, and classrooms in which the cooling and heating mechanisms see much less frequent use.
While the National Commission on Excellence in Education admits that, in the words of the Kansas City Times, "mediocrisy is strangling the American educational system," it ignores the crying need for both the abolition of all those baseless Schools of Education, and much smaller classes and schools in which would exist meaningful communication between the teacher and pupil.
While our government uses quotas to more equitably distribute jobs among various groups, millions of potentially productive citizens unable to find employment continue to suffer both materially and psychologically from their imposed idleness.
The dogmatic vigorously reject the idea of our interdependence when they inundate us with trite slogans designed to conceal the fact that our country is destroying both its natural environment and many of its youngest living members in the name of freedom.
of its youngest.
An idea, "a formulated thought or opinion," can transform an individual, group or populace. For most of its history the United States tolerated the segregation of black people, yet the presentation and eventual acceptance of a few simple ideas has created today a vastly different national opinion of racial discrimination.
While, according to Life magazine, "it floats in the watery void of its mother's womb, its lidless eyes unblinking, the inch-long-six-week-old, living human embryo...(which) is undergoing the most colossal 'growth spurt of its life' can be either killed by the abortion procedure or strengthened through intrauterine surgery.
If this country is to remain free, it must exhibit, in a much shorter period of time, the same willingness to absorb and act when confronted with waste, exploitation and injustice. Dr. Jonas Salk, the medical researcher responsible for the vaccine against polio, recently put it this way: "We must understand that it is to our mutual advantage to change our way of life, to recognize that we all must make a few sacrifices."
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan, July 6, 1987
Opinion
Community spirit alive
The community of Lawrence is to be congratulated for the outstanding Independence Days celebration this weekend. Despite the heat, wind and a little lightning and rain, the people showed up and appeared to be having a great time.
From the beginning of exhibitions and entertainment Sunday morning through the bluegrass concert and canoe race to the spectacular fireworks display Monday night, the weekend was full of true, American spirit commensurate with a national holiday.
The Lawrence Chamber of Commerce Visitors and Conventions Bureau is to be commended for the fine organization of the events. The simpler the better was the order of the day, as activities were for fun, not for winning, such as the watermelon seed-spitting contest and the fishing derby. Innovation even had its moment as children were quick to discover a vine along the river path and took turns swinging Tarzan-style across the path.
The crafts demonstrations and exhibitions were tremendous, reminding us of arts of a day gone by. These artists continue traditions that someday may be forever lost.
"The bombs bursting in air," a line from our national anthem, was brought to mind by the traditional fireworks display. And it would have been a flawless ending to an almost
perfect Fourth of July weekend, save for a few dissonant chords.
One of the ground displays fired off in the stadium was the famed Pac-Man. We think it stood out like a sore thumb. It's not necessary to promote our nation's video-holics. Why not Uncle Sam, instead? Earlier, at the riverfront celebration, there were the problems of waiting in long lines in order to ride the river shuttle or running short of food at the buffalo barbecue.
The crux of the two days was to bring people together for fun and sharing. It was an opportunity to do just that with friends and neighbors, many of whom we may not know very well.
These minor discords didn't ruin the whole weekend for us. They just left room for improvement for what we hope will become an annual event.
Sometimes it is easy for students to forget that the city of Lawrence does exist. At times we think it just fills up the area around the campus. But there is a city out there, complete with community spirit. For those of us who remain here during the summer months, the city becomes truly visible, not overshadowed by the doings of the University.
This weekend it was residents as well as students who turned out for the festivities. Perhaps it brought each a closer to a mutual understanding.
Congratulations, Lawrence, on a successful weekend.
Much like a carrot on a string dangling in front of the nose of a hungry pack mule, the president has been teasing us with the prospects of his candidacy.
Clues, hints and carrots
It seems as if President Reagan has been hinting at this ever since he was elected back in 1800.
If half the fun is "getting there," then all this hoopla about whether he will run is just good, clean, political fun. And perhaps he has his reasons.
predictions of many people that Vice President George Bush would be on a death-watch during Reagan's presidency.
Maybe one of those reasons is that he is awaiting news from his doctors to see whether he is physically able to withstand another four years in office. Reagan has always presented an image of the active president. He chops wood just as Lincoln did, except he uses a chain saw. And he rides horses just as Teddy Roosevelt did. He is definitely not a weakling, despite the
His delay in declaring candidacy is probably just good, political savvy. Let's face it, it's a president's market as far as candidacy goes. It's legal, safe and wise, and the other potential Republican candidates can only sit by and grumble while Reagan deliberates.
He may have lost a little luster with the press lately, but he still has most of them in the palm of his hand.
we'd also like to argue that this country needs a two-term president. It is extremely difficult to get anything accomplished in the short span of four years, especially when you have to clean the dirt out of the corners of the White House, left by the previous administration.
Churchgoers expecting God to have open arms and mind
Others receiving scattered votes included Playboy publisher Hugh Heffner, Mamet Ali Aga, who attempted to assassinate Pope John II, and a ranking hierarchy who womanize and/or steal.
The magazine editors also said a surprising 60 percent said they thought they would go to heaven "even if I died with a mortal sin on my shoulder." They said, with what most Catholics are taught to believe.
And while 86 percent of those responding said they believed in hell, the magazine said its readers were reluctant to put anyone there.
Given a list of "candidates" for *hell*, 22 percent choose Hitter, 10 percent Stalin, 12 percent Nero, 8 percent Hutchison.
"The decline in the belief in hell is one of the most important changes in our history," said Dr. Martin Marty, church historian and professor of divinity at the University of Chicago, in commenting on the survey.
Churchgoers are increasingly optimistic about the afterlife, demonstrating a growing belief in a merciful, loving and forgiving God and a lessening concern about the darker elements of the universe.
"There is a growth in humaneness and a great sense among people that fear of hell doesn't motivate people to be good," he added.
By DAVID E. ANDERSON UPI Religion Writer
Heaven, the magazine said, is something else.
Nearly everyone said they believed in it and almost as many said they expected to go there.
They found that 97 percent of those responding to the informal survey said they believed in heaven and 33 percent said they expected to go straight to heaven when they died.
Another 50 percent of the readers, made up mostly of Roman Catholics, said they expected to go to heaven after purgatory. According to Roman Catholic doctrine, purgatory is a place where baptized souls that have died without repentance for venial sins go.
Asked what they would do in heaven, reader response fell into a pattern, saying first they expected "to hug God," find relatives who died before them and ask God some tough questions, like "why are little children taken without warning?"
Only 1 percent of those responding said they expected to go to hell.
Readers' images of heaven were highly rural and pastoral, with descriptions ranging from "a peaceable green pasture" to "like the Rocky Mountains with streams and waterfalls and meadows with trees and flowers and the magnificent Grand Canyon."
WHAT MIGHT HAPPEN IS THAT MORE AND MORE PEOPLE WILL SUFFER FROM HEADACHES.
THEY MIGHT DEVELOP SKIN AND NERVE DISORDERS AND MAY BE TUMORS.
AND THEN THEY WOULD HAVE TO SEEK EXPENSIVE MEDICAL TREATMENT.
HELL, I LIKE DIOXIN!
"They have window boxes and dream of going to the country," he said. "You have to picture something to talk about heaven so I don't bettle you think I should be bored after three days in such a heaven."
The editors said the last two responses were not surprising but the first was.
That is the conclusion of the editors of U.S. Catholic, the monthly publication of the Claretian Fathers and Brothers, who surveyed their readers on their views of the afterlife.
Marty said results may reflect the pastoral longing of American city dwellers.
Anyway, he added, the Bible "calls heaven a city as much as a garden."
"The hugging of God was mentioned too many times by widely dispersed people to be ignored," the magazine said. The editors speculated the image may come from the New Testament parable of the prodigal son, the gospel song image of "he's got the whole world in his hands" or from the longing of people who were not hugged enough as children.
ERA should be left to smolder, die
Much ink has been spilled over the Equal Rights Amendment issue; i.e., the ERA or the Unisex Amendment. Last June, the ERA was left to die, and the question now is whether to rake the dying embers of the ERA's ashes or to let things be.
For centuries, women have been the object of the artist's, poet's and writer's inspiration and exalation it solely on account of their sex. Now why throw it away? All for the love of the ERA?
The proponents of the ERA are screaming about male chauvinism and job discrimination, wanting to create equality for men and women as they say there is in other parts of the world.
Do you know that women in Russia make up 50 percent of the work force? Yet many typically female jobs are the least attractive, such as paving streets, picking up garbage or digging
my contrast, the woman in the United States is a truly free and happy bird. So what's she cribbing about? Equal rights as men? What rights do men have here anyway that women
or take the Indian woman for instance. The educated woman in India who has a career works hard both at office and home. Often she has to rise at 4 a.m. to have the clothes washed, put the dirty dishes into the pie pan packed, the grocery shopping done and the children sent to school before she can take off.
As for job discrimination against women, that's a lot of bull. If there's job discrimination against women, it probably arises out of a lack of common sense, and this discrimination is not created by law and therefore cannot be abolished by law.
The American woman, by contrast, is helped enormously by dishwashers, washing machines, vacuum cleaners, hot water, packaged food and so on.
The Indian woman has to do the job of the washing machine, dishwasher, vacuum cleaner and cook as well. (Unless she belongs to the rich
Possibly under ERA, women will relinquish the equal rights to send equal amounts of candy to their babies.
Some of the ERA talk can make you sick. Take for instance the unpredicted thrill of unisex restrooms. The gross indelicacy of the idea stuns me.
neting to the old-fashioned times (or is it called ancient culture now?) when it was thrilling to receive a box of candy or a dozen red roses from an admiring beau.
Unlike his American counterpart, hubby does not gallantly offer to do the dishes or baby-sit. If there's any cleaning up he does, it is to clean the sumptuous table. That's why his any kind of chair is the arm chair kind.
or upper-middle class who can afford peons,
cooks and maids.)
PRIYA
PERIANAYAKAM
Guest Columnist
In the United States, a woman has the complete freedom to choose to be single or married, she can select the man of her choice without being harangued by a host of relatives.
Very often in India, a young girl may not be allowed to go to college. She may just have to get married. (If he turns out to be an enlightened husband, surely it is by the mercies of heaven.)
then she can stay at home or seek a career as she so desires.
Most often, a girl has to subject herself to the summation of the dowry system, paying a huge dowry for her future.
The pressures to conform to rigid patterns of society and tradition are intense and often unavoidable. This clearly indicates lack of freedom and equality.
A woman from any race or background can succeed if she truly wants to. Take the case of two young Indian women doctors in Kansas City, highly respected and admired by their colleagues — Dr. Naline Premshing, cardiologist at the Heart Clinic, and Dr. Madhava Parekh, pathologist at the Kansas City Osteopathic Hospital.
Hospital
They made it because they had drive, stamina and ambition. They didn't need the ERA. Neither do I. Nor you.
All things considered. NPR is worth saving
"Good morning. . This is Bob Edwards on NPR's Morning Edition."
The voice is familiar to all National Public Radio addicts but it may soon be lost. NPR has been hit by the fiscal plague and its deficit could grow to $9.1 million by September.
The board of directors is fighting hard to keep the network afloat but the sudden financial crisis has forced it to announce reduction plans and layoffs. Some say the crisis is fatal since all the signs are visible. NPR President Frank Mankiewicz and his team have assured the deficit increased with every new audit and signs of mismanagement became evident.
It seems that NPR spent more money than it had and inadequate control over its finances compounded the problem. Internal control, the ones said, was not as strict as it should have been.
The effects of the mistakes are being borne by employees. As a result of the budget cuts, 139
Can NPR be saved? It deserves to be. The organization's acting president, Ronald S. Bornstein, has appealed to the Corporation for Public Broadcasting for help. CPB is a non-profit, independent government agency that allocates federal money to public radio and television. Bornstein was hoping that CPB would serve as a guarantor for a bank loan that would not to sort out its affairs and CPB has agreed to NPR's rescue after some anxious debate.
According to the bail-out plan, CPB would act as a banker and loan NPR money to meet its immediate financial needs. In turn, local
stations would pay back that loan by pledging their Community Service Grants, the money that CPB gives to public radio and television. A CPB spokesman said that the general plan had been accepted by 93 percent of the radio stations and that the details were being worked out.
This might ward off the crisis temporarily and we would be able to enjoy the services a little longer. But if no one disappear from our lives, but then again, maybe some anomaly, rich
SEEMA SIROHI
philanthropist will rescue the network before it's too late.
My addiction to the network is obvious, but I speak out of a need for noncommercial journalism. An institution such as public radio serves a great need in our lives. It provides news and features that are certainly not available in abundance on other stations. It covers events, especially international, that go unnoticed by commercial stations.
Award-winning new programs such as "Morning Edition" and "All Things Considered" remain unmatched by their five-minute counterparts on other stations. I could not imagine being subjected to these biased news reports, but poor newscasters have such little time to tell us all about the local, national and international climate of the day. They cannot possibly cover such wide a
spectrum of news with such consistent quality as NPR.
And NPR begins my day in a very wholesome way with a full three hours of "Morning Edition." I am sure NPR fans share the feeling. Now the question is whether NPR can maintain the same standard of performance that it is credited with, because the budget cuts have touched the untouchable — the news department.
NPR's news budget will decline from $5.3 million at the start of this year to $4.5 million in 1984. Such cuts in the news department, which is the heart of NPR, can be stifling.
can referral rending be provided to save public radio? A distant possibility, because the conservatives are not exactly in the law with public radio. They say that the taxpayers' dollars cannot be used for public radio that cannot support itself. Public radio is also accused of bias — left-of-the liberal kind.
This may only be the tip of the proverbial 12ceberg because NPR's financial future seems
The last accultuation holds little water when one seriously analyzes the method of coverage. It is almost excruciatingly fair. All sides of the picture are well-represented and the coverage goes beyond repeating the official government line on issues.
In today's world, where the media are becoming increasingly more dependent on advertising revenue for survival, a refined institution such as public radio ought to be preserved to provide the balance. And if England's poor economy can support the BBC, then America's recovering economy can certainly salve NPR. Another simple option, of course, would be to cut a very thin slice from the billion-dollar defense budget and give it to NPR.
Letters to the Editor 'Way' column way off base
To the editor:
What was the real point of Charles Lawnhorn's column of June 29th? It certainly wasn't about "Exercise religious tolerance with newer ways to worship."
In the opening paragraph, Lawhorn introduces the controversial group "The Way" and never ceases to mention them. The article is little more than a thin, historically distorted effort to defend
Lawhorn writes about having an open mind and how "our society likes to label," but he seems to rely rather heavily on symbols. He
refers to the Salem witch hunts, McCarthyism, America — “the land of the free, home of the brave,” – and offers a grammar school account of why the Pilgrims journeyed to America. Lawnhorn adds that the Way does not believe in the doctrine of the Trinity but since they do believe in Jesus Christ they are an acceptable “Christian” group.
If the article was an attempt to defend the Way, it would not encourage tolerance toward them nor add a grain of credibility to their group.
Loreen Keating Lawrence junior
The University Daily KANSAN
4
Newsroom—864-4810 Business Office—864-4358
Kansan Telephone Numbers
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The University Daily Kamaan (USP5 60490) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 60490, daily during the regular school year and Wednesday and Friday during the seminars sessions, including Saturday, Sunday, holidays, and final periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 60443. Subscription by mail are $4 for six months at a fixed rate and $12 for six months at an annual rate. Postmaster information are in ABS. The student activity fee POSTMASTER: Send address changes to the University Daily Kamaan, 118 Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 60443.
Editor Janet Murphy
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John Oberzan Mike Kautsch
University Daily Kansan, July 6; 1983
Page 5
Volunteer
From page 1
teers for fall, according to Carol Butler of the Volunteer Clearing, House, is Headquarters. Workers at Headquarters do not release their last names for security reasons.
The 24-hour counseling service has both walk-in and phone-in advice and provides enrollee support.
Headquarters trains people in the fall, spring and summer. Volunteers must complete 35 to 40 hours of training.
The service prefers that volunteers commit themselves for six months, Butler said, but it does not require a time commitment because work is on a volunteer basis and no contracts are
She said that the service taught general counseling skills, suicide and relationship counseling and drug identification.
Headquarters also refers callers to other services that can best advise them, she said.
EMERGENCY HOUSING is available to people who meet certain guidelines, but the rules are subject to change.
Larry Carter, assistant director of Headquarters, said that the group was funded primarily by the United Way and that it also provided free community fee, revenue sharing and private donations.
Another Lawrence service that is accepting volunteers in the fall is the Women's Transitional Care Services, Inc., according to Barb Smith, volunteer coordinator of WTCS.
WTCs are a 24-hour crisis center that offers counselling, emergency housing and referrals for bakersfield children.
Although it is finishing a training session,
WTC5 will take volunteers again at the end of September or the beginning of October, she said.
SMITH SAID THAT volunteers were given 25 hours of training over a four-week period and that they were screened during this time for strong opinions, racism or class discrimination.
She said people could not be too optimised to work at WTCS because the service tried to do more with less.
This service also asks for one year's commitment from volunteers but, Smith said,
She said that in addition to providing shelter for up to 30 days for women and children, the shelter also provides social rehabilitation services and low-rent housing information for
WTCS is funded through the United Way revenue sharing, social rehabilitation services.
Watkins
The report also stated that the storage room would enable the museum to be more efficient in storing and retrieving such museum items as linens, tools and pictures.
From page 1
"We have about one-third of our collection on display and two-thirds in storage," he said.
In a report prepared for the City Commission, the museum said it was important to control temperature and humidity because any fluctuations caused materials to expand and contract. Excess humidity also causes mold, mildew and corrosion.
Janssen said that because the collection was rotated for display, the temperature-controlled
Jansen said a new storage room, which would be 24 feet by 30 feet and 8 feet high, would be constructed in an unused part of the attic. He said $7,000 was needed to build it.
storage room should not be considered a junk closet.
"WERE NOT GOING to lock these items in the room and throw away the key," he said.
"Last year," he said, "11,70 people visited the museum." Jansen said the museum received 60 percent of its budget from public funds and the rest from private funds.
Jansen said the museum requested revenue sharing funds because the museum was providing a high degree of service to Lawrence and to the county.
The museum's budget this year, he said, was $48,000. The $3,500 that the museum has requested is about 8 percent of its current budget.
Ernest Coleman, the county's federal funds
adviser, said the County Commission would further discuss the request today.
UNLIKE THE OTHER services mentioned, the Rape Victim Support Service, a Douglas County rape counseling group, does not need new laws, said Edith Guffey, director of the service.
The museum is one of more than 20 organizations seeking a share of the funds.
alcohol_taxes and private foundations and donations, Smith said.
Coleman said the county would not know the amount of federal revenue sharing funds to be distributed for 1984 until later this summer. He estimated that the county would receive revenue sharing funds for 1983 was about $30,000.
IF THE LEVEL of national funds remains the same and if the formula used for allocating the funds does not change, Coleman said, the county will receive about the same amount of funds in 1984.
Mike Wilden, assistant city manager, said, however, that the revenue sharing act had not been renewed for 1984 and that it was uncertain whether they would be available for revenue sharing in 1984.
The service wants volunteers to stay for one year. Guffey said.
Guffey said that the group offered crisis counseling for victims of sexual assault and an
The service takes volunteers once a year. People go through one day of training when they join the support group, and then volunteers meet every Thursday night for two hours, as long as
that they assisted them in going to the hospital or to the police.
A representative from the service also speaks to groups on both preventing and dealing with abuse.
PEOPLE INTERESTED in working for any of the Lawrence services can contact Volunteer Services.
There are no set workings hours for the service but both Headquarters and KU Information contact Rape Victim Support Service personnel and refer any victim to them, Guffey said.
This group keeps track of about 50 services in Lawrence that use volunteers on a regular basis and refers people to services that need help, Butler said.
Gunman steals 'Return of the Jedi' from Overland Park projectionist
By United Press International
OVERLAND PARK — A gumman held a film projectionist hostage for two hours yesterday and forced him to hand over a 70mm print of "Return of the Jedi."
Overland Park police Lt. Phil Barbour said the gunman got away with the film, valued at between $7,000 and $12,000, in seven metal cases.
Barbour said projectionist John J. Smith told authorities he was leaving the Glenwood Theatre shortly after midnight yesterday and pulled him in the parking lot and milled a rum.
Once inside, Smith said the gumman told him to rewind the film on seven transport reels. After the hour-long task was completed, he was forced to help the gumman carry the canisters to the parking lot. He was then ordered back into the theatre and ordered not to call anyone for 20 minutes. Smith called police about 2:15 a.m.
to the parking lot and waited for the movie house to clear.
Police said they believed the movie was stolen to make illegal copies for sale. But Frank McGowan, a branch manager for 20th Century Fox, told me that he made a quality copy, from a 70mm print.
Smith said he and the man went into the theatre, but when the gunman saw the building still was occupied, the pair returned
Theatre officials said they obtained an extra copy of the movie and it was shown as scheduled yesterday.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan, July 6, 1983
League of Women Voters studying U.S. security policy
The League of Women Voters is studying the pros and cons of U.S. national security policy to plan for the future. The official official of the league said last week.
Janet Meyer, first vice president and national security chairman of the Kansas League, attended a conference held in New York last month as part of the national study.
Academic and professional experts briefed Meyer and 50 other league leaders from around the country on national security policies.
"I learned that there aren't any easy answers, although some found it easier to choose sides." Meyer said.
Meyer said that the group wanted to lobby more effectively in Congress for social programs, such as unemployment and welfare.
The Lawrence League of Women Voters will conduct public discussions in September and October about U.S. national security issues.
She said the league thought social programs were being neglected, but said, "You can't lobby for money if you don't understand what the demands are in other areas."
"This is something that the average citizen should be concerned about, and not just take someone else's word on the potential dangers," Meyer said.
McMurrv's sentencing set for Friday
Former KU-on-Wheels director Steven McMurray, who was convicted last month of embezzling $20,425 worth of Student Senate bus funds, will be sentenced by Douglas County District Judge Ralph Kirk at 3:30 p.m. Friday.
McMurry, 122 Concord Road, had originally pleaded not guilty to five counts of embezzlement.
But after Assistant District Attorney Harry Warren told McMurry that he might file additional embezzlement charges, McMurry agreed to change his plea.
McMurray also agreed to reimburse the University a sum negotiated by his lawyers and University legal counsel.
On June 9 Judge King found McMurry guilty and ordered a presentencing investigation.
The investigation concluded during the past week, and Friday was scheduled as the sentencing date.
McMurray faces a minimum of two years and a maximum of five years in prison for each of the five counts. Fines range up to $5,000 a count.
On campus
RICHARD REBER, PIANIST,
will present a faculty recital at 8 p.m. today in Swarthout Recital Hall, Murphy Hall.
FACULTY AND STAFF performers will present a Midwestern Music Camp recital at 1 p.m. tomorrow in Swainthorpe. Rectal Hall, Murphy
SENIOR HIGH JAZZ ensemble will present a Midwestern Music Camp recital at 7:30 p.m. Friday in Swarthout Reef Hall, Murray Park.
SENIOR HIGH CAMP bands will present a Midwestern Music Camp recital at 1 p.m. Saturday in Crafton-Freeman Theatre, Murphy
KELEY STONE, ORGANIST,
will present a master's recital at
8 p.m. Saturday in Swarthout Recital Hall.
Murphy Hall.
CONNIE HAVERKAMP, PIANIST, will present a senior recital at 8 p.m. Sunday in Swarthout Recital Hall, Murphy Hall.
DON COOK, ORGANIST, will present a doctoral recital at 8 p.m. Monday in Swarthout Recital Hall, Murphy Hall.
CAMPUS CRUSADE for Christ will meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas University Chapel to pray for recovery Tuesday evening through July 25. Everyone interested is welcome to attend.
By MATTHEW HARRISON Staff Writer
Director seeks research money
Energy research is not the hot topic that it was 10 years ago, but it still is a serious problem, Shirley C. Domer, interim director of the KU Energy Research Center, said last week.
The energy research center serves two important functions — as a source of finding energy research funds for KU system and a servous system for KU energy research.
DOMER TOOK LOST last year when the center's first director, Robert Riordan, took an administrative position with Kansas Power and Light Co.
Domer, who holds a doctorate in communications, said that she had worked to expand the center's ability to conduct research on disciplines involved in energy research.
"As a professional communicator, I see my job as a terrific opportunity to bring together people from a variety of backgrounds to address the problem of national importance," she said.
The center monitors federal agencies and surveys public and private publications in hopes of finding funds for energy research. When possible funds are lower, theOWER said, one contender researchers she thinks might be interested.
"I SEE MYSELF as a link between people in different disciplines," she said. "Sometimes the areas of interest
don't match up with the funding opportunities."
Domer said that one time a conflict existed between a researcher and potential funds because of a difference in political philosophies.
"Last year I had a faculty member tell me that he could not accept the funding opportunity because the results of his work might be used for political purposes and he didn't want that," she said.
Domer recently discovered funds that were available for studying the energy situation in undeveloped countries.
After a long search, she heard of a professor in Latin American Studies who might be interested in the project. She then put the researcher and the source of the funds in contact with each other.
She said, however, that nothing had been finalized.
DOMER MUST ALSO ACT as a liaison between the University's energy programs and the public's concern for how tax money is being spent on energy development.
She said that although people were concerned about natural gas rates, they
"We have looked in the past to the federal government and the Department of Energy to push energy research in all fronts." Domer said.
She said, however, that under the Reagan Administration more than 70 percent of the DOE funds appropriated last year went for nuclear research, while a solar research program in Colorado, Colo., had been "cut to the bone."
DOMER SAID THAT interest in energy would return when the public found once more long gas lines or utility bills that were unbeagged high.
Although there still is a lot of interest in natural gas, other areas of energy are undergoing rapid development.
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1
University Daily Kansan, July 6; 1983
Page 7
On the record
Police said that the man had thrown the fireworks in the street from a moving car and that the remaining fireworks had been confiscated.
AN 18-YEAR-OLD Lawrence resident was arrested Monday for possession of bottle rockets and cherry bombs, police said.
A GREASE FIRE ignited in the kitchen of a Stoffuer Place residence Friday afternoon causing $500 worth of damage, police said.
A THEIF STOLE three sets of hubcaps, worth $1,033, from three cars parked near Allen Field House Friday morning, police said. Another set of hubcaps, worth $400, also was stolen and found in the 900 block of West 23rd Street.
A LARGE AQUARIUM water filter, valued at $80, was stolen from the backyard of a residence in the 500 block street during the past weekend police said.
A KU STUDENT was arrested for window peeking in the 800 block of Avalon Road early Tuesday morning, police said.
GARDENING EQUIPMENT, worth $313, was stolen from a storage shed in the 1700 block of Tennessee Street during the past weekend, police said.
Keith Aberding, Lawrence, entertained the people who walked between Burcham and Constant parks during the Independence Days celebration. Aberding was one of several roving musicians who serenaded strollers.
Independence Days draws 10,000 people
Lawrence Independence Days celebration was "a huge success," the event's organizer said yesterday.
Judy Billing, the organizer, said that Sunday's attendance was about 6,000 to 10,000 people and that about 6,000 to 8,000 attended Monday.
She said that the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce planned to hold the event again next year.
Apparently, those who attended the event were well-behaved.
"WE DON'T THINK we made any money, but I hope we broke even," she said.
Sgt. Larry Loveland, information officer for the Lawrence Police Department, said that crowd behavior was better than expected.
Freed DeVictor, director of parks and recreation, had high praise for the crowd. He said that they were cooperative in disposing of trash and that city crews had no problems during the two days.
THE INDEPENDENCE DAYS celebration culminated Monday night in Memorial Stadium with a sponsored by the Lawrence Jayces.
Billings said that people were enthusiastic about the event.
"I have no doubts that the attendance will be better next year because people were pleased with what they saw this year," she said. "We know that there are things we can do better next year."
She said that exhibit sales were low and that people were more interested in relaxing and learning about different crafts.
The Chamber of Commerce will evaluate the event this week, she said, and suggest ways to increase attendance next year.
Billings said that planning more activities on the river and more exhibits for next year's Independence Days might increase attendance.
Buckingham to compete in World Games
Former KU pole vaulter Jeff Buck ingham will compete in Edmonton, Canada, Friday at the World University Games, where he will vie for a fourth straight victory.
Buckingham left for Canada from the National Sports Festival in Colorado Springs, Colo., where Sunday he set a meet record and matched his personal best indoor mark of 18.7 and one-quarter inches
According to KU assistant track coach Roger Bowen, Buckingham has won the Track and Field Championships in Indianapolis, the U.S.A.-East German capital in Los Angeles and the National Sports Center in Colorado Springs, Colo.
In winning the National Sports Festival, Buckingham easily out-distanced second-placed finisher Billy Kelley's mark of 17-11 and one-quarter inches.
Buckingham's victory at the sports festival was his third straight victory in his career.
The University Daily
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MANAGER SERVICE
(913) 834-3797, 842-1878
Farlent Immmediate? Poor boy special! Smalt but
Farlent Immmediate? Would consider it. Ocill
please depend.
evenly decorated 3 bedroom house just west of tuffy's Hillcrest. Preferred婚宴 $275
Hampton Township houses 2 BR unfurnished
homes at 14th & Kentucky; 10 month lease available
at 14th & Kentucky; 10 month lease available
KU STUDENTS &
FACULTY
Still looking for that perfect home?
Consider these completely furnished studios
1 br, 2 br, 4 & 8 br apartment locations . . .
HANOVER PLACE
between 14th & 15th
on Massachusetts
841.1212
SUMMIT HOUSE
1105 Louisians
841-8220
SUNDAN : E APARTMENT 1
7th & Florida
841-5255
TIBURON
9th & Emery
841-5255
COLDWATER FLATS
41. W. 14th
841-1212
BLEXES
922 Tennessee 10th Indiana
All offered by
Professional Management
Management & Management
Maintenance
SOUTHEAST PARKWAY TOWNSMICH spacious, quiet 3 bedroom duplexes. Located at 26nd & Kassidn Featuring all appliances, washer-dryer hook-ups, ats, kitchen appliances, swimming pool. Call 749-1567 for an appointment.
Lease with option to buy: 2 year old duplex in peaceful neighborhood. All appliances and dishwasher, duspool, W/D), friendly terms avail. 12%/842-6435 days 841-1295 days
Low rent. $173.50, no utilities. I need a housemate.
Bill: 943-6927 after 5 and weekends.
MED. STUDENTS, NURSES, THEIRAPISTS,
STUDENTS, EMPLOYEES.
KC this Spring or Fall! We have a beautiful duplex available. Completed retirement with ac. app., wew.
Student in our programs. Please preface. Free rent insured for early birth. Call
Near, campus. house - 3 bedroom. 1 bath, $400.
Duplex. 2 bedroom. 1 bath, carpeted.
C, dishwasher. $735. 12 month lease. no pets. Call
$415-2116 for appointment.
Something For Everyone
At Naismith Hall
Just South Of Campus
- Private Baths
- Academic Year Lease
* Also Summer Leases
- Parties and Special Events
- Free Services
* Maid Service
- Color, Cable T.V. Lounges
- All The Food You Can Eat
* Swimming Pool
* Much More!
Visit or Call: 843-8559 1800 Naismith Drive
Applications Now Available Come See Our Model Suite
FOR SALE
Plan Abad! Rooms available for spring, summer,
autumn, winter & spring. Cooperative community close to campus
with 150+ students.
1 BH B屋. Appliances - adjacent to O zone parking.
Prefer married couple. 825; 643-806.
Rent now or reserve for fall - furnished apts or room sets on campus or downtown, off-street parking.
One bedroom apartment, sleeping room, 5 bedroom brace, onboards. 10161169003
- Studios, Apartments,
00 00 00 00
- Furnished or Unfur-
- Laundry Facilities
- Excellent Maintenance Service
Townhouses
Save money, rent a 1 or 2 bedroom, or studio apartment next to campground. Nice, phone贝贝-84760, a friendly, southern location. All appliances, gas heat, central air, pool, or UTB hotel. Call between 9 a.m. and 10 p.m. on weekdays.
- 3 Pools, Tennis, Athletic Clubs
184 Mercury Combat, 1100. Body; OK, interior
very good, 6 cylinder. Runs great. 749-2105
Mavicer 3-door, 6 cylinder, AC power, run
val. RM2922-after $8,190
(979) LD T兰拉斯, P/S/P, A/J/C power exs-
tension, PV control, C/B control,
power condition.
1909 Kawai 550 Cycle, 6,500 miles, great shape, lots of fun,
$1,500 fee, b42-288, eannings
AVAILABLE TOYOAK TOWEL, also apartment in
Toyota City. Also cheap summer rooms, share kitchen & bath.
Also cheap outdoor patio.
2500 W.6th
KU Bus
Five faculty positions offered, 3 by rank, CUA, biowoodmoulder (CUA)
Biowoodmoulder (CUA) Biowoodmoulder (CUA) Biowoodmoulder (CUA) Biowoodmoulder (CUA) Biowoodmoulder (CUA) Biowoodmoulder (CUA) Biowoodmoulder (CUA) Biowoodmoulder (CUA)
Aiwa portable case player/brand new
Auto Rew
Met. cap $100.84 9990
843-7333
Homette, 12 x 50' B.B. W/D, New A/C skirted on large, down woodaped shelves $20, 400 or will consider as a partial payment on a small rancher in NW Lawrence, 842-693-701, 9 to 2nd Karnes, annexes
Club
KU Bue
1801 red Toyota Corolla SE 5-speed. AIR AM/FM
radio. Cargo is available. $3,995. Country Shipment. $6,500 best offer. @840-710-5000.
New car model.
Honda Express II (moped), low mileage, baskets,
top cap condition, $225.00, 842.790
Honda Passport Almost new. Call 843-8492
nose room in desirable neighborhood;
ample built-in shelves for books. Large backyard,
with flowers and garden. Price determined by in-
surance plan. Between 7 and 1 m.
a. between 2 and 10 p.m.
Trailer, 1458S, 2 bedrooms, living room, bedroom, kitchen, laundry room, plannings, including washer & dryer; B74 830-6900
This Bike is For You! SR, 25" frame, many acce-
cessories, fine leather $400 purchase - Dave 643
LOST AND FOUND
Car key, possibly POD, on silver钥匙 ring, found on 1st floor Laptop键盘. 26 key. Now in campus piano
FOUND: Small black female dog - Meadowbrook
address: 823-0718
Pet ferret found on campus June 29. If anyone has a pet ferret, call the animal care unit: 844-557-8967.
HELP WANTED
EAST COAST ADVENTURE - BORTON. Families seek in child care worker homes. Few families live in city. Flexible starting dates, many openings, one CARE home. 425 Buckingham Road, Montreal, MA 02126. 818-795-3000. fachadcare.com
POSITION ANNOUNCEMENT Project Coordinator for Uprand Bound program, University of Kansas Required qualifications: Bachelor's degree in the public schools; work experience with low incomes in the public schools; work experience with low incomes in the public schools; work experience with low incomes in the public schools; work experience with low incomes in the public schools; work experience with low incomes in the public schools; work experience with low incomes in the public schools; work experience with low incomes in the public schools; work experience with low incomes in the public schools; work experience with low incomes in the public schools; work experience with low incomes in the public schools; work experience with low incomes in the public schools; work experience with low incomes in the public schools;
Work Study positions available in the Office of State
Affirmative Action and Disability (NY, NY) Applications
Application deadline: Friday, July 16, 2015. Applicants
must be at least 18 years old. No applications
from non-affirmative action or disability groups.
PERSONAL
The
Ebc.
Shop
GOING AWAY? Relatable female law student will care for your home, pets, plants, etc. next academic year.
College sophomore, 19, needs female companion due to girlfriend problem. Contact Job 844-767-0355.
Graduate student (24) seeks dectm, intelligent girl/ lady for company, desperately. Please write to: jonathan.mccormick@csun.edu
Instant passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization,
immigration, visa ID, and course of fine portraits.
Vintage & Classic
Contemporary Clothing
Lane
10 West 8th St.
Closed Wed
9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
gift shop
GRAN SPORT
KU student, 7; seeks a nice, skilled and somewhat
sensitive female for friendship. Write resum-
tion, Box 845 of the university.
While other book makers are responding to "murals" take to reduce weight, Vaque has an exceptionally fine line of books producing the frill, the all-new aikle leather unifying flange from Vaque Incuriously! The new flange adds style and price & quality against Denier. New Balancia & Aimo & New You be pleasantly
WILDERNESS OUTFITTERS
CAMPING BACKPACKING CAMOING
VASQUE FLYTE:
Very Light
Very Good Value
Very Compatible
Leather
Perm Sale
reg. 400 • NOW $35
A Visit Above
Mall shopping Center
127 W. 6th St., NE.
KWALITY COMICS: Fantasy games, science fiction
plus the beat in graphic literature. New arrivals
every Saturday. 107 W. 7th, 843-7299; M-F: 11-7; Sat:
10-5.
GRAN SPORT
7th & Arkansas 843-3328
Information metropolitan for people interested in being interested in the Center. Please contact p.m. at Headquarters, Personal服务中心 608-432-1755.
Say it on a shirt, custom silicone printing. T-shirts, jeans and caps. Swirlt by Shiwell 740-161-691
NEW YORK
$1.58
Cold Games Boards!
Get a "taste" of New York 9th & Mass., in Downtown Lawrence. All beef hot dogs, super dogs and fabulous Palau sausages, in pita bread garnished with your choice of N.Y. kraut, spicy broccoli, green beans, ketchup, hot sauce pickle relish and celery salt at an extra channel.
Cool down with a Dr. Brown's cream soda, black cherry, root beer, orange or a unique Cel-Rey—all direct from NYC.
Deliciously served from an authentic N.Y. vendor's cart.
10:30-3:30; Tues.-Sat., weather permitting.
*Obdilulu*
Phyllis'
Fabulous
Franks
Special for students. Haircuts $7 and perma $3.
Charm, ask for Deen Jensen. 943-3500.
Leaving Town?
Airline Tickets
At airline counter prices no extra service charge Make your travel arrangements on campus
Service for:
See Maupintour Travel
- The lowest airfares—Complete
- travel arrangements
* Eureail and Japan Rail Passes
Eural and Japan Rail Passes
Car rental—Hotel confirmations
Student semester break holidays
Travel Insurance
ON CAMPUS LOCATION in the Student Union and 900 Mass.
Maupintour travel service
749-0700
11. 36 PTCHERS 4:7 p.m. everyday. Also enjoy scrumbbal submarine sandwiches, great meals, video & pinball games, and the summertime on our front lawn. Get a taste of black block of north of the Union. Hawk Crossing 85-660
Used furniture bought and sold. Pick up available.
Everything But Ice 6th and Vermont.
Waxing, threading, manicure, pedicure, bleaching.
Call 843-5494.
"Ziggy Spud"
1006 Mass
749-1660
841-6232 * Holiday Plaza * 25th & Iowa
- FREE WEEK MEM "ZRSHIP
New Customer Only* expires 7/18
25% OFF MEMBERSHIPS
99¢
Zelofeld's
ice cream
parlor
& DELI
TANIME
EUROPEAN TANNING
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale ! Make sense out of Western Civilization! Makes sense to use in your own work. Give the answer to the Test exam preparation. "New Analysis of Western Civilization" available now at Town Clerk. The
Now through July 10
Impress your datage with the total environment of the Hawks Crossing. Groove on the front porch to great tunes, total sunshine and mega sun. Happy holidays! 47.4% of the Hawks "long for sale, and then."
Tenth - Party like it 14% 99%. While you’re out, grab some healthy food at Yelp Leo. Open late: Mon - Thurs 11 p.m. l.p. Fri. Sat. 11 p.m. l.m. Sun. If you party at home, Soln delivers 811.325
ROKES $150, long stem, assorted colors, $1.00 each.
ROKES $20, short stem, assorted colors, $1.00 each.
$1 each, f. or Eschscholzia floridia. W 30% W 35%.
Yuri Andogov would love Laurence's Yelp Stool. The submarines are disarming. Featuring fast delivery guaranteed to knock out your taste bud! Call 641-3290.
SERVICES OFFERED
Custom Photographic Services. Compositions, portraits, and reproduction. In appointment call.
Alan's Auto Service - Quality Import & Domestic Car
Alan's Auto Service - Quality Import & Domestic Car
We work with quality customers. Students
dont have to pay.
Graduate English student, rapid reader, excellent research skills, 14 years teaching experience, proffessional editing & grant writing experience, will write a graduate student, grad student with research, etc. B41-4807
Great Plains Numismatic Services
Box 747
745 New Hampshire
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
Lawrence, Kansas 6842-8001
KOOL yourself and your car with quality SOLAR
WINDOW TINTING, professionally installed (call
+44(777)355-1234)
MICRO COMPUTING EDUCATION CLASSES -
Computerkatz is now offering beginning classes in the programming language BASIC. Advanced classes also offered, three languages on Tues and Wed. Mail resume 859-4201 or info@micromath.com.
MOPED & MOTORCYCLE REPAIR - Honda,
Yamaha, Kawasaki, Suniski, Suzuki & Motobase.
Work on up & delivery available. Work by appointment only.
RITCHY RHEIGHTS CYCLE CO., Tampa, FL
RITCHY RHEIGHTS CYCLE CO.
Need a tutor? Specialize in Math, Physics and CS with experience. Nam 843-412-6
ON TIME, PAPERS TYPED, FAST & EFFICIENT
841-3510
Learns Tennsisiish from experienced instructor
involved in the preparation of KU diaries;
for private tuition. 842-355 days 749-357 evenings.
men & women
Debbie's Beauty Salon
927 1/2 Mass.
842-1752
Get the best Haircut
at the best price in
town...
$7.50
men & women
Racquetball, tennis, squash racquet stringing,
specializing in new graphite hybrid stringing. Tres-
passing equipment. New use for stringer.
New used. 82/528 days. 749-357 evenings.
Library Research-Editing - Typing: 812-8240
TYPING
AFORDABLE QUALITY for all your typing needs.
Call Jady, 848-7945 at 6 p.m.
24 Hour Ftyping, Fast, accurate, All-day Appliance support. Compatible with HP DESKTOP ATPYING, SERVICE, IBM MAG, Card II Unlimited storage, with easy retrieval and editing, ideal for paper, manuscripts, themes, and graphics.
Absolutely LETTER PERCEPT typing ... Your work is our only business Professional/EX
TAB TOP TYPING - 2023 town. Experienced yacht sales 611 memory royal Correcting text on your computer.
Elvin could shag. Shakespeare could write it,
talent - typing. Call 842-9043 after 5:00 & weekends.
Experienced types will type letters, theses and
disertationations IBM Correcting Selective Calc
Experienced typed, term paper, university thesis, other types of writing. Must have a computer and will correct spelling. Phone 843-6200, Mr. Burke and will correct spelling. Phone 843-6200, Mr. Burke and will correct spelling. Phone 843-6200, Mr. Burke and will correct spelling.
It's a Fact, Fast, Affordable. Great Typing. Word Processor; you can afford it! 863-5620
Professional secretary will do your typing - themes,
theses, dissertations 843-887 for 5.00 and
6.00.
TYPING PLUS. Theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications, resumes. Assistance with composition, grammar, spelling, etc. English tutoring for foreign students — or Americas. 841-6254
WANTED
Nonsmoking female roommate, grad. student preferred. For 3-bedroom spacious apartment 4 blocks from campus Pool, laundry, dishwasher, refrigerator, walk-in closet. Non-smoking female roommate to share furnished two-bedroom apartment, utilities paid. Call 749-8065. Young Scoutman (31) wants to housepartement with mature individuals starting August 1. Roommates are privately priced. Collect after 5.30 p.m. 1-339-7277.
L421
Don't want to drive across town in the summer heat to send in your classified ad? Take advantage of this form and save yourself time and money while still receiving the satisfaction of placing your ad in the Kansan. Just mail this form with a check or money order payable to the Kansan to: University Daily Kansan, 116 Flint Hall, Lawrence, Ks 66045. Use rates below to figure costs.
Classified Heading:
Write Ad Here: ___
Name: ___
Address: ___
Date to Run:
Classified Display:
1 col x 1 inch—$4.00.
1 time 2 times 3 times 4 times 5 times
$2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00 $3.25
.02 .03 .04 .05 .06
---
Page 8
University Daily Kansan, July 6, 1983
New Big Eight TV contract to be announced soon
By ED GROM Staff Reporter
The Big Eight Conference is expected to announce within the next 10 days a new television contract for basketball games that would add more revenue for member schools, Carl James, commissioner of the Big Eight. said yesterday.
Since the previous Big Eight Conference contract with TVS Sports Network expired May 31, six television companies have shown interest in purchasing television rights for Big Eight games, James said.
"WE SENT OUT our guidelines for a contract to all interested companies
and we're at the point right now where attorneys from both sides are discussing the proposals sent back to us, "I have a proposal we would discuss within a week to 10 days from now."
James said that the six interested television companies were TVS, New York; Anheuer-Busch-Katz Communications, New York; Raycom, Charlotte, N.C.; Tanner Communications, Memphis, Tennessee; Jefferson Productions, Charlotte, N.C. and A.B. Inc., St. Louis.
TVS owns the rights to televise games from several college conferences, including the Southeastern Conference, the Big Ten Conference.
Raycom has the rights to televised all games in the Atlantic Coast Conference and Tanner televises all Metro Conference games.
the southwest Conference, the Missouri Valley Conference.
Del Brinkman, dean of the School of Journalism and a member of the Big Eight Conference basketball television committee, said that the bidding had come down to two companies for the television rights - TVS and Anheuser-Busch-Katz Communications.
BRINEMAN SAID THAT the Anheuser-Busch-Katz company had offered a three-year contract at $7.5 million.
He said the committee possibly would meet in a telephone conference later.
He said he did not know what TVS had offered.
"There is a lot more to that figure," Brinkman said. "You have your nationally televised games and your money." There can be more money involved.
"But this way, with one set price tag, the new contract would give the conference the opportunity to distribute the television revenue more evenly."
In the Big Eight Conference, revenue from televised basketball games is handled by the conference office and is distributed to each school, James said.
The amount of money a school receives depends on how many games that school had televised and whether the game was either nationally or regionally televised.
LAST YEAR, KU received $73,383 in revenue from televised basketball games, according to assistant athletic director Susan Wachter. That put KU behind Missouri, Kansas State and Nebraska in money received.
"In the past, we never had have a concrete television contract for college basketball games," Brinkman said. "In the future, we may have one set rate."
Stieb called on to break All-Star whammy, Soto to prolong it
CHICAGO — Mario Soto of the Cincinnati Reds and Dave Stieb of the Toronto Blue Jays were named today as the starting pitchers for tonight's 50th Anniversary All-Star Game at Comiskey Park.
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Gaylord Perry, who was released by the Seattle Mariners 10 days ago, was awarded to the Kansas City Royals yesterday on a waiver claim, a team spokesman said.
Steib, a 10-game winner during the first half of the season, will be making his third All-Star appearance.
By United Press International
Perry, who has a 310-261 lifetime record, will join the team tomorrow in its first workout after the All-Star Game. He will be in uniform Friday night when the Royals play the New York Yankees.
SOTO, WHO HAS won nine games and is second in the National League in strikes with 124, will be making his consecutive All-Star appearance.
the GROSSING
4-7p.m.
$1.50 pitchers
1 block N. of Union
Royals pick up Gaylord Perry
Harvey Kuen, manager of the American League, announced that he had replaced injured Reggie Jackson of California in the startling outfield with Jake Schmidt. Gilgish of Milwaukee replaced Jackson on the squad. Rice leads the majors in
The 44-year-old right-hander was 3:10 with a 4.94 earned run average this year before being designated for reassignment by the Mariners, his seventh major league team. Perry began his professional career in 1958 at St. Cloud, Minn., in the Northern League and played his first major league game with San Francisco in 1962.
fielder Andre Dawson of Montreal, first baseman Al Oliver of Montreal, right fielder Dale Murphy of Atlanta, third baseman Mike Schmidt of Philadelphia, catcher Gary Carter of Montreal, pitcher Ozzie Smith of St. Louis and Soto.
carries
INDIAN EARTH
The all in one, non-cosmetic cosmetic
927 Mass.
YELLO SUB DELIVERS 841-3268
The NL has won 19 of the last 20 games and 23 of the last 26.
KNOWLEDGE SERVICE EDUCATION
COMMODITE EPSON WORLD MEMORISON
VICOR 9000 KAY PRO ONDATA
WQW 80 w/2ch 144
61-0094
Computerark
He has won 20 or more games in a season five times, the latest with San Diego in 1978 when his 21-6 record and 2.72 ERA earned him the Cy Young Award as the National League's top pitcher.
SUNTORY COFFEE SHOP
By United Press International
Taco Via'
Expires 7/15
3 Tacos for
$1.29!
Open late
every night
1700 W. 23rd.
KANSAS REPERTORY THEATRE IS COMING UP!
You'll Love Our Style
809 Vermont, Lawrence
843-8808
Headmasters.
Place a Kansan want ad.
Call 864-4358.
10%
10% Discount Parts & Labor
On service repair work performed by Jack Ellena Buick-Olds-
GMC, Inc.
2112 W. 29th Street.
Coupon must be presented at time of repair order write-up to qualify. Offer good until July 29th, 1983.
JACK ELLENA BUICK-OLDs-GMC, INC
PHONE: (844) 257-6200
FAX: (844) 257-6202
homers with 22 and has hit six in his last five games.
Kuenn said that first baseman Rod Carew of the California Angels would lead off for the AL followed by shortstop Royston Yount of Milwaukee, center fielder Mickey Roe and Rice in left field, third baseman George Brett of Kansas City, catcher Ted
COMMONWEALTH THEATRES
GRANADA DOWNTown Theatre
STAR WARS RETURN OF THE JEDI Daily at 2:15-7:30, Mon-Thu 9:30-11:45
VARSITY Downtown Theatre
CHRISTOPHER BEEVE RICHARD PRYOR Superman III Daily at 2:15-7:19, Mon-45
HILLCREST 1 Downtown Theatre
WARGAMES Daily at 7:30-9:30, Mat. Sat. Sun. Mon. 2:15
HILLCREST 2 Downtown Theatre
TRADING PLACES Dan AKYROD EDDIE MURPHY Daily at 7:35-9:40, Mat. Sat. Sun. Mon. 2:15
HILLCREST 3 Downtown Theatre
James Bond's all-time action high Daily at 7:35-9:40, Mat. Sat. Sun. Mon. 2:15
CINEMA 1 Downtown Theatre
PORKYS II Eve 7:40-8:40 The Next Day Mar. Sat. Sun. Mon. 2:00 Patrice
CINEMA 2 Downtown Theatre
TWIGHTZONE THE MOVIE Eve 7:30-9:30 Mat. Sat. Sun. Mon. 2:00
SUNSET Downtown Theatre
WALTER MATTHEW KOBIN WILLIAMS THE SURVIVORS PLUS "HANKY PANKY" Survival: 8:30 Parking: 11:15
THE CASTLE
TEA ROOM
COMMORAL WEEKEND TICKETS
GRANDA
STAR WARS
RETURN OF
THE JEDI
P123
1307 Mass. phone: 843-1151
CINEMA 1
THE FILM ACADEMY
PORKY'S II
Eve.
Saturday
7:40-8:40 The Hunt Day
Sat. Sun.
2:00
Dobbie
Simmons of Milwaukee, right fielder Dave Winfield of New York, second baseman Manny Trillo of Cleveland and Stieb.
14 kt. Chain
Repair
Kizer
Cummings
(jewelers)
800 Mass. 749-4333
MANAGER WHITEY HERZOG of the National League named second baseman Steve Sax of Los Angeles as his first start. He was fielded Tim Raines of Montreal, center
CINEMA 1 WEST DAY AND TUE DAY
PORKYS II
Eve. Sat, 7:40-9:40 The Next Day
Mat, Sat, Sun, Mon 2:00
CINEMA 2 WEST DAY AND TUE DAY
Twilight Zone
THE MOVIE
Eve. 7:30-9:30 Mat, Sat, Sun, Mon 2:00
SUNSET WEST DAY AND TUE DAY
WALTRA MATTHAU ROBERT WILLIAMS
THE SURVIVORS
PLUS "HANKY PANKY"
Survivor: 9:20 Panky: 11:15
C-90
RENTS RECORDS
1422 W. 23rd St. 841-0256
KATY'S CELLAR SHOPPE
842-7456
Open Tues. thru Sat. 10:30 to 4:30
NEXT-TO-NEW
CLOTHING FOR WOMEN
745 NEW HAMPSHIRE
THE MARKETPLACE
(BEHIND THE HARVEST)
842 7456
JK
ONE & TWO BEDROOM APARTMENTS
CLOSE TO CAMPUS
$225
KEYSTONE PROPERTIES
Phone 811-4118
Phone 843-1116
HERITAGE MANAGEMENT CORP
SNIA FILMS
TONIGHT
There will never be anybody as funny, bizarre or amazing as
BUSTER KEATON
This is why. THE THREE AGES OF SHERLOCK JR.
7:30 p.m. Woodruff Aud $1.50
喜食
Minsky's Introduces
"IT'S NOT A HAMBURGER,
IT'S A 1/2 LB.
STEAK BURGER!"
$250 includes medium drink
& curly-Q-fries
6-pks.
beer to go.
2228 Iowa
THE ORIGINAL
Minsky's
PIZZA
842-0154
"IT'S NOT A HAMBURGER,
IT'S A 1/2 LB.
STEAK BURGER!"
$250 includes medium drink
& curly-Q-fries
Minsky's
PIZZA
8-pkq,
bear to go.
842-0154
THE ORIGINAL Minsky's
PIZZA
WATERBED WHITE SALE
20% off our everyday low-priced sheets
up to 50% off mattress pads and waterbed sheets
العربية
WATERBED 842-5622
710 W. 6th
WORKS
--cash & carry
ROSES
$10 A DOZEN
cash & carry
1601 W. 23rd . Southern Hills Center . Next to Gammons
749-2912
SOUTHERN HILLS Floral & Gift
in the heart of the city
COUNTRY LIVING in the heart of the city
- Spacious studios, 1, 2 & 3BR apartments and 2 & 3BR townhouses
- Located 2 blocks from campus
meadowbrook 18TH AT CRESTLINE 8424200
AFTER THE 4TH CLEARANCE SALE
- Tops & Shorts-Reduced 30-40%
- Swimwear-Reduced 20-40%
- Nightwear-Reduced 30%
- Dresses-Reduced 30-40-50%
- Discontinued Bras-1/2 price
FREE PARKING
Store Hours:
9:30-5:30
'till 8:30 Thursdays
Jay SHOPPE
Downtown
835 Mass.
Lawrence, Kansas
1
The University Daily
ku
KANSAN
University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas
Vol. 93, No. 156 USPS 650-640
Friday, July 8, 1983
Weather
Today will be sunny and hot with highs ranging from 90 to 95 according to the National Weather Service in Topeka. The winds will be from the south at 5 to 15 mph. Tonight will be clear with a low around 65. Today will be sunny and hot with a bigh in the low to mid-85.
SRS cuts may decrease care official says
Staff Writer
By DOUGLAS FARAH Staff Writer
Chuck Jostmeyer suffers from a degenerative hip condition, heart trouble, and a nervous disorder. But he is no longer able to get all of the necessary medication to deal with his condition.
Jostmeier is one of more than 200 people in Douglas County affected by cutbacks in the state's General Assistance Program. Those people receive medical assistance and cash grants through the program, which serves adults who have no other source of income.
BECAUSE OF the cutbacks, which went into effect April 1, recipients will be allowed fewer visits to the doctor, have to pay more for medical services and will receive smaller cash grants.
Barbara Gaines, income maintenance supervisor for the local office of Social and Rehabilitation Services, said that it was too early to tell what the full effects of the outcrops
However, she said that she thought some people might not be getting the medical care needed.
Jostmeier receives $173 a month, the maximum allowed for recipients of General Assistance who are 51 years of age or older or who are physically handicapped.
The $173 is his only source of income. He returns $229 a month before the changes went into effect.
The 42-year-old man has not been steadily unemployed since he was severely injured in an attack.
"MY EXPENSES last month were $209. I have to pay rent, utilities, insurance and a personal loan. That's the bare minimum, not even allowing for a pack of cigarettes." *Costmayer*
1 "spent $22 on medicine this month and $27 last month. I needed more, but didn't have the money to pay it."
Before the cutbacks, all drugs prescribed by a physician were covered. Now the list of drugs covered by MedKam, the state-funded medical institution, for General Assistance recipients is limited.
The problem of how to deal with people who need medical attention but cannot afford to pay for it is growing in Lawrence and the social service agencies have been overrun with requests for aid, according to the Rev. Paul Berry, director of Ballard Community Center.
"REQUESTS FOR AID have been climbing steadily since the first of the year, but there has been a sudden jump since the first of May." Berry said.
The requests are usually for pharmaceutical items that are no longer covered by the state, he
"The these drugs are things like psychotropic drugs for mentally handicapped persons that enable these persons to function normally," Berry said.
See REDUCTIONS page 5
1970
Caitlin McGrath, 6, and Angela Shoher, 7, offer helping hands to Hilary Flaming, 8, as they play in the fountain behind Miller and Wattkins scholarship halls. The girls belong to the "Buffalos," the primary class from the Hilltop Child Development Center.
International students' sponsors must pay bill
BY ALBERTO SALDARRIAGA
Staff Writer
If next fall's tuition fees were due today, 15 international students would not be allowed to study at the University of Kansas because their foreign sponsors still owe money from last year's tuition, KU officials said recently.
The foreign governments or private institutions that sponsor the students will have to pay the full amount due before August 17 for them to be permitted to join fall classes, said Clark Coan, dean of foreign students and associate dean of student life.
"A GROUP OF STUDENTS from Venezuela, Nigeria, Mexico, Zambia and Ghana are facing hard financial difficulties because of different internal situations in their countries," Coan said.
According to Coan, 49 foreign students were facing this ultimatum in May.
But this figure has been reduced considerably and the circumstances of the remaining 15 people still can change, he said. The students have more than a month to adjust with their families if they are up on time.
CHIMA OKENE, African Student Association president, said that the University's policy simply did not work because it did not give the money to travel from the foreign countries.
John Patterson, KU comprolier, declined to reveal the amount of money owed by the students but said that the University had established "a clear policy in that matter."
If a student doesn't pay the last semester he attended classes, he is not allowed to enroll in the course.
"The student is caught in between KU's strong regulation and the long bureaucratic process that goes on in our countries before the money is sent," he said.
Last year ASA requested that the University begin billing sponsored students each academic year instead of each semester.
"They didn't accept it. So we think KU has to be more patient and understand that bills go more than 5,000 miles away while the students remain here," he said.
Okene said that in the case of most Nigerian students, "The money has always arrived," he said.
NIGERIANS HAVE BEEN hurt by bureaucratic problems in Nigeria and the drop of oil prices on the international market, Coan said. Zombians and Ghanians have been affected by increasing regulations that try to stop the flow of currency out of those countries.
Ignacio Vasquez, Venezuela graduate student, said he had to pay last spring and summer semesters' tuition from his own pocket because his sponsor did not do it.
"Otherwise, I wouldn't have been allowed to continue studying." he said.
CHUKWUMA ONWUCHEKWA, a Nigerian student who just graduated in chemical engineering, said his graduation was delayed a semester and a half until his fees were paid.
allowed to join KU's Ph.D. program, "be said"
Ocan said that extreme delays in payments were
the reason the foreign students from continuing classwork all fall unless the bills are paid before August 17.
Agustin Zarate, Mexico City, Mex., graduate student, said he would not receive his master's degree in human development until his government paid his tuition for last fall and spring.
Developers caused proposed tax hike, Watson says
"If it doesn't happen before August, I won't be allowed to join KU's Ph.D. program," he said.
He said that the group of 15 foreign students
TSE TUTION page 5
Staff Reporter
By GENE HUNTER
the total mill levy to 44.808 mills in 1984.
A proposed increase in Lawrence property taxes, revealed Tuesday when the city released its 1984 budget, is directly attributable to developers who have not paid their special assessment fees, City Manager Buford Watson said yesterday.
The increase would raise the property tax in Lawrence $1.81 for every $1.00 of assessed value
Several Lawrence developers said the recession and misunderstandings about special assessment agreements have led to their delinquent statics.
A SPECIAL ASSESSMENT is a loan the city makes to a developer to pay for the construction of sewers, sidewalks and streets in new development projects.
Watson said the non-payment of special assessments caused a proposed 1.808 mill increase in the city mill levy, which would bring
Robert Stephens, owner of Stephens Real Estate and Insurance Co., 2701 W. 6th St., is one developer who has not paid his special assessment, according to Allen Loyd, city
But Stephens said yesterday that he did not owe the special assessment because he had sold the property to a builder.
WATSON, HOWEVER, said it was the city's position that whoever originally guaranteed the special assessment would be held liable for property, regardless of who owned it after that.
"They are still the one on the note until the "matter is satisfied," he said. "But nobody knows what will happen."
buying the property back and that he would pay the entire amount owed to the city within 30 to 60 days.
Stephens said that he was in the process of
Warren Mitchell, owner of Mitchell Agency Inc., a real estate company at BIR Massachusetts SL., said that high interest rates and poor credit ratings have forced the property, and thus, navin the assessment.
"WE GOT CAUGHT in a bear trap and we're trying to work our way out," he said.
"We don't have any explanation other than we are planning to cann' them soon."
City analyst Loyd said that since June 30, 1981, $961,000 in special assessments have remained unpaid.
Watson said that if the assessments were not paid within three years of the time they are due, the city could take ownership of the property and sell it to retrieve the amount due.
Watson said, however, that it was up to the Commission to decide how to collect the money.
Mayor David Longhurst said that the important thing was for the city to get the money in the best way it could, rather than taking legal action.
"GIVEN THE CIRCUMSANES AND the economy, I would be reasonable in allowing them to pay the assessments in as undisruptive a possible," he said. "But they will have to be paid."
Commissioner Nancy Shontz, however, was less understanding.
"It's very clear to me that some developers have abused this benefit financing pitching fund."
"They have used it as a cheap money. Instead of paying off their assessments, they have invested in other things that give them a higher return on their investment.
田
"IF WE EVER get back on track, we ought to be a little more discriminant in choosing which to take," he said.
Douglas County to have average wheat harvest, farm officials predict
By MATTHEW SCHOFIELD
Staff Writer
Douglas County's wheat harvest is about half finished, and it looks to be an average year, area wheat experts said yesterday.
The wheat harvest reached the Lawrence area this week. Clear skys and little rain are helping. Larry Spray, 1717 East 24th, works to cut the wheat on his family's farm.
Dean Nieler, manager of the Farmer's Co-Op grain elevator in Lawrence, said that some farmers had been getting yields as high as 50 bushels of wheat an acre, but that most farmer's yields were substantially lower and the final yield should be about 32 bushels, which is about the norm.
BUT, HE SAID, an average harvest in Douglas County doesn't mean much in the big picture.
"Out in western Kansas they're having an excellent harvest," he said. "And that's where
He said that Douglas County was a fall crop area, which means the principal crops are corn
Earl VanMeter, Douglas County extension agent, agreed with Nieder.
Not relying too heavily on wheat helps area farmers, he said.
"With exports off — as much as 40 percent in some reports — and carryover so high, the only thing this extra wheat will mean is more wheat to put in storage and lower prices," he said.
"Wheat has been about $3 a bushel for the last 45 years," he said. "And with production costs as they are, interest rates at about 14 percent and machinery cost being so high, that it's not enough."
PRICES FOR WHIET at $3.42 a bushel at the Lawrence Co-Op yesterday, which is about what they were last year. But VanMeter said farmers needed more for their product.
In the PIK program, a farmer agrees not to plant a certain amount of grain and in exchange the government gives him that amount of grain for payment because there was more than an
But VanMeter said the price would have fallen much further if it had not been for the lack of a phone.
entire wheat harvest in storage across the United States.
Nieder said the Lawrence Co-Op had some stored wheat, but not an unusual amount.
THE PIK PROGRAM took about 20 percent of the wheat fields in Kansas out of production this year. VanMeter said But ideal weather conditions this spring increased individual yields.
"Can you imagine what kind of shape we would be in right now if we hadn't PIKI?" he
VanMeter said the program had still been successful.
PIK was necessary because of a spiraling increase in grain yields, he said, which kept prices for wheat so low that many farmers needed the increased production to stay afloat.
Yet the continual increase in production might not be the best thing in the long run for farmers.
"FARMERS WOULD probably be better off it they were still getting yields of 20 bushels an acre and prices up around 45," he said. "That meant that we would pay the price of bread by as much as 20 percent, though."
"And the production-minded American farmer wouldn't want that anyway."
X
The wheat harvest is continuing in Kansas this week as farmers race to get crops in before wet weather hits again. This combine was about five miles west of Bonner Springs.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, July 8, 1983
News Briefs
From United Press International
Anti-Khomeini hijackers free 184 hostages in Paris
PARIS — Acting on orders barked out by an exiled guerrilla leader, six Iranian hijackers opposed to Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini freed 184 hostages from a commandeered jumbo jet yesterday and surrendered without a fight.
The six hijackers threatened to show up at ANA air base (air base) after a group of militants with Mafia links with Iran's outlawed leftist People's Muhaijade guerrilla movement.
The aircraft, with 394 people aboard, was hijacked Wednesday on a flight from Tehran to the southern resort of Shiraz and was forced to land in Kuwait where half the passengers were freed before the jet went on to Paris.
Iran immediately asked for the hijackers' extradition, but French government spokesman Max Gallo said they might be given political asylum, if requested. He said they would face charges of hijacking, which carried a maximum sentence of five to 10 years in jail.
The sky pirates claimed at first to be members of the Mujahideen guerrillas, but later said they commandeered the plane "on our own initiative in order that all might know Khomein's crimes."
Court rules for speedier executions
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court Wednesday gave death penalty states the ability to speed up executions.
From now on, when an execution date is imminent, the 12 U.S. Circuit Courts of Appeals may step up the speed with which they handle a case.
The courts may compress the time they usually take to consider an appeal and — if they issue a rejection — let the execution take place on
Although the ruling affects death penalty claims only when they reach the federal appeals court, the results are crucial. Those courts generally are the next-to-last hope for inmates trying to avoid execution.
Thatcher miffed at steel restrictions
LONDON — Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher angrily denounced President Reagan's new steel import restrictions yesterday, as a "deplorable" reversal of the cooperative spirit reached by Western leaders at the Williamsburg summit.
The government has urged the Common Market to consider suing the United States for damages over the new import restrictions on specialist steel.
In the declaration issued at the end of the Williamsburg meeting May 30, the government chiefs of the world's major industrialized nations pledged to halt protectionism and eventually reverse it by dismantling trade barriers.
William Brock, the top U.S. trade official, said the U.S. action was consistent with the rules of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade.
The American move was made in response to complaints from U.S. steel producers, many of whom are facing commercial disaster from declining orders.
Abscam offenders begin jail terms
Three years after their convictions in the Abscam bribery investigation, six men, including three former congressmen, began serving their prison sentences yesterday for their roles in the scandal.
Reporting to prisons across the country were former Reps. Michael Myers, D-Pa.; Raymond Lederer, D-Pa.; and Frank Thompson, former Camden, N.J., Mayor Angela Richette; former Philadelphia Councilman Louis Johnson and Philadelphia lawyer Howard Criden.
Nineteen people were convicted on a variety of charges as a result of the FBI's 1980 investigation in which agents posed as wealthy Arabs offering bribes to politicians during secretly videotaped encounters.
Police search Rome for kidnappers
Emanuela Orlandi, daughter of Ercole Orlandi, a messenger in the canal ante-chamber, disappeared from a city center street June 22.
The kidnappers announced their demand for Agca's release in a telephone call to the city council. They were trying to convince the city whether they belonged to a terrorist group.
Newspapers speculated that the kidnappers were Italian right-wing extremists acting on behalf of the Turkish Gray Wolves organization to which Agca once belonged.
Six Western hostages safe for now
NAIROBI, Kenya — Guerrilla in Sudan threatening to kill five Western aid workers, including two Americans, backed off their second deadline yesterday and negotiators inched toward a settlement, Sudanese government officials said.
The Southern Sudan Liberation Front guerrillas had threatened to kill the hostages at 8 a.m. yesterday if their demands for shoes, clothing, drugs and $189,000 were not met.
The abductors originally said they would shoot their captives Wednesday but were persuaded to postpone the execution at least one
The two American hostages were identified as Ron Pontier, 29, of Clermont, Fla. and John Haspels, 36, of Lyons, Kan.
Oil spill kills sea cows, fund reports
The fund reported that more than 50 dugongs, a rare sea mammal, have been counted on eastern Gulf beaches.
GLAND, Switzerland — The Persian Gulf's mammoth oil spill has wiped out all the region's dugongs, or sea cows, as well as inflicting unprecedented harm on other wildlife and coral, the World Wildlife Fund said yesterday.
The report also soo scientists and have recorded numbers of dead turtles, dolphins, fish, sea snakes and birds.
Three Iranian wells in the Nowruz offshore fields are dumping 1,200 barrels of crude oil daily into the Gulf.
The Iran-Iraq war has prevented technicians from capping the wells and launching clean-up operations.
Girl goes to Russia to see Andropov
BOSTON — Eleven-year-old Samantha Smith headed for Russia yesterday with hopes of asking her host, Soviet leader Yuri Andropov. "Why do we keep making bombs for a war if there's no one to start it?"
Samantha's original letter to Andropo seeking his assurances of peace was published in Pravda, the Soviet daily newspaper. Getting no direct reply, she wrote the Soviet ambassador in Washington.
Several days later, she received a two-page letter signed by Andropov assuring her he was committed to peace and inviting her family to tour Russia for two weeks as guests of the Kremlin.
Panel OKs export of flammable fabrics
WASHINGTON — The Consumer Product Safety Commission, following a 4-1 vote, issued an order yesterday that relaxed restrictions on the export of clothes, carpets and other fabrics that fail to meet U.S. fire safety standards.
By United Press International
COMMISSION CHAIRMAN Nancy Steeples defended the approach as practical and Commissioner Terrence Mullen was named president of businesses compete, but Commissioner
The action will allow foreign countries — many of which have no such standards — to decide whether they want to accent such goods.
Under the previous policy, in effect since 1975, any product made in the United States that did not meet the standards of the Flammability Fabrics Act of 1933 could not be sold domestically or overseas.
This new policy allows the export of any product, even those initially made for domestic use and taken off the market, that they violate flammability standards.
The only export exception was on products specifically manufactured for overseas sale and about which the delivery received prior notification of that fact.
Edith Sloan opposed the move on moral grounds.
Sloan said, "The easiest way to
In their order, they cited 1978 congressional amendments to the Flammability Act in which, they said, "Congress evidenced its intent that the responsibility for protecting citizens of other countries lies with the governments of those countries, not the commission."
describe the moral forces at work is to refer to the ancient directive "Thou shall not kill." '
COMMISSIONERS SAM Zagoria and Stuart Statler joined Steors and Scanlon in voting for the change.
Under the revised policy, any product that violates the flammability standards can be exported if the company
first, gives the commission 30 days notice.
During that period, the commission would inform the foreign country where the company wants to sell the merchandise.
"WHAT THIS DOES is basically put the decision-making in the hands of the foreign country," said Steerls. "I have had meetings with representatives of several foreign countries and I haven't seen any negativism."
Scanlon said he would like to see the relaxation extended to export restrictions now imposed on the more than 15,000 goods covered by the Consumer Product Safety Act and the Federal Hazardous Substances Act.
Five states ordered to revise desegregation plans
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — The Education Department is giving five states until Aug. 15 to revise their college desegregation plans or face a possible cutoff of federal education funds, a spokesman said yesterday.
One of those states, Georgia, has refused to overhaul its college graduation exam, which has been called discriminatory by civil rights groups,
and says it may go to court over the matter.
AN EDUCATION DEPARTMENT spokesman said Georgia, Oklahoma, North Carolina, Florida and Arkansas were notified in letters dated June 30 that the government had turned down their court-ordered plans. The rejection of North Carolina's plan applied to the state's community college system
The letters, addressed to the governors or top education officials of the states, were signed by Harry Singleton.
assistant secretary of education for civil rights.
Singleton wrote that the plans contained many good features, but were unacceptable and needed improvements overall.
THE PLANS WERE required when Judge John Pratt of the U. S. District Court of the District of Columbia ruled March 24 that the states failed to meet earlier, court-ordered, full desegregation.
Pratt had ordered the Education Department to decide on the new plans by June 30. He told the department to
begin enforcement procedures by Sept. 15, either through civil action or by cutting off education funds, unless proposals are suitable.
In order to give the states another chance to comply, the department gave them until the middle of next month to submit revisions.
GOV. JOE FRANK HARRIS of Georgia held a news conference in Atlanta Wednesday where he said he would submit an amended plan for the state's 33 colleges and universities by Aug. 1.
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1
University Daily Kansan, July 8, 1983
Page 3
Program aids residents in paying cooling bills
By MARY ANN COSTELLO Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
When temperatures reach the 90s in Kansas, it can be uncomfortable at best.
Many people retreat into the comfort of air-conditioned surroundings, but many low-income residents cannot afford to keep cool.
HOWEVER FOR two years now the Low Income Energy Assistance Program has been helping people meet the needs of cooling and heating their homes.
The program is funded through the Low Income Energy Assistance Act of 1981, and is administered at the state level for participation of Social and Rehabilitation Services.
About $8.1 million in aid was distributed in Kansas this past winter, but only about $3.1 million is available for aid this summer, Julia Lambert, program coordinator in Topeka, said yesterday.
She said that all low-income residents could apply for the winter assistance program, but that the 1983 federal law limited to disabled and elderly people.
Application for aid must be made by Aug. 31, but people should apply as soon as possible, Lambert said.
She said that last summer the funds were depleted by the end of July.
*WINTER IS GIVEN more priority because nobody can do without heat in winter.*
"But in the summer, the elderly and disabled are more susceptible to heat than other people in terms of heat-stroke and heat-related illnesses."
Applications for summer aid are available from the local SRS office, 319 Perry St., and local social service agencies.
Local social service agencies include Ballard Community Center, Inc., 708 Elm St.; Council on Aging, 745 Vernont St.; Independence, Inc., 1910 Haskell St.; American Red Cross, 155 W. 11th St.; Indianapolis Indian Center, 2336 Louisiana St.
Employees of the SRS department and the Council on Aging will help people complete applications by phone or in the applicant's home if necessary.
TO BE ELIGIBLE for summer aid, at least one household member must be 65 or older, or determined blind or visually impaired. Institutions standards, Lambert said.
A lot of the people we work with are not eligible for the program because they are not disabled according to Social Security Administration standards, or their disability status has been denied. An outreach director of Independence Inc., an outreach agency for severely handicapped adults who live alone.
To be eligible for the program, an applicant must pay at least part of the cooling expenses where he lives. Lambert said. The payment can be to a utility company or included as part of the payment. An applicant must show proof of payment.
Lambert said the amount of money an applicant received would vary by need, which is determined by his address and the size and location of his residence.
RESIDENTS OF THE warmest regions of Kansas, based on National Weather Service statistics, would be eligible for more money, she said.
Last year 1,600 people applied for aid in Douglas and Shawnee counties, Lambert said. About 1,400 of the applicants received aid.
Recipients get a single check, she said. The average check last summer.
"I was a n little star struck, overwhelmed," said Kathy Roberts after Jack Nicholson walked into the Kane County Union Bookstore yesterday.
Oscar winners pay KU unexpected visit
By MICHAEL PAUL Staff Reporter
Jack Nicholson? The Jack Nicholson?
Staff Reporter
"He said he needed some help and then he began pillaging clothes into my arms." Roberts, a clerk in the gift shon.
"CLOTHES WERE BEING PIPED so fast into my arms that I didn't know what Nicholson was buying or what Hutton was buying."
Hutton? Timothy Hutton?
Actors Nicholson and Hutton stopped in Lawrence for about an hour on their tour of sites for a movie, and took a spokeswoman for MGM in Topeka.
The spokesman said that they would return to Los Angeles tomorrow. They had been staying in Topeka, but she would not say exactly where.
NICOLSON WON an Academy Award for best actor in "One Flew over the Cuckoo's Nest." and Button won an Academy Award for best supporting actor in "Ordinary People."
Roberts did recall that Nicholson bought a floor mat that had the Javawk on it.
"He kept saying how much he lifted it," she said.
Roberts said that Nicholson bought several KU sweat shirts and T-shirts and two hats.
Clara Young, a cashier in the bookstore, said that Nicholson said he was buying the clothes as gifts for friends.
She said his bill was $200.88.
"HE PAID CASH: two $100 bills and 88 cents of change." she said.
She said his bill was about $100.
He paid in cash too, she said, with two $90 bills.
Fern Bunce, the cashier who waited on Hutton, said that he bought not only sweat shirts but also mugs, glasses, and other small items.
Juana Simons, a clerk, said that
Nicholson was dressed in old white jeans, a blue shirt and was wearing a "wird-looking straw hat" that had a visor built into it. She said the hat was pulled low over his face. He had Walkman earphones around his neck.
SHE SAID TRAT Hutton was wearing a cap and a three-fourths length T-shirt and looked as if he had not shaved.
But Roberts said that Nicholson seemed to enjoy the attention.
Simons said that a bodyguard accompanied the actors and Bunce said that there were two photographers.
Macrobiotics guru promotes simple, natural diet
"He was not trying too hard not to be noticed." she said.
By ANN REGAN
By ANN REGAN Staff Regent
Staff Reporter
Cooking with macrobiotic foods is cheaper than using processed foods.
Although many students rely on alcohol to reduce tension and on junk foods to provide nutrition, David thinks he may have a better idea.
Briscoe, 1423 Kentucky St., is director of the East West Center. His house doubles as home for the student who promotes the use of diet for health and healing.
If students would apply macrobiotic nutritional principles to their lives,
MACROBIOTICS EMPIHASIZES simple, natural foods such as whole grains, seeds, sprouts, fresh fruits and vegetables, common to the area, Briscoe said.
besides, being easier to store and prepare, he said.
Briscoe also conducts classes about macrobiotics at the center, which
He graduated from the University of Kansas in 1978 with a degree in English and taught at West Junior High School for two years.
The foundation is the major organization in the world for teaching and counseling in macrobiotic nutrition, lifestyle and medication, Briscoe said.
The Lawrence center is a branch of the East West Foundation in Boston, Mass., which Briscoe learned of while reading about macrobiotics.
Its purpose is to bridge the traditional wisdom of the East with the modern scientific techniques of the West, he said.
"There is an enormous amount of pressure on students in college to
conform, to succeed and to concentrate. They become very tight and controlled, then they use alcohol to control them. The students must learn to reduce extremes.
REDUCING TENSION ALSO would reduce illness caused by stress, ac-
The theory of macrobiotics, which means "big life," promotes three basic food groups. Briscoe said, which could be pictured as balancing on a seasaw
On each end are foods that are either expansive or contractive, terms that refer to their effect on the body and mind
Expansive foods – sugar, sugar,
alcohol and drugs – create flabbiness.
Contractive foods — meats, fish, eggs and dairy products — cause rigidity.
In the center of the seasweat are the most highly balanced foods, grains, and legumes.
The idea behind macrobiotics is to eat foods that are closest to the center of the seaswax. This will create physical mental balance, according to Briscoe.
IN WINTER, PEOPLE should eat foods that will help keep them warm; in the spring, they might eat more.
Students should also keep the cycles of the seasons in mind when they eat,
In summer, people should eat light foods such as fruits and vegetables
Although Briscoe says microbiotics is not a "southern California health spa approach to diet," more believers than doctors value it as a medical tool.
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Jeff Nichols, a Topeka physician familiar with macrobiotics, said he would not necessarily recommend a macrobiotic diet to his patients because each person should find a diet to suit his individual needs.
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Hillcrest Shopping Center
SUMMER SPECIALS 1983
A
Mon. 'Watermelons' $1.00 all night
Tues. 'Survival of the Fittest'
(8:00-11:00)
All the beer and bar drinks
you can drink $3.00 cover
11:00 to close- 75* draws
and $1.50 bar drinks
Wed. 25* draws and $1.00 bar drinks (8:00-10:30) 50* draws and $1.25 bar drinks (10:30-close)
Thurs. 25' draws and $1.00 bar drinks
(8:00-10:30)
50' draws and $1.25 bar drinks
(10:30-close)
Fri. afternoon 5:00-8:00 two for ones on all drinks and half price food
Fri. & Sat. night
Late Night Happy Hour
11-midnight $1.25 bar drinks
and 50° draws
GAMMONS SNOWIE
23rd & Ousdahl So. Hills Center 842-3977
Page 4
Opinion
University Daily Kansan, July 8, 1983
Ms. Smith goes to USSR
Out of the mouth of a babe comes the $64 question of the modern age: "Why do we keep on making bombs for a war if there's no one to start it?"
It's a good question, innocently asked by 11-year-old Samantha Smith. The reason it's such a newsworthy question is because she requested the answer from Soviet leader Yuri Andropov. Even more newsworthy is the fact that he answered her and even invited her and the Smith family to the USSR as guests of the Kremlin.
Yesterday, the Smith family did indeed head for the Soviet Union, laden with gifts and souvenirs for their hosts. Samantha even has a special gift for Andropov, but it's Samantha's surprise because "You (reporters) can't keep a secret."
For an 11-year-old, she's wise to the ways of the world.
Unfortunately, so are her parents and the Soviets.
This innocent girl is being exploited by everyone, her quaint letter being splashed on the pages of Pravda, the Soviet party-run newspaper, her mother reading prepared statements for the droves of reporters and those
reporters devouring the kitsch and regurgitating it like the story of "Samantha meets Godzilla."
It figures that the Soviets would capitalize on Samantha's letter and tour. Her letter displays American discontent with the nuclear situation, and that's what the readers of Pravda want to see. America would do the same thing if 11-year-old Natasha from Moscow wrote Reagan. It's good ol' capitalism in action. (An interesting side light: A Russian girl did indeed write the president earlier this summer but her letter, addressed in Russian, was returned, addressee unknown.)
Samantha's mother read a prepared statement, full of strong words such as, "Children are the most eloquent statement of our hopes for the future. The danger of nuclear war threats that future."
Mrs. Smith, is nothing sacred? The spotlight is on your daughter and her invitation to the USSR. We can almost see you fighting for the microphone. It's proper to protect your child from the throng, but practice a little restraint when the camera is on you.
"AND SO, MY LIL' OL'
DAUGHTER, AMY. SAID
TO ME," DADDY, NUCLEAR
BOMBS IS AWFUL"""
WAIT A
MINUTE! THAT'S
MY LINE!!
"AND SO, MY LIL' OL'
DAUGHTER, AMY. SAID
TO ME," DADDY, NUCLEAR
BOMBS IS AWFUL"""
WAIT A
MINUTE! THAT'S
MY LINE!!
©1983 MUMA NEAL
©1983 NUAMI MENA
Blacks beginning slow rise to power
A voice is crying out from that modern jungle we call South Africa-the voice of the black trade unions. It is a small but potentially dangerous wave coming ashore in the shape of an organized black labor force. The white minority that rules the country of 21 million blacks and 3 million coloreds could get flooded by industrial unrest.
The adominable idea of apartheid, which exists in South Africa while the world calmly watches, ensures political and social dominion over a majority whose toil is indispensable in mines, factories and kitchens. Even though the black workers have the power to bring the economy to its knees and cripple their masters, they have failed to do so because they are denied the basic human rights that we take for granted here.
The pathetic life they lead in desolate, dumplike "homelands" within their own country destroys the very moral fiber of their community. The men go in thousands to work in mines and cities and they are not allowed to take their families with them to work on their farm oratum and loneliness. They are rising against the life they are forced to lead, but slowly
A government inquiry into the conditions of black workers following labor unrest and an upsurge in unionism in the early 1970s prompted legislation in 1979 that for the first time officially permitted blacks to form unions albeit under strictly controlled conditions. What was given with one hand was taken with the other. They allowed to form a union but a union with no rights.
When the legislation was passed in 1979, the government made bureaucratic regulations to ensure the movement. The unions were asked to register with the Department of Labor and to bargain system run by councils with representatives from management and labor.
Most of the black unions are wary of this arrangement and many refused to register. Leaders of more militant unions predict a dark future for those who cooperate with the government. But noncooperation almost always results in arrests and torture. The list of jailed, banned and detained unionists is long. The Media Workers Association of South Africa — MWASA — has had all its articulate leaders banned. The group has also accused media agencies. A leader of the Gr
SEEMA SIROHI
and Allied Workers Union was stripped, hung in the air and given electric shocks in his knees for sneaking out.
Last June, 148 blacks signed a letter to the Transport Company of South Africa reporting harrassment on the job. The company got rid of the letter and related documents and fired 400 workers on the spot. Dr. Neil Aggett, a white involved in union activities, died in detention Feb 5, 1982 under suspicious circumstances. He was born in Brooklyn and died at National Congress, the organization that was in news recently in relation to the execution of three murguillas in Pretoria.
In spite of pressure from the government, union leaders are determined to carry on the struggle. Leaders sometimes drive 2,000 miles to organize workers and address meetings. There is resolution in their efforts. Earlier union movements, some highly political and with large memberships, crumbled under state pressure with the same swiftness with which they had
arsen. The latest wave is different with several advantages that are likely to ensure black unions a permanent place in South Africa. The pressure from labor shortages in recent years has meant inclusion of blacks in skilled jobs from which they can get better training, and are worse if more secure in their jobs today.
But there is no reason to be complacent. The black unions representing about 10 percent of the black industrial force are still embryonic and vulnerable. There are obstacles from "the government and disunity in their own ranks." For unions the immediate problem is survival.
Evidence of factionalism abounds. A "unity summit" in Johannesburg last year brought together unions representing 150,000 workers. The absence of CUSA — Confederation of Unions of South Africa — was noticed by observers. CUSA, the second largest black union alliance, and other unions with all-black leadership are suspicious of unions with white members.
The split reflects the wider debate on whether the key to liberation is in nonracial or black nationalism philosophy. Black unions doubtful of whites say that whites even with the best of intentions attempt to control any organization they are in. Another source of factionalism is disagreement over the extent to which unions should cooperate with the government.
The union movement faces immense odds but the simple act of organizing is itself a form of militance, given the South African context. It is a political act in a country where democracy exists only for 4 million whites. Most unions, even the militant ones, have so far not made any demands that would represent a serious challenge to the government or their bosses. But the militants have finally got a voice in South Africa's rich economy has finally got a voice is significant. After fighting for their rights, the unions could very easily become a political force.
Middle-aged flower child wilts in the 1980s
By LLOYD G. CARTER
United Press International
FRESNO, Calif. — As a teen-ager in the 1960s, my it was to task me with frightened passions that the Beatles, Animals, Kinks, Zombies, Rolling Stones and even Hermann's Hermits were not invaders from outer space but merely my musical heroes.
Dressed in bell bottoms, paisley shirt, granny glasses and unfurled moptop, my parents felt certain I would run away with a band of gypsies
I revealed in the emotional shouts registered by Mick Jagger's menacing glare or Jimi
But as the years passed and the roses of the Flower Power Generation wilted slightly, my expert grasp on the minutiae and trivia of rockdom (Paul McCartney's favorite drink? Rum and Coke) slipped slightly. I began to hear more tunes on the radio without being able to instantly name the band, recording studio and latest drug influences.
The grudging recognition that I am inching perilously close to what others (never me) might call middle age came when I saw the latest list of Top 20 hits and realized I may be hopelessly out of touch.
At the top of the charts is a group called the Police. Can you imagine how uncool that name would have been in the '60s?
At the No. 5 spot is a group called Kajagoogoo.
Don't ask me what that means. It sounds like somebody starting to sneeze.
While Mick Jagger's paean to erotic frustration, ("I Can't Get No) Satisfaction," kept plenty of parents nervous two decades ago, the parents of my generation get to worry about such innocuous album titles as "Pyromania" (by Def Leppard, which presumably is a hard-of-hearing, illiterate jungle cat), "Cuts Like a Knife," "Killer on the Rampage" and
Cruising in at the 17 spot is a group called Debarge, who presumably spent some time on the ship.
Bridging the generation gap somewhat is (pick up) Stix, with a catchy album called Kilroy Was Here. Don't ask me what Kilroy has been doing. I don't want to know.
"Eliminator" (which could be about a murderer or a balm for a digestive tract upset.)
Keeping the Top 20 soul list hopping is a bright little ditty called "Freak-a-zoid" by Midnight Star, a group reportedly hailing from the planet Mureatrov.
However, the final indignity in the sudden onrush of my golden years is realizing that in addition to Top 20 list for hit songs, there are also more tracks I'd love to watch video games, unheard of in my younger days.
A closet arcade freak, I am happy to see that Centipede is at the top of the home video charts. However, I walked in a record-video-etc. store out that stargazers my mvaided sensibilities.
Plantation life still obvious on Capitol Hill
It's called "Texas Chainsaw Massacre" and it should be cutting a swath to the top of the video game charts soon.
By IRA B. ALLEN
United Press International
The Greek columns, the lush green swearts swarming with plebian tourists, the patricians who orate at length on the Senate floor, the backslapping and camaraderie, the amiable way a congressman will chat with anyone who recognizes him.
WASHINGTON — Most of the old Southern power bars who made laws in back rooms over bourbon and branchwater are gone; but Capitol Hill is still a plantation.
Staff members are paid whatever their lords and masters want to pay. There are no equal opportunity or health and safety laws that apply, and good field hands are rewarded with
The outward serenity of life on the Hill can mask the rampant ambition that causes each of the 100 senators to look in the mirror each morning and see a future president of the United States. Or at least hear the staff sharecroppers tell him so.
comfortable, high-paying jobs close to the power.
The ease with which information can be obtained led to a formulation by this columnist that should be of help to newcomers in the Capitol press corps. Namely, anything newsworthy that happens in Washington or the rest of campus can be learned within 45 minutes on the Hill.
Covering Congress is a reporter's dream — regular hours, long vacations when members leave for "district work periods" and, above all, the need to travel with lawyers and 20,000 staff members will talk.
Like any rule, there is an exception. For those not favored by the well-aimed leak, it did become impossible to confirm last fall that Sen. Edward Kennedy was indeed dropping out of the presidential race. Thus, an important corollary to the theory is that a scoop can last only 45 minutes, except when it involves Congress itself.
Capitol Hill is a breeder reactor of good stories. Every imaginable issue either starts in Congress or finds its way there in a hurry, and most issues take at least 10 years from inception, formation, generating more accusations, bearings, disclosures and recriminations that can be consumed.
Even a story on the impeccably tended Capitol gardens produced a truism: "They spread 40 tons of fertilizer on Capitol Hill every year, and that doesn't even include what's in the Congressional Record."
Letters Policy
The University Daily Kansas welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten, double-spaced and should not exceed 500 spaces. 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.
Furor about briefing papers is 'much ado about nothing'
President Reagan has been backed into a corner — a dangerous one.
If you don't believe it, just ask former President Richard M. Nixon how it feels to have the press hound you ohil you are essentially helpless.
It would appear that the fear of becoming involved in another Vietnam War or a growing federal deficit or the significance of a meeting between Pope John Paul II and Polish Solidarity leader Lech Walesa have taken a back seat in importance to a collection of "briefing papers"
Surely there are more pressing matters facing the United States than determining whether the
WARREN BRIDGES
1976
And, typically, officials differ in their views as to how to handle the situation.
Reagan has been quoted as calling the controversy surrounding the papers "much ado about nothing." At the same time, he has called for an immediate investigation into the matter.
Carter has said the Reagan campaign staff's reported possession of the papers "a very serious loss" to his 1980 campaign.
The only official who appears to be taking the situation as it should be taken is House Speaker Thomas O'Neil, who said an investigation into the matter was essentially unnecessary because. Briefing book or no briefing book, our counsel was extremely unpopular in the last election. $^{16}$
Regardless of the findings of the various
committees, departments and organizations that may investigate the matter, nothing will be discovered that will put Carter back into office.
And, if a single debate can determine the results of a$^{a}$ presidential election, perhaps someone should tell presidential hopefuls Walter Mondale and John Glenn that all they need to do is schedule a debate with whomever the publican candidates will be, as if we didn't know.
And, if demonstrating the extremes is effective as an example, perhaps a system should be set up to avoid having a president campaign for four years. Instead, a single debate could determine who our next president would be.
Sound ridiculous? Of course it does, and it should.
Reagan, who also called for an investigation,
may have another incentive in doing so.
But that appears to be what some Democrats are advocating with their insistence that the issue of the papers be fully investigated.
Though it has not been confirmed, it stands to reason that if Reagan is going to announce his candidacy for 1984, he will want to have the matter cleared up before that time.
And being placed on the defensive at the hands of the press is something Reagan won't need
However, as is often the case, opponents of Beagan may make the issue a political one.
Sure, if the papers were indeed acquired illegally or anything else happened outside the law, an investigation is in order and appropriate punishment should be handed down.
But the issue should not take precedence over more important issues until the results are
The press needs to be aware of that fact, and remain neutral in its presidential coverage — and that includes questioning the president about more than just a collection of papers that Reagan claims he never saw in the first place.
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Page 5
Reductions
From page 1
Jostmeyer is a case in point. Because the psychotropic drugs prescribed by physicians are no longer covered and Jostmeyer cannot afford to buv them on his own, he simply goes without.
The changes in Jostmeyer's behavior without the drug are noticeable, according to Patty Doria of Independence Inc., a private, non-profit organization that works with the disabled.
DORIA HAS WORKED with Jostmeyer extensively, and said that Jostmeyer was able to deal with people better when he used the medication.
While psychotropic drugs are the main concern of social services workers, other factors may also influence treatment.
netore April, Jostmeyer was able to get an effective painkiller for his hip condition, which allowed him to be much more mobile, Doria said.
The painkiller is no longer covered and his doctor has been unable to find another as
"THE DOCTOR GAVE me another painkiller and told me it might not work and that I might get sick from it," Jostmeyer said. "He gave me the choice, and I decided to try it. All it did was make me sick. Aspirin would have done as much good."
Since then, Joostmeir said he had been laid up in bed at times because the pain was so great he
Another change in the medical assistance program since April is the co-payment require-
Before, a patient was able to see a doctor or enter a hospital at the doctor's request and pay
nothing out of his own pocket. He must pay $25 for each inpatient general hospital service and $10 for each outpatient service, according to Gaines.
IN ADDITION, Gaines said, the patient must now pay $1 for each of the 12 visits to the doctor covered annually by MediKan, and $1 for every prescription.
The co-payment doesn't seem like much, but it is a factor if you have six or eight prescriptions. Six or eight dollars a week is a budget. You may receive $100 to $200 a month. "Berry said."
Doria said the co-payment requirements caused some people to forgo needed medical
Lawrenzo area doctors are caught in the middle of the dilemma.
"IT IS IMPORTANT to point out that the doctor isn't the monster in all this," Berry said. "He is caught between changes in the public assistance medical program and the needs of the patient."
Gerald Pees, physician and president of the Douglas County Medical Association, said his office had not yet refused medical service to anyone.
One of the main problems doctors face is lack of SRS accounting of how many times a patient sees a doctor, Pees said. MediKan pays for 12 visits a year per person.
"What if it's the thirteenth time? Who's going to pay for it then?" We have no way of knowing if this visit is the person's first or thirteenth for the year. SRS has no controls that I am aware of."
Pees said he did not know whether all medical needs in the community were being met.
"WHAT I DO KNOW is that the doctors in town and we, here, would someone with a medical degree come in."
According to Gaines, the changes in the medical program were brought on by the need to save money. By March SRS revenues had fallen short.
One reason for the revenue crisis was that requests for public assistance this year rose 30 percent over last year, much more than the other groups. The SHS budget proposals were based, Games said.
In order to stay within the budget, changes were made. Gaines said. All SIRS programs were
cut back to avoid having to eliminate any program entirely.
According to a document prepared by SRS for the Lawrence City Commission to use in allocating federal revenue sharing funds, cutbacks in medical services will save $4.2 million statewide and $100,000 in Douglas County.
ACCORDING TO THE same document, cutbacks in other SRS programs will save $8 million statewide and $200,000 in Douglas County.
Many question whether there will be any real savings.
Doria said cutbacks in General Assistance
were shortsighted because in the end it would cost taxpayers more money.
"General Assistance covered people who fell through the cracks. People with mental and physical disorders or who lack sufficient skills to perform their duties on General Assistance income." Doris said.
"IF A SOLUTION doesn't come forth soon, we will face the possibility in the community of people dying of starvation, exposure and lack of medical care
"People who have been able to live independent lives in the community will have to be institutionalized, which will ultimately cost the health care workers more money than restoring them their medication."
Tuition
From page 1
did not have many immediate solutions available.
Coan said that the University did not discriminate on the basis of national origin but had no rules against State laws.
"The measure is certainly strong and discriminative," said Desmond Chikeze, ASA treasurer.
"THEY CAN GET a summer job and pay the amount owed, get money from their families or apply for a short-term loan, but the top for all is $600, which perhaps is not enough." he said.
"In fact, no new Nigerian student will be given a visa to study unless he pays one year of his study fee."
"But it also can save a lot of problems," he said. "I know people who have a very bad time here because their sponsor doesn't send them money regularly."
Last spring 54 Nigerian students were enrolled
SOME INTERNATIONAL students have reported to the office of foreign student services that their governments and private sponsors were not sending them monthly room and board
Mexicans and Venezuelans are facing another kind of financial problem, Coan said. Recent devaluations in their currencies have reduced the economic power of their monthly checks.
"If I had to pay 100 pesos for one dollar last year, now I have to pay 150 pesos. It means that I am receiving half the money I was getting before and my expenses are the same," Silvia Benavides, Mexico City, Mex., graduate student, said.
Last spring there were 1,028 international students from 94 countries enrolled in KU campus.
...
The Venezuelan government has limited the amount of money a student can receive to $200 for monthly living expenses. It also has curtailled requirements to take home household furniture and cars.
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SUMMER THEATRE SHINES
Kansas Repertory Theatre '83
Presented by The University of Kansas Theatre
Curtain time is 8:00 p.m. /*^2 30 p.m. matinee in the Crafton-Preyer Theatre / Murphy Hall
Tickets on sale now in the Murphy Hall Box Office
All seats reserved. For reservations, call 913/864-3982
Funded in part by the Student Activity Fee
Presented bv The University of Kansas Theatre
V
featuring a KU/Community Cast
A new musical based on
Studs Terkel's book
Adapted by Stephen Schwartz;
July 8, 14, 17*, 23
Working
By Tom Stoppard July 10 $^{\textcircled{8}}$, 16, 22, 24
By Tennessee Williams July 9.15.21.24*
The Real Inspector Hound & After Magritte
The Glass Menagerie
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STEREO WHOLESALE PRICES
The Gramophone Shop offers any single purchaser every major brand of audio product at wholesale pricing. Wholesale purchasers are entitled to full factory-authored service. It is the purchaser's responsibility to transport any wholesale product to the manufacturer's warranty station. Often, this is what many stores call "service."
The Gramophone Shop Wholesale Division is unique in that you can purchase at or below so-called "sale" prices at any time and yet receive better service than mail order houses. You can receive your equipment immediately, in factory-sealed cartons; the units are not demos or factory dumps. You know what you are getting and you can get it now!
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Page 6
Spare Time
University Daily Kansan, July 8, 1983
Play unfolds workers' dreams, woes
ALEXANDRA
Special to the KANSAN
Kent Hodges and Rosemary Tyrrrell, Oceanside, Calif., graduate student, rehearses a scene on a construction site for "Working," the first offering this summer for the Kansas Repertory Theatre. The play opens tonight in Crafton-Prever Theatre in Murphy Hall.
By MICHAEL PAUL Staff Reporter
'we will walk slowly — as most old people do' and he will talk slowly, in an easy way.
Sometimes tonight Charles Old father Jr will dress in a pale blue shirt and checked slacks. He will put on a yellow button-up sweater and wear a red plaid cap that will cover most of his gray hair.
"I DON'T DAYDREAM anymore," he'll say. "As soon as I think of something, I forget it."
Oldfather will play the role of a retired worker named Joe Zutty in "Working" at 8 p.m. in the Crafton-Preyer Theatre in Murphy Hall. The is the first of four that the Kansas Repertory Theater will perform in July.
"Working" is adapted from Studs Terkel's book of the same name. Terkel interviewed hundreds of workmates to them what they thought of their jobs.
OLDFATHER, 63, received his law degree from Harvard Law School in 1948. He taught law at the University of Kansas School of Law from 1950 to 1974 and was the University attorney from 1971 to 1974.
He said that after he retired in 1974 he decided to go into acting because it was something that would be challenging.
Looking for a challenge, he said, is no different from what his character is trying to do.
"I could relate to Joe," he said.
"When I retired, I couldn't find anything first to test my capra-
ses and has found nothing to test his skills."
Joe tries to keep busy. Oldfather said, by meeting friends, visiting his wife's grave and going to fires.
Most of the characters in the play are like Joe — trying to make life interesting.
THE GAS MAN, for example, while reading meters likes to introduce himself to housewives by sneaking up to them and screaming. "GAS MAN"
Wayne Dery, an assistant director of facilities planning at KU who has performed in the Lawrence Community Theatre, portrays the gas man.
"You've got to make excitement for yourself," the gas man explains.
"The character is interesting," he said. "He is going to make life interesting for himself. If he doesn't find excitement, he creates it."
Derk, who has a degree in civil engineering, said he could understand the gas man's actions.
"I REMEMBER DOING field surveys," he said, and I know the feeling of loneliness that occurs from being in strange neighborhoods.
Dex said his character was not a stereotype.
"Not all gas men are like him," Dexx said. "But a lot of people are like him — trying to make life exciting."
"Working" is not only about blue collar workers.
Hi Stockwell, assistant director and printing coordinator for KU Printing Services, portrays Mr. Rosen, the president of a corporation who has such fringe benefits as a private dining room and a chef.
"I couldn't be more secure, right?" says Mr. Rosen.
BUT HE REVEALS himself to be insecure, telling us that he sits in his office eating antacid tablets and the board of trustees will fire him.
Stockwell, who has performed in the Lawrence Community Theatre, said his character, like the other characters in the show, was not a stereotype.
"I don't think any character in the show is a stereotype," he said. "The characters are fighting stereotypes. They want to be recognized as something more than what they do for a living."
The Kansas Reptery Theatre also will perform "Working" at 8 p.m. July 14 and 23 and at 2:30 p.m. July 17.
Other performances of "The Glass Menagerie" will be at 8 p.m. July 15 and 21 and at 2:30 p.m. July 24.
OTHER PERFORMANCES of "After Magrite" and "The Real Inspector Hound" will be at 8 p.m. July 16, 22 and 24
Reservations can be made by calling 864-3982.
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phone: 843-1151
14 kt. Chain
Repair
Kizer
Cummings
jewelers
800 Mass. 749-4333
ZIP THE 25 MILE YELLO SUB
just w. of 23rd & Louisiana
Got the fast food blues?
Subman will chase them away with 13 varieties of foot-long sub sandwiches.
A Yello Sub makes a total nutritious, delicious meal. The freshest veggies, quality meats & cheeses are piled high on our natural, homemade, wholewheat bun. Each sub is oven-toasted, not microwaved.
Subman also features homemade desserts & Dannon Frozen Yogurt.
We're open late.
Mon-Thurs 'till 11pm.
Fri, Sat 'till 1am.
Sun 'till 10pm.
w/coupon good thru July
1 coupon/person 1 sub/coupon
no deliveries please
ALL 1/2 ft. SUBS
$1.25
YELLO SUB
Call in your order. It'll be ready when you arrive.
841-3268
YELLO SUB DELIVERS 841-3268
RENTS RECORDS
--display at the Kansas Union art gallery.
French Toast
Taco Via'
Expires 7/18
BUY ANY MENU ITEM,
GET 2nd ONE FOR ½ PRICE!
When you purchase any size drink
1700 W. 23rd
Ten Towering Reasons to Live Here.
OPEN HOUSE
Sat., July 9th, 1983
1-4
Electricity:PAID
Natural Gas: PAID
1. Electricity:PAID
2. Natural Gas: PAID
3. Water: PAID
4. Cable TV: PAID
5. Location: ON CAMPUS
6. Transportation: ON BUS ROUTE
Emergency Maintenance: 24 HOURS
Swimming Pool: OPEN DURING SEASON
Graduate Student Tower: COMPUTER FACILITY
Women Student Tower: LIMITED ACCESS ENTRANCES
JAYHAWKER TOWERS APARTMENTS 1603 W. Fifteenth 913-843-4993
By GUELMA ANDERSON Staff Reporter
The hard-core science fiction fan does not have to settle for movies and magazines this summer to explore the topic.
Staff Reporter
The Center for the Study of Science Fiction and the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences are sponsoring the Campbell Conference on the Teaching, Writing and Illustration of Science Fiction on July 15 and 16.
Science fiction conferences to be conducted this summer
JAMES GUNN, professor of English and director of the conference, said that he expected 50 to 75 people to attend the fourth annual conference.
He said that many of the participants in the conference would be teachers but said that it would be open to the University community for $15 a person.
"Science fiction is very relevant to the problems of everyday life," he said. "Knowing about science fiction can help you adjust to the rapid changes that will come about in the future because of science and technology."
The conference will feature renowned science fiction artist Vincent Coppola.
In addition to the conference, Gunn also will direct the sixth annual Intensive English Institute on the job in NYC. The institute will be from July 11 to 25.
TIM MITCHELL, associate professor of art history at KU, will lecture on the importance of architecture.
Also, Guo Jianzhou, professor of English at Hangzhou University in China, is scheduled to give a report on science fiction in China.
He said that nine high school and college teachers from around the country would participate in the institute.
The guest speakers at the institute will be science fiction authors Gordon Dickson, Frederik Pohl and Theodore Sturgome. The lectures will be in Alderson Auditorium at the Union and will be open to the public.
ON JULY 11, Dickson will discuss the current situation in science fiction, on July 18, Pohl will compare science fiction and the space program and on July 20, Pohl will discuss science fiction as a way of life. All lectures will start at 7:30 p.m.
On campus
SENIOR HIGH JAZZ ensembles will present a Midwestern Music Camp recital at 7:30 p.m. today in Swarthout Recital Hall, Murphy Hall.
Murphy Hall.
CONNIE HAVERKAMP, pianist, will present a senior recital at 8 p.m. Sunday in Swarthout Recital Hall.
KELLEY STONE, ORGANIST, will present a master's recital at 8 p.m. tomorrow in Swarthout Recital Hall, Murphy Hall.
DON COOK, ORGANIST, will pres-
ent a doctoral recital at 8 p.m. Monday
in Swarthout Recital Hall, Murphy
Hall
CAMPUS CRUSADE for Christ will meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union. The group will meet every Tuesday evening through July 25. Everyone is welcome to attend.
SENIOR HIGH CAMP bands will present a Midwestern Music Camp recital at 1 p.m. tomorrow in Crafton-Prever Theatre, Murhuy Hall.
FACULTY AND STAFF performers will present a Midwestern Music Camp recital at 8 p.m. Tuesday in Swarthout facultial Hall, Murphy Hall.
- Oleg Cassini
Look into fashion. Come in to Hutton Optical and get acquainted. We have the lenses you need with the frames you want. Get two pairs of glasses for the price of one.
2 PAIRS OF GLASSES FOR THE PRICE OF ONE
Bring in your prescription and save: pay full price on a pair of high fashion glasses and get a second pair of single vision glasses for free. Multi-focals on the second pair additional.
- Anthony Martin
- Zsa Zsa Gabor
C
- Jordache
- Arnold Palmer
- Mary McFadden
A
HUTTON
Offer expires July 16th
HUTTON
842-5208
OPTICAL CO.
742 Mass.
Mon.-Fri. 10-5
Sat. 10-2
WHY BUY A TERMINAL WHEN YOU CAN BUY A COMMODORE 64K MICROCOMPUTER FOR ONLY $275.00? AND THE MODEM IS ONLY $89.00?
Place a Kansan want ad. Call 864-4358
commodore
COMPUTER
MINISTRY OF EDUCATION
Commodore 64
Get A Software Package For Connection With
K. U.'s Honeywell System
FREE
With the Purchase of the Commodore 64 and Modem
and Modem
We Also Offer
MICRO COMPUTING
CLASSES!
Tues. & Thurs. evenings
for 2 1/2 hours
Computerark
808 W, 24h
(behind McDonalds,
next to the building)
841-0094
Hours: M-F 10-7
Sat. 10-4
University Daily Kansan, July 8, 1983
Emeritus professor Elbel dies
Page 7
By GUELMA ANDERSON Staff Reporter
Edwin R. Eibel, professor emeritus of physical education at the University of Kansas, known by students and peers as Edwin Ebel, the Edora Nursing Center. He was 87.
Eibel began teaching, at KU in 1928 and retired in 1966.
HIS VOICE WAS recognized not only by those who attended his lectures, but also by the thousands of fans who attended KU football and basketball. The college was the public address announcer for these events until he retired.
In 1930, he became manager of the Kansas Relays. When he left KU in 1942 to serve in the Army Air Corps, it was said that 'the University would need three men to take his place as manager of the Relays.
From 1928 until 1942, he directed the intramural program at KU and was
considered one of the greatest directors of intramural sports in the country.
After serving in World War II, Elbel returned to KU to resume his former duties and become director of the University's Veterans Services bureau.
IN ADDITION to the practical applications of physical education, Elibel was also a prominent researcher.
In 1948, he received an award from the American Academy of Physical Education honoring his distinguished research.
Elbel was born in South Bend, Ind., on Nov. 24, 1895. After receiving his bachelor's degree in 1920 from Springfield College in Massachusetts, Elbel earned a doctor of the physical education department at Ottawa University for five years.
He returned to Springfield College in 1925 for his master's degree and then took a position as associate professor at
Elibel worked with many outstanding athletes and coaches during his career at the University, but believed that physical education was for everyone.
KU in 1928. He earned his doctorate at the University of Iowa in 1938.
"DO SOMETHING for the boy or girl, man or woman without obvious athletic talent. Your job is to teach, not eliminate. Your greatest thrill may be riding around us indulging in bursts with pride at reaching a goal that was difficult for him."
In 1961 he told the faculty of the physical education department what he wanted to do.
Elibel is survived by a son and a daughter, a sister and nine grandchildren. Elibel's wife of 61 years, Nora, died last summer.
Services will be at 10 a.m. today at the Warren-McElwain Mortuary. He will be buried at the Oak Hill Cemetery.
Edward A. Martinko, associate director of the Kansas Applied Remote Scenarios Program at KU, has authored a chapter in Biological Survey, effective July 1.
environmental studies program of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and an assistant professor of environmental studies.
Martinko named Survey director
Martinko also is director of the
Martino succeeds Ron McGregor, professor of biology, who resigned as director so that he could spend more time teaching. Ron McGregor has been director since 1973.
His research has focused on remote sensing studies - studies in which satellite images and aerial photographs are used to detect changes in land use and in plant and insect habitats.
A LAWRENCE WOMAN filed a
On the record
A WICHITA MAN was arrested Wednesday morning for destroying $300 worth of property in a room at the Hallmark Inn Best Western Motel, 730 Iowa St., police said. The 33-year-old man claimed that God had told him to "tear up" the room. The man remains County Jaynin in lieu of $1,500 bond.
The State Biological Survey was established at the University in 1959. Its purpose is to study the character and supply of animals and plants.
The Survey also is responsible for interpreting the information it gathers and making it available through international programs to Kansas residents.
complaint against her son-in-law Wednesday morning, alleging that he used her telephone account to make long distance phone calls. The woman told police that her son-in-law had made some of the long distance phone calls from her home phone and had charged other calls to her account through third party billing. The woman told police that because of her son-in-
law's "theft of services," she has had to pay $1,000 to Southwestern Bell during the past year.
A 1977 MOTORCYCLE, worth $400, was stolen from a residence in the 1900 block of West 31st Street early Thursday morning, police said. A thief was caught on the carport, entered the carport, cut a padlock from the motorcycle and stole it.
The University Daily
Call 864-4358
CLASSIFIED RATES
one firm two three four five six seven eight nine ten eleven twelve thirty four fifty six seventy eight ninety one two three four five six seven eight nine ten eleven twelve三十四五十六七十八九十十一十二十二十二十二十二
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 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 ads can be placed in person or simply by calling the Kahana business office at 864-4358.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Glutton #1 is:
Sharon Blakely!
WHO
WILL BE
GLUTTON #2
Chocolatr Unlimited
--rent now or reserve for delivery - furnished apts.
rent near or deserve to decorate, with off-street
rentals.
Look for Entry #2 in this paper.
Kansan classifieds get results
- **SUPER SATURDAY!** *
roll-off dice, X 10 - 10 draw
Time Out
bar and grill
1:00 - 4:00
Jayhawker Towers Apartments
OPEN HOUSE
JULY 9,1983
1:00-4:00
Now taking applications for summer and fall leases. KU students only.
2 Bedroom Apartments On Campus
- All Utilities Paid
* Ten Month Leases
* Air Conditioned
* Swimming Pool
* On Bus Line
* Free Cablevision
* Laundry Facilities
* Furnished or Unfurnished
* Tower A. M. Students Only
* Tower B - Women Students Only
* Tower C D - All KU. Students
Office Hours
Mon-Fri. 8:00 to 5:00
Sat-Sun. 8:00 to 5:00
FOR RENT
1603 W. 15th 843-4993
EVERYONE
e.g. £75, 843-8690.
A nine, one bedroom house, working distance from
the AstraZeneca clinic.
Bellevue, Abbotsford, CA 94322, Abbotsford,
CA 94322.
Brand New Sunrise Place 9th & Michigan
2 bedroom duplex just south of Kroger's. Appliances
- Walking distance to RI
* Two bedroom high energy
* Bedroom with basement available.
* Free cable TV.
* Free 24-hour security a month.
Low summer rates available.
Call
WWW.SOFTWARE
PROPERTY
MANAGEMENT SERVICES
(913) 851-797, 842-1978
Apt. available now; 3 bedroom basement close to campground, Carpenter, pet-free, no pets, no smoking. Call (212) 845-9700.
Available August, possibly sooner. Four bedroom,
two baths, deluxe duplex with basement, garage, GA.
all appliances plus WD/HD setup, ice-maker. Lease
references required 440/mo. 78qth after
2 p.m.
Apartment complex next to campus. Brand new super stadium studios, 1 & 2 bedroom apartments, male sleeping rooms. Laundry facilities & off-street parking. 845 2116
Crescent Apartment
OAKS & GASLIGHT
APARTMENTS
start at $240
water and gas paid
air and heat paid
CRESCENT
APARTMENTS
start at $268
ALL ON BUS ROUTE!
2357 Ridgecourt
842-4461
Professional
ACORN APARTMENTS
start at $285
water paid
Professionally managed by Heritage Management Corp
For Rent 3 Bedroom Home Appliances, AC
Garage On 8th, west of Roasty's Hillcrest. $165
Newly decorated 3 bedroom house just west of Burt's Hillcrest. Preferred婚宴 $275
KU STUDENTS
& FACULTY
Still looking for that perfect home?
Consider these completely furnished studios
1 br. 2 br. & 3 br. apartment locations . . .
HANOVER PLACE
between 18th & 15th
on Massachusetts
841.1312
BUNDANCE APARTMENTS
7th & Florida
841-5255
TIBURON
9th & Emery
841-5255
COLDWATER FLATS
413 W, 14th
841-1212
4 — PLEXER
Hanover Townships, position 2 BR unimproved
at 19th and Kentucky, 10 month lease available.
SUMMIT HOUSE
1105 Louisiana
841-8280
B41-B28D
All offered by
Masters Management
Professional Management &
Maintenance
& Utilities
MED. STUDENTS, NURSES, THERAPISTS.
We are coming to the Center and Center in KC this month for a special event available. Completely refurbished with ac, app, wew.
Receive free rent for early birds. Call free rent incentive for early birds. Call
922 Tennessee * 916 Indiana
Near campus: house · 3 bedroom · 1 bath; $400
Duplex, 2 bedroom, 1 bath, carpeted, CA,
diahawker, $275, 12 month lease, no pets Call
821-2416 for illness
One bedroom duplex just west of campus. 843-6605.
Plan Ahead! Rooms available for spring, summer
and fall at Sunflower House, a thirty-member coed,
male-only dormitory close to campus.
Rentable rates: 74-90/ft²
One HR house. Appliances - adjacent to O zone parking. Preferred married couple. 923-845-6000.
Save money, rent a #1 to #2 bedroom, or studio apartment next to campus. No pets, phone 924-8105.
One bedroom apartment, sleeping 5, room
house, no pets. Beds 843-1601, 842-897.
APARTMENT SHOPPERS
CHECK LIST
NAISWITH HALL
NAISMITH HALL
On KU Bus House
Utilities (except phone) paid
Maid Service
Social Activities
Food Service with
Unlimited Services
Fully Carpeted,
Air-Conditioned Rooms
Close to Cunau.
If your apartment doesn't offer the above it's not Naismith Hall Drop by and look us owe
NAISMITH HALL
1800 Naismith Drive
843-8559
SOUTHERN PARKWAY TOWNHOUSE spacious, quiet 3 bedroom duplexes. Located at 20th & Kanoak. Featuring all appliances, weather-door bookups, at-baths, private bathrooms, swimming pool. Call 749-1650 for an appointment.
TRAILRIDGE
- Studios, Apartments.
- Townhouses
- Furnished or Unfur-
- Furnished or Unfurnished
- Laundry Facilities
- Excellent Maintenance Service
- 3 Pools, Tennis, Athletic
KU Bus
Studio 1. A & 3 bedrooms still available, no quiet.
Studio 2. A bedroom on the right with one porch on the left. Call studio a.m. and b.m. for pricing.
2500 W.6th 843-7333
FOR SALE
1974 Mercury Comet, B1.100, Body. OK, Interior.
6. double cylinders, Kugel. Great 749-420-316.
Airlines:
Bell Airlines 500 seat, AIR AMF Airport Tape, 31,000 seat,
Boeing 767-200, best offer: 464-1100 seats.
Safari Airlines $2,500 or best offer: 464-1100 seats.
107 Maverick 2-door, 6 cylinder, AC power, runs well.
843.85978 $6.1000
Homette, 12' x 6', BK, W/B, DW, C/A, skirted, skid
large, down large wood bed, $2.00 or will consider
as a partial payment on a small nursery in NW
Lakewood, 12' x 6', Lot 9, 2nd & Arkansas, evening,
or weekends.
1999 LD Landau, P/S/P, B/A/C, power seats,
power windows, cruise control, excellent condition
For sale by owner 3 b ranch, C/A, woodfurnish
845-297-1065, reasonably proof. Call
845-297-1065, willing to die
Ailwa, portable cassette player/brand new
Auto New,
Met. car $100; 841-999-000
1809 Kawa 350 Cycle, 6,500 mile, great shape, lots of fun,
$1,500 firm, $48,248 evening.
Honda Express II (moped), low mileage, baskets,
top condition, $225.00, $84.790
EAST COAST ADVENTURE. BOSTON. Families seek live in child care workers. Live in love, safely and comfortably in the city. Flexible starting dates, many openings, one week off. Find a job for free. Fitch, the finchmroad Road, MA 02148
Fitch, the finchmroad Road, MA 02148
Kravo AM/FM cassette car stereo. Less than 1 year old. $140 or best offer. 7491-1881 at 5. weekends.
Two dressers, one with mirror. Good for college student or apartment business. Price negotiable. 749-1190.
This bike is For You! SK, 25' frame, many accessories, fine tires, £100, negotiated. Davenage 843-1052.
Work Study positions in the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 220 Strong Hall Application deadline: Friday July 18, 2013. Applications are available in 220 Strong Hall EOE.
Marine and tropical lakes, African Cichlids, aquatic plants and sugaris, Jawahiri Tachyphilus, #198
$^4$
Moving to small rpi. Need to sell antique couch. Call weekends - 841-9066.
PERSONAL
Piano - Gilmore older upright. Needs some repair
899. Call 542 298.
FOUND: Small black female dog - Mendoverbrook
No. 9653184.
College sophomore, 19, needs female companionship
to girlfriend problems. Contact John at
212-575-3486.
Car key, possibly PFD key ring (grab on lt
side Lippincott June 4. Key is now at campus plexi
GOING AWAY! Reliable female law student will care for your host, pets, plants, etc. not academic requirements.
HELP WANTED
LOST AND FOUND
Leather wallet found - Robinson Gym. Call to identify
843-2643
Pet ferret found on campus June 29. If anyone has a pet ferret, call the animal care unit, 844-5678.
Dedicated live-in basement for group *g* group home in Shawne. Good support system; competitive and benefits. College degree preferred. No enrollments to P- Box 1234, Gladstone, KC 60018 @ 8/73
The Etc.
Shop
Graduate student (24) seeks decem, intelligent girl/judy for company, desperately. Please write Box 2038, Lawrence, KS 60445.叫 you back.
Informative meeting for people interested in being:
Gay and Lesbian Peer Counselors, Sunday, July 10, 7:30 p.m.
Lesbian and Gay Resource Center, Massachusetts. For more information call 811-2435.
Temporary Clothing
Linda
10 West 9th St.
Closed Wed.
913-843-0611
Perm Sale
reg. $40...NOW $35
A Cut Above
Math Shop Center
621-788-1234
Immediate passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization,
immigration, visa ID, and of course fine portraits.
KU student, 27, seeks a culture, and somewhat
sky design for friendship. Write Brief, Box 84,
1052 Madison Ave.
Zeipfeld's
ice cream
parlor
& DELI
99¢
1006 Mass
749-1660
"Ziggy Spud"
Now through July 10
KWALLET COMICS FANTASY gaming fiction fiction
KWALLET COMICS FANTASY gaming fiction
Saturday 70 W. 70, 841-729 5-11; Thursday
Saturday 70 W. 70, 841-729 5-11; Friday
Saturday 70 W. 70, 841-729 5-11; Saturday
Sunday 70 W. 70, 841-729 5-11; Sunday
Sunday 70 W. 70, 841-729 5-11; Sunday
Say it on a shirt, custom silhouette printing. T-shirts, jerseys and caps. Shrift by Shirtray 740-6161.
PAMPHLETS WANTED
Are you capable of writing and producing a pamphlet? Any subject. If so, we are in the business of selling them, and need more. 50% royalties for $11 for information pamphlet.
The National Pamphleteer Box 223
Special for students. Haircuts $7 and permits $25.
Charmie ask for Dena Jenna 843-3580.
Used furniture bought and sold. Pick up available:
Everything But Ice. 60 and Vermont.
Unalaska. AK 99685
sPORT
WILDERNESS OUTFITTERS
CAMPING BACKPACKING CANOEING
SUDS N-DUDS
(BAR or L-NAUNDOMAT)
SOr draw
DRYERS TABLE
DRYERS THAT DRY!
west end of Holiday Plaza
749 4323
...
18. 36 PITCHERS 4.7 p.m. everyday. Also enjoy submarine aquatic sandwiches, great humes, video & fishball games, and the sunshine on our front lawn. Welcome to black block north of the Union. Hawks Crushing #48-960.
VASQ
*express your datage with the total environment of the Hawks Crossing. Groove on the front perch to great tunes, total sunshine and mega sun! Happy Day! *4:15, 4:17, 4:18, the Hawks Crowing for sure, and then.
UEFLYTE:
Very Light
Very Good Value
Very Comfortable
Very Leather
INDIAN EARTH
927 Mass.
The all in one, non-cosmetic cosmetic
While other book makers are rescuing to marital fit, they also try to reduce weight. Vague has the advantage of a well-crafted book, introducing the *Flyte* to the all-new, all-star ensemble. Ungainting hair from Shave Ivory incredibly soft and smooth, the book covers price & quality against Diane, New Balance & Akiyo & You. Now it's be pleasedly
Waxing, threading, manicure, pedicure, bleaching
Call 443-5484
GRAN SPORT
7th & Arkansas 843-3328
HONESTN long stem, assorted colored $1.90 each.
HOLYWITH long stem, assorted colored $1.90 each.
HOLYWITH long stem, assorted colored $1.90 each.
HOLYWITH long stem, assorted colored $1.90 each.
HOLYWITH long stem, assorted colored $1.90 each.
Western Civilization Notes. New on Sale ! Make
up to $50 off. (Sale ends 12/31/2016).
Iam. 1) As study guide, 2) For class preparation,
3) For exam preparation. "New Analysis of Western
Civilization" available now at Town Crier. The
course is priced at $49.95.
Airline Tickets
Twight-- Partly like it 1997. While you are out, grab some healthy, tasty grub at Yello Sub. Open late: Mon- Thurs "til 11 p.m. p.m., Sat- Till "1 a.m. Sun- Mon. If you party at home, Subman delivers 841-3206.
Leaving Town?
At airline counter prices
no extra service charge
Make your travel
arrangements
See Maupintour Travel
- Eurail and Japan Rail Passes
- Car rental - Hotel confirmations
- The lowest airfares—Complete travel arrangements
- Student semester break holidays
* Travel Insurance
Travel Insurance
ON CAMPUS LOCATION
ON CAMPUS LOCATION in the Student Union
Maupintour travel service
749-0700
Virtuously dedicated to the care of your baby, Airlift Andreas would love Lawrence's Yelsh Sack. He'll deliver all of your baby's delivery guarantees to outweigh your taste buds!
SERVICES OFFERED
1. Aauto Service - Quality Import & Domestic Car
Service. We work on imposts. Stainless Discount
Services
Library Research-Editing - Typing: 842-8240
Beginner Adult Piano Classes. 6-week course. Call 842-0755 for class times. Olsen Piano & Organ.
Custom Photographic Services. Companies, por-
traits, and reproduction. Appointment
with us. 503-621-4975. www.customphotogra-
fic.com
KOOL yourself and your car with quality SOLAR
devices installed. Call DEVIL REFINESE DISCOVERY
Graduate English student, rapid reader, excellent research skills, 14 years teaching experience, pre-educating & grant writing experience, will teach a graduate, grad student, with research, bachelor, 841-4967.
ON TIME, PAPERS TYPED, FAST & EFFICIENT.
841-3510.
Need a Tutor? Specialize in Math, Physics or CS on TIME. PAYED FAST, FAST & EFFICIENT ON TIME. PAYED TYPED, FAST, FAST & EFFICIENT
MOPED & MOTORCYCLE REPAIR - Honda.
We specialize in tune-ups and electric repairs. Pick-up and available work. By appointment only. Please visit N123 112 09 on www.trials.com. Thank you. Trial Saul
Leara Tennessei summer from experienced instructor in small groups with other KU students, or with a teaching team.
Racquetball, tennis, squash racket接球 specializing in new graphite/hybrid stringing. Tennis Racquetball (for sale at a/o - head. Price, Dupont, Klumba) 749-387 6294; 749-387 6295. WUTONG: M
TUTORING, Math, CS-200, French, individual session, call 841-4306
AFFORDABLE QUALITY for all your typing needs
Call Judy, 842945 after 6 p.m.
Absolutely LETTER PERPECT typing editing
business professional's percept
performance 848,601.9 8/10
TYPING
Elvis could wedge, Shakespeare could write Mr. talent, typing Call 842-0534 after 5 a.m & weekends. Experienced typist will type letters, theses and dissertations; IBM Correcting Selective, Call 842-0534
--a Fact, Fast, Affordable, Clean Typing, Word Processing, you can afford it! 943-5281
Call TIP TOP TYPING - 1203 Iowa. Experienced
Computer memory expert. Right correcting
memory error.
Experienced typist. Term papers, theses, all micellaneous. IBM Correcting Selective. Ellite or Pica, and will correct spelling. Phone 843-6544. Mrs. Wright.
Professional secretary will do your typing. Dennis, these dusexers; 843-867 after 6:00 and before 9:00.
TYPING PLUS. Thems, dissertations, papers, letters, applications, resumes. Assistance with composition, grammar, spelling, etc. English tutoring for foreign students — or America. 841-6254
GOOD WORK Good clean typing, word processing at
tails, rates. Call 843-1111 for dependable service
WANTED
Noonmaking female roommate, grad. student preferred. for 3-bedroom spacious apartment, 4-bedroom suite, 5-bedroom suite, heating/cediling pay $179. Call 843-4920 after 6 p.m. (Monday through Friday). Roommates will be utilized, utilities paid. Call 749-2085. Roommate Aug. 1, 10:12 mo. leave, top of 1/8 of the bed. Bedroom Jan. 1, 10:12 pm. Young Student (31) wants to move housebase with mature individuals starting August 1. Needs no bedroom; bedroom is reasonably priced. Call 843-4920.
L427
Don't want to drive across town in the summer heat to send in your classified ad? Take advantage of this form and save yourself time and money while still receiving the satisfaction of placing your ad in the Kansan. Just mail this form with a check or money order payable to the Kansan to: University Daily Kansan, 118 Flint Hall, Lawrence, Ks 66045. Use rates below to figure costs.
Classified Heading:
Write Ad Here: ___
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Additional words
1
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1 time 2 times 3 times 4 times 5 times
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.02 .03 .04 .05 .06
Page 8
University Daily Kansan, July 8, 1983
Miniature golfers must travel to play game
By ED GROM
Staff Reporter
Lawrence has its share of theaters, shops, restaurants and recreation facilities to accommodate a leisurely evening for the average person, but one thing is lacking — a miniature golf course.
A person from Lawrence hoping to find the ups and downs of a miniature golf course must travel 30 miles or so to reach a resort, Kan., for a round of miniature golf.
DEAN RABE, of the Sports Center in Topeak, said that a Lawrence couple slapped on his miniature golf course for not closing time and mentioned that they
had gotten lost trying to find the course.
he has not trying to陪 the course.
He said that the couple had to hurry
to finish the round and did not have
enough time to enjoy the course.
"We get some people from Lawrence, but there may be more because not everybody tells us where they're from," Rabe said.
Why must somebody from a place the size of Lawrence have to go through the trouble of finding such places and that distance to play miniature golf?
Lawrence once had a miniature golf course, at 1810 23rd St. from 1972 to 1975, but the owner, Thaine High, was forced to close it because he could no longer afford payments according to Rabe, a business acquaintance of High.
"THAINE HIGH had a successful place at one time but that land became liquid gold and he could no longer afford to keep it there." Rabe said. "An investment business bought the land and built a shopping center there."
John Myers of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce said that a miniature golf course probably would succeed in the city but that the cost of land in a prime location and operating expenses would be high.
"We had one in the city a few years ago, but he had to close because of the increasing cost of the land." Myers said. "I didn't close because of lack of interest."
Safety Way Stores bought the land where the old course stood in 1976 and rented it out to local businesses.
to Aetna Life Insurance Co. in 1979. The land is now part of the shopping mall at 23rd and Iowa streets.
"I REMEMBER a bunch of us went there on my birthday when Putt-Putt was open," said Darren Cole, Lawrence sophomore. "That place was a lot of fun. I hope they open another one some day."
Another KU student, Don Wahl,
Lincoln, Kan. junior, said that Lawrence would be a good location but that
a college education because of the college students.
"I think a place like that would go here, and a lot of the students would enjoy it," Wahl said.
Rabe said that he looked into the
possibilities of opening a course in Lawrence but that he decided not to because of the high land costs and the cost of starting a new one.
"I bought my place in Topeka from a guy who went bankrupt, so I already had the nucleus of the business," Rabe said. "You are looking at about $4,000 per hole you put in and add another $150,000 for the land. For a successful course, you need 36 holes, so you have $300,000 right there.
"THE PROBABILITY of building a course is not economically sound. You have to have the money to start with, and there is an opportunity that you can do well."
"If I had the money on hand, I might trv one in Lawrence," he said.
Body is identified as soldier, 20 missing 4 months
By United Press International
FORT RILEY — Army pathologists were conducting an autopsy on a 26-year-old soldier who had been killed in a shooting and determine the cause of his death.
Yesterday, officials at Fort Riley identified the body of the man who was found in a pile of driftwood Wednesday afternoon in the Kansas River as Joseph Lemon, said Fort Riley spokesman Donna Beach.
The body was discovered in a three-day search that began after a Fort Riley caretaker found arm and hand bones near the river.
A pathologist at Irwin Army Community Hospital identified the body through dental records.
Beach said an autopsy was not complete and officials had not deter- tion.
Ticket orders slow for 1984 Summer Olympics
"They have found nothing at this point to indicate foul play." Beach said.
Bv JOHN UNREIN
Staff Writer
Nationwide ticket orders for the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles have dropped off considerably in recent weeks, according to a representative of the Los Angeles Olympic Organizing Committee.
And if reports from area Sears stores are any indication, the trend is true in the United States.
LESS THAN 300 Olympic ticket order forms, which have been available since June 15, have been distributed from the two Sears stores in Lawrence and Topeka, according to Sears employees at the stores.
Sears stores in the Kansas City area also reported slow distribution of order from
High ticket prices may be one cause for the present lack of orders.
A ticket to the July 28 opening ceremony of the Summer Olympics
The Olympic basketball season ticket guaranties the holder the same seat for all 63 games held at the Forum in Inglewood, Calif., home of the Los
Angeles Lakers. One basketball season tickets cost from $1,000 to $2,000.
OTHER OLYMPIC PRICES range from as low as $10 for a ticket to see the soccer finals in the Rose Bowl to as high as $50 for a ticket to gymnastics all-around finals at UCLA.
KU students interested in beating the high cost of tickets might do so by working at the Olympics next summer. Applicants must send a resume to the Los Angeles Olympic Organizing Committee, Human Resources Dept., Los Angeles, Calif., 90084. Applicants must be more than 16 years old.
Another reason for the decline of ticket orders, at least nationally, according to an organizing committee representative, is that people are simply putting off ordering until the last minute.
"The first couple of weeks we were swamped," said Pam Sonntag, customer relations representative. "It's really slacked off now though.
"ONCE PEOPLE REALIZED they had until August to get their orders in."
the orders slowed down to a steady rate."
Sonntag explained that no ticket orders will be filled before Aug. 15, 1983. Instead, ticket orders will be given ticket assignments by a computer on a first-come, first-served basis.
After the August deadline, assignments will be erased for events that have been overbooked. Sonntag said, "We had already placed in a pool for a random drawing.
Order forms placed in the pool will then be grouped into categories based on events and prices. Separate random drawings will be held for each category, and order forms that are drawn will be filled.
THE BEST TICKETS, Sonntag said, will be given to the randomly drawn orders that are received at the earliest opportunity, an advantage to sending in orders early.
"This is probably the fairest distribution of tickets in the history of the event." Sonntag said.
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Although no events have been overbooked as of yet, Somning said, the opening and closing ceremonies and the final game will be in boxing and basketball probably will be.
Ticket order forms are available from Sears stores throughout the country, Sonntag said, and payment must be enclosed with the order.
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Bonds later moved to the University of Cincinnati where he was recruiting coordinator the past two seasons.
Bonds was originally hired as assistant coach March 1, but his position was never made final, and he is now defensive coordinator Ron Zonk.
Eumont comes to the Jahyws from Tulane University where he served as defensive coordinator on a team that won offensive coordinator Buddy Gels.
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Zook said Bonds had been filling the position of recruiting coordinator at KU before being named defensive ends coach.
Bonds, who in 1975 played fullback at the University of Cincinnati while Gottfried was assistant coach, began his coaching career in 1978 at Murray State University in Murray. Here Gottfied was the head coach.
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Gottried named one of his former players, Jay Bonds, as defensive ends coach and Vic Eumont as head coach. The new staff will start their new Job Aug. 15.
Coach hires two veterans for'83 staff
6th & Missouri
Kansas coach Mike Gottfried rounded out his coaching staff for the coming season by hiring two assistant coaches yesterday.
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The University Daily
KANSAN
University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas
Vol. 93, No.157 USPS 650-640
Wednesday, July 13, 1983
Weather
Today will be mostly sunny with highs in the mid 90s, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka. Winds will be from the south at 10 to 15 mph.
It will be fair tonight with lows around 70.
Tomorrow will be partly cloudy with highs in the
80s.
PENN STATE UNIVERSITY
Stephen Phillips/KANAN The night lights reflect off the Kaw and illuminate nearby buildings. The picture provides an east view of the river and shore from Burcham Park.
Law cuts help for med students
By MELISSA BAUMAN
Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
Expense and an expected nationwide glut of doctors are responsible for scaling down scholarships the University of Kansas Medical Center gave students willing to practice in underserved areas in Kansas, Med Center officials said.
The law, which the Kansas Legislature passed April 23, went into effect July 1.
ITWILL DECREASE the 100 scholarships now offered by the school by 25 each year starting with the 1884 school year until only 50 scholarships are available, said Bill Joure Burge, director of Student Financial Aid at the Med Center in Kansas City, Kan.
The program, started in 1978, pays tuition and $500 each month to students willing to practice in critically underserved areas. Burge said. Tuition at the Med Center is $4,517 a year.
TWENTY-NINE COUNTIES of the 105 counties in Kansas are designated as critically underserved. Franklin, Jefferson, Leavenworth, Miami and Osage counties, all bordering Douglas County, are among those classified as critically underserved.
Counties classified as underserved average between 33.3 and 35.8 physicians for every 100,000 people. Eight counties are underserved.
every 100,000 people was the average for Kansas. Burge said that for each year a student used
Hamas said 47.7 full-time physicians for every 100,000 people was the average for Kansas.
the scholarship he either had to practice for a year in an underserved area or repay the money. Either plan takes place after he finishes his course, which is usually three years after graduation.
She said the new law not only scaled down the number of scholarships, but also allowed the Med Center to place money from students who repaid the scholarships back into the fund to use
UNTIL. LAST YEAR, when the number of scholarships was cut to 100, there was no limit on the number of applicants.
About 75 percent of the medical students,150 to 160 people in each class of 200, used the scholarships before the limit was established, she said.
Burge said the program was started because of uneven distribution of doctors in Kansas and because some Med Center graduates were not staying in Kansas to practice. Cities were drawing a supply of doctors, but rural areas were not.
Scholarships are being scaled down because the Kansas lawnmakers think that there will be an oversupply of doctors by 1990 and also because the cost of the program reached about $6 million before it was limited to 100 scholarships, she said.
Hannas said the Kansas Department of Health and Environment compiled the 1982 Kansas Medically Underserved Report, which predicted more doctors than it needed by 1990.
LAST YEAR the program cost about $4.7 million and the appropriations for this year are $4.1 million. Burge said.
Burge said although there might be more doctors in Kansas, this did not mean that the
underserved areas would have a sufficient supply. The trend is that doctors graduating from medical school are heading for urban practices.
A. J. Yarm, associate vice chancellor for academic affairs at the Med Center, also said that even with the predicted 5 percent oversupply, shortages might exist in some areas.
"THE SITUATION IN Kansas has improved, but we still have some serious shortages in certain areas of the state and, in particular, with regard to family physicians," Yarmat said.
He said it was too early to know what impact the Med Center's scholarship program would have.
Burge agreed that it was too early to tell whether the program was fulfilling its purpose of persuading doctors to stay in Kansas because it would not be able to do so. June were only on the scholarship for one year.
Of those completing their residence last year, she said, half repaid the money instead of paying her rent.
She said that because their tuition was only paid for one year, repaying the money was no problem for most graduates and that these students are in an accurate gauge of the program's success.
McMurry sentenced for bus funds embezzlement
"IN A COUPLE OF years we'll really be able to tell. This fifty-fifty bit isn't indicative of what's going to happen," Burge said.
She said the figures on doctors who had been on the scholarship for two years and just graduated from school were much lower.
Because of certain changes made last year in the conditions of the scholarship, Burge said, fewer students had been applying than in previous years.
Rv CHARLES RARNES
Staff Reporter
Steven McMurry, former director of KU on Wheels, was sentenced Friday in Douglas County District Court to eight to 20 years in prison and told to pay $257.05) in resituation to the court.
McMurry pleaded no contest to five counts of theft June 10 and District Court Judge Ralph King found him guilty on all five counts.
KING ORDERED FRIDAY that McMurray, 28, serve from two to five years in prison for each of four counts of theft. These sentences will run consecutively.
McMurray also was sentenced to two to five years on a fifth count. However, King ordered McMurray to serve the fifth sentence concurrently.
McMurry was charged last September with taking money from KU on Wheels, the University's student-subsidized transportation system.
McMurray acknowledged in court Friday that he had taken $200,000 in cash and checks from the bus fund, but he disputed the theft of an additional $75,651.
Harry Warren, assistant Douglas County district attorney, said that the $275,011 figure
See DOCTORS page 5
was determined by the KU Police Department, which recently completed an audit of McMurry's University State Bank account from 1976 to the fall of 1982.
MCMURYR'S LAWYER, Wesley M. Norwood,
said at McMurry's trial last month that he hoped
he and a lawyer representing the University
could work out a resiliation agreement.
But University counsel Ronald Broun said that Norwood had consistently offered a sum significantly lower than the amount discovered stolen by the KU Police Department audit.
Norwood could not be reached for comment.
"We took the position that he should pay back what he stole," Broun said yesterday, "and it
BROUN SAID THAT the University had gone to great lengths to determine the amount taken in this "cold-blooded embellishment."
He said neither McMurry nor his lawyer had talked of restitution until about two months ago.
He also said that the University would take every possible measure to make sure that restitution was paid.
King ordered repayment to the students and not to the University at large. Brown said.
1985
HE SAID HE HOPED that any restitution received would be used to benefit students and
Steven McMurry
But Broun said that it would not be feasible to try to hunt down students who bought bus passes during the time McMurry was in charge of the funds.
Broun said that the "bleeding of funds" contributed to the increase in bus fares and ultimately affected all students who rode the bus.
REGARDING MCMURY'S ability to pay the restitution, Warren said, "McMurry has reported at $70,000 worth of assets he can jounture."
Broun said that McMurry had offered to turn over certain properties to the University.
"We aren't going to liquidate the property in order to give it like a game," he said. "We have to tie it down and get the best price."
Although Brom was unsure of McMurry's ability to pay back the entire $257,051 immediately, he said the University would keep track of how much assistance and make sure that he nailed the entire sum.
"HIS SENTENCE WAS consistent with what he and the length of time he did it."
Warren said that McMurray is being held in Douglas County Jail until the issuance of "commitment," an order sending him to an evaluation center.
He will then be sent to the Kansas Rehabilitation and Diagnostic Center in Topokia for evaluation.
Judge King has 120 days in which to modify the sentence.
Public favors redevelopment Angino says
Staff Reporter
By GENE HUNTER Staff Reporter
Lawrence City Commissioner Ernest Angino at last night's City Commission meeting refuted Mayor David Longhurst's assertion that the public was overwhelmingly against a downtown redevelopment plan proposed by the city's developer of record.
Longhurst at last week's commission meeting read a prepared statement in which he outlined his opposition to the plan, proposed by Sizeler Realty Co. Inc., Konner, La.
ANGINO SAID IN a prepared statement last night that he did not agree with Longhurst that the public perception of the plan was overwhelmingly negative.
He said that many people had expressed a desire to see something done to improve downtown and that others had commented on the
See CITY page 5
Protective custody causes trauma for abused children, social workers say
By CHARLES BARNES
Staff Reporter
Summer — a time marked by children playing in parks and swimming in pools.
But for some of Lawrence's young, the bliss of blue sky and cool breeze can be shattered by a traumatic experience -- being placed in protective custody.
DURING JULY an estimated 40 children will be investigated for possible court custody arrangements, Donna Flory, supervisor of the Child Protective Services Department and Rehabilitation Services, said yesterday.
It is especially traumatic for a child if, when he is taken from his parents, he has to witness a confrontation between social workers, police and parents. Florv said.
"Many children placed in custody are scarred for life." Florv said.
She said she still remembered the story of a fellow employee who recalled the feeling of being "ripped out of her mother's arms" when she was a child.
"COUPLE THIS WITH being separated from parents, relatives and home and you have a traumatic experience."
"At the time a petition is filed for protective custody," the situation in which the child is living under care is stated.
"Our No. 1 goal is to preserve the family." Flory said, "and only when the child is in imminent danger do we recommend that the child be placed in protective custody."
Mark Gleason, Douglas County Court service officer, said that 21 patients had been filed this year for protective custody of children who have allegedly been severely neglected, abused or
GLEASON SAID THAT of the petitions filed for protective custody in 1982, two were filled for abandoned children. 17 for abused children. 22 for emotionally abused children. were filled for "emotionally abused" children.
Gleason said that of the 51 petitions filed, 26 were on behalf of children 7-year-old or younger, 12 were for children ages 8 to 12, and 13 were for children ages 13 to 16.
Twelve of these petitions were dismissed by the court he said.
ACCORDING TO FLORY, most of the children placed in protective custody suffer from being out of touch with the outside world.
During 1982 there were 39 children placed in the custody of their parents, individuals other than those held by Gleason, a Cleaon judge.
"Even if children are physically abused at home, for the most part, they still identify with their parents." Flory said, "and when they grow up, they feel more angry at the system than their parents."
Flory said that many adults who remember being placed in custody when they were young resent the social or police agency that separated them from their parents.
She said that besides being in new surroundings with unfamiliar faces, these children do not know where their parents are, and they do not know what to expect. Their probably will not come back to claim them.
"It is a devastating experience for a child to be taken into custody after being abandoned by his mother."
But some children are not separated from their parents by social workers or police — some
FLORYSAID SAID Douglas County has three full-time and one part-time SRS employees who investigate an average of 40 new cases a month involving children in need of care. An additional 20 "on-giving cases" also need follow-up work each month.
"Of the 40 new cases investigated in a month, about one third involve children under 7 years of age."
According to Flory, 5 percent of the 40 cases investigated result in a petition for custody being issued.
"We can't confirm abuse or neglect in some cases." Fliess said.
"In other cases parents merely over-disciplined their children," Flory said.
See WARDS page 5
Renee Habert '83
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, July 13, 1983
News Briefs From United Press International
Poland says U.S. sanctions delayed lift of martial law
WARSAW, Poland — Poland yesterday blamed U.S. economic sanctions for the communist regime's failure to lift marital law and said Washington would be presented a bill for the damages caused to the country's economy.
Jerzy Urban, chief government spokesman, hinted that the regime would act soon to restore full civilian rule. Although he refused to set a date for the action, speculation centered on July 22, Poland's national day.
The Communist Party Politburo heard appeals for lifting martial law and issued a statement supporting such moves, the PAP news agency reported.
"If it were not for the U.S. sanctions, total lifting (of marital law) would have been possible earlier than it will take place." Urban said.
"At an appropriate moment, Poland will present to the United States a balance sheet of the losses it has suffered. . . and we shall demand compensation."
Officials have estimated the sanctions have caused up to $12 billion in damages since martial law was declared on Dec. 13, 1981.
TOKYO — The Japanese Cabinet approved an austerity budget proposal yesterday that allows for a small increase in defense spending for fiscal 1984 but cuts outlays for most government agencies by about 10 percent.
Prime Minister Yasuhiro Nakasane's Cabinet approved the hard fought proposal, which sets a $12.2 billion ceiling on fiscal 1984 defense spending, according to the office of Chief Cabinet Secretary Masaharu Gotoda.
The 6.88 percent increase fell short of the 8.9 percent hike sought by the Defense Agency to meet a military acquisition schedule outlined in an $18.3 billion buildup plan undertaken this year in response to U.S. pressure.
The budget proposal must be approved by the Diet, or parliament, but since the body is controlled by Nakasone's ruling Liberal-Democratic Party, approval is virtually assured.
Albosta seeks compromise on files
WASHINGTON — A House subcommittee chairman seeking complete access to Ronald Reagan's 1980 campaign files offered yesterday to negotiate a compromise with the White House to avert a subpoena battle.
Rep. Donald Albsta, D-Mich., whose committee is investigating the Reagan administration's involvement in obtaining the Carter campaign briefing books, still threatened to seek to subpoena the files if no agreement were reached promptly.
Albosta said it seemed "self-serving" for the administration to screen the files before providing them to the subcommittee.
He noted that Reagan and two top aides, presidential counselor Edwin Meese and deputy White House chief of staff Michael Daver, serve as trustees controlling the Hoover campaign files, while Attorney General Ben S. McPhail Smith, a close friend of the president, heads the Justice Department.
Official vows to cut defense waste
WASHINGTON — Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Thayer pledged yesterday to fire Pentagon officials, if necessary, to cut waste in military spending and raised the "ultimate threat" of cutting off some defense contractors.
Thayer, who is responsible for day-to-day Pentagon operations, spoke with reporters about a draft report by Defense Department auditors who charged that millions of dollars were wasted between 1980 and 1982 in the purchase of aircraft spare parts by the Air Force and the
Prices for almost 30 percent of the 15,000 spare parts checked by the Pentagon inspector general's office soared 500 percent or more in those periods.
He indicated he is trying to lower the projected $322.4 billion defense budget for fiscal 1985, which the Pentagon is drawing up now, but declined to go into details.
U.S. base worries OAS court head
TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras — The head of an Organization of American States human rights court warned yesterday that U.S. training of Salvadoran troops in Honduras could drag that country deeper into Central American turmoil.
Carlos Roberto Reina, president of the Inter-American Human Rights Court, was referring to the U.S. base in eastern Honduras where 120 Green Berets began training 58 Salvadoran troops June 30.
Reina conceded that protests against the training base have been futile.
The Inter-American Human Rights Court, sponsored by the OAS, was created in 1969 to hear cases of human rights violations in the hemisphere, but has not received any cases.
PLO official, Gromyko discuss Syria
MOSCOW — A high-ranking Palestine Liberation Organization official met yesterday with Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko to seek the Kremlin's help in resolving the PLO's dispute with Syria, a Palestinian spokesman said.
Western observers had predicted the official, Farouk Kaddouri, might be preparing the way for a visit by PLO Chairman Yasser Arafat. But in Tunis, Arafat told the British Broadcasting Corp. he did not intend to come to the Soviet capital — "at least not at this stage."
Kaddoumi, head of the Palestinian organization's political department, and Gromyko discussed "political problems between the PLO and Syria," the spokesman said.
'Sex' tapes were stolen,lawyer says
LOS ANGELES — A lawyer who claimed to possess three videotapes showing government officials at "sex parties" told the White House and local prosecutors yesterday the tapes had been stolen from his office.
Chief Deputy District Attorney Jim Bascue said lawyer Robert K. Steinberg had informed his office yesterday morning of the alleged theft of an identity card from a bank in Queens.
Steinberg said Monday he was given the videotapes Saturday after being asked to provide legal counsel to Marvin Pancoast, 33, accused of killing Vicki Morgan, longtime mistress to the late Alfred Bloomingdale.
He said the tapes showed six people involved in "sadomasochistic sex acts," with Morgan and claimed they posed a "high risk to the national security of the country if released."
Church considering abortion stance
ST. LOUIS — The Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod, North America's second-largest Lutheran body, today will take up a resolution endorsing abortion only to save a mother's life.
"Abortion is not a moral option except as a tragically unavoidable by-product of medical procedures necessary to prevent the death of a human life."
The Rev. Ralph A. Bohmann, the synod president, said he wanted the church's position established as the most conservative of large U.S. Lutheran bodies.
WASHINGTON — Saying the law housing law has not worked, President Reagan yesterday sent Congress a proposal, already criticized as cumbersome and costly, to supply "the same ingredient" for effective enforcement.
Reagan proposes change in housing law
Under the current law, the Housing and Urban Development Department must rely on conciliation between governmental bodies in nation and landlords or real estate
The Justice Department's civil rights chief, William Bradford Reynolds, predicted the plan will gain wider acceptance after administration officials sit down and talk with civil rights leaders. He said he could enrol enough to end racial discrimination.
agents. Under the Reagan amendments, the Justice Department would be empowered to bring lawsuits on behalf of individuals instead of entering a case only upon discovery of a pattern or practice of discrimination.
THE 1988 FAIR Housing Act forbids discrimination in the sale or rental of housing because of race, color, religion, sex or national origin.
Opponents, including most civil rights groups and a number of congressional Republicans, favor a bill to give HUD's administrative law judges the authority to backers of that bill say it is a briefer and less costly process than lawsuits.
REAGAN'S HOUSING PROPOSAL comes on the eve of Senate hearings on three controversial Reagan appointees to the U.S. Civil Rights Commission, which has been critical of administration civil rights policy.
The administration argues that the law judge approach adds layers of bureaucracy and could delay bringing disputes to court for final resolution.
“This is a terribly strong antidiscrimination bill” that will result in “a quick and fair result,” said Reynolds, the leading figure in an administration campaign to show that it is wrong for schools to despite vocal criticism of its policies.
In New Orleans, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People gave former Vice President Walker Mondale top rating yesterday in a "report card" ranking of Democratic presidential candidates.
Mondale and Sens. Alan Craston of California, Gary Hart of Colorado and John Glenn of Ohio each received ratings in the 80s, while Sen. Ernest Hollings of South Carolina received an average ranking of less than 40 percent.
ALTHEA SIMMONS, director of the NAACP's Washington bureau, said the group is seeking $150 million.
the NAACP's stand on 379 recorded
competitive votes taken between 1965
and 1981.
The issues included school designation, voting rights, civil rights enforcement, social funding and job training programs. Simmons said.
She said each rated candidate, who will have appeared before the NAACP convention this week, would rate a B. except Hollings, whose voting records are years but still is significantly worse than the other Democratic candidates.
Even though President Reagan does not have a congressional voting record and was not formally rated, Simmons said his first two years in office would entitle him to a grade of 50 percent or less.
The NAACP report card does not function as an endorsement, she said.
Dole to ask for separate review of food stamp bill
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — Worried that a cash crunch could shut down the food stamp program, Sen. Robert Dole, R-Kan., said yesterday he would push for separate congressional action on a money bill to keep the food aid flowing.
The food stamp program will run out of money next month unless Congress passes a $1.2 billion supplemental appropriation, which is part of a larger effort to approve a review on Capitol Hill and also the object of a veto threat by President Reagan.
nutrition subcommittee he heads, Dole said he would recommend Congress separate the food stamp appropriation measure from the larger bill to prevent any reduction or cutoff in benefits to 22 million Americans who receive the
Dole's opinion carries a great deal of weight because he is the key Senate candidate.
AT A HEARING of the Senate
Because funds are close to running out, the Agriculture Department last Friday notified state welfare commissioners that they may have to reduce benefits in August by 20 percent and eliminate them in September because Congress has not acted on the spending bill.
IF THE CUTBACK were necessary,
a monthly allotment of $253 for a
household of four people would be
reduced to $202 in August.
Appearing before Dole's subcommittee, John Bode, deputy assistant secretary of agriculture, said he could see no problem with making the food stamp money a separate measure.
"We're very confident that the funds ultimately will be appropriated," Bode said.
The government lacks $260 million of the money it needs for August and $1 billion for September. Congress appropriated just $10.8 billion for the $12
billion needed to keep the program running through September 30, the end of the fiscal year.
THE AGRICULTURE DEPARTMENT requested the $1.2 billion supplemental appropriation in January. The money has not yet been received. The department required to tell states to begin making in-house preparations for cutbacks.
In past years, the government has informed states by less formal notification that money was running out, but each time Congress has come through the budget, the official said this was the first time formal notices have been sent to the states.
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University Daily Kansan, July 13, 1983
Page 3
Vagueness suits grant director
By DAVID E. SHAY
By DAVID E. SHAY Staff Writer
Vagueness in regulations for the Community Development Block Grant program do not hamper city administrators, but rather enable them to focus on the needs of individual neighborhoods, the director of the Lawrence Department of Community Development said yesterday.
"The viguenge enhances your ability to get things done," said Lynn Goettsch.
"THE RULES ARE so vague that you can rationalize anything."
Goodell said much of the vagueness was due to the law-making process. Members of Congress have differing goals for the program, so as compromises are made, some contradictions appear.
Part of the vagueness comes from the lack of definitions in the regulations, Goodell said. The program was set up to "correct" the light, "but" "blight" was never defined.
Lynn Goodell
He said that his office kept data from census findings to find areas that needed help, but that the statistics were too general.
The CDBG regulations also allow for urgent projects like a flood or other storm damage. However, it is difficult to assess the impact of up to 16 months in advance, Goodell said.
[Image of a man with glasses and a mustache. He is wearing a light-colored shirt. The background is indistinct.]
GOODLELL SAID LAWRENCE had never sought funds under the urgency allocations. However, since budgets can be amended throughout the year, if
an urgent project came up, funds could be reallocated for an emergency.
On questions of interpretation, Goodell contacts HUD for its opinion.
Three times a year, HUD sends a monitor to investigate the administering of funds. The monitor checks procedures and ongoing projects.
Goodell said the monitor checked records for waste, fraud and mishandling.
The monitors usually bring experts to evaluate the progress of ongoing projects. The HUD officials are helpful to the city department, Goodell said.
IF A CITY IS CAUGHT abusing funds, the penalty can range from having to repay the misused funds to having to pay for DGBC allocations out of Goodwill said.
Although Lawrence was caught investing CDBG funds illegally in January, Goodell said, the city was relatively free of violations.
Goodell said that in January investigators discovered the city had invested CDBG funds in short-term securities, which is illegal under CDBG guidelines. He said that the city had to repay the interest the funds earned to
GOODLELL SAID, HOWEVER, that citizen involvement in Lawrence was a failure.
The CDBG Advisory Board is careful when choosing projects for funding,
"This city is very serious about what the law intends to do." he said.
The CDBG program has survived the federal government's budget cuts so far, Goodell said, because Congress should not be in urban program that should not be cut.
AFTER CUTS IN SOCIAL spending, Congress in 1891 set up guidelines to allow up to 10 percent of the CUDB to participate in social services within the community.
Goodell said Lawrence used the majority of its $700,000 allocation on housing rehabilitation and funding neighborhood projects.
Lawrence, because it is a city of more than 50,000 people, receives its funds through the entitlement program. It has the methods of distributing CDBG funds.
THE SMALL CITIES program distributes funds based on competitive ratings among cities under 50,000 population.
The actual amount of the allocation depends on the age of homes in the community, income level and the degree of overcrowding.
KU officials pleased with Regents raises
The University of Kansas is pleased with its increase in state money for faculty and staff salaries and for other operating expenses, Robert Cobb, executive vice chancellor, said yesterday.
On Friday the Board of Regents approved, during a telephone conference call, budgets for the six state universities and the Kansas Technical Institute, according to Cobb.
KU received a 6.5 percent increase in its operating budget, which includes faculty and staff salaries and other operating expenses, and a 4.5 percent merit increase in faculty salaries, said Keith Nitcher, director of business affairs.
Other operating expenses include items such as telephones, janitorial
services, utilities and equipment Nitcher said.
He said KU received $94.3 million for salaries and other operating expenses for fiscal year 1864, which began July 1.
The University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan. reportedly received $118.1 million for fiscal year 1984.
The Regents usually approve operating budgets in April, but this year there was a wait until merit board members were approved. Nithear said.
Mert salary increases approved by the Regents on July 3 will vary from zero to 20 percent, the Regents said Friday.
Some faculty members will not receive merit pay raises, but others could get 20 percent, Nitcher said.
Peace camp set for weekend
A peace camp in protest of the Wolf Creek Nuclear Power Plant will be staged Friday through Sunday at the Riverside West Public Use Area at John Redmond Reservoir, four miles north of Burlington.
Participants will assemble for the rally at 3 p.m. Saturday at Lakeview Cafe on Kansas highway 75, five miles north of Burlington, Morgan said.
The encampment, organized by the Women's Peace Camp Steering Committee of Lawrence, will include a rally, march and demonstration, according to Sara Morgan, camp organizer.
She said the march was end at the gate of the Wolf Creek Nuclear Power Plant.
Shirley Gilley, another member of the committee, said workshops and discussion groups would address children's concerns in the nuclear age.
Fall semester enrollment set for Friday
Enrollment and class changes for the fall semester for all students except undergraduates in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences will take place 6 a.m. to noon and 4:30 to 7:30 p.m., doctoral, doctor of student records, said yesterday.
Thompson said that advisers for the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences would be busy with summer orientation activities and help students for midsummer enrollment advising.
The next enrollment period for undergraduates in the College and
University of Chicago will begin on Thursday, April 26.
Midsummer enrollment is available to students who were enrolled during the spring or summer but have not enrolled yet for the fall and to students who began school this summer, Thompson said.
Friday also will be an early addrop period open to all students already enrolled for the fall semester. It will be followed by a second drop in a class until Apr 23. Thompson said.
Students should consult the fall 1993 timetable, available in 103 Strong Hall, for instructions on procedures for classroom and departments, Thomson said.
No appointments are required to enroll or change enrollment, he said.
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Page 4
Opinion
University Daily Kansan, July 13, 1983
Betraving student trust
It is indeed sad when peers steal from peers. It has happened before and it will happen again. But it is hoped that it will never happen again with the magnitude of which Steven McMurry stole from the students of the University of Kansas.
During his nine-year tenure, McMurry, former director of KU on Wheels, the University's bus service, had been commended for his capable management. Yet McMurry had embezzled $257,051 over a period of about four years, betraying the trust placed in him by student leaders.
That money basically came out of the pockets of the students who rode the bus. Friday, he was sentenced to eight to 20 years in prison on five counts of theft and was ordered to make restitution to the University for the full amount.
In 1973 through 1982, everything was going through the ceiling — gas prices, groceries and the everyday things for which you never thought twice about shelling out money. So we went up to the window in the Union and wrote the check, maybe wondering, where does all our money go?
In this case, our money went into the pockets of one of our student leaders.
contributing to one of the largest embezzlements of state funds in the history of Kansas.
The time to grumble about justice being served was last September, when McMurray was arrested. Justice has indeed been served, but will we?
Judge Ralph King ruled that McMurry must make restitution to the University.
Who will get that money? And, perhaps more important, will anyone get that money?
McMurry has reported about $70,000 worth of assets he can liquidate. The balance of the sum is supposed to be paid by McMurry upon probation. It may be a while before McMurry can get a job to pay back $187,051. Most likely, it will never happen. In other words, there won't be a sudden surplus of funds in KU on Wheels.
Some students may not even know that they have been robbed. Some have probably graduated and left the University. Perhaps they couldn't care less about a few bucks. That is not the point. They have a part of $200,000 due them, and they deserve to see it. They won't, though.
It's time to get some responsible student leadership at this University.
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Justice may be served with new law
It could be a step in the right direction — if those afflicted wisely choose to take that step.
If they do, the lives of some 1,200 convicted murderers could be cut short.
In a 6-3 decision last Wednesday, the Supreme Court made it easier for federal appeals courts to accept — and to reject — last-minute appeals to postpone scheduled executions.
The appeals process has been criticized for its lengthy evaluations of the appeals.
It doesn't seem right to toy with a condemned prisoner's life as if it were a game, waiting until the last minute and then prolonging, or cutting short, his life.
Indeed, the appeals process is absolutely necessary as a part of our judicial system. At the same time, however, there is a great need for consistency and expedition in that process.
The court seemed to realize that fact in making its decision — one that has been long
The issue of capital punishment is a controversial one. And, it has received a great deal of scrutiny since the court reinstated it seven years ago.
In 1976, the Supreme Court determined that capital punishment was not unconstitutional,
and it gave the states the power to use it as a deterrent.
A majority of our states now have capital punishment on the books.
The arguments for and against executions tend to take two very opposing sides:
1) Capital punishment is constitutional, and 2) Cantal punishment is unconstitutional.
Both arguments fall short of the real issue —
WARREN
BRIDGES
that is, if a nation is going to implement a system of judicial deterence, then it needs to be used.
Statistics reveal that while there are about 1,200 men and women on death row, only seven men have been executed since the 1976 decision — four of those died voluntarily.
And, according to the Uniform Crime Report 1980, published by the Federal Bureau of
Investigation, the five states with the most violent crimes per 100,000 population, New York, Florida, Nevada, California and Maryland, all of which have been investigated and were utilized it only twice in the last seven years.
That says something — that the system needs to be improved.
Imagine if the court would have declared capital punishment unconstitutional back in 1976. The problem would have been solved, no more executions.
So why, when a majority of our states now have capital punishment, is it not being used?
Although the court has not specifically offered an answer to that question, it appears to have made a reasonable effort.
It now remains to be seen whether those given the opportunity to expedite the process choose to do so, for the good of the country, and for the good of the convicted murderers now unsure of their fate, though they have been condemned to die.
Again, the emphasis should now be placed, not on second-guessing the court's decision, but rather in making the most effective system of justice possible — an idea that has been a long time formulating, but may very well be taking shape.
Gum-chewing smokers, rise and be counted
--privacy statutes. But that is best left up to constitutional lawyers to throush out before the court.
By DONALD B. THACKREY United Press International
SAN FRANCISCO — San Francisco's recent smog regi-
gation was fine if idea was good.
The city fathers told that employers must provide smoke-free work areas if some of the employees request it. And if an agreement cannot be worked out between smokers and non-smokers, smoking must be banned in the workplace.
What about gum chewing? Dentists have been known to deplore the effects of gum-chewing on dental health. And the snapping and popping and tearing of gum has annoyed numerous co-workers.
All this is fair and healthy and democratic. But it leaves out a lot.
The solution is simple. Segregate chewers and non-chewers.
San Francisco employers, now may have to provide smoking and non-smoking sections in their buildings.
They would have one section for smokers who chew gum, another for smokers who don't, a third section for non-smokers who chew and a fourth for non-smokers who don't.
Of course some later governing body would be sure to have constituents opposed to the smell of garlic. The ordinance could be expanded to weed out garlic users from garlic non-users.
The clicking of false teeth is another habit that can be annoying in an office. As well as whistling off key. And chewing pencils. Extended scratching (unless accompanied by a doctor's certificate blaming the seven-year itch or such medical cause) could also come under fire.
Halitosis and the dreaded BO probably are protected from public segregation by invasion of
It is easy to envision the work space of tomorrow. Each worker will be in his own cubicle somewhat as their bosses are today. What a boost to morale!
Another beneficial byproduct of such an arrangement is the hum of new employment. There would be more work for the carpenters who build interior walls, increased employment for furniture movers, and of course a boom in the construction materials needed for segregated cubicles.
And if in the future the politicians decided that even the unpleasant contact between smoker and non-smoker at the water fountain was detrimental, a multitude of new jobs would be created by plumbers and fountain manufacturers as each caribbean was afforded its own water fountain.
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Letters to the Editor
Misleading column on ERA warrants some clarification
To the editor:
Priya Perianayakam's anti-ERA editorial of July 9th resumes a response, especially because her views reflect those of so many women, who, being naive and badly informed about the wide discrepancy between their inherent potential and the actual potential that good old American red, white and blue society will allow them, fail to understand the need for an ERA. First, there's no doubt about it that American women are underpaid for the same services rendered as men. The standard argument that men work harder at their professional jobs and hence deserve better pay usually can be shown to be untrue in actual court cases. The problem is that women have and older guests to contact in their lives and professionally risk process. Add to that, the observation that the Reagan administration has done a great deal to hinder enforcement of anti-discrimination laws, and has even attempted to dispense with many of them.
Perianayakam states, "The proponents of the ERA are screaming about male chauvinism and job discrimination, wanting to create equality for men and women as they say there is in other parts of the world." First of all, this is a case of what I call "sloganism." Sloganism is when you unfairly attribute some term or phrase to women in order to justify your oppressive viewpoint. The term "screaming," used to characterize advocating the pro-ERA viewpoint is a case of sloganism. The second problem with the statement just quoted is that it really isn't true. That is, women in the United States are not interested in comparing their rights with those of women in the Soviet Union or India, at least not unfavorably. That's not the issue at all. The issue is that in the United States of America, women are not subjected to high ideals stated in our Pledge of Allegiance, "with liberty and justice for all." It is justice that is the issue here, not sameness, as Perianayakam seems to believe.
Passage of the ERA would not require us to use unisex bathrooms, or to deny ourselves the pleasure of accepting a pretty bouquet any more than it would require the equal sharing of X chromosomes. Phyllis Schlaffy took advantage of this same misunderstanding when she invented the slogan, 'God made Adam and Eve, not Adam and Steve. As a lawyer, she knows what it's like to be an officer; she requires women to serve in the armed forces, but in fairness to men, it might require the development of an equivalent, non-combat service for women, as a substitute.
Even Schlafly admitted that men have much to gain from an ERA, by the way. Divorce laws in this country are one major example of gross unfairness to men. When a couple divorce, in most states in this country, there is practically no limit to the remuneration a husband may pay for his wife. Because couples need, length of marriage, or whether his wife is responsible for the breakup.
Finally, with regard to the claim that the issue of job discrimination is "a" lot of bull, I suggest
that Perianayakam ask her two friends whom she cited as examples of feminine success what they've had to overcome to achieve that success. Ask any woman in the professional world. Make sure you've got a lot of time. As Dr. Percyk Kilbourne recently told Women in Science, it's not always that hard to get the first job, because institutions often have quotas to fill. However, getting promoted or getting tenure can be next to impossible.
The really sad thing about all of this is that the real victims of discrimination aren't just individuals. Society is denying itself many an opportunity to worthy talent, because she can't get the job.
Mary Anderson Sheldon, Mo., graduate student
To the editor:
Support athletics
In response to a paid advertisement, "Our Interdependence: An idea which can transform"
If you must pride yourself in being a "self-conscious failure in the floundering free-enterprise system," would you accept yourself as such and refrain from damning worthy institutions of which you seem to have very little knowledge. Your recent attack on college athletics was unfounded—do you wish to deny a college education to athletes because they are athletes? Consider that a high school athlete works in the same respect as a high school scholar, each seeking financial awards for college where they can fully develop their potential and realize their responsibility in this world. Would you deny a scholarship to learn? Athletics breed discipline and respect for one's body. Athletics have been known to unify both the athlete and the non-athlete in a common interest.
In defense of the "we-golfers-generate-jobs group," the contributions of Tom Watson must be cited. Yearly, Watson holds a charity golf tournament to benefit Children's Mercy Hospital. The annual Kansas Open, held at Alvamar, supports The Villages, a local, non-profit organization that provides permanent homes for abused and neglected children of each end unit to the percent of each unit it tax-deductible). The Evans Scholars program yearly awards outstanding high school caddies from various country clubs with college scholarships.
No group is collectively perfect; however, the potential for improvement should not be denied. A well-educated athlete is aware of the responsibilities that exist in his or her academic achievement make outstanding leaders. Watson stands as an example to follow.
Karen Gustafson Leawood junior
The University Daily KANSAN
The University Jalansky Kannan (153F6 650-646) is published at the University of Kansas. 118 Flm Hall, Lawrence, Kaunda. 6644, daily during the regular school year and Wednesday and Friday during the summer holidays. Subscriptions are paid at Lawrence, Kaunda. 6644. Subscription for mail are $18 for six months or $24 if you do so on your own. Subscription paid through the student activity fee POSTMASK Send address changes to the university mail通道 with the student activity fee POSTMASK Send address changes to the university mail通道 with the student activity fee POSTMASK Send address changes to the university mail通道 with the student activity fee POSTMACK
Editor Janet Murphy
Managing Editor
Editorial Editor
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Laurie Samuelson
Justin Abelson
Harry Mallin
Rick Dulley
Ned Stafford
Elizabeth Pennis
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University Daily Kansan, July 13, 1983
Page 5
Doctors
From page 1
When the program began, Burge said, 150 to 160 students in each entering class applied. Last year only 110 applied and 133 applied for the 1983-84 school year.
Originally, she said, type one scholarships paid full tuition plus $500 each month to students who agreed to practice in underserved or critically underserved areas. Type two scholarships paid only tuition to students who agreed to practice anywhere in Kansas.
LAST YEAR, HOWEVER, the Legislature changed type one scholarships to pay tuition and $500 a month to students who agreed to practice in critically underserved areas and type two to pay tuition to students agreeing to practice in underserved areas.
"I think that turned a lot of kids off," Burge said.
She said the last year's law also increased the
interest rate from 10 percent to 15 percent for students repaying the money instead of practi-
ticing it.
VARMAT SAID the Med Center had tried various methods used by other medical schools around the country to increase the number of doctors in Kansas.
She said raising the interest rate was meant to prevent students from using the scholarship as a loan.
He said the Med Center had increased the number of students admitted, increased the number of residencies available and tried to attract students from rural areas, because the student might be more likely to return to a rural area to practice.
The Med Center also developed an outreach program in which students would go to a small community for a few months to practice with a doctor.
"Without question, first the increase in the number of students, second the scholarship plan and third the outreach plan have contributed to a large rise in the number of still some serious shortages." Yarrat said.
STANLEY HANDSY, who was on the scholarship for one year, graduated from the Med Center in 1979 and practices in Erie, a city where people in critically underserved Neoohio County.
Students on the scholarship may state which area they prefer to practice in, but the Med students who are not scholarships must do so.
Handshy, who is from a rural area outside Columbus, said that he had planned to practice in a small town before he took the scholarship. "I didn't know where about where the Med Center would locate him."
Handsily's biggest concern, he said, was that he had no idea which areas would be classified as
City
From page 1
Angino also said that the opening of the Wal-Mart Discount City in Lawrence had already drained business from the downtown area.
harm that a suburban mall would cause to downtown
Angino also said that financing the necessary capital improvements for a downtown shopping center would only cost Lawrence taxpayers $700,000 more than for a suburban mail
He warned that further decreases in downtown business would cause a loss of jobs.
ANGINO WENT ON to say that getting a federal grant, one of the methods proposed by the city for paying for the project, was a good precedence to recover some of the federal taxes it paid.
Ann Franke, 1224 Ohio St., read a statement outlining her opposition to the proposed downtown development.
She said that the walkways located in the center of the plan would attract a criminal element and that it could not be easily patrolled by police.
She also said that the plan would dramatically change the nature of the retail shopping environment from unique shops to more standardized retail stores.
In other business, the commission directed the city staff to prepare a resolution, which, if approved, would authorize the city to build a firebase inside the side of Kasold Drive From Sixth to 15th streets.
THE COMMISSION WILL consider the resolution at next Tuesday's meeting.
Handsy said he wanted to return to a rural area to practice because he had grown up in a small community. He said, however, that he did not believe the number of doctors in rural areas increase the number of doctors in rural areas.
Under the resolution, the city would pay 50 percent of the cost of the sidewalk, and property owners on the west side of Kasialo Drive would be taxed for the other 50 percent.
"I don't think the scholarship would convince anybody to come to a rural area that didn't want to. At least at the present time, I don't think you can buy a physician," he said.
Property owners would be taxed according to the size of their lots and distance from the Property.
Margaret Searn, a resident who would be taxed, protested the practice of taxing land. (AP)
"The purpose of sidewalks are for walking,
those who benefit the most are those who walk,
their own."
She said that because everyone used the walkway and not just residents of the area, all residents were on the sidewalk.
ANOTHER PROBLEM, he said, was that some counties were listed as underdressed, but have towns in adjaining counties with large populations which might affect the size of a doctor's practice.
underserved when he finished his residency. He wanted to be located in southeast Kansan, but there was no guarantee that counties in that area would be underserved when he was ready to begin practice.
Wards
From page 1
The SRS staff directs those parents to family-oriented programs, she said.
Floy said that investigations are begun after the SIRS office or the police receive a complaint about an alleged assault.
ASSISTANT DISTRICT ATTORNEY Jean Sagan, who files child custody petitions in Douglas County, described the role of police investigating a child suspected to be in need of care.
"After receiving a complaint or responding to a domestic disturbance, a police officer may discover a neglected or abused child," Sagan said.
"He usually contacts SRS staff and asks them to undertake a more thorough investigation.
"Some children are simply abandoned. Others are severely abused," Sagan said. "And we have to do something."
The SRS staff responds immediately, according to Flory, if it thinks the child is in imminent
If a child has been abused, but it seems like an isolated incident, SRS staff will respond within 72 hours.
"IF WE RECEIVE a call from kindergarten that a child is covered with belt marks, we go out to school."
If the child is habitually dirty, she said, SRS staff has seven days to remow
If the child is truant or ungoverable, state law prescribes for the staff to undertake an activity that is not ordinarily permitted.
"A custody case may take anywhere from a week to a day to process." Flory said. "We have to talk to the district attorney's office, then the judge, write a report seeking initial temporary custody, talk to the parents and then write a report for the follow-up hearing."
SAGAN SAID THAT she would usually file a petition for protective custody if the problem was serious and if she had enough information on the case.
The court then hears the arguments and makes a determination of the benefits and drawbacks of placing the child in protective custody.
During two years of filing petitions involving neglected and abused children, Sagan said, there have been times when she thought it was difficult to keep from getting emotionally involved in the
Sagan also said that it was her policy “not to interfere in the internal workings of a family, unless the best interests of the child necessitate u.”
SUMMER THEATRE SHINES
Kansas Repertory Theatre '83
Presented by The University of Kansas Theatre
Curtain time is 8:00 p.m. /*2:30 p.m. matinee in the Crafton-Preyer Theatre/Murphy Hall
Tickets on sale now in the Murphy Hall Box Office
All seats reserved For reservations call 913/864-3982
Funded in part by the Student Activity Fee
Working
featuring a
KU/Community Cast
A new musical based on
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Adapted by Stephen Schwartz
July 8, 14, 17*, 23
The Glass Menagerie
By Tennessee Williams
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The Real Inspector Hound
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on bus route.
LIVING/DINING RM
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Leasing now for summer and fall
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1603 W. Fifteenth
843-4993
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The Gramophone Shop offers any single purchaser every major brand of audio product at wholesale pricing. Wholesale purchasers are entitled to full factory-authorized service. It is the purchaser's responsibility to transport any wholesale product to the manufacturer's warranty station. Often, this is what many stores call "service."
The Gramophone Shop Wholesale Division is unique in that you can purchase at or below so-called "sale" prices at any time and yet receive better service than mail order houses. You can receive your equipment immediately, in factory-sealed cartons; the units are not demos or factory dumps. You know what you are getting and you can get it now!
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan, July 13, 1983
Lawrence misses National Ice Cream Week scoop
10
National Ice Cream Week began Sunday. But do not waste your time looking for special celebrations. The local ice cream shops are quietly participating in the event.
By MICHAEL PAUL Staff Reporter
The nation is celebrating an event this week, but no one has invited Lawrence to the party.
The event is National Ice Cream Week, and Friday is National Ice Cream Week.
But that is news to the local ice cream shops.
"IWASN'T AWARE of it," said Derry Potter, owner and manager of Dairy Queen Brazier, 2545 Iowa St. and 1835 Massachusetts St.
And it is news to the city.
And it's easy to notice that "I didn't know anything about it." said a spokesman for the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce, "There is nothing planned as a community to celebrate it."
But National Ice Cream Week does exist and has since 1979, said Dan Shaw, communications specialist for Dairymen, Inc., a cooperative of 8,000 farmers in 17 southern and southeastern states that sponsors the week.
Shaw said that the dairymen's purpose was to salute the $3.5 billion ice cream industry, which uses 10 percent of the milk supply in the nation.
IT IS AN IDEA that was even supported by the House Agriculture Council.
Shaw said that on June 26 the committee approved a resolution urging Americans to celebrate July 15 as National Ice Cream Day and proclaimed July 10-16 as National Ice Cream Week.
He said celebrations were planned in
And Saturday in Sylaacua, Ala.
Flav O-Rich dairy will honor National Ice Cream Week by trying to make the world's largest banana split. The ingredients will include 100 gallons of water, 40 pounds of bananas, 50 pounds of fudge topping and 24 pounds of whipped cream.
large cities such as Seattle, Boston and New York.
And in Lawrence?
John Jarrett, manager of Zeigfeld's Ice Cream P帕er Dell, 1006 Massachusetts St. said, "It will be business as usual. I was aware that it was going to happen."
JOHN BOWEN, part owner of Chocolate Unlimited Inc., 1601 W. 23rd St., said that he had planned nothing special for the week.
And an assistant manager, who refused to be identified, for Zarda Dairy Store No. 17, 1002 W. 23rd St.
I have not planned that I am aware of."
Ben Zarda, president of Zarda Brothers Dairy Inc., Shawnee, confirmed that the company had no special activities for its stores. But he said his company was one of the companies that was invited to send ice cream to Capitol Hill during an ice cream celebration last month.
"We sent about 12 gallons of ice cream, which included vanilla, mint chocolate chip and praline pecan," he said.
Doug Shade, manager of Baskin-
Robbins 31 Flavors Ice Cream Stores,
1924 W. 23rd St. and 925 Iowa St., said
he planned to celebrate the week.
JIM ROTE, regional director of Baskin-Robbins for Oklahoma, Nebraska, Minnesota and Kansas, said that he did not learn of National Ice Cream Week until a television station asked to interview him about it.
Stanley Brown, general manager for the frozen food department of All-Star Dairy. 1800 W. Second St., said, "We get any information, I don't know why."
Dan Shaw couldn't explain why the Lawrence stores had not received any interest.
Perhaps next year Lawrence will be invited to the party.
He said that publicity was sent to stores that were on the Dairymen, Inc.'s, mailing list and to those stores that had requested information.
IF IT WERE INVITED this year, they would have learned about these facts provided by Shaw:
*ice cream was first invented by Roman emperors, who had their servants go to the mountains and bring snow that was then mixed with honey.
- The ice cream cone was invented at the 1904 World's Fair in St. Louis. A vendor ran out of clean dishes on which to serve it. He added ice cream on a waffle-like pastry
- When immigrants at Ellis Island in New York saw ice cream for the first time, they spread it on bread, thinking that the ice cream was cold butter.
- Vanilla is the most popular flavor, followed by chocolate, neopolitan, chocolate chip and strawberry.
Grad students to attend CU for seminar
Attention graduate students who still have pangs of patriotism from independence Day — the office of study abroad wants you.
The seminar, co-sponsored by the Academy of Independent Scholars and the U.S. Information Agency, will take place July 23 to Aug. 20.
The office announced yesterday that a four-week, tuition-free seminar on democracy would be held at the University of Colorado. Boulder, Colo.
The purposes of the seminar are to develop an awareness of democracy, to reinforce democratic values and to allow the older generation to pass on the democratic tradition to the younger generation.
The topics will include the development of democracy, its relevance, the status of democracy today and the status of democracy in the future.
Distinguished faculty in political science, history and economics, Fulbright scholars and graduate students will explore the tones at the seminar.
To be eligible for the seminar, graduate students must be in the upper 10 percent of their class and possess good verbal skills in English. They also must have done previous work in political science, social science or the humanities.
For more information, contact the office of study abroad in Lippincott Hill.
Director to toughen affirmative action approach
Room and board will cost $500, but partial scholarships are available.
The problems of veterans and the disabled at KU will be drawing increased attention by the office of affirmative action, the director of the office said yesterday.
Roberta Ferron, the director, said that she thought that the issues had not been fully addressed by the office in the past.
She said that not much had been done to assist disabled people who were employed with or attended the University.
FERRON ALSO SAID that no one had done much to solve the problem of discrimination against veterans.
Departments have no consistent policy or criteria for hiring student
The office also will begin spending more time investigating student complaints of employment discrimination at KU.
Before Ferron tackles these problems, however, she said that she had to manage the annual in-house paperwork.
THIS SUMMER the office also is finishing the 1983-84 edition of Goals and Timetables, an analysis of the men and minorities employed at KU
The first project — a revision of the affirmative action handbook — will be published in late 2015.
The handbook had not been revised since 1978, she said, and many of the provisions in the handbook were no longer relevant.
sessions for University supervisors on administering equal employment opportunity provisions. The sessions began in October.
Ferron said that yesterday the office completed the last of its training
Ferron said that the supervisors learned about guidelines on women and minority employment set forth by the U.S. Department of Labor, and the overall role of the KU affirmative action office.
On the record
"I want to continue to work on the image of the affirmative action office." Ferron said.
A THIEF STOOL $106 worth of bubble gum, chocolate, and other candies, from a locked concession stand in the Holcom Sports Complex, 2125 W. 25th St., sometime between late Sunday night and midnight, when a friend entered the stand after cutting off a aadock on a door.
A KU STUDENT REPORTED yesterday that $2,030 worth of stereo equipment was stolen from his
Sweet Treats
A BLACK AND WHITE dog named "Boots," which the owner told police was valued at $300, was reported stolen yesterday from the 1300 block of East 15th Street, police said. Police have suspects.
apartment in the 2400 block of West 25th Street sometime during the last month and a half, police said. The thief broke into the apartment through a patio door.
---
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celebrate BACK·TO·SCHOOL KU
celebrate
P
KU
Reach the 100 million dollar University of Kansas market with the medium that does it best—The University Daily Kansan. The University of Kansas market plays a very important role in the economy of many Lawrence businesses Therefore, spend your hard earned dollars where they do the most good.
iversity Daily Kansan's Back-To-School Edition ★ Thursday, August 18, 1983 ★ Be There When The Students Return
What the Kansan Back-To-School Edition has to offer you the advertiser:
1. The Back-to-School issue reaches approximately 30,000 students, faculty and staff.
2. The University market spends approximately 100 million dollars annually in the Lawrence community.
3. The *Karan* is the best form of advertising to establish your business name with the students. The Back-To-School issue helps the advertiser make a first and lasting impression on new students, faculty and staff.
4. Wise purchase of a space plus a creative layout makes sure your advertisment is noticed.
5. The Back-To-School issue has a longer life which means readership is greater than regular issues.
7. Two-day distribution during enrollment—Thursday,
August 18 and Friday, August 19.
6. The Back To School issue is distributed to attain maximum exposure for the advertising dollars spent.
8. Increased distribution points on campus.
9. Increased press run (2,000 additional copies printed over normal press run).
10. The *Kanan* is the best source to reach the University market.
8
Don't Miss These Deadlines!
Section I
Section II
Section III
Section IV
City & Area Campus Sports Wrap
Friday, July 15
Friday, July 22
Friday, July 29
Friday, July 29
Make Plans Now To Be In The Back-To-School Edition The Only Way To Reach The Entire University Market
---
Contact your Kansan sales representative or call the Kansan Business Office 864-4358
University Daily Kansan, July 13, 1983
Page 7
On campus
TOMORROW
"ELIZABETH COLEPY GREENE," a talk by Elizabeth Broun will be given at 11 a.m. at the Spencer Museum of Art.
THE KU SAILING CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in Parlor A of the Kansas Union.
THE MIDWESTERN MUSIC CAMP faculty and staff performance will be at 8 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall.
FRIDAY
THE MIDWESTERN MUSIC CAMP will present the senior high school jazz ensembles at 7:30 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall.
THE CAMPBELL CONFERENCE on the Teaching, Writing and Illustration of Science Fiction will be Friday and Saturday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Please phone 864-7496 or 864-4520.
SATURDAY
'Working' oddly unsatisfying
By JUDITH HINDMAN Staff Writer
The musical "Working," now being staged by the Kansas Repertory Theatre, has all the potential for great appeal, but falls short of its goal.
The production, based on Studies Terkel's popular book, is a collection of interviews with housewives, truck drivers, hard-hats and other ordinary people who talk about what it is like to commonplace and stuck in a boring job.
ADAPTOR STEPHEN SWHARTZ and five other composers remained faithful to the words of Terkel's interviewees, selecting comments and putting them to music. Unfortunately, the result is a jumble of songs that often disintegrates into trite phrases set to music.
Throughout the production, there is great audience recognition of, and identification with, the characters, who could be anyone's neighbors or coworkers pouring out their frustrations and disappointments in songs that are sometimes funny, sometimes sad and sometimes even entertaining.
There are a few moving songs, notably two poignant numbers by James Taylor, "Millwork" and "Un Mejor Dia Vendra." And his third
UNFORTUNATELY, THE BAND at times, becomes overpowering, covering up the singers' words.
musical contribution, 'Brother
commented by effective
staging by the KET
But as a whole, this two and one-half hour protest against the dehumanization and alienation of the revolution is oddly unsatisfying.
This is not the KRT's fault. Generally, they do a good job with the material. But in the end, the production process causes the material to make silk purses out of sow's ears.
The biggest problem is that while Terkel's book is a marvelous selection of personalities, it is not necessarily good theatre. There is no plot, no central focus, no driving force to carry the performance along. And so, the production goes on — a melange of flimsy related vignettes.
Despite these flaws, the production is good summer evening entertainment. It comes alive, and sometimes even disrupts the use of the performances by the actors.
AS WITH ALL COMMUNITY productions, there are some actors who seem uncomfortable with their roles; but this will probably improve as the KRT moves into its second week of production.
The players generally are a talented
group of summer community players who are obviously having a great time. There are even several times the audience absolutely delights the audience.
As Lovin' Al, a car attendant, Beafour K. Wools displays great stage presence and is at his best when he gleefully breaks into a soft-shoe that enchants the audience. It's a shame he doesn't have a baby. Dad had to come so early in the evening.
The cast also includes what has to be Lawrence's most talented newspaper boy. Actor Jason Edmonds implys sings about his delight in throwing papers in the bushes. They go "boing," he sings, while his body shakes like a bush after being hit with the evening's paper.
AND MARGARET HUMPREYRS is perfect in a gypsy number as the waitress Delores Dante who fantasizes to relieve the tedium of restaurant work. But after several years of "Alice" on television, the spunky waitress bit has become simply too overdone.
The set is well-conceived and lends itself well to the flexibility required of this production.
"Working" will be shown at 8 p.m. tomorrow and July 23, and at 2:30 p.m. Sunday in Crafton-Preyer Theatre, Murphy Hall.
Eating disorders to be subject of self-help group
A self-help group for people with anorexia nervosa and bulimia will meet for the first time at 7:30 tonight in the Lawrence, Kansas Room at Lawrence Memorial Hospital, a leader of the group said yesterday.
Elisabeth Dykens, graduate student in clinical psychology, North Easton, Md., said that the group aim was to provide information, discussion and support for people with the diseases and their families.
DYKENS AND ABBIE ELLICOTT.
graduate student in clinical psychology, Baltimore, will lead the group, which is sponsored by Anorexia Nervosa and Associated Disorders, Highland Park, Ill., a network agency to provide guidelines for self-help groups.
"Abbie and I have done therapy work with eating disorders before, and we just felt that there was a real need in me to for a self-help group," Dykens said.
Dykens said that between 13 and 20 percent of all college-age women
experience some type of eating disorder, whether it is anorexia, bulimia or obesity, although the group will not focus on the last disorder.
Bulimia is characterized by binge eating, which is usually followed by depression, self-induced vomiting or laxative abuse. Dykens said.
She said that people with bulimia typically were of normal weight or slightly overweight and usually knew their eating habits were not normal.
ANOREXICS ARE USUALLY less aware that they are not eating normally and have a distorted image of themselves and their bodies, she said.
She said that an anorexics commonly lost about 25 percent of their original body weight. They will deny that they are hungry, refuse to eat except for tiny portions. Victims often have irregular or non-existent menstruation.
There is no registration or fee for the group and people interested should visit www.nih.gov/registration.
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Saturday, July 16 A special Jazz presentation SHORTY ROGERS AND BUD SHANK Backed by the Tim Brewer Trio
Shorty Records is an outstanding arranger, composer and trumpeter/thugethion player who has recorded over 30 jazz albums for RCA, Capitol and Atlantic. His performing credits include work with such diverse players as Stan Kenton, Art Peeper, Peggy Lee and Carmen McGraw. His studio credits include the scores for such TV series as "I Spy," "Mop," *Stunny* and *Sandy*. He is a versatile artist whose work includes collaborations with the Golden Arm. But it is as "The Founding Father of the West Coast School of Jazz" that he is best known among jazz musicians and listeners the world over.
Budd Shank is a hustlausaphaonist of extreme versatility. The jazz world first took note of him in 1854, when he was named "NEW STAR" by Dow Beat Magazine and "Arrival of the Year" by Bill McKinney. He is a multi-instrumentalist with ophone and Flute through the 50's and 60's. Going into the studio, he was for many years the "first call" choice in film and television, and it is his sound that has set the mood for countless movies, including "The Last of Us," "Dracula," and "Planet of the Apes." The National Academy of Recordings Art and Sciences has honored him four times with their "Most Valuable Player" award for his work in film, TV and photographic
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John Bucher, manager of user education at the Academic Computing Center, conducts an informational seminar in the use of the Zenith microcomputer. Last spring, the Board of Regents awarded Zenith a contract for purchase of microcomputers for the Regents schools. The company offered faculty, staff and students the opportunity to purchase the microcomputers at the same price as the state. So far, about 70 of the computers have been purchased by KU for use in various departments. Fewer than five have been purchased by students.
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan, July 13, 1983
Lawrence Roundup
Sizeler plans given OK
The Lawrence Chamber of Commerce sent a letter to Mayor David Longhour last week supporting the continuation of the agreement with Reed Beah, Kerner, La., to procure both the town and downtown downslope development.
The City Commission last week directed the city staff to draw-up agreement to allow Sizeler to start operations and install for the proposed department store.
In the letter, Chamber of Commerce President Joel Jacobs said that the Chamber had many questions about the development but that they could only be answered by proceeding with the project.
Jacobs said the Chamber wanted to know:
- Whether Lawrence would receive a federal grant for the project and how large the grant would be.
- How much the project would cost the general taxpayers.
- *Whether the downtown merchants and property owners favored creating a special benefit district to pay for part of the project.
- Who the major department stores in the project would be.
KU officer free of blame
The Kansas Supreme Court rour-
last week that Victor Shore, a KU
police officer, was not responsible
for the deaths of two Lawrence
residents killed in a high-speed car
chase in 1979.
Kenneth E. McCue III and Margie Thornton were both killed Nov. 18, 1979 when their car was struck by a Jeep driven by KU student Don Bender during a high-speed chase. Bender is being pursued by KU police.
The ruling upheld an earlier decision of the Douglas County District Court.
Cabs to add $3 flat rate
Ward A. Thompson, owner of Yellow Cab Cob, of Lawrence, said Monday that Yellow Cab couldw be charged at $3 flat rate for rides on lily up.
Thompson, who opposes the new rate, said that 80 percent of his customers would be paying more for a ride than they do now.
Thompson said he was changing the rate system because his competitor, Jayhawk Dial-A-Ride, had taken 25 percent of his business since they started using the $3 flat rate last winter.
Thompson said he wanted the City Commission to consider regulating the fee structures for the cab companies.
Donors finance Polish girl's surgery
NEW YORK — A 9-year-old Polish girl yesterday used her only words of English to thank supporters who raised funds for the cause she needs to remove a deadly brain tumor.
By United Press International
"Thank you everybody," said Iwona Badurece, waving two tiny American and Polish flags and smiling shyly at a knot of reporters and photographers.
was_scheduled to_undergo a_final operation today.
THE YOUNGSTER APPEARED at a news conference held at New York University Medical Center, where she
Two previous operations that removed 70 percent of a grapefruit-sized tumor left Iwena blind in the left eye and deaf in the left ear.
An international fund-raising drive, led by Edward Ostrowski, president of the city Uniformed Sanitization Association, raised $38,965 to pay Iwona's back hospital bills and the cost of the final operation.
OSTROWSKI SAID HE launched a fund-raising campaign on June 15 after hearing of the child's plight. He said the
contributions, mostly "nickels and dimes," had poured in from around the world.
Vallow Benjamin, a physician, said he planned to remove what remained of a benign tumor that would have cut off the brain's blood supply and have been removed.
WORKING WATER
This sailboat glided across the waters of Clinton Lake last weekend. Sailing was just one way to enjoy the recent sunny weather.
Benjamin, who volunteered his services, said he expected the operation would take 12 hours.
Despite the family's debt of $21,000 in outstanding bills, Benjamin said the hospital never refused to operate on the child.
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Best prices anywhere.
GRAN SPORT
7th & Arkansas 843-3328
GEAR-UP for the GREAT OUTDOORS
all Eureka tents in stock
30% off
GRAN SPORT Wilderness Outfitters
camping canoeing back-packing
See us first for all your outdoor needs.
Best prices anywhere.
7th & Arkansas 843-3328
New Eye Appeal!
Come in and let us show you a new look with a complimentary eye make-up lesson and receive:
20% off
all eye make-up products.
Choose from:
• 47 fashion colors
• basic neutrals
• 24 eye pencils
• color mascaras variety of eye make-up enhancers
Call or drop by and schedule the best half hour of your summer.
20% off valid only until August 1st.
MERLE NORMAN
The Place for the Custom Face™
701 Mass. 841-5334
Eyeliner Powder
Student Loans at The First are worth writing home about.
Dear Mom and Dad,
Surprise! This is not a letter asking for more money.
I just applied for a guaranteed student loan at The First Tuition and expenses are covered for next semester and I don't begin payments until after graduation.
Thanks for everything,
P.S.
Send
Food!!
Stop writing home for money Come to The First instead. Terry Boyer, our student loan manager, can help you get a guaranteeed student loan to cover your tuition and expenses at any approved college or university.
and your loan is processed quickly
The application form is uncomplicated, the interest rate is low.
Stop by the 4th Floor Student Loan Office to see Terry. Then send the above note to your folks
TheFirst We want to help.
The First National Bank of Lawrence
Ninth & Massachusetts, Lawrence, Kansas 60644 (913) 843-0529
Member F.O.C.I. Equal Opportunity Employer
simple! You don't even have to share any home cooking with us. Would be nice, though.
.
University Daily Kansan, Julv 13. 1983
Page 9
1000
Mike Everett, Lawrence, and Hugh Lester, Lawrence high school senior, help move into the new K.S. "Boots" Adams Alumni center, by unloading hundreds of boxes into the new building.
The University of Kansas Alumni Association offices were moved yesterday from the Kansas Union to the Association's new home on the third floor of the new K.S. "Boots" Adams Alumni Center.
By MARY ANN COSTELLO Staff Reporter
Chuck Marsh, a writer for Kansas Alumni Magazine, worked to meet an encreaching deadline behind a new, big book. His new office in the Alumni Center.
Alumni staff settles into new offices
Clair Keizer, Alumni Association field director, said yesterday that most of the Lawrence staff of the Alumni Association had the day off but that he expected them to be back at work today.
HOWEVER, A FEW Alumni Association staff members were on the third floor of the new Alumni Center yesterday getting a taste of what it was like to have their "own office for a change."
"I love my new office," Marah said.
"It would be perfect if they'd just turn
him off."
Marsh said that the publication's staff had shared close quarters in the
HE SAID THE ONLY qualm he had was whether students would be intimidated by the grandness of the new building and hesitate to visit it.
"The feeling of the University will be somewhat removed now," he said. "We'll have to make a special effort to give the University a sense for what the University is all about."
Marsh said he also was referring to the plush interior that greeted visitors to the center, including a carpeted elevator with floor to ceiling mirrors.
old Alumni Association offices on the
floor of the Kansas Union.
"You can tell who's important around here by seeing how deeply you step into the carpet in their office," he said, returning to his work at a typewriter borrowed temporarily until his arrives at the new office.
DAN REEDER, editor of Kansas Alumni Magazine, sat down the hall in his own slightly larger office. He told me that he would now have much more work space.
Before, he said, the four staff members had one room with three desks, a conference table and a graphics table in which to cope. Now they will have private offices and a production room.
"It's going to change the way we work," he said. "There are both positive and negative aspects."
He said that sparks flew from group participation, unavoidable in the smaller offices, that were helpful for talks such as headline writing.
"On the other hand," he said, "we'll now be able to talk on the telephone."
DONNA NEUER, assistant director of the Alumni Association, had a small private office in the Union, but that she loves her new larger office.
The University Daily
"The office I had before was as small as a closet, although it had a beautiful wood-grain ceiling."
He said the Learned Club, on the second floor, would open Aug. 22, the club's next season.
Kevin Carroll, general manager of the Alumni Center, was hired in February to manage the building and oversee its food service.
IN A FEW WEEKS, he said, the center would begin hold open houses for invited guests KU faculty and staff. Alumni Association members from Douglas County, and more than 2,500 doors to the center will be invited.
KANSAN WANT ADS Call 864-4358
CLASSIFIED RATES
two five three four five two five seven eight nine ten
$2.25 $2.75 $3.00 $3.60 $4.00 $4.50 $5.00 $5.50 $6.00
$6.50 $7.00 $7.50 $8.00 $8.50 $9.00 $9.50 $10.00
AD DEADLINES
ERRORS
Monday ... Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday ... Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday ... Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday ... Friday 5 p.m.
Weekend ... Wednesday
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
The Kannan will not be responsible for more than two incorrect injections. 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 items can be placed in person or simply by calling the Kama business office at 864-4358.
Kansan classifieds get results
ANNOUNCEMENTS
118 Flint Hall 864-4358
Join BABACO and buy all your needs at a $150 discount.
BABACO is located in Massachusetts St. Lawrence.
Self help group for anorectics, bulimia and their families and friends will meet on Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. in the Lawrence-Kansas Room of the Lawrence Memorial Hospital, starting July 18. The group is a team of nurses, Veterans, and Association Disorders and is free. For more information, call 843-2494 or e-mail 843-2494.
FOR RENT
2 bedroom duplex past south of Kroger's. Appliances
$725, 943-8695
3 three bedroom homes available for August 1 occupancy. Perfect for students. Located across from the University of Missouri.
OPEN HOUSE
Brand New Sunrise Place
Open daily 9:00-12:00 a.m.
- Free cable TV.
* From $375 to $475 a month.
- Walking distance to K.U.
* Two steps highly visible
- From $375-$475 a month
Open daily 9:00-12:00 a.m.
& 1:00-5:00 p.m.
Call 841-1287 (office)
or 841-5797
- Two bedroom highly energy efficient units, finished basement and furnish available
A nice, one bedroom house, walking distance from campus. Available August 1. Call Abo. A81-7922.
Apartment complex next in campus. Brand new
apartment with balconies, 1 & 2 bedroom apartments,
male sleeping room, Laundry & off-street
parking. 843-216
ap. available soon 2 bedroom basement close to
camp. Ap. furnished, furnished, no smokin
nap.
Available Aug 1, possible soon. Four bedroom,
two baths, deluxe duplex with basement, garage GA,
all appliances plus W/D hookup, ice-maker. Please
interpreter required $440.00 mo. #3473.298 on line.
KU STUDENTS
KU STUDENTS
&
FACULTY
Still looking for that perfect home?
Consider these completely furnished studios
1 br., 2 bath, 2 carers
**HANOVER PLACE**
between 14th & 15th
on Massachusetts
841-1212
**SUNDANCE APARTMENTS**
7th & Florida
841-5255
**TRABOM**
8th & Emery
841-5255
**SUMMIT HOUSE**
SUMMIT HOUSE
1105 Louisiana
841-B280
COLDWATER FLAT
413. W 14th.
841-1212
4 — PLEXES
922 Tennessee '916 Indiana
B41-8200
B41-8200
Masterraft Management
Masterraft Management &
Maintenance
Mastercraft Management
For Heat 3 Bedroom house. Appliances AC
garage On 8th, west of hillett's Hillerest. £129.99
Newly decorated 3 bedroom house just west of
Bilcarrt. Preferred婚宴费 $750
or $850 per room.
norevant Fortwinkle 2 bikes 2 BH unimurbed
norevant Fortwinkle 10 bikes 10 BH unimurbed
at 14th & Kentucky 10 month loans available
Jayhawker Towers Apartments
Now taking applications for fall leases. KK1 students only.
One bedroom apartment, sleeping room, 5 bedroom,
no pets, h03-1601, 842-8971.
Betam Apartments On Campus
* All Utilities Paid
* Ten Month Leases
* Air Conditioned
* Swimming Pool
* On Bus Line
* Free Cablevision
* Laundry Facilities
* Furnished or Unfurnished
Tower A-Grad Students Only
lower A - Grad Students Onl-
town B - Grad Students Onl-
town C - All D.K. Students
Office Hours
Morning 9 a.m. to 10 a.m.
Monday 9 a.m. to 10 a.m.
Sat. 8 a.m. to 9 p.m.
1603 W. 15th 843-4993
Studio 4. 1-3 bedrooms still available in quiet southwest location. All appliances, gas heat, central air, pool, on KU bus lane. Call between 9 a.m. and m.p. Mon-Fri 834-7574
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 8550
Plan Abbed! Rooms available for spring, summer and fall at sunflower House, a thirty member coed, cooperative, community close to campus. Reasonable rates. 749-0871.
TRAILRIDGE
partly bedroom duplex just west of campus. 436-866. Partially furnished inuxured roomette. 1 bd., with covered patio and garage. quiet. South side of residence. Please, no smoking. Preferred. Please, no smoking. Preferred. Please, no smoking.
843-8559
One BR house. Appliances - adjacent to O zone park.
Preferred married couple. 829. 836-800-600.
TRAILRIDGE
- Studios, Apartments.
Rent now or reserve for full-furnished apts, or rent new university or downsizes, with off-street parking. Call 426-787-0300.
- Laundry Facilities
SOUTHERN PARKWAY TOUCHWISHES spacious, quiet 3 bedroom duplexes. Located at 8041 & Kasanda. Featuring all appliances, washer-dryer looks up, a separate kitchen, pool area, swimming pool. Call 749-197 for an appointment.
- Furnished or Unfur-
nished
- Excellent Maintenance Service
- 3 Pools, Tennis, Athletic Club
Save money, rent a n i o 2 bedroom, or studio apartment next to campus. No pets. phone 604-415-88.
- KU Bus
- Townhouses
- Furnished or Unfur-
Kramer AM-PM piano can cut speed. Less than 1/8 sec. for the piano. Fine Guitar Gilmore lutes upright, with benches. Needles on piano.
157 ValveKing bug. Excellent condition. Heats up fast.
ValveKing bug. Excellent condition. Heats up fast.
battery and battery, asking $150. Cell health is excellent.
battery and battery, asking $150. Cell health is excellent.
MED STUDENTS, NURSES, THEMATISTS,
MEDICAL MASTERS. RC this Spring or Fall! We have a beautiful duplex
available. Completely refreshed as ac, app, uw.
Prepare for the upcoming semester.
Prepare free rent incentive for early call. Call
(804) 265-7930.
2500 W. 6th 843-7333
FOR SALE
1974 Mercury, Comet, B1100, Body. OK, Interior.
4 cooler, 6 cylinders. Great: max 749-210.
1955 Yamaha ID 800 *Excellent condition*, $3,500
1962 Yamaha ID 750 *Excellent condition*, $3,500
1976 MGB *Excellent condition*, $4,000
1985 MGB *Excellent condition*, $4,000
19F7 LTD Landu, P/S/P, B/A/C, power seats,
power windows, cruise control, excellent condition
x36 percent DESK, metal, beige and chrome. 72
conference top. 6 top. 8 sideways. 7 sides top. $100 EXEC
top. $100 EXECUTE. 7 sides top. $100 EXECUTE SWIMWEL CHAIR,
goldenwood, wood swimwel base. "Marysphy" cost new
$100.
Alawa portable cable player/brand new. Auto Ret.
Met cap $100 $84-2990.
LOST AND FOUND
1980 Toyota Corolla Wagon, 5.300, 50,000 miles,
very good condition; 4,500, call 843-687-06
double bed, *Jamison* furniture, true leather.
Cost new $400, your price $180. COFFEE
cost new $90. Your price $120. ENCLOSURES,
massive wood; for $75. SECTIONAL
3 pieces, 1 piece, 1 straight, Excellent $180
3 pieces, 1 piece, 1 straight, Excellent $180
For sale by owner 3 br. ranch, C/A, woodburning
fireplace, fenced yard, reasonably priced. Call
(212) 562-7990.
Hometee, 12 x 9'2', BW, H/D, W New A, skirted, dark large, down wool sweater $6, 200 or will consider as a partial payment on a small rackcase in NW Lawrence, 443-699-1. List 9.2 ARkames, an Arkansas
Piano. Beautiful, old upright with bench. 300. Call 691.8037, after work or on weekends.
Marmite and tropical Ginger. African Cajun, paprika
and supplies Jawahir Rocky Trail, 912-874-0356.
www.jawahirrockytrail.com
Moving to small apt. Need to sell antique couch. Call weekends . 841-0996.
good condition. $50 - call 843-8401.
Two dressers, one with mirror. Good for college student or apartment business. Price negotiable. 749-1100. This Bike is For You! SI, 25, frame, many accessories, fine shoes, $200, nissen bag. Dave-943-8257
Car key, possibly POD, key ring, found on lst
fingerprint June 24. Key nos. at campus police
Hewlett Packard Calculator. Believed left in Union June 2004 and needly need back Cat Tom at
Dedicated live-in homecare for boys' group home in Shawnee. Good support system; competitive salary and benefits. College degree preferred. No prior experience required. Box 524, Oklaho St. 6063 8601 or 1/7/12
Leather wallet found - Robinson Gym. Call to iden
ty 844-2643.
HELP WANTED
BENEFITS* Up to $19,000 starting salary, over $28,000 in four years. Over $1,500 per month for selected students during Jr. and Sr. years. Medical and dental coverage. 30 days' annual paid vacation. Opportunity for Navy-funded post-graduate education. Family benefits.
TEACHERS NEEDED IN FLORIDA
The University of Kansas Department of Psychology seeks part time clinical psychologists to supervise PD training therapist. Applicants must hold PHD, or equivalent experience and be employed in a rodeled setting. Must be available on Wednesday for job offers of $4,500-$6,499. Contact Raymond L. Higgins, PhD, Department of Psychology, Fraser Hall, U.K., 123 W. 8th St., E. 7th Floor, KU Application deadline is July 20, 1983. EOPA/AT
11 and evenings. Call between 1, 5, fay-0288.
POSITION ANNUCEMENT - Project Coordinator for Upward Board program, University of Kansas. Requires qualifications; bachelor's degree. Job duties include providing the public schools; work experience with low income ethnic minority students; experience in program management; ability to organize and coordinate programs Optional Preferred Qualifications: Doctorate in education or related field at Topka and Kansas City, Kansas target areas. Salary range = $419,000-$520,000. Starring date: December 31, 2015. Resumes to transcripts and names of five references to: Dr. Fred Rodrigues, 21 Bassley Hall University of Kansas, Room 1070, Suite 361, Kansas City, July 15, 2015. Complete job description available upon request. AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY/AFFIRMATION.
PERSONAL
Female nursing aid need to assist disabled female, no experience required, short time of stay.
QUALIFICATIONS. U.S. citizen. Ages 19-29. College graduates or seminarians. BS MS Technical majors only. Call collect Naval Navy Opportunities at (816) 354-7000, Wed.-Feb. 20am-4pm.
instructions needed to teach math, science, or engineering at the Navy's Nuclear Power School in Orlando, Florida.
The University of Kansas-Dept. of HIPER is seeking an instructor/aest./nst. to teach history and foundational education classes. Required qualifications include M.S. in physical education with additional specialization in prefectural or sensory/female/speechful teaching. Preferred qualifications: doctorate degree in physical education with special preparation in pediatrics, music, or dance; 9-month appointment, beginning Aug. 16, 1983. Application deadline: 5 p.m., July 21, 1983. Resumes submitted to the KU School of Education, Robinson Center, University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas. An equal opportunity/affirmative action employer.
EAST COAST ADVENTURE BOSTON. BOSTON
suburbs include Bostons, Boston. Live in lakes,
suburbs close to workplaces, starting dates, many openings,
year commitment to the city, year
Pitches, 1b Beckman Road, Brookline MA 02346
MA 02346
The Etc. Shop
Adult executive; Striving for excellence building
administration. Master's in Architecture,
70 Lafayette School of Architecture, 1/2 West
East Side, NY.
Vintage & Classic
Contemporary Clothing
Line
10 West 6th St.
Closed Wed.
24 West 5th St.
GOING AWAY! Fareable female law student will care for your HAWTS, plains, etc. next academic year. You'll receive a Graduate student (24) seeks decent, intelligent girl lady for company desperately. Please write to Jill at jill@adp.com.
PAMPHLETS WANTED
Are you capable of writing and producing a pamphlet? Any subject. If so, we are in the business of selling them, and we are, 60% royalties. Enclose $1 for information pamphlet.
The National Pamphleteer
KU student, 27, seeks a nice, cultured and somewhat
skilled friend. Requests: Write Email, Box #45,
SMS or email: jennifer.horst@wbc.edu
Instant passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization,
immigration, ID, and of course fine portraits
76-819-108-34
on a shirt, custom silkscreen printing. T-shirts,
jerseys and capris. Shiftart by Swells 740-1611.
Leaving Town?
Airline Tickets
At airline counter prices
no extra service charge
Make your travel
arrival requests
on campus
See Maupintour Travel
Service for:
travel arrangements
* Eurail and Japan Rail Passes
- The lowest airfares—Complete
INDIAN EARTH
- Eurail and Japan Rail Passes
* Car rental—Hotel confirmations
* Student semester break holidays
* Travel insurance
ON CAMPUS LOCATION in the Student Union and 900 Mass.
carries
Special for students. Haircuts $7 and permits $25
Chaskie, ask for Deven Jensen. 843-330-6
Washing, manicure, pedicure, bleaching.
Waxing, handling, manicure, pedicure.
Maunintour travel service
The all in one, non-cosmetic cosmetic
927 Mass.
11. 36 PITCHERS 4-7 p.m. every day. Also enjoy scrimmation subliminal sandwiches, great tunes, video & game games, and the sunshine on our front yard. Learn to block north of the Union. Hawk Crossing 83-660.
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Make sense out of Western Civilization! Makes sense to use in a course on Western Civilization. For exam preparation. "New Analysis of Western Civilization" available now at Town City, The. (For the rest of the book see www.westerncivilization.com.)
SUDS·N·DUDS
(BAR OF LAUNDRONAT)
SOR stords
POOL tables
DRYERS THAT DRY!
west end of Holiday Plaza
749-4132
Rick's Bike Shop
Impress your datauge with the total environment of the Hawks Crossing. Groove on the front porch to great tunes, total sunshine and mega sunlight. Happy Crossing for sure, and then.
ROSES l bong stem, assorted colors, $1.50 each.
$3/doz. CARANTRIES - fresh cut, beautiful colors.
$1 each, 6 for 4. Echanted Florist, 2112 W. 25th.
Holiday Plaza - 843-8329
1033 Vermont BIKE SHOP 841-6642
Tunight - Party like it is 1999. While you are out, grab some healthy stuff; yellate at Yello Sub. Open late: Mom- Thurs' tit tlp i p. Fr.- Sat' tit tlp i m. Sun- Thurs' tit tlp i p. You if party at a dinner, Salden deliver 841-3268
Yarl Andresha would love Vera's Yelp坐
席. Andresha guaranteed to knock off your taste buds
during delivery.
SERVICES OFFERED
Great Plains Normatic Box 747
745 New Hampshire
Great Plains Numismatic Services
Box 747
745 New Hampshire
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
842-8001
Coin Investment Services
Beginner. Audit Piano Class. Special & week
call. Call 843-9756 for class times. Owen Piano &
week call. Call 843-9756 for class times.
Library Research - Editing - Typing, 815-20
library research - CSU - 320, French, individual sessions, call 841-490
Learn Tennisham summer from experienced instructor in small groups with other KU students, or private lessons. 845-5385 days, 749-3572 evenings.
Racquetball, tennis, squash racket string specializing in new graphite basketball. Tennis. New used equipment. Private lesson. New used, 845-5385 days, 749-3572 evenings.
TYPING
AFFORDABLE QUALITY for all your typing needs.
Call Lady. 845-7945 after 6 p.m.
24 Hour Typing. Fast, accurate, dependable All day. Mail resume to Aqwil Alaqub 90135 800-763-3333 AAY TYPING SERVICE 800-763-3333 II Unlimited document storage, with easy retrieval and editing. Ideal for papers, manuscripts, thesis and research.
Absolutely LETTER PERPECT typing - editing
Your work in our own business Professional/Ex
Jesus Christ!
Elvin could wiggle. Shakespeare could write Mr. talent- typing. Call 842-0434 after 5 o'clock & weekends. Experienced typist will type letters, Duesen and dissertations. IBM Correcting Selective. Call
Experimented kypal Term papers, there are all kinds of kypal papers available. Pica and may correct spelling. Phone 843-8544. Mkrs Pica,
Call TIP TOP TYPING - 1003 Iowa. Experienced
CALL TIP TOP TYPING - 615 memory Iowa, Roy correcting,
Jake correcting.
It's a Fact, Fast, Affordable, Familiar Typing, Word
Processing; you can afford it! 843-6230
TYFING PLUS. THEMES, dissertations, paper set
on the topic of grammar spelling etc. English tutoring
program, grammar spelling, etc. English tutoring
program.
http://www.sanderson.edu/tyfing.html
Professional secretary will do your typing; themes, themes, themes; durations 843-887 feet. 5:00 and 6:00.
GOOD WORK Good Clean work, word processing at
tips* rate. Call 8481311 for dependable service
WANTED
female roommate wanted for 2 bedrooms for: fall
& spring seminars. Free service bursary $150 mpi plus
a $180 roommate fee.
Female roommate wanted starting August for 3 bedroom apartment, on bus route. Responsible rent
Looking for mature, upper-level male roommate to share large two bedroom apt. for next school year. W/W carpet. A/C, dishwasher, owen room. $125.90 plus 1/2 electricity. 749-2022, ask for Loe.
preferred. For 2 bedroom apartment 4
blocks from campus. Prod. laundry, fifthhouser,
stores. Free Wi-Fi. No smoking. Non-smoking
two-bedroom apartment to share furnished
two-bedroom apartment, utilities paid. Call 769-8583.
Two-bedroom apartment to share furnished
bedroom 2 bathroom duplex. Pultely equipped
kitchen, garage storage deck. Verky can move in.
Bedroom 1 bathroom.
Roommate Aug. 1, 10/12 mo. lease, top 1/2 of older
Roommate $12 plus utilities ($vp. $30) 841-7401.
Roommate for furnished 2 bedroom at 1712
Tennessee for July and August. 843-3277 - $19.
L42K
Classified Heading:
Write Ad Here: ___
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Don't want to drive across town in the summer heat to send in your classified ad? Take advantage of this form and save yourself time and money while still receiving the satisfaction of placing your ad in the Kansan. Just mail this form with a check or money order payable to the Kansan to: University Daily Kansan, 118 Flint Hall, Lawrence, Ks 66045. Use rates below to figure costs.
Name:
Physics
1 time 2 times 3 times 4 times 5 times
15 words or fewer $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00 $3.25
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Page 10
University Daily Kansan, July 13, 1983
-
TV rights to college football unresolved
By ED GROM Staff Reporter
The NCAA has lost control of television contracts for college football games unless a court ruling Monday is overturned. The NCAA Court, the NCAA official said yesterday.
Dennis Cryder, NCAA assistant television program director, said that because of the ruling by the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Denver, the NCAA would not have the power to negotiate television rights for schools unless the Supreme Court overturned the ruling.
The ruling also clears the path for an appeal to the Supreme Court by the NCAA in its dispute with the universities of Oklahoma and Georgia.
ON MONDAY, the Court of Appeals upheld a lower court's decision to void $281.1 million in television contracts with the NCAA. The ruling frees colleges to make separate network deals.
The universities filed suit last August challenging the NCAA's authority to negotiate television contracts for member schools.
"What Georgia and Oklahoma did was challenge the NCAA's right to determine who televises their games," said KU athletic director Monte Johnson. "Should the case come out in favor of the two schools, rights of football games could be negotiated with more than the usual networks."
UNDER THE CURRENT NCAA contract, ABC, CBS and Turner Broadcasting System were the only television networks allowed to telewise live college football, according to Mike Brady, director at the University of Oklahoma.
What it all boils down to, Treps said,
is money.
He said that an open market for TV rights would strengthen college football as a television product and that bids for the rights of games would go up.
"Talks between schools and television companies is an open market right now, and any school can talk with any TV company." Treps said.
THE ONLY PROBLEM, he said, was whether any other contracts for schools around the country would be signed before the coming season.
"The season is coming up in less than two months," Treps said, "and we do
not have a contract. There is not enough time to put together an attractive agreement.
"In a way, what we were hoping for if the courts overturned the NCAA was to go through the 1983 season with the present NCAA contract and then start the new system in 1984 so the best possible contract could signed."
Last month, representatives from the 60 member schools of the College Football Association, including Johnson, met in Dallas and voted to draw up a new name for TV networks in case the courts ruled in favor of Oklahoma and Georgia.
"It has been apparent that the stay was going to be lifted, so we needed to draw up a contingency plan," said Elaine Donahue, administrative assistant to the executive director of the CFA.
"NOW THAT THE LATEST ruling has been announced, we are arranging a meeting with all 60 schools to discuss the contingency plan."
She said that although the place and time of the meeting was not finalized, it would take place before the end of the month.
Johnson said that if the NCAA lost its power in negotiating contracts for schools, there would be group pack-crew contracts and individual contracts, for the coming seasons.
"I'm sure there would be an arrangement where one group would represent a lot of schools," Johnson said. "The CFA would make arrangements or turn that task over to conferences."
Before the contingency plans can become legal, Treps said, the Supreme Court will have to resolve the dispute.
AT THIS TIME, Cryder said, the NCAA legal counsel is in the process of drawing up a case proposal for the Supreme Court, but it could be several days before the court decides to consider the case.
The Supreme Court is in recens until October, but the court has gone into emergency sessions before, Cryder said.
"If the Supreme Court does not decide to hear the case or if it rules against the NCAA, the present NCAA contract will be null and void." Cryder
Blue Jays beat Royals on two-run grounder
Bv United Press International
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Will Upshaw hit a ground ball through a drawn-in infield last night, allowing two runs to score and giving the Toronto Blue Jays a 9-6 victory over the Kansas City Royals.
Cliff Johnson opened the eighth with a walk, and the Royals countered by bringing in Dan Quisenberry.
Pinch hitter Jorge Orta then reached on a tap in front of the plate, and Lloyd Moseby, also pinch hitting, put down a bunt that Quisenberry fielded but had no play on.
UPSHAW, ANOTHER PINCH hit, hit a two-hopper toward Kansas City second baseman Frank White. City second baseman into right field and two runs scored.
The final run scored on a grounder by Alfredo Griffin. Steve Renko, 5-7, was the loser.
The Royals had tied it 6-6 with
four runs in the seventh, three coming on a George Brett homer and the other on Willie Worsham's RB II. In the reliever reliever Roy Lee Jackson, 7-1.
Jackson came in for Blue Jay's starter Doley Alexander Alexander and pitched 6 i/8 innings, giving up seven hits and four earned runs.
The Blue Jays used four home runs to take a 6-1 lead over the first four innings. Barry Bonnell his sixth of the year in the first, and Toronto added five runs in the fourth to chase starter Vidal Blue, who has hit six homers since Johnson opened the fourth with a bunt single and George Bell, called up Monday from Syracuse, lineed a homer into the left-field bleachers.
Jesse Barfield then walked, and Buck Martinez made it 5-0 with a shot over the center-field wall.
Renko replaced Blue and was greeted by Dave Collins' first homer of the year.
Fisk continues hitting home runs, Bannister nabs shutout as Sox win, 8-0
By United Press International
Willie Aikens had three hits for the losing cause.
The Chicago battery was fully charged at Comiskey Park last night.
Carlton Fisk continued his slugging surge with two home runs and Floyd Bannister pitched his first shutout in a year to lead the Chicago White Sox to an 8-0 rout of the Cleveland Indians. Fisk hit his 12th homer of the year with one out in the first off Lary Sorensen, 4-8, and smashed a two-run shot in the seventh against Jerry Reed. The Chicago catcher has hit eight home runs and driven in 16 runs in his last 17 games.
BANNISTER WALKED three and struck out eight in picking his 11th career shutout. In winning his fourth, Cleveland was the only team he limited Cleveland to just five hits.
The White Sox broke the game open with three runs in the second inning. After Harold Baines led off with a double to right, he scored on the first of three singles by Ron Kittle. Kittle took third on Vance Law's single to right and scooted on Jerry Dybzkin's base but only run scored on Julio Cruzsingle.
in other American League games,
seattle nipped Boston 3:2. Baltimore
caught up in the playoffs.
In Boston, John Moses had an RBI single and Spike Owen drove in a run in the fifth inning to rally the Mariners. The "Mariners" Bryan Clark won his fourth game in six decisions and in the first of his 23 innings to pick up his 16th save.
Minnesota 4-3, Milwaukee throttled Texas 9-2, Toronto beat Kansas City 9-6 and Detroit beat California 5-4 in 14 innings.
IN BALTIMORE, rookie Allen Ramirez and Tim Stoddard combined on a six-hitter and Eddie Murray cracked a two-run homer to lift the Orioles to their third straight triumph. Ramirez, 2-0, outdued rookie left-handier Gorman Heimueller, who had scattered four hits in his major-league debut until Murray's 15th home in the eighth inning.
In Minneapolis, Jerry Mumphrey drilled a two-run single with two out in the eighth inning to cap a three-run outburst and rally the Yankees. George Frazer, 3-1, relieved Meckough who had a no-hitter through six innings
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In other games, Cincinnati topped
York 2-2 and Houston beat
Montego 1-0.
Claudell Washington scored the go-ahead run on a throwing error by Philadelphia catcher Virgil in the eighth inning. He took the ball, led off the eighth with a double, stole third and scored when Virgil's high throw went off the glove of
— in the seventh and got the victory.
In late games, it was Chicago at San Diego, Los Angeles and Pittsburgh at San Francisco.
In Detroit, Wayne Krenchkii slammed a two-out double against the wall in right-center field to score Chet Lemon in the bottom of the 14th to lift the Tigers. Loser Mike Witt, 4-6, got the Lemon on a 3-2 pitch. Krenchkii then powered a 2-2 pitch for his first hit in seven at-bats in the game.
In Arlington, Texas, rookie Chuck Porter hurried a seven-hit to record his first major-league victory, and Cecil Cooper drove in three runs with a single hit. The Rangers' 18-hit attack. It was the Rangers' fifth loss in six games.
IN THE NATIONAL LEAGUE.
Philadelphia seemed headed for a split of a double-header with Atlanta until the Braves' costly ninth-inning error provided the host Phillies with a sweep and first place in the Eastern Division.
walked, Von Hayes singled to center and Ozzie V丽古lirced an RBI single to right. Looser Steve Bedrosian, 5-3, then intentionally walked Greg Gross to load the bases. Larry Milbourne hit a grounder to Rafael Ramirez, who threw to Hubbard for the forcec, but Hubbard's relay went wide of first and into a photographers' box as the tying and winning runs crossed the plate.
IN THE FIRST GAME, Denny, 7-5,
allowed three hits and one run in seven
innings before being relieved by
Holland, who notched his eighth
by striking out five in the last two
innings. Denny, who lowered her ERA
to 217, got 13 of his first 15 outs on
grounders.
Braves second baseman Glenn Hubbard's wild throw in the ninth allowed two runs to score and gave Philadelphia a 7-6 victory over Atlanta for the nightcap triumph. In the first game, John Denny and Al Iafrey threw out Garry Maddox stroked a two-run triple to lead the Philies to a 4-1 victory.
Philadelphia had drawn within 6-5 with one out when Mike Schmidt
third baseman Schmidt and into left field. Two outs later, Chambliss added his 12th homer.
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The University Daily
KANSAN
University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas
Vol. 93, No. 158 USPS 650-640
Friday, July 15, 1983
Weather
Today will be mostly sunny with a high in the low to mid 90s, according to the National Weather Service. Winds will be from the south at 15 to 25 mph.
Tonight will be fair with lows from 70 to 75.
Tomorrow will be mostly sunny, with highs in low 90s.
Jo Jo White fired; team stunned
By ED GROM Staff Reporter
Nearly four months after the firing of head Coach Ted Owens, members of the KU basketball team were stunned yet again, this time by the firing of Assistant Coach Jo Je
Head Coach Larry Brown fired White yesterday from the coaching staff for what he called "philosophical differences" between the two men.
"I MADE MY DECISION based on philosophical differences and you can read into that what you want," said Brown, who was hired in April to replace Owens.
"I know a lot of people around liked Jo Jo and I was hoping that he would be around for a few months," he said.
White, 36, who was hired as assistant coach in July 1961, has an unidentified phone number and an address on file.
A few of the players had already learned about the firing as early as Tuesday morning when White shocked forward Kerry Boagin, Gardena, Calif., sophomore, with the news.
Jo Jo White
"IT WAS A SHOCK. I couldn't believe it. I still can't believe it."
"I so called the morning after he was fired and told me," said Bogni, a prize recruiter of
"I was very close to Jo. He was a tremendous figure in my life, but Coach Brown must have thought that the move was for the benefit of the team or he wouldn't have made it.
"I will always hold Jo White in the greatest respect and I still feel the same about Coach Woodson."
Sophomore guard Ron Kellogg, Omaha, Neb., sophomore, once who said he could play at KU because of White's impressive recruiting pitch, said that he, too, was shocked by the firing.
"I was deeply hurt when Coach Owens was fired and this hurts just as badly," Kellogg said. "I don't think the news will hit me until the season starts.
"YOU HAVE TO MOVE on, though. This is something every player in this game has to get."
Brown, who returned to Lawrence Monday from a three-week vacation in Europe, said that he talked to Athlete Director Monte Johnson on Monday. Johnson told Monday and then notified White that evening.
Johnson said that he did not want to comment on the firing of White, but he did confirm that Brown had talked with him before the decision was made.
"I have nothing to do with the hiring and firing of assistant coaches," Johnson said. "That is in line with our policy."
Brown said that he would retain Assistant Coach Bob Hill on his staff and that part-time assistant Jim Haney would assume White's duties until a replacement was named.
HANEY, FORMER HEAD COACH at the University of Oregon, was hired by Brown in May.
"I just found out about it this morning when I called the office," said Hill, who is in Pittsburgh.
"I have been gone for two and one-half weeks, so I don't know the details. I haven't had a chance to talk to either Larry or Jo at length about the situation, so I am not going to say too much."
Carl Henry, Oklahoma City senior, said that he had heard rumors that White was going to be fired as early as Monday and that he still could not believe the news.
"I heard a rumor going around the last few days and I heard the news two days ago from another player. Henry said. "I was hoping the rumor was false. I don't know when the news will sink."
"LARRY BROWN is the coach and you have to respect any decision he makes. He is a great coach and I don't think he would make any move if it wouldn't help the team."
Tim Banks, Long Island City, N.Y., senior,
said that White was the person responsible for
JUMBO POPCORN
CANDIES
Amy Brown, concession clerk at Varsity Theatre, 1015 Massachusetts St., stirs through a giant mound of popcorn. Although many people think movie prices are high, theaters make most of their profit from concession sales. See related story, page 3.
Stephen Phillips/KANSAN
Some professors dissatisfied by delay in salary increases
Rv ANN REGAN
Staff Reporter
Last Friday the Board of Regents gave final approval for a 4.5 percent salary increase for faculty members at the University of Kansas, but it will not go into effect until the first of the year. And for some faculty members it was too little and too late.
"Most of the faculty is somewhat less pleased than the administration with the 4.5 percent raise, especially in light of the fact that it doesn't even take effect until next year," Cameron Hurst, co-director of East Asian studies, said yesterday.
"IT IS TRUE that KU fared better this year than some other institutions, but we certainly didn't improve our miserable ranking in national surveys of average salary rankings." he said.
In salaries of associate and assistant profes-
sors, KI1 enlisted last of the 24 institutions.
In March the KU chapter of the American Association of University Professors released figures showing that during the 1981-82 academic year faculty salaries at KU ranked 21st out of 24 institutions the AAUP used for comparison.
Robert Cobb, executive vice chancellor, said that he thought the Legislature approved the six-month delay because of uncertainties last spring about the revenue that would be available
THE FIRST TIME faculty members will receive their merit pay increases will be Feb. 1, 1984, Cobb said.
Bill Hopkins, professor of human development, said that the fact that the increase was 4.5 percent rather than zero was good but that the delay hurt.
he also said that since he came to KU in 1970 he calculated that because of low pay increases and inflation the buying power of his take-home pay had decreased by 45 percent.
The $1.3 million KU has been allocated to pay for merit increases will be forwarded through KU vice chancellors to school and department heads who will distribute the money to faculty members based on merit evaluations. Warderman, KU budget director, said yesterday.
Merit salary increases are determined and recommended on the basis of an evaluation of a faculty member's performance in teaching, supervisory activities,VICE, vice chancellor of academic affairs, said.
Serving on a committee for a government agency would be an example of service, she
agency would be an example of service, she said. In fiscal year 1984 there are 1,357 full-time faculty members eligible for merit pay increases. Zimmerman said.
To be eligible for merit increases, faculty members must be full time and continuing in the
OF THOSE, 1,077, or nearly 80 percent, will receive an annual increase from 0.1 percent to 3 percent, he said. The remaining faculty will receive from 3 percent to 20 percent.
In fiscal year 1983 KU faculty received a 7.5 percent increase in merit pay. Of 1,364 faculty members eligible, 1,300 were recommended for merit increases.
Despite policy, few report harassment
By GUELMA ANDERSON Staff Reporter
Last year the University Council and Chancellor Gene A. Budig approved a policy dealing with sexual harassment, but some KU officials say that students and employees still are reluctant to make formal complaints alleging sexual harassment.
David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said Wednesday that people were either ignoring the problem of sexual harassment or dealing with it themselves.
"PEOPLE ARE FEARFUL that making a formal charge will give them visibility." Ambler said.
"I hear people tell me that it's a widespread problem, but in the six years that I have been here, only one or two cases have been directed to me."
The KU policy defines sexual harassment as unwelcome sexual advances, requests for sexual favors and other verbal or physical conduct of a sexual nature made toward students or employees and used as a condition of employment or academic decisions.
Roberta Ferrera, director of the KU affirmative action office, said that three formal complaints had been made this year — two cases that there had been about 12 informal complaints.
"Students and employees don't want to make an issue," she said.
In clear-cut cases of harassment, informal complaints were not effective, she said.
"WE'RE TIED BECAUSE we can't put the person accused of harassment on the defensive and we can't make an official charge," she said.
Ferron said she could not directly approach a person accused of sexual harassment in an informal complaint but she could indirectly make contact with the person by suggesting harassment counseling to the entire staff of the company, who would be responsible for the harasser, who could be male or female, worked.
The office of affirmative action investigates formal complaints in accordance with affirmative action grievance procedures. If mediation is not successful, the case will be heard by the
stuil, the case will be heard by th
see HARASS page 5
Uncle Sam going after unpaid loans
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — About 41,000 federal workers will get final notice soon warning that unless they start repaying their student loans, Uncle Sam will take up to 15 percent of their paychecks, a government official said yesterday.
Frank Krebs, a member of the Education Department's Student Loan Collection Task Force, said the "offsetting" of federal wages could begin within 60 days of receipt of the
KREERS, A TASK force management analyst,
said the warnings would be issued after a
meeting next month between the task force and representatives of each federal department.
The collection program was given new muscle last year by the Debt Collection Act of 1982, which authorized the government to offset student loans and pensions to repay defaulted student loans.
Unlike garnishing wages, which requires a court order, offsetting wages merely requires the government to have a legal document stipulating the debt — in this case the student debt.
In addition to final notices to 41,000 federal workers, similar warnings will be sent to about 200 retired federal employees who also have defaulted on student loans.
UNLESS THEY AGREE on a repayment plan with the government within 60 days of receipt of the notice, the government could take up to 15 percent of the loan and accumulate interest are settled.
The offset program is just one part of an effort by the federal government to collect $2.7 billion in defaulted student loans from an estimated 850,000 persons.
Last August, while several U.S. Attorney's offices filed suit against defaulters outside the government, a computer check identified 40,000 federal workers who had not repaid student loans.
LETTERS TO THEM resulted in 5,000 debtors making payments totaling $2.3 million.
Neighborhood
Foreign students say learning English at center is tough, but is rewarding
By ALBERTO SALDARRIAGA
Russ Elliott-Hodge, assistant instructor at the Applied English Center, and Chong Ho Lee Seoul, South Korea, discuss the grammar in Lee's writing. Lee must finish classes at the Center before he may enroll in the department of computer science.
Staff Writer
The first week Pedro Hidalgo stayed in Lawrence, he had to eat hot dogs and hamburgers because that was all he knew how to order in English.
Steve Zuk/KANSAN
"One day I tried to switch to a ham and cheese sandwich but when the guy asked me in a laser-speed speaking if I wanted white, brown, wheat, garlic or rye bread, and asked me what kind of sandwich it was, told him. "I give me a hot dog." "Hildag, a Santiago Chile, graduate student, said."
A YEAR AND A half later, he remembers that anecdote with a touch of humor.
"But I really had a hard time catching the English," he said. "I had to spend two semesters at the Applied English Center before beginning my research." He said he would have problems understanding some professors.'
Learning the English language can be tough, cumbersome, embarrassing, boring but always useful *t ad* - warding, according to several authors. We are here with those who are attending AEC courses this summer.
KAREN PEARSON, AEC teacher, said that learning English was important for academic success and equally important to enhance the quality of the time spent in this country.
in fact, the National Association of Foreign Student Advisors, NAFSA, has identified financial and English problems as the two main troubles of foreign students in the United States.
Sharing everyday experiences with English-speaking people, she said, cannot be accomplished without the help of someone familiar.
This summer there are 134 students enrolled at the AEC. Pearson said.
In a regular semester the figure varies from 325 to 400, said O. Dean Gregory, associate director of the AEC and associate professor of linguistics.
LAST FALL THERE were 371 students from more than 30 countries, he said. About 100 of them were from Hispanic countries, particularly Venezuela.
Tao Ming, who was an electronics instructor in
the people's Republic of China, said that for people from the Far East, speaking and understanding was the hardest part of the English language.
"I want to get my Ph.D. in electronic engineering," he said.
"I studied English by myself for five years in my country. I can read and write but I can't speak fluently." He caught me to catch less than 50 percent of what people say or what I listen from the TV," he said.
ALTHOUGH PEOPLE FROM the Far East have to learn the Latin alphabet and learn to write horizontally from left to right, he said. They are easier than learning the oral part of English.
“Besides, the use of slang makes it harder to understand.” he said.
Ata Alajoffi, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, special student who graduated in Arabic language in Saudi Arabia, has studied English one year at the AEC
He said that the structure of the English language gave Arabs a lot of trouble.
"Constructions in Arabic are totally different from English. We use first the verb, after, the subject, and finally the object," Aloufi said.
"THE ARAB STUDENT naturally tries to change the sentence from Arabic to English and of course the result is an awkward construction.
"We also have problems with the vocabulary I try to learn 10 words every day, but after a week we get stuck."
"In addition, sometimes the dictionary shows how to pronounce a word and you hear it pronounced."
"The Arab culture has a strong emphasis in the oral language," Scott said.
Robert Scott, AEC teacher, said that though writing was the hardest task for every foreign student, it was one of the easiest.
'Of course, there are students who do it very
"We have to begin helping them to organize their ideas, to get used to writing in paragraphs from left to right and to write keeping on the paper lines.
**WE FIND THAT Arab students have little experience writing and we have to teach them**
Clemente Chica, AEC counselor, said that Hispanic people could manage speaking English in English classrooms.
well but usually writing is tough for Arab people."
"Writing is usually tough because in Spanish we are used to writing in the same way the word sounds," Chica, Bogota Colombi, Colombia, said.
FOREIGN STUDENTS spend an average of two semesters as full-time AEC students before switching to any KU school, according to Pearson, AEC instructor.
She said that after two or three semesters of English, foreign students could attend KU classes, but a lot still needed advanced composition courses.
Gregory, associate director of the AEC, said that they did not keep people in the English program longer than necessary.
"We are happy to say hello and happy to say good-bye," he said.
He also said that he knew five students who in one semester jumped from the introductory class to the second.
"THEY REFUSED TO speak their native language and decided to talk only in English," he said. "They became unpopular among their friends but they learned."
The AEC offers four levels of English courses elementary, intermediate, advanced 1 and advanced 2.
Students are placed in one of those levels, Gregory said, according to scores achieved from taking the Michigan examination, a stand-alone test according to recommendations from AEC teachers.
He also said that last spring the AEC had 40
see ENGLHLPAGE.9
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, July 15, 1983
News Briefs
From United Press International
Volcker endorses Fed plan for raising interest rates
WASHINGTON — Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker yesterday told a Senate confirmation hearing that possible Fed actions raising interest rates now could avert bigger increases later on.
Voleker told the Senate Banking Committee the Fed already has tightened its monetary policy somewhat and he also surprised some members by saying he is not committed to serving out his new four-year term.
President Reagan, following a long internal administration debate, announced June 18 he would nominate Volcker to serve another term as the 899.800-a-year head of the Federal Reserve Board.
The Fed's tight-money policies under Volcker's leadership have been credited with helping to cut down the inflation rate from double digits. Volcker will reveal the new Fed decisions next week when he makes a formal, annual report to committees of Congress.
formal, semi-annual report to committees of Congress.
Chairman Jake Garn, R-Ullah, said the banking committee would not vote on Volcker's confirmation until it received that report.
Nuclear arms talks recess until fall
GENEVA, Switzerland — The deadlocked U.S.-Soviet talks on medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe recessed for two months yesterday to give negotiators a chance to get fresh instructions from their governments.
ten governments.
The two sides agreed to resume negotiations on Sept. 8.
The two states agreed to resume negotiations. U.S. and other NATO officials say they think Moscow is stalling at the negotiations in the belief that anti-nuclear pressure on western European governments is increasing.
But NATO nations have been emphasizing their determination to proceed with plans to start deploying new U.S. missiles at year's end unless Moscow agrees to eliminate medium-range missiles in Europe or an interim low, ceiling.
In Moscow, the Soviet news agency Tass reported that the United States wants at any cost, to break what they feel is an arms parity in Europe.
NRC orders five plants shut down
WASHINGTON — The Nuclear Regulatory Commission yesterday ordered five nuclear power plants shut down because of growing evidence of nine cracks in crucial, reactor-cooling water lines.
The plants must undergo costly inspections and possible repairs of the massive piping systems that could take several months.
At least 11 other plants have also experienced potentially dangerous pipe cracks, but all are either closed for repairs or have already been removed.
A major part of the repair could cost a utility company $500,000 to $1 million a day.
the river plants ordered closed for inspection are: Quad Cities 2, Cordova, Ill.; Brown Ferry 3, Decatur, Ala.; Brunswick 2, Southport, N.C.; Dresden 3, Morris, Ill.; and Pilgrim 1, Plymouth, Mass.
Senate OKs weapon-testing agency
WASHINGTON — Over Pentagon objections, the Senate approved yesterday in a 91-5 vote an amendment to establish an independent testing office in the Defense Department to detect unsafe or ineffective "weather flowers."
**Warrior Tips**
A recent General Accounting Office report said more than $32 billion worth of new weapon systems had not been properly tested under combat-like conditions and might not even work.
The amendment said the new agency would be headed by a civilian director, subject to Senate confirmation.
The test manager will vote on the Pentagon panel that recommends whether to purchase new weapon systems; provide independent reports to Congress; increase the testing staff; and make testing a separate budget item.
Lifting of martial law expected soon
WARSAW, Poland — Parliament yesterday passed a law giving police sweeping powers and began work on legislation that Polish political sources said would lead to the lifting of marital law next week.
The leaders of the Solidarity underground denounced the regime for what they decried as an attempt to retain marital law but in disguise that it was actually illegal.
Polish sources said Gen. Wojciech Jaruzelski's government would order an amnesty for several hundred political prisoners and declare martial law over on July 22.
The new law gave police sweeping stop-and-search powers and guaranteed them the right to use tear gas, clubs, water cannons and dogs — tactics that became familiar during martial law.
Heckler seeks changes in child laws
WASHINGTON — Welfare secretary Margaret Heckler urged Congress yesterday to adopt tougher child support laws and attack a "national disgrace" that cheats young victims out of nearly $4 billion a year.
Heckler, head of the Health and Human Services Department, called for approval of a fund that would pay bonuses to states with good collection records.
The bill also would require states to deduct delinquent payments from parents' wages and to collect overdue payments from state tax refunds in welfare cases.
The Census Bureau reported last week 'that less than half the four million women awarded child support payments in 1981 are collecting the full amount. Unpaid child support amounts to nearly $4 billion a year, it estimated.
Dissident's wife opposes rights pact
Yesterday marked the fifth anniversary of the sentencing of Shcharansky, a Jewish computer technician. He was sentenced to 13 years in prison for treason and "anti-Soviet agitation" — chargesprompted by his request for permission to emigrate to Israel.
WASHINGTON — The wife of Soviet dissident Anatoly Scharikany said yesterday the United States should not sign a new human rights accord with Moscow because of his imprisonment and the denial of emigration rights to thousands of Jews.
The United States, the Soviet Union and other nations are at a Madrid conference preparing to sign an agreement reaffirming human rights
Jewish emigration from the Soviet Union has virtually ended.
Firefighers gain on tri-state blazes
LOS ANGELES — Firefighters disregarded near-record temperatures yesterday to gain ground on a rash of forest and brush fires in California, Nevada and Oregon that have blackened more than 19,000 acres.
An army of 4,500 firefighters was on the lines against more than a dozen brush and timber blazes. Authorities said at least one was the result of arson.
The fire caused 43 injuries and, so far, has cost $970,000. Injuries ranged from heat exhaustion to broken bones to contact with poison oak.
The conflagration began last weekend when a planned burning of standing brush flashed into the deep canyons. It was reported 60 percent controlled.
Congressmen face reprimand for misconduct
WASHINGTON - A House committee yesterday recommended that two congressmen be reprimanded for "improper sexual conduct" with teenage congressional pages, saying that Rep. Daniel Crane, R-II., had sex with a female page and that Rep. Gerry Studds, D-Mass., with a male page.
By United Press International
Studds acknowledged in a speech on the house floor he is a homosexual and said he made a "very serious error in judgment" 10 years ago.
Both congressmen admitted to participating in the affairs.
CRANE APOLOIZED for his "mistake" and said, "I'm human." 1
The Committee on Standards of Official Conduct, meeting in closed session, voted 11-1 to adopt the recommendations and report of special counsel Joseph Califano, who conducted a year-long investigation of allegations of sexual misconduct between teenage pages and House members.
A reprimand, if agreed to by the full house, has no effect on a con-
ference.
But he also said, "in no way did I violate my path of office."
only hope my wife and children will forgive me."
House Republican leader Bob Michel of Illinois said, "It is now up to the full House to make its judgment and act accordingly." He expected the House to act next week.
Califano's report said both pages consented to sexual relations with the congressmen and no laws apparently were broken. The papers have left Congress and were not identified. Both pages committee; they bear no grudges.
THE REPORT SAID Studds, 46, who is single, had a sexual relationship in 1973 with a 17-year-old male page, who may have been 16 when the relationship ended. In 1974, House veteran, made sexual advances in 1973 to two other male pages.
The committee said Crane, 47, who is married and has six children, had a sexual relationship with a 17-year-old female page in 1880. He is in his third
STUDDS, IN HIS DRAMATIC speech
to his colleagues acknowledging his sexual orientation, said he is not fighting the charges only because the "right to privacy is more important that proving in public the validity of the points I have made.
"It is not a simple task for any of us to meet adequately the obligations of either public office or private life, let alone both. But these challenges are made substantially more complex and both an elected public official and gay."
CALIFOAN IS CONTINUING an investigation of drug use on Capitol
The panel recommended that Studus and Crane should be reprimanded by the full House and that disciplinary action be taken against Howarth.
Jackson wants conference for minority problems
Bv United Press International
WASHINGTON—Civil rights activist Jesse Jackson asked the Justice Department yesterday to convene a hearing on the problems of blacks and minorities.
Jackson, head of Operation PUSH,
People United to Save Humanity, met with Attorney General William French Smith, Assistant Attorney General William Bradford Reynolds and other top department officials at a time when the administration is trying to repair its civil rights image.
SMITH TOLD REPORTERS the department would consider Jackson's idea, but made no immediate commitment to hold the conference.
still was actively considering running for president despite comments this week by Benjamin Hooks, executive director of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, and no chance of being elected in 1984.
"We must distinguish between opinion and scientific data," Jackson said, noting that some polls showed him running ahead of declared Democratic candidates.
He also criticized the government for selectively enforcing the Voting Rights
On another subject, Jackson said he
HOWEVER, SMITH TOLD reporters the Justice Department had been vigorously enforcing the Voting Rights Act since President Reagan took office.
President Reagan's controversial nomination of three men to the U.S. Civil Rights Commission as replacement for members who have opposed his policies.
The committee agreed, on a voice vote, to delay until September a recommendation to the Senate on confirmation of the secretary of public hearings tried.
In Washington, the Senate Judiciary Committee delayed a vote yesterday on
The committee votes originally were scheduled for yesterday, but several Democratic members asked for more time.
DEMOCRATIC LAWMAKERS and civil rights groups have sharply criticized the nominations, questioning the motives for ousting the incumbents
attack on the independence of the six-member commission and an effort to make sure it will endorse his views.
The nominees are John Bunzel, a senior fellow at the Hoover Institute, a conservative research organization in California; Morris Abram, a prominent New York lawyer with a long history of law; Michael Destroy, assistant professor of law at Catholic University in Washington and a leading opponent of abortion.
SEN. ORRIN HATCH, R-Utah, who presided over several hours of the day-long hearing on the matter Wednesday, questioned the need for another public hearing because several dozen civil rights groups, lawmakers and other witnesses already have testified.
They called the president's action an
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University Daily Kansan, July 15, 1983
Page 3
Local theaters helped by popcorn-eaters
By PAT COONEY Staff Writer
Lawrence movie-goers consume about 800 pounds of popcorn in theaters each week, and if they didn't, the team would be losing money according to area theater managers.
The concession is crucial to whether a theater breaks even. Charles Flink, manager of the Cinema Twin Theatres in Lawrence, said recently.
'WE ARE ACTUALLY losing money the first couple weeks we play a movie.'
All eight theater screens in Lawrence, including the drive-in, are owned and operated by Commonwealth largest theater chain in the nation.
Rance Blann, Lawrence manager for Commonwealth and a 15-year veteran of the business, agreed that concessions were a large part of the industry.
"When I look at the year-end figures, what we made for the year is very close to what we sell in concessions," he said. Most of the money that剧院送的票, for demonstration goes back to the companies that made the movies, Blann said.
STUDIOS DO NOT GET a flat rate from the theaters, but instead are paid a percentage of each ticket sold, he said. The percentage is based on a sliding scale - high the first week then tapering off
"For the first week of 'Return of the Jedi,' the fee was 82 percent, the highest I've ever seen," Blann said. "That is why we have to raise the price."
"We pay an average fee of $33 to 54 percent over the course of a year."
During the first week of "Jedi" Blann said, the state received 15 cents a ticket for tax, Lucasfilms Ltd., which produced the film, received $3.57 and the theater received 78 cents out of the $4.50 ticket price.
THE FILMS THAT Lawrence is allowed to show are determined by the availability of prints and what the studio will be a good attendance, Blann said.
He said he also attended regular meetings at the Commonwealth home office.
"We get to see films in advance and make a determination on which ones are going to be big, which ones we need now and which ones can wait." Blann
but sometimes there are just so few
prints available that we have to wait."
"Lawrence is high on the priority list.
Sometimes there is no room for a picture at the theaters and they have to wait until another movie leaves town, he said. That is what happened to "Survivors," starring Walter Mathau and Robin Williams.
"SURVIVORS" LOST OUT to "Porky's II" and ended up at the drive-in, a less desirable location, Blann said.
"This situation only happens twice each year — once in the summer and at Christmas," he said. "The studios release their big pictures at the same times. We wish they would spread them out."
"Last summer was a record for us, but this summer is even better for consistency. The big films last summer were a great time, and we spent a 21-week run in Lawrence."
So far this summer Lawrence has had several big hits, Blann said, such as "Superman," "Trading Places," "Bulls," "Thunder," "Octopus" and "War Games."
"Blue Thunder" is the only one that has left town.
A FILM'S STAY in town is determined by how long it makes money.
Blann said, but usually runs a minimum of four weeks.
Although he would not give specific figures, Blann said that in the six weeks since the opening of "Return to the Land" the organization of Lawrence had seen the picture.
"Every Monday, I decide which pictures will be held over and which ones we will get rid of," he said. "Sometimes people call and ask what will be playing next week and I can't always tell them."
"Jedi" is being shown at the Granda Theatre downtown because it has the largest seating capacity and is one of two Lawrence theaters with a Dolby sound system, Blann said. The Varsity Theatre across the street has the other.
BUT TECHNICAL CONSIDERATIONS are not the only factors in deciding where a movie will be shown, Blann said.
Usually reating capacity matched with expected audience size is the desired value.
With coming films such as "Jaws 3-D," Stephen King's "Cujo," James Bond in "Never Say Never Again," and Steven Speiberg's sequel to "Raiders of the Lost Ark," Blann sees no slackening in theater audiences.
Oread parking lot to close for repair
The parking lot on Oread Avenue, across the street from the K.S. "Boots" Adams Alumni Center, will be closed from July 18 until about Aug. 13, Don Kearns, director of KU Parking Services said yesterday.
The lot, known as R or lot 58, will receive a new asphalt surface, new curbs and a new entrance but will permit parking only. Kearns said.
KU employees who use the lot can park in X zone, adjacent to Memorial Stadium, until the lot is reopened.
On the record
A CAGE AND a ferret named "Cindy," valued at $80, were stolen from a locked car parked at the Travelodge Motel, 801 Iowa St., Wednesday morning, police said. Thieves entered through windows left partially open by the owner to allow air circulation.
THE MANAGER OF Green's Party Supply, 808 W. 23rd St., reported Wednesday afternoon the theft of a keg of beer and a carbon dioxide canister, worth $250, police said. The manager told police that a man had rented the
keg and canister by paying with a check from a closed account.
Police said they had given the check to the district attorney's office.
A TOPEKA WOMAN was released on a $2,000 bail bond Wednesday night after being arrested for the theft of three maternity dresses, valued at a total of $122. From Lady Mademia Maternity Boutique, 18 Eth. St., police said.
According to police, four women entered the store and one of them removed the dresses from a rack.
THE AUXILIARY'S supervisor,
Leroy Farmer, the group met once a month for two-hour training sessions
"Some of the training includes
The volunteers are not paid Johnson said, but the county provides uniforms and training for them.
He said that although the auxiliary was used mainly to direct traffic during high school and KU football and basketball games, members were trained to perform the same duties as police officers.
FARMER SAID SOME of the best training came from riding with a deputy, which the volunteers do once a month.
"It teaches them how to get along with people in law enforcement situations," he said.
The auxiliary, he said, is composed of qualified people from all walks of life.
Farmer said, however, he would like to see the auxiliary have even more training in case the county police are trained law enforcement officers.
Farmer said the screening process for members had been successful.
After about 100 hours of training, an individual is ready to be assigned to duties. Farmer said.
During a disaster, he said, the group can help to administer emergency care to injured people, to transport them and to search for missing persons.
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"WE HAVEN'T HAD anyone go through training and on to become a member of the reserve who has seen what I said." I think that smokes for itself!
Farmer said that last year the volunteers had about 1,200 hours of on-the-job performance, not including classroom work.
Without the auxiliary, he said, the county would have to call back off-duty police officers and deputies to report any cases as the county and atlantic events
"WE WATCH FOR people who only want the badge so they can wear a gun. We have to be very cautious of that."
Police found the women preparing to enter a truck. When an officer asked the women for identification, one of them replied that she had no identification but that she needed to go to the bathroom. Police let the woman go into a bathroom at Sunflower International Casbah, 803 Massachusetts St., but when she returned they noticed that her purse was no longer bulging, they said. Police then entered the bathroom and found the dresses.
He estimated that the auxiliary saved Douglas County taxpayers $12,000 to $15,000 a year.
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"Applicants for the group are screened very carefully," Johnson said.
Evenings
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Sheriff's auxiliary helps take pressure off deputies
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FUNKHOUSE 109, 236, 417
STUDIO 109, 236, 417
STOPMART 109, 236, 417
MOVIES 109, 236, 417
THE GENERAL MUSIC BAND ARE THE NEW ENTERTAINMENT OF THE CITY
Evening 7-9:20 Mall. Sat. Sat. 2:15
A different kind of game:
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Evenings 7:20-8:30
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Today, the Douglas County Sheriff's Auxiliary, a group of 13 men and one woman, saves Douglas County thousands of dollars each year by volunteering time to help pay for her law enforcement-related duties.
The auxiliary is endorsed by and receives money from Douglas County, and according to Douglas County Sheriff Rex Johnson, there is no need to worry about hostile vistantes.
a different kind of game
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TRADING PLACES
A PARADISE PICTURE
Eve. 7-20 9-30; Mat. Sat. Sun. 2-15
Staff Writer
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Did you know that your student activity fee funds a law office for students? Most services are available at NO CHARGE!
In the early 1970s, a time of civil strife for college towns throughout the country, many Lawrence residents thought that if a volunteer was carried out, it would become an out-of-control group of armed vigilantes.
- Advice on most legal matters
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117 Satellite Union 864-5665
- Preparation & review of legal documents
- Many other services available
- Notarization of legal documents
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841-3268
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The Gramophone Shop Wholesale Division is unique in that you can purchase at or below so-called "sale" prices at any time and yet receive better service than mail order houses. You can receive your equipment immediately, in factory-sealed cartons; the units are not demos or factory dumps. You know what you are getting and you can get it now!
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Page 4
Opinion
University Daily Kansan, July 15, 1983
Downtown needs a vote
Lawrence is a city divided in many ways. It has the Kansas River splitting it neatly into north and south Lawrence. It has everything west of Iowa street considered West Lawrence and everything east of New Hampshire considered East Lawrence.
But a more subtle division is occurring in the minds of the citizens of Lawrence: Whether to redevelop the downtown area.
The issue has been around for a while, but when grumblings were heard about a suburban indoor shopping mall, the City Commission decided to get moving.
It's easy to see why downtown Lawrence is afraid of malls.
They're convenient. They're comfortable. You don't get wet when it rains or cold when it snows and they have everything you've always wanted under one roof. Oak Park Mall in Overland Park even has a low-cost medical clinic.
The Greater Kansas City area is expanding southward, toward the malls. Of course the planners knew that when they were built. The suburbs
are thriving and the metropolis, well, it's surviving.
Lawrence is expanding southward and westward. The Lawrence mall was going to be placed south of the city. Sound familiar?
It sounded familiar to the City Commission and it decided to nix the mall and get to work on a downtown plan. To make a long story short, Lawrence has a plan now, and it seemed to be going quite smoothly until the April city elections. That's when the voters elected David Longhurst and Mike Amyx to the commission. They don't like the plan one bit.
Could their reluctance have anything to do with the fact that they have downtown businesses that will be affected by the redevelopment scheme?
Before this issue dies at the hands of a few people in powerful positions, it should be brought before the voters. Perhaps then, the leaders of the community will have an idea of what the people who elected them think of the plan. Then, and only then, should further decisions be made.
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Israel, US keep their eyes on PLO
as PLO rebels demand a holy war against Israel and fight Yasser Arafat's leadership, American and Israeli officials surprisingly react to the change in the Palestine Liberation Organization
Recently, Arafat's loyalists decided to withdraw their forces from the Beka'a Valley in eastern Lebanon to avoid clashes with Syrian and Libyan-backed rebels.
What would be best for Israelis and Americans? To have Arafat — the most wanted terrorist in Israel — eliminated from the PLO leadership or to give that power to a Syrian leader.
Yasser Arafat's fight for a Palestinian homeland has been changing international politics. He has gone to socialist countries and even to the Vatican to ask for support for the PLO. International news agencies have always covered PLO actions closely.
Although Arafat showed some flexibility in the six-man PLO delegation meeting in Damascus, Col Saed Mouss, the rebels' leader, did not trust the decision.
Unfortunately, Israelis and Americans do not trust Arafat either. Their judgment of the leader's attitude toward world peace is questionable.
Because PLO rebels were frustrated with the Beirut defeat last year, they rejected Arafat's diplomacy. His moderation is a problem for Israel, because of his determination to reach a
1
KATIA SILVA
Guest Columnist
solution for the Palestinian cause. With the radicals — PLO rebels, Syrians and Libyans — in control, instability in the MidEast is certain.
However, Israeli radicals want the rebels to win that there will be no need to negotiate about the West Bank and the Gaza Strip. Israel and PLO expert Matti Steinberg of Newsweek
magazine said. Meanwhile, the Israeli moderates know that a radical PLO turn will send Israel to war.
Arafat's unpopularity is leading Americans and Israelis onto the wrong path. In such a situation, their interests — supposedly to get peace in the Mideast through an agreement with the PLO and Syrian forces — are obviously in danger. But Secretary of State George Shultz does not realize the need for Arafat's leadership of the PLO.
In an interview in Newsweek he said a Syrian-controlled PLO would be beneficial for Lebanon peace talks, since "the greater the Syrian control, the likelier that if Syria withdraws, the PLO will,too." But will Syria ever withdraw?
The danger of a Syrian-controlled PLO is clear. So, why does Shultz believe the PLO mutineers will help Americans reach their interests in the Mideast? Is peace the interest he is defending? With the all hatred involved, it seems that Israeli and Palestinian radicals' interest is in fighting a holy war.
Chilean housewives joining unions in strike
Everything is not quiet on the Chilean front anymore. Gen. Augusto Pinochet, the dictator of Chile for nearly 10 years, is hearing voices of protest. For the first time since the military took over in 1973, the country is witness to national strikes.
May 11 and June 14 were observed as days of "national protest" and there have been anti-government demonstrations ever since, copper miners being an integral part of them. Rodilo Seguel, president of the largest copper union, was arrested while sleeping one night as Gen. Pinochet threatened to send civilian leaders "to your caves so that this problem will end."
If the problem was that simple, it would end, but it seems that the unions have finally decided to have a showdown with their rulers. Pinochet, the incredible man, won a 1980 referendum extending his authoritarian rule for nine years. But now the question is whether he can carry out his laughable plan to retain power for six more years.
Things seem to have changed since Pinocheto took power in Chile in a bloody coup against the democratically elected but Marxist government of Salvador Allende. History says that the CIA was behind it, with the light was given by the light was given by Kissinger because the cost of the coup to the American government, which was only a few hundred million dollars, justified the end.
So, Pinochet was installed as the new anti-communist ruler of Chile. It is futile to reflect now on what Allende could have done, but Pinochet certainly hasn't done much for his country. He has made his very own contributions to the problems. Unemployment stands at a
stolid 30 percent and inflation is keeping it company with a soaring 28 percent. The wages have been frozen for two years and the gross national product showed a plunging of 14 percent
The economy is clearly a disaster area and so far Pinochet has not been able to remedy the dire conditions that led to the protests. He, of course, blames the Chilean Communist Party for the collapse of the Interior Ministry and the Chileans "not to be provoked by the Marxists" into counterviolence.
Despite the violence and wide support for the strikes, the government shows few signs of compromise. Pinchett says that he will serve his current term to 1989 before calling for elections.
Virat Singh
The demonstrators say that they will settle for nothing less than his removal. Gen. Pinochet's power cannot be underestimated and neither can the force available to him. But the sooner the elections are held the less radical the results will be.
SEEMA SIROHI
The Reagan administration's outlook seems to be that Chile is authoritarian, but anticommunist, and therefore, deserving of love and affection. Since President Reagan's term, official bank loans have been resumed and the Navy has visited the Chilean shores. It has been
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two years and Chile still has not met the minimal human rights conditions needed to stand in line for American aid.
But then such qualifications are usually ignored when it comes to preserving a passionately dedicated right-wing government, whatever the price. This seems to be a familiar story in South America where history gets to repeat itself quite often. There seems to be a cycle of military dictatorships, or disarmament, which leads to the military aid to control the insurgence, more deaths, revolutionary government and a military coup — and it goes on.
Pinochet is at a difficult stage of his dictatorship. The ruling elite and many people and groups who were initially "understanding," if not vehemently favorable, think that the present government is responsible for the ruined economy. So much so, Chile's Roman Catholic bishops have urged the military regime to end censorship, respect the rights of striking workers and "listen to the people." The Catholic Church is an important voice in South America and often a revolutionary one. The statement issued by the bishopsaid, "Dissent is an innate right," and it includes "the right to strike in certain circumstances."
It appears that the "certain" circumstances have arrived and along with the miners, truckers and students, the housewives have come out on the streets banging their pots — a traditional form of protest in Chile. Now one can only hope that the right ears will hear the banging pots.
Tongue-in-cheek weaponry safer than a loud Walkman
By JAMES O. CLIFFORD United Press International
SAN FRANCISCO — There's real danger that nuclear weapons will become America's Maginot Line, giving us a false sense of security while the enemy perfects a weapon that will render us powerless.
Believe me, I am committed to a strong national defense and would never, never do anything to aid the U.S.S.R. or undermine our moral fiber, if there's any left.
However, my sources, which I can't name, tell me Soviet scientists are well on the way to perfecting a device that will render our youth more intelligent, freezing them in place like so many status.
The weapon is devilishly simple: a beam that silences any radio playing loud music.
Just open your ears the next time you walk down any busy street and you'll know how the cormorants fly.
Teenagers carrying radios as heavy as a machine gun plow through crowds blaring songs that drown out police sirens. Cars roar by with windows down and horrible sound fences flanked by tank drivers. A bank driver, who day could become as immobile as Hitler's Panzers stuck in Russian mud.
One is not even immune on buses that here have signs reading: "No smoking, eating or radios." Smokers are thrown off but I've yet to see anyone tell somebody to "turn that &?$!&½² thing off."
I catch my bus at 5 a.m., the same time a young man opens a gas station near the depot. The first thing he does is switch on a radio that wakes the neighborhood before the roosters crow. It's as regular as the flag raising at Fort McHenry.
I have teenage sons who can't take a shower without a radio on. I asked the oldest how he could hear it with the water running and he answered, "I don't hear it. I feel it."
When they mow the lawn several portable radios are placed at strategic spots so no matter where you go, the battery is always on.
And study without a radio on? You've got to be kidding.
Remember the scene in "Gundacanal Diary" where Marine William Bendix becomes frustrated because the radio he's lugged ashore breaks down just when the announcer's about to broadcast the final score of the World Series? Bendix wanted to know something, not feel it.
Contrast that with the radios blaring from helicopters as they attack in the Vietnam War
If the enemy had the weapon the Russians are working on, they wouldn't even have had to fire a shot.
We may just have to end up fighting the next big one with people over 40. They'll have enough sense to go home and pull crabgrass — and where will national defense be then?
On the other hand, maybe the Russians have the same problem.
Perhaps someday *SALT* will stand for Strategic Audio Limitation TAs.
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Business Office-364-4358
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Letters to the Editor
Not a guru, just a simple, macrobiotic guy
To the editor:
To the editor:
I appreciated the opportunity of having some of my views on macrobiotics printed in your brief article "Macrobiotics guru promotes simple, natural diet" on July 8. However, there was some wrong information presented and, in my opinion, poor interpretation done by the reporter.
First of all, the East West Center is located at 4321 Main St., Suite 205, Kansas City, Missouri, 64110. There, we present macrobiotic cooking classes and workshops which cover the entire scope of macrobiotics, including diet, psychological and spiritual development, natural healing and exercise. We do not present classes on "medication" as reported in the article.
Secondly, macrobiotics encourages one to establish a life of care and appreciation for each other and the environment as well as promoting healthy living based on a natural diet consisting mainly of whole cereal grains and fresh vegetables.
The high quality of nutrition derived from whole, microbiotically prepared food is unsurpassed. Contrary to the article, there are many medical professionals who recognize the benefits of macrobiotics. Their reports have appeared in The New England Journal of Medicine, The Journal of the American Medical Association and other medical publications, Harvard Medical School researchers have monitored the positive changes made by people who practice macrobiotics and the August 1982 issue of Life magazine featured an article on the results of the application of macrobiotics to the relief of cancer.
On the East coast, the Lemuel Shattuck Hospital of Boston offers macrobiotic food service to its staff and patients. The hospital is presently studying the effects of macrobiotics on its psychiatric patients. The Tidewater Detention Center is conducting research on the effects of macrobiotics on the health of the names of scientific medical institutions. The names of scientific medical institutions are interested in macrobiotics are too numerous to completely list here. And judging from the steady increase of physicians, nurses and other medical professionals who attend our classes and seminars, I can definitely
The Topena physician referred to in the article does not realize that macrobiotics does not offer a single diet for everyone but a dietary principle that takes into account differing climatic and geographical considerations, varying ages, sexes, levels of activity and ever-changing personal needs. I would suggest that he become familiar with macrobiotics by knowing the facts.
report that the medical community is beginning to acknowledge the value of macrobiotics.
Finally, I object to being referred to as a "guru." Anyone who knows me would find this reference ludicrous. Macrobiotics encourages everyone to establish freedom, understanding, health and happiness. There are no leaders and followers in true macrobiotic living. Each one is completely free to be and work in freedom and work is dedicated to helping people create for themselves healthy and happy lives which include freedom from the authority of gurus and anyone else.
---
In Friendship,
David Briscoe, director
East West Center
University Daily Kansan, July 15, 1983
Page 5
White
From page 1
him getting a full scholarship last year after he made the team as a walk on,
"He helped me out a lot with my basketball skills, but he got the scholarship for me," said Banks, who transferred from Colby Community Junior College.
"he talked to Ted Owens for me and got me the scholarship and he set the situation for me."
"He is a great guy and it is a sad situation right now."
WHEN OWENS WAS fired, some players talked about transferring to other schools.
Boagm said that he had not heard of any player talking about transferring since the White
"That was one of the reasons why Jo Jo called me the Tuesday," Bongni said. "He was worried about it."
"He said he wanted me to stay here because it would be in my best interest. He said that I had good people to play with and good coaches to play for. I am not going to transfer."
Kellogg said, "Transferring would put you four steps behind. I came to Kansas because that is the place I wanted to be for the next four years."
When Brown was first named as a replacement for Owens in April, the first move he made was to take his place.
"WHEN A COACH MOVES to a different job, he usually hires a new coach staff." Brown
"When I was hired here, Monte asked me if I had any plans for the assistant coach. I told
Monte that I would review the situation and decide whether to keep them on the staff or not.
"I looked over the situation again and thought about it a lot on my trip during the last three weeks and decided that letting Jo Jo go was the thint to do."
White was an All-America guard at KU during 1967-68 and 1986-89 and later played 12 seasons in the NBA with the Boston Celtics, the Golden State Warriors and the Kansas City Kings.
While at KU he led the Jayhawks to two Big 12 Conference championships and two appearances.
IN THE NBA he was a seven-time all-pro performer and a member on two championship teams with the Boston Celtics. He was named most valuable player in the championship series.
"I don't think he'll have too much trouble finding another job," Banks said. "He will be an asset to any team he goes to."
English
teachers, all of them majoring in teaching English as a second language.
From page 1
Gregory said the students' motivation for studying English varied from individual to group.
He said that, in general, older people tended to be more responsible than younger students and that people who had been exposed to other foreign languages learned faster.
Discrimination Hearing Board, according to the policy
If the board rules in the complainant's favor, sanctions imposed can be anything from ordering the harasser to cease the undesired activity to dismissal of the harasser from his or her job. The accused does have the right to appeal.
Harass
BEFORE A COMPLAINT can get to the formal stage, the victim must be sure that the person making the complaint is a law enforcement officer.
"Sexual harassment is easy to charge, but hard to substantiate." Amber said.
"I know of cases that the person being accused had no idea his actions were being interpreted."
Ferron agreed that that situation could occur. "Oftentimes a person may be joking when someone else perceives it as sexual intent," she said.
She said, however, that a person should be aware that his actions could be misinterpreted.
"If someone makes obvious suggestions about your clothing or body, then that is a verbal command."
SHIRLEY HARKESK, associate professor of sociology and former chairman of the policy committee on sexual harassment, said the main problem was figuring out exactly what sexual behavior is.
"The policy doesn't list the specific kinds of sexual harassment," she said.
Ferron said, "I don't think the policy is strong enough. The language in the federal policy provides for intimidating and hostile environments, but that was not included in our policy."
Harkness said that, in general, the policy had been effective and had increased the level of enforcement.
"I THINK IT is too early to suggest what else could be done because the policy has only been in effect for a year," she said.
effect for a year. She said that it would take some time before everyone was aware of the policy and the procedures that could be undertaken.
A brochure on the policy was to be developed last year, she said, but budget cuts prevented its implementation.
She said groups such as residence hall tenants
should conduct meetings to inform students about sexual harassment.
Ferron said the office of affirmative action would give separate training sessions for men and women employees this school year to learn general information about sexual harassment.
THE OFFICE ALSO has a new assistant director, Mary Hofferek, who will mediate harassment complaints.
Hofferek, who took office July 1, counseled students informally at the University of Missouri-Columbia on sexual harassment.
Watkins hires two doctors to start rounds this August
Watkins Memorial Hospital has hired two new physicians or the full semester, representing a new faculty.
Jim Strobl, acting chief of staff for the hospital, announced yesterday that the two physicians, James Patrick Walker, 2916 Westdale Ct., and Lawrence Magee of Washington, Kan., had accepted positions beginning this fall.
WALKER, 36, a graduate of the University of Oklahoma medical school, Oklahoma City, worked at Hutchinson Memorial Hospital before being hired at Watkins.
Strobl said that Walker would work at Watkins as a general practitioner.
Magee, 31, a graduate of the University of Kansas Medical School, is now working at Wake Forest.
"I'm excited about it. I went to school there and graduated from KU. I've always enjoyed Lawrence and the University. Most of my friends have been at KU. I'd like to get back to them." Magee said.
Magee also will be a general practitioner at Watkins.
A board of three doctors at Watkins screened five of 90 applicants before deciding who would be admitted.
The two new doctors will increase the staff of doctors at Watkins to 11.
SUMMER THEATRE SHINES
Kansas Repertory Theatre '83
Presented by The University of Kansas Theatre
Curtain time is 8 o.p.m /* 2 30 p.m. matinee in the Crafton-Preyer Theatre/ Murphy Hall
Tickets on sale now in the Murphy Hall Box Office
All seats reserved For reservations call 913/864-3982
Funded in part by the Student Activity Fee
V
Working
The Glass Menagerie
featuring a
KU/Community Cast
A new musical based on
Studs Tennis's book
Adapted by Stephen Schwartz
July 14, 17* 23
The Real Inspector Hound & After Magritte
By Tennessee Williams July 9 15 21 24*
By Tom Stoppard July 10* 16.22.24
celebrate BACK·TO·SCHOOL KU
KU
University Daily Kansan's Back-To-School Edition ★ Thursday, August 18, 1983 ★ Be There When The Students Return
Reach the 100 million dollar University of Kansas market with the medium that does it best—The University Daily Kansan. The University of Kansas market plays a very important role in the economy of many Lawrence businesses Therefore, spend your hard earned dollars where they do the most good.
1. The Back-To-School issue reaches approximately 30,000 students, faculty and staff.
3. The Karan is the best form of advertising to establish your business name with the students. The Back-to-School issue helps the advertiser make a first and last impression on new students, faculty and staff.
What the Kansan Back-To-School Edition has to offer you the advertiser:
2. The University market spends approximately 100 million dollars annually in the Lawrence community.
6. The Back-to-School issue is distributed to attain maximum exposure for the advertising dollars spent.
4. Wise purchase of an art space plus a creative layout makes sure your advertisement is noticed.
7. Two-day distribution during enrollment - Thursday,
August 18 and Friday, August 19.
9. increased press run (2,000 additional copies printed over normal press run).
5. The Back To-School issue has a longer life which means readership is greater than regular issues.
---
8
10. The Kannan is the best source to reach the University market.
Section I
Section II
Section III
Section IV
8. Increased distribution points on campus
Don't Miss These Deadlines!
Campus Sports Wrap
City & Area
Friday, July 15
Friday, July 22
Friday, July 29
Friday, July 29
Make Plans Now To Be In The Back-To-School Edition
The Oniv Way To Reach The Entire University Market
O
Contact your Kansan sales representative or call the Kansan Business Office 864-4358
PATIO SALE! up to 40% to 70% off
"The heat got us . . .
The heat got us . . .
So 'hot foot' it over to ridiculous sale prices on:"
A boy on a beach chair with his dog.
- Jackets
- Calculators
- KU Garments
- Posters/Prints
- Lamps
- Engineering Art
- Paperbacks
Supplies
- Greeting Cards
Today thru Saturday!
Jayhawk Bookstore
C
1420 Crescent Rd. On top of Naismith Hill
SUMMER SPECIALS 1983
A
HANNA HARRIS
Mon. 'Watermelons' $1.00 all night
Tues.' Survival of the Fittest'
(8:00-11:00)
All the beer and bar drinks
you can drink $3.00 cover
11:00 to close- 75' draws
and $1.50 bar drinks
Thurs. 25* draws and $1.00 bar drinks
(8:00-10:30)
50* draws and $1.25 bar drinks
(10:30-close)
Wed. 25* draws and $1.00 bar drinks (8:00-10:30) 50* draws and $1.25 bar drinks (10:30-close)
Fri. afternoon 5:00-8:00 two for ones on all drinks and half price food
Fri. & Sat. night
Late Night Happy Hour
11-midnight $1.25 bar drinks and 75' draws
GAMMONS SNOWE
23rd & Ousdahl So. Hills Center 842-3977
Page 6
University Dalv Kansan, July 15, 1983
Prof participated in Voyager I
By GUELMA ANDERSON Staff Reporter
Thomas Armstrong, professor of physics and astronomy and faculty adviser for the Ad Astra L-5 Society, knows first hand about the achievements that the United States has made in space.
His research contributed to the success of the space flight of Voyager I
IN 1972, ARMSTRONG, along with six other scientists, proposed a radiation experiment for the Voyager to visit Jupiter in 1979, and it was accepted.
He said that they designed an instrument that identified the different types of radiation around Jupiter and that the radiation's direction and speed
The experiment discovered an invisible plasma envelope, which is a mass of free electrons around Jupiter between 350 to 500 million degrees, beats the
The purpose of the Voyager flights, Armstrong said, was to solve the mysteries of Earth.
WHEN WE ARE BETTER able to understand how the Earth and its
P. J. WILSON
Thomas Armstrong
sister planets originated, this will let us understand more about the parts of the Earth that we don't have access to, such as its interior.
"We only sample a tiny Fraction of the Earth — the mere crust. You drill a hole one mile deep and you think you've got something, but the Earth is hollow."
"If you really want to know what the chemistry of the core is all about, you have to find out what other planets are made of."
He said that the National Aeronautics and Space Administration planned more Voyager flights in 1986 and 1989 to Uranus and Neptune
respectively, and that in 1986 one mission, Galileo, will go to Jupiter.
"Recently there's been a flurry of excitement about whether Galileo is adequately designed to survive the universe's surrounds, Jupiter, Amstrom said.
"They are worried that the radiation will come through and strike the computer chips that stores the data controlling the space craft.
"We have been called upon to make some re-analyses of our Jupiter data from the Voyager flight to shed light on this question."
ARMSTRONG HAS BEEN involved with the U.S. space program since his apprenticeship at the University of Iowa in 1962.
"I always had a great interest in science fiction, astronomy and space exploration, but I was more interested in space.
"I was building rockets in high school. There was little question in my mind that I wanted to do scientific things."
"THEY'RE NOT SUCCESSFUL by blind luck or magic. It's the fact that people worry about all of the things that can go wrong and try to assess them. I'm impressed with this."13
Space Week to lift-off tomorrow
By MICHAEL PAUL
Staff Reporter
The countdown continues toward tomorrow's model rocket launch at 23rd and Iowa streets that will begin the celebration of national Space Week.
The nine-day observance coincides with the dates of the first manned flight.
The launch of the model rockets is one of several events planned by the Ad Astra L-5 Society, a campus organization that promotes scientific exploration.
IN APRIL THE Kansas Legislature approved a resolution that declared July 16-24 of each year as Kansas Space Observance and July 20, the date of the first manned landing on the moon; as Space Exploration Day.
Although in the past two years all 50 states have issued Space Week proclamations, Kansas is the first state to declare a permanent commemorative holiday.
AD ASTRA is the KU-Lawrence chapter of the national L-5 Society and has about 45 members, said William Communications coordinator for Ad Astra.
Events scheduled for Space
launch include a rocket
launch in 23rd and 50th streets. In case
Events scheduled for Space Week:
STEAK BURGER!"
'IT'S NOT A HAMBURGER, IT'S A 1/2 LB.
includes medium drink & curly-Q-fries
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Minsky's Introduces
6-pks. beer to go.
Minsky's PIZZA
842-0154
2228 Iowa
SOUTHRIDGE PLAZA APTS
1704 West 24th (913) 842-1160
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
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montn
Heritage Management Corp.
paid
FORD
MOTORCYCLE
NEW PURCHASE? HOME IMPROVEMENTS?
CONSIDERING A VACATION?
Check with KU Federal Credit Union First!
Call a Credit Union loan officer when you are interested in getting facts regarding financing and interest rates.
K
KU FEDERAL CREDIT UNION 101 Carruth-O'Leary
Campus 864-3291
BUSINESS MOTORHOME
Hours M-F 9-5:00
of bad weather, the launch will be Sunday.
- 7:30 p.m. Monday, Frederick Pohl,
science fiction author, will speak in
Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas
Union.
YAMAHA
- 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, several NASA films will be shown in the Apollo Auditorium of the Space Technology Center on West Campus.
*9:30 p.m. Friday, July 22, a "star
particle at the KU Observatory on top of
the observatory"
ADAMS SAID THAT there were at least three reasons that space should be explored.
- 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, in the Apollo Airline officials from the U.S. Air Force, the space industry, the University of Texas and NASA assess the feasibility of space development
He said that space could be a source of raw materials that were of a limited supply on Earth. Asteroids, he said, are rocky bodies that could be used in construction.
L-5. Adams said, means "Lagrange libration point 5" and it refers to a point in the moon's orbit. Because of the Earth-moon gravitational pull, an object placed in orbit around L-5 is likely to be held in that orbit and, Adams said, would be an appropriate spot for a space colony.
Ad Astra, from the Kansas state motto, means "toward the stars."
exploration and development of space.
- 7:30 p.m. Thursday, NASA films will be shown in the Apollo Auditorium.
The L-5 SOCIETY was founded in 1975 and consists of more than 100 local chapters nationwide, Adams said. The society's purpose is to promote the
He also said that space had a cheap energy source — the sun — and that because of the lack of gravity in space, the energy was needed to operate machines.
w/purchase of 12" sub & this coupon
Good thru July 31st
But Shank is a flutist/axophorn of extreme versatility. The jazz world first took note of him in 1854, when he was named "NEW STAR" by *Downtown Best Music* and "Annual of the Year." By 1862, he had joined the Gramophone Company and phoné and Flute through the 50's and 60's. Going into the studios, he was for many years the "first call" choice in film and television. He also received the Academy Award for Best Director, the *Trojan War*, the *Trojan Women*, the *Twain Commission*, the *Thomas Crown Affair*, Summer of *42*, Shaft, and Planet of the Apes. The National Academy of Recordings Arts and Sciences have honored him with their "Meetable Value Player" award for his work in film, TV, and photographic recording.
THE JUKE JUMPERS
Bring a friend the Crossing 1/2 BLT FREE
1 sub/coupon 1 coupon/person
Also enjoy:
12th & Oread
1 block N. of the Union
stop in for a bite & a brew!
1/2 BLT FREE
- homemade cookies
DON'T MISS THE OPPORTUNITY TO SEE THESE WONDERFUL MUSICIANS IN THE INTIMATE SETTING OF THE JAZZHAUS. TICKETS ONLY $7.50
- the sunshine on our front porch
- ```markdown
- happy hour 4-7 $1.50 pitchers
1.
Call in's are FAST 843-6660
- occasional live music
VIII
Shorty Rogers is an outstanding arranger, composer and trumpeter/yugtshutron player who has recorded over 30 jazz albums for RCA, Capitol and Atlantic. His performing credits include work with such diverse players as Stan Kanton, Art Peeper, Peggy Lee and Carman McCrane. His studio credits include the scores for such series as the series "The Wonderful World of Jazz" and the series "The Wild One and The Man with the Golden Arm." But it as "The Founding Father of the West Coast School of Jazz" that he is best known among jazz musicians and listeners the world over.
One Bedroom
LUXURY APARTMENTS
---
PARKING
Saturday, July 16 A special Jazz presentation SHORTY ROGERS AND BUD SHANK Backed by the Tim Brewer Trio
I love you too much. I will always be with you.
starting at $245\frac{00}{month}$
M
S
Redbud Apartments
Heritage Management Corp.
...walking distance from campus
This week at the JAZZHAUS:
Fri., July 15
Rock n' Roll with the Bill Lynch Band
Bill Lynch Band
Use Kansan Classified.
--surprise! This is not a letter asking for more money I just applied for a guaranteed student loan at
The Jazzhaus 9261/2 Massachusetts
The
SUNDAY, JULY 17
The Juke Jumpers return!
Student Loans at The First are worth writing home about.
Dear Mom and Dad
The First Turtian and
expenses are covered for
paymenta
next semester and so on
don't begin payments until after graduation
Thanks for everything,
PS
send
Food!!
P.S
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Food!!
Stop writing home for money. Come to The First instead. Terry Boyer, our student loan manager, can help you get a guaranteed student loan to cover your
tuition and expenses at any approved college or university.
TheFirst We want to help.
The First National Bank of Lawrence
Ninth E. Massachusetts, Lawrence, Kansas 60044 (813) 645-0152
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The application form is uncomplicated, the interest rate is low,and your loan is processed quickly.
Stop by the 4th Floor Student Loan Office to see Terry. Then send the above note to your folks.
University Dally Kansan, July 15, 1983
Page 7
Jazzy summer planned in KC as masters perform in festival
Kansas City Jazz '83 will be held Labor Day weekend, Bob Rohfh, Starlight Theater general manager and festival spokesman, announced yester-
A hot jazz weekend is coming in August.
The 3-day festival is the first of who will be an annual event produced by a new, non-profit organization, the Kansas City Jazz Festival Committee.
THE FESTIVAL WAS developed to help revitalize Kansas City as a major city.
The festival will begin at 8 p.m.
Friday, Sept. 21 Crown Center
a celebration with honor God
Basie's 79th birthday. Basie and his
band will perform a tree concert that
will carry many of Kansas City's
total laziness.
On Saturday, Sept. 3, the festival moves to the lawn of the Nelson-Atkins
Art Museum where the Kansas City Parks and Recreation Department will sponsor a twilight jazz concert from 5 to 9 p.m., ending with the American Ballet Works artist Ernest Alain Hubert of Paris, France. Admission is free.
Also Saturday night, George Benson, internationally recognized jazz guitarist, will perform at 8 p.m. at Starlight Theater. Tickets prices are from $5 to $20.
On Sunday, Sept. 4, the festival moves back to Crown Center with a free showcase of Kansas City jazz artists performing from 1 to 5 p.m. in the square.
The festival will end on Sunday on a high note with a performance by Ella Fitzgerald and Ocyron Peterson at 8 p.m. Tickets prices are from $5 to $20.
KU students relaxing to the sounds of their favorite radio station in Kanaas or other parts of the country this summer may be joined by the students of a KU professor.
News service presents KU's perspective
For example, Russell Getter, KU associate professor of political science, was interviewed recently by the KU Radio News Service about the stolen briefing papers of former President Jimmy Carter.
By MARY ANN COSTELLO
A TAPE OF the interview has been made available to radio stations throughout the country to be used for training and for the office of University Relations
Staff Reporter
to record a tape of an interview by a University Relations reporter with a KU faculty member or visiting politician about a current news topic.
The news service has been providing tapes of interviews with KU faculty and guest speakers to radio stations across the country since 1979.
The interviews are about a minute long and are available to callers for a fee.
Lana Neagle, a news service reporter for University Relations and Wichita graduate student, conducts three interviews a week for the news service during the fall and spring semesters, and about two a week during the summer when the campus is less active.
TOMORROW SHE WILL interview Vincent DiFate, a science fiction illustrator who is in Lawrence to attend the Campbell Conference on the Teaching, Writing and Illustration of Science, which gives his opinion on special effects used by science fiction movies such as "The Return of the Jedi."
During the past year Naegel has
interviewed Sen. Howard Baker, R-TEn, Sen. Gary Hart, D-Dolo, and Associate Supreme Court Justice Harry A. Blackmun, among others.
HE SAID when an interview was particularly timely or with an important politician, he would ask the Associated Press to advertise it to its member stations so they would know they could call for the interview.
"The service is a good way for us to get KU's name out to western Kansas," Barthell said. "It keeps University Relations in touch with faculty members, and keeps us up to date with their expertise."
From five to 30 stations call to record each tape. He said, however, that he
had no way of knowing how many stations used the service.
Bartlett said that any radio station could use the service, which is free of charge. But he said the newcastets at many radio stations Kansas were too busy to use the times.
In the past, faculty have been interviewed about the economy, minimum wage laws, the U.S. space program, copyright laws and fleas.
For each interview Neagel picks a faculty member who is an expert on the subject, which is a current event that has generated public reaction, he said.
"WE'D LIKE PROFESSORS to us a call if they're watching the news and feel they have a fairly unique perspective on a news story, or can give us some background that is not on the news stations or in the papers," he said.
Barthelle said he tried to cover stories that related to KU research.
But it is often difficult to cover a research topic in x minute, he said.
The University Daily
KANSAN WANT ADS
Call 864-4358
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five six seven eight nine ten
15 lb. or fewer 20 lb.
$2.25 $2.75 $3.00 $3.35 $3.65 $3.95 $4.25 $4.55
miles of freeway miles of highway miles of road miles of ocean miles of air miles of water miles of snow miles of ice miles of fire miles of snow
AD DEADLINES
ERRORS
to run
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These items can be placed in person or simply by calling the Kaiman business office at 804-4538.
The Kanna 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 aid.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Kansan classifieds get results.
Join BALCOA mast and may eat all your need at a BALCOA or BACAO. You may attend Massachusetts St. Lawrence for an event at BALCOA.
Kaeri Tennyson!
BUTTERFLY BISCUIT COFFEE
...
Look for Entry #3 in this paper.
Chocolate Unlimited
WHO
WILL BE
GLUTTON #3?
1033 Vermont BIKE SHOP 841-6642
Self help group for amoetectes, bulimics and their families is held weekly in the Lawrence Kranos Room of the Lawrence Memorial Hospital, starting every Wednesday. Discussed disorders and is free. For more information, call 617-258-3402.
Rick's Bike Shop 400 bicycles in stock, Peugeot, Fuji, Trek, Puch. We repair everything. RICKS
Spinter* Books now has AIR CONDITIONING,
Lawrence's feminist womans and children's
bookshelf for ALL women, collectively operated by
Melissa G. M. Thursday 8 i.m. 5:30, 10:10 11:20
Mass.
2 bedroom duplex just south of Kroger's, Appliances,
purchased, PLC3. 843-605-9616
FOR RENT
3 three bedroom homes available for August 1 occupancy Perfect for students. Located from campus. Call 843-2164 for appointment. Contact the following: campus.admissions@univ.edu Campus Available: 1 Call Abu, 843-7572.
OPEN HOUSE
Brand New Sunrise Place 9th & Michigan
- Walking distance to K.U.
* Two bedroom highly energy efficient units, finished basement and living room
* Townhouse live
* Free cary day
* From 9-04-75 a.m.
Open daily 9:00-12:00 a.m.
& 1:00-1:00 p.m.
Call 644-1032 (office)
or 844-1032
App. available soon, 2 bedroom basement close to camp. carpeted furnished, no pets, no smoking.
- Studios, Apartments,
TRAILRIDGE
- Excellent Maintenance Service
- Townhouses
- Furnished or Unfur-
- 3 Pools, Tennis, Athletic Club
- Laundry Facilities
- KU Bus
2500 W. 6th 843-7333
MED, STUDENTS, NURSES, THERAPISTS,
STUDENTS WITH ADDITIONAL CARE. We have a beautiful duplex available. Completely refurbished as app. we will provide all the necessary care. We offer appropriate free rent incentive for early call.
Hanover Townhouses - spacious 2 BR unfurnished townhouses w/garage. Close to campus & downtown at 14th & Kentucky 10 month leases available
APARTMENT SHOPPERS
CHECK LIST
NAISMITH HALL
On KU Bus Route
Utilities (except phone) paid
Maid Service
Social Activities
Food Service with
Unlimited Seconds
NAISMITH HALL
Air-Conditioned Rooms Close to Campus If your apartment doesn't offer the above it's not Naismith Hall!
Drop by and look us ove
NAISMITH HALL 1800 Naismith Drive
843-8559
Apartment complex next to campus. Brand new home with master suite, balcony and maid's laundry room & off-street manicure room. Laundry facility & front door.
Rent now or reserve for fall - furnished apts. or room new university or dormitory, with off-street parking.
KU STUDENTS
SOUTHERN PARKWAY TOWNHouses spacious, quiet 3 bedroom duplexes Located at within 6 and Kassidy 10-acre lot that includes attached garage with attics and a swimming pool C248-798 for an appointment. For more information, contact us, or visit www.parkwaytownhouses.com.
& FACULTY
Still looking for that perfect home?
Consider these completely furnished studios
1. 2x 2. 8x 3. 8 apartment locations . . .
HANOVER PLACE between 14th & 15th on Massachusetts 841-1212
SUNDANCE APARTMENTS
7th and Florida
841-5255
TIBURON
9th and Emery
841-5255
COLDWATER FLAT
91.3 W 14th
841-1212
4 - PLEXES
move money, rent a 1, or 2 bedroom, or studio apartment to meet a. pet. needs, phone: 842-1838.
One bedroom apartment, sleeping room, 3 bedroom
room, no beds. 845-1601, 842-8971.
One bedroom duplex just west of campus. 843-666-665.
Partially furnished luxurious townhouse, 3 bdem, 1/2 bath, C/A/W, B/B fireplace, private fence yard with covered patio and garage, quiet. South side of hill, walk to KU. 3 male grade 0 or mature students (not available) or 6 peer students. Referrals. 400 plus utilities. 842-744-968.
Plan Ahmed! Koons is available for spring, summer and fall. Koons helps a small cooperative, community close to campus.
922 Tennessee * 916 Indiana
841-1280
841-1280
Mastercraft Management
Management & Maintenance
Maintenance
clean, two bedrooms, light housekeeping
agreement. Private bath. Private home
breakfast. Please be respecied for
unlimited assistance. Graduate student(s) preferred.
849-7974. Close to bus line, evenings.
Crescent Apartments
SUMMIT HOUSE
1105 Louisiana
841-8280
OAKS & GASLIGHT
APARTMENTS
start at $240
water and gas paid
air and heat paid
CRESCENT
APARTMENTS
start at $265 - utilities
ACORN APARTMENTS
start at #285
water paid
ALL ON BUS ROUTE!
2357 Ridgecourt
8434461
Professionally managed by Heritage Management Corp.
Studio 1, 3 & 8 bedrooms still available in quiet
apartment on the first floor. A pool, pool
equipment, room. Call between 9:45 m. and 6:
9:45 a.m.
Jayhawker Towers Apartments
Now taking applications for fall leases. Kill students only.
2 Bedroom Apartments On Campus
- All Utilities Paid
* Ten Month Leases
* Croydon Licensed
* Swimming Pool
* On Bus Line
* Free Cabrevision
* Laundry Facilities
* Furnished or Unfurnished
Tower A—Grad Students Only
Tower B—Women Students Only
Tower C—Students
Office Hours
Mon-Fri 8.00 to 5.00
FOR SALE
1603 W. 15th
843-4993
on a place for we. We have one room left on the floor of an old home close to campus. Share this room with your friends. References requested. Deposit required. $18/month. Includes meals (evenings) or $4.99/week (evenings) or $6.49/week (afternoons).
1970 Volkswagen Bug, Excellent condition. Hebuil engine, like Firestone tires, 30 mpg, recent inspection, battery and tune up, asking $1,100. Call (815) 625-7255.
HELP WANTED
Kramer AM-PM cassette can store more than 1 year of recordings. Kramer's AM-PM cassette is designed for piano. Kramer's AM-PM upright, with benches. Needs a bass speaker. (Sears)
172 Datum $10.2 dr. sedan, 63,000 miles, excellent mechanical condition. Auto transmission and electric ignition. Body needs work: Asking $600. (813) 651-6502 after 5 p.m.
1977 MGB, excellent condition, mileage 40-900
$1,800. Borg - 941-1231
Very good, 6 cylinder. Runs: great. 749-310
1975 Yamaha HD 200 - Excellent condition. $2,900
1974 Ducati 850 - Excellent condition. $2,600
1977 MAVERICK - 4-door, VB, AT, A/C, AM, PM
condition, $160 or tenet after Offer 6.
After Offer: $160
970 LTD Landau, P/S/B, P/A/C, power seat,
power windows, cruise control, excellent cockpit
other wallet found · Robinson Gym Call to identify. 864-263
Hometown, 12. 8*9. 0, BRI W/D, New C/A skirted, tied down, large wired床褥, 80 or will consider as a partial payment on a small rachine in evening Lawnness, 463-809. Let 9, 2nd & Arkansas, in evening
10.45 GHz
1980 Toyota Corolla Wagon 3-speed; 30,000 miles.
400-600-2000; 650-800-2000.
187 Mercury Comet, $1,100; Body OK, Interior.
Very good, 6 cylinders. Runs: great. 749-2105.
Hewlett-Packard Calculator. Believed to join in Union June 30th. Desperately need face Catch Tom at Loomis on Thursday.
COORDINATOR: The Consumer Affairs Association is seeking a dedicated graduate student to coordinate customer service activities for the month project, ten hours per week · hourly flexible. Job description and application available at www.coordinator.org.
1 day only. 1885 Sunset Moped. $625.00 or best offer
749-3148 after 6 p.m. Friday
CONFERENCE DESK, metal, beige and chrome, 72
INSTRUMENTS DESK, metal, beige and chrome,
EXECUTIVE DESK, metal, beige and chrome, 60 x
30 x 30, lop leeks, $160 EXECUTE SWIVEL CHAIR,
80 x 50, lop leeks, $160 EXECUTE SWIVEL CHAIR,
$400 price, your $140 price SLEEPER FOOTBAL,
QUEEN size double bed, **JAMMON** traditional winger, steel
TABLE AND 2 END TABLES, all 3 have door
enclosures massive wood floor, straight. Excellent. $120
FREE DELIVERY. $300-399. www.careers.mil.
enclosure, massive wood. 10 for $75. SECTIONAL
SOPA, 3 pieces, curved, 2 straight. Excellent. $130.
FREE DELIVERY to your Lawncare card. 64-803.
FOR WEEKEND OF AUGUST 2nd, Friday and Saturday
at 9 a.m.
Dedicated live in houseparents for boys group home in Shawnee. Good support system; competitive salary and benefits. College degree pre-needed. Children send resume to O P box 243, Olashe, IL 61070.
Moving to small apl. Need to sell antique couch. Call weekdays 814-906-000.
Two dressers, one with mirror. Good for college students or apartment living. Price negotiable.
LOST AND FOUND
Piano. Beautiful, old upright with bench. 380.00 Call
641-8037, after work or on weekends.
EAST COAST ADVENTURE - BOSTON Boston seeks live in child care workers. Live in safe, low-income neighborhoods with access to city. Flexible starting dates, many openings, one full-time position. $295K. 1st Buckminster Road, Brookline, MA 02164 1st Buckminster Road, Brookline, MA 02164
Computer Science 300 workbook & 85 papertabs
found on law of Lifeblood Tuesday, May 641-811
and November 22
Female nursing aid needed to assist disabled female, no experience, short hours, overages (17 years old) or disability.
PERSONAL
The University of Kansas Department of Psychology seeks part-time clinical psychologists to supervise students in a role where they must be certified or certificated in Kansas, must have supervision experience and be employed in a role-model setting. Must be available on Wednesdays for an hour. Applicants must pay the salary of $5,400-$6,500. Contact Raymond L. Higgins, PhD, Department of Psychology, Fraser Hall, University of Kansas, Lawrence KS. Application email: kansas.edu/psychology@ukw.edu
DIRECTOR OF LABORATORIES Twelve month appointment; 9 months three-quarter time, 3 months time at $1,000 to $1,200, depending on experience and availability. Position begins on August 1, 1985. Position involves advanced technical and skilled work in the design, development, construction and maintenance of devices, some highly sophisticated, including small computer, timers, physiological sensors, and other medical equipment. Supervision of technicians. Application deadline is July 22, 1983. Contact Denis H. Karpwatt, 763-842-2222 or info@laboratories.com (763-842-2222 for further information) EOE/AA
adult exercise & fitness training; winnamoo building
& fitness training; winnamoo building
& fitness training; Lawrence Building; Bokel; 7/9 West
& Fitness Training; Lawrence Building; Bokel; 7/9 West
The Etc. Shop
Vintage & Classic
Contemporary Clothing
10 West 9th St.
Closed Wed.
08001 912123
GOING AWAY! Relatable female law student will care for your home, plants, etc. next academic year.
NEW YORK $1.58
Cow Jaws Supply
Get a "taste" of New York 9th & Mass. in Downtown Lawrence. All beef hot dogs, super dogs and fabulous Polish sausages in pita bread garnished with your choice of N.Y. Kraut, spicy peppers, onions, ketchup, hot sauce, pickle relish and celery salt at an extra charge!
Cool down with a Dr. Brown's cream soda, black cherry, root beer, orange or a unique Cel-Rey—all direct from NYC.
Deliciously served from an authentic N.Y. vendor's cart.
10:30-3:30, Tues.-Sat., weather permitting
Chadita
Phyllis Fabulous Franks
Instant passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization, immigration, visa. ID, and DD of fine portrait
Used furniture bought and sold. Pick up available Everything But Ice, 6th and Vermont.
Waxing, threading, manicure, pedicure, bleaching.
Call 843-5484.
INDIAN EARTH The all in one, non-cosmetic cosmetic
carries
INDIAN EARTH
KU student, 17, works a nice, cultured and somewhat
stylish position for Friendship Writers, Nov. 24,
2014. Send resume to KU Student Engr. Office, 506 W. 39th St., Boston, MA 02118.
Say it on a shirt, silicone skirtcase printing. T-shirts, jerseys and capes. Shirtz by Shariw 749-1611.
Special for students. Haircuts $7 and perms $2. Charm, ask for Deena Jenna 845-350.
PAMPHLETS WANTED
Are you capable of writing and producing a pamphlet? Any subject. If so, we are in the business of selling them, and need more, 50% royalties. What's your $1 for information pamphlet.
The National Pamphleteer
Box 223
Unalaska, AK 99685
927 Mass.
$1.80 PITCHERS 4.7 p.m. every day! Also enjoy tuxedo submarine sandwiches, great meals, video & hittin games, and the sunshine on our front lawn. Hits include a black block north of the Union, Hinks having 634-6600, Hinks having 634-6600.
Western Civilization. Notes. Now on sale! Make sense out of Western Civilization! Makes sense to use in case you are writing a book or for exam preparation. *New Analysis of Western Civilization* available now at Town Creeer, The University of Iowa.
Leaving Town?
Airline Tickets
At airline counter prices no extra service charge Make your travel arrangements on campus
See Maupintour Travel
Service for:
Eurail and Japan Rail Passes
Car rental—Hotel confirmations
Student semester break holidays
Travel insurance
ON CAMPUS LOCATION in the Student Union and 900 Mass.
- The lowest airfares—Complete travel arrangements
Maupintour travel service
749-0700
Balmain: For, balmina or other food related
enquiries call 843.3299
Impress your datage with the total environment of the Hawks Crossing. Groove on the front porch to great tunes, total sunshine and morga subs. Happy hour 8:10 p.m., everyday 4:17 a.m., the Hawks
SUDS-N-DUDS
(CHAR N LAUNDRATM)
500 GRAE Pool Table
DRIVERS THAT DRY!
west end of Holiday Plaza
749 4312
ROSES • long stem, assorted colors, $1.50 each.
dixes: 12 oz. CARMEN • fresh cut, beautiful colors.
$1 each, 6 for $4. Enchanted Florist, 2112 W, 25th
Holda Plaza, 843-529
Tunight- *Party like it* its 1999! You're out, get some healthy lunch grab at Yello Open. Late: Mon- Thurs' till 11 p.m. Fr- Sat' till 1 a.m. Sun' till 10 p.m. If you party at dinner, Salman delivers.
Yurt Andrew would love Lawrence's Yellow Submarine because it's guaranteed to be delivered, guaranteed to knock out your taste buds!
SERVICES OFFERED
*n*TIME, PAPERS TYPED, FAST & EFFICIENT
845-3510
Beginner Piano Classes Special 4-week course. Call 843-9753 for class times. Owen Piano &
MOPED & MOTORCYCLE REPAIR - Honda,
Yamaha, Kawasaki, Suzuki & electrical
& electrical requirements. Pick-up &
download available. Work by appointment only.
Lakewood CITY CHORES CO-CHI.
Near SAT-THU BROTHERS CYCLE CO.
Learn Tremblik's summer from experienced instructor in small groups with other TKC students, or engage in a private lesson.
Library Research - Editing - Typing: 841-8249
TUTORING, Math, CS 200, French, individual
English, writing
TYPING
Racquetball, tennis, squash racquet hybrid specializing in new graphite/hybrid stringing. Tennis Racquets for sale also. Head. Prince Dunlon. etc. New/used. 843/358 days. 740/357 days.
**48 Hour Ttyping, Fast, accurate, dependable. All day.**
**12 Hour Ttyping, Faster than 48 Hour.**
AAA TYPING SERVICE IBM JMG Card. II
Unlimited document storage with easy retrieval and
access. Inbox, Internet, Beeswax,
dissertations. Batch 849 1450 after 5 p.m.
Experienced 360-bits
Accurate, affordable technology for Harvard Harvard
Counselor, Call Nancy, 814-1219
AFORDABLE QUALITY for all your typing needs.
Call Judge, 842-7945 after 9 p.m.
Absolutely LETTER PERFECT typing, editing.
Your work is our only business.
Professional/Experienced. 845-6818. 9-3
Medical School secretary
(address: 107 East 52nd St, Auburn
overnight service (under 25 pages). Call Mar-
lary McDermott at (314) 648-4891.
BJM on IBM-Precise personal typing, evenings/wednesday 8:50-10, Barbara. Special
Call TIP TOP TYPING 1203 Iowa. Experienced tech
support in Microsoft wiley, Royal correcting
coding 884-957-8891.
Experienced typed, tipped. Term papers, thematics, all
maths, statistics, calculus. Send resume to
Picca, and will correct spelling. Phone 845-3621, Mm.
728-2420.
Elvis could wiggle. Shakespeare could write my
talent-typing. Call 843-604-123 while 5 & 10:00.
Experienced typist will type letters, theses and
datasetations. IBM Correcting Selective. Call
843-604-123.
It's a Fact, Fast, Affordable, Clean Typing, Word
Processing; you can afford it! 843-890-383
Professional secretary will do your typing ... them, then dessertations 843-8677 with 1.00 and 1.50 cookies.
TYPING PLUS: These, dissertations, papers,
letters, applications, resume. Assistance with
composition, grammar, spelling, etc. English
tutoring for foreign students — or Americans.
GOOD WORK Good clean typing, word processing at tails rates. Call 843-7111 for dependable service.
WANTED
Female roommate wanted starting August for a bedroom apartment on bus route. Reasonable rent
Female roommate wanted for $3 bedroom价, for fall spring seminars. Free bus service i35 plus. No minimum deposit required.
Looking for mature, upper-level male roomto share large two bedroom appt. for next school year, W/W carpet, A/C, dishwasher, own room. 152.90 plus 1/2 electricity 749-202, ask for Lee.
Male roommate must. Nice two bedroom apt. at st. & Avalon. Wake up tacr your grade or low student level. Must be a licensed educator. $195/day.
Male roommate wanted for furnished Meadowbrook
apg. must be clean and responsible. $150 plus 1/2
yrs.
Nonmissing female roommate, grad. student preferred. For 3-bedroom spacious apartment 4 beds from campus and 1 suite. Call 843-6201 by 6 p.m.
Nonmissing female roommate to share furnished two-bedroom apartment, utilities paid. Call 749-5083.
Nonmissing male roommate for 3-bedroom 2 bathroom duplex. Fullly equipped kitchen, storage room, deck. Very nice. Can move in.
Use one or two rooms needed for a two bedroom roommate. Roommate 1, 10/12 m lease, tip 1/2 of older roommate $120 plus utilities ($vb +$mc)/841-7401
Roommate for furnished 3 bedrooms ($vb +$mc)/837-3297
$150 per night (2016) - $319
L424
Don't want to drive across town in the summer heat to send in your classified ad? Take advantage of this form and save yourself time and money while still receiving the satisfaction of placing your ad in the Kansan. Just mail this form with a check or money order payable to the Kansan to: University Daily Kansan, 118 Flint Hall, Lawrence, Ks 66045. Use rates below to figure costs.
Classified Heading:
Write Ad Here:
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan, July 15, 1983
'Menagerie' still needs polish
By JUDITH HINDMAN Staff Reporter
"The Glass Menagerie," being staged by Kansas Repertory Theatre, is a play about illusion, fantasy and truth.
It is set in St. Louis in the mid-1900s and on centers on a mother's attempt to find a suitor for her shy, crippled daughter. A girl tries to escape from his mundane existence.
THE PLAYS MOOD, one of dark memories filtered through years of remorse and guilt, is quickly established by Jim Peterson's well-executed stage set, by the dark lighting and by the effective use of music from the
The set is a stuntingly accurate representation of a St. Louys row house.
Playwright Tennessee Williams has portrayed a family whose members use fantasies to escape the painful realities of life.
The play opens with the son, Tom Wingfield, delivering a monologue explaining that the audience is about to hear a speech that is his personal reminiscence.
The play then becomes a dramatization of his own guilt and anguish.
MARK NASH, as Tom Wingfield, effectively portrays a character trapped by his circumstances and longing to follow his absent father — "a telephone man who fell in love with long distances."
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At one point, he emotionally describes watching a magician escape from a coffin "without removing a single nail." But Tom's only escape from the sedum of his daily life is at the movies where he has seen images of escape from the grim realities of daily life during the depression.
There are times during the production when Nash's performance is almost too flat. Some of the quater game benefits benefited from a little more emotion.
IF TOM WINGFIELD is a symbol of the restless, frustrated youth of America, hungry for adventure, then the mother, Amanda, is the symbol of the old, genteel South, struggling to maintain a steady workforce in an era when unemployment, hunger and despair were the lot of many American families.
Margaret Humphreys, as Amanda Wingfield, is as overpowering in her role as Nash is underpowering in his. After hearing her shrill criticisms for 10 minutes, the audience easily understands the father's absence and the son's desire to follow him.
The main flaw in this production is during the confrontations between Tom and Amanda. There is no gradual building of tension. The continuing tension affords them and son jump almost immediately from police tolerance to loud rage.
the GROSSING
4-7p.m.
$1.50 pitchers
1 block N. of Union
It would have been effective to just once have had an angry confrontation between mother and son that simmered before exploding.
MARTA BROW, while displaying considerable acting talent, simply looked too healthy to be the crippled daughter, Laura Wingfield. This impression was reinforced several times when she forgot her bracelet and broke it. And she always seemed to walk with too much vigor to be a crippled recluse.
Additionally, like Nash, Brow sometimes underplayed her part too much. For example, when the long-awaited "gentleman caller" finally appears and is unable to come to the dinner table, Brow simply can't信望sick enough.
The production is a success despite some opening night sabotage by the props. But the cast recovered well from the falling candlesticks and ash trays.
This is a good production that needs only a little more polish — which it should have accomplished by this weekend.
Remaining performances of the "The Glass Menagerie" will be at 8 p.m. today and next Thursday and at 2:30 p.m. July 24.
14 kt. Chain
Repair
Kizer
Cummings
(jewelers)
800 Mass. 749-4333
COUNTRY LIVING
in the heart of the city
KU, Wichita may play this season
Kansas" 66-65 heartbreak breaking to Wichita State in the 1981 NCAA tournament, which became known as "The Battle of New Orleans," with the defeat of the battle over which school has the best college basketball team in Kansas.
Sources in the KU athletic department said yesterday that an announcement would be made next week verifying that a Kansas vs. Wichita State game would be scheduled this season.
The University of Kansas and Wichita State University, both known for strong basketball programs, have not met in a regular season basketball game since 1955 (KU won the game 56-35).
The sources said that a date and place for the game had not been decided but that KU had an open date Jan. 7.
But KU Athletic Director Monte Johnson denied any plans for such a game, and Lew Perkins, athletic director at Wichita State, refused to comment yesterday when asked to verify such plans.
You'll Love Our Style
809 Vermont, Lawrence
843-8808
Headmasters.
- Spacious studios, 1, 2 & 3BR apartments and 2 & 3BR townhouses
842-4200
BICYCLE REPAIR
All Makes
Fast Service
Full Service At The Bottom Of The Hill
Bicycle
Annex
BICYCLE REPAIR
All Makes
Fast Service
Full Service At The Bottom Of The Hill
Bicycle Annex
CLEVELAND — Alan Bannister belted a 1-1 pitch into the left field stands leading off the 10th inning last night to help the Cleveland Indians snap a five-game losing streak with a victory over the Kansas City Royals.
HR in 10th downs Royals
By United Press International
Rick Satulife, 11-4, pitched his fifth complete game, giving up nine hits, striking out a career-high 10 and walking two.
Armstrong, 4-4. Armstrong had come in of relief at starter Bud Black in the eighth innings. Black gave up seven hits and three earned runs.
The Indians took a 1-0 lead in the first on a two-out home run by Toby Harrah against Black, and the Royals bounced back in the fifth on a two-run homer by rookie Pat Sheridan.
The Royals increased their lead to 3-1 in the top of the eighth inning. But Cleveland came back in the bottom half in the inning with two runs to tie the score.
The loss went to reliever Mike
meadowbrook
SENIOR HIGH SCHOOL, BANDS,
chorus and orchestra will present a
midwestern Music Camp concert at 1
p.m. on Saturday, March 24th,
Crafter-Freezer
Murphy Hall
SENIOR HIGH JAZZ ENSEMBLES will present a Midwestern Music Camp recital at 7.30 p.m. today in Swarthout Recital Hall, Murrayhall Hall.
On campus
Swarthowlet Rectal Hall, Murphy Hall
CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR CHRIST
MURPHY HALL
DAN FRIZANE will conduct a doctoral recital at 8 p.m. Monday in
1337 Massachusetts * 749-0636 (next to Mick's)
will meet at 7 p.m.
tuesday in the Jayhawk Room of
the Kansas Union. The group will
meet Thursday night. Everyone
is interested to welcome it
FACULTY AND STAFF ARTISTS will present a Midwestern music Camp recital at 8 p.m. Tuesday in Swarthout Recital Hall, Murphy Hall.
Friday & Saturday Nights 5-9 p.m.
$3.95
VALENTINO'S
SPAGHETTI BAR
SALAD BAR • 6 SAUCES • 2 LASAGNA • DESSERT PIZZA
544 W.23rd
Valentino's
Ristorante
749.
4244
COUPONS
COUPONS
COUPONS
--expires 7/22/83
C90 RECORDS 99 cent Record Rental
$1 OFF!
Maxell Disk MD1 & MD2
Take home any unsealed record for 24 hours for 99 cents with this coupon. Limit 5 per coupon.
1422 W. 23rd Street. 841-0256
Expires 7/30/83
100
1
$1 OFF Disk Library Cases
Computerark Lifetime Guarantee 808 W.24th 841-0094
(808) 726-3521 www.computerark.com (702/6933
808 W.24th
Computerark
841-0094
528 WEST 29RD STREET
across from the post office
BORDER
BANDIJO
RESTAURANT
BUY ONE
1 TEXAS BURRITO
get the second one for 50¢
with this coupon
Expires 7/23/83
Local DELIVERY Available
PIZZA Shoppe
TRIPLE TIPPING
KINGSIZE
PIZZA
AND
32 OZ PEPSI
6th and Kasold
Westridge
Shopping Center
g 875
PLUS
AXL
LOCATION: Carry Out Dept. 1001
842-0600
BY Availabie
TRIple TOPPING
KINBSIZE
PIZZA
AND
32 OZ PEPSI
g rta
PLUS
LINK
LINK
LINK
RICKLEMAN'S
FAFONIO SANDWICHES
Lawrence
1814 W. 23rd
749-3072
BUY ONE SANDWICH
GET ONE OF EQUAL
VALUE
FREE!
expires 8/31
--expires 7/31/83
--expires 7/31/83
$1.00 or 50c VALUE
14:00 off Future Savings Sun, Wed, or Fri of each month
$ 1.00 or 50¢ VALUE
$1.00 off Evening Buffet Sun. thru Wed, or 50¢ off
Luncheon Buffet 7 days a week. One coupon per
Customer, offer expires 7/29/83 at Valentino's.
544 West 23rd St.
Lawrence
Valentino's
Pizza & Pasta
749-4244
ELDRIDGE HOUSE RESTAURANT & CLUB $2.50 OFF 7th & Mass.
ANY DINNER ENTREE
Elegant Dining at Affordable Prices 749-0613
The Eldridge House
HENRY'S RESTAURANT
$1.00 OFF
$1.95 reg $2.95
ALL YOU CAN EAT SALAD BAR
6th & Missouri 843-2139
NO SALE
Not to be used in conjunction with any other special—expires 8-31.
--expires 7/31/83
28 items:
turkey fruits
ham potato salad
cheeses diet dressing
pudding raw vegs.
* much more!
Expires 7/22
& much more!
Buy one Whopper sandwich, get another Whopper free.
Please present this coupon before ordering. Limit one coupon per customer. Not to be used with other coupons or offers. Void where prohibited by law. This offer expires JULY 31,1983
Good only at: 1301 W. 23rd Street
BURGER KING
Burger King/Whopper--Reg. U.S. Pat. & TM OR. 1982 Burger King Corporation
Patronize Kansan advertisers.
FREE
GAME COUPON
Good for One FREE Game
Le Mars
Family Fun Centers
Summertime Special
Dannon Frozen Yogurt
FREE
w/coupon & purchase of any sub
expires 7-31-83
YELLO SUB
just W. of 23rd & Louisiana
Q
C
THE GRAUER MAN
After 5 p.m. Special:
Buy any Maxi Sandwich and get any mini-sandwich for only 50¢
Southern Hills Mall Limit: One coupon per customer.
1 sandwich/coupon 1 coupon/person
704 Mass.
843-7398 WE DELIVER expires 7-22-83
GQ
GQ For Women For Men
GQ For Women For Men
— $10 shampoo, cut, blowdry
— $40 perm, cut, style
Gentlemen's Quarters
611 W. 9th 843-2138 expires 7-30-8
4
The University Daily
SQUEAKY
KANSAN
University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas
Vol. 93, No. 159 USPS 650-640
Wednesday, July 20, 1983
Weather
Today will be hot and sunny with a high around 100, according to the National Weather Service.
Winds will be from the south at about 10 to 20 mph. Tonight will be clear with low of 75. Tomorrow will be more of the same, with the high expected around 105.
Ruling could allow union
By ANN REGAN Staff Reporter
One obstacle to the formation of a faculty union at KU was eliminated by a Kansas Supreme Court decision last week. Art Skidmore, president of the College of collective bargaining, said yesterday.
The ruling, according to Skidmore, requires the board of Regents to deal directly with the commissioners.
IN A 5-2 DECISION Friday, the Supreme Court ruled that The Regents cannot delegate its responsibility as the "public employer" of students in the University administrators as it had done in the past.
Instead, the Court ruled, the Regents must now negotiate with faculty unions on salaries and benefits.
Staunmore said that he and other faculty members had been trying for several years to start a KU chapter of the National Education Association.
Although a faculty bargaining group at KU is now deemed more likely, Skidmore said, it will probably take from three to five years before it happens.
K-NEA, A. Topeka-based group that negotiates contracts for elementary and secondary school teachers, also has bargaining groups at Pittsburgh State University and about 13 community colleges in Kansas, including Johnson County Community College in Lenexa.
PITTSBURG STATE is the only one of the seven Regens institutions with a collective
The decision is a step in the right direction, Skidmore said. It answers some of the objections KU faculty members have about the effectiveness of unionization.
Skidmore said that before the Court's decision, administrators said that they could not bargain with the faculty because it was the responsibility of the Regents. Now bargaining groups will be present.
Skidmore said that some KU faculty members thought that the Pittsburg State NEA chapter had not been successful in dealing with the administration there.
Skidmore also said that a concern that the Regents would not respond to collective bargaining efforts by faculty members had been eliminated by the ruling.
Two members of the Regents said yesterday they would not comment on the ruling until they
had studied the decision. The other seven Regeng could not be reached for comment.
Items that the Supreme Court ruled the Regents must negotiate with faculty unions include:
- Tenure — Negotiations of tenure procedures and appeal processes.
- Salary generation — Determination of faculty salaries.
- Salary allocation - The amount of money given to schools and departments within the universities.
- Out-of-state travel — Expenses for faculty members to travel to seminars and conferences.
- Promotions — Promotion decisions remain the responsibility of the administration, though some faculty members want more input into appeal procedures.
- Summer employment — Decisions about which faculty members will be employed during summer sessions.
- Retrenchment — Program or department cut-outs or elimination
- Access to personnel files - Individual faculty members have restricted access to their personnel records.
Nuke protesters appear in court
By CHARLES BARNES and MELISSA BAUMAN Staff Reporters
Four of five women arrested last week for criminal trespassing during a peaceful protest at the Wolf Creek Nuclear Power Plant made a first appearance in Coffey County District Court
Coffey County District Court Judge James Smith appointed lawyers and scheduled arrangement for 9:30 a.m. Tuesday for KU senior S. Lynn Anthony, 824 Massachusetts St.
former KU student Gail Boaz, 1020 Missouri St.; Cindy J. Parry, Route 2; and Susan Royd-Skyes of Topeka.
THE FIFTH WOMAN, KU graduate student Cindy Treaster, 1827 Missouri St., is scheduled to make her first appearance at 2 p.m. Monday in Coffey County District Court.
Coffey County Attorney Phil Fromme said the five women were arrested for criminal trespassing after they chained themselves to a gate in the basement of areek plant, near Burlington, Saturday afternoon.
Treaster yesterday described the protesters!
"When the people marching to the rally队 began to get close to the gate, KG&E security officers closed the one large entrance gate which was being allowed in allow plant workers to leave." Treasurer said.
entrance into the plant, which is being built by Kansas Gas and Electric Company of Wichita
"The security officers then saw that we had stopped in front of the gate and so they decided to go inside."
"AS THE GATE opened, we knew this might be our only chance to get inside the plant so I and
See WOLF CREEK page 5
1978
Special to the KANSAN
Former KU track star Jeff Buckingham recently soared to new heights; setting a new American record in the pole vault at the Lawrence Open Track and Field Championships Saturday. See related story page 8.
Commission approves funds for teen community center
By GENE HUNTER Staff Reporter
The Lawrence City Commission voted unanimously last night to allocate $34,000 to fund a new library.
The $34,000 is part of about $243,000 in unused Community Development Block Grant money that the commission considered for reallocation last night.
Although no site has been found for the center,
LAURA AMBLER, a junior at Lawrence High School and a member of a group proposing the center, said last night that the center would be given a grant to help Lawrence teenagers between grades 9 and 12.
Summer, representing Young Adults Recreation Company Limited, a group of students, teachers and Lawrence residents formed to submit the proposal to the commission.
Ambler said, the group already has sponsored several parties at the Entertainer, a vacant bar at 265 W. sth. Sth., and one at Holdley Park Swim Club, at 170 W. sth. Sth., and all of them were well-witted.
Ambler said that the group stressed that the parties and the center would be "non-alcoholic but not anti-alcoholic" because they didn't want to alienate any of the students.
"WE DON'T TELL anyone that they can't drink. We just tell them that they can't bring it in." she said.
Ambler said that there had been some problems with students sneaking liquor in with them to the parties but that it was not widesread.
The $34,000 will be used to pay for the rent of a building, a pool table, a big-screen TV, a sound system, an ice machine and furniture, according to the group's proposal.
The commission approved the allocation See CITY page 5
Still no progress in search for student
By CHARLES BARNES
"We have issued a statewide missing person alert," he said, "but we still haven't located him."
Staff Reporter
MARK'S FATHER, the Rev. Homer D. Henderson of Lawrence, said he notified Lawrence police Sunday afternoon that his son was not home and failed to show up for his job Sunday morning.
KU sophomore Mark Henderson still is listed as missing after his abrupt disappearance early Sunday morning, Lawrence Police Sgt. Larry Loveland said yesterday.
1975-76
The Rev. and Mrs. Henderson live at 1332 Strong Ave.
Henderson is the senior pastor at Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont St.
Henderson said he knew his son was missing when he didn't show up for his job. He said his son worked at Alvamar Golf and Country Club, 4120 Clinton Parkway.
Mark Henderson
He said the younger Henderson enjoyed his
work and was scheduled to work a 6 a.m. to 9
a.m. shift.
Henderson said that friends reported seeing his son leave a party at 12:30 a.m. Sunday.
"Mark had parked his car at a friend's house and had gotten a ride with him to a party, which was on the other side of the Lawrence Country Club golf course." Henderson said.
"SINCE HIS CAR wasn't at his friend's house," he said, "we assume that he left the party, walked across the golf course and got in his car."
Henderson said that the "next clue" was that at about 1:30 a.m., $100 was withdrawn from the younger Henderson's bank account at the bank in Iowa. Insta Bank machine at 27th and Iowa streets."
"We are not sure if he withdrew the money or if someone forced him to reveal his secret Insta-Bank card number and then withdrew money from his account." Henderson said.
renderson said that the residence where Mark was last seen **and** the bank where the money was found.
Henderson said that Mark had been recruited as a backfellow for the 1983 Jayhawk football team and that he had been training to get in shape.
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32. 33. 34. 35. 36. 37. 38. 39. 40. 41. 42. 43. 44. 45. 46. 47. 48. 49. 50. 51. 52. 53. 54. 55. 56. 57. 58. 59. 60. 61. 62. 63. 64. 65. 66. 67. 68. 69. 70. 71. 72. 73. 74. 75. 76. 77. 78. 79. 80. 81. 82. 83. 84. 85. 86. 87. 88. 89. 90. 91. 92. 93. 94. 95. 96. 97. 98. 99. 100.
This dog probably has had better days. To the horror of many held a free dog dip Saturday to rid the animals of their fleas and area dogs, Lawrence Feed and Farm Supply, 545 Wisconsin St., ticks. See related story page 3.
Nicaragua issues peace plan; calls for non-aggression pact
By United Press International
LEON, Nicaragua — Nicaragua issued a six-point peace plan yesterday on the fourth anniversary of Sandinista rule and accepted a ceasefire agreement from leaders to end the threat of a Central American war.
The plan — which adopted some of the key peace proposals developed at a Latin American summit in Cancun during the weekend — will allow Turkey to turnarab in the policy of the fledgling nation.
IT PREVIOUSLY HAD said it would only accept bilateral talks to avert hostility between it and its northern, U.S.-backed neighbor — Honduras — where rebels have waged a guerrilla campaign to topple the Managua government.
"We do not have economic investments abroad, or dreams of imperial domination, and therefore, our country neither needs nor wants a military force. We have 80,000 people in Leon during the ceremonies.
The plan called for the immediate signing of a non-aggression pact between Nicaragua and Honduras and a halt in all arms shipments to all forces fighting in El Salvador.
IT ALSO CALLED for a complete halt in outside military aid to any group in the region, a commitment by Latin American nations not to interfere in the affairs of their neighbors, an end to economic discrimination and suspension of all forms of bases or exercises by foreign agents in the area.
Ortega also said he "accepts the multilateral peace talks" called for by the United Nations to address Venezuela and Panama — "so that those who say they are interested in peace concrete steps
toward developing the process of setting the basis for peace."
In Washington, the State Department also backed the Contadora plan that called for a region-wide cease-fire, elimination of superpowers and an end to the arms flow into the troubled area.
Meanwhile, the United States has dispatched one eight-ship aircraft carrier battle group to the Pacific Ocean off the Western coast of Central America. The United States is interested in the region," the Navy said yesterday.
THE SHIPS WILL STAY in international waters and conduct "routine training and operations off the Western coast of Central America as a demonstration of U.S. interest in the region and to underscore U.S. support for the North Atlantic region," the Navy said in a terse announcement.
Administration officials have said the United States plans to conduct major military exercises in the Caribbean region later this summer as a result of the war. U.S.'s ability to send power swiftly to the area.
U. S. intelligence sources reported that the Soviet Union apparently has boosted the rate of flow of weapons and other military equipment to Cuba, having sent 20,000 tons of material to the island nation in early 1983. The sources could not determine any of it was later sent on to Nicaragua.
The White House and the Pentagon declined to comment about the war games, which will be the first in Honduras since February when 1,000 U.S. troops arrived in Honduras in exercises near the Nicaraguan border.
NICARAGUA HAS CHARGED the United States and Honduras with staging covert operations against the Sandinista regime in Managua.
A
Page 2
University Daily Karisan, July 20, 1983
News Briefs From United Press International
Soviet soldiers apprehend anti-whaling protesters
NOME, Alaska — An anti-wailing ship of the environmental organization Greenpeace, pursued by Soviet ships and helicopters, scurried across the Bering Sea and docked at Nome yesterday, leaving behind seven protesters whom the Russians seized on a Siberian island.
Crew members of the Rainbow Warrior, Greenpeace's 147-foot converted trawler, said they had film showing both a Soviet whaling operation near Lorino, Siberia, and the arrest of their comrades — six Americans and one Canadian — by uniformed Soviet soldiers.
Greenspace charges the whaling operation with supplying meat to a local mink farm and not to native Siberians as the Soviets claim.
U. S. State Department spokesman Brian Carlson said Soviet officials had not formally notified the U.S. Embassy of the arrests of American
The arrests came on the opening day of the International Whaling Commission's annual meeting in England. The commission wants a total ban on commercial whaling by 1986.
Japan, the Soviet Union, Norway and Peru formally objected to the ban, which under whaling commission rules means they may ignore it.
Gemavel visits U.S.: Begin delayed
WASHINGTON — Lebanese President Amin Gemayel arrived yesterday for talks on the future of the Middle East negotiations, while Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin postponed his scheduled visit next week for "personal reasons."
Gemayel is to meet President Reagan Friday.
Begin, who was to visit Reagan July 27, telephoned the Oval Office yesterday and said that he would like to reschedule it later this year. Officials said health problems prevented Begin from attending the meeting:
Gemayel had a brief courtesy meeting with Secretary of State George Shultz yesterday. Lebanese officials quoted Gemayel as saying he believes it is only a matter of weeks before Israel will redeploy its troops to a "security zone" in the southern part of Lebanon.
Abductors want message published
VATICAN CITY — Kidnappers threatening to kill their 15-year-old hostage unless the Turk who attempted to assassinate Pope John Paul II is freed telephoned the Vatican on a special hot line yesterday and demanded publication of a statement.
“In the course of the telephone call, the only concrete thing that emerged was a request that some of the main organs of the independent press should publish today in its entirety and without interruption by comment, the message is from the news agency ANSA “The Vatican statement said.
The Vatican has said John Paul had forgiven Mehmet Ali Agca for shooting him in St. Peter's Square just four days after the attack and that was all the Vatican could legally do.
Asbestos company sues government
WASHINGTON — Lawyers for Manville Corp., the nation's largest asbestos manufacturer, filed a lawsuit yesterday against the federal government to recover nearly $1 million paid to asbestos victims.
government of rebel forces in Iraq — was filed in the U.S. Court of Claims. It seeks $768,361 the firm paid to 50 victims who worked in Navy shipvards during World War II and $185,741 in legal expenses.
The firm argues that the government is responsible for exposing the workers to dangerous levels of asbestos fibers, which can cause the lung disease asbestosis and often-fatal cancerous tumors of the lungs and surrounding tissue.
safety training. Recently declassified government documents obtained by Manville show the Navy and Maritime Commission knew in 1939 that asbestosis was an occupational hazard of shipbuilding.
TOPEKA — A 15-year-old tola boy whose friend was shot to death told his physician that a black man wearing a ski mask beat and sexually molested him, the physician testified yesterday.
Richard Lee Hull testified in the first-degree murder trial of Nathaniel J. "Yorkie" Smith, who is charged with three slayings which occurred near Iola in August 1982. Smith also is charged with four counts of aggravated sodomy and nine other counts.
Gerald Short survived the pistol whipping which left him blind in one eye, but the bodies of two other teen-agers and a 59-year-old woman were found in a rural area outside Iola, which is in southeast Kansas the weekend of Aug. 20. Short will testify in the hearing.
OPEC maintains prices, production
HELSINKI, Finland — OPEC nations yesterday ended a two-day conference agreeing to maintain oil prices and production levels despite forecasts of higher world demand and put off choosing a new secretary-general for the cartel.
Without the usual public acrimony of previous meetings, the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries held its benchmark oil price at $29 per barrel and its production ceiling at 17.5 million barrels a day.
At a news conference ending the session, United Arab Emirates Oil Minister Mana Saeed Al Otaiba also said that to keep a dispute between warring Iraq and Iran from erupting, the cartel had deferred naming a new secretary-general.
FDA bars sale of 'sobriety' products
WASHINGTON — The government took formal action yesterday to prevent the marketing of unproven "sobriety" products that it said could lead drunks into mistakenly believing they can drive safely.
The Food and Drug Administration announced that any product intended to prevent or minimize inebriation is a drug and, as such, may not be sold unless test results are submitted to the FDA proving its safety and effectiveness.
"Because of the danger, FDA wants consumers to know that no such product has been approved for marketing by FDA," FDA Commis-
There are no such drugs now on the market, but the FDA said several products and advertising plans with sobriety claims have been developed by manufacturers.
Ladv Libertv needs help, team says
WASHINGTON — Her skin has some bad holes and blemishes, and there is something nasty growing near one elbow. Her frame is bent in some places, and her head is not on straight.
But despite all that, there is nothing wrong with the Statue of Liberty that a $20 million to $30 million restoration job cannot fix, a team of American and French architects and engineers reported to the National Park Service yesterday.
The French-American Committee for Restoration of the Statue of Liberty submitted a preliminary engineering report on the physical condition of the 97-year-old Statue of Liberty.
The statue, one of the most revered monuments in the United States, can be renovated in plenty of time for the centennial of its dedication. Oct. 28, 1986, the team said.
Association changing loan policy
By MARY ANN COSTELLO
There have already been a few changes in the loan collection procedures in the Kansas University Endowment Association's student loan program since William A. Shunk was hired in May to oversee the program.
Staff Reporter
Shunk, a retired Army officer who received his master's degree in business administration in December, said that he was hired for the new position of vice president because of an increase in the number of KU students who define on loans.
MORE THAN 7 PERCENT of the loans were uncollectible in 1982, he said. That figure compares with a 4.8 percent default rate in 1980.
"I imagine economic conditions have something to do with it." Shusk said.
Students sometimes take out federal loans in addition to Endowment Association loans, and as a result, may realize that they do not have enough money after they graduate to pay all the loans, he said.
Because of the problem, Shunk said the Endowment Association was making a few changes in its loan program in an effort to make the collection process easier.
BEFORE JULY 1, Shunk said, the office of student (financial accounting at the College of Health Sciences has administered Endowment Association
For one thing, it recently consolidated its loan programs for the Lawrence campus and the College of Health Sciences in Kansas City, Kan
Shunk said the consolidation should increase efficiency.
He also said he hoped to increase the amount of money collected by taking a more aggressive approach to loan collections.
The Endowment Association now waits until loan payments are six to
nine months delinquent before turning a loan over to a collection agency. Shunk said he would like to shorten that time.
William A. Shunk
He said a loan that was six months overdue was harder to collect than one that was 30 days overdue because the Endowment Association could lose communication with a student if his address changed.
SHUNK ALSO SAID he planned to send out reminders to students shortly before their loans were due and to send them an email with an occasional telephone call.
He said the Endowment Association's goal was to reduce the default rate to 3.0%.
When students cannot make payments, Shunk said that he tried to work out arrangements on an individual basis. However, students are usually required to make a $30 minimum deposit, as a result of the defaulted loan.
He said it was important to collect on defaulted loans so that the Endowment Association could maintain a constant amount of available money for student loans.
"The loan money is endowed by graduates of the University," he said. "Probably at one time they borrowed money to get through school."
Shunk said the Association had about $4.2 million available for short-term loans to students on the Lawrence campus, and about $1.4 million for short- and long-term loans to students at the College of Health Sciences.
There is $2.1 million worth of loans outstanding, he said.
ONLY SHORT-TERM LOANS are available to students at the Lawrence campus. They have a 6 percent interest rate and are due in a year or less, he said. Once they mature, the interest rate increases to 14 percent.
Undergraduates may borrow up to $500, or up to $1,000 with a co-signer. Graduate students may borrow up to $1,000, or $2,000 with a co-signer, he said. The average short-term loan is about $300.
Shunk said people who co-signed student loans would now be required to complete a financial statement because some co-signers in the past had not been accounted for. Co-signers are responsible for the loan If the borrower defaults.
THERE ARE NOW about 4,400 loans to students on the Lawrence campus and about 2,400 loans to students at the Kansas City, Kan., campus, he said. Some students have three to four loans in association协会 loans taken out at one time.
Sidewalk sale to offer folks big bargains
The sale will last from 8:30 a.m. to around 8:30 p.m. Lee said, and parking
Everybody loves a bargain, and a large crowd of bargain hunters is expected at the Downtown Lawrence Association's Sidewalk Sale tomorrow. Mary Lee, executive secretary-twice of the association, said yesterday.
Besides the bargains found at the sidewalk sale there will be concession boots on street corners and between store entrances set up by 38 non-profit organizations.
The sale will extend from the 700 block through the 1000 block of Massachusetts.
She said that the high turnout of people was not a problem at last year's
"It's pretty slow going anywhere around town that day just because of the number of people and people serving around looking for parking."
"As a matter of fact, I even had people calling me way back in April or May wanting to know when the kids would plan their vacation around it," she said.
Coffee Shop
Minsky's Munchers, Wednesday nite is your nite to
In case of bad weather the DLA board will decide by 10 a.m. whether to continue the sale or to change it to Friday.
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University Daily Kansan, July 20, 1983
Page 3
Dog-dipping day fights fleas
By STEVE ZUK Staff Writer
Poo watched intently from a truck window as Micco and Brownie were dunked in a trough of white liquid.
The small ones were helpless. They were grabbed by the legs and dipped once, or twice if their owners thought it necessary
The big ones could put up a better fight. They tried to hold their positions as they were pulled up a plank, and they splashed as they went in.
AND ALL OF THEM, dogs of almost every size and variety, went in.
Poue, a Chow, was told that his dumking, a baptism of sorts, would cleave him and make him happier, not understand. He was only a dog.
And in this way, Roger Tuckel,
Lawrence, and Kim Kennedy,
Lepton, dunked at least 200 area
dogs in the trough Saturday, ridding them of fleas and ticks.
The mass dunking, which took place at Lawrence Feed and Farm Supply, 545 Wisconsin St., was the store's first free dog dip in recent years, and it was a splashing success, according to Tuckel, owner of the feed store.
"Any time you say 'free,' the people will turn out," Tuckel said. "We've had people coming by since 7 o'clock, whose been ringing off the phone."
TUCKEL AND KENNEDY supervised the dipping, which began at 1 p.m., of a steady stream of dogs that were fed into the feed store earlier than morning.
"If there weren't 200 dogs, I'll eat them all," Tuckel said.
The trough of repellent was emptied at 4:30 p.m., but the dogs kept coming until early evening, he said.
Tuckel said his store would have another dog dip in September when the weather begins to get cooler.
"Dogs should be dipped every eight to 10 weeks, but some of these dogs never even see a vet," Tuckel said.
SO THE STORE had a veterinarian on hand in case any owners wanted their dogs to have rabbits shots or checks.
The store used a lindane repellent Saturday that is available over the counter. Lindane is used on livestock for treating scabies.
"Fleas and ticks are terrible this year," Tockel said, because the weather the past few months has been ideal for them.
But 200 dogs will be happier this summer, regardless of how they felt when they were dipped in the trough.
"The dog dip turned out great. Everyone had a good time," Tuckel said.
A LOT OF PURINA dealers do it throughout the country, and it helped our business. We had a great day Saturday.
"It's a convenience for the people."
Chancellor Gene A. Budig has been appointed new *G*^(n+1)* of Staff of the
Chancellor named to military post
Maj. Gen. Raph T. Tice, adjunct general of Kansas, who made the appointment, said that Budig was the only head of a major public university involved with either the Air National Guard or the Air Force Reserve.
HOWEVER, BUDIG SAID Monday that "faculty and staff members from many institutions of higher learning operate in national Guard programs."
"These programs are important to our national defense," he said. "I consider it a very important assignment, previously, as do the other participants."
For more than 20 years, Budig has been active in the Air National Guard in Nebraska, West Virginia and Kansas. He is a full colonel.
Budig said that the Kansas Air National Guard, which has major flying detachments at Forbes Field in Oklahoma City, required a weekend in Wichita, required one weekend a
JOHN HARRIS
Chancellor Gene A. Budig month plus 15 days a year for special training
Budig said that his weekend duty was soent at either Forbes or McConnell
and that on some weekends he might spend Saturday at one of the bases and Sunday at the other.
"THE TIME REQUIRED will be the same," Budig said. "The responsibility will be greater.
"I have to be concerned with the well-being of more than 2,000 members of the Kansas National Guard."
Budig replaces Brig Gen William S. Mahler, Overland Park, who retired. Budig will report to the Assistant General-Air, Ernest Z. Adelman.
Budig is a graduate of the Air Force Squadron Officers School, the Air Command and Staff College and the Industrial College of the Armed Forces;
Before coming to Kansas two years ago, he served as president of Illinois State University from 1973 to 1977 and of West Virginia University from 1977 to 1981. He holds three academic degrees from the University of Nebraska.
The appointment became effective July 1.
SUMMER THEATRE SHINES
Kansas Repertory Theatre '83
Presented by The University of Kansas Theatre
Curtain time is 8:00 p.m. /*2:30 p.m. matinee in the Crafton-Preyer Theatre / Murphy Hall
Tickets on sale now in the Murphy Hall Box Office
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Opinion
Page 4
University Daily Kansan, July 20, 1983
The ladv needs a facial
Most people have more to worry about than the health of a 97-year-old lady in New York City. But this lady is special and her story is worth hearing.
She has a chronic skin ailment which has pockmarked her skin over the ages. We hear that she has a strange growth on her elbow. There are rumors that her head isn't on straight. She's the Statue of Liberty and she's falling to pieces.
Here in Lawrence, we may find ourselves far removed from the happenings on either coast. We may be in the heartland, but we have to think of our country, not just wheat, weather and words.
The Statue of Liberty is not just an enormous sculpture in New York Harbor. It's one of the most visible and moving symbols of what this country stands for. Cynics may point at the deteriorating statue and say that it shows how deteriorated the state of liberty is in the U.S. It may be true that the statue is falling apart, but it was not erected to be the butt of a national joke. It's time to repair the lady.
rounding the 305-foot statue with scaffolding for 2-and-one-half years and may entail removing the right arm and torch and rebuilding it on the ground. A team of French and American architects have completed a study of the statue and estimate that the repairs will cost from $20 million to $30 million. That's a lot of cash, but would be money well spent.
The restoration will require sur-
It's not that easy, though. The White House isn't going to pick up the lady's tab. The money for restoration is coming from public donations. The donations are being collected by the Interior Department's Statue of Liberty-Ellis Island Commission, (co National Park Service, Interior Building, Washington, D.C. 20240).
For many of us, even in Lawrence, the Statue of Liberty was the first sight of America our ancestors saw. Perhaps that is what we should think about when we hear a cry for money from the restoration commission.
It all goes well, the repairs will be finished in plenty of time for the centennial celebration of the statue's dedication, Oct. 28, 1986, according to the team of architects. We think it would be a fitting birthday present to one of our nations leading ladies.
U.S.
U.S.S.R.
©1993 WILLIAM NEWS
SAMANTHA
Ball diamonds are boy's best friend
I have a confession to make. These past couple of years I have been going through a "born again" experience. It is not, however, a religious experience. Rather, it involves an overwhelming renewed interest in the game of baseball. As with all confessions, it is best to start at the beginning.
beginning.
Summer vacation is a time of endless possibilities. Especially for an elementary school student who has suffered through the agony of late spring classes. One of those possibilities involves baseball.
Baseball can take many different forms. I, along with many other kids, took part in "organized" baseball, such as Little League. I wasn't the most graceful player. But I played the game with plenty of heart and desire.
game with plenty of bases.
I played every position except first base and pitcher. Some might call it versatility, others called it uncoordinated. I do remember sometimes having to chase after fly balls or watch a grounder go through my legs.
The best thing was the队 I played for — TED Market. Win or lose, after every game, the players could go to the sponsor's store and get a free soda or popsicle.
As for my times at bat, I wasn't known as a long-ball threat or a short-ball threat. I was luck if I was hitting my weight, which was under 100 pounds. Instead of looking for a ball to hit, I wished for the walk. Let somebody else swing for the fences or make an out.
Besides "organized" baseball, there were the pickup games. No uniforms, no managers or umpires but plenty of running around. It wasn't often that we could get enough players for two full squads, so we improvised.
in squares, so we import them.
Sometimes the team at bat had to supply a
catcher. Or a catcher and a pitcher. There were times when a ball hit to right field was foul since both teams were playing without a rightfielder.
both teams were played. Other baseball variations included: pop flies, hot box, catch, whiffle ball or stick球. When there wasn't anybody around, a rubber ball, a wall and a dash of imagination could put you in the middle of the World Series.
But playing the game wasn't enough. One had to collect baseball cards. A pack of cards cost a
C
JUSTIN ABELSON Managing Editor
nickle. For the money, one got five cards and a piece of gum. The gum was very pink, very sweet and usually quite stale.
The cards allowed me to get closer to my heroes, like Willie Mays or Bob Coleman or lesser known players like Choo Choo Coleman. Sure, most of the poses were staged. And I always disliked playing with cards. I loved playing cards and I would provide me with such useful information that a player did during the off season.
But there was more to do with the cards than to just look at them. One always tried to trade the duplicates. A George Altman for a Boston Red Sox's rookie stars. Flipping cards was another pastime. It was played like pitching pennies, except you never flipped your favorite cards. But sometimes, when you got caught up in the flipping fervor, you lost a favorite or two.
Then there was the radio or television. Or the newspapers supplying the accounts of games, the features, standings and box scores. Or the specialty magazines, with the pictures that often got cut out and taped to the walls.
There were also the baseball books: the histories of the game; the autobiographies and biographies, and the essays written by baseball players. One such writer was Lily Barker, who age it took the form of 'boy wonder' about
And then there were the trips to the ballpark. My attention was divided between the game and the food I could consume. Hot dogs, popcorn, pizza, cookies, broccoli, and even if they gave away a prize, Cracker Jack, even if they gave away a prize.
Chucker Jacen
But as I reached high school, my interest in the game ran to wane. I no longer devoured all I could about baseball. In fact, I found baseball boring.
Even in college, baseball wasn't a passion. I followed the playoffs and the World Series but only in passing. The summer after graduating, he was when the change occurred. I saw the light.
I was working in Geneva, New York, where one of the summer offerings was a minor league baseball team. The Geneva Cubs were the single A affiliate of the Chicago Cubs.
How can I describe the experience? The place was small enough to get to know the players. During night games, one might take notice of the sunset and the stars. The fans were enthusiastic and friendly. A fine place to get reacquainted with the game.
That proved to be the reswakening experience. I want to spread the word to those who are lost. Make your way to the hallpark, relax and enjoy yourself. It is a pleasant way to get saved.
Parade of AIDS victims won't find the cure
Parades are usually pleasant, and my memories of childhood smiles and tears when the parade came into town and are left quite vivid — memories that I wouldn't trade for the world — perched stop Dad's shoulders so I could see, though it often meant he couldn't.
For the most part, they are all the same, with brightly-colored floats lavishly covered with thousands of flowers; loud, marching bands bellowed sounds my young ears grew to enjoy more and more; and music that was a bit of trash along the street and tired little boys and girls — and parents.
A new kind of parade was held recently, though time would hardly allow me to chase my childhood fondness to San Francisco to enjoy it. And I would have been quite disappointed had I
gobble.
And, in fact, it is doubtful that many children watched this parade, and if they did, it is doubtful they understood its message.
A group of AIDS victims, calling themselves the "People with AIDS Alliance," led an estimated 300,000 people through the streets of San Francisco in the 13th annual Gay Freedom Day Parade.
Admittedly, the parade is not a new one, but to my eyes, and doubtless, to the eyes of many children, it was.
Homosexuals, intravenous drug abusers,
Haitians and hemophiliacs make up more than
94 percent of this country's victims of acquired
immune deficiency syndrome, or AIDS.
PETER TAYLOR
And, of the reported 1,641 confirmed victims of
For years, parades have symbolized to our children amusement, the declaration of a special event or day.
concerned, frightened.
So were lepels, but they didn't hold parades.
WARREN BRIDGES
the disease, it has been reported that 1.140 of
it is caused by a bacterial
Obses are either homosexual or bisexual Statistics are not the problem here.
True, victims of the disease are justifiably concerned, frightened.
Three days before the parade, held June 26, the National Gay Task Force met with Reagan administration officials in an effort to try to combat the disease.
Jeff Levi, a representative of the group, has been reported as calling the meeting "very successful," and said that the administration officials indicated that they would ask for more than $17 million from the 1984 budget to help fight the disease.
That hardly seems necessary, however, as newspapers, television reports and radio have almost daily reported on some aspect of the disease, mentioning even that the doctor who was denied medical attention for years because doctors reportedly failed to correctly diagnose the disease as AIDS.
The parade's successful steps in fighting the disguise?
Perhaps the parade was meant to draw attention to the disease.
Perhaps the victims who participated in the parade had something to say.
it only they had said it — as the group in Washington did.
I don't see any.
Letters Policy
The University Daily Kansan welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten, double-spaced and should not exceed 300 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.
Dog days bring on heat politically silly season
By IRA R. ALLEN
United Press International
WASHINGTON — The political "silly season," a phrase coined by some pundit long ago to describe campaign publicity gimmicks, is generally thought to start a few weeks before the first primary and to continue through Election Day.
But close观察 of headline patterns know the "silly season" is not some vague election year metaphor. It arrives on schedule once a year and lasts precisely 31 days.
It is July — a month so hot and humid in Washington that statues sweat and lethargic pigeons slide right off.
No sooner do the lightning bugs and mosquitoes rise up from the capital's primordial swamp than lawmakers and top government policymakers flee to Delaware beaches or California mountainset. Top investigative reporters loll on Martha's Vineyard. The regular order of official business comes to a stop, but the police are staying; the voters don't start paying attention until Labor Day in an election year, and they are barely conscious of politics in off years.
In July, there are not just slow news days. It's a slow news month.
a show news issue.
That is why for the past seven years, seemingly minor events become full blown scandals, dominating the headlines until Congress or the president does something truly substantive.
latest daily story:
This July, for example, the only story in town
— breaking as soon as Congress on a 10-day
vacation — is "is debategate."
Every recent July has seen the Washington media, usually consisting of those reporters who have to work when everyone else is on vacation, embarked on a feeding frenzy nipping at the latest juicy tidbit.
While potentially more substantial than other scandals, there has yet to be any solid evidence that anybody did anything illegal. There is a growing suspicion that whatever is proven, only a few lower-level campaign aides will suffer any consequences.
What makes this July even juicier is the allegation that friends of the president and
possibly some government officials committed bizarre sexual activities on video tape.
Senate Republican leader Howard Baker speculated that the current brouhaha boiled over just as lawmakers went on a Fourth of July vacation, proving that "this city has missed Congress. The press goes crazy writing its own stories."
Last July, the story was allegations that lawmakers engaged in homosexual acts with pages and may have used, bought or sold cocaine.
In 1981, the July scandal was the firing of CIA covert operations chief Max Hugel for his past deeds in an alleged stock swindle, and calls for the firing of CIA Director William Casey, who failed to fully disclose his financial dealings. Casey is also involved in the current controversy.
very.
In 1980, President Carter's perennially embarrassing brother, Billy, was required to register as a foreign agent and to testify before a Senate committee about alleged influence-pedding in Libya.
In 1979, President Carter created a crisis by retreating incommunicado to Camp David, firing some of his Cabinet and pronouncing the existence of a nuclear attack "a national threat." July will do that to you.
In 1978, it was Carter's drug adviser, physician Peter Bourne, who scandalized headline writers by having written a phony prescription for an aide and eventually resigning.
July 177 marked the beginning of the tail of Carter's budget adviser, Bert "C" Mroud of Friar
Obviously, there are many other minor scandals that occupy idle reporters' witness the Libyan hit squad of December 1981 and the continuing speculation about Nancy Reagan's
And there is plenty of legitimate history being made — in other months.
indeed in so many ways.
So it gives one pause, in the year's best month for pausing, to wonder whatever happened to July.
Perhaps its quot*b of historic events — the birth of Julius Caesar, the American and French revolutions, the battle of Gettysburg, the moon landing, Ted Kennedy's fateful encounter with a bridge railing — was used up long ago.
The city deserves the best in redevelopment
Reservations about the proposed downtown mall should not be confused with any lack of desire to develop the central business district to its best advantage. Scheme IV offers some real pitfalls. Eighth street will be closed off. The fire department is situated on this street a block away. The disjointed interior wall creates a rat's nest in and upon those so called a rat's nest. In malls, there are fewer jobs per dollar and lower salaries than at downtown stores. Selection is limited and prices higher because soaring rents force a "middle Market" approach that ensures mediocrity. Thus this plan will cost 20 percent more due to its urban nature. Guess who says. Ask any
To the editor:
trucker working the downtown area about the plan. New Hampshire will be blocked and rerouted next to Rhode Island for an estimated million dollars.
mlinda boo start from the given that a southwall mall will be built: Sizerel has promised to do so. How can we keep the center city vital? A hotel and convention center on the blighted 600 block of New Hampshire would create new markets. An earth-sheltered retail center on the 700 block fronting Rhode Island would be of international import and offer utility savings for shops that can then offer lower prices. Gained in the deal would be a park on top. The appropriation of the Woolworth building would allow the necessary renovations to open up the first level to handicap
access and the revelation of the brick structure. One level could be a single store and other shops owned condominium style.
It's regrettable that we have been pushed into this scheme because of the package deal arrangement of financier, architect, contractor equalling that hybrid known as the developer. It's been either their way or not at all. Please remember that cash will flow out of state to mall home offices and our Louisiana-based owners ad infinitum. Something grand will be created in downtown Lawrence to the benefit of all — but not this mail. We can do better.
Ann G. Francke Lawrence junior
The University Daily KANSAN
The University Daily Kannan, (USPR 690-696) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 6045, daily during the regular school year and Wednesday and Friday during the summer sessions, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays, and final periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 6044. Subscriptions by mail are $12 for six months or $24 for a year in Kansas County and $18 for six months or $24 for a year in Kentucky. See the student section fee. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to the University Daily Kannan, 118 Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 6044.
Editor Janet Murphy
Managing Editor
Editorial Editor
Campus Editor
Business Manager
Laurie Samuelson
Retail/Production Manager
National/Back-to-School Coordinator
Classified/Campus Manager
Justin Abelan
Harry Mallin
Rick Dullea
Advertising Adviser and General Manager News Adviser
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Bill Maher
Cort Gorman
Jill Bodner
John Oberzan
Mike Kautsch
University Daily Kansan, July 20.1983
Page 5
Wolf Creek
From page 1
our other women took two bicycle chains in hand and slipped in.
Treaster said that once inside the gate it took the women about two and one-half minutes to secure the chains tightly.
"During that time one security officer advanced to grab the chain, but he stopped and stepped back, possibly to wait for the police to arrive." Treacher said.
She estimated that she and the other protesters were chained to the gate for about 25 minutes before police arrived.
KU graduate student Seraph Morgan, a spokesman for the group that organized the weekend Women's and Children's Peace Camp and the march and rally at the front gate, said that the rally began as the women were chaining themselves to the gate.
WOMEN AND CHILDREN listened to the rally's speakers while yelling and cheering in support of the protestors' actions, she said.
"Three children were cheering for their mother who was chained to the fence." Morgan said.
Morgan said that some of workers leaving the plant jeered at the protesters from passing cars.
Fromme said the protest should not have taken place while the workers were leaving.
"They chose the wrong time to chain themselves to the gate," he said. "Quitting time is not the time to do that and the workers weren't too pleased."
"They should be thankful they were arrested." Fromme said. "We could have had trouble."
MORGAN SAID THAT rally participants did not appear to be in danger from the workers and that participants in the rally realized that there would be a shift change at the time of the rally.
"We understand that the people who work there must pay rent and feed their children," Morgan said.
"But we wanted them to see us and think about what they are doing."
Lyle Koeper, KG&E manager of corporate communications, said, "When laws are broken the seriousness of the demonstration then becomes evident to all of society."
This type of demonstration does present a problem, he said, because both KG&E and taxpayers must pay to maintain law and order.
Koerper also said that demonstrations involving arrests represented "a real danger to life."
"This has been the first time there has been a demonstration at the site or Wichita that we have not been informed of," he said.
Koeper said that in the past, demonstrators had always contacted law enforcement officials.
Morgan said that the weekend Women's and Children's Peace Camp at John Redmond Reservoir and the rally at the plant's gate were well-publicized and had been organized, but that the decision to engage in illegal activities was a decision made by individuals.
"THERE WAS NO CONSPIRACY to get five people arrested," she said.
"If five non-violent people chained to a fence can tie up the entire security force at Wolf Creek there is definitely a security problem."
Morgan said that she was disappointed that the media focused primarily on the arrests and not the other educational activities of the weeken.
"We showed five films and slide shows and had six workshops dealing with peace issues." Morgan said. "I wish we could have gotten more coverage on that."
City
contingent on the group finding a building for the center within 90 days.
From page 1
THE FLIGHTS, which began this morning,
will cost $25 each way.
In other business, the commission authorized City Manager Buford Watson to sign an agreement with Capitol Airlines of Manhattan to provide air service to Kansas City International Airport.
Flights will leave Lawrence Municipal Airport weekdays at 7:15, 10:15 and 10:45, and 1:15.
Flightes will leave Kansas City International at 9:15 a.m. and leave 12:35, 1:45, 4:45, 9:15 and 12:45.
Under the agreement, Capitol will have to file fare changes with the city 15 days before they become effective, but the commission cannot deny them a rate change.
The commission also voted unanimously to grant a zoning variance to the new K.S. "Boots" Adams Alumni Center at KU so the University can construct a sign in front the building.
THE COMMISSION ALSO granted an extension to Bob Brown so that he could make repairs to a vacant house he owns at 725 New Jersey St.
The city had been considering tearing down the house.
The commission had issued two deadlines to Brown to make repairs to the house, which, in the meantime, will be used for other projects.
Commissioner Nancy Shontz admonished Brown for not meeting the deadline, but Brown said that he had not been able to get building permits for the wiring and plumbing needed on his property.
"I think if I were in your shoes, I would have done everything I could to get the work done because I knew the city would take my house if I didn't meet the deadline," she said.
Richard Kersenbahum, 1112 New Jersey St., said that the commission should not be tearing down buildings in that area against the wishes of the residents.
"I have yet to see anyone come down here from East Lawrence who wants these houses
"Maybe it comes from someone who has an interest in de-stabilizing the neighborhood."
KERSIENBAUM LATER said there was "a little war on going" between homeowners in the area and nearby industries that wanted to see businesses torn down so that the industries could expand
Ten Towering Reasons to Live Here.
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8. Swimming Pool: OPEN DURING SEASON
9. Graduate Student Tower: COMPUTER FACILITY
10. Women Student Tower: LIMITED ACCESS ENTRANCES
Student Loans at The First are worth writing home about.
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This weekend Fri July 22, Sat July 23, THE BELAIRS
In good time... Wichita Eagle-Beacon Forrest Rose, Scene Magazine
"Shots of Rocking RB, Soul and some outrageous Rock 'N' Roll that makes the dance floor valuable real estate... Recent gigs with Gatemouth 'Brown, Willie Dixon, and Albert Collins indicate these boys are headed for bigger things"
"Dave Pruitt's guitar riffs sear like high, hot whips. Henderson's harp walls like a grieving widow; the bass and drums drive the band like a freight train."
howing good time. Within EagleBeach
"Amid all the flash and three-chord frenzy of today's New Wave rockers and all the shaltz oozing out of the studios. The Belairs are playing deeply nourishing, earthy rhythm and blues."
"Michael Henderson was blowing hard like I've never heard before...
chugging like a freight train was carried right through the club"
*Alison M. Henson* *2014*
Nightflying Magazine
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan, July 20, 1983
Orchestra, chorus to perform together
By MICHAEL PAUL Staff Reporter
The University of Kansas String Orchestra and the KU Summer Repery. Chorus will perform together for the first time this summer at 8 p.m. tomorrow in Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont St.
The work that the 16-piece orchestra and the 25-voice chorus will perform will be "Kyrie" and "Gloria" from Mozart's "Missa brevis."
MICHAEL KIMBER, KU assistant professor of viola and assistant chairman of the music department, will conduct the orchestra.
James Ralston, KU professor of music, will conduct the chorus.
Kimber said the concert would be in Plymouth Congregational Church because a summer music camp was using a hill full of bill and because the church had an organ.
church had no organ to the 'Missa brevis,' he said. "Also, the layout of the church was appropriate for the
number of people performing in the concert. Hoch Auditorium was a bit large for this."
"Missa brevis," which means "brief Mass," was composed by Mozart when he was 18, Kimbel said. It will be the third work performed at the concert.
The orchestra will also perform five other works.
CORELLI'S CONCERTO GROSSO in D Major will be the first work performed. Don Appert, a doctoral student in conducting, will be the guest conductor.
conducted, she was the principal trombonist for both the Virginia Orchestra Group and the Virginia Opera Association from 1792 to 1863. During that time he was also an instructor of music at the Hampton Institute in Hampton, Va.
Appert said the work had three movements, with each movement consisting of a contrast in tempo and mood.
In the work, he said, a set of soloists will alternate playing with the full orchestra.
The work will feature three soloists -
Jennifer Himes and Mark Barsamian, both of Lawrence, will be the violin soloists, and Ulrike Hellborn, a student musician from Germany who is visiting Lawrence, will be the cello soloist.
THREE MOVEMENTS from Johann Sebastian Bach's Suite in D Major also will be performed. Kimber said that although the music was written for strings, trumpets and oboes, the music also could be played with only stringed instruments.
After "Missa brevis" there will an intermission and the orchestra will perform Grieg's "Last Spring," he said.
"This is a lively, sentimental piece for strings," said Kimber.
Don Appelt will then conduct his own composition, "In the Simulitude of a Dream." He composed the piece in 1981.
The work, he said, is based on John Bunyan's "Pilgrim's Progress."
"It's an attempt to capture Pilgrim's intense longing for heaven," he said.
Pieces, "Opus 44, No. 4, Jennifer Himes will be the featured soloist."
The concert will conclude with three movements from Hindemith's "Five"
KIMBER SAID ANOTHER title of the piece was "In the First Position for Advanced Players."
"The title refers to the first group of notes that violin players learn to use." he said. "Although not every composition is written in the first position, it still requires skill to play it.
"The music is exciting. It has a gorpy-like freacy to it."
Kimber said that the KU Summer Orchestra consisted mostly of KU students who were in the KU Orchestra during the school year.
He said that the summer orchestra had not existed for several years because of insufficient enrollment, and even this summer the orchestra was originally intended to be a reading orchestra.
A READING ORCHESTRA meets and rehearses but not with the intention of giving a performance.
"But this summer we discovered that we had a good group, and we decided to give a concert," Kimber said.
Music instrument thefts in high school camps biggest, KU police say
An out-of-state high school student participating in the KU Midwestern Music Camp celebrated his birthday without his musical instruments.
On Monday the student, Sean J. Abel,
Columbia, Mo., entered a storage room
in Murphy Hall and discovered that the
room had been abandoned and then
Saturday afternoon were gone.
ACCORDING TO KU POLICE Lieutenant Jeanne Longaker, the theft was the largest in the history of the music camp.
Two clarinets worth a total of $3,000,
a barrel of a clarinet worth $45, two
saxophones worth a total of $4,800,
an amplifier worth $600, and a synthesizer
worth $700 were stolen from Abel, 18,
and two 17-year campmates.
Longaker said that there were no signs of forced entry into the room and
She said that through the years the same keys had been used to unlock the storage room door.
that the thief who stole the $4,145 worth of equipment might have entered with a handgun.
DAVID BUSHOUSE, director of the Midwestern Music Camp, said, "Most instruments which have been reported stolen in the past have usually only been misplaced and these turn up and are returned to the students."
But next week the lock on the door will be changed, she said.
Bushouse said that in this case he did not think that the students would be so fortunate.
"At least one of the students had his instruments insured." he said.
Longaker said KU police detectives began an investigation into the case yesterday.
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University Daily Kansan, July 20, 1983
Page 7
On the record
A THEIF STOLE $419 from the Scotch Fabric Care Services, 1526 W. 23rd St., sometime between Sunday afternoon and Monday morning, police said. The thief removed an air conditioner, entered the building through the opening and then used a key to open the safe. Police have no suspects.
A LAWRENCE MAN accidentally shot himself Monday evening at his home in the 800 block of Rhode Island Street, police said. The man told police that while he was cleaning his hagut gun, sending shotgun pellets into his leg.
Police said that the man had been released from Lawrence Memorial Hospital and that the wound was minor.
A TOPEKA MAN remains in Douglass County jail in lieu of $7,500 bond after
he was charged Monday with possession of stolen property, obstruction of justice, possession of drug paraphernalia, possession of a firearm, police said.
The cities of Lawrence and Hollywood may seem like an unlikely match, but the prospects of two movies one already filmed in Lawrence and one that part of them may be filmed in Lawrence — are looking up.
The air date of the movie "The Day After," which will feature parts filmed in Lawrence last fall, is now scheduled to bill BILL SAul. ABC publicist
City scene of movie
It was filmed at many Lawrence locations such as Allen Field House, Lawrence Memorial Hospital, Concord and Rusty's Food Center, 901 Iowa St.
The movie, which is about the aftermath of a nuclear war, was originally scheduled to air in March.
Lawrence Roundup
Several Lawrence extras participated in the scenes, but they may not make the final editing cut in the new movie. The film's most significant was which originally four hours long,
The MGM film is based on the novel "The Last Cattle Drive," which was written by KU graduate Robert Day, who will be writer-in-residence this
John Myers, director of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce, said that he expected to hear about the shouting schedule this week.
The movie's featured actors, Jack Nicholson and Timothy Hutton, visited Lawrence last week scouting for film locations.
The board of education of Lawrence
Unified School District 497 Monday
approved a 4:1 mill increase for its
1983-84 budget.
A mill is $1 of taxation for every
$1,900 of assessed property valuation.
District seeks tax hike
The tax increase was needed because of a $3.8 million decrease in the district's tax base, according to a U.S. federal judge who intends for business and facilities.
The total 1983-84 budget will be published Friday in a local newspaper. The public hearing on the budget is scheduled for Aug. 15.
Three applicants completed initial hearings conducted by the Federal Communications Commission Friday for the right to build and operate the first non-cable television station in Lawrence.
Cable review continues
The FCC is expected to reach a decision in four to six months.
Lawrence was assigned UHF channel 38 in April 1981 by the FCC.
The three applicants being reviewed by the FCC are Denning-Santee Communications of Lawrence, Miller Broadcasting Inc. of Baldwin, owned by Monte Miller, publisher of the Baldwin-based Telegraphics, and Kansas Family TV Inc. of Chattanooga, Tenn.
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time two three four five six seven eight nine ten
15 words or fewer. $2.25 $2.75 $2.75 $3.25 $3.25 $3.25 $3.25 $3.25
ten words or fewer. $2.50 $2.50 $2.50 $2.50 $2.50 $2.50 $2.50 $2.50
AD DEADLINES
to run
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Friday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
ERRORS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or simply by calling the Kauai business office at 864-1358.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
The Kaunan 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.
KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE
118 Flint Hall 864-4358
SHE help group for anorectics, bulimics and their families and friends will meet on Wednesday. 7:30 p.m. in the Lawrence-Kanasa Room of the Lawrence Memorial Hospital, starting July 13. The group is a support group for those with eating disorders and is free. For more information, call 824-249 or 842-8443.
1033 Vermont BIKE SHOP 841-6642
Rick's Bike Shop
400 bikes in stock, buoy, Foji,
Trek, Puch. We repair everything.
RICKS
Stanley's Books now has AIR CONDITIONING.
Lawrence's female women, and children,
babeskins, girls, and baby clothes.
M.M. 12.5, Thursday 11.8 Sat. 10.5, 10.1, 1/2
Mass.
FOR RENT
b bedroom doubles just south of Kroger's Appliances,
garage 8723, 843-8065
三 bedroom homes available for August 1st
and early September at studios. Located across
from staircase. Call 843-2116 for appointment.
OPEN HOUSE
Brand New Sunrise Place
9th & Michigan
from $375-$475 a month.
Open daily 9:00-12:00 a.m.
& 1:00-5:00 p.m.
Call 841-1287 (office)
or 841-5797
OPEN HOUSE
- Walking distance to K. U.
* Two bedroom highly energy
efficient home
and fireplace available.
* Free cable TV.
* Living
KU STUDENTS
A nice, one bedroom house, walking distance from campus. Available August 1! Call Abel.849-7522
a couple of weeks ahead of the super stadium station, 1 & 2 & bedroom apartments,
male sleeping rooms. Laundry facilities & off-street parking.
KU STUDENTS
FACULTY
Still looking for that perfect home?
Consider these completely furnished studios
1. br. 2br. & 3br. apartment locations ...
HANOVIR PLACE
between 14th and 15th
on Massachusetts
841-1212
922 Tennessee " 916 Indiana
841-8280
Military Management
Mesastrach Management
Management in
Maintenance
COLDWATER FLATS
413 W. 14th
841-1212
4 - PLEXES
Baitment apartment very close to campus 1 room with bath. Unfurnished except refrigerator. Prefer laundry machines, dishwashers, utilities. Call Jim, 2 p.m. or 5-7 p.m. 841-2089. Innover Townhouse, spacious 2 BH unfurnished townhouses w/garage. Close to campus & downtown. Enclosed. 1 month leaves available @ 641-6657.
nine bedrooms apartment, sleeping room, 9 bedroom
room, no beds, 843-1601, 842-9717.
MED. STUDENTS. NURSES. THEOPATISTS.
MED. STUDENTS. THEOPATISTS.
(For Spring or Fall) We have a beautiful duplex available. Completely refurbished with ac, appl, we have a separate bathroom and incentive for early birth. Applicant must include incentive for early birth.
One bedroom duplex just west of campau. 843-6050.
Partially furnished luxurious (ownhouse). 3 bdrm, 1/2 bath. C/A, W/B fireplace, private fence yard with covered patio and garage, quiet. South side of hill, walk to KU. 3 male graduate or mature students. Enclosed kitchen. Pets: References. 845 plus utilities. 842-7460
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!
843-8559
NAISMITH HALL
843-8559
Plan Ahead! Korns available for spring summer
school. 50% of students participate in
cooperative, community close (a campus
setting) for summer school.
Clean, quiet two-bedroom, home housekeeping apartment. Private bath, light in private home suite. Two-story building with utilities included. Graduate students) preferred. Available August 1. Call answer, weekends only.
Save money, rent, a 1 or 3 bedroom, or studio apartment next to campus. No pets. Phone 642-7541 for help. See "For Rent" on campus webster.monetone. One block from Union. Utilities paid, no pet. See at 1201 Ohio. First choice pet comes胜利.
Before You Sign,
Check With Us.
JAYHAWKER TOWERS
1603 W. 15th
843-4993
The Only On-Campus Apartments.
Offering all utilities paid.
10 month leases, free Cable TV,
Swimming pool and covered parking
Two bedroom units ...
For the KU student.
Rent now or reserve for free - furnished apts, a room near university or downtown, with off-street parking. No pets please. Phone 612-387-9500. Website www.businesstours.com. $4/month plus 4/unities. Close bus route to hub. Call 748-6653.
Studios
One Bedrooms
Two Bedrooms
All Utilities Paid
SOUTHERN PARKWAY TOWNSHIP spacious, quiet 3 bedroom duplexes. Located at 62nd & Kannell. Featuring all appliances, weather-dry book-ook-up, large private pool, swimming pool. Call 748-1570 for an appointment.
Massachusetts at 7th
749-5011
Eldridge House Apartments
- Studios, Apartments.
The Place To Live In Downtown Lawrence
0.98.88.88
TRAILRIDGE
- Furnished or Unfur
- Townhouses
- Excellent Maintenance Service
- Laundry Facilities
- 3 Pools, Tennis, Athletic Clubs
KU Bus
2500 W. 6th 843-7333
Need a place for fall? We have one room left on second floor of an old home close to campus. Share the space with your friends. References requested. Deposit required. $185/month with utilities paid by landlord. Landlord 844-6243.
FOR SALE
1979 Volkswagen Bug. Extended condition. Refurbished. Tested. Tune-up. Inspection battery and tune-up using $10 Call Auto Repair.
1927 Daimon 310 2 dr. sedn. 63,000 miles, excellent mechanical condition. Auto transmission & electron ignition. Body needs work. Asking $500
(913) 851 4800 after 5 p.m.
1947 Mercury Comet, $1,100. Body, OK. Interior
Very good. 6 cylinder. Runs:鬼马 748-3105.
1977. MIGB, excellent condition, mileage - 49,000
$3,000. BKM 841-1231
1975 Yanana RD 200 - Excellent to 3,500
miles. Streetwalk. Call 843 843 7977. Keepying
777 MAVEHURK* 4-door, WB, AT A,C AM,PW,
condition. $1600 or best offer. After 4.
843 960.
1959 LTD Landau, P/S, P/B, A/C power steal,
power windows, cradle control, excellent condition,
power steal.
CONFERENCE DESK, metal, burgundy and chrome, x36 x96, top 8, overhanging 3 side boards, $260
top 12, overhanging 3 side boards, $260
top 36, top locks, $450 EXECUTIVE SWITCH BLAIR, CHROME
top 54, wood swiss board, $260 wood swiss board, $260
DELTER SWITCH BLAIR, QUEEN size double bed, *Jamison*, Traditional, white, used, 2 years Cost new - $890 your price - $1090 COFFER SALES $299 for each pair enclosures, massive wood, for $75. SECTIONAL SALES $299 per pair, insured, *Iraved* Excellent $120 Hardware Karden hk000 receiver $140 BC260 turntable $190 (or best price) $404-545
Homestee, 12.9, 8;20 B/W, D/W, New A/C, skirted, down large, wood floored shed, $6, 200 or will consider as a partial payment on a small rancher in NW Wisconsin, 4691, Ld 9, 20 and Arkansas, even weeks.
Visiting faculty member must still classify two-time Digest Appeal 1970. New white-water, alternate-density dams are in the process of construction.
Munt selli, Honda Hawk, 1980 • $880, Windshield BUC
855-641-8737
Two dressers, one with mirror. Good for college students or apartment living. Price vegetable.
Piano. Beautiful, old upright with bench. 300-641 Call 8907, after work or on weekends.
LOST AND FOUND
COORDINATOR: The Consumer Affairs Association is seeking a dedicated graduate student to coordinate job opportunities for the new project, ten hours per week. hourly flexible Job description and application available at 819
Found. black grey-orange, female, declared cat,
843-3631.
Hewlett Packard Calculator. Believed best inunion June 30th. Desperately need back Tatom atm
Computer Science 300 worked on & 2 paperbacks
found in law of licehythm B164-8011 or
B164-8012
HELP WANTED
Dedicated live-in houseparents for boys group home in Shawne, Good support system; competitive salary and benefits. College degree preferred. No children. Send resume to P.O. Box 1254, Glasgow, UK.
BENEFITS: Up to $19,000* salary, allowance in $24,000 in four years. Over $1,800 per month for selected students during ur. and Sr. years. Medical dental and medical coverage. 30 days' earned annual paid vacation. Opportunity for Navy-financed college-education. Family benefits.
TEACHERS NEEDED IN FLORIDA
instructors needed to teach math, science, or engineering at the Navy's Nuclear Power School in Orlando, Florida.
Live-in female associate aide wanted for elderly live-in woman within walking distance of campus. Room and board in exchange for housekeeping duties, transportation, preparation. Phone 802-653-0245 or evenings at 9am.
EAST COAST ADVENTURE - BOSTON. Families live in child-care workers. Live in sale, live in retirement community. Live in city. Flexible starting dates, many openings, one week long. 180, 190, 200, 210, 240,
QUALIFICATIONS. U.S. cities. Ages 19-29. College qualifications or senior education, BSMS technical majors only. Call集训 Navy Officer Opportunities at 816-374-7820. Mon.-Wed. 8am-2pm.
DIRECTOR OF LABORATORIES Twelve month appointment; 6 months three-partners time, 3 months full-time at $1,000 or $12,000, depending on the position offered. Position may be expected to begin August 1, 1963. Position involves advanced technical and skilled work in the design, manufacture, fabrication and installation of devices, some highly sophisticated, including small computer, timers, physiological sensors, and stimulus control mechanisms. Application deadline is July 22, 1963. Contact Dennis H Karpwitz, Department of Psychology, University of Aaras. Phone: (804) 573-8395. Applicaion deadline is
Need female roommate to share a bpt, apt. furn.
A/C, noon meal $190 - etc. 749-1825
Gammon's Nightclub is looking for intelligent, hardworking women with good personality and looks to join the team at the 1 nightclub in Baltimore. Call 434-9977 after 2 p.m. for an appointment.
PERSONAL
THE ETC SHOP 10. W 9th 843-0611. Black leather riding boots, 9e like new!
THE ETC, SHOP 10 @ 9h, 843 601) Sidwalk sale
july 21 Wing-hip wipe front tux shirts
january 25 Grip-on sleeve
Instant passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization immigration, visa, ID, and of course fine portraits Swella Studio 749-161
The Etc. Shop
The Etc.
Shop
Vintage & Classic
Contemporary Clothing
10 West 9th St.
Closed Wed.
10 West 10th St.
sometimes last year gain! The ETSHC Ship 10 W
embellished jewelry with good quality. Saturday sale
jewelry, good quality. Sunday sale Jewelry
NURSING STUDENT needs ride to KUMC for fall.
1983. Will share expenses. 842-4244.
OVER 10,000 ITEMS FOR SALE! Super low prices,
clothing, furniture, knitwear, GUARANTEED
STOCK. FREE SHIPPING.
NEW YORK
$1.58
ICE CREAM FREQUENTLY SERVED
Gate a ‘taste’ of New York 6th & Mass, in Downtown Lawrence, Beet hot dogs, super dogs and fabulous Polish sausages in pita bread garnished with your choice of N.Y. kraut, spicy brown mustard, freshly chopped onions, ketchup sauce, pickled cabbage and celery salt at Mass.
Cool down with a Dr. Brown's crema soda, black cherry, root beer, orange or a unique Cel-Rey—all dried from NYC.
Deliciously served from an authentic N.Y. vendor's cart.
10:30-3:30. Tues-Sat. weather
serving
Fabulous Franks
**AIDE NEEDED to San Diego or anywhere on route**
Leave July 17 or 28. Call 749-2609
say from a third-country issue provider. Pricing is subject to change based on availability. Special for students. Haircuts $7 and permits $15.
carries
INDIAN EARTH
927 Mass
The all in one, non-cosmetic cosmetic
...
Waxing, threading, manicure, pedicure, bleaching.
Call 843-5404
Impress your datsage with the total environment of the Hawks Crusing. Grove on the front porch to great tuesdays, total sunshine and mega bush. Happy 8:10 p.m. showings, every day 4:17, the Hawks
eastern Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Make sure out of western Civilization. Make sense to use in eastern Civilization. Give it a review. For exam preparation. *New Analysis of Western Civilization* available now at Town Crest. The
DRYERS THAT DRY!
(BAR and LAUNDBROMAT)
505 draws Pool Table
*Bulletin* For bulimia or other food-related
problems, call 843-3429
ESCAPE THE NEAT, COME IN FOR
A COOL TAN!
*1 FREE WEEK
*1 $2 service charge
TAN ME
EUROPEAN TANNING
841-8232 • Holiday Plaza • 29th & Iowa
SUDS·N·DUDS
SLOP by THE ETC SHOP and see Linda & Linda
BROTHERS' PATRONIC WEEKEND. Enjoy a BLUE PLETS CATERIES 4 p.m., every day. Also enjoy scrimmage submarine sandboxes, great tunnels,
shuffleboards, and more. Walk on over, just one black north of the beach.
DRYERS THAT DRY!
Yurt Andreeva would have Lawrences' Yolk sauce topping her eggs. The chef guaranteed to knock on your taste buds with deliciously prepared cheese.
west end of Holiday Plaza
749-4132
BONUS! 5 long stems, assorted colored $1.50 each.
Bonus items included: Coin-sterched Plants, 2111 W 250 B
Coin-sterched Plants, 2111 W 250 B
Leaving Town?
Airline Tickets
At airline counter prices
no extra service charge
Make your travel
arrangements
- travel arrangements
* Eurail and Japan Rail Passes
See Maupintour Travel
Service for
Carr and cooper hall uses
* Car rental—Hotel confirmations
* Student semester break holidays
* Travel insurance
ON CAMPUS LOCATION in the Student Union and 000 Mad
- The lowest airfares—Complete
749-0700
Maupintour travel service
749 0799
Tightness · Party like it's 1995! While you are out, grab some healthy taste at yello in Debut Late: Mon · Thurs 'till it p.m. Fr. Sat 'till it p.m. Sun. Mon · Thurs 'till it p.m. If you party at a dinner, Submit demand 841-3506
SERVICES OFFERED
Beginner. Adult Piano Classes. Special 6-week
course. CCL 842-0475 for class times. Olivia Piano &
Susan Piano.
MOPED & MOTORCYCLE REPAIR Honla, Yamaha Kawasaki Sankuki, Sunroof repair electrical repairs up & delivery available. Work with appointment only. Call please 841-5212 on 8 to p. 3pm. Tues. thru Sat.
Learn Teach Learn's summer from experienced instructor in small groups with other K1 students, or participate as a teacher.
Great Plains Numismatic Services
Pay 747
Box 747
745 New Hampshire
745 New Hampshire
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
842-8001
Racquetball, tennis, squash racquet stringing,
specializing in new graphite/hybrid stringing.
Tennis Racquets for sale also. Head Prince,
City, etc. New Orleans, 842-350-3987, 748-352-5937
Library Research- Editing - Typing, 842-840
TUTORING, H.M. CS 300, French, individual
English, 842-840
TYPING
12 hour Typing. Fast, accurate, dependable. All day.
Supports Word Processor, Quickbook, and
AUTIPYING Service. IBM MMC. Card 32U.
Illimited storage storage with easy retrieval and
editing. Ideal for layout designing, flames,
flouses, and images. IBM MMC. 128 after p. 97.
Accurate, affordable typing by former Harvard Medical School secretary. Call Nany, 814-1219.
AFFORDABLE GUILD for all your typing needs.
Call July 8, 892-7495 after 6 p.m.
IBM on IBM-Preciate personal typing
exceedings/wweekends 921-5600 Barbara Special
Accurate, affordable typing by former Harvard Medical School secretary Call Nancy. Accurate, affordable typing. Ask about speedy service (under 20 pages) Call Mary · 914-687-673
Absolutely LETTER PERIPHERY typing - editing.
Your work is only binaries but not executable.
For more information go to http://www.konzept.com.
Call TIP TOP TYPING - 1201 Iowa. Experienced typing
TIP top memory keypad. Right correcting
keypad.
Experienced Typed Tenn. Paper masters, all except specialties of writing. Send resume and will correct spelling. Phone 843-6044, Mrs. Burris.
Eikva could wiggle. Shakespeare could write my
talent, typing. Call 842-9034 after 5:30 & weekends.
Experienced typist will type letters, theses and
dissertation. IBM Correcting. Selective. Call
is a FaaC, Fast, Affordable, Clean Ttyping, Word Processing; you can afford it (843-8383)
ON TIME, PAPERIS TYPED, FAST & EFFICIENT.
MA1-3510
Professional secretary will do your typing, themes,
themes, dissertations 843-887 JP, 509 and 600
JP.
**TYPNING** Call Speed. 40 pp & under, overnight service. Any Length. call 843-6483 of 5 a.m. p.11pm. **TYPNING PLUS** These, dissertations, papers, letters, applications, resumes. Assistance with composition, grammar, spelling, ete. English for foreign students — or American 841-6244
WANTED
GOOD WORK Good clean word, typing process at *tipsy* rates. Call 682 3111 for dependable services
Female roommate wanted starting August for 8th floor apartment in Riverside Reach. Residence level 3. Call 882-3506. Phone: 882-3506.
Female roommate wanted for 2 bed apartment, for fall - spring seminars. Fee per service $185/mo plus room rental.
Female roommate need to share mice, fully furnished West Hill Apts $115 a month plan 7/12-9/12
Looking for mature, upper level male roommate to share large 2 bedroom apt. for next school year. W/W carpet, A/C, dishwasher, owen room. $152.50 plus 1/2 electricity. 749-2623, ask for Lee.
Male roommate must. Nice two bedroom apt. at 8th & Avon. Prefer 1st year, grade or law student. $250-$400 per month.
Male roommate requires for furnished Wedoworkroom
to be rented. Room is 120 sq ft, deposit: 842-4000 by 11 a.m., after 6 p.m.
Neonokroom, mate meal roommate to share two bedroom apartment. Pool, laundry, dishwasher; standard equipment 10 minutes from campus by car and 12 hours from home. Call Mark at 841-4921 @ 6 p.m.
One female roommate to share rice house with 4 other girls. Very cheerful girl. Private bedroom. Move in after August 1. Call Nancy or Catelee. 749-3597
one or two roommates needed for a two bedroom
apc, one block north of campus. 843-5846
---
Wholesale, payable to your employer or directly to the office. Early August, share expenses and driving, Georgia. 610-735-2918 or 740-323-2918. Bachelor's degree required. Rent on aft. 84th & Alabama with 2 others. Rent is $10 plus utilities. Call Dan or Jan (collect 912)-381-1292 or plus utilities.
Roommate wanted to share ranch style home. Lots of extra. Close to 1290. $199.78 - 749-2890
LARZ
Don't want to drive across town in the summer heat to send in your classified ad? Take advantage of this form and save yourself time and money while still receiving the satisfaction of placing your ad in the Kansan. Just mail this form with a check or money order payable to the Kansan to: University Dally Kansan, 118 Flint Hall, Lawrence, Ks 66045. Use rates below to figure costs.
Classified Heading:
Write Ad Here:
Name:___
Address:___
Phone:___
Date to Rur
Classified Display:
1 col x 1 inch—$4.00
| | 1 time | 2 times | 3 times | 4 times | 5 times |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
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| Additional work | .02 | .03 | .04 | .05 | .06 |
Page 8
University Daily Kansan, July 20, 1983
Now that former KU track star Jeff Buckingham has set a new American record in the pole vault, the Gardner native said yesterday that he has his eyes set on the world record.
Buckingham, who graduated from KU last spring, set a new American record Saturday with a vault of 18-10 and $^4$ inches at the Lawrence Open Track and Field Championships in Memorial Stadium.
He barely missed breaking the world record mark of 19 feet and $ \frac{3}{4} $ inches when his arm hit the bar on his third attempt at 19-1 and $ \frac{3}{4} $ inches.
"I thought that I could set the American record with the right conditions," Buckingham said. "The condition was good on Saturday and I made a good vault."
Buckingham, who turned down an invitation to compete in a meet in France so he could attempt a new sport, said that he could have set a world
just w. of 23rd & Louisiana
ZIP THE 20C AUG
YELLO
SUB
Got the fast food blues?
Subman will chase them away with 13 varieties of foot-long sub sandwiches.
A Yello Sub makes a total nutritious, delicious meal. The freshest veggies, quality meats & cheeses are piled high on our natural, homemade, wholewheat bun. Each sub is overtoasted, not microwaved.
Subman also features homemade desserts & Dannon Frozen Yogurt.
We're open late.
Mon-Thurs 'till 11pm.
Fri, Sat 'till 1am.
Sun 'till 10pm.
ALL 1/2 ft. SUBS
$1.25
record if a new pole he ordered would have arrived on time.
w/coupon good thru July
1 coupon/person 1 sub/coupon
no deliveries please
YELLO SUB
Call in your order. It'll be ready when you arrive 841-3268
"The pole I ordered is a hair bigger and I really think I could have cleared the bar with that pole," he said. "I guess it will have to wait until later."
Buckingham has since received the new pole and will get plenty of chances to test it in world-class competition in the near future.
Buckingham leaves Friday for a five-week trip to Europe where he will compete in 12 invitational competitions before returning to Lawrence Sept. 10.
He will first compete in Scotland and Rome prior to the World Track and Field Championships, Aug. 7 to 14 in Helsinki, Finland.
After competing in Helsinki, Buckingham will make stops in England, Germany and France.
COMMONWEALTH THEATRES
GRANADA DOWNTOWN
STARWARS
RETURN OF
THE JEDI
POP
Eveninga 7:00-9:30
Mat. Sat. Sun. 8:30-10:30
CENTRAL FOX TIME
Johnson says visit led to KU-WSU game
VARSITY DOWNTOWN
TELEPHONE 412-3055
Tony Mawson knows the old dates are over.
But reluctantly agrees to film
the crash back that good again.
STAYING ALIVE
TORONTO BAY
CYPRUS HAWKES BAY
CYPRUS WEST BAY
CYPRUS GREAT EAST BAY
CYPRUS NEW JERSEY BAY
CYPRUS MIDDLE EAST BAY
CYPRUS MIDLAND BAY
CYPRUS NORTH BAY
CYPRUS SOUTH BAY
**FESTIVAL SUMMER 2015**
CINEMAS 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36, 37, 38, 39, 40, 41, 42, 43, 44, 45, 46, 47, 48, 49, 50, 51, 52, 53, 54, 55, 56, 57, 58, 59, 60, 61, 62, 63, 64, 65, 66, 67, 68, 69, 70, 71, 72, 73, 74, 75, 76, 77, 78, 79, 80, 81, 82, 83, 84, 85, 86, 87, 88, 89, 90, 91, 92, 93, 94, 95, 96, 97, 98, 99, 100, 101, 102, 103, 104, 105, 106, 107, 108, 109, 110, 111, 112, 113, 114, 115, 116, 117, 118, 119, 120, 121, 122, 123, 124, 125, 126, 127, 128, 129, 130, 131, 132, 133, 134, 135, 136, 137, 138, 139, 140, 141, 142, 143, 144, 145, 146, 147, 148, 149, 150, 151, 152, 153, 154, 155, 156, 157, 158, 159, 160, 161, 162, 163, 164, 165, 166, 167, 168, 169, 170, 171, 172, 173, 174, 175, 176, 177, 178, 179, 180, 181, 182, 183, 184, 185, 186, 187, 188, 189, 190, 191, 192, 193, 194, 195, 196, 197, 198, 199, 200, 201, 202, 203, 204, 205, 206, 207, 208, 209, 210, 211, 212, 213, 214, 215, 216, 217, 218, 219, 220, 221, 222, 223, 224, 225, 226, 227, 228, 229, 230, 231, 232, 233, 234, 235, 236, 237, 238, 239, 240, 241, 242, 243, 244, 245, 246, 247, 248, 249, 250, 251, 252, 253, 254, 255, 256, 257, 258, 259, 260, 261, 262, 263, 264, 265, 266, 267, 268, 269, 270, 271, 272, 273, 274, 275, 276, 277, 278, 279, 280, 281, 282, 283, 284, 285, 286, 287, 288, 289, 290, 291, 292, 293, 294, 295, 296, 297, 298, 299, 300, 301, 302, 303, 304, 305, 306, 307, 308, 309, 310, 311, 312, 313, 314, 315, 316, 317, 318, 319, 320, 321, 322, 323, 324, 325, 326, 327, 328, 329, 330, 331, 332, 333, 334, 335, 336, 337, 338, 339, 340, 341, 342, 343, 344, 345, 346, 347, 348, 349, 350, 351, 352, 353, 354, 355, 356, 357, 358, 359, 360, 361, 362, 363, 364, 365, 366, 367, 368, 369, 370, 371, 372, 373, 374, 375, 376, 377, 378, 379, 380, 381, 382, 383, 384, 385, 386, 387, 388, 389, 390, 391, 392, 393, 394, 395, 396, 397, 398, 399, 400, 401, 402, 403, 404, 405, 406, 407, 408, 409, 410, 411, 412, 413, 414, 415, 416, 417, 418, 419, 420, 421, 422, 423, 424, 425, 426, 427, 428, 429, 430, 431, 432, 433, 434, 435, 436, 437, 438, 439, 440, 441, 442, 443, 444, 445, 446, 447, 448, 449, 450, 451, 452, 453, 454, 455, 456, 457, 458, 459, 460, 461, 462, 463, 464, 465, 466, 467, 468, 469, 470, 471, 472, 473, 474, 475, 476, 477, 478, 479, 480, 481, 482, 483, 484, 485, 486, 487, 488, 489, 490, 491, 492, 493, 494, 495, 496, 497, 498, 499, 500, 501, 502, 503, 504, 505, 506, 507, 508, 509, 510, 511, 512, 513, 514, 515, 516, 517, 518, 519, 520, 521, 522, 523, 524, 525, 526, 527, 528, 529, 530, 531, 532, 533, 534, 535, 536, 537, 538, 539, 540, 541, 542, 543, 544, 545, 546, 547, 548, 549, 550, 551, 552, 553, 554, 555, 556, 557, 558, 559, 560, 561, 562, 563, 564, 565, 566, 567, 568, 569, 570, 571, 572, 573, 574, 575, 576, 577, 578, 579, 580, 581, 582, 583, 584, 585, 586, 587, 588, 589, 590, 591, 592, 593, 594, 595, 596, 597, 598, 599, 600, 601, 602, 603, 604, 605, 606, 607, 608, 609, 610, 611, 612, 613, 614, 615, 616, 617, 618, 619, 620, 621, 622, 623, 624, 625, 626, 627, 628, 629, 630, 631, 632, 633, 634, 635, 636, 637, 638, 639, 640, 641, 642, 643, 644, 645, 646, 647, 648, 649, 650, 651, 652, 653, 654, 655, 656, 657, 658, 659, 660, 661, 662, 663, 664, 665, 666, 667, 668, 669, 670, 671, 672, 673, 674, 675, 676, 677, 678, 679, 680, 681, 682, 683, 684, 685, 686, 687, 688, 689, 690, 691, 692, 693, 694, 695, 696, 697, 698, 699, 700, 701, 702, 703, 704, 705, 706, 707, 708, 709, 710, 711, 712, 713, 714, 715, 716, 717, 718, 719, 720, 721, 722, 723, 724, 725, 726, 727, 728, 729, 730, 731, 732, 733, 734, 735, 736, 737, 738, 739, 740, 741, 742, 743, 744, 745, 746, 747, 748, 749, 750, 751, 752, 753, 754, 755, 756, 757, 758, 759, 760, 761, 762, 763, 764, 765, 766, 767, 768, 769, 770, 771, 772, 773, 774, 775, 776, 777, 778, 779, 780, 781, 782, 783, 784, 785, 786, 787, 788, 789, 790, 791, 792, 793, 794, 795, 796, 797, 798, 799, 800, 801, 802, 803, 804, 805, 806, 807, 808, 809, 810, 811, 812, 813, 814, 815, 816, 817, 818, 819, 820, 821, 822, 823, 824, 825, 826, 827, 828, 829, 830, 831, 832, 833, 834, 835, 836, 837, 838, 839, 840, 841, 842, 843, 844, 845, 846, 847, 848, 849, 850, 851, 852, 853, 854, 855, 856, 857, 858, 859, 860, 861, 862, 863, 864, 865, 866, 867, 868, 869, 870, 871, 872, 873, 874, 875, 876, 877, 878, 879, 880, 881, 882, 883, 884, 885, 886, 887, 888, 889, 890, 891, 892, 893, 894, 895, 896, 897, 898, 899, 900, 901, 902, 903, 904, 905, 906, 907, 908, 909, 910, 911, 912, 913, 914, 915, 916, 917, 918, 919, 920, 921, 922, 923, 924, 925, 926, 927, 928, 929, 930, 931, 932, 933, 934, 935, 936, 937, 938, 939, 940, 941, 942, 943, 944, 945, 946, 947, 948, 949, 950, 951, 952, 953, 954, 955, 956, 957, 958, 959, 960, 961, 962, 963, 964, 965, 966, 967, 968, 969, 970, 971, 972, 973, 974, 975, 976, 977, 978, 979, 980, 981, 982, 983, 984, 985, 986, 987, 988, 989, 990, 991, 992, 993, 994, 995, 996, 997, 998, 999, 1000, 1001, 1002, 1003, 1004, 1005, 1006, 1007, 1008, 1009, 1010, 1011, 1012, 1013, 1014, 1015, 1016, 1017, 1018, 1019, 1020, 1021, 1022, 1023, 1024, 1025, 1026, 1027, 1028, 1029, 1030, 1031, 1032, 1033, 1034, 1035, 1036, 1037, 1038, 1039, 1040, 1041, 1042, 1043, 1044, 1045, 1046, 1047, 1048, 1049, 1050, 1051, 1052, 1053, 1054, 1055, 1056, 1057, 1058, 1059, 1060, 1061, 1062, 1063, 1064, 1065, 1066, 1067, 1068, 1069, 1070, 1071, 1072, 1073, 1074, 1075, 1076, 1077, 1078, 1079, 1080, 1081, 1082, 1083, 1084, 1085, 1086, 1087, 1088, 1089, 1090, 1091, 1092, 1093, 1094, 1095, 1096, 1097, 1098, 1099, 1100, 1101, 1102, 1103, 1104, 1105, 1106, 1107, 1108, 1109, 1110, 1111, 1112, 1113, 1114, 1115, 1116, 1117, 1118, 1119, 1120, 1121, 1122, 1123, 1124, 1125, 1126, 1127, 1128, 1129, 1130, 1131, 1132, 1133, 1134, 1135, 1136, 1137, 1138, 1139, 1140, 1141, 1142, 1143, 1144, 1145, 1146, 1147, 1148, 1149, 1150, 1151, 1152, 1153, 1154, 1155, 1156, 1157, 1158, 1159, 1160, 1161, 1162, 1163, 1164, 1165, 1166, 1167, 1168, 1169, 1170, 1171, 1172, 1173, 1174, 1175, 1176, 1177, 1178, 1179, 1180, 1181, 1182, 1183, 1184, 1185, 1186, 1187, 1188, 1189, 1190, 1191, 1192, 1193, 1194, 1195, 1196, 1197, 1198, 1199, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024, 2025, 2026, 2027, 2028, 2029, 2030, 2031, 2032, 2033, 2034, 2035, 2036, 2037, 2038, 2039, 2040, 2041, 2042, 2043, 2044, 2045, 2046, 2047, 2048, 2049, 2050, 2051, 2052, 2053, 2054, 2055, 2056, 2057, 2058, 2059, 2060, 2061, 2062, 2063, 2064, 2065, 2066, 2067, 2068, 2069, 2070, 2071, 2072, 2073, 2074, 2075, 2076, 2077, 2078, 2079, 2080, 2081, 2082, 2083, 2084, 2085, 2086, 2087, 2088, 2089, 2090, 2091, 2092, 2093, 2094, 2095, 2096, 2097, 2098, 2099, 1000, 1001, 1002, 1003, 1004, 1005, 1006, 1007, 1008, 1009, 1010, 1011, 1012, 1013, 1014, 1015, 1016, 1017, 1018, 1019, 1020, 1021, 1022, 1023, 1024, 1025, 1026, 1027, 1028, 1029, 1030, 1031, 1032, 1033, 1034, 1035, 1036, 1037, 1038, 1039, 1040, 1041, 1042, 1043, 1044, 1045, 1046, 1047, 1048, 1049, 1050, 1051, 1052, 1053, 1054, 1055, 1056, 1057, 1058, 1059, 1060, 1061, 1062, 1063, 1064, 1065, 1066, 1067, 1068, 1069, 1070, 1071, 1072, 1073, 1074, 1075, 1076, 1077, 1078, 1079, 1080, 1081, 1082, 1083, 1084, 1085, 1086, 1087, 1088, 1089, 1090, 1091, 1092, 1093, 1094, 1095, 1096, 1097, 1098, 1099, 1100, 1101, 1102, 1103, 1104, 1105, 1106, 1107, 1108, 1109, 1110, 1111, 1112, 1113, 1114, 1115, 1116, 1117, 1118, 1119, 1120, 1121, 1122, 1123, 1124, 1125, 1126, 1127, 1128, 1129, 1130, 1131, 1132, 1133, 1134, 1135, 1136, 1137, 1138, 1139, 1140, 1141, 1142, 1143, 1144, 1145, 1146, 1147, 1148, 1149, 1150, 1151, 1152, 1153, 1154, 1155, 1156, 1157, 1158, 1159, 1160, 1161, 1162, 1163, 1164, 1165, 1166, 1167, 1168, 1169, 1170, 1171, 1172, 1173, 1174, 1175, 1176, 1177, 1178, 1179, 1180, 1181, 1182, 1183, 1184, 1185, 1186, 1187, 1188, 1189, 1190, 1191, 1192, 1193, 1194, 1195, 1196, 1197, 1198, 1199, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024, 2025, 2026, 2027, 2028, 2029, 2030, 2031, 2032, 2033, 2034, 2035, 2036, 2037, 2038, 2039, 2040, 2041, 2042, 2043, 2044, 2045, 2046, 2047, 2048, 2049, 2050, 2051, 2052, 2053, 2054, 2055, 2056, 2057, 2058, 2059, 2060, 2061, 2062, 2063, 2064, 2065, 2066, 2067, 2068, 2069, 2070, 2071, 2072, 2073, 2074, 2075, 2076, 2077, 2078, 2079, 2080, 2081, 2082, 2083, 2084, 2085, 2086, 2087, 2088, 2089, 2090, 2091, 2092, 2093, 2094, 2095, 2096, 2097, 2098, 2099, 1000, 1001, 1002, 1003, 1004, 1005, 1006, 1007, 1008, 1009, 1010, 1011, 1012, 1013, 1014, 1015, 1016, 1017, 1018, 1019, 1020, 1021, 1022, 1023, 1024, 1025, 1026, 1027, 1028, 1029, 1030, 1031, 1032, 1033, 1034, 1035, 1036, 1037, 1038, 1039, 1040, 1041, 1042, 1043, 1044, 1045, 1046, 1047, 1048, 1049, 1050, 1051, 1052, 1053, 1054, 1055, 1056, 1057, 1058, 1059, 1060, 1061, 1062, 1063, 1064, 1065, 1066, 1067, 1068, 1069, 1070, 1071, 1072, 1073, 1074, 1075, 1076, 1077, 1078, 1079, 1080, 1081, 1082, 1083, 1084, 1085, 1086, 1087, 1088, 1089, 1090, 1091, 1092, 1093, 1094, 1095, 1096, 1097, 1098, 1099, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024, 2025, 2026, 2027, 2028, 2029, 2030, 2031, 2032, 2033, 2034, 2035, 2036, 2037, 2038, 2039, 2040, 2041, 2042, 2043, 2044, 2045, 2046, 2047, 2048, 2049, 2050, 2051, 2052, 2053, 2054, 2055, 2056, 2057, 2058, 2059, 2060, 2061, 2062, 2063, 2064, 2065, 2066, 2067, 2068, 2069, 2070, 2071, 2072, 2073, 2074, 2075, 2076, 2077, 2078, 2079, 2080, 2081, 2082, 2083, 2084, 2085, 2086, 2087, 2088, 2089, 2090, 2091, 2092, 2093, 2094, 2095, 2096, 2097, 2098, 2099, 1000, 1001, 1002, 1003, 1004, 1005, 1006, 1007, 1008, 1009, 1010, 1011, 1012, 1013, 1014, 1015, 1016, 1017, 1018, 1019, 1020, 1021, 1022, 1023, 1024, 1025, 1026, 1027, 1028, 1029, 1030, 1031, 1032, 1033, 1034, 1035, 1036, 1037, 1038, 1039, 1040, 1041, 1042, 1043, 1044, 1045, 1046, 1047, 1048, 1049, 1050, 1051, 1052, 1053, 1054, 1055, 1056, 1057, 1058, 1059, 1060, 1061, 1062, 1063, 1064, 1065, 1066, 1067, 1068, 1069, 1070, 1071, 1072, 1073, 1074, 1075, 1076, 1077, 1078, 1079, 1080, 1081, 1082, 1083, 1084, 1085, 1086, 1087, 1088, 1089, 1090, 1091, 1092, 1093, 1094, 1095, 1096, 1097, 1098, 1099, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024, 2025, 2026, 2027, 2028, 2029, 2030, 2031, 2032, 2033, 2034, 2035, 2036, 2037, 2038, 2039, 2040, 2041, 2042, 2043, 2044, 2045, 2046, 2047, 2048, 2049, 2050, 2051, 2052, 2053, 2054, 2055, 2056, 2057, 2058, 2059, 2060, 2061, 2062, 2063, 2064, 2065, 2066, 2067, 2068, 2069, 2070, 2071, 2072, 2073, 2074, 2075, 2076, 2077, 2078, 2079, 2080, 2081, 2082, 2083, 2084, 2085, 2086, 2087, 2088, 2089, 2090, 2091, 2092, 2093, 2094, 2095, 2096, 2097, 2098, 2099, 1000, 1001, 1002, 1003, 1004, 1005, 1006, 1007, 1008, 1009, 1010, 1011, 1012, 1013, 1014, 1015, 1016, 1017, 1018, 1019, 1020, 1021, 1022, 1023, 1024, 1025, 1026, 1027, 1028, 1029, 1030, 1031, 1032, 1033, 1034, 1035, 1036, 1037, 1038, 1039, 1040, 1041, 1042, 1043, 1044, 1045, 1046, 1047, 1048, 1049, 1050, 1051, 1052, 1053, 1054, 1055, 1056, 1057, 1058, 1059, 1060, 1061, 1062, 1063, 1064, 1065, 1066, 1067, 1068, 1069, 1070, 1071, 1072, 1073, 1074, 1075, 1076, 1077, 1078, 1079, 1080, 1081, 1082, 1083, 1084, 1085, 1086, 1087, 1088, 1089, 1090, 1091, 1092, 1093, 1094, 1095, 1096, 1097, 1098, 1099, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024, 2025, 2026, 2027, 2028, 2029, 2030, 2031, 2032, 2033, 2034, 2035, 2036, 2037, 2038, 2039, 2040, 2041, 2042, 2043, 2044, 2045, 2046, 2047, 2048, 2049, 2050, 2051, 2052, 2053, 2054, 2055, 2056, 2057, 2058, 2059, 2060, 2061, 2062, 2063, 2064, 2065, 2066, 2067, 2068, 2069, 2070, 2071, 2072, 2073, 2074, 2075, 2076, 2077, 2078, 2079, 2080, 2081, 2082, 2083, 2084, 2085, 2086, 2087, 2088, 2089, 2090, 2091, 2092, 2093, 2094, 2095, 2096, 2097, 2098, 2099, 1000, 1001, 1002, 1003, 1004, 1005, 1006, 1007, 1008, 1009, 1010, 1011, 1012, 1013, 1014, 1015, 1016, 101
MAMMOTH PATTERN PROJECT
A NORMAL GROWN PREDICTION - A DIRECTOR'S CALIBration FILM
HILLCREST 1
9TH AND IONA
WILLIAMSBURG
6:00 AM
JOHNSON SAID THAT the BMA tournament would be a four-team tournament among KU, Wichita State and two other schools of national prominence. He said that KU and Wichita State would be placed in opposite ends of the bracket and could meet in the finals.
HILLCREST 2
11TH AND 10TH
FAXPHONE 849-86400
A different kind of game
WARGAMES
Evenings 7:20-9:30
Mat. Sat. Sun. 2:15
DAM AYKROYD
EDINBURGH
TRADING
PLACES
A PARAMETER PICTURE
WEST WALK, Sun. 2-15
Jaywhawks and the Shockers meeting twice during the 1985-86 season. Both teams are entered in the inaugural Business Men's Assurance Co. Invitational Tournament, Dec. 27-28, 1985, at Kemper Arena.
"I had a meeting with the Rotary Club in Wichita at the time, so while I was down there I scheduled to get back to school," he named as new athletic director at
KU Athletic Director Monte Johnson said yesterday that a social visit between himself and Wichita State University Athletic Director Lew Porkins in late April led to the Jan 8 scheduled basketball game between the two schools, their first regular season meeting since 1953.
By ED GROM
Staff Reporter
HILLCREST 3
9TH AND 10TH AVE. BROADWAY
HILLCREST TEL. (855) 242-6800
Yellowbeard
PG ORION
Evenings 7:55-8:30 Mat. Sat. Sep. 2:15
Staff Reporter
The two teams last met in the NCAA Regionalists in New Orleans in 1981. We played on Saturday.
CINEMA 1
1527 WEST NW
MASS. CITY
WALKING TRAIN
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John White
daytime baby 2:50
daytime baby 7:40
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WSU* Johnson said. "I wanted to meet him and talk with him about athletics."
"THE SUBJECT OF basketball came up and we discussed whether there was a possibility that KU and WSU could meet some time in a regular season game. After a matter of working out schedules and open dates, we decided that there was a date we could get together on."
What Johnson and Perkins worked out was a regular season game between the two schools the next three years, Sunday, Jan. 3, in Allen Field House.
"I think it is great for the state of Kansas," said KU head coach Larry Brown. "Here are two powerful basketball schools in the same state and they haven't played (a regular season game) in more than 25 years.
"Television networks have expressed some interest in the game."
Besides the initial KW-Whitcha State game in Lawrence this season, the two teams will meet at Kemper Arena in Kansas City in January during the 1984-85 season, and in Wichita during the 1985-86 season, Johnson said.
"I think a game like this has to be played, for the schools, the fans and the players," Brown said.
"THEER IS A GOOD possibility that the game will be on TV," Johnson said.
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On service repair work performed by Jack Ellena Buick-Olds-GMC, Inc. 2112 W.29th Street.
Coupon must be presented at time of repair order write-up to qualify. Offer good until July 29th, 1983.
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stop in for a bite & a brew!
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HENRY'S WANTS YOUR OPINION ON THE MALL!
I favor construction of a downtown mall as presented by Sizeler Realty Co., provided the cost to the city does not exceed 3.5 million dollars.
I favor construction of a privately-funded "cornfield" mall.
I do not believe Lawrence needs an additional shopping area.
Mail or bring your opinion ballot to Henry's Restaurant, 6th & Missouri,
Lawrence, KS. The results will be published in the Journal-World.
Additional Comments
Return by 7-31.
1
The University Daily
WARNER
KANSAN
University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas
Vol. 93, No. 160 USPS 650-840
Friday, July 22,1983
Weather
Today will be sunny, and hot with highs in the mid to upper 90s, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka. The winds will be from the west to southwest at 5 to 15 mph. Tonight will be mostly clear with a low in the 70s. It will continue to be hot on Saturday with highs in the mid 90s.
By JUDITH HINDMAN
Staff Reporter
In 1890, Eileen Murphy, associate professor of design, was working in her office on the fifth floor of the Art and Design building when a rush broke out on all of her skin that was exposed to
The cause? Murphy said someone two offices away had opened a can of silk screen lacquer thinner and the fumes had entered her office.
"IT SEEMED LIKE the air was being dumped into my office." Murray said.
Now, three years later, faculty members and students are still unhappy about the building's conditions and complain of headaches and stuffy classrooms.
Last spring, Watkins Hospital treated an art student for a severe illness that the physician said was possibly caused by exposure to toxic substances in the building.
At the time, James Maeser, dean of the School of Fine Arts, said that it was possible that health problems could occur as a result of the fumes.
TODAY, SIX YEARS LATER, insufficient funding continues to block the correction of many remaining problems.
Some faculty members and students doubt the system's ability to either dilute or exhaust toxic substances and some areas of the building still remains as originally planned because of poor ventilation.
And, according to Facilities Operations, there are times when the building's ventilation system either breaks down or is turned off in order to save money.
Murphy, who is sensitive to air pollution because of previous exposure to formaldehyde insulation in a house, is still unhappy about the ventilation system in the building.
"I stay out of that building as much as possible because of the problems," she said. "The students get horrible headaches when they come in there. I think it is threatening our major."
A STUDENT WHO ASKED not to be identified confirmed the headaches were a common result.
"I take a lot of aspirin when I'm in the
building because the fumes really get to you," she said. "And I've had a lot of other students in my class."
And there is evidence that the student's problems may be more severe than headaches.
Haymond Schweigel, physician and inferi- chief of staff at Watkins Hospital, said that last spring he diagnosed one student's serious illness from the building's inadequate ventilation.
"I had one girl last semester who may have developed a blood disorder from the toxic materials. It is hard to prove, but it was unpleasant." he said.
HE DESCRIBED HER DISORDER as an auto-immune disorder in which the immune system became self-destructive to the patient's tissues.
Although he declined to discuss that patient's specific symptoms, he did say that they could
'Art is not one of the high priorities, and so you don't say too much.' Michael Ott art professor
include arthritis, hemorrhages, kidney failure and loss of muscle control.
Although doctors do not completely understand how this happens, Schwegler said, that type of disorder seems to be related to the use of chemicals that throw the immune system out of
The prevention of such problems in the Art and Design building, he said, "would be a matter of the people who use it."
Internet麦克兰, a founder of the Center for Occupational Hazards and the Art Hazards Information Center in New York, said in his book, "Artist Beware," that many art materials contained toxic substances. Continued exposure to the substances can result in chemical pneumonia, asthma, metal fume fever, kidney damage, liver damage, anemia, skin problems, cancer and mercury, lead, cyanide or chlorine poisoning.
BUT BECAUSE MANY HEALTH problems take years to show up, no one knows the full extent of the dangers or the long-term effects of exposure to some of the substances. he said.
McCann said in a recent telephone interview
that the problem became more acute at the end of each semester when art students were working long hours to finish final projects.
Then, he said, they have greater exposure and less detoxification time.
Detoxification time is the amount of time the body requires to rid itself of toxic substances it
McCann said that 8 hours of exposure often required 16 hours of defoxification.
WHEN STUDENTS OR FACULTY members are working long hours, they have more exposure and less time for detoxification.
Murphy is only one of many faculty members concerned about the unknown dangers from these toxic substances. She also is more vocal about problems that the art and design department has been trying to solve since the building opened.
Michael Ott, who was chairman of the art department during the final phases of construction, said, "The building was designed to recirculate the same air to save money. This building was built when the thinking was to save buildings settling in many windows and cool it by machine."
"I have not seen a single university that I thought was adequately safe," he said. "I've done inspections at about 25 or 30 and my associate analyst has been at over 200 schools given lectures there."
McCann said that it took a proper engineer to design and build a system that would work
"ANY STUDIO THAT is producing toxic chemicals into the air should be 100 percent exhausted. This includes printmaking, photography and weaving," he said.
He also said that paint studios needed to dilute the fumes with fresh air. He said the amount of fresh air required depended on the number of students and on the amount of turpentine used.
"The problem is that no one knows what the safe levels are, he said. "A 0.1 percent concentration of a substance is enough to get people ill."
Bob Porter, the associate director of physical plant maintenance for Facilities Operations, said last week that very little fresh air was brought into the Art and Design building.
"Real air is taken in at a minimum," he said.
WHEN THE TEMPERATURE is between 40 and 65 degrees, he said, the building's air circulation system takes in as much outside air
NINA LAMBERT
Carole Thomas, Topeka senior in illustration, works in the spray painting studio in the Art and Design building. The studio lacks proper ventilation for large scale spray painting.
Henderson calls home from Texas
By CHARLES BARNES
Staff Reporter
After more than four days and 4,000 miles, KU backfill Mark Henderson finally was found yesterday morning in Lubbock, Texas.
"he called us 9:30 to Labbock," said Mark's father, the Rev. Homer Henderson.
"When he got into town he stopped at his friend's house and then called his grandparents."
Henderson said Mark grew up in Lubbock and considered it his hometown.
"HIS GRANDPARENTS TOLD him about the search and so he called us." Henderson said.
"He went out to see friends in Huntington beach, but he couldn't find them he went to New York."
Henderson said that Mark drove to Lubbock after he could not find any friends of his in New York.
"He told us that his way to California, he stopped in Las Vegas to send us a postcard and tell us what he was doing," Henderson said. "But we were going there, people so he moved on without sending one."
"I guess he has driven about 4,000 miles since Sunday." Henderson said.
in addition to the $100 Mark withdrew from his Lawrence bank account at 1:30 a.m. Sunday, Henderson said, Mark had two gas credit cards which he used to finance his travels.
HE SIMPLY SAID he wanted to take a trip on the spur of the moment, Henderson said. "He must have thought 'tom. arrow is Sunday, I think I did it.'"
Henderson said that Mark was "utterly amused" at the reaction to his trip.
"When he heard that an all-points bulletin had been issued, and that story had been written about him in the Kansan, the Lawrence Journal-World, the LA Times, and papers in Oklahoma City, Dallas and South Dakota, he said 'Oh my God.'" Henderson said.
"I think it will do him good to find out what impact of his actions have had" Henderson
are him.
"We're grateful to the coaches and football
"Mark was also surprised to find out that the football team had a meeting to get leads to try to
players who helped try to find him," Henderson said.
THE LAWRENCE POLICE Department and Douglas County, Sheriff's Department did a
disaster investigation.
David Reavis, a detective in the Douglas County Sheriff's Department, said that he had been notified at 10 a.m. yesterday that Mark had been found.
Reavis said he and a KU Police Department detective had collected 12 pages of information on Mark's disappearance.
"We didn't have any information on whether it was foul play or whether he had taken a shot."
"It was a routine investigation," Reavis said, and "we always collect all the information we need."
"WE CONTACTED ABOUT 25 people. If it had turned out to be a felony case and more detectives had to be called in, we wouldn't want to have to retrace our stone," he said.
The elder Henderson was understandably relieved.
D WARLING appliances
"I feel like a five ton weight has been taken off my stomach," he said.
Despite the 99 degree temperature yesterday, Lawrence shoppers turned out to bargain hunt during the annual sidewalk sale.
ABC official denies network can't find sponsors for show
Staff Reporter
Bv MELISSA BAUMAN
A representative from ABC-TV denied yesterday that the network cannot get sponsors for "The Day After," a movie filmed in the Lawrence area portraying the aftermath of nuclear war.
"That's too harsh a statement, I think," Dan Doran, public relations spokesman for ABC, said yesterday. "There is a concern about sponsorship only because it's such a touchy matter. But saying that we can't get sponsorship is too harsh."
THE MOVIE DEPICTS survivors of a nuclear bomb attack on Kansas City and uses realistic makeup and special effects to simulate victims' injuries.
In a Wall Street Journal article published Tuesday, ABC officials said that sponsorship of the movie was a problem, which was why it did not run last spring as scheduled.
The article also said that the network was considering running the movie without sponsors
Doran said that the movie was delayed because editing took longer than expected and that the network wanted as much time as possible to promote the movie.
"There are no clandestine reasons that the movie has been delayed," he said.
DORAN SAID HE did not know whether the network was considering running the movie without advertisements.
"All I can say is I would presume, judging from the interviews that the Wall Street Journal got, that it is a possibility, but it has not been confirmed with me yet," he said.
Doran said that ABC was talking of doing some kind of public service program related to the movie on the ABC news program Nightline or immediately following the televast, but said that it was still in preliminary stages and that the goal of the Nightline program had not been decided.
Doran said that the movie was tentatively scheduled to air in November or December.
The movie, some of which was filmed on the KU campus, included many Lawrence residents, KU professors and students as extras.
BRENT LAMB, Topeka senior, was an extra for the film. He said that although he was only on the set for a day, he could see why advertisers would not want to sponsor the film.
"If you want to convey a positive image, then associating yourself with this film wouldn't be hard."
"If I were an advertiser I would probably wait and put my money on some happy movie"
See Harold Harvey, vice president
SEE MOVIE page 5
Dole will help Menninger celebrate the doctor's 90th birthday in Topeka
From Staff and Wire Reports
TOPEKA — Karl A. Menninger, chairman of the board and founder of the Menninger Foundation in Topeka, and Sen. Robert Dole, R-Kan., have more in common than being native
Today both men will celebrate birthdays — the 90th for Menninger and the 60th for Dole — at a reception in Topeka that will begin three days of events celebrating Menniger's 90th birthday.
DOLE WILL VISIT two foster homes owned by The Villages Inc., a non-profit organization founded by Menninger, before presenting a lecture titled "Taking Care of the Children: Private and Federal Cooperation," before the reception.
Herbert Callison, executive director of The Villages Inc., said that when they selected Dole to lecture at the reception, they did not know it also was Dole's birthday.
"We wanted to get someone who was a Kansan because Dr. Karl loves native Kansans," he said. "And we wanted to get someone who was a Japanese because it is the greatest love is solving the problems of children."
"So, Dole just seemed like the logical choice." Elizabeth Dole, secretary of the department of transportation and wife of the senator, will give brief documentary remarks before her husband's lecture.
THE LECTURE WILL begin at 8 p.m. in White Concert Hall at Washburn University, and the reception will be held immediately after the lecture and the reception are open to the public.
Meinlinger said this week that his long career, which has revolutionized the field of psychiatry, was a success.
"There's so much to be done in this troubled world," he said, appearing deep in thought in his library-office on the Menninger Foundation grounds. "I'm not through yet. I'm still alive."
For a man who has spent the past 50 years witnessing revolutionary progress in the field of psychology and social reform, it is natural for him to mourn over the tasks he thinks are yet undone.
HE SAID HE FELT guilty because death would probably spare him from one of his greatest fears and sorrows — nuclear holocaust
See BIRTHDAYS page 5
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, July 22, 1983
News Briefs From United Press International
Martial law ends for Poles; 600 prisoners get amnesty
WARSAW, Poland — Vowing that "anarchy will not return to Poland," Polish leader Wojciech Jaruzelski ended more than 19 months of martial law at midnight yesterday and offered amnesty to up to 600 political prisoners.
The declaration to end martial law coincided with Poland's national day, the 39th anniversary of the establishment of the post-war government.
but the end of martial rule appeared to mean little real change for Polish citizens. Parliament approved regulations entering many military restrictions into law, including the banning of the Solidarity trade union and censorship of all printed materials.
tade union and consortium) he would resign as defense minister in October but said he would stay on as Communist Party leader and premier to steer Poland through the post-martial law period.
In Washington, President Reagan said at a news conference that he would not lift sanctions against Poland until he determined that the end of martial law was more than cosmetic. "We're going to go by deeds, not words," Reagan said.
Reagan hopes blockade not required
WASHINGTON — President Reagan denied yesterday that he is applying boat diplomacy in Central America, but said peace in the region would be "extremely difficult" to achieve with the Sandistas in power in Nicaragua.
The State Department announced that special envoy Richard Stone returned to Central America yesterday for at least a week. His planned stops do not include Nicaragua, but a spokesman would not rule out a visit to Managua.
House cuts money for MX program
WASHINGTON — In a compromise reluctantly accepted by the Reagan administration, the House voted yesterday to pare down the initial number of MX missiles only 14 hours after approving production of the 10-warhead weapon.
On a voice vote, the House approved an amendment that cut procurement funds from $2.6 billion to $2.2 billion, enough to build 21 of the nuclear weapons in 1984 instead of the proposed 27.
In the Senate, meanwhile, negotiations were under way between the Republican and Democratic leadership in an effort to end a filibuster by the Senate.
Earlier, an effort by Senate Republican leader Howard Baker to cut off the debate failed.
Soviets to free Greenpeace members
MOSCOW — Seven Greempeace activists seized by Soviet soldiers while trying to film evidence of illegal whaling on the Siberian coast will be released today to their ship Rainbow Warrior, officials said yesterday.
The U.S. State Department announced that the six Americans and one Canadian would be released from Soviet custody in a ship-board
The seven, all members of the Greempeace environmental organization, were detained Monday after they came ashore on the Siberian coast to obtain evidence that the Soviets were violating international whaling rules.
The Soviet news agency Tass accused the environmentalists of violating Soviet territory.
Fasters' vigil continues despite heat
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Fasters at their hilltop tent city in the midst of a Midwestern heat wave say their vigil will continue until the Reagan administration releases millions of pounds of surplus food.
The protesters call themselves the Community for Creative Non-Violence. They began fasting July 4.
The Washington-based group is known for its demonstrative acts to bring economic issues into the news. Last year they served Thanksgiving dinner to the poor in Lafayette Park across the street from the White House.
They have brought their protest to America's breadbasket, for that Kansas City is one of the nation's largest storehouses for surplus food.
An estimated 727 million pounds of surplus food is in warehouses located near the city, according to consumer experts.
Black students integrate voluntarily
ST. LOUIS — Black inner-city students are seizing the opportunity to transfer to mostly white suburban districts under a voluntary desegregation plan hailed by educators as a model of big-city school integration.
Susan Uchitelle, interim director of the Voluntary Interdistrict Coordinating Council, said yesterday 2,574 new applications had been filed by city blacks who wanted to transfer to schools in St. Louis County.
About 900 students already had transferred from city to county schools.
The first-year goal of the plan is for 3,000 city black students to transfer to predominantly white school districts in suburban St. Louis.
The transfers are the integral part of the plan, approved July 5, which negotiated settlements among city schools and 23 suburban districts.
Police arrest labor leaders in Brazil
Labor sources said at least 400,000 workers stayed off their jobs. The stoppage, called two weeks ago, was first aimed as a general protest against government austerity measures that have squeezed salaries and increased unemployment.
SAO PAULO, Brazil — Club-swinging riot police up two demonstrations and arrested 100 labor leaders yesterday during a strike that drew thousands of workers protesting government austerity measures.
It gained momentum when the government agreed to even tougher salary controls with the International Monetary Fund as the price for further foreign loans to help service the country's $90 billion foreign debt.
Lavelle couldn't testify, lawyer says
WASHINGTON — Fired EPA official Rita Lavalte's failure to appear before a House subcommittee was a misunderstanding, not an act of defiance.
Lavelle's lawyer, James Bierbower, said Lavelle was sick and could not afford a trip back to Washington from her family's home in California to testify.
Lavelle is being tried in U.S. District Court on a contempt of Congress charge, which stemmed from her refusal to testify about allegations of mismanagement in the Environmental Protection Agency's $1.6 billion Superfund hazard waste cleanup program.
Prosecutor Timothy Reardon said the congressional subpoena to appear was not "an RSVP."
Hostage released; back in U.S.
The president of American University in Beirut, who was abducted a year ago outside his campus home, was fired in "excellent condition" and returned to the United States, officials said yesterday. The White House thanked Syria for helping win his release.
By United Press International
"We're obviously very pleased," presidential spokesman Larry Speakes said in Washington of the release of David S. Dodge, 59, who was jumped by gunmen July 19, 1962, pushed into a car and vanished.
SPEAKES SAID DODGE was in "excellent physical and mental condition" but had asked that no details of a release or release be immediately made public.
There was no immediate explanation of the Syrian role in Dodge's release
There was speculation he had been seized by a faction of the Moslem Shite Amal militia, backers of Iran's Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, to be executed. Hussein hopped Iranian Charge d'Afaires Hussein Mousavi, who was later killed.
A State Department official who
asked to remain unidentified said Dodge was safely back in the United States but refused to say where.
Dodge, born in Beirut and educated at Princeton University, was believed to have been kidnapped by a pro-Iranian Lebanese group during the turmoil of last year's Israeli siege of Palestinian positions in Beirut.
WORD OF DODGE's release came as harried Beirut residents cleaned up from a day of shelling, capped by a car bomb explosion outside the fashionable seaside Summerland Hotel that killed six people and injured 15 others.
Lebanese President Amin Gemayel met in Washington with Secretary of State John Kerry.
"I don't know when the Syrians will stop such kinds of noe-terrorism." Genaynel told a National Press Club breakfast. "I know one thing, that if they stop such kinds of action, those bombs — they will return to Damascus."
his country of all foreign forces. He later balked against the shelling of the city, which was the site of a major battle.
In Damascus, Syria denounced the Israeli plan, passed by the Cabinet of Prime Minister Menachem Begin Wednesday, to redeploy its troops in Lebanon to more defensible positions in the south.
IN LEBANON'S EASTERN. Bekka Valley, the Syrian air force shot down an unmanned Israeli drone aircraft as it flew over Syrian positions 6 miles from the Syrian border, said official Syrian radio, monitored in Beirut.
Before last year's war in Lebanon, Israel reported using the drones to test weapon systems.
Judge defers sentences in bomb case
Two KU students and two former KU students will have to perform 25 hours of community service for a deferral of prosecution in a case involving possession of an explosive device. Douglas Browne, the Judge, Mike Elwell ruled yesterday.
Elwell said that if the four men did not complete the community service they would face the possibility of prosecution.
Of the four arrested, only Kevin David Neal, Wichita senior, appeared at the diversion hearing.
Defense lawyer Martin Miller, who represented the four, said that John Terrent Bryant, Kansas City, Kan., sophomore, could not attend the hearing because of car trouble Miller said that Mark McGreevey and David Schmidt, both not attend the hearing because they held jobs out-of-state.
The four men were arrested May 12 on West Campus for possession of "a beer bottle filled with gasoline and a knife" or use of a wick, "a Glass a misdemonstrator."
Since they did not appear at the hearing, Elwell said that by Aug. 29, Schmit, 23, McGreewy, 22, and Bryant, 20, would have to send him a statement
verifying that they intend to perform community service.
MARTINSVILLE, Ind. — A judge, who believes long hair is the key to getting drugs, ordered a 27-year-old burglar to spend 120 days in jail and have his shoulder-length locks cut off for at least two years.
Morgan County Circuit Judge James E. Harris said his order that Dennis Biggesteraff trim his hair was given for crime prevention reasons.
Judge orders haircut to halt drug problem
"Long hair doesn't bother me any more. You can't change the world." Harris said. "But it's a key to the door to getting controlled substances. Shorter hair might make it more difficult for him to get drugs."
At first, Biggerstaff bridled at Harris' haircut order Monday. But after Harris threatened to toss aside the guilty plea and retry Biggerstaff on the charge, he agreed to comply with the two-year order.
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Harris said Biggerstaff, who was charged with stealing firearms and ammunition from a Martinsville home in June 1982, had a serious alcohol and drug problem that may have caused him to commit the crime.
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Elwell said the community service could be performed in the communities of the United States.
Assistant District Attorney Harry Warren said in court yesterday that he had consulted with Miller Tuesday about working out an agreement.
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University Daily Kansan, July 22, 1983
Page 3
The music tradition lives, thanks to him
By MICHAEL PAUL Staff Reporter
I
Russell L. Wiley stepped onto the red and blue conductor's platform. He was about to begin rehearsal of the "1812 Overture" with high school musicians enrolled in the Midwestern Music Camp.
Russell L. Wiley, professor emeritus of music, conducts one of the bands in the Midwestern music and AWT Camp during a rehearsal. Wiley started the band in 1978.
As he looked at the musicians seated behind blue music stands, he sensed that they were anxious about rehearsing the work.
"I KNOW IT'S a difficult work," he said. "But I didn't select it. It's a tradition at the camp."
Wiley, professor emeritus of music, is indeed a part of that tradition.
He began the summer music camp in 1936 and rehearsed and conducted its high school musicians until 1974, when he retired as its director.
Wiley was invited to rehearse one of the bands for a concert scheduled for 1 p.m. tomorrow in Crafton-Preyer Theatre at Murphy Hall. In addition to conducting the "1812 Overture," he will conduct the "Irish Tune from County Derry," which has been adopted as the theme song of the camp.
ASIDE FROM HIS WORK with the summer camp, Wiley was director of bands at KU from 1934 to 1968 and later as the conductor of the symphony orchestra from 1942 to 1957
Although Wiley retired as director of bands in 1988, his influence still is being held.
James Barnes, assistant to the director of bands who played tuba in Wiley's last concert band in 1988, said he modernized the KU band program.
"He brought it into the 20th century. He was one of the few people at that time who took it seriously. Today college band programs are an important part of a University's program," Barnes said.
Wiley, who was born in Comanche County, Texas in 1906, is the youngest of six brothers.
"MY FATHER WAS a country fiddler. And all of my brothers picked up the violin and fooled around with it. You them could play it quite well." Wiley said.
Wiley first learned to play by ear and by the time he was 10, he was giving public performances - although not on a concert stage.
"We lived in Woodson, then, which is about 60 miles northeast of Abilene, Texas. And that area had more houses than you could shake a stick." he said.
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Joey Maverick knows the old days are over.
But nobody gonna tell him
he can't feel that good again.
After Wiley finished high school, he worked for a few years to save money
"A professor that I knew had asked me to come to the school and organize the band and orchestra," he said, of organizing a band or orchestra.
1927, HE ENROLLED in Ran-
dolph College, a junior college in Cisco,
Texas. But he was more than a student.
"Every summer the churches would hold these two-week revival meetings and invite evangelists to preach. So, in the summer I would ride my pony four miles to these churches and play the violin at the meetings."
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Wiley then attended Phillips University in Enid, Okla., in 1929 and 1930 and received a bachelor's degree in music. It was at the university that he met the teacher who had the greatest interest on his life — Rein Dukovanker.
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"I never saw a teacher like that before," he said. "He was the greatest. Wiley also said that Duyksteraus was "hard as nails."
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The band eventually corrected its mistakes.
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To cover all of these interests, the film crew is traveling to many places, including Topoka, Lawrence, Wichita, Oklahoma and reservations in Western Kansas.
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"That sounds like mud. You're playing four notes, I want three. That's all too slow," he told the musicians during rehearsal.
Travis said that much of the film was being shot in eastern Kansas because the producers wanted to avoid stereotypical views of Kansas as part of the
CENTRON HAS PRODUCED two other Kansas promotional films for the Department of Economic Development, according to Powers. They also have produced films promoting the state for various companies in Kansas and have produced educational film strips about the state for McGraw-Hill.
"I had to memorize my lessons for him," he said. "If they weren't memorized, he would end the lesson. That didn't happen too many times."
"I've worked here 35 years," Travis said. "We've never done anything like this before."
The second year 40 bands attended the festival and Wiley invited a famous conductor from New York — Edwin Franko Goldman.
ALTHOUGH THIS IS NOT the first Kansas promotional film produced by Centron, both Powers and Travis said that the metropolitan focus and the techniques made it unlike other Kansas films they have done.
More than 20,000 musicians now attend the festival each year, Wiley said. When the festival recently celebrated its 50th anniversary, it honored him by inviting him to conduct a 100-piece honor orchestra.
"WHILE HE WAS there, he award about an opening for a band director. He told Dean Donald M. Swarthout about me.
IN 1932 WILEY ORGANIZED the Tri-State Music Festival. The first year, he said, the festival attracted 10 tri-state from Kansas, Oklahoma and Texas.
"Apparently, he must have made a good impression, for Dean Swarhorth
"I really appreciated that," he said. But it was the impression that Wiley made on one of his students that led to his job at KU.
And, during rehearsal Wednesday, Wiley heard some sounds that Tekhoviksy had not scored in the "1832 Overture."
"I had a Swedish kid with blond hair, who had a marvelous tenor voice," he said. "He decided to leave Phillips to study at the University of Kansas."
that have had a lot of publicity already," she said. "Many people have heard of Matt Dillon. We want to show us the populist, modern, up-to-date thins."
Dixie Powers, Centron's vice president and general manager, said, "It will be a film of multi-faceted uses. It will be used to attract industry and visitors to the state. For residents, it will be a shot in the arm. It will show Kansas as a dynamic and lovely place."
"I I know the score, then I can keep my attention on the band, the orchestra," he said. "I can listen to the sound, and I can do the pianissimo, to the fortissimo."
Wiley said he had run into all kinds of obstacles while trying to establish his position.
The former band director, J.C. McCanles, had taught all of the instruments. And the School of Fine Wiley said, expected him to do the same.
To combat that image, the film will show water sports such as skiing and boating. It also will show hangliding and ski jumping, which is described as appealing to young people.
"THEY TOLD ME that I would have to remove everything from the room every day after I used it so that other people could use the room.
Travis said that the film would rely heavily on pictures, and that she had tried to limit the amount of narration in the script. She said that the limited narration "will allow the visual images to speak for themselves."
"They showed me this room in Strong Hall," he said. "It had four blackboards in it. Well, it was obvious that this wasn't a studio but a classroom.
Travis said that the film also would emphasize recreation opportunities, a focus on community and fun.
"Well, I resented that. It meant I couldn't even leave my music in the room. Eventually, they found some space in another part of Strong Hall for
"I had played some clarinet and some saxophone, but the idea of teaching all of the instruments in the band frightened me," he said.
"I wanted to develop a camp similar to the Interlochen Music Camp in Michigan," he said. "And the University seemed an appropriate place since it was near the middle of the United States."
teachers for the brass, wind, or percussion instruments, he said.
In 1936 Wiley began the summer music camp.
"WeVE GOT MORE WATER than Minnesota, and more shore than they do from Florida to Maine. And people still think this is a dvstate." she said.
Wiley said that he nearly left the job when he was shown his studio.
WILEY SAID THAT throughout the years he had made some changes in how he conducted and taught, but nothing drastic. He conducts without a baton, however, because it gives him greater use of his hands.
He said that the University did not offer any money for the camp for the first few years and that in the first year there were only 40 students at the
The next year, however, 250 students were enrolled and the camp began an orchestra. The camp continued to attract more students, more than 1,000 students were enrolled.
Powers said that after filming was completed, around Aug. 1, Centron film editors and sound technicians would begin process the film, which will premiere later this year at the Midwest International Conference, set for Oct. 9 to 11 in Lawrence.
The involvement of Karen Carlin, the governor's wife, as a fund-raiser and coordinator for the film sparked publicity and an investigation into possible conflict of interest. Carlin was paid $12,000 for her work with the film.
"These things serve a dual purpose. They are a plus to industry," she said. "The film will appeal to people who would be transferred here."
It's just part of the tradition that Russell L. Wiley started nearly 90 years ago.
The writer, Trudy Travis, scriptwriter for Centron Corporation Inc., 1621. W. Nith St., said that the film would emphasize the metropolitan and social aspects of the state, rather than "what fields and coworkers chewed their "cud."
Balancing the tourist and industrial appeals required some compromise,
Other filming sites in Lawrence include the Hallmark Cards Inc plant, the K-Mart Discount Store and the Independence Days Festival, which was held July 3 and 4 at Constant and Bercham parks.
As an example, Travis said, traditional tourist sights such as the beaches he and others had not been heavily emphasized, although they appear in the film.
At that time there were no private
"It will have a kaleidoscope view, with montages of scattered scenes. Some scenes will fragment, spin and reform into other scenes," she said.
The 15-minute film is being sponsored by the Travel Industry Association.
TRAVIS SAID THAT the KU scenes would publicize the educational opportunities in Kansas and would be used to promote shot at other colleges and universities.
New techniques will help give the film a contemporary look, said Powers.
The Museum of Natural History and Spencer Museum of Art will be among the sights featured in a promotional film titled "This is Kansas," which is being produced by a Lawrence film company, according to the film's writer.
"THE FILM IS NOT absolutely oriented one way or the other," she said. "Some impacts have been watered down to make room for others."
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SUMMERSPECIALS1983
1980s
Mon. 'Watermelons' $1.00 all night
Tues. 'Survival of the Fittest'
(8:00-11:00)
All the beer and bar drinks
you can drink $3.00 cover
11:00 to close- 75° draws
and $1.50 bar drinks
Wed. 25* draws and $1.00 bar drinks
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50* draws and $1.25 bar drinks
(10:30-close)
Thurs. 25* draws and $1.00 bar drinks
(8:00-10:30)
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Fri. afternoon 5:00-8:00 two for ones on all drinks and half price food
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Opinion
Page 4 University Daily Kansan, July 22, 1983
Much ado about sports
The firing of coaches is common in the sporting world. It is something that some coaches live in fear of, while others accept it as being part of the job.
With the firing of Jo Jo White as assistant basketball coach, we see the face of KU sports shift toward a new look — again. Since last fall, there have been plenty of changes.
The changes began at the very top of the KU sporting pyramid, when Monte Johnson was hired as athletic director last November to replace Jim Lessig, who had resigned.
The next change was football coach Don Fambrough, Fambrough served as head coach for two four-year stints, from 1971 to 1974 and 1979 to 1982.
After last season's 2-7-2 record, the decision was made to fire Fambrough and hire a new coach - Mike Gottfried. And while some players remain from the Fambrough years, Gottfried is well under way to molding his own team.
The next big shift came with the end of the basketball season when Ted Owens was fired after 19 seasons. During Owen's tenure at KU, the Jayhawks won 348 games and lost 182. But last year the team posted a 13-16 record.
This firing was particularly upsetting to some of the players and fans of KU basketball. Even when Larry Brown, a coach with proven ability was hired, the situation was less than settled.
One of Brown's first moves was to retain White and Bob Hill as his assistant coaches. This move produced a sigh of relief among the players and fans. Unfortunately, the calm did not last.
But while White and his contributions will be missed, it is too early to cry that the basketball program is again on shakv ground.
So much is made of the hiring and firing of coaches. But compare this with what happens when a professor is fired.
Unless there is some great outburst by fellow faculty members or students, little note is made of the changes in the academic staff. With coaches it's different. We all follow the change with such interest, and sometimes we make too much of it.
Certainly the media are guilty of this, as are students, alumni and university well-wishers. Sports are indeed an important part of university life. But certainly no more than academics.
GO UP TO THE OFFICE,
REPRODUCE THESE
DOCUMENTS, AND GET
ME A GLASS OF WATER
AND A COUPLE OF ASPIRIN,
WILL YA, PAGE?
HELLO, WASHINGTON POST?
A CONGRESSMAN JUST ASKED
ME UP TO HIS ROOM TO
REPRODUCE WITH him, AND
HE ALSO DRINKS AND
TAKES DRUGS...
Phone
Play is really a sad comedy of errors
Reagan: It's time you straightened out your act and stopped spreading the red philosophy among innocent people. Let's have some peace for a change.
Andropov: Yes! It wouldn't hurt. Sometimes I wonder what peace tastes like. It's been so long.
Reagan: If you would show a little bit of compassion and understanding we could start the process now, and then I could spend more time on my ranch.
Andropov? I'm all for it and I would rather have you in California than in the White House
Reagan. There is no time for nasty cracks.
Don't try to aggravate me or I will be forced to
crack up.
Andropoe: I promise to be serious now. You know, sometimes I think it's not really nice of us to send our troops to other countries to test our strength against each other.
Reagan: I have often thought about that and I always give them aid to rebuild.
government invited us to put some method in its
madness.
(Chorus)
who give them advice. Andropov: That is a kind thought on your part but what if we left them to their own fate and didn't intervene at all?
Reagan: It's not a bad idea but I just don't trust you. Besides, those ignorant people can't govern themselves. They depend on us to regularly intervene and put in a new dictator or
Andropov? That reminds me of Afghanistan in a way because that is what happened. The
The Third World
The Third World
Where has all the peace gone?
Gone, gone a wandering.
Where have all the peacemakers gone?
Gone, gone, gone!
Reagan: So as we were discussing earlier, we should go ahead and negotiate on who should pull the boat.
Andropo : Wouldn't it be nice if we both pulled out of our playgrounds and lived happily
SEEMA SIROHI
thereafter. We could even stop the economic warfare and trade with each other. By Leun '11 I knew that it was a bad idea.
Reagan: If there was peace between us, the rest of the world would have peace too. I wouldn't have to come up with any more MX missile-type ideas.
Andropev: And I wouldn't have to spend so much on defense try to match all that.
Reagan: So first you pull out of Afghanistan ...
Andropoe: Only if you promise to leave El Salvador alone.
Reagan: I can't. They need us down there to curb the rebels.
Andropoev: We are doing the same sort of social work in Afghanistan. So there
Reagan: I hope you do realize that Central America is in delicate shape right now and our presence is crucial indeed. And having your devotee, Castro, in the area doesn't help. He is
Andropov: Red isn't such a bad color
Reagan: I won't have any of that.
Andropov: Come on! Surely there are other ways of looking at the world besides the Republican one.
Reagan: Yours truly doesn't think so. I am getting tired of this, I think I'll take a vacation because we don't seem to be making any progress
Andropov: I think I will visit my doctor
The Third World
Where has all the peace gone?
Gone, gone a wandering.
same, gone at a later date
Where have all the peacemakers gone?
When will they ever learn?
Will they ever return?
Report on education needs to be acted upon
By PATRICIA McCORMACK
United Press International
Homework for the nation's 17,000 school administrators:
Read "A Nation at Risk" from cover to cover. It's not light summertime reading, but doing the assignment may be vital to improving the health of each administrator's respective school.
That's what the top school busses are being told in an action plan mailed out this week by the American Association of School Administrators
American Association of School Administrators.
After they read the report, the people
"A Nation at Risk" documents education's faults. Those faults threaten the nation's security, productivity and the well-being of its people, the commission said in awarding a failing grade to schools, especially inner city ones.
The 16-page action plan from the AASA is
to enhance the Excellence Report. Using it to
Improve Your Service.
responsible for the day-to-day operation of the nation's public schools are told to see that teachers, supervisors, parents, businessmen, government and labor people read up, too.
Why the reading homework from the AASA?
Gary Marx, associate executive director,
answered.
"Otherwise, how's a person to know firsthand?"
"News reports of the commission report were excellent, but people involved should not rely on second-hand accounts."
The AASA action plan also urges school administrators to lead the "readers" in the formation of study groups in each community.
"Reading the report is the only way to see what it contains," he said.
...IF IT'S MORE DEBATEGATE,
I DON'T WANNA HEAR IT.
CLICK.
THE DAILY DIRECTORY
MORGAN SEX
VIDEO TAPES
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.
State publicity film causing needless furor over funding
Three top Kansas Republicans have requested an investigation into Mrs. Carlin's participation in the production of "This is Kansas," a publicity film for the state.
The recent hullabaloo about the professional aspirations of Karen Carlin, wife of Kansas governor John Carlin, reeks of pointless political mud-slinging.
Mrs. Carlin's $12,000 salary from the Travel Industry Association pays for her work as film adviser and fund raiser. She intends to raise $90,000 for the production of the 20-minute film.
Republicans also urged an investigation into the duties of her 14-year-old son, who gets about
KIESA ASCUE Guest Columnist
$200 a month for cleaning the grounds around
Cedar Crest, the governor's mansion.
Most recently, an article proclaimed that the governor's wife had the audacity to write fund-raising letters on mansion stationery and to make promotional phone calls from her home. Some members of the press have swarmed on the story like hungry bees, sucking every ounce of nectar from the driest of buds. Media-wise Republican leaders know how to manipulate the press, and reporters eager for stories and scandals have blown the Karen Carlin tidbits into a continuing saga of ridiculous proportions. The First Lady deserves more credit, and less bad publicity, than she has been given in some papers.
MARY ELIZABETH CURTIS
Those leaders who protest Mrs. Carlin's employment seem to think that a governor's wife's place is in the home, if not in the kitchen.
If Mrs. Carln wants to raise funds for a film, why shouldn't she? Her role as wife of the governor should not exclude her from pursuing her own interests and supporting her own causes. Certainly, when she solicits funds she steps from her role as wife into her role as a
professional. She should be allowed to do so without being ousted with criticism
If she used stationery from the mansion, critics argue, then businessmen who want to make brown points with the governor could be influenced to give money to the film.
Use of the stationery might be imprudent. However, such use probably stems not from a lack of ethical standards, but from a reluctance on Mrs. Carlin's part to define herself and her home solely in relationship to her husband's position.
She probably just didn't think about the stationery that's available around her home as paper that would wield power. Eternal favor to businessmen is special favors to businessmen who invest in his wife's interests
The furor could be understood, perhaps, if Mrs. Carlin was trying to raise money for an Xerated film, or if she offered privileges in return for contributions. However, the film that she endorses will celebrate the state that her husband leads. Her role as a fund-raiser fits doubly well because of her status in the state, if the two roles must be considered together.
She has done no evil through her efforts to encourage people to help her promote Kansas with the film.
Attorney General Robert Stephan, who may be in contention with Carlin for a job in the next election, has agreed to interview Mrs. Carlin on the matter. He plans to determine whether the First Lady has broken any conflict of interest laws.
If he decides that her need for the profession of her choice should go unfulfilled, his motives, and the conflict of interest laws, must be reevaluated.
The investigation began on July 5, and even Stephan agrees that it has slouched along for long enough.
The story broke on the ebb of a wave of criticism about a swimming pool proposed for Cedar Crest. Taken altogether, recent inquiries into the family affairs of Gov. Carin represent a blow to Democrats. Republican glory pigs who root eagerly at any chance to flip a little mud at the governor.
chance to tip a fireplace. That mud misses the target. The wives of famous men deserve to choose professional lives of their own.
The University Daily KANSAN
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The University Daily Kansas (USPS 690-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 6044, daily during the school year and Wednesday and Friday during the summer sessions, excluding Saturday, holiday, Sundays, and final periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 6044. Subscriptions by mail are $15 for six months or a fee in a year to the County and $18 for six months or a fee in a year to the City. Postmaster: POSTMASTER. Send address changes to the University Daily Kansas, 118 Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 6044.
Editor
Janet Murphy
Managing Editor
Editorial Editor
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University Daily Kansan, July 22, 1983
Page 5
Art
From page 1
an possible. However, when outside temperatures are below 30 or above 65 degrees, the
"The outside air closes off, the return air opens up and we are getting more room air back
Porter estimated that the minimum amount of fresh air taken in was about 25 percent.
Phil Blackhurst, chairman of the art department, said that the building's ventilation system is one of the most energy-efficient.
Norman Moody, chief engineer for the Kansas Architectural Services Division, declined this week to look up the specific amounts of fresh air even though they were on file in his office.
"THEERE HAVE BEEN PROBLEMS with the ventilation system," he said, "but there has been a conscientious effort to make improvements when they are needed within the restraints of air."
Blackhurst said that the exhaust in the welding studio had been upgraded and that a new exhaust system had been installed in the printmaking studio.
"There is still work to be done in the silkscreen area to bring in outside air," he said. "I would have been happy if there were no fog."
"I would guess that if OSHA came in and went over this place with a fine-tooth comb that they would find some places where we don't meet standards," he said. "But those standards were designed for places where people are working 40 hours a week."
McCann, however, contends that teachers and students actually need stricter standards than they currently do.
HE SAID THAT the standards used by OSHA
the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, were based on studies of healthy white male workers who have passed pre-employment and are the most resistant to toxic substances.
He also said that people who were susceptible to the effects of toxic substances did not stay ill.
"You can have teachers and students who are young or elderly — both high risk groups," he said. "So in the general population, who do you adjust to?"
Ott said that because the building's closed
was in there for 20 hours a week. I do think it is pretty good now."
Ot also said that the department was unable to use the spray painting room in the way that it did before.
"The venting system for that room won't even take out the smoke from a cigarette," he said.
Blackhurst said that the cost estimate to have the room fixed was "wuite high."
Despite the presence of toxic materials, there are times when, because of breakouts and budget restrictions, the building's ventilation system is not operating at all.
Phil Blackhurst
'There have been problems with the ventilation system, but there has been a conscientious effort to make improvements where they are needed within the restraints of the budget.'
art department chairman
ventilation system recirculated the same air, it also recirculated fumes.
"The main problem is the ventilation and the main solution would be more windows," he said.
"I gave them complete drawings of how the printmaking area should be built and they didn't
'THE PRINTING ROOM was so bad, I finally said I wouldn't teach them anymore. Finally no
"I thought it was moderately dangerous for students and very hazardous for me because I
NICK VACCARO, a professor of art who teaches oil painting, said that the air conditioning had broken down every summer since the building opened.
Porter said that Facilities Operations was continuing to have problems with the motor of a truck.
The system had its third motor installed two years ago, he said, and now that motor must be completely disassembled. This will be done, he said, when the unit is no longer in use.
Porter said that, because the unit could not maintain enough oil pressure in the recent
LMH to offer outpatients list of flat rates
By MELISSA BAUMAN
Staff Reporter
mind maps of grocery shoppers browsing through aisles with calculators in their hands.
But beginning in August, comparison shopper Mark Spiegel began a parergraph (part of Lawnsprey Memorial Hospital)
Comparison shopping usually brings to mind visions of grocery shoppers browsing the aisles.
LMH WILL OFFER a list of flat rate prices for more than 44 different categories of outpatient surgery so that Lawrence residents may shop around to decrease their health costs, Dennis Strathmann, finance director of LMH, said yesterday.
Strathmann said the prices for outpatient surgery were formulated by averaging what patients received.
Strathmain said there were two reasons for the price list.
"We assume we're going to lose a little on some and make a little on some so it will average out. But the patient is going to have more time. And that's why it's going to cost ahead of time." he said.
"It gives the patient an opportunity to see what it's going to cost them up front, and the paperwork is greatly simplified for us. We want it to change to collect, instead of 10 or 12," he said.
HE ALSO SAID that both Medicare and the police Shield had said that they preferred this model.
Strathmany said that he thought flat rates would be adopted by other hospitals but that
LMH was the first hospital in Kansas to develop a flat rate for outpatient surgery.
In order to compare prices, Strathmann said, people can call LMH for its rate and then call other hospitals for an estimate, but other hospitals will not be able to guarantee their estimates.
"In most hospitals it's an a-la-carte-type charging system where whatever amount of time the surgery takes and the recovery takes is determined by the price of the procedure." Strathmann said.
For example, charges for multiple dental extractions will be $487 and $308 for a myringotomy, $308 after the change. A myringotomy is an operation frequently done on children in which a surgeon inserts tubes into the ear to drain it.
A RESULT OF THE flat rate price list might be bringing more patients to LMH, according to Judith Hefley, director of community relations for the hospital.
"I think when people realize that we are very competitive or even less than other hospitals it will increase the number of patients. This might be a functional result," she said.
In June LMH did 122 outpatient surgeries, and the total for the first six months of this year was 720. Last year the hospital had done three operations on an outpatient basis in the first six months.
Strathmany, however, said he did not think the rate list would increase patients.
City," he said. "We're just trying to give the citizens of this community the best we can offer."
LAWRENCE MEMORIAL, HOWEVER, would like to increase its patient load, according to Strathmany, which is one reason why Laud will lower its prices for private rooms.
'It's not really designed as a marketing tool to steal patients from Topeka - Kansas
"Effective Sept. 1, we're going to be basically an all-private room institution except in rare cases where we don't have the room," he said.
Now private rooms cost $161 a day, and semi-private rooms cost $145. When the rate change takes effect there will be no semi-private rooms and the charge will be $135, Strathmann said.
The reason for the change is related to the recent expansion at LMH. Now an entire floor has been closed because of low occupancy in the past five or six months, he said, and the hospital still must meet payments on that floor.
Another reason for the change to private rooms is patient incompatibility, he said.
"I WOULD CALL them the 'hot-type' complaints," he said. "We don't get a great deal of complaints about the nursing service or the food. It's 'roommate is too noisy' or 'roommate smokes, and I don't' or 'TV's too loud.' 'visitors stay too late.'"
"If you stop and think about it, when you go to the Hyatt Regency, they don't tell you you're going to have a roommate for you. You should give you a private room, Strathmann said."
Porter said that the building should have had two separate systems installed during construc-
THIS HAPPENED THIRKE times in seven
Portorres and he running scared that
we will mistake him to keep us alive.
summer heat, it shut off for up to one and a half hours.
"It gets down to an economics point. You can buy one big unit cheaper than you can buy two medium-sized units," he said. "It appears to me that the technology is more efficient, they usually start cutting on utilities first."
He said that some campus buildings had multiple units and that when one unit broke down, the other would be shut down.
The circulation system in the Art and Design building is completely turned off for an hour each day because of budget restraints, Porter said.
"IN ENERGY CONSERVATION usage, which we do one hour a day, we turn everything off. Visual arts is the only building where everything stops for that one hour," he said.
Porter said the system was turned off in order to reduce the amount of power consumption at peak times of usage. The University's yearly power rate is based on its peak demand.
Vaccaro, who teaches oil painting on the fourth floor, said that the building needed more air circulation.
"There are times when the heat and air conditioning are off. Then what we have is stagnation," he said. "They call it circulating, but you feel you are breathing the same air."
"I have talked to everyone about having exhaust fans installed. I think they don't want to put any more money into that building.
"THEY HAVE GOT TO DO something more than saying we'll look into it."
Burry, who had developed the skin rash, also had suggested the installation of exhaust fans in his basement.
"The response was that they couldn't do anything to disturb the aesthetics of the building.
anything to be said in the absence of the building.
"They have all been cooperative, but nothing has been done. I finally gave up pursuing it. I just don't think about it anymore." she said.
Ott, former art department chairman, said why he thought the department was having difficulty in getting funding for necessary changes.
“ART IS NOT ONE of the high priorities, and
you don’t say too much,” he said. ...
Birthdays
"You just take what they will give you."
From page 1
- but his children and their children and all children must suffer its blow.
Meenninger's innovative work has earned him the title of dean of American psychiatry and earned him prestigious awards for his contributions to science, social reform, humanitarian
Former associates and admirers of Menninger's will gather in Topeka this weekend at the College of Music.
Despite a stroke in 1982 and brain surgery in 1976, Mninger works at least five and one-half days a week at one of his four offices in Topeka. He was able to stay afloat from the stroke, and his hands tremble slightly.
MENNINGER, CALLED "Dr. Kart" by his friends, founded the internationally renowned Menninger Foundation in 1925 with his father, C.F. Menninger, and his brother, William. Today it is one of the largest and most respected centers for the treatment and prevention of mental illness.
Dark Ages concept of mental illness, and "The Crime of Punishment," a major catalyst in 1968 toward penal reform.
In 1966, he founded The Villages, an innovative approach to finding homes for neglected, abused and deserted children. The Villages has spread throughout the world. In Minnesota, “is the greatest thing I ever created.”
He has written 13 books, including "The Human Mind," which, in 1890, helped dispel the
Along with a deep concern for children is another major concern of Menninger's nuclear weapons.
"WE'VE GOT MORE than a million people engaged in the process of making weapons to slaughter people — people they don't even know. Lots of people don't think it's suicide," he said. "Mr. Reagan thinks it's great. He whoops it up. He calls it defense."
"It's a bitter thing we're leaving our children.
I hope to do something about it."
Meningner's colleagues speak with awe when describing him.
"He is the greatest humanitarian who ever lived in the United States," said Robert Hulsen, president of The Villages. "He's the Albert Schweitzer of the United States."
Movie
"But I'm not an advertiser," he said.
of Centron Corporation Inc., said that he saw no reason for advertisers to be squeamish.
From page 1
Bonnie Cullum, a KU graduate who also was an extra in the movie, said that if she were an advertiser she would sponsor the movie.
"IT'S ONLY BECAUSE of the controversial nature plus the fact that it shows a great deal of the blood and guts as a result of the atomic blast."
"I felt that the movie was a very worthwhile cause and one that we should examine. It's not light humor, and it's not a documentary. And I guess it would depend on my product, but I would
advertise because people are going to be watching this kind of thing." Cullum said.
An extra who was in several scenes, Wes Chick, 1605 Tennessee St., said that he would probably sponsor the movie if he were a national advertiser.
Crick said, however, that some advertisers might not want to sponsor the movie because of its explicit portrayal of injuries and because they are an adult product associated with such a depressing subject.
"BUT IF I WANTED my public to know that my company was backing the idea of disarmament from a company standpoint of just public relations, then I would go ahead with it," he said.
ARE THE ZIG ZAG
YELLO
SUB
YELLO SUB
just w. of
23rd & Louisiana
Got the fast food blues? Subman will chase them away with 13 varieties of foot-long sub sandwiches.
A Yello Sub makes a total nutritious, delicious meal. The freshest veggies, quality meats & cheeses are piled high on our natural, homemade, wholewheat bun. Each sub is overtoasted, not microwaved.
YELLO SUB
just w. of 23rd & Louisiana
Got the fast food blues? Subman will chase them away with 13 varieties of foot-long sub sandwiches.
A Yello Sub makes a total nutritious, delicious meal. The freshest veggies, quality meats & cheeses are piled high on our natural, homemade, wholewheat bun. Each sub is oven-toasted, not microwaved.
Subman also features homemade desserts & Dannon Frozen Yogurt.
We're open late.
Mon-Thurs 'till 11pm.
Fri, Sat 'till 1am.
Sun 'till 10pm.
ALL 1/2 ft. SUBS $1.25
w/coupon good thru July
1 coupon/person 1 sub/coupon no deliveries please
YELLO SUB
Call in your order. It'll be ready when you arrive.
YELLO SUB
just w. of 23rd & Louisiana
Got the fast food blues? Subman will chase them away with 13 varieties of foot-long sub sandwiches.
A Yello Sub makes a total nutritious, delicious meal. The freshest veggies, quality meats & cheeses are piled high on our natural, homemade, wholewheat bun. Each sub is oven-toasted, not microwaved.
Subman also features homemade desserts & Dannon Frozen Yogurt.
We're open late. Mon-Thurs 'til 11pm. Fri, Sat 'til 1am. Sun 'til 10pm.
ALL 1/2 ft. SUBS $1.25
w/coupon good thru July 1 coupon/person 1 sub/coupon no deliveries please
YELLO SUB
Call in your order. It'll be ready when you arrive. 841-3268
Minsky's introduces
"IT'S NOT A HAMBURGER, IT'S A 1/2 LB.
STEAK BURGER!"
$250 includes medium drink & curly-Q-fries
6-pks. beer to go.
THE ORIGINAL Minsky's PIZZA
842-0154
The Jazzhaus
926 1/2 Massachusetts
Presents
This weekend Fri July 22, Sat July 23, THE BELAIRS
"Shots of Rocking R&B, Soul and some outrageous Rock 'N' Roll that makes the dance floor valuable real estate...Recent glits with Gatemouth Brown, Willie Dixon, and Albert Collins indicate these boys are headed for bigger things!"
Kevin Walsh, The Blue Notes
"Dave Prutt's guitar riffs sear like high, hot whips; Henderson's harp walls like a grieving widow; the bass and drums drive the band like a freight train"
Forrest Rose, Scene Magazine
"Michael Henderson was blowing harp like I've never heard before...chugging like a freight train was coming right through the club!"
Nightflying Magazine
"Howling good time" Wichita Eagle-Bascon
"Amid all the flash and truce-chord frenzy of today's New Wave rockers and all the schmaltz oozing out of the studios, the Belairs are playing deeply nourishing, earthy rhythm and blues!"
Springfield Leader & Press
Sunday, July 24 Dance to the Island Music of
Minsky's introduces
"IT'S NOT A HAMBURGER,
IT'S A 1/2 LB.
STEAK BURGER!"
$250 includes medium drink
& curly-Q-fries
6-pks.
beer to go.
THE ORIGINAL
Minsky's
PIZZA
2228 Iowa
842-0154
The Jazzhaus
926 1/2 Massachusetts
Presents
This weekend Fri July 22,
Sat July 23, THE BELAIRS
"Shots of Rocking R&B, Soul and some outrageous Rock 'N' Roll that makes the dance floor, valuable real estate. Recent gigs with Gatemouth Brown, Willie Dixon, and Albert Collins indicate these boys are headed for bigger things"
Kevin Walsh, The Blue Notes
"Dave Prutt's guitar riffs sear like high, hot whips; Henderson's harp walls like a grieving widow, the bass and drums drive the band like a freight train"
Forrest Rose, Scene Magazine
"Michael Henderson was blowing harp like I've never heard before...chugging like a fright train was coming right through the club"
Nightflying Magazine
"Howling good time' Wichita Eagle-Beacon"
"Amid all the flash and three-chord tranzy of todays New Wave rockers and all the schmaltz coating out of the studios, the Belairs are playing deeply nourishing, earthy rhythm and blue"
Springfield Leader & Press
Sunday, July 24
Dance to the Island Music of
BLOODWATER ROCKS
CARIBE
ISLAND MUSIC
Student Loans at The First are worth writing home about.
Dear Mom and Dad,
Surprise! This is not a letter asking for more money.
I just applied for a guaranteed student loan at The First. Tution and expenses are covered for next semester. And I don't begin payments until after graduation.
Thanks for everything,
PS.
Send
Food!!
Stop writing home for money. Come to The First instead. Terry Boyer, our student loan manager, can help you get a guaranteed student loan to cover your
tuition and expenses at any approved college or university.
The First
We want to help.
The First National Bank of Lawrence
John & Massachusetts, Lawrence, Kansas 66044 (913) 843-0152
Member F.D.J.C. Equal Opportunity Leader Employer
The application form is uncomplicated, the interest rate is low, and your loan is processed quickly.
Stop by the 4th Floor Student Loan Office to see Terry. Then send the above note to your folks.
Page 6
University Daily Kansan, July 22, 1983
Spare Time
By ANNE AMOURY Staff Writer
staff Writer
In a tiny, rectangular room with dirty, chipped paint on the pester-covered walls, radio announcer Tom Hoyt talked about his modern jazz
Disjointed and seeming musical chaos came from two small speakers on top of grey file cabinets in JKH-FM's music library. It was the Chicago Art Ensemble, a group of five middle-aged black musicians heard in the Jazz Show," which is narrated by Hoyl and Airdays from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m.
"STUFF LIKE THIS is quite vital. It deserves to be heard. That's KJIKH's philosophy — to expose music that you wouldn't hear elsewhere." Hvoi said
He held up the Art Ensemble record jacket and said, "There are millions of jazz fans who will listen to the first edition of this album and say, 'This is not jazz.'"
He dropped the record jacket back on the wooden desk in front of him and
From the speakers, the scream of a desperate saxophone rang out over a furious, convulsive bass on the Art Ensemble's album. "Nice Guys."
"I didn't know a thing about jazz —
Wes Montgomery and Miles Davis and
Jazz."
Hoyt, a 23-year-old KU graduate in psychology, admitted he was ignorant of jazz when he started working at KJHK in the summer of 1980.
HIS FIRST SHOW on KJHK was devoted to "crossover," a hybrid of jazz and rock exemplified by such artists as Chick Corea and Herbie Hancock.
During that show, as his awareness of jazz increased, he learned to define and articulate its sound.
"My tastes bended more toward experimental, abstract music," he said.
He began to gravitate toward music that had no melodic or rhythmic base such as Ornette Coleman's, the Art Ensemble of Chicago and the later music of John Coltrane, he said. He also noted that the music could be a little unsettling.
SENIOR AND JUNIOR HIGH SCHOOL jazz ensembles will present a Midwestern Music Camp recital at 7:30 PM and a Southwouth Recital Hall, Murdhv Hall.
SENIOR HIGH SCHOOL, BANDS,
chorus and orchestra will present the
final Midwestern Music Concert camp
Crafton-Preyer Theatre, Murphy Hall.
THEODORE STURGEON will present a lecture in the Science Fiction
Lecture series at 7:30 p.m. Monday in
Auditorium Alderton. Kansas Union.
"ELDRED AND NEVELSON: Another Dimension," an exhibit of works by two sculptors, will open Tuesday in the Museum of Art and continue through Sept. 25.
ROBERT GOODIN, ORGANIST, will present a doctoral recital at 8 p.m. Monday in Swarthout Recital Hall, Murphy Hall.
On campus
“It’s kind of hard to tap your foot to this,” he said.
ALTHOUGH MUSICAL PURISTS would object to calling this music jazz, Hoyt said, it not only is jazz, but an uncorrupted form of jazz.
"Jazz is based on improvisation and this music is purely improvisation. To me, that's what makes jazz jazz," he said.
STUDENT CREATIVE ANACHRONISTS will meet at 7:15 p.m. Tuesday in parlor A of the Kansas Union.
What's not jazz, according to Hoyt, is playing other artists' written music.
His head of curly brown hair tilted downward as he talked about the kind of response his one-year-old show stimulates.
He gets phone calls "sporadically," he said. Some people call to request something and some call for detailed information, and he plays so they can search for them.
"They don't call very often — only when something really moves them, he."
THE BEST KIND of phone call, Hoyt said, is when people don't ask for anything in particular but just want to tell him they appreciate the show.
"Anyone who listens is a compliment.
They're giving me a reason to do this."
Wait, the comma after "are" might be a typo or just a space.
The prompt says "Maintain the original reading order and flow of the text."
I'll just use standard indentation.
"Anyone who listens is a compliment.
They're giving me a reason to do this."
KJHK is operated by KU students. The disc jockeys follow broad guidelines established by the program directors, but they also are allowed a certain degree of freedom to experiment.
Disc jockeys such as Hoyt, who are knowledgeable about a particular type of music, are sometimes allotted a time slot for a special program.
HOYT'S SHOW IS NOT limited to jazz or even "experimental jazz." He also incorporates some rare ethnic music into his show.
One African artist, Fela Amukusa Kuti, whose politically oriented music and activities have earned him a jail sentence in his native Nigeria, generates a lot of favorable listener response. Hoyt said.
A West German group named Popol Vuh also attracts callers.
"The first time I played Pup Voh, I got a fascinator who wanted to run in the woods."
As for what motivates Hoyt to do the show, he said, "I get bored very easily. I see things out that are unnatural. I think it shows as a celebration of the unusual."
Stars to come out at gathering
Space Week activities will end tonight at the Astronomical Observatory in Lindley Hall with a "Star Party" and give participants a chance to get a first hand look at the benefits.
Astronomy Associates, a student organization for people interested in astronomy, is co-sponsoring the party with the Ad Astra L-5 Society, a campus-based group that promotes the scientific exploration of space.
Posters, T-shirts and star finders, which are used to identify stars, will be sold at the gathering. Paulette Falk, a history professor at Associates of Lawrence, said yesterday.
Several telescopes will be used at the party, which will begin at 9:30 p.m. at the observatory.
Starlight's plays benefit from outdoor setting
By KYLE RITCHEY
Staff Writer
The glamor and romance of performances under the stars is what makes the Starlight Theatre in Kansas City, Mo., so special.
The outdoor amphitheater, which is owned by the city, is situated in the heart of Scoop Park amid golf areas and two diamond, picnic areas and a跑.
WHEN CONSTRUCTION BEGAN on the Starlight in 1949, it was the dream of the planners to make the theatre one of Kansas City's most magnificent theaters. They hoped to create stars to the stage of the Starlight.
Beginning in the summer of 1951, Broadway musicals and light operas were presented at the Starlight during a 10-week summer season.
the first performance at the Starlight, a pageant called 'Thrillis of a Century', was staged in 1950, in Cincinnati City celebrated its 100th year.
The format of the Starlight was changed in 1980 when two contemporary concerts were presented. Now there are more concerts than plays, according to G. Crawford and Katie Swainsker for the Starlight Theatre.
"This season there are five musicals and 28 contemporary concerts." he said.
THE FINAL MUSICAL of the season, "They're Playing Our
Starlight's season runs from mid-May through September.
Song." is scheduled for Aug. 7, and a wide variety of concerts will be presented through September, Carlland said.
The concerts are announced one month ahead of time by New West Productions, the promoter for all concerts at the Starlight
Other events scheduled at the Starlight include:
- Aug. 19 Rick Springfield
- Aug. 29 Hank Williams
- Aug. 30 Elvis Costello
- Sept. 2 Sheena Easton
- Sent 2 George Ronenn
- Sept. 5 Men at Work
- Sept. 9 James Taylor
- Sept. 7 Anne Murray
- Sept. 11 Manhattan Transfer
- Sept. 18 Little River Band
A schedule of events is printed every Sunday in the Kansas City Star. Additional information can be obtained by calling the Theatre League at 1-816-421-7500, or the Starlight Theatre.
TICKETS RANGE in price from $8 to $13 for the musicals and $10 to $18.50 for the concerts. They can be obtained at any Jones Store, Capital Street, Ticket outlets, or by calling a A-Tick at 1-813-7651-6371
Tickets for most concerts at the Starlight also can be purchased at Omni Electronics, 540 Fireside Ct., in Lawrence.
Celebrations to honor Bolivar's birth
To offer a chance for more people to participate, Latin American students at the University of Kansas will wait until Sept. 6 to honor Bolivar's birth with lectures by Latin American intellectuals, a historical film, an exhibition of books and documents in Watson library and a Latin American party.
Big celebrations will take place in South America Sunday, July 24, commemorating the 200th birthday of Simon Bolivar, liberator of six South American nations, while in the United States 10 million Latin Americans coast to coast will join them in the celebration.
recipient of the Nobel Prize for Literature and to KU to present a book about Rolf Wolff.
"We haven't got a confirmation, but we are optimistic of having him here at our disposal."
ROSA HELENA HIDALGO, president of the Latin American Student Association, said the group invited Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Colombian
Bolivar led Colombia, Venezuela, Ecuador, Panama, Peru and Bolivia to freedom from Spain.
Charles Stansifer, director of the KU Center of Latin American Studies, said Americans recognized Bolivar as the "pre-eminent hero of Latin American
He was born in Caracas, Venezuela,
on July 24, 1783, and died near Santa
María de la Vega.
HE HELPED LEAD several years of fighting against Spain before freeing the first South American country from its control. Nueva Granada, today's
Colombia, was liberated in 1819, and by 1821. Venezuela was free.
Ecuador gained freedom under Bolivar a year later and Peru followed in 1824. Upper Peru took the name of Bolivia after its liberation in 1825.
Celebrations have been going on since the Organization of American States proclaimed this year, beginning last week with "Bicentennial Year of Simon Bolivar."
In 11 towns named Bolivar, spread throughout the United States, small Latin American communities Sunday attended an event organized by the Organization of American States.
THOSE TOWNS NAMED BOLIVAR can be found in Missouri, Virginia, Tennessee, New York, West Virginia, Mississippi, Pennsylvania, Mississippi and Cleveland
THE CASTLE
TEA ROOM
phone 843-1151
14 kt. Chain Repair
Kizer Cummings
(jewelers)
800 Mass. 749-4333
Come and Enjoy our Nightly Drink Specials Dancing Nightly
BARRON'S
Food Hours
Sun-Thurs 4:00 p.m.-9:30 p.m.
Fri & Sat 12:00 p.m.-9:30 p.m.
Bar Hours
Sun-Tues 4:00 p.m.-1:00 m.
(depending on crowd)
Mon-Sun 8:30 a.m.-5:00 p.m.
Fat & Sat 12:00 p.m-3:00 m.
Tinn & Mass, Lawrence, KS 812-841-7098
NEXT-TO-NEW
CLOTHING FOR WOMEN
745 NEW HAMPSHIRE
THE MARKETPLACE
(BEHIND THE HARVEST)
842-7456
Open Tues. thru Sat. 10:30 to 4:30
You'll Love Our Style
809 Vermont, Lawrence
843-8808
Headmasters.
Gatehouse
of Lawrence
2168 WEST 29TH STREET
LAWRENCE KANASRA 80044
PHONE 843-6446
1, 2; & 3 BEDROOM APARTMENTS
Limited Availability for Fall
• Wall-to-Wall carpeting. New Draperies throughout
• Kitchen equipped with stove, refrigerator, disposal,
& dishwasher
• Outdoor swimming pool & Central air
• Extra storage available at no cost
• Hot & cold water, sewage & trash paid
• Conveniently located on bus route to KU
Prices start at $285
For more information call:
843-6446
Office hours
M-F 9-6
Sat 9-2
Professionally Managed by Middle States Management Company
Gatehouse of Lawrence
2104 WEST 57TH STREET
LAWRENCE, KANSAS 68044
Phone: 843-6448
BARCELONA HOTELS AND SPA RESORTS
---
One Bedroom
LUXURY APARTMENTS
Redbud Apartments
starting at $245.00
month
...walking distance from campus
1034 Mississippi Street
Heritage Management Corp
PHONE 843-1116
Heritage Management Corp.
PUBLIC NOTICE STEREO WHOLESALE PRICES
The Gramophone Shop offers any single purchaser every major brand of audio product at wholesale pricing. Wholesale purchasers are entitled to full factory-authorized service. It is the purchaser's responsibility to transport any wholesale product to the manufacturer's warranty station. Often, this is what many stores call "service."
The Gramophone Shop Wholesale Division is unique in that you can purchase at or below so-called "sale" prices at any time and yet receive better service than mail order houses. You can receive your equipment immediately, in factory-sealed cartons; the units are not demos or factory dumps. You know what you are getting and you can get it now!
KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREO
GRAMOPHONE SHOP
HOLIDAY PLAZA
University Daily Kansan, July 22, 1983
Page 7
C. R. H.
Steve Zuk/KANSAN
William Duelman, professor of systematics and ecology, and director of the herpetology division of the Museum of Natural History, checks one jar of specimens out of a roomful of bottles. Herpetology is a branch of zoology that deals with reptiles and amphibians.
195,000 frogs and reptiles, KU's treasure
Roaming around at night in the rain in Latin America with a high-powered light on your head is a good way to find strange animals, as well as attract the attention of the police or military, professor of systems and ecology
By DOUGLAS FARAH
By DOUGLAS FARAH Staff Reporter
HE SAID THAT his encounters with police usually ended with the police shaking their heads in amazement at the "gringo" willingness to brave the elements to get the desired frog or other animal.
Herpetology is the study of amphibians and reptiles. Specimens must be gathered from all over the world in order to do research, Duellman said.
Duelman, director of the herp-
tetology division of the Museum of
Natural History since 1959, has travel-
ed to Latin America 25 times and
total of four and one-half years
researching and collecting specimens
there.
And in the course of collecting
Yet it is this type of fieldwork that has enabled KU to maintain one of the top six herpetology divisions in the country.
KU's herpetology division has developed into a regional center for the study of amphibians and reptiles from Latin America, Duellman said. This is due in part to the division's interest in the wide variety of animals found in Latin America that are unknown to scientists.
"We found 36 species in one night and in all. There are 118 known species in 158."
"WE WORKED FOR three years in Ecuador, in three square kilometers and found more species of frogs that I had never seen in all the United States," Diedelman said.
specimens for the museum and scientific study just about anything can and should be done.
Deuelman said that so far KU had maintained an outstanding track record in its research, enabling it to recruit researchers from the National Science Foundation.
The NSF grants provide about
He said the study of flora and fauna of little studied places such as Latin America was important because the forests there were being destroyed.
**'WE ARE DESTROYING species in there we don't even know exist,' he said.**
Duellman is doing research on marsupial frogs, a type of frog that inhabits the Andes and Amazon regions of South America.
$150,000 a year to the division, while KU contributes $55,000. Duelman said.
Marsupial frogs are unique in that they carry their eggs on their backs and in many species the eggs hatch as frogs. The young go through the tadpole stage while in the pouch on their mother's back.
The division of herpetology is working to find and identify as many species as possible. The division now has more than 195,000 specimens from all over the world in collection, making it one of the top collections in the nation, Duelman said.
can spend three or four hours trying to catch one after it has been spotted."
COLLECTING SPECIMENS from many different parts of the world is only a small part of the job, however, Duelman said.
When a specimen is caught, notes are made on its color and behavior. Data on the specimen's habitat, such as the type of food it consumes, temperature and elevation, are recorded.
Most specimens are photographed in color, and if possible, recordings of its sounds are made. Duelman said. Then the specimens were preserved, tagged and shipped back to KU.
After the specimens reach KU, some are treated chemically so the bones and cartilage structures can be seen, collection manager, collection collection manager for the division.
Other specimens are thinly sliced for cross sections of the head, he said.
The University Daily
RECORDINGS OF SPECIMENS are analyzed by an electronic analyzer that gives a printout of the sounds. The printout is then used for researching what the animals' calls mean, said David Cassinella, a graduate student
KANSAN WANT ADS
Call 864-4358
CLASSIFIED RATES
time three five six seven eight nine ten one two three four five six seven eight nine ten one two three four five six seven eight nine ten one two three four五六七八九十一二三四
AD DEADLINES
ERRORS
Monday ... Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday ... Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday ... Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday ... Tuesday 5 p.m.
Friday ... Wednesday 5 p.m.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
The Kanman will not be responsible for more than two incorrect inotrises. 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 Kansan business office at 864-4158.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Selfhelp group for anorectes, bulimics and their families and friends will meet on Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. in the Lawrence-Kansas Room of the Lawrence Memorial Hospital, starting July 13. The group is a service for anorectic nervosis and Association Disorders and in need. For more information, call 842-3894 or 842-3894.
...
KING OF THE DREAMS
Susan Lan!
Look for the ad in this paper.
AND YOU
CAN BE
GLUTTON #4!
FOR RENT
...
Chocolate Unlimited
Spinner's Books now has AIR CONDITIONING,
Lawrence's feminist women's and children's
bookshelf for ALL women, collectively operating
in Mass. 9 p.m., Thursday 11 a.m., Mass. 10/1, 10/2
Mass.
OPEN HOUSE
2 dieselon duplex, just south of Kruger's. Appliances.
savage 9273, 845 0605
3 three bedroom homes available for August 1
occupancy service call. Call 443-2674 for application.
Call 443-2674 for application.
Brand New Sunrise Place 9th & Michigan
9th & Michigan
- Walking distance to K.U.
* Two bedroom highly energy
efficient basement
and fireplace available
* Townhouse living.
- From $37h-$475 a month.
Open daily 9:00-12:00 a.m.
& 1:00-5:00 p.m.
Call 841-1287 (office)
or 841-5797
Apartments compete with cars to campuses. Brand new homes are more expensive than older ones. Male sleeping rooms. Laundry facilities & off-street parking.
Basement apartment very close to campus. Room with free kitchen. Wheelchair accessible. Female no smoking. Available at 8:40 a.m. Please contact Jennifer at j.jenifer@abuday.edu for further details.
Crescent Apartments
OAKS & GASLIGHT
APARTMENTS
start at $240
water and gas paid
air and heat paid
CRESCENT
APARTMENTS
ACORN APARTMENTS
start at $285
water paid
ALL ON BUS ROUTE!
2357 Ridgecount
842-4461
Professional managed by
Heritage Management Corp.
Hanover Townhouses, spacious 2 BD unfurnished
at 16th and Kennetbury, 10 month lease available
One bedroom apartment, sleeping room. 5 bedroom,
no pets. 843-1601. 842-9871.
MED. STUDENTS, NURSES, THEIRPATIERS
OTHERS. If you come to the M K Center in
Denver, please be aware that we are not
available. Complete retirement with app. aw.
app. aww. and aww. or aww. for birth and
appreciate free rent incentive for early births. Call
(212) 455-3670.
KU STUDENTS &
FACULTY
Still looking for that perfect home?
Consider these completely furnished studios
1. 2 bed • & 3 amentarium locations . . .
HANOVER PLACE
between 11th & 15th
on Massachusetts
841-1212
SUNDANCE APARTMENTS
7th & Florida
TIBURON
9th & Emery
841-5255
SUMMIT HOUSE
1105 Louisiana
841-8280
COLDWATER FLATLS
413 W. 14th
841-1212
A - PLEXES
922 Tennessee * 916 Indiana
All offered by
Mastercraft Management
Professional Management &
Management
One bedroom duplex just west of campus. 843-685-
Plane Ahead! Rooms available for spring, summer and fall at Sunflower House, a thirty-member coed, cooperative, community class to campus
Jayhawker Towers Apartments
Rent now or reserve for fall - furnished apartments, or room near university or downtown, on off street parking. SANTA FE PARKWAY TOWNSHIP spacious, quiet 3 bedroom duplexes. Located at Natal & Kaiserd Featuring all appliances, washer-dryer hook-ups, dryers, dishwasher, swimming pool. Call 749-1687 for an appointment.
APARTMENT SHOPPERS CHECK LIST
Bowdoin
Comments On Campus
* All Utilities Paid
* Ten Month Leases
* Air Conditioned
* Summing Pool
* On Bus Line
* Free Cablevision
* Laundry Facilities
* Furnished or Unfurnished
Tower A - Grad Students Only
Tower B - Women Students Only
Tower C D - All K.U. Students
Now taking applications for fall leases.
Office Hours
Mon.-Fri. 8:00 to 5:00
Sat. 8:00 to 12:00
Quit, clean two-bedroom light housekeeping
private private bath. PHA private home
studios. Private studio facilities included. Graduate students; preferred.
August 14. Call唤客, weekends.
1603 W.15th 843-4993
NAISMITH HALL
On KU Bus Route
The Place To Live In Downtown Lawrence
Roommax $ needed. 4 bedroom duplex. $28/month
+1/4伙额. Close to host route. Call 728-6353
Eldridge House Apartments
Massachusetts at 7th
749-5011
Studios
One Bedrooms
Two Bedrooms
All Utilities Paid
Off KU Bus Route
Utilities (except phone) paid
Maid Service
Social Activities
Food Service with
Unlimited Seconds
Fully Furnished, Carpeted.
Close to Campus
Fully Furnished, Carpeted Air-Conditioned Rooms
If your apartment doesn't offer the above it's not Naismith Hall Drop by and look us owe
843-8559
NAISMITH HALL
1800 Naismith Drive
Save money, rent a 1 or 2 bedroom, or studio apartment next to campus. No pets. No phone number. Phone 843-7481. Call the university's semester One block from Union. Utilities patrol, not parks. See at 1200 Ohio. First choose get choice.
TRAILRIDGE
- Studios, Apartments.
- Townhouses
- Excellent Maintenance Services
- Laundry Facilities
- Furnished or Unfur-
- 3 Pools, Tennis, Athletic Clubs
KU Bus
FOR SALE
Need a place for *salt!* We have one room left on second floor of an older hourhouse to college. Share the space with friends and colleagues. References requested, Deposit required, $18/month with utilities paid by landlord. Call 840-642-9435
LOST AND FOUND
10.213 Diatomium 50 l i-2 d : sodium, 65,000 cells, excellent adhesion. For use in skin care and body art.
2. Electric ignition system needs work. Adding 1% ABS to water will improve performance.
Must sell, Hewaik Hawk 1980 - 8000 Windwheel BIC
$550, Call 841-4737
Plane. Beautiful, old upright with bench. 8000 Call
841-9873, work or on weekends.
2500 W. 6th 843-7333
1973 Volkswagen Bug. Excellent condition. Heated steering wheel. Interior protection,灯罩,护目镜,灯座,保险箱,灯塔,uping,行李钩,Cell phone.
1979 LTD Landau, P/S, P/B, A/C power boats, power windows, cruise control, excellent condition
27' racting bicycle, full alloy $750.00 749-3603 Days.
American Athletics Lacrosse, loudspeaker system,
A.A.L. 5000 - 100 watt, fitted, 4-way. Was $400 new
now only $83.40 - 4607
1931 Capsize, only 33,000 miles, very good condition.
1830 best orer gift. After A. 8427857.
Hometown, 12' x 50', B3H, W/D. New $2,40. skirted, large down, large wood踢鞋, $6,20 or will consider as a partial payment on a small runner in NW or Southwest. Let 9, Lift & Arkansas, or weekends.
Bedroom bedside suite. Includes dresser w/ mirror and bed w/ backboard. Must see # 814-268 windows
EXECUTIVE DESK, metal, beige and chroma of wood, with back panel. Must see # 814-268 bed, "Jamison". Traditional, winged, used, two cost $99 + $80, your price. $190 COPPER enclosures, massive wooden, all for $85. SECTIONAL SOFA, 3 pieces. I curved, 1 straight. Excellent $140 enclosures, massive wood, all for $85. SECTIONAL HVAC CCC 775, speed A./C. stereo, excellent condition, best offer. Call after 5 p.m. M-F: 749-3113 Harman/Kardon hkd2160 receiver # 141, BUC 806 Harman/Kardon hkd2160 receiver # 141, BUC 806
1977 MIGB, excellent condition, mileage ... 49,000
$33,000. BMG 141-1231
Compound Science 20th Edition and 2.5th edition
Compound Science 20th Edition and 2.5th edition
Compound Science 20th Edition and 2.5th edition
Very good, 6 cylinder. Rius: great 749-210.
1935 Yamaha HD 200 - Excellent condition - 5,300
1977 Honda PW 80 - Excellent condition - 1977 MAVERICK 4-door, V8, A/T, A/C, AM-PW,
excellent condition, 100% or best after Offer. After 6.
Two dresses, with mirror. Good for college student or apartment living. Price negotiable.
Found: black-grey-orange female, declawed cat,
843-361
Lost. Black female cat with orange spots, with black tail and brown markings or B4-0435 or B4-1045. Black top of black tessile coat.
HELP WANTED
COORDINATOR The Consumer Affairs Association is seeking a dedicated graduate student to coordinate weeklong project assignments for a month project, ten hours per week, hourly flexible. Descriptive information available at 818 COORDINATOR.
Visiting faculty member will sell class two-time Dodge Apex (1978), new whitehawks, alternates etc. for $400-$500 each.
Clerk to work starting August, 1 through fall. Prepare
morning hours. Apply in person. Skipper's Lounge
Morning hours. Apply in person.
EAST COAST ADVENTURE, BOSTON. Families look in child-care workers. Live in suite, lovely home with pool and hot tub. Flexible starting time, many openings. Flushable starring dogs, one space per car. Fitch 19th, Rockingham Road, Boston, MA 02136
Garmonn's Nightshirt is looking for intelligent, hardworking women with good personality and looks. You join the team at the 1 nightshirt in Lawrence, call 842-7677; after 2 p.m. for an interview.
Live-in female colleague aide wanted for elderly woman within walking distance of campus. Room and board in exchange for housekeeping duties. Please contact preparation. Phone 481-6211 after晚餐 or evenings.
Remember last year girls' THE ETCY SHOP to W
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Special for students, Harvitz $7 and perma-
ture. Special for faculty, Harvitz $15 and perma-
ture. Used furniture bought and sold. Pick up available.
Special for students, Harvitz $7 and perma-
ture. Used furniture bought and sold. Pick up available.
Leaving Town?
At airline counter prices
no extra service charge
Make your travel
arrangements
on campus
Airline Tickets
See Maupintour Travel
Complies travel arrangements
* Eurail and Japan Rail Passes
* Car rental—Hotel confirmations
* Student semester break holidays
O
**$15.00 PICHERS 4-7 p.m. everyday. Also enjoy submarine scorpions sandwiches, great tunes, and more.**
Walk on over; just one block north of the beach. Walk on over; just one block north of the beach.
*Mustate*: for bulrush or other food-related
*Mustate*: for bulrush or other food-related
Bulimit? For bulimia or other food-related
problem, call 843-2429
SUDS·N·DUDS
(BAR LAUNDROMAT)
300 draws
Pooled Table
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west end of Holiday Place
ON CAMPUS LOCATION in the Student Union and 900 Mass
Maupintour travel service 749-0700
Impress your dutage with the total environment of the Hawks Crossing. Grow on the front porch to great tunnels, total sunshine and mags inside. Happy Hawks Crossing for sure, and then.
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale. Make sense out of Western Civilization! Makes sense to use in the new book, *The New York City For exam preparation*. *New Analysis of Western Civilization* available now at 11 Town Center, The Bronx. (www.westerncivilization.com)
ROSES • long stem, assorted colors, $1.50 each
$150 due. CARNATIONS • fresh cut, beautiful colors,
$1 each, for $15. Enchanted Florist, 212 W. 25th -
Holiday Plaza, 843-529
Rick's Bike Shop 400 bikes in stock. Peugeot, Fuji, Trek, Puch. We repair everything RICKS
1033 Vermont BIKE SHOP 841-6642
Tunight: *Party like it* a 1999 'Bachelor's you are out, grab some healthy, grapply grub at Vello Shoe. Open late: *Mon* - Thurs 11 p.m. Fri, Sat, Sat 11 a.m. Sun, Mon - If you party at Suites, Sailor delivers. 841-326-2000. 841-326-2000.
Yuri Adrioprowe would love Lawrence's Yelp Sub. The submarines are disarming. Features (fast delivery guaranteed to knock out your taste bud!) 841-260-1281
SERVICES OFFERED
Beginner Adult Dinner Classes *Special Week*
Call 820-7545 for class times. Owen & Piano
HOME PET CARE, Personal service, reasonable
RATE 841/410 or 843/967
+
Champions is annual sale. Topeka, 124 Swenson
parking, interior, furniture, bldg, commercial,
parcel rentals.
MOPED & * MOTORCYCLE REPAIR • Honda
Yamaha, Kawasaki, Suncor & Motocycle
Repair Services. Req's in up &
delivery available by appointment only.
Please call 412-5122 (8:06 p.m.) fax: 918-7311
(9:18 a.m.)
Learn Tennessee summer from experienced instructor in small group with other KC students, or with other instructors.
person, person, person, person, squash racquet stringing
specializing in new graphic/nyhird stringing.
Ten Tennis Racquets for sale also. Head. Frenze.
Dunninge, etc. New updated. 484 565 days. 740 3227
Library Research - Editing - Typing, 824240
*TUTORING.H, Math. C-58, 200-201* (individual
TYPTING
24 hour Typing, Past, accurate, dependable, All day, all night. Royal Self-Correcting Alpha 88, 84-9061 883750. Instant access to unlimited document storage, with easy retrieval and editing, fixed documents, mammography, themes, and artwork.
APPROPRIATE QUALITY for all your typing needs.
Call Laity, 842-7945 at 6 p.m.
Absolutely LETTER PERCEPT typing - editing
Your work is in our only business
The letter is your business
Accurate, affordable secretary, by former Harvard Medical school secretary, Call Name: 841-1215
Accurate, affordable聘务. Ask about speedy overnight service (under 25 pages). Call Mary
BIM on IBM - Precise personal typing
weekends evenings 842-5560. Barbara. Special
Experienced typist, Tern term papers, thesis all
and more. Send resume to: Mary Browne,
Pen and will correct spelling. Phone 843-7521. Ms.
Browne will accept any mail or fax.
Elvis could wiggle. Shakespeare could write. My talent, typing `call GG402-8443` after 5 & 6 weeks.
Experienced typist will type letters, theses and dissertations. IBM Correcting Selective Call
Experienced typist will type term paper papers, thesis
reports and reports. Mail resume to: T. Cullinan 862-492-4744 or
010-19-1983. Job will be offered on a yearly basis.
T. Cullinan 862-492-4744 or 010-19-1983. Job will be offered on a yearly basis.
5. 2 Facts. Fast Affordable, Easy Typing. We can do it on ANY DOS or PC. On TIME PAPERSTYPED, FAST & EFFICIENT
Professional secretary will do your w词ing, themes,
themes, dissertations 843-887 5:00 and 6:00
*TYPING - Call Speedy, 40 pp & under, overnight service. Any length, call 814-483-4484 at 5 a.m. p.m.*
*TYPING PLUS - These, dissertations, papers, letters, applications, resumes. Assistance with composition, grammar, spelling, etc. English tutoring for foreign students — or Americans
GOOD WORK Good clean typing, word processing at
types rates. Call 842 38113 for dependable service
WANTED
Female roommate wanted starting August for 5
days. Room is $120/month. Residential rent
C/A,户 own, room. Call 892 3606.
1 to 2 male roommates needed, starting August 1
on balcony route. $35 plus utilities, 10 or 12 rooms
per person.
One roommate wanted for 2 bedroom apt; for fall spring semester. Free bus service $135/mo, plus roommates.
Emily room, vault place-setting at gourmet table
in the kitchen. (Carol 411-7981)
Home/share enriching atmosphere. (Carol 411-7981)
Looking like I. mature, upper level roommate to share large 2 bedroom apt, for next school year. W/W carpet, A/C, dishwasher, own room. $132.50/lit / 1/2 electricity. T94-7092, ask for Lee.
Female renamed床室 need to nice, fully rounded West Rib Apn. A $12 a month plus 7/8
R female mrmalemate wanted. Nine two bedroom apt at 38 & 8Aon. Fprt first year, grad or law student. Please call 212-756-4090.
Male roommate wanted for furnished Meadowbrook room.
Roommate required 840 hours before 11 a.m., after 9 p.m.,
deposit. 840 required 11 a.m., after 9 p.m.
Male roommate, nine 2. brap, arm on bus route B,
plus 1/2 utilities, 842-797-6 per 4 p.m. On bus route.
Need female roommate to share 2 brap. Furn;
A/C pool, money $150 — £e49.185.
Non-smoking female roommate starting Aug. 1 for
maturely furnished home. Aug. 10-27 for new
roommate.
Nonmoking, neat, male roommates to share two bedroom apartment. Pool, laundry, dishwasher, standard equipment in minutes from campus by car. Free Wi-Fi in 1.2 utilities. Call Mark at 841-403 for 6 p.m.
One female roommate to move in with me with 4
rooms, a kitchen, and a laundry room. 5/10/2013
Move in after August 6th.
Responsible romantico to be beautiful 2 hdram,
A/C, dishwasher, economical utilities. Must be clean and
healthy; $150/mo. plus 1/2 utilities. Call
349-7145 or 843-7878. Keep trying.
RIDE WANTED - any point along route to Charlevoix, Mich. (Chicago, Lansing, etc.) Early August, share expenses and driving, Georgia, 864-3100 or 749-2125.
ROOMMATE NEEDS to be 2 br.店house apt. at 450 & Albama with 2 others. Hire is $450. Call Dan or use object # 813-1527 or 864-5490.
Roommate wanted to share room rental style. Home of extra, close to bus $190, RHU, 748-269-0000
LAK
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan, July 22, 1983
White still uncertain of reason for firing
By ED GROM
Staff Reporter
It has been 11 days since Jo Jo White was fired as assistant coach of the KU basketball team, and he still cannot put his finger on the exact reason why Head Coach Mark Foster
"He told me I was fired because of philosophical reasons, and that's the only reason he gave me," White said yesterday in an interview at his home. It could mean many things, but he also gave me any more reason than that."
BROWN FIRED WHITE last Monday but did not officially release the book.
The move came less than four months after Brown, who was hired to replace Ted Owens as head coach, had White and Bob Hill as assistant coaches.
"I was as shocked as everybody else." White said. "I hurt a lot.
"I cried for six days, but not any man; I can't do anything about it now. never."
White, a former collegiate standout at KU and an All-Pro while in the NBA with the Boston Celtics, said that he and
Brown had a disagreement on "what was right and what was wrong" and that that may have been a reason for the firing.
"I WOULD RATHER not go further" than that." White said. "The matter is out of my hands now, and I'd rather leave it alone.
One of the first moves White made after his firing was to contact some of the players on the KU team. White said that he called forward Kerry Boagni Tuesday morning, the day after Brown fired him, and told him to stay at KU.
"I know what is right and what is wrong about certain things, and I still believe that I am right. I stood up for them," he said. "I was right, and look where it got me."
"Sure, I was worried about the players, especially Kerry," White said. "I'm sure that packing up and getting on the field was easy, and I told him to stick it out and play ball."
PETER S. MIDDLETON
"It was in his best interest and all the players' interest to stay. He is in a good position."
Jo Jo White
EVEN THOUGH HE will not be a direct part of the 1983-94 Jayhawks, White said that his feelings remained with the team.
ance for the upcoming season, but I am worried about the kids," White said. "They were just starting to identify well with each other at the end of last season. They showed what they could do when they put their minds and talents to it.
"I can't predict about their perform-
"They were stunned when Ted was fired, and when the situation was just starting to settle down, they had to deal with my fireing. It is a lot to cope with."
"I hope that they can get everything out of their minds by the time the season rolls around. They have been doing it all wrong for years, but make any quick and rush decisions."
Looking back at the job at KU, White said, "All I know is that I gave all my efforts in my coaching job. I gave my all when I played in high school, in college and in the pros. Why should I stop there?
"I CARE FOR the kids, and I try to help them in any way I can. They came first. I was always around when they needed help, and I will be here if they need help in the future. I was close to the players, and I feel for them right now."
As for his future, White said that he did not know where a new job would take him, but he said that he would like to coach and stay in the area.
"Kansas is my home," he said. "I don't want to go anywhere else."
"If there is a job out there where I feel comfortable and where I feel I can make a positive contribution, I would consider it. Lawrence is such a good city and the people so friendly, I would hate to leave."
Justice keeps NCAA contract alive
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — Supreme Court Justice Bryon White yesterday kept alive the National Collegiate Athletic Association's multi-million dollar television deal to broadcast college football this fall.
White, a former All-America half-back, blocked, at least for three months, lower court rulings invalidating the association's arrangements with ABC and CBS, saying "the merits (of the case) are with the NCAA" and the outcome would have "a major impact countrywide."
On July 16, White granted a temporary stay to give challengers — the University of Oklahoma and the University of Georgia — a chance to
THE NCAAS CONTRACTS with the networks involve $74.3 million in payments for 1983 and affect audiences 22.5 million for each game broadens.
respond to the NCAA's Supreme Court appeal.
Oklahoma spokeman Mike Treps said yesterday school officials were disappointed and surprised by the fall of the program, television bids for the 1983 season.
BUT BIG TEN COMMISSIONER WAYNE Duke said "all叫 a but few selfish institutions are best served by Justice White's decision, which hopefully will permit the orderly presentation of football on television this season."
YELLO SUB DELIVERS 841-3268
White said Oklahoma and Georgia "might do better for themselves during the 1983 season if they were free to go their own way," but without his stay, "it would appear that the networks' contracts would be void under the outstanding judgment and could not be enforced."
White's order delays the effect of a federal court ruling that the NCAA's arrangement with the networks is anti-competitive because it reduces the
number of college football games available to TV viewers.
White said he would vote "with confidence" to hear the NCAA's full appeal, to be filed with the high court by late September.
IF THE COURT AGREES to take the case, a ruling not be likely until 1884. If the justices refuse to hear it, their action — leaving the lower court ruling intact — would not come any earlier than mid-October, when the football season is already well under way.
RENTS RECORDS
1422 W. 23rd St. 841-0256
The NCAA, a non-profit association, adopts policies governing how football is played by its 785 member colleges and 100 athletic conferences.
Contracts with ABC and CBS allow the telecast of 14 games each fall, and a contract with Turner Broadcasting provides for telecasting 19 games.
Oklahoma and Georgia complained the deal limited how many times a college could appear on television.
A KU STUDENT received a ticket yesterday morning for driving recklessly in the parking lot at 1000 Nassimsh Drive, police said.
FOUR BEDS, FOUR CHESTS of drawers and two coffee tables, valued at a total of $1,500, were reported stolen yesterday from the Delta Delta Delta sorority house, 1630 Oxford Road, police said. The theft occurred sometime between June 1 and July 20.
On the record
A LAWRENCE RESIDENT'S dirt bike, valued at $275, was reported stolen yesterday from the 1000 block of Massachusetts Street, police said. The bike was stolen sometime Tuesday. Police have no suspects.
According to police, witnesses reported that a motorcycle was "doing wheeles" when the driver stopped. While the driver was still the motorcycle sid' into a car
--start at $235
Local DELIVERY Available
Yesterday in the National League, Tom Vizery and Jody Davis belted solo homers to back the combined five-hit pitching of Dick Ruhven and Lee Smith and give the Cubs a 32 win over the San Francisco Giants in Chicago.
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2 Small Soft Drinks
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IN LATER GAMES, it was Detroit at California in the nightcap, Boston at Seattle and Baltimore at Oakland.
DINE-IN ONLY
Veryzer hit his first NL home run and first in the majors since July 1980 in the third inning, and Davis added his 17th of the year in the fourth inning off Allee
UDK DIRE IN CHEF
AT ATLANTA, Bob Dennier went 5-for-5 with three RBIs, and Pete Rose drove in three runs to help John Denny maintain his hex over the Braves. Denny, 9-5, hurled 5-2 innings to improve his lifetime record to 7-0 against Atlanta. With the score tied in the fifth, Mike Schmidt drilled his 19th home run for the Phillies. Chris Chambliss hit his 11th for Atlanta.
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Manning leads Brewers to 7-6 victory over Sox
SOUTHRIDGE PLAZA APTS
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At Anakea, Calif., Alan Trammell stroked a two-run homer in the fifth and Larry Herndon added a solo blast in the eighth in the opener for the Tiger win. Howard Bailey, 5-2, won in his first start since May 27, 1961. Aurelio Lopez recorded his 13th save. Mike Witt, 4-7, was the loser.
- Water and Cable paid
At St. Louis, Terry Kennedy drove in three runs with a double and a sacrifice fly, and Mark Thurmond and Lais Robinson combined on a four-hitter (or San Diego)
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At Arlington, Texas, Frank Tanana tossed a five-hitter for his first complete game of the season and Larry Parrish had four hits to lead the Rangers. Tanana, 4-2, struck out five and walked one in helping Texas to only its third triumph in its last 11 games. Jim Gott fell to 5-8.
By United Press International
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At Pittsburgh, Jim Morrison singled in two runs in the bottom of the ninth inning to give the Pirates the victory. The Pirates have won 10 of their last 11 and 23 of 31. Bill Madlock of Pittsburgh collected his 1,500 career hit.
808 W. 24th St.
1912 W. 25th 842-3416
One and two bedrooms start at $190
In other games, Texas downed Toronto, 3-2, and Detroit topped California, 5-1 in the first game of a double-header. Kansas City at New York and Minnesota at Cleveland were postponed by rain.
At Cineinmati, Nick Essasy slammed a two-run homer and Duane Walker doubled in two runs to lead the Reds in a game marked by 19 walks. Mike Torrez, 5-12, walked 10 in 3-1-3 innings and set a Mets record for most walks issued by one pitcher in a game.
Rick Manning ignited a three-run eighth inning with an RBI single and scored the breaking run on a double by Paul Molitor last night to rally the Milwaukee Brewers to a 7-6 victory over the Chicago White Sox.
CHICAGO TOOK A 6-4 lead with three runs in the eighth. IJulio Cruz led off with a single and stole second. Rudy Law singled in Cruz, stole second and scored on Carlton Fisk's single. Fisk took second on the throw home, stole third and scored on Greg Luzinski's sacrifice fly to right.
- Professional Management
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Pete Ladd, who pitched the eighth in relief of Moose Haas, earned the vicory to raise his record to 2-2. Jim Slaton recorded his fourth save. Milwaukee has won 10 of its last 11 games. Juan Agoito, pitching in relief, took the lost.
Hammaker, 10.5, who allowed only five hits, despite the loss.
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- New Super Studios gas & water paid furnished
Ruthven, 7-7, pitched the first seven innings before yielding to Smith, who blanked the Giants over the final two innings to record his 13th save. Ruthven had a no-hitter for 4.23 innings to tie with the two-out double to Milky Way in the fifth.
SUPERSTUDIOS
At Montreal, Al Oliver keyed a six-run fifth-inning with a two-run single for the Expos. Montreal batted around in the fifth against Houston starter Nolan Ryan, 9-3, to help Bill Gullickson, 8-10, to cover his complete game. The second season he or raise his career total to 3,365, two behind Philadelphia's Steve Carlton, who's first on the all-time list.
The victory snapped a three-game Giants winning streak and was only Chicago's fourth triumph in its last 16 games.
stadium apartments
IN OTHER GAMES, Montreal downed Houston, 9-4, Cincinnati topped New York, 6-1, Philadelphia beat Atlanta, 10-6, San Diego defeated St. Louis, 4-2 and Pittsburgh edged Los Angeles, 5-4.
SUPERSTUDIOS
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Legal Services for Students
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for students? Most services are available at NO CHARGE!
Did you know that your student activity fee funds a law office for students? Most services are
CONSIDERING A VACATION?
8:30 to 4:30 Mon. thru Friday
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- Many other services available
- Notarization of legal documents
RIDE ON A BIKER
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Check with KU Federal Credit Union First!
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Call a Credit Union loan officer when you are interested in getting facts regarding financing and interest rates.
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1
The University Daily
FLATING
KANSAN
University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas
Vol. 93, No. 161 USPS 650-640
Wednesday, July 27, 1983
Weather
Today will be mostly sunny and hot according to the National Weather Service in Topeka. The highs will be in the mid to upper 90s
The winds will be from the south at 10 to 20 mph. Tonight will be partly cloudy with tops around 80°F.
Most KU property not insured
Tomorrow will be mostly sunny and hot with highs in the mid to upper 90s.
By CHRIS McMENEMY
Staff Writer
Staff Writer
Suppose the Kenneth Spencer Research Library burns one night. Its collection of rare books is destroyed, and the building must be replaced.
A new library would cost about $4.5 million, but it would be difficult to determine the cost of replacing the contents because no value has been set on the rare collection of books and manuscripts.
VALUES ARE NOT determined for the contents of most University buildings because they are not insured. In fact, almost no state property is insured.
Again, suppose 2,300 people are listening to a lecture in Hoch Auditorium. A beam gives way, falling on the audience, and parts of the ceiling crash to the floor.
staff people are injured and need extensive hospital care, but the most that all of these people together can collect from the state of Florida is unlikely not enough to pay one person's medical bills.
State law prohibits the University from insuring most of its possessions, and KU is limited in its power to compensate victims of disasters.
IN SPENCER'S CASE, the few million dollars spent on rebuilding would only be a start. The collections in the library are considered priceless because many of the items are
"If it were a total disaster, the state would probably go out of the rare-books library business," Alexandra Mason, chief librarian at Spencer, said last week.
Spencer's fate would ultimately be decided by the Kansas Legislature, which would have to decide.
bobbie place in the image
But the lack of insurance on state property does create an uneasy feeling for people such as Mason.
VIcki Thomas, University general counsel, said that state law prohibited any state agency from purchasing or carrying insurance on state property unless authorized by the State Commission.
THE STATE ISSELF-INSURED. Thomas said, but there are three general exceptions:
- Insurance can be carried on buildings built with bond money, so that bondholders are protected. KU residence halls fall into this category.
- Gifts to the state, such as a museum painting, may be insured.
- Property bought with federal funds also may be insured. Often federal grants include money for insurance.
Some officials think the Legislature decided not to buy insurance because it could not afford the premiums.
But Speaker of the House Mike Hayden,
R-Atwood, disagrees with that interpretation.
"The state can afford anything it wants. The most cost-effective way is to be self-insured," he said.
INDIVIDUALS USUALLY CANNOT afford to insure themselves, so they buy insurance in a pool. Hayden said. The state is large enough that it does not have to work that way.
An emergency fund is kept on hand by the state for arguples that might occur, he said.
"It would take a very major disaster before the state couldn't cope," he said.
One example of the state coping with campus damage is the story of Nichols Hall at Kansas
evenings burned in 1967, but kids were not taken until two weeks ago for its reconstruction.
Within a year of the fire, the Legislature approved funds to move all the activities in Nichols to a new location, said Vincent Cool, assistant director of facilities and planning at
BUT IN 1978 STUDENTS started a campaign to save the landmark, which for 11 years stood gutted. The Legislature agreed to study the issue and later recommended funds for reconstruction.
Cool said that when the old auditorium at Kansas State, which did not have a formal name, burned in 1964, funds were appropriated quickly to rebuild it. It was replaced by McCain
"In our experience, major losses by fire have been replaced almost immediately." Cool said.
The University of Kansas has not had to deal with the Legislature to get buildings replaced. The only building severely damaged has been the Kansas Union, which burned in 1970.
The Union, however, was insured because it is
a private, non-profit corporation and is not bound by the state law, according to Warner L. Ames of New York.
BECAUSE THE STATE'S' self-insurance policy has never been tested at KU, administra-
tionally it is not reliable.
Allen Wiechert, KU director of facilities planning, said the policy of not insuring University buildings was fine unless more than one disaster happened per year.
"The state doesn't have any big pocket of money set aside." Wiechcark said. "It would be nice if we could have insurance on all our buildings because they could be repaired or outbuilt."
The Kansas University Endowment Association pays for insurance on contents and objects borrowed for display by the museum, said Doug Tilghman, acting museum director.
"It's something that the Endowment Association would prefer not to pay." Tlighman said. "They think the state should pay it, but as long the state doesn't, they feel they must."
KU has three buildings that house valuable contents — the Spencer Research Library, the Museum of Natural History, and the Museum of Art. Of the three, only the contents of the art museum are insured.
THE MUSEUM CAN BE authorized to have insurance coverage, because it has property purchased by gift funds.
Mason, chief librarian at Spencer Library, has mixed feelings about not having insurance.
But the research library and natural history museum are in different situations.
Because many of the pieces in her collection are the only ones in existence, she said, they were not created by her.
Philip S. Humphrey, director of the Museum of Natural History, has the same difficulty.
"The problem for our collections is if we had a fire, it is an irreparable loss." he said. "These collections started before the first day of classes at the University.
"How do you insure stuff that is priceless?"
MASON AND HUMPIRE agreed that careful planning is the best insurance. They said they worked hard to protect their collections so that insurance revenue would not be necessary.
Spencer Research Library has a direct line to the Spencer Research Library for all alarm systems with smoke and heat detectors
See INSURE page 5
SNS
Mohammad Iqbal Khatri, Pakistan graduate student and a member of the KU Cricket Club, takes his turn as batsman in a recent cricket match at. A match can take all day to play.
Campus security hampered by older locks
Staff Reporter
By MARY ANN COSTELLO
High security locks would be welcomed in Murphy Hall, where $9,145 worth of musical instruments were stolen last week, Stanley said. The KU music department, said last week.
KU police do not know how the instruments were taken, said LJ. Jeanne Longaker, but it was possible the thief may have had a key to enter them because there were no signs of forced entry.
THE CIRCULATION OF keys to old locks on campus has proven to be a problem, according to University officials, and recommendations for security systems are needed to help solve the problem; systems, are intended to help solve the problem;
"Some of those keys are so old and worn they're almost like skeleton keys in that they'd open almost anything," said Robert Porter, a local plant maintenance for Facilities Operations.
He said that with some of the old locks there were as many as 300 to 500 keys made for one door — a situation that was just about impossible to police.
Shumway said the School of Fine Arts did not have the money to install a costly, high-security
BUT HE SAID THE lock on Room S31, the room from which the instruments were stolen, and several other rooms in the department, would receive new locks this fall. The lock changes had been scheduled before the theft occurred.
Patti Jallian, clerk for the School of Fine Arts,
said she distributed all locks and keys for the
school.
Students are required to give her a $3 deposit, she said, and may keep the keys for a semester.
Within the past three years, Porter said, several buildings on campus have installed a high-security lock system by Medeco Security Locks, a company based in Salem, Va.
HE SAID THE MEDECO lock system increased security because Medeco keys could
only be made on a Medeco key-cutting machine.
Canies of the keys cannot be made at stores.
Medeco also assigns each key an identifying number, he said, and no Medeco key within a named key.
"Under the Medeco system, the chances of key getting into unauthorized hands is almost zero."
Doris Belote, business manager for the division of biological sciences, said the division planned to install Medeco locks in the Malot Hall addition now being built, as well as in the third through fifth floors they now occupy in Malot Hall.
"We're just thrilled about it," she said.
Unauthorized copies of Malott Hall key are thought to be responsible for past thefts where there were no signs of forced entry, she said. Forged microcapsules recently' research microscopes were stolen recently.
HOWEVER, BELOTE SAID, there had been fewer thefts during the past two years because the division began keeping stricter records of its keys.
Porter said that before there was any Medeco locks on campus, the locks for a building would be supplied by the lowest bidder and that they were locked to certain levels of locks from different companies on campus.
He said Medeco locks were expensive to install. A $20 cylinder must be placed in each key slot, and it costs $3 to replace a Medeco lock key that *lost* or broken.
So far Medico locks have only been installed in new and remodeled buildings, he said, such as the K.S. "Boots" Adams Alumni Center, Stauffer Fintl Hall, Watson Library and Lindley
WHEN AN ADDITION is put on a building, Porter said, the administration tries to find money to install the new locks on all the doors, not just the doors in the addition.
"Eventually, we hope to have every building on campus done as funding is appropriated," he said.
Porter said Facilities Operations held "key conferences" with departments on campus to
Llamas may not bark, but they keep coyotes away
Where's Stanley? Ollie, an eight-month-old llama, watches over his flock of sheep to protect them from coyotes and other predators. He belongs to Ron and Denise Stauffer, RFD 5, Lawrence.
1
By JUDITH HINDMAN Staff Writer
Sheep ranchers have a new weapon in their battle against the marauding coyote — the lama.
Ranchers prize the lima because of its alertness and curious investigation of all unusual things.
RON AND DENISE STAUFFER, Route 5,
recently bought a six-month-old llama to protect
their valuable registered show sheep. Denise
Stauffer said a University of Wyoming study found that a llama's presence in a flock would cut the number of sheep lost to predators.
They also prize the llama's ability to project vile-spelling split at an enemy.
And if the spit does not work, the lama can finish the job with a well-placed, strong kick.
The Stauffer bought their brown lama, Olie, from Fred Hartman, Tecumseh, Neb., who has 31 lamas and has been raising them for 18 months.
Hartman said yesterday in a telephone interview that his llamas were so alert that if a blackbird landed on a fence park one-half mile away the llamas would run to "check it out."
is not the only lama in town. Wayne and Sally Russell, Route 2, bought their lama. Spat,
THE RUSSELLS KEEP Spot in the field with their cattle.
But Sally Russell said yesterday that they bought Spot as a pet because coyotes were not very aggressive.
"Having a lama is kind of a bad," she said. "They are selling pretty well right now. A lot of people buy it."
The Stauffers are pleased with their purchase so far.
"Coyotes and bobcats are just terrible out here." Denise Staffer said. "If there is any noise or movement, he checks on it. Since we have gotten him, we have had no problems."
"Ilamas spit like a camel through a harelp! There have even been cases of llamas killing coyotes with their powerful kick," she said.
HARTMAN DOUETED THAT llamas could kill coyotes but said they probably scared coyotes by spitting at them. He said a llama's spit had a terrible odor.
"Coyotes are actually chickens, too. They will run if something chases them," he said. "But they don't."
Hartman also said Ilamas adapted well to the Midwestern climate because their wool insulates them.
Denise Stauffer said llamas were expensive, with females costing more than $5,000. Males.
The prices are high, she said, because of high demand for llamas, restrictions on their importation and their relatively long gestation period, which is 11 months.
"We started home, then turned around and went back and got him. I think my husband didn't want to listen to me all the way home."
LLAMAS ALSO ARE valued for their wool, which she said, could be sold for $35 a pound to
See LLAMAS page 2
"I read everything I could find about llamas and really wanted one. When we got to Nebraska, my husband didn't want to buy Ollie because he was brown," she said.
Denise Stauffer said that, although Ollie was very tame and would eat grain out of her hand, she had a preference for the butter.
Plan to save NPR unfair director says
Bv ANNE AMOURY
Staff Reporter
National Public Radio's rejection Monday of the Corporation for Public Broadcasting's latest loan agreement proposal has put public radio in its worst crisis ever, the director of KANU said yesterday.
Howard Hill, the director, said that CPB was intransigent in its demand that NPR transfer ownership of its program distribution system to a select group of NPR stations in return for a loan to bail out the network, which faces a $9.1 million debt.
UNLESS NPR AGREES to the proposal outlined by the CPB, which is a federally funded, nonprofit agency that distributes money to the 281 NPR stations nationwide, the corporation must make a $1 million payment to the network by Monday when the payment is due.
NEW'S contract with the corporation calls for about $1 million to be paid to NPR on the first of each month for program production.
On July 15, NPR appealed to CPB for an interim loan until a formal agreement could be reached, but CPB wants a formal, long-term agreement.
Congress allocates money for public broadcasting through the CPB. The corporation then allocates 75 percent to public television and 25 percent to public radio.
NPR needs $400,000 by Friday to meet the payroll of its 300 employees at the company's office.
HLIA SAId THAT CPB was attempting to restructure NPR by taking ownership of the NPR satellite system, which is one enterprise by which the nearly bankruptcy NPR can make
it's impossible to talk to them," he said.
"They are so unreasonable in what they ask that negotiations become futile.
"The assurances given CBP are as good as the best creditors around. If they're good enough for Chase Manhattan, why aren't they good enough for CPB?"
B. Morse, NPR station services associate in Washington, D.C., said Monday that a bail-out plan CPB proposed in early July called for the individual stations to pledge a total of $1.6 million a year for the next three years from their CPB grants.
She said that 163 stations had signed the contract out of the 201 that had pledged to sign, but at that least 200 were needed to come up with the funding necessary to pay off the stations' part of NPR's debt.
HILL SAD HE was confident that NPR stations would pull together to pay the $1.6 million for the next three years.
*a Meanwhile, NPR is preparing to launch a nationwide fund-raising campaign.*
1
See RADIO page 5
Page 2
University Dally Kansan, July 27, 1983
News Briefs From United Press International
Reagan says U.S. seeking Central American peace
WASHINGTON — President Reagan said yesterday the United States was "not planning a war" in Central America and a solution to the region's troubles can be reached peacefully — not "through the barrel of a gun."
Reagan lashed out at critics he said were unleashing a "drumbeat of confusion" about U.S. intentions.
In a nationally broadcast news conference that centered almost entirely on his Central American policies, Reagan insisted that he sought to bring "a new era of peace and social justice" to the region and that it would never become another Vietnam.
"Too much attention is being paid to those efforts we are making to provide a security shield, and not enough to the other elements of our
The news conference came as Reagan's requests for more aid for Central America bogged down in Congress and his policies were under attack by Democrats who warned his actions could lead the nation into war.
Senate approves MX production bill
WASHINGTON — In a resounding victory for President Reagan's military strategy, Senate last night approved full-scale production of the $10 billion nuclear reactor.
Senate approval of MX production funds, part of the $200 billion 1984 military authorization bill later approved 83-15, came despite more than two weeks of speeches and arguments by Sen. Gary Hart, D-Colo., other opponents — mostly Democratic of the 10-warhead weapon
As approved by the Senate, the bill authorizes building 21 missiles in 1984 for deployment and another six as sares or for testing purposes.
The House version, passed last week, calls for actual production of only 21 missiles in all and contains similar strings linking further developments.
The administration argues that the MX is needed to counter the Soviet Union's huge SS-18 and SS-19 missiles and as leverage at the time.
Honduras praises military exercises
Honduras yesterday hailed President Reagan's dispatch of naval forces to Nicaraguan coastal waters and plans for military maneuvers in Honduras, but other Central American nations expressed concern over the action.
The military moves came as the United States also stepped up diplomatic efforts to prevent Nicaraguan-Honduran border tensions and the civil war in El Salvador from developing into a region-wide conflict.
Honduran President Roberto Suazo Cordova called the growing U.S. military role in his country "necessary and urgent." But Honduran legislator Efrain Diaz Arrivillaga of the Christian Democratic Party said, "Even with Nicaragua's peace proposal and the favorable reaction from the U.S. government, they are sending warships to the region."
Chrysler-UAW agreement expected
DETROIT — Chrysler Corp. said yesterday it was confident an agreement could be reached on the demand by the United Auto Workers for an immediate pay hike for workers, but cautioned that its financial resources were limited.
Miner refused to elaborate on Chrysler's response to the union's bid for an immediate 1 hour raise for Chrysler's 47,100 U.S. workers and 48,200 U.S. workers.
Chrysler workers currently make $2 an hour less than their counterparts at the other Big Three automakers.
Chrysler recently announced a record quarterly profit and plans to repay $1.2 billion in federally backed loans made to help the firm avoid bankruptcy.
Craft testifies in discrimination case
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — A television news anchorwoman sued her former employers in a sex discrimination case told a federal jury yesterday she was removed from her job because the station said she was too unattractive, too old and too unstylish to succeed in the ratings.
Christine Craft, 38, was the first witness called in the trial of her $1.2 million civil suit against Metromedia, Inc., former owner of station KMBC.TV.
Deenia Egan, one of Craft's two lawyers, said Craft told KMCB, now called KMZB, before the station hired her in January 1981 that she did
"From day one there was a constant criticism of her appearance." Egan said of KMBC.
Craft, now an anchorman for a Santa Barbara, Calif., station,
claims that she was fired Aug. 14, 1981, from the job she hired to do.
She is a certified nurse educator.
Mexico claims economy on the rise
MEXICO CITY — Debt-strapped Mexico appeared headed toward financial recovery yesterday, announcing it will postpone the use of two available loans for more than $1.4 billion because of a huge trade surplus.
A spokesman for the Finance Ministry said that Mexico would not draw on pending loans from the International Monetary Fund and the international banking community at the present time.
Deputy Finance Minister Francisco Suarez said Monday that the country had a $4 billion surplus in the trade balance for the first six months.
Mexico's foreign debt is estimated at $84 billion, the second largest in the world after Brazil, which owes $90 billion.
Typhoon downs Philippine bridge
MANILA, Philippines — Rescuers yesterday searched for an estimated 100 people who were swept away when an overcrowded footbridge, weakened by Typhoon Wayne, collapsed into a raging river in the central Philippines.
Reports from Cebu City, 360 miles south of Manila, said the unofficial death toll from the Monday night accident was 42.
Officials said the seldom-used bridge, spanning the Mananga River, was packed with homeward-bound commuters unable to drive across a nearby spillway flooded by rains from Typhoon Wayne, which swept the Philippines late Sunday.
Castro attacks U.S. Latin policy
SANTIAGO DE. CUBA, Cuba — President Fidel Castro, speaking on the 30th anniversary of the start of his revolution, warned yesterday that the United States was heading toward an "error of incalculable consequences" in its Latin American policy.
"Cuba is prepared to fight, including under the conditions of an occupied country," Castro said in his speech to thousands of people gathered in Antonio Maceo Plaza in Santiago de Cuba.
Castro assailed the Reagan administration for backing El Salvador's government in its war against leftist guerrillas and for converting Honduras into a launching pad for aggression against Nicaragua.
President of Qatar University visits KU
By MARY ANN COSTELLO Staff Reporter
The president of the University of Qatar was at the University of Kansas this weekend visiting friends at his alma mater.
Mohamad Kazem, president of the University of Qatar, received a master's degree in 1955 and a doctorate in 1967 from the University of Kangas.
Kazem, a native of Cairo, Egypt, said Saturday that the university, which has about 4,000 students and 400 faculty, will move in a few months to a new ultramodern campus in a suburb of Doha, the capital of Qatar.
TEN YEARS AGO he started the University of Qatar, the first university in Qatar, a country of 220,000 people on the west coast of the Persian Gulf.
He said the new campus would have the latest technology, including new schools of journalism and mass communication and economics and administration
But modernization is not easy for the people of Ozers, Karen said.
"We are trying to modernize while
Ridgway is one of several KU faculty in the School of Education who has visited the University of Qatar in the summer to consult to its School of Education.
AMONG THE FRIENDS that Kazem visits on his frequent trips to KU is Robert Ridgway, KU professor in curriculum and instruction.
keeping our roots," he said. "For us modernization is not just following the rules."
"To me it was indicative of the progress that is being made in the nation from a very underdeveloped country to one that can pull its own weight with the rest of the world," he said.
He said yesterday that the most vivid memory of his visit to Qatar last winter was the country's sharp contrast of old and new.
YELLO SUB DELIVERS 841-3268
SEVENTY PERCENT of the students at the university are Qatarians, Kazem said. Other students are from neighboring Arab nations, Australia.
Ridgway said the University of Qatar was more cosmopolitan than most universities its size.
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the Philippines, the United States,
Africa and Asia.
Kazem said the greatest difference between the University of Qatar and KU was that students go to the University of Qatar for free.
WHILE HE WAS HERE, Kazem invited Chancellor Gene A. Budig to visit the University of Qatar. Budig will visit sometime in the next 16 months.
All students at the university, including foreign students, receive full
Qatar will also pay for its citizens to study abroad if the University of Qatar does not offer a program in their area of study, he said.
He has published nine books on education in English and Arabic, he said. He is working on a comparative study of the development of student values in American and Egyptian universities.
Kazem said he had been a visiting professor at several Arab universities and the University of Nevada, and a faculty member of education in several Arab countries.
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University Daily Kansan, July 27,1983
Page 3
Commission authorizes signing of mall plan
The Lawrence City Commission last night voted to authorize Mayor David Longhurst to sign an agreement to allow Sizer Realty Co. of Kenner, La., to proceed with plans for downtown redevelopment.
Commissioner Mike Amys voted against signing the agreement, and commissioner Dennis L. Blake said
THE AGREEMENT COMMITS the city to prepare an estimate of the costs of the necessary capital improvements and to prepare a plan to finance them.
It also commits the city to prepare a plan to acquire the buildings that will be built on the site.
It does not, however, commit the city to actually begin construction, and the city still can abandon the project without legal ramifications.
The commission also created a committee to negotiate with Sizerel.
The committee will consist of Longhurst, City Manager Buford Watson and one other person who will be recommended by the Downtown Improvement Committee and approved by the City Commission.
COMMISSIONER HOWARD HILL, following the precedent set during the past two meetings by Longhurst and Commissioner Ernest Angiola, read a statement to the commission explaining his support for the rebelledement plan.
Hill urged the commission to sign the agreement for the initial phase of redevelopment because it would not obligate the city to any action other than making specific plans for the project.
He said specific plans would answer many questions about the project
Longhurst criticized the agreement.
"At what point are we going to consider the public to be sufficiently educated to make a decision? And then are we going to abide by it?"
Longhurst said last week that he would see to it that there would be a referendum to let the public decide the issue. Amyx has said the same thing.
KU looking for new Regents professors
Wanted: People to fill two Regents Distinguished Professors at the academy.
By ANN REGAN
Staff Reporter
Qualifications: Must be a recognized leader in a technical field such as computer engineering or pharmacy and willing to relocate to KU.
Closing date for applications: No hurry.
GUEVE OF TWO Regents Distinguished Professorships at KU has been open since 1975, and another will be available Jan. 1 when Takeru Higuchi, professor of chemistry and pharmacy, retires from his Regents professorship. June Michal, assistant to the vice president for academic affairs, said yesterday.
Candidates for a Regents Distin-
The reason KU has had such difficulties filling the professorships is that the salaries being offered are not qualified candidates to Kayasu's sea.
gushed Professorship must meet standards established by KU in teaching, research and service, Michal said, as well as additional criteria deterred from professorships are applicable to all Distinguished Professors at the University.
CANDIDATES FOR Regents professorships, which were established by the Legislature in 1963, must have qualifications that will add to the economic and industrial development of Kansas, she said.
Because of that requirement, a professor of English would not be
Also, no one who is now employed at a Regents institution would be considered. Michal said, because the Regents want to attract outside faculty.
The financial situation may improve if the Legislature approves a Regents request to add $342,000 to the Regents program in fiscal year 1986. ssb.sbs
KU, Kansas State University and Wichita State University are the only 40 colleges in the nation.
the program and the only ones eligible for the increase in funds, she said.
IF APPROVED, THE REQUEST would increase the annual stipend for Regents professors' salaries from $12,500 to $15,000 and double the number of Regents professorships at KU from two to four, she said.
The total salary is determined by combining the base salary for the appointment, determined by the depreciation of the salarietaxipend from the Revenues, Michal said.
The additional funding also would be used to purchase new laboratory and research facilities.
Kansas State would gain two positions, she said, and Wichita State, her ally, would lose.
The two positions now open are in computer engineering and molecular biology and are being advertised by those departments, Michal said.
A UNIVERSITY PARTICIPATING in the program asks the Regents whether it may conduct a grant or granttee degree department is chosen to receive the
professorship.
The department chosen is then authorized to advertise the position, accept applications and conduct interviews, Michal said.
Robert Weaver, professor of biochemistry, is involved in the search to find a candidate for a Distinguished Professor in molecular biology. He said that convincing someone to relocate might be the biggest problem.
"Most of the candidates are located on the East or West Coast and tend to be biased against the Midwest," he said. "We have to overcome that."
HIGUCHI, WHO HAS BEEN a Regents Distinguished Professor since 1967, was instrumental in acquiring a $1.25 million grant to establish a national center or research center. KU, the university's director of the office of university relations.
In 1981 Higuchi also established, with the Kansas University Endowment Association, four annual $10,000 research achievement awards for men and women who have contributed to research at KU, she said.
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Page 4
Opinion
University Daily Kansan, July 27, 1963
Walk softly, carry a big light
Darkness is never so total as when it is mixed with an ample amount of fear. And darkness is prevalent on the campus of this University. When night falls, a rising tide of fear often accompanies it; a fear felt by male and female alike.
Campus lighting has been an issue for years. Usually, it is followed by little or no action by the University. The blue phones scattered about the campus are one exception. They are an important weapon against the night-stalkers. But better lighting would be a more effective weapon.
Nothing prompted this editorial but sheer foresight. We weren't prodded into writing this by a series of night-attacks on students. Editorials written after the fact are often bitter and full of hindsight.
The defenders of the campus' present lighting facilities may quote figures of the seemingly immense amount of streetlights on campus. Don't be misled. Take a walk at night on the pathways of our University.
In front of Watson Library is a stellar phenomenon - a black hole. The front of the library may be well-lighted for aesthetic purposes, but that light does not illuminate the
lawn. And while buildings such as Wescoe Hall may be doused with light, don't dare walk behind Stauffer-Flint Hall or down the hill behind Fraser Hall.
In some places it is so dark you're in danger of tripping over an object in your path. The unpainted curbstones along Memorial Drive are nearly invisible in the darkness between the streetlights. Reflective paint could remedy the problem.
The list continues: The area between Strong and Bailey halls, Marvin Grove, Danforth Chapel, Blake Hall — and onward into the black night.
One of the problems is the properties of the average campus light itself. The lights seem bright, yet only tend to illuminate a circle of light beneath them. The cylindrical lens of the streetlamp seems to softly diffuse the light, not magnify it as it should. And although this lens may be a necessary component of the lamp, it is not helping the situation.
If more modern lamps, with more lumens-per-watt, took the place of the present lighting system, the campus might not be as pretty at night, but it certainly would be a lot safer.
GEORGE WILLS COZY FRIENDSHIP WITH REAGAN IS CLEARLY A BREACH OF JOURNALISTIC ETHICS! HE'S MUCH TOO CLOSE TO THE SOURCE OF POWER! NO WONDER THE PUBLIC CAN'T VIEW US AS OBJECTIVE! CANCEL HIS COLUMN!
WHERE ARE YOU GOING?
I DON'T WANT TO BE LATE FOR THE CHAMBER OF COMMERCE MEETING!
U.S. to draw hard line in Nicaragua
By HELEN THOMAS
United Press International
He named former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger to head it and Kissenger, who once participated in the destabilization of Chile, leading to the downfall of leftist President
Responding to congressional demands, Reagan established a bipartisan commission to look into long-range U.S. policies toward the region. The committee of the panel members are considered hard line.
WASHINGTON — President Reagan is making several moves on the Central American front when polls show a wariness of his policies. The drive is to break the back of the Sandinista government in Nicaragua, which he says is being armed by Cuba and the Soviet Union.
military leaders Reagan insists he is seeking a political dialogue and has said repeatedly that Cuba's Fidel Castro resisted an overture he made early
Salvador Allende, is already on record with his view.
He said he would oppose going to war with Nicaragua but he would do whatever was needed through covert aid to guerrillas or through a strong presence on the Honduras-Nicaragua
Meanwhile, the president is seeking to convince a reluctant Congress that the United States is more interested in economic and industrial Central America than it is in a military solution.
Reports indicate those moves already have been made and more with the United States planning to hold a major U.S.-Honduran summit on the Honduras-Nicaragua border next month.
in his administration. Clearly, Reagan has not been pushing to talk to Castro or the leaders of the Salvadoran insurgency or the Sandistas.
Some of the U.S. pressure may be taking hold. Nicaragua has offered to negotiate the question of arms supplies to El Salvador and other regional sticking points.
But while the United States struggles to keep Central America in the Western fold, the mistakes of the past are creeping up and need quick solutions.
But clearly time is running out, and if the United States wants to make the Monroe Doctrine work, keeping the other superpower out of the Western Hemisphere, it must add more of an economic and social wallop to its military assistance. And some members of Congress say that should be in the form of a new massive Marshall Plan for Central America.
Democrats facing nomination-election gap
By ARNOLD SAWISLAK
United Press International
WASHINGTON — American politics appears to be reducing itself to a series of "gates," as in Water or Billy, or "gaps" as in gender or missile.
What follows here is about a "gag" that is has been around for some time but, like Legionnaire's Disease, never got a popular label. It has to do with the differing and sometimes overlapping nature of having a presidential nomination on the one hand, and a presidential election on the other.
This pheromone is not new. The best example of it will be 20 years old in 1984 and the proof that it works will be seen in 2020.
This "nomination-election gap," for lack of a catcher label, surfaced when Sen. Barry Goldwater stormed the Republican Party to win the presidential nomination without breaking a sweat. Goldwater had the campaign so well organized that he had the nomination all but locked up before any potential rival could get started.
Then he went out to campaign for the presidency and took the worst popular vote drubbing in history to that date. Lyndon Johnson beat him in a race where he was saying "I will win." Barry Farky was in peril.
In 1972, Sen. George McGovern demonstrated how a Democrat could do it better. Using the newly reformed Democratic rules as a battering ram, he won the nomination with ease and then went on to an even worse shellacking in the fall. Coldwater had absorbed eight years earlier.
Political professionals explained what had happened in terms of ideology and pragmatism. Simply stated, in both cases the parties had become so focused on the ideological parity of their candidates that they forgot about political electability.
And therein is the gap. In seeking a candidate whose liberalism or conservatism is beyond question, the parties also may be selecting a candidate who is perceived as being too far to the right or left to be elected in November, when the majority of those who vote identify themselves as middle of the road Republicans or Democrats or independents.
However, an ideological candidate for a nomination can be transformed into a pragmatic candidate for president. Ronald Reagan did it in 1980.
The strong stands he took represented Simple Simon, "good news" solutions to citizen concerns — lower taxes and less red ink and red tape in government. He projected himself as the common sense nice guy. Carter as the befuddled lighthearted surrounded by spendthrift doodlers.
As 1984 approaches, the Democrats are beginning to wonder whether they have a position to win.
Democratic Party activists seem to favor liberals of the Walter Mondale and Alan Cranston stripe for the nomination, but it also seems, from polls of the public at large, that a perceived moderate such as John Glenn may be the most electable Democrat.
The question being asked is whether a non-ideologue like Glenn can win the Democratic nomination or whether a candidate like Mondale or Cranston can win a national election.
THE DETROIT HALL OF FAME
TO SESS BY THE TRUMBERG CO.
CENTRAL AMERICA
...GOOD DAY, I HAVE COME TO SAVE YOU FROM COMMUNISM.
WETNAM
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 includes his class and home town or faculty or staff position. The Kansan reserves the right to edit or reject letters.
Questions about news ethics often have unclear answers
Dave Roman's story is an interesting one — of intrigue, emotion and, perhaps, questionable tactics.
Roman, a reporter for the Potomac News newspaper in Woodbridge, Virginia, seemed, for a while, to be caught between a rock and a hard place with no place to turn.
The rock — journalistic ethics
The hard place — the law.
Roman's story is told in the July/August issue of the Columbia Journalism Review by a former
The story began late last year, when Roman wanted to interview a convicted murderer, John J. LeVasseur, who was raped on Death Row at the notorious Jail Center, a maximum security prison.
Because Roman and LeVasseur reportedly had "not got along well" during LeVasseur's trial, Roman decided that instead of writing a letter to him in an interview, he would arrange a personal request.
The story goes on to tell how Roman set up the meeting with the help of William Britton,
1970
WARREN BRIDGES
superintendent of a jail where LeVasseur allegedly had done time prior to being sent to Mecklenberg.
Apparently, Britton was to accompany Roman while they were in the prison. However, Britton told him he could not make the trip, but could arrange Rome's visit — by swearing in Roman as a sergeant for a day, and having a lieutenant accompany him.
Roman agreed, and got the interview.
Roman agreed, and got the interview.
That seems to be where the question of where one draws the line of journalistic ethics comes into play.
Following the interview, Roman apparently had second thoughts about the method he used to get the interview, and he even wrote a story of how it worked. "He got to get in touch," which ran in the Potomac News.
Britton was suspended from his job as a result or his role in Harper's trip to America. He was removed three weeks after
Roman faced another charge, a misdemeanor,
for impersonating an officer.
the paper decided to run the interview, Roman, Britton and the lieutenant were all charged with two felonies — conspiracy to falsify a state register (a sign-in register), and documentation that did something.
Subsequently, the felony charges were dropped because Roman had signed his real name.
However, Roman was later convicted of the misdemonstrand and given a six-month suspended sentence.
Roman continues to work on the Potomac News and was described by his publisher as a "fine, sensitive news reporter." . . .
"in," in the article, Roman contends that although he regrets the way he gathered the information because it could have been gathered by "more conventional means," he says he did not break the law because, as the story reports, "Britton had the authority to hire and fire."
The question remains — did Roman act unethically? A court of law determined that he had broken the law. But does that automatically mean he acted unethically?
that would have happened had Roman gone ahead and written LeVasseur asking him to grant an interview? Roman did get the interview, and it seems that if LeVasseur was hired at his current interview, he would have done so regardless of whether the request was written or personal.
Journalists face many of the same ethical questions as other public servants, but are less likely to be exposed.
Journalistic ethics is not a standard set of rules accepted by everyone in the news business.
There are exceptions. Sigma Delta Chi, the Society of Professional Journalists developed a "Code of Ethics" more than 50 years ago, though it was revised in 1973.
But it does not hold all the answers, and neither do columnists, city editors, managing directors.
Many of the considerations journalists must commonly keep in mind include whether a reporter should call the family of murder victim to gather information about the victim, or, if necessary, to report what happened or weeping relatives at a funeral, or releasing a sworn deposition before it is entered into court.
All of these, and many other questions face journalists across the nation.
The University Daily KANSAN
Kansas Telephone Numbers
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Business Office--684-4358
The University Daily Kannan (USPK 60-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 6043, daily during the regular school year and Wednesday and Friday during the summer sessions, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays, and final periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 6044. Subscriptions by mail are $15 for six months or $2 a year in Douglas County and $1 for six months or $3 for a year outside the county. Students subscriptions are $1 a semester. Postage paid by mail. Send addresses to the following: University Daily Kannan, 118 Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 6043.
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1
University Daily Kansan, July 27, 1983
Page 5
Insure
From page 1
and pull alarms, a sophisticated burglar alarm system and special fire extinguishers that will quickly put out fires.
Water from a sprinkler system could ruin the collection, so the building does not have a sprinkler system, said William Mitchell, associate special collections librarian.
Humphrey said that the natural history museum had regular inspections by the state fire marshal and that a special sprinkler system was being installed in special bays for special "verminal-proof" containers for specimens.
The Lawrence Fire Department also considers prevention important. A pre-fire plan has been designed by the University in cooperation with the department, according to John Mullens, coordinator of public safety at KU.
FIREFIGHTERS VISIT EVERY building on campus to get familiar with the basic floor plans so that in dark, smoke-filled hallways firefighters can find their way more quickly. Mullens said.
Buildings, however, are not the only thing that the state does not insure. Liability insurance, except auto liability, also is not carried by the state.
And, until 1979 the state could not be sued either
The Tort Claims Act now allows people to sue the state for amounts more than $500, but it does not allow people to sue the state.
any single occurrence, said Thomas, KU general counsel.
This act also serves as a sort of insurance policy for state employees. Thomas said it protects them from liability up to $200,000. The company insured 45 percent of the long as the employee did not act irresponsibly.
FOR SMAIL CLAIMS, Thomas said, people can take their case to the Joint Committee on Claims Against the State, but they must show that the state has a responsibility to pay for the
Until last spring the Museum of Natural History carried liability insurance, Humphrey said, since the museum offers many educational programs that take children on field trips.
Endowment funds paid for the insurance, but the museum was told that having the insurance
Humphrey said that now the museum provided insurance" by taking extra precautions, such as using a bulletproof vest.
"The best insurance is to not have a need for insurance," he said.
Even with the extra care, accidents can happen. A child could be bitten by a snake or could fall.
"WITH AN INSURANCE COMPANY, there is a definite way of making a claim and relatively certain evidence."
"There's more of a question mark in my mind of how the state will respond to a claim."
"We can almost meet whatever their needs are." he said.
Keys
work out plans for buildings that got Medeco locks
From page 1
He said keys could be "cross-cut" to open several doors. a dean may have a key that opens several doors, he said, while a faculty member's key may open only one door.
Porter said each department on campus was responsible for the security of its locks. Facilities Operations makes recommendations to ensure no unauthorized access nor oblitation to follow the recommendations.
HE SAID THAT Facilities Operations advised departments to keep the number of copies of keys to a minimum and to require a deposit on keys they issued.
"But no matter how many precautions you take," he said, "if someone wants to break in,
Porter said Facilities Operations recommended that a department consider how often a key would be used when deciding whether another key was necessary.
He said, however, that he was required to supply departments with as many copies of keys
"We recommend they put a deposit bond on a key when they issue it out," he said.
He said that Facilities Operations demanded a $100 security deposit for each key it gave to contractors for access to buildings they were working on.
Porter said he thought the deposit was effective because most people would not forfeit $100. Only once was a key not returned by a driver, and they asked for the key as the was stolen from one of his trucks.
Porter said that Facilities Operations kept tight control over keys it issued to its custodial, lockers and safes.
He said in-house precautions were effective. "We've had very few problems," he says. "It's very easy to get the wrong data."
From page 1
Llamas
She said Ollie also seemed anxious when any sheen were taken from the flock.
SAILY RUSSELL SAID because llamas were curious, they would approach people.
big. She said.
Denise Staffer said llamas could survive on pasture grass and could go as long as two weeks without water.
"Some say they can be trained almost like a dog," she said.
They also are relatively disease-free, and their life span is about 25 years.
Radio
From page 1
Hill said KANU would participate in the fund-raiser, which will take place Aug. 1-3. The campaign will consist of messages during the network's award-winning news programs, "The Network" and "All Things Considered," appealing for listener contributions to keep NPR afloat.
Hill said the money raised from the campaign would be used to offset the $13,000 KANU was.
Al Berman, KANU director of development, said he expected a genuine show of concern from Lawrence listeners.
Hill said the whole financial crisis stemmed from NPR's overspending.
"THIS IS AN EMERGENCY," Berman said, and "we think many of our listeners will appreciation."
"It makes me mad that an organization could overspend that bady. Frank Mankiewicz should have been watching the bottom line closer," he said.
Frank Mankiewicz resigned as president of PR in May when the deficit he estimated to be $36 million was $19 million.
The CPB Board meets tomorrow to continue negotiations on the loan agreement.
Hill reserves some optimism about the outcome of the meeting, but said that "PCB still expects to see good progress."
"If anything goes wrong," he said, "I just want people to know who did it."
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan, July 27, 1983
DENIS AND MARGARET WILSON
More than 60 percent of St. John's parishioners are older than 65. Here, Draga Rodina and Mildred Yadrich walk home after 8 a.m. Mass.
SALVATRINI CASA
St. John's is the center of the Croatian community in Kansas City, Kan. Some residents fear that the church will be closed if parishioners can't support it.
Wanda Johnson and Mellisa Sigler get a break from their fifth-grade classes. They attend St. John the Baptist Parochial School.
Strawberry Hill rich in history
In the 1860s Chief Splitlog and his band of exiled Wyandot Indians from Ohio made a new home along Jersey Creek in what is now an old part of Kansas City, Kan.
They often traveled up the hill that then overlooked all of Kansas City, to pick wild
Hence the name — Strawberry Hill.
EVEN THOUGH THE Indians outlasted the strawberries, the berries lived on in name.
Today Strawberry Hill is a Catholic Crowned community with a heritage as rich as any in the country.
The first Croatians to come to Kansas City were recruited from Yugoslavia in the late 19th century to work in packing houses along the Missouri River.
The Croatians lived on the river's bottom land east of Strawberry Hill and west of what is now Novi Beograd.
The Irish bought the hill from the Indians and built tightly spaced rows of small, two-story houses.
The hill was then in Wyandotte City, separate from Kansas City, Kan.
SOON THE IRISH families on the Hill had saved enough money to move farther west in the city, and the Croatians had saved enough money to buy houses on the Hill. Some had saved enough money to quit work at the packing houses and finally start businesses of their own.
In 1900 the Croatians started their own Catholic parish — St. John the Baptist Catholic Church. Since then Strawberry Hill has been a predominately Croatian neighborhood.
Still, reminders of other inhabitants remain. Streets in the community are named after the Wyandot Indians, and though St. Mary's has been closed, the Irish houses are still being used.
But now the neighborhood is growing old.
AFTER WORLD WAR II the neighborhood was troubled by prosperity. Those who came back from the war did not come back to the Hill. Like the Irish before them, they bought better homes west of Strawberry Hill in Kansas City, Kan.
"Hundreds of kids got married and moved off the Hill," said Nick Tomasic, Strawberry Hill resident and Wandvatte county district attorney. "That was it."
With young Croatians moving off the Hill and new immigrants buying homes west of the Hill, the population of the Hill began to get steadily older.
Tomasic said that 60 percent of the parishioners at St. John's were 65 or older and that the old parishioners on fixed incomes found it difficult to support the church
Today the Croatian culture in Kansas City, Kan, centers on St. John the Baptist Church, although Croatians have spread throughout the city.
"YOU DON'T HAVE Slavic people on the Hill anymore. You have different nationalities," said Mr. Almajon, a professor of Russian language.
"This (Strawberry Hill) used to be about 99 percent Catholic," Tomasic said. "It's not now."
The construction of Interstate 70 on the east
side of the neighborhood eliminated about 200 homes, along with about a third of the Hill.
Although many Croatians have moved away from Strawberry Hill, they retain their loyalty to the company.
"They all come back," he said.
They are come back, he said.
Though the Croatians may come back to Strawberry Hill, their numbers are not as great as they once were.
The grade school, which had 50 or 60 students to a grade in the early 1960s, had 261 students last year, or an average of 29 students a grade.
Croatians in Kansas City, whether they live on Strawberry Hill or not, know a lot about the history of the Croatan people there.
SISTER DANIEL, who teaches third grade
John's, had his students last year, but not all of
them.
Parish organizations at St. John's, such as the Tamburtizans, perform ethnic舞和 dances and expose the people of Kansas City to Croatian customs.
OTHER ORGANIZATIONS, such as the Catholic Club and Boy Scout Troop 19, meet at the parish, exposing people who may not live on the Hill to the Croatian culture.
The culture of the Croatians in Kansas City should remain strong as long as there are people on the Hill to support the church, Tomascic said.
"but we have no money in reserve," he said. "We're on a day-h-day basis. We get the opportunity to do something."
The image shows two children walking down a snowy street. The road is paved with brick tiles, and there are buildings on both sides. One building has a tall steeple, possibly a church, and the other appears to be residential or commercial. The sky is overcast with thick clouds, suggesting a cold and stormy day.
Mary and Danny Tokic walk down Strawberry Hill, past the parochial grade school, to St. John the Baptist Catholic Church, classes every day.
Photos and text by Steve Zuk
STRAKE DAY HILL
The passing of time hasn't been kind to the Strawberry Hill community. Many of the younger residents have chosen to move out, while older residents have remained behind.
University Daily Kansan, July 27, 1983
Page 7
Med Center hopes to obtain kidnev stone machine
By MATTHEW HARRISON Staff Reporter
For much of the population in the United States suffering from kidney stones, a long hospital stay and surgery are required. Patients are available to resolve the painful disorder.
But the University of Kansas Medical Center hopes to acquire a newly developed $1.6 million machine called a Dornier Kidney Lithotriptor that would help alleviate the suffering of patients with kidney failure. A UCI professor of urology said last week.
IN JUNE THE BOARD of Regents approved a request to the Kansas Legislature from the Med Center in Kansas City, Kan., for permission to purchase the machine, said Gene Staples, hospital administrator.
Staples said the machine, which is a top priority item for the hospital's fiscal year 1984 budget, would be purchased with state money that was given to the hospital for fiscal year 1983 but was not used.
The hospital cannot spend the money without permission from the state, he
Keith L. Nitcher, KU director of business and fiscal affairs, said he hoped the machine could be purchased by the hospital early next year.
The Legislature must give permission to the hospital to increase its spending authority, enabling the hospital to hire more doctors and the purchase of the Dormier. Nitcher said.
THE LEGISLATURE WILL NOT be able to consider the request until the
request is submitted.
Kidney stones are hard, cement-like minerals that collect in the kidney. They are usually the result of deposits left by fluids as they pass through the
John W. Weigel, professor of urology at the Med Center, said the Dornier Lithotriphone machine was the first of its kind designed for non-internal disintegration of kidney stones by shock waves.
The idea behind the Dornier Litho-
trisher is to exert high-intensity shock
TWO X-RAYS DETERMINE where the stone is in the body he said, and the shock wave, which is generated by an external source, is emitted from a mitated by bony tissue to the inner stone.
waves on kidney stones. The machine concentrates its energy on the stones, which dissolve and pass from the body in the patient's urine, he said.
One benefit the new machine will offer if purchased is that stones may be removed without affecting the surrounding organs.
Weilger said that operating on kidneys required a large incision of six to seven inches with considerable blood loss and possible permanent damage to the kidney.
"The Dormier method appears to be a very, very safe method of removing the carpet."
Now kidney stone patients must undergo a series of painful procedures involving X-rays, medication and physical examinations. Robert J. Burkman, Chanute physician
BURKMAN SAID THAT often a patient's diet had to be altered and the
stone diluted with fluid. If the stone does not dissolve on its own, surgery should be avoided.
The science of "endo-urology," or surgery from within, is not an entirely new concept.
THE PATIENT IS GIVEN a sedative to stop body movement but is still conscious.
Weigel said stone dissolving was now being done at KU by direct insertion of a probe through the patient's skin directly into the kidney.
The stone is then fragmented, picked up and irrigated out through the urine. Weilgal said. This process requires a pump and an irrigation system used by the Dormer machine does not.
"This offers a non-evasive approach. The stone is powdered into many pieces, and the patient is able to pass the fragment 90 percent of the way."
Weigel said some patients would be hospitalized for the Dornier process but that many would be done on an out-patient basis.
Initially, four hospitals, in Houston, St. Louis, Los Angeles and New Orleans, were given the Dornier to test KU would be on the second wave of hospitals to use the new device. Weigel said.
Along with a fellow colleague, Weigel proposed the idea of purchasing the kidney dissolver to the hospital advocacy group that requests appropriation.
Wiegel said the machine should be cost-effective, assuming that the Med Program would reduce costs.
"A LOT OF PEOPLE have stones that they have been reluctant to do anything about because they don't want to be operated on," he said.
Weigel said 70 percent or more patients with stones were candidates for laparoscopy.
"We are sort of the end of the funnel here. We have a lot of extraordinarily complex stone problems. We're the only ones who would have such a sort of thing." Weigel said.
A WOMAN WAS RELEASED from the Douglas County jail Monday morning after being arrested Sunday for stealing three frozen lobsters, worth a total of $7.47, and a Unisonic telephone, worth $12.99, from Rusty's Food Center, 2300 Louisiana St., police said
On the record
Police said the woman had placed the lobsters and the phone in her purse.
A THIEF STOLE two stereo speakers, worth about $100, from a KU student's car in the 1900 block of West Fourth Street early Monday morning, police said.
A LAWRENCE MAN was arrested Monday for possession of drugs, paraphernalia and a weapon, police said. Mr. Lawrence was sent day after posting a $1,650 ball bond.
A LAWRENCE MAN reported on Monday that a burglar had stolen 19 bottles of wine and liqueur, valued at a total $400, and a gallon whiskey bottle valued at $300. The burglar resided in the 1300 block of Westbrooke Street, police said. The man told police that the burglary occurred between July 5 and Monday morning.
The University Daily
CLASSIFIED RATES
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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.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
The Kannan will be responsible for more than 20 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 the calling Kansai business office at 864-4358.
KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE
118 Flat Hall 864-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
indole not results
FOR RENT
Spinister's books now has AIR CONDITIONING,
Lawrence's feminine, womans and children's
bookstore for ALL women, collectively operated by
laboratory: M: P 12, Thursday 8 t: Sat. 10, 6:10, 11/12
3 bedroom apartment just 2 blocks from union
Stone, refrigerator included $330 843-2528 after 5
m
2 bedroom apartment, just 2 blocks from union.
Stave and refrigerator included. $290, 843-2528 after 5
years.
in $375.00 or 495 a month.
Brand New Sunrise Place 9th & Michigan
Open daily 9:00-12:00 a.m.
OPEN HOUSE
& 1:00-5:00 p.m.
Call 841-1287 (office)
or 841-5797
- Walking distance to K.U.
* Two bedroom highly energy efficient units, finished basement and fireplace available.
* Townhouse living.
* Available TV.
* From $375-$425 a month.
Apartment complex next to campus. Brand new super stadium studio, 1 & 2 bedroom apartments, male sleeping rooms. Laundry facilities & off-street parking. 843-216-126
3 three bedroom homes available for August 1 occupancy. Perfect for Students. Located across from the main campus.
KU STUDENTS &
FACULTY
Still looking for that perfect home?
Consider these completely furnished studios
1 br, 2 br. A 3 br. apartment locations . . .
HANOVER PLACE between 14th & 15th on Massachusetts 841-1212
SUNDANCE APARTMENTS
7th & Florida
841-5255
TIBURON
9th Avenue
841-5255
SUMMIT HOUSE
1105 Louisiana
841-8280
COLDWATER FLATS
413 W. 14th
841-1212
4 — PLEXES
922 Tennessee “916 Indian
River”
All owned by
Mastercraft Management
Professional Management &
Maintenance
Basement apartment very close to campus. 1 room with bath. Unaffected except refrigerator. Prefer furnished room. Facilities include: Call Jim, 2 pm - 5 p.m. 614-208-9388. Hanover Townhouses, spacious 2 BR unfilled townhouses w/ garage. Close to campus & downtown at 14th & Kentucky 10 month leaves available.
Massachusetts at 7th
749.5011
Eldridge House Apartments
The Place To Live in Downtown Lawrence
Studios
One Bedrooms
Two Bedrooms
All Utilities Paid
MED. STUDENTS, NURSES, THERAPEPTISTS.
You will be coming to the KT Med. Center in
KC Spring Street for a 10-hr course available.
Completely refreshed with app. & app.
prepare. Free rent incentive for early birds. Call
prepare. Free rent incentive for early birds. Call
Mature, upper-level room to share large 2 bedroom apartment for next school year. Carpet, gas-run AC, dachshower pool, laundry. Own room. Kitchen. Bathroom. 1/2 cup. Against rent free. 749-202, ask for KC.
Before You Sign,
Check With Us.
STERLING BELL
The Only On-Campus Apartments.
Offering all utilities paid.
10 month leases, free Cable TV.
Swimming pool and covered parking.
Two bedroom units . . .
Only for the KU student.
JAYHAWKER TOWERS
1603 W. 15th
843-4993
house, no pier.
Plan Ahead! Rooms available for spring, summer,
and fall at Sunflower House, a thirty-member cood.
cooperative, community close to campus.
One bedroom apartment, sleeping room 5. bedroom house, no pets. 843-1601, 842-971.
ON CAMPUS
CONVENIENCE WITH
AN OFF CAMPUS
LIFESTYLE!
APARTMENT LIFE GOT YOU DOWN ? THINKING OF MOVING BACK TO THE CAMPUS LIFESTYLE? THINK OF
NAISMITH HALL
Two bedroom apartment Close to campus, 926
942-7239
Rent now or reserve for fall - furnished apts. or room new university or dormitory, with off street parking.
ROOM available at RAINBOW COOPERATIVE
HOUSE, 113 Tennessee BIRD PER月, including
a private room for up to 6 persons.
- Studios, Apartments;
NAISMITH HALL
843-8559
APARTMENT and room available now for fall
move. One block from Uguin. Utilities paid,
no pets. See at 1290 Ohio. First come gets choice.
Don't delay for this offer.
TRAILRIDGE
Townhouses
- Furnished or Untur
Save money, rent a 1 and 2 bedroom, or studio apart
mort need to examine. No phone; telete 843-645-618
- Laundry Facilities
- Excellent Maintenance Service
- 3 Pools, Tennis, Athletic
Roommates needed: 4 bedroom doubles $94/month
plus 1/4 utilities. Close to bus route. Call 740-6833.
2500 W. 6th 843-7333
Need a place for fall! We have one room left on second floor of an older house close to campus. Share space with us in the basement. References requested. Deposit required. $185/month with utilities paid by landlord. #462-8030
SOUTHERN PARKWAY TOWNSHIP spacious, quiet 3 bedroom duplexes. Located at 62nd & Kassidk Featuring all appliances, weather-dry hook up, apt. for children, swimming pool. Call 749-1580 for an appointment.
KU Bus
FOR SALE
1974 Capacitor, only 33,000 miles, very good condition
i280 or best offer. After 8:42 726-7567
1973 Buick Station Wagon - good tires - Huns good pearl.
FCC # 562-708-201.
1974 Mercury, Comet, $1,100. Body; OK, Interior.
Good, 6. toy car; Rumg, grunt: **492-2105**.
Buck Skagway, A.C. runs good, two TAM-Am-
bull
1980 Honda Express Moped. Good condition. Runnge:
$225. 832-843-0801.
1979 Brown Chevy Chevette: good transmission,
AM/FMADM: 45,000 miles, in good shape. Make me
your contact number.
go here to purchase
22' racing bicycle, full alloy $759.94-769.03 days.
24' mountain bike, land, labdoubower system,
A. Al. 100, 100 watt, tread, 4 way. Was $40 new,
now only $29.81-46.07
1979 LTD Land, P/S/P/B, A/C power seals,
windows, cruise control, excellent power
seals.
HONDA CVCC 77, 5 speed. A/C; Stereo, excellent condition, best offer. Call after 5 p.m. #F9-74518.
Harman Kardon h300 receiveer $140. BIC 60x turntable. $140 (or best offer). #F9-7454
Blonde bedroom suite. Includes dresser w/mirror and bed/wardboard. Must see 641-628 eighties executive DESK, metal, beige chair, 60 x 9" top, locks $150, SLEEPER POP, QUEEN衣套 $250, TWO ROOMS cost. Cost new - $800, your price. $100, COFFEE TABLE and 2 END TABLE for $75. FREE DELIVERY for 10 $75. FREE DELIVERY for 1 piece, I curved, 2 straight. Excellent - $120 FREE DELIVERY to your Lawncare柜. $430-600
Homeite, 17 x 12' x 8', BHW, D/W. New A/C skirted, large down, long wired floorpaper $4, 200 or will consider as a partial payment on a small raker in SWS w/6000. Let 9.2 and 28A, Avenues, or weekdays.
Fair houseback back to school needs, step by 300 Michigan. Sep Aug 14 Journal world unaccompanied.
Mixer 1 g +
Phone: 814-650-7224
Google Hivek 1900 : 8580 WindowBist BIC
Honda 814-650-7227
Nissan K130 814-650-7228
Dresser with large mirror, suitcase, large backpack
salted bed set 843-279 or 749-5211
Moving sale - must sell single bed, sofa & desk - all in good condition. Phone 811-4908
Maint staff 10 times annual specials 4,000 items,
maint staff 2 times annual specials only. Call 658-398-9000
after $5 p.m.
*round. black-grey-orange female declawed cat*
482-303
Visiting faculty member must sell clay two-one-Dodge Aspen Jump. New white shirts, blue cap and yellow pants 634-640-7249 634-640-7248
LOST: 1, woman 1 gold watch. No face, but 12.00
marker. Golden reward offered. Bali 841-096-86
COMPUTER SCIENCE INTERN- Qualifications:
knowledge of English language programming; examinations in Computer Science or a related field; currently enrolled student; Preference: Working with students in a network-based line protocols, and networking concepts, experience with mini and micro computers; experience with data storage systems; knowledge of Dave Nordell, University of Kansas, Academic Computing Services, Computer Center, Lawrence,
LOST AND FOUND
HELP WANTED
R. N. Pediatric ICU Nurse needed for home care. Immediate care; excellent wages, referral bans, malpractice and binding provided Local work available. For an interview, call Topika 292-1686
TEACHERS NEEDED IN FLORIDA
Clerk to work startling. August 1 through秋末冬初。Boy in school, wear uniforms. Boys apply in person. Skills: Lingerie Sailor. Bears apply in person.
EAST COAST ADVENTURE - BOSTON. Families seek live-in child care workers. Live in lawn care, nursing care, daycare or city. Flexible starting dates, many openings, one location. 6th, 16th摩根大道, Road MAIN, MA 02146
6th, 16th摩根大道, Road MAIN, MA 02146
Garrison M. Nighthawk is confident for intelligent, hard-working students. The student plays the庄士敦 at the Y nightclub in Lawrence, Calif., on Tuesday and Wednesday.
Live-in female companion aide wanted for elderly woman within walking distance of campus. Room and board in exchange for housekeeping duties, in residence or evening. Phone 842-3591 afterroom or evening.
(nurseries needed to teach math, science, or engineering at the Navy's Nuclear Power School in Orlando, Florida.
BENEFITS. Up to $19,000 starting salary, over $32,000 in four years. Over $1,500 per month for selected students during Jr. and Sr. years. Medical and dental coverage. 30 days' earned annual paid vacation. Opportunity for navy-financed graduate education. Family benefits.
QUALIFICATIONS. U.S. citizen. Ages 19-29 College qul=ate or seniorates, JBS硕士 Technology majors. Call collect Naval Officer Opportunities at 816) 374-8227. Mon.-Wed. 5am-2pm.
Science writer. The Office of University Relations of the University of Kansas seeks a science writer to support the publication of a book thereafter, $15,000 minimum. Minimum required qualifications: A.A. or B.S. degree in print communication or related field; experience that includes feature writing; publication at least five articles on scientific topics written in a foreign language; and general news articles. Duties include science writing (not technical) writing in a popular style, general knowledge of the scientific community, All application material | cover letter, resume, work samples | must be received by 5 p.m. August 12, 1984. Applicant for position of Office of University Relations. P.O. Box 2290. The University of Kansas, Lawrence. KS 60445.
PERSONAL
first assistant, portfolio, resume, naturalization,
immigration, visa, ID, and of course fine portraits
Remember last year gold, THE ETC Ship. to W
Wayne. The new gold is good quality. Silsong sale午
journey jewelry, good quality. Silsong sale午
journey jewelry.
NURSING STUDENT needs ride to KUMC for fall
10. Will share expenses. 843-6244
OVER 10,000 ITEMS FOR SALE. Low price low fees.
furniture, linen, furniture,GUARANTED app
tenance.
The Etc.
Shop
The Ec.
Shop
Vintage & Classic
Contemporary Clothing
On Sale
10 West 9th St.
Washington, WI
91-834-5611
Say it on a shirt, custom silicone screen labels, FriBabies cap and case. Ships in 24 hours. Special offers. Haircut! $17 and perons $35 Churney, ask for Dennis Jenen. #43-330. Used furniture bought and sold. Pick up available.
Savit on a shirt; custom silkscreen print. T-shirt.
Shiftirt by Sveta 740-1611
carries INDIAN EARTH
carries
INDIAN EARTH
The all in one, non-cosmetic cosmetic 007 Mean
927 Mass.
WANTED: MISS RIGHT: Must be beautiful, have interest in hair, sh堕 bleid, between ages of 21, 30, ability to converge intelligently on variety of subjects and like to TGIF. Aty woman meeting these qualifications and seeking a meaningful interaction with photo to Latin Letters 965, 11 limps, Lawrence.
Leaving Town?
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Make sense out of Western Civilization! Makes sense to use in the following notes. For exam preparation "New Analysis of Western Civilization" available now at Town Cries. The course is free.
**Balanced:** for balmily or other food related problems, call NN-529.
Airline Tickets
13-58 PITCHES 4.7 p.m., every day. Also enjoy submarine submarines sandwiches, great tunes, video & game tutorials, and the sunshine on our front side of the stadium, black block 660 the Union. Hawk Crawling 35 35.
Impress your datase with the total environment of the Hawks Crossing. Groove on the front perch to great turtles, total sunshine and mega sunset. Happy holidays for 671Ks, $471Ks the Hawks Crossing for sure, and then.
Sunday
At airline counter prices
no extra service charge
Make your travel
arrangements on
50c Draws
DRYERS THAT DRY! west end Holiday Plaza
INDOMAY 249.413.732
See Maupintour Travel
BIDEN:
long b腿, assorted colors, $15 each.
short b腿, assorted colors, $10 each.
$1 each, for 8. Elasticated Plierls 2118 W 25th St,
63rd Ave, New York City.
Great Plains Numismatic Services
Service for:
- The lounge, airfares—Complete travel arrangement
* Car rental—Travel Passes
* Car rental—Hotel confirmations
* Student semester break holidays
图
Yert Andrewson would love Lawrence's Yell Sub. The submarines are disarming. Featuring fast delivery to knock out your taste bud! Call 841-3288.
romight- Party like it! 1994 You're go, out grab some healthy, tasteful grab at Yelle Sho. Open later. Mon- Thurs '11 p.m. l!m. Fri- Sat '11 a.m. m- Sun '10 p.m. If you party at home, Subman deliver.
Maupintour travel service
749-0700
SERVICES OFFERED
ON CAMPUS LOCATION in the Student Union and 900 Mass.
Beginner Adult Piano Classes 5-week course. Call 842-7901 for class times. Oloe &琴台
B04-14
745 New Hampshire
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
842-8001
HOME PET CARE, Personal service, reasonable
rate, 841-4051 or 851-9074
MOPED & MOTORCYCLE REPAIR HIRO
Yamaha, Rawadai, Suzuki, Push & Motocyclee
Nissan, Honda, Kia, BMW, JD Power,
up & delivery available. With appointment
by phone call 814-3228 to p.m. tbc. Invite Sun-
telephone 814-3228 to p.m. tbc. Invite Sun-
telephone 814-3228 to p.m. tbc. Invite Sun-
telephone 814-3228 to p.m. tbc. Invite Sun-
telephone 814-3228 to p.m. tc
TUTORING. Math, CS-200, French, individual sessions. call 841-4309.
Learn Transition summer from experienced instructor in small groups with other KU students, or in large classes with faculty.
Racequercball, tennis, squash racquet stringing
tools, tennis rackets, ping pong balls for sale also. Lead, Prunus, Dapple,
new. Used; 8425-500 dgs, 768-302 encavings.
etc. University, 209-233-6661.
**TOUTING**, Math C, CS-200, French, individual sex.
TYPING
AFFORDABLE QUALITY for all your typing needs
Call Judy, 842-7945 at 6 p.m.
24 Hour Typing. Fast, accurate, dependable. All day. All subjects. 800-754-3111; 800-754-3096. **TYPTING** SEHUM. IBP II. Unlimited document storage, with easy retrieval and editing. Ideal for paper, manuscripts, thesis, and reports.
Absolutely LETTER-PERFECT typing - editing
Your work, your own business. Professional Ess-
tails.
Accurate, affordable typing. Ask about speed not accuracy.
Accurate, affordable typing. Ask about speed not accuracy.
Accurate, affordable typing. Ask about speed not accuracy.
JBM on JIM-Preceive personal typing ewgong/
weekends. 842-5000. Barbara special summary
CALL TIP TOP TYPING - D32 Iowa. Experienced
TIP TOP TYPING user memurveyer, Horley corrections
Experimented input, Term, papers, Username, Email
Experimented input, Term, papers, Username, Email
Pica and will correct spelling. Phone 643-5000, Mrs
Pica and will correct spelling. Phone 643-5000, Mrs
Elvis could wiggle, Shakespeare could write. Mr. Callaghan, call 61240345 before 5 o'clock & weekends. Experienced typist would type letters, these and dissertations; IBM Correcting Selective Cell.
Experienced typist will type term paper theses; telephone calls; internet research; conference presentations; and II. Cell Terry B48-754 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. on Monday through Saturday. Call (312) 298-3250.
Professional secretary will do your typing, themes,
theses, dissertations #845-0877, from 9:00 to 10:00
Us a Faint, Fast, Affordable, Usm Typing. Wr
Us a Faint, Fast, Affordable, Usm Typing.
ON TIME, TAPES FYPED, TYPED & EFFICIENCY
TYPING *Call Speed.* 40 pp. & over, overnight scribbles.
TYPING PLUS. Theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications, resumes, assistance with composition, grammar, spelling, etc., English tutoring.
TYPING PLUS. Dissertations, papers, letters, applications, resumes, assistance with composition, grammar, spelling, etc., English tutoring.
WANTED
1 or 4 mile roommate plus starting August 1.
Balo bus route 35 plus abilities. 10 or 12 month
Female roommate wanted starting August for 8
bedroom apartment, on bus. Reasonable rent
is $1,200 per month.
Empty room, vacant place setting at gourmet table waiting for right female housemate. Help around house share enriching atmosphere. (Carol, 841-7021) early eve.
Female roommate needed to share mice, fully furnished. 81st Apt. 811a a month plus 7/3 children.
Female roommate wanted for Park 25 apartment
Two bedroom, one bath, $118. a month plus electric
routine and kitchen.
Male roeminate wavetable. Nine two bedroom apt at 8th AVA and Watson Center, 813-642-9018.
Call Vastor: (813) 642-9018
House to house with mature individual or couple.
Non-smoker preferred. Walking distance to KU 8180
974-512-6822. Travel time from home to college.
Male or female roommate wanted. 3153/1 plus 100
unit. Call Eric a 1-649-7623 or 149-2155.
Male roommate, nine bldm. apt. on bus route 86,
plus 1/2 utilities. 842-7967 after p. 6 on bus route.
Nonsmoking female roommate starting Aug. 1 for
mostly furnished 2 bedroom apartment close to same
house.
Non-smoking male housemates, 10% share up until 833
Missouri, 729/277 or 443/622, ask for Tom.
Nonmasking, neat, male roommates to share two bedroom apartment Pool, laundry, dishwasher, standard equipment, 10 minutes from campus by bike. Closet to bath rearrive. Available August 1, $135 per month.
Non-smoking room male for nice, clean, 2 bedroom apartment in 4+plex. Just 1/2 block north of the hotel. Roommates must pay $1.25/1.25/1.25/1.25/1.25/1.25/1.25/1.25/1.25/1.25/1.25/1.25/1.25/1.25/1.25/1.25/1.25/1.25/1.25/1.25/1.25.
One female roommate to share nice house with 4 other girls. Very close to campus. Private bedroom. @Rm 8a placement on floor. In August 1 roommate is at Rm 749-359.
HIDE WANTED - any point along route to Charlevoix, Mich. (Chicago, Lansing, etc.) Early August, share expenses and driving. Georgia 864-3100 or 749-2315.
ROOMMATE NEEDED: to share 2, townhouses apt at 247 & Alabama with 2 others. Rent $450 or $600. Call Dan or do colection 130-3121 or 130-4549.
ROOMMATE WANTED Roommate to share a bedroom hostel with driver and洗衣 $15/mn
3-4-4-4-4 76-84-4-4-4
1. Respond promptly to information required for reservation. Respon-
dible remnants to share beautiful 2 bathrooms will be cleaned and refurbished by a clean and a spa at $160 per room, 179 rooms call 518-354-3414.
Roommate wanted for next school year, 6th & 8th
from home. One room, 6th & 8th
(9:14:42-9:43 am) at p.m.
Wanted: Christian male roommate to nice 4
bedroom house close to campus $10 per month plus
15% of cost.
LAX
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210m
University Daily Kansan, July 27, 1983
Page 8
Conservation continues, researcher says
By GUELMA ANDERSON Staff Reporter
In 1973 the United States was in an energy panic. The primary fuels of the nation — oil and natural gas — became scarce and costly because of an oil embargo imposed by the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries.
Americans were forced to drive less and cut down on overall fuel usage in
THE EMBARGO SPARKED nationwide concern about energy conservation, and now, in 1983, the effort to conserve continues.
John Clark, professor of history and a researcher of U.S. energy since 1968, said last week that domestic consumption of gas fell by as much as slower pace than it did before 1973.
"People are more conscious of the energy in their homes." he said.
Statistics prove Clark's assertion.
Energy-saving measures such as attic and wall insulation and storm windows were installed in 10.4 million households throughout the country in 1981, according to Statistical Abstracts of the United States. 1982-83.
KANSAS ENCOURAGES such measures with its state Energy Conservation Plan, according to Terri Muchmore, director of the Research and Energy Analysis Division of the Kansas Corporation Commission.
She said that the plan included five points of conservation methods - reduced lighting, car pooling, energy efficiency checks, thermal standards and cars making right turns on red lights.
The city of Lawrence also is conscious of its energy usage.
Allen Loyd, Lawrence management analyst, said that although specific temperature settings were not enforced rigorously in city buildings, more efficient lighting and new insulation had been installed.
He said now the city was considering the use of computers to adjust the climate.
ALSO, THE CITV promotes the practice of buying smaller pickups and touring.
He said that Lawrence had two programs that were available to the public — the Weatherization Program and Project Seal.
The Weatherization Program provides attic insulation, storm windows and weather stripping for people with low to moderate incomes. Project Seal provides a weatherization kit to anyone who attends a workshop.
Utility assistance programs for low-income people have been spreading throughout the country, and Lawrence is no exception.
Last winter State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, coordinated the Warm Hearts program, which distributed private contributions of more than $61,000 to individuals and families who needed help with their heating bills.
The University of Kansas al-o has joined the conservation bandwagon.
ROBERT PORTER, associate director of physical plant maintenance for Facilities Operations, said that when the energy crunch hit in 1973, the administration began to enforce strict conservation measures.
"We now have good support from the
He said that this fall the department was going to install timers in Wescoe Hall that would turn off lights in the classrooms every hour.
University community as far as turning off lights," he said.
"It will take some public relations by the administration to help with the success of this, but, if it is successful, call them in other buildings. Porter said."
During July the air conditioning in campan buildings is being turned off for one hour twice a day to conserve energy during peak periods, Porter said.
HE SAID THAT thermostats in campus buildings had been set for 68 degrees in the winter and 78 degrees in the summer. We have previous standard of 75 degrees all year.
The University has implemented other conservation measures, he said, such as switching from incandescent to fluorescent lighting, insulating steam lines in new buildings and installing to monitor all utilities in buildings.
Yet, for all the conservation efforts of consumers, there is still a good chance that the nation again will be crippled by a lack of available energy sources and towering costs because of dependence on foreign oil.
When OPEC placed an oil embargo on the United States in 1973, more than one-third of the nation's oil was exported to the US. It is a publication of Congressional Quarterly. But in 1981 almost half of U.S. oil reserves were imported.
In 1980 Congress decided to reduce dependence on oil from foreign countries by letting the price of energy rise to whatever level corporations thought it was worth, assuming that at some point expensive energy would force consumers to use less, according to the Energy Policy report.
"FOR EXAMPLE, coal is such a fiby fuel, and nuclear energy is so uncertain," he said. "And yet what else have we got?"
"Within another 10 years, nuclear energy may be revitalized because we don't have any other options — even if they were resolved the waste disposal problem."
But Clark said that this was a short-term solution that gave private companies good profits. But it did not tap alternative sources of energy.
THE REAGAN ADMINISTRATION'S energy policy skirts the issues of alternative energy sources and the rise of foreign imports. Clark said.
"Prices are going up, and whoever composes low-income groups are the ones that pay."
adium apartments
• 1 & 2 Bedroom Units
• Furnished or Unfurnished
• Professional Management
• AC - Private Parking
• New Super Studios
gas & water paid
partially furnished
843-2116
1123 INDIA 1 Block North of Kansas Union
"We are at the mercy of OPEC and other foreign countries," he said.
Clark said that U.S. energy independence rested on whether other energy sources that were available in the United States should be used.
"We're really teetering on the brink of disaster everyday."
SUPERSTUDIOS
Carol Prentice, administrative assistant to Demand Tacha, vice chancellor for academic affairs, said that nominations for the position were solicited from the staff of the museum and from the faculty of the art history department. She said that Tighman was a unanimous choice.
HE REPLACES Elizabeth Broun.
Broun, who has been the acting director since July 1, 1982, said she was leaving Sept. 1 so that she could do postdoctoral work. She said that she had accepted an 11-month fellowship to study American Art at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C.
Tighman, who is now the assistant director for administration at the museum, is on vacation and was unavailable for comment yesterday.
Douglas Tlighman has been selected as the new acting director of the Helen Foreman Spencer Museum of Art, the University of Pennsylvania and for academic affairs announced Monday.
She said that Tilghman had been the acting director in the spring of 1978 when Charles Eldredge, then the director, was on sabbatical.
Chu-Tsing Li, professor of art history and chairman of the committee that is responsible for developing the museum.
Acting director selected for Spencer art museum
Staff Reporter
THE SEARCH FOR a permanent director began in December 1982, Li said, when Eldredge resigned to become director of the National Museum of American Art of the Smithsonian Institution. He said that a new faculty member was needed February but he was unable to adequately search for a director by the April 15 deadline set by the vice chancellor for academic affairs, Deanell Tacha.
The duties of the director, he said,
include overseeing acquisitions,
exhibitions, financial development, and
educational and public programs.
The search, he said, was renewed in May.
By MICHAEL PAUL
said the committee would begin to review applications Sept. 1.
Li said that he had hoped to have a permanent director by this month, but that it now appeared that a permanent would not be named until January.
THE DIRECTOR REPORTS to the vice chancellor for academic affairs, the vice president.
Li said that the absence of a permanent director had not interfered with the scheduling of exhibitions for the event, but his plans planned nearly two years in advance.
But he said that the absence of a permanent director would delay decisions about future exhibitions and activities.
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The University Daily
Z
bng
KANSAN
University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas
Vol. 93, No. 162 USPS 650-640
Friday, July 29, 1983
Weather
Today he will sunny and hot with highs of
100 to 105, according to the National
Weather Service.
Winds will be from the south 10 to 15 mph.
Tonight will be fair with lows from 75 to 80.
will be made in the same, with
the high expected to be in the 100s.
Journalist recounts public life
A. E. B. A. B.
Clyde Reed, former publisher of the Parsons Sun, brings his knowledge and many years of experiences to the classrooms of KU.
Staff Reporter
By ANN REGAN Staff Reporter
In 1963, when Clyde Reed was chairman of the Board of Regents, he offered himself as the sacrificial lamb to tell Wichtians that their college should not become part of the state's education system, according to Keith Austin, a friend of Reed's and former editor of the
"They were ready to lynch him, tar and heather him. He had trouble getting out of town."
REED DOES NOT LIKE to talk about that incident — “It wouldn’t serve any purpose now, it’s over” — the same way he does not like to read his impishments or the famous friends he has re=do.
Reed, a KU graduate of the class of 1937,
returned to the University of Kansas last fall to
teach a class in editorial writing in the William
School of Journalism and Mass Communications.
The subject is one he knows something about. His father bought the Parsons Sun in 1914, the year Reed was born, and Reed worked his way up to the boy to editor and publisher of the newspaper.
Reed became owner of the paper in 1953. In 1982, he sold the Sun to the Harris Group of New York.
He said he had learned a lot about Kansas, especially when he ran as the Republican candidate.
"MY THOUGHT IS THAT every newspaperman should run for office at least once, and preferably be defeated," he said. "I got to know Kansas and Kansas people. I got to know things about Kansas that I could learn in no other way than by an active candidacy."
Austin, a Reed supporter during the election, said Reed's severance of a waiver tax on real estate was unacceptable.
regrets losing the election for one man.
Reed said one of the highlights of the election was when President Dwight D. Eisenhower came to Abilene and, in an appearance in front of the Sunflower Hotel, endorsed Reed's candidacy.
"He wasn't able to speak his mind, even if it wasn't the popular thing to do." Austin said.
"It was its downfall. But I don't think he wants to leave the election for one minute."
"IT MADE ME FEEL. GREAT for the moment," he said.
Reed was in national politics from 1941 to 1942 when he worked in Washington, D.C., as a se. secretary for his father, who served as a U.S. senator from Kansas from 1939 until his death in 1949. He also was governor of Kansas from 1929 to 1931.
"But he didn't want me to stay in Washington." Reed said of his father.
"He said he had seen too many politicians — good people — who were ruined by staying in the city."
While in Washington, Reed, who is described as a "fire buff" by his friends, joined the Friendship Fire Association, which was founded by George Washington.
Association members would assist firemen at fires by providing coffee and doughnuts, he
Reed said he first became interested in fires when he had to hae fire engines and police
ALTHOUGH HE NEVER held public office, Reed was frequently appointed to serve on boards and committees and received several awards.
In 1961, Gov. John Anderson appointed him to the Board of Regents, and he served as its chief executive.
In 1976, he was appointed to the board of the Corporation for Public Broadcasting by the Board.
Reed also has served and been honored by his alma mater.
He was vice president and president of the University of Kansas Alumni Association in 1955 and 1965 and is now a trustee of the Kansas University Endowment Association.
One award that has special meaning for him is the citation he received in 1963 from the William Allen White Foundation for journalistic merit as an outstanding Kansas editor.
REEED SAID HIS father was a close friend and political ally of William Allen White, the editor and publisher from Emporia, after which he began his journalism and Mass Communications is named.
Reed said that, as a child, he often went with his father to visit White.
"I remember Mr. White presiding over a great, huge salad bowl when he had guests for dinner. He relished it, and that's no pun," Reed said.
Reed, like White, used his newspaper editorials to support what he believed was best advice.
He supported the severance tax in an area where it was extremely unpopular, fought the
railroad bosses when they were still very powerful and, in recent years, upset his town by supporting a controversial redevelopment plan.
Reed said that Parsons was an important rail center and that in 1947 the Missouri, Kansas and Texas railroad charged hands and the new president "began whacking, away at the payroll." By the end of the year more than 1,000 area men had been transferred or fired.
WHEN THE RAILROAD posted a notice one Sunday that it was going to close its accounting office, putting 150 men out of work. Reed said he could not believe it.
"Firing people is one thing, firing them on Sunday is quite another in my book," he said. Reed said that, although he did not win the first fight against Tommy Robinson, he brought the issue to the nation of the middle
Redevelopment was another issue Reed felt strongly about and brought to the public's
Max Bickford, former executive officer of the Regents and a crony of Reed's, said, "If Clyde had to list one of his greatest achieve-ments, it would be the development of downtown Parsons."
REEED WAS CHAIRMAN of the Parsons Urban Renewal Agency from 1998 to 1973. While he was chairman, the agency carried out a series of brown removal that covered 35 shameful streets.
Bickford said that completion of the project was a hard-fought victory for Reed but that Reed "was a fighter in whatever he believed in."
Reed tries to instill in his students the same sense of commitment and willingness to take a
"I want them to take a position. I don't care if it's for or against an issue. I just don't want them to waffle."
Voters may get say in redevelopment
By GENE HUNTER
Staff Reporter
Lawrence Mayor David Longhirst and City Commissioner Mike Amyx have been promised that Lawrence residents will have a chance to decide whether downtown development will
According to Dean Palos, a city planner who has worked extensively on the project, they will.
PALOS SAID YESTERDAY that Lawrence voters would have to approve any general obligation bonds to help finance the city's share of the estimated $4.5 million project. The city has proposed issuing $1.6 million in general obligation bonds to finance capital improve-
But will Lawrence residents get that chance?
issued, the City Commission would first have to approve them. If approved, the law states that the matter would have to be put to a public vote in either a general or special election.
General obligation bonds would be used for financing either, parking spaces or a pedestrian plaza and would be financed through an increase in the city's mill levy, he said.
Palos said that before the bonds could be
receiving to the city's proposal, other sources
DOWNTOWN page 5
New program to benefit work-seeking students
By MARY ANN COSTELLO
Staff Reporter
A new, off-campus, work-study program is expected to create about 50 student jobs in Lawrence this fall. Pam Houston, coordinator of the Student Employment Center, said yesterday.
Last spring the Kansas Legislature allocated $30,000 to the University of Kansas for the
Academic Building.
TO BE FLUBIGIBLE for the jobs, students must qualify for the federal College Work-Study program, she said. Students can apply for work-study status by completing a Family Financial Statement, available at the office of financial aid in Strong Hall.
She said the $89,000 would be used to subsidize local employers who create career-oriented jobs for KU students.
Mark Tallman, executive director of the Associated Students of Kansas, said the program would subsidize jobs related to any area of college study.
THIS SPRING the Legislature allocated money for the program to all Regents institute and provide staff training.
The financial aid and business offices at each of the institutions have been working with the Regents to establish guidelines for the program, he said.
The program is modeled after a similar
program in Washington state, he said, and several other states have adopted, or are
Marvin Burris, associate budget director for the Regents, said that each university would administer its own funds for the program. However, uniform guidelines were established so that students at all the schools would have an equal opportunity under the program.
Any private or non-profit business or organization, or any public agency in Kansas, can participate in the off-campus program, he said. THE STATE WILL MATCH half of the student's salary if he is paid the federal minimum wage, but, he said, individual schools may use the state funds to match a higher salary.
Tallman thinks the program will create jobs in the business community.
"Now an employer could afford to pay two student employees for what it has cost him to pay."
The program is meant to create new jobs, Tallman said, not give someone else's job to a student. Holders of full-time jobs are not likely to be held in this program because it only supports part-time jobs.
Houston said the office of financial aid would send letters publicizing the program to local businesses in a couple of weeks. The office has an email list of few calls from interested employers, she said.
KU officials study proposal to issue common final exams
Staff Renorter
By GUELMA ANDERSON
Students who think they can transfer college credit in English or math to the University of Kansas and get out of taking English 101 or Math 102 must complete an upcoming year, according to a University official.
Michael Young, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, said yesterday that to assure uniform standards the Dean's Task Force on General Education was discussing the possibility of common finals for all KU students who take basic English or math courses.
*STUDENTS WHO TAKE English 101 or
English 123 elsewhere have difficulties in other
areas.*
"Students say that they hear 10) is hard, well it
is hard because we want to ensure a high fidelity
Michael Johnson, director of freshman-sophomore English, said that a common final was a good idea but that it would be hard to handle.
"The University has never done anything quite like that," he said, "Trying to get all the students from different schools together to take the exam would be difficult."
Johnson said that he hoped the task force would suggest strengthening the English program's remedial courses so that they would available to more students.
He said that he also would like to see English 101 become a more intensive writing course.
IN ADDITION TO ENGLISH, the task force is discussing the possibility of a common final
Charles Himmelberg, chairman of the department of mathematics, said that sometimes basic math courses at other universities were not as demanding as they were here.
The tank force is comprised of 14 faculty members and students from several departments within the College, he said, and will be able to take a fall to the dean and the College's departments.
He said that the review would be finished this spring.
Young said that the task force was part of an overall review that began last fall of the year.
"Students would take courses in Eastern Civilization or Black Studies along with Western Civilization because you get a better perspective on the world that way." he said.
Young said that the task force also was interested in increasing the number of faculty members.
"If a student really needs to take another course, such as calculus or statistics, the final grade is determined by taking the class."
He said that 15 faculty members taught the honors sections, but that teacher assistant Janice Avery was the only one.
Student uses computer idea to improve film production
THE TASK FORCE also is discussing the development of complementary courses in the
SEAVER AGREED, saying that more faculty should teach other sections and that he wanted Western Civilization to become a core requirement for every school in the University.
Staff Writer
Complementary courses would broaden the many topics now addressed in Western Civi-
By PAT COONEY Staff Writer
Animation photography at a local film production company is easier and costs less now because a part-time KU student programmed a computer to take over some of the manual work of photographing individual drawings.
"It could save the student from the unpleasantness of flunking a calculus or statistics course."
Roger Holden, 31, Lawrence senior, said Wednesday that he programmed an Atari home computer to control "robotic" motors that position the individual drawings and camera used in making animated films.
"The course would give everyone a better idea of where they come from." he said.
HE ALSO HELPED DESIGN the computer hardware that links the Atari computer to the existing camera system at the film company, Centron Corp. Inc., 1621 W. 9th St.
Before Holden devised his system for Centron, he said, each position of the camera or the drawings had to be set manually by turning cranks.
"It cuts down the time required for animation photography by as much as a half," Holden said. "One second of animated film requires the filming of about 25 individual drawings."
The whole project cost about $5,000. Holden, a communications major, said.
"It would have cost $35,000 to $40,000 if they had purchased it on the road," he said.
THE EFFECT OF ZOOMING is achieved by
the camera up or down, he said,
and
panning is accomplished by moving the drawing left or right.
Loren Dolezal, director of animation photography at Centron, said that he could now do a
new production.
"We can do filmographs quicker than before," Dolezal said. "Before we might do three a day. Now we can do eight to 12 a day."
"Each motor is controlled by a translator," he said, "which responds to impulses from the computer."
"The program he is working on now will enable us to use more motors," he said.
HOLDEN'S SYSTEM NOW uses three motors to make position adjustments, Dolezal said. More motors would allow a wider variety of positions for both the camera and drawings.
Holden, who works at the audio-visual center in Lippincott Hall, said although he became involved with Centron quite by accident, he had been interested in computers since 1976.
Dolezal said the new photographic system was only the start.
Before getting into films, he said, he was trying to duplicate the exact sound of a Stradivarius violin with a computer. He said that he succeeded in synthesizing tones but that lack
Holden said after he told Dolezal he worked
**ANIMATE** page 5
About two years ago, Holden said, he called Centron to get information about film processing and was referred to Dolezal.
PARTING LANDWOW
Roger Holden, Lawrence senior, works at a computer that he Dolezal, director of animated photography at Centron, works with programed to control an animation camera for Centron Inc. Loren the camera.
-
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, July 29, 1983
News Briefs From United Press International
Aid to Nicaraguans cut off; Reagan loses House battle
WASHINGTON — The House, in a rebuke of President Reagan's Central American policy, voted 228-195 last night to halt U.S. covert aid to anti-government rebels in Nicaragua.
Amendments were offered to a Democratic-sponsored bill intended to halt what administration critics charged is a U.S.-sponsored invasion of Nicaragua by anti-Sandinista insurgents.
The dramatic series of votes came amid growing concern in Congress about the increasing U.S. military presence in the troubled region where Reagan has dispatched ground troops and naval battle groups to carry out maneuvers.
One of the final amendments — offered by Democratic leader Jim Wright of Texas — restored original provisions of the bill to order a halt to the covert aid and openly provide $30 million to friendly Central American governments to use in halting arms shipments to any
The amendment also called on Reagan to work with the Organization of American States to resolve the conflict in Central America.
While Soviet military supply ships were en route to Nicaragua and a U.S. naval flotilla steamed offshore, Latin American foreign ministers gathered in Panama City yesterday for crucial talks on peace efforts in Central America.
U. S. presidential envoy Richard Stone arrived in Costa Rica from Honduras, pressing his third diplomatic shuttle in a bid to defuse tensions sparked by the Salvadoran civil war and attacks by Goncalo Nicaraguan rebels trying to topple the leftist Managua government.
Assembled for the meeting in Panama City were foreign ministers from Mexico, Colombia, Venezuela, Panama, Costa Rica, Honduras, El Salvador, Nicaragua and Guatemala. They are to conduct a preliminary session and a full meeting today.
WASHINGTON — Congress voted yesterday to kill tax withholding on interest and dividends, and Republican leaders said they were assured by the White House that President Reagan would sign the repeal legislation.
Congress repeals withholding plan
The Senate and House, vote against the controversial tax program in overwhelming numbers, acted just one week before the Treasury introduced a plan.
Although the bill would repeal the withholding statute, it also calls for tougher taxpayer reporting requirements of interest and dividend income and "backup" withholding for those who fail to report or under report that income.
A spokesman said the White House had assured Congress that Reagan would sign the measure, which he earlier opposed, because it also included his Caribbean Basin Initiative, a package of tax and trade incentives for 27 friendly nations in the region.
Midwest continues to sweat it out
The second round of an oppressive wave scorched the Plains and Midwest yesterday with record-breaking temperatures as the death toll rose.
The nation's midsection suffered under temperatures that soared past 100 degrees. Scorers in Kansas included 106 at Medicine Lake, 105 at Garden City and 104 at Wichita. Kansas City hit a record 103. The state experienced one weather-related death since the heat wave moved in two weeks ago.
Seventeen other states also have reported deaths, including Kentucky with 44, Missouri with 40, Illinois 23, Indiana 16, Georgia 14, Tennessee 11, North Carolina 9, Iowa four, Alabama, Florida and South Dakota, Oklahoma, Ohio, Minnesota, Maryland, New York and Arkansas one each.
Forecasters blamed the renewed heat on hot air pushed from the Southwest into the Midwest by the jet stream.
Poles enact law to oppose dissent
WARSAW, Poland — The Polish parliament approved legislation yesterday to stiffen censorship and authorize jail terms for anti-government activism, turning the end of martial law into a crackdown on dissent.
Three penal code amendments authorize 3-year jail terms for Poles convicted of belonging to an illegal organization — such as Solidarity — for leading an illegal demonstration or for displaying anti-regime posters or graffiti.
A new law allows examination of scientific publications, trade union bulletins and exhibitions so that "publications in use cannot affect the results of research."
Unlike many of the two-year regulations passed July 20, the laws passed yesterday will stay on the books permanently as a cornerstone of the regime's effort to check dissent.
Workers' wage raises at record low
WASHINGTON — Union contracts negotiated during the first half of 1983 gave workers first-year wage increases averaging less than 1 percent, a record low, the Labor Department reported yesterday.
The department said the primary reason the wage increases were low was that steel workers and some construction workers accepted wage increases.
The Labor Department also reported that new claims for state unemployment benefits rose for the first time in nearly a month in mid-July.
The department said that the increase in new claims were an indication the steady slide in the nation's jobless rate may be stalled. Initial claims are considered a key barometer of job market health because they reflect new entrants on the jobless rolls.
U.S. announces Soviet grain pact
WASHINGTON — The Reagan administration announced a new long-term grain agreement with the Soviet Union yesterday that guarantees up to $2 billion in Kremlin purchases from U.S. farmers in each of the next five years.
The agreement calls for higher minimum and maximum purchases than a previous agreement that expires Sept. 30 of this year.
Corporation averts NPR bankruptcy
WASHINGTON — National Public Radio and the Corporation for Public Broadcasting agreed yesterday on an $8.5 million government loan and other steps to avert financial collusion of the radio network.
The compromise ensures that NPR, struggling with a $9.1 million deficit, will meet its Friday payroll that hinged on successful negotiations for a rescue plan. Telephone and rent bills for the network's plush downtown Washington headquarters are also overdue.
The letter of intent between NPR and the corporation, which distributes federal funds to public radio and television stations, includes transfer of ownership of the network's distribution equipment to three trustees. The names of the trustees were not announced.
Chancellor guards more than University
By MICHAEL PAUL
That's one way that Chancellor Gene A. Budig described his job as chief of staff for the Kansas Air National Guard.
Budig was appointed to the position July 1 to replace Brig Gen. William S. McCormick.
Staff Reporter
"THE AIR NATIONAL GUARD and the Air Force Reserve both play an important role in support of the United States Air Force," he said. "They are available to the country in a national or international emergency."
"It provides a great escape."
But Burd, a colonel who has been a member of Air National Guard organizations for more than 20 years, also is an important part of the nation's defense.
Budig said that, as chief of staff, he would help coordinate the activities of more than 2,000 Air National Guardsmen in Kansas and of two large flying groups — one at Forbes Field in Topeka and the other McConnell Air Force Base in Wichita.
The Topeka group, which is assigned to the Strategic Air Command, flies the KC-133, a large tanker plane that refuels aircraft.
"THE WICHTHA GROUP is the largest F-4 organization in the Air National Guard." Budd said. "It is at the forefront of the Air National Guard are trained."
The Wichita group flies the F-4 "Phantom" fighters and is part of the Tactical Air Command.
Budig said, however, that he was not a pilot.
"But as chief of staff," he said, "I'll
do in a KC-135 during refueling
missile."
Col. Rex Bartlow, support personnel management officer for the Army Medical Corps.
The job requires one weekend a day, 15 days of special training each year.
the chief of staff was a part-time position.
BARTLW SAIED THAT Budget received $116 daily for 63 days, which amounts to $7,308, and that on weekends costs $5,924. A day's pay for four hours training,
Budig he joined the Air National Guard because he had a great interest in aviation.
The Air National Guard, Budig, sad
has more than 100,000 members na-
Energy meters to be installed on campus
Facilities Operations will shut off utilities during parts of August throughout the campus in order to install energy monitoring meters.
Dick Perkins, associate director for utility management, said that water and electric meters would be installed so much energy each building used.
The following is a schedule of the utility shutdowns in August.
University Relations Building - 1
- Aug. 1
- Aug 2
Water: Strong Hall West Wing and Center of Building — 8 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Water: Strong Hall East Wing - 8 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Electric. Stauffer-Flint Hall — 8 a.m. to 12 p.m.
Electric. Chancellor's Residence — 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
- Aug. 4
Electric: Nuclear Reactor Building 15.4
Water: Lindley Hall - 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Electric; Blake Hall - 8 a.m. to 12
Spooner-Thayer Hall - 1 p.m. to 5
Water: Robinson Center — 8 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Low water pressure: Malott Hall,
Watkins Hospital: 8 a.m. to 3 a.m.
Haworth Hall, Endocrine
Psychology Lab - 8 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Electric: Learned Hall, West Wing except for rooms 216, 218, 218A, 219, 221, and 231 - a. m. to 12 p.m.
Learned Hall, East Eaglewing except
the Tower Section 1 p.m. to 5 p.m.
2 p.m. to 5 p.m.
water: Murphy Hall - 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Military Science - 8 a.m. to 3 p.m.
• Aug. 9
Watkins Hospital = 8 a.m. to 2 p.
Electric: Dyche Museum, North
Vancouver
Water: Dyche Museum, South Building 4.2 m to 13.9 m.
Haworth Hall, Malot Hall, Robinson
Gymnastics, Watkins
Hospital —
Dyche Museum, North Building — 1 p.m. to 5 p.m.
- Aug. 10
Water: Snow Hall - 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
* Aug. 12
Water: Watson Library — 8 a.m. to 3 p.m.
COFFEE SHOP
Water: Nuclear Reactor — 8 a.m. to 5 m.
Taco Via Expires 10/10 BOWL OF NACHOS $1.64 Regular Price
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Open late
Open late every night
---
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Funded by student activity fee.
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If you detect an odor you think may be natural gas-
Safety Hints from your gas company.
OFF
(1) Open windows and doors to dilute the air to a safe level
(2) Can I aid or advice from the gas company or fire department or police department
(1) Open windows and odors if outside the air is safe later.
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(3) If the odor appears to be very strong, leave the house or building immediately. Go to a telephone and notify the gas company—do not turn on any electrical appliances, including light switches.
(4) When the problem is solved, have a qualified person from the gas company, plumbing or climate control firms relight appliance.
(5) In the event a leak is detected anywhere outside of a building notify the gas company immediately and describe the location and approximate level of the odor—a quick check of the area made to determine the problem and corrective action needed.
If you have any questions please contact our office.
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University Daily Dally Kansan, July 29, 1983
Page 3
Blood bank safe, official says
By DAVID E. SHAY
Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
The blood banking technique used in Douglas County and at Lawrence Memorial Hospital is as safe a system as it can possibly be, according to the Douglas County Chapter of the American Red Cross.
JoAnna Byers, executive director of the chapter, said "My feeling is that I believe in the power of the human spirit."
BYERS SAID THAT when a potential donor first registered, he had to fill out a questionnaire that covered his medical background. The donor's vital signs also are checked to make sure his system can handle the blood loss.
With the recent AIDS scare, the Red Cross now has incorporated a special set of questions to screen people that may have AIDS, she said.
Byers said that because the system was strictly voluntary, the donor would have nothing to gain by not filling out the questionnaire truthfully.
"We rarely come across anything where people aren't telling the truth," she said. "We have to rely on people's honesty."
The local Red Cross, which collects blood twice a year on campus, sends the blood on the day it is collected to hospitals and to determine whether it can be used.
THE LAB THEN TYPES the blood and runs tests to determine if the blood contains clotting factors.
venereal disease. Byers said that the test for hepatitis was 80 percent accurate.
According to a lab technician at LMH, the hospital rechecks the 125 pints it receives every month from the blood banks for the type and RHI factor in the blood.
Byers said that there were several ways blood could be contaminated and cause the recipient damage. The conditions of the transfusion and the way the blood is handled can lead to a problem for the patient.
The local Red Cross, which collects 1600 pints of blood each year, works with major employers in the area to find donors. Byers said.
SHE SAID THAT this encouraged people to give blood regularly. Although blood donations are down 17 percent, the number of chapters has not felt much of the effect.
"We have a very stable donor population," she said.
On campus, Byers said that a vast number of the donors had never given blood before.
Probably 75 percent of all the donors at a university will be new donors.
Byers said that the regulation of the bank banking system made it a very difficult task.
"I think it is a very well regulated system," she said. "I think it is as safe
Energy issues to be explored
Two meetings concerning energy will be held in Topeka in August; one dealing with low income energy assist with the other with natural gas legislation.
On Aug. 2, the Department of Social and Rehabilitation Services will give Lawrence residents a chance to offer their opinions and ideas on the federally funded Low Income Energy Assistance Program.
The program is designed to help people, including the elderly, disabled or in special circumstances.
guidelines, who are not able to meet utility costs.
A telephone conference hook-up in Lawrence will be available to the public at 9 a.m. at the SRS office at 619 E. 9th Street.
U. S. Rep. Jim Slattery, R-Kan., a congressman from the 2nd District, will conduct congressional hearings on natural gas legislation beginning at 9 a.m. on Aug. 9th in the old Supreme Court Building. It will be the first hearing held this year in Topeka by the Fossil Fuels Subcommittee.
By ED GROM Staff Reporter
KU orienteering moves to the city
Orientering — the sport that combines cross country running and the ability to read a map — has gone urban in Lawrence for the summer.
Student Union Activities has taken a sport that normally uses a wilderness setting as its playing field and moved it into the streets of Lawrence and the KU campus for two events earlier this month and another at the end of August.
INSTEAD of SCHEDULING orienteering events in the wooded areas of Clinton Lake, SUA sponsored events on West Campus June 12 and at Haskell Junior College July 17. The campus KuU campus is scheduled for Aug. 28.
"We usually hold events in wooded areas around Clinton Lake or other park sites, but we decided to try the summer in Lawrence." We said this summer in Lawrence. "We saw him."
Gene Wee, SUA orientering director, said that the change to the urban area was due to the surroundings of Lawrence.
"We used areas like West Campus and Haskell because the surroundings are more pleasant during the summer.
"The wooded areas would make for
a lot of bites and poison ivy and we don't want that. Orienteering is a growing sport and we would like for people to enjoy it and want to try it again."
MORE THAN 15 PEOPLE participated in the event on West Campus and another 25 competed at Haskell, Wee said.
"Summer is not a good time of the year to run orienting events," Wee said. "There aren't many students in town and interest is down. But for the people who still like it, we have these events to keep them enforced."
In orientering, the person who follows a given course correctly in the least amount of time is the winner, he said. Control markers are placed at spots along the trail and marked on a man.
"In the fall we use dead trees, stumps, rocks and other things for our control markers." Wee said. "In the fall we can keep grass areas and that as markers.
"It IS DIFFERENT, but it is still challenging. We have a beginners course and a harder course for the more experienced people."
"True, cross country running is a big part of the events, but the catch is that the fastest runner doesn't always win the race." We said. "You have to
Orienteering is more than just running. Wee said.
read the map correctly and follow your compass. The sharp runner will beat the fast one."
Orientediee came to KU in 1976 when several students from the eastern United States promoted the sport at KU. Wee said.
Orientete became an organized club at KU in 1977 when it became affiliated with the U.S. Orientete Association.
Since then KU students have competed in state and national events.
KU EARNED DISTINCTION in the U.S. Orienteering Association this year when the team won the College Orienteering Championships in upstate New York. KU defeated the defending champion, U.S. Military Academy of West Point, N.Y., in the finals.
"It was quite a thrill because we beat them in their own back yard," Wee said. "I hope winning a big event can draw more interest in the area."
"We are fortunate to have a very dedicated and competitive chapter of the USOA here at KU." Wee said. "Not only do the KU club members compete in national events, they help out around the community with events such as the ones we run in the summer."
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan, July 29; 1983
Opinion
Ruling fixes sticky mess
We're always being told that baseball is a game of inches. A pitcher may just miss the strike zone, or a batted ball drops just inside the foul line.
George Brett and the Kansas City Royals are involved in a new twist to this game of inches — how far can the pine tar be on the bat and what should the umpires do about it.
In last Friday's game against the New York Yankees, Brett hit a two-out, two-run homer to put the Royals ahead 5-4. But Billy Martin, Yankees' manager, came out to talk with the umpires. Maybe Brett missed a base and Martin was bringing this blunder to the umpire's attention. No, it had to do with the amount of pine tar on Brett's bat.
The official rules, in part, state: "The bat handle, for not more than 18 inches from the end, may be covered or treated with any material to improve the grip." Unfortunately, Brett's bat did indeed have more than 18 inches of pine tar.
This being the case, the rules state that the bat should be removed from the game. The umpires in this case
also included another rule. "A batter is out for illegal action when he uses or attempts to use a bat that, in the ampire's judgement, has been altered or tampered with in such a way to improve the distance or cause an unusual reaction on the baseball."
We do not believe that a hitter of Brett's caliber needs a substance to improve his batting average. It would also appear that American League President Lee MacPhail thinks the same. Yesterday, MacPhail upheld the Royal's protest of the game.
Instead of a loss, the game has been suspended and will be made up at a later date.
It would be too easy to put the blame on the umpires, or think that the umpires had it in for the Royals. In this case, the umpires based their decision on how they interpreted the rules. It should be remembered that the game is based on judgment as well as skill and inches.
We would like to think that the rules will be clarified on this matter. A game should be won or lost because of the ability of the teams involved.
SANDINISTA ON THE ROOF!
POW POW KABOOM!
LEFTIST BEHIND THE WATER TROUGH!
KATOONG KATOONG KATOONG!
Pow Pow KABOOM!
SANDINISTA ON THE ROOF!
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©1982
MARCUS HENDERSON
Stateside visit filled with ups, downs
The past two years at the University of Kansas went by a shot. They were the fastest two years of my life and now I'm equipped with a degree and am homeward bound.
It seems that I landed at John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York City just a few months ago, eager for an enriching and rewarding experience. I can remember feeling lost in the hustle and bustle of the airport, faced with unhelpful TWA officials. The air controllers' strike was at its peak and my flight to Kansas City had been cancelled. I was confronted with having to find shelter for the night in the big city of New York.
Making an SOS call to a friend seemed like a momentous task because I didn't know how to use the pay phones. I was still getting used to American money. Hailing a taxi forced images of mugging, rape and plain old murder through my mind. But it all worked out in the end and I am now living in New York, driving through Manhattan and enjoying the lights from the Empire State building.
It has been a learning experience ever since. All on my own, in a land, 7,000 miles away, I think I have done well for myself. From the frightened foreign stage, I quickly graduated to a state of more confidence. The butterflies in my stomach appeared as I wisered up to the ways of life here.
Traveling to a different country does that to you. You are forced to learn things about yourself and there is no family to hide behind.
You learn quickly and you learn well. The initial weeks of every foreign student are the most difficult. Feeling extremely homeick and alone in this wide world, students go through the why-dl-come-here stage. A few disappointments only reinforce the feeling.
Frequent visits to the Foreign Student Office in Strong Hall help. At first it seems that they are the only set of officials who understand your plight and whom you can trust. To find solace,
SEEMA SIROHI
foreign students often turn to others from their own country. Having found the right clique, they feel slightly more at ease. Life soon becomes a busy cycle of trying to open a bank account, gathering security number, making regular visits to the job board in Strong Hall and writing letters home.
Once out of this phase, I started to enjoy life a little more. Classes and grades became an acceptable part of days at KU and all the pressure and stress made the weekends something to look forward to. The awe of being in one of the top journalism schools subsided and
the erudite professors walking the corridors of
that Hall have more accessible. And thus
they are depicted by Fy.
I remember spending my first Christmas in America in that North Pole they mistakenly refer to as Minneapolis. Having never been to the Himalayas in the winter at home, tackling Minnesota weather in December almost bordered on adventure. Many inches of snow and a frozen Mississippi were just some of the buildings built for it, as part of the Minnesota initiation rites. Thankfully, a big Christmas feast awaited my "damped" spirits.
While traveling within the United States, I met some of the most memorable people. I remember the couple from Missouri who saved us in the Smokey Mountains by letting us camp in their camping area. Our food had been stolen by bears and they not only fed us but they also ate our vegetables. We exchanged facts about India on the way and parted with a promise to correspond.
Those promises to correspond are accumulating as time draws near to leave KU, which was home for two years. I tried desperately to capture people and moments on film but, like all imitations, it won't be the "real thing." Photographs are merely an appendage to a higher feeling, and friends and experiences here will always remain a part of my future.
Leaving America means another beginning in my life and I am looking forward to it.
Mr. Moneybags isn't welcome in this bank
By FRED FERGUSON
United Press International
NEW YORK — When the banks won't take your money, it must mean something.
It's not paranoid. We just don't think they reduct't
want our money. They're really拒到 tau.
tai.
Take what happened the other day. We were in trouble from the start. The guard watched with acute suspicion. We were lugging this big plastic bag.
He kept watching during the writing of a deposit slip and the slip to the teller's cage. The contents of that plastic shopping bag — actually two, one inside the other because of the
weight — were plopped on the counter in front of the teller. Trump, thump, thump.
Our favorite friendly people's bank teller let a uplift before filing off to check on us at the bank.
"Harry," she said to the guard, "why do you do this to me? Didn't you see what he was talking about?"
She counted: 19 rolls pennies — $9.50; 10 rolls nickels — $20; 4 rolls dimes — $20; 3 rolls quarters — $30. In all, $79.50, the product of a lot of careful hardening.
"You shouldn't do this," she went on. "You're hurting circulation."
said. "We'll have to debit you if it comes out wrong."
The experience left us with a feeling we should try another method. Perhaps we should buy something with all that money we occasionally bring the bank. But we've tried that before. It upsets cashiers. They don't like our kind of money any more than bank tellers.
Eventually, our deposit book was returned almost reluctantly. The fact it showed a higher balance, after all, might encourage such an action. But inadmision about coming in earlier next time.
"You know we can't count this today," she
We felt hurt.
Slowly an idea is dawning. Our money must not be the right kind. Only paper money is in our hands. Money is a tool.
AS LONG AS IT HAD TO BE REPAIRED, THEY THOUGHT IT SHOULD ACCURATELY REFLECT IMMIGRATION POLICY.
Unexpected note from I.R.S. sends taxpayer into a panic
I'm not at all sure that some of our governmental bodies are performing as well as they could, or should. Now that may seem like a generally noted observation. And, indeed, it would be impossible for all of the organizations, groups, etc., within the government to work perfectly.
On the other hand, some instances are ridiculous.
The other day I received a rather serious-looking envelope which caused me to panic — not only the size, but the contents.
WARREN BRIDGES
rather, panic because the return address read,
"Internal Revenue Service."
I am not a millionaire, for that matter, even a thousandaire. In fact, the occasion is rare that I receive an amount more than $100,000.
My assets include a car, if it can be called
I've named it Pokey. The name more than
speaks.
I also own a stereo system. The repairmen also seem to like it, as they often see more of it than I do.
So why would the IRS be interested in me?
In a kind of frightening, grudging manner, I openly
suggest that I should be
"The first two words I noticed were "incorrect"
and "missing."
and "missing."
This didn't appear to be just another random questionnaire about how I feel about paying taxes. That would have been simple.
The letter went on to say something about a problem with something in my file. That could be bad news or good news. Perhaps it caught on the headline and somehow became switched with a millionaire's.
tax return for money I never made or owe a huge amount of money I don't have.
I figured either I was going to receive a huge
"Please help us verify your name." "Now that made a lot of sense. The IRS seemed confident enough of my name in the past to make it happen within a portion of my paychecks twice a month.
But the most odd thing was that the envelope which I received, directly from the IRS, had my name on it.
"In the box below marked Correction Information, enter your . . . name, and any former names."
That's easy enough. My parents gave me only one name at the time of my birth.
In an effort to find out, I called the toll-free number listed in the letter, apparently for people who face such dilemmas.
The letter also asked for something I didn't quite understand — my "taxpayer identifying number." I wonder if I didn't give it to them, whether I would no longer be considered a taxpayer, which would mean that I wouldn't have to pay taxes.
After receiving a busy signal for an entire day, I was ready to toast the form where I thought it would be.
But there was something quite important looking about this particular letter, so I called the number the next day and, surprisingly, received an answer.
The sweet-sounding voice at the other end of the line told me the form was, indeed, important.
But when I asked her what the IRS did with the number, she said she did not know. I can understand that. I mean, just because she answers a toll-free number, designed to answer questions, is certainly no reason for her to know what the IRS does with "taxpayer identification numbers," or as I later discovered, Social Security numbers.
Now that would have been easy. They should have just asked for it.
As for my name, well, I hope they get that
right. I'd hate to get someone else's tax return.
Turn the page, take a sip and drive
The man in the next car is drumming on the steering wheel as we wait for the light at 9th and Iowa, southbound. His stereo is so loud I can hear it through the closed, tinted windows of his Cordoba. It is playing Wagner's "Ride of the Valyries."
ed, air-conditioned world and is about to spruft Viking horns out of his head.
The man is dangerous. He is in his own seclud-
HARRY MALLIN
[Name]
The light turns green and he cracks his whip on the backs of his horses. The man is a nomadic hero, off to save Brunhilda and get his oil changed.
It's amazing how four panes of glass can close
us off from reality. Behind their mock safety, we play with our noses, sing along with Milech and the rest of the band.
Haven't we all done it? Grooming activities we'd never do in public, we perform at a stoplight without batting an eye. Some people who wouldn't dare harm the National Anthem at a Royal's game, belt out "Cat Scratch Fever" as it comes on the radio of their Nova.
I've seen it all. A lady next to me in her Subaru is watching "Days of our Livet" on a small, dashboard-mounted television. She is applying eye makeup with one hand, drinking coffee out of a Renee traveler's mug in the other hand and using it with her knee. At least I hope she's steering.
The man in the Volkswagen on my left is reading "War and Peace." He is munching on a doughnut in his left hand and I can see a small crab in his mouth acutely on the edge of his seat between his feet.
I hate to think what the man behind me in the back truck is doing. Was that my imagination or a real life?
The University Daily KANSAN
The University Daily Kansas (USPB 650-646) is published at the University of Kansas. 118 Flint students will attend during the regular school year and Wednesday and Friday during the summer vacations, each offering a free class or two credit hours at Lawrence Ks. 6844. Subscriptions to are $18 for six months or $24 for seven months paid through the student activity mail. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to the U.SPB Office of Student Services, 950 East Sixth Street, Lawrence Ks. 6844.
Janet Murphy
Business Manager
Laurie Samelson
Advertising Adviser and General Manager News Adviser
John Oberzan
Mike Kauitseh
University Daily Kansan, July 29, 1983
Page 5
I
Downtown
From page 1
of potential revenue for the proposed redevelopment include utility revenue bonds, street improvement bonds, Community Development bonds and community investment bonds. Action Grant and tax increment financing
The city's share of the project's cost has been estimated at $18 million.
IF LAWRENCE RESIDENTS were to vote against the use of general obligation bonds, Palos said, the city would either have to
According to Paley, the city has not yet looked into alternatives to the proposed general election.
discontinue the project or find some other way of
paving for that part of the proposal.
Another way to pay for the proposed project would be a voluntary, self-supported benefit package.
That plan would tax downtown property owners, in order to pay for part of the project.
district financing were used, the people in the district would have the right to file a protest petition.
Allen Loyd, city analyst, said that if benefit
Commissioner Ernest Angino said at Tuesday's commission meeting that if the downtown property owners voted to oppose a proposed district, he would vote to discontinue development.
Angino supports the project along with commissioners Howard Hill and Nancy Shontz. Without Angino's support, the project could be discontinued.
Longhurst and Amyx voted to discontinue the project earlier this month.
SHONTZ, HOWEVER, said that if the city were unable to help finance the project with a self-supported benefit district, it should look for some other way to do so.
Palos said that it was possible for the city to find a means of financing the project that would not require the general public to be taxed and therefore would not require voter approval.
He said that an example of such a situation would be if the city could make it attractive for
private investors to finance downtown redevelopment.
Longhurst, however, said he doubted that such a plan could be found
"I can't see this project being implemented without significant public expense" he said.
Longhurst also said that he and one members of the commission would not let the downtown project begin without some kind of indication that the public wanted it.
"People will have the opportunity to vote," Longhurst said.
Animate
From page 1
with computers. "He asked me if I knew how to program a home computer to control robotic arms."
"After about a month I figured it out," he said.
HOLDEN SAID THAT he and Dolezal figured out what hardware they needed to connect the computer with small motors that positioned the camera and subject.
Holden said they made a proposal to the company and it was accepted.
Holden has received no money for his work but does retain the design rights for the system and is applying for a copyright for the computer program.
Fourteen episodes were produced for the series, titled "Reading Rainbow," which PBS designed to teach youngsters to enjoy reading, he said. Actor LeVar Burton serves as host of the series, and the stories are narrated by notables such as Bill Cosby and James Earl Jones.
The first big test for the system came when Centron contracted to produce animated versions of well-known children's books for the Public Broadcasting System, Holden said.
not have been able to submit a bid that would have met the producer's time and budget
"THE COMPUTER ALLOWED Centro to take on this huge animation project by making it cost-justifiable," Holden said. "Without the animation computer, Centrob probably would
"If they filmed the animated series manually without my computer system, it would have taken up to twice as long to film and it would not have been finished in time." Holden said.
Holden said he has formed a company to sell his invention nationally while also setting his thoughts more on working with big-time film production in the future.
"I am now more interested in pursuing a career, he said. "I might break away and head
Coordinator sought for mental health
Watkins Memorial Hospital is seeking a psychiatrist to fill the position of mental health services coordinator, a hospital administrator said yesterday.
Jim Strobil, acting director of the hospital,
said, however, that the new coordinator probably would not take over until the spring semester.
"We're advertising in professional journals. That's why the deadline is so far off because it takes until mid-August for the ads to get in," he said.
Watkins will advertise in national psychiatric journals to draw applicants, Strobl said. The deadline for applications is Nov. 1.
Strobl said that a screening committee would pare the list of applicants to three. These psychiatrists would then be invited for an on-campus interview.
The screening and affirmative action procedures probably will be completed at the end of the year.
"Based on that, we'll have the person here in mid-January when school starts rolling in."
He said that the position of psychiatrist opened when Sidney Schroeeder, coordinator for the Mental Health Services, retired July 1.
Dean Kerkman, a psychologist at the ser-
vice of the firm, said in a new pa-
ychiatrist is hired. Srobi said.
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PUBLIC NOTICE STEREO WHOLESALE PRICES
The Gramophone Shop offers any single purchaser every major brand of audio product at wholesale pricing. Wholesale purchasers are entitled to full factory-authorized service. It is the purchaser's responsibility to transport any wholesale product to the manufacturer's warranty station. Often, this is what many stores call "service."
The Gramophone Shop Wholesale Division is unique in that you can purchase at or below so-called "sale" prices at any time and yet receive better service than mail order houses. You can receive your equipment immediately, in factory-sealed cartons; the units are not demos or factory dumps. You know what you are getting and you can get it now!
KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREO GRAMOPHONE SHOP HOLIDAY PLAZA
Page 6
University Daily Kansan. July 29,1983
Karma group studies past lives
By MELISSA BAUMAN
Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
Blaming tests, beer or parents for frequent headaches may be focusing the blame in the wrong direction, according to a believer in reincarnation.
One cause of headaches, said Ruth Davis, founder and president of the Association for the Study of Karina, is a chemical in your head was cut off in a previous life.
DAVIS SAID YESTERDAY that a person's former lives affected his present life — the basic principle of karma — as in the case of one man who was a victim of an insult and that his headaches were caused by his decapitation in a previous life.
The association, which Davis operates from her real estate office in Tulsa, Okla., plans to establish a chapter in all 50 states, she said.
Davis said that she would like to establish a group in a university town in Kansas and that she was considering Lawrence.
Two Lawrence women who are interested in psychic phenomena said that they had mixed feelings about the group group would succeed in Lawrence.
One of the women, Jo Anderson, 1402 New York St., said that she thought there would be people interested in the groom if it started in Lawrence.
THE OTHER WOMAN, Penny Hemphill, 1217 Tennessee St., said she was not sure whether Lawrence psychics would respond.
"I'm aware that Lawrence has a fairly large psychic community, but I don't know whether or not there are people with it," she said.
Davis said that the non-profit organization was chartered October 1, 1982, and
that it had 250 members on its mailing list.
About 25 members of the group meet on Friday nights at Davis' home in Tulsa, she said, for sessions in psychic development. Members do this through phone calls and online video that necklace that have vibrations from the person to whom the object belongs.
The group sometimes conducts seances at the meetings, Davis said.
SHE SAID THAT at last Friday's seance she received an image of the name "Butterball." Although the name meant nothing to Davis, another member of the group once owned a dog named Butterball and claimed that her dead father was using this signal to contact her.
Davis said that she had discovered four of her former lives.
"One lifetime I know about from my own hypnotic regression. The rest of them are from people I have put under my care. I have told me about them." Davis said.
She said that she had hypnotized six people who told her that she was part of the war.
Davis said that she was once a nun in Medieval England.
"A METHODIST MINISTER'S WIFE sent me back through that time, and I saw on a floor and knew that I had been burned on the stomach because I had been pregnant," she said. "I knew that they had given the baby to the knight who had made me pregnant."
Davis said that she had also discovered that she had been a priestess in the Temple of the Sun in Babylon, that she had been a member of a harem in Syria and that she had lived in colonial America.
DAVIS SAID THAT everyone had psychic abilities but that the ability was more developed in some people than in others. She said, however, that with practice a person's psychic abilities could be developed to a higher degree.
that the psychic could help find the person.
When Davis performs hypnosis, she said, she records the conversation because the person hypnotized may forget details.
"I've hypnotized some people who didn't believe in reincarnation," she said. "One lady came in for weight loss. I asked her if she'd like to go back in."
"All of a sudden she was watching a dog and a pony in a fire."
Davis said that there were many ministers from different religions, including catholicism, presbyterianism and unitarianism, in the group and that these people found no conflict between their religion and reincarnation.
She said that reincarction theorized that a person has former lives. Karma says that these previous lives affect the person's present life.
Reincarnationist think that a person makes his own heaven or hell, Davis said, and that the time between lives is for the spirit to rest and grow.
"EVERYBODY BELIEVES the way they want to believe, plus they believe that you should."
She said that the group's members thought that souls were energy that returned to Earth to be used again. She does not know whether God creates new souls.
"don't try to limit God. Nobody has any idea how many souls there are," she said.
Spencer museum shows sketches of sculptures
But is it art?
That has been the question raised by the "Salina Piece," a 40-ton black steel sculpture that was donated to the University of Kansas two years ago.
It was intended to be displayed on a grassy triangle bordered by 18th and Indiana streets and Sunflower Road. The unassembled sculpture was placed at the site in September 1881, but was never assembled.
IT WAS PUT IN STORAGE on West Campus in November of year after residents complained it to, after it was installed it to and after I fell while being installed.
A small wooden model of the sculpture is one of the works included in "Eldred and Nevelson: Another Dimension," an exhibition of drawings, plans and prints by American sculptors Dale Eldred and Louise Nevelson that are at the Helen Foersman Spencer Museum of Art and will run until Sent. 25.
Eldred sculpted the Salina Piece in 1969.
According to Jeannette Johnson, assistant to Executive Vice Chancellor Robert Cobb, a prospective site has been selected for the sculpture and she was sent there in early winter before the winter, but she said she did not know where that site was.
COBB, WHO IS COORDINATING the installation of the sculpture, is on vacation and was unavailable for comment.
Aside from the wooden model of the
Local DELIVERY Available
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(303) 560-5136
Equal Opportunity Employer M/F
842-0600
Professionally Managed by Middle States Management Company
Office hours
1, 2, & 3 BEDROOM APARTMENTS Limited Availability for Fall
- Wall-to-Wall carpeting, New Draperies through
- Kitchen equipped with stove, refrigerator, disp
& dishwasher
- Outdoor swimming pool & Central air
- Extra storage available at no cost
- Hot & cold water, sewage & trash paid
- Conveniently located on bus route to KU
HARRISON COUNTY CENTRAL HIGH SCHOOL
Gatehouse of Lawrence
2108 WEST 20TH STREET
LAWRENCE, KANSAS 68044
Phone 543-6445
Prices start at $285
For more information call
CONSIDERING A VACATION?
NEW PURCHASE?
HOME IMPROVEMENTS?
Check with KU Federal Credit Union First!
Call a Credit Union loan officer when you are interested in getting facts regarding financing and interest rates.
"Salina Piece," the exhibition includes 20 drawings by Eldred of designs for other sculptures.
843-6446
K
RV CENTRE
KU FEDERAL CREDIT UNION
101 Carruth-O'Leary
Campus
864-3291
The exhibition also includes 12 prints by Louise Nevelson.
Hours M-F 9-5:00
Elizabeth Broun, acting director of the museum, said that a site for the sculpture would be selected within a few weeks and that she expected the sculpture to be installed this fall.
The museum acquired an 8-foot-tall, black-painted aluminum sculpture by Nevelson in late May. The sculpture, Seventh Decade Garden IX-X, was first displayed in 1971 at the Pace Gallery in New York.
BAYRIDE
Nevelson, born in Russia and called the "Czarina" of modern sculpture, has sculpted in wood, marble, terra cotta and aluminum.
On the record
TWD BACKPACKS OWNED by KU students were stolen from the Oread Bookstore in the Kansas Union around noon Tuesday, police said. The backpacks, which had been left unattended, their contents were valued at $18.50.
A 21-YEAR-OLD LECOMPTON man was arrested Wednesday night for driving intoxicated, possession of a controlled substance and leaving the scene of an accident, police said. The man was released yesterday morning from the Douglas County jail after having a $1,000 bail bond.
749-3072
TWO BACKPACKS OWNED by KU students were stolen from a car parked outside the Jayhawk Bookstore, 1420 Crescent Road, Wednesday afternoon, police said. The backpacks and their contents were valued at $103.
A LAWRENCE RESIDENT was struck two or three tapes with a pool cue Wednesday night at the Red Place 401 New Hampshire St. police said
JT PICKLEMAN'S
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HAMBURGER
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COPIES
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the electronic printshop
843-8019
July 25 - August 6
2024 W 23rd
Behind Hardees
749-5392
1963 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
1963 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
1963 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
[Signature]
[Date]
Bye, Janet
Thanks
GO FOR THE DOUBLE PLAY!!
1st Pocket the CASH for through July up to 50% of the unwanted books.
2nd Leave us your schedule. We will Fall your books and offer pull your purchase discount of 5% an early purchase discount of 5% off new and 10% off used books.Books may be picked up between August 10-16. MAKE IT EASY FOR YOU!
EAGLE
Jayhawk Bookstore 1420 Crescent Rd. Lawrence, Ks. 66044·843-3826
University Dally Kansan, July 29, 1983
Page 7
Brett's sticky bat vindicated
By United Press International
KANSAS CITY, Mo — George Brett was standing in the fairway of hole 4. at Brookridge Country Club Thursday about 100 yards from the green. He pulled out his nine-iron but before he hit the tee, the ball interrupted by club pro Doley Thames.
Thames didn't want to give Brett a free lesson — he wanted to inform the All-Star third baseman that he and his Kansas City Royals had just won their protest in last weekend's pine tar controversy, and that his two-run, nine-inning game against Gossage and the New York Yankees had been reinstated.
BRETT PROMPTLY HIT his ninetime within 10 feet of the pin and went on to shoot a round of 82 — about five times. He normally scores on the golf course.
"I wasn't counting on winning the protest," Brett said. "I didn't have my heart set in winning. I wish the damn thing never happened."
Brett drilled his two-out homer off Gossage Sunday to give the Royals a 5-4 lead. But Yankee Manager Billy Martin argued that Brett's bat had excessive pine tar and after measuring the weight of each palm plate, Jim Tim McClelland ruded the Kansas City third baseman out and nullified the home run.
The Royals sent a four-page protest to the American League office on Monday and three days later, Lee MacPhail, president of the American League, ruled in Kansas City's favor over Brette Brennert's 20th homer of the season.
MacPhail said the suspended game would be resumed from that point — two outs in the top half of the ninth inning with the Royals on top 5-4 — if
the two teams remain contenders in their respective divisions.
BRETT BENEFITED FROM MacPhail's decision by more than just a home run. He also picked up two RBs, giving him 66 for the season, and four points on his batting average, boosting him from .348 to .352. But the biggest benefit he derived was being cleared as a cheater.
"There's no way I cheated," Brett said. "It's not like I used a cork bat. It was an oversight, a mistake. Any time you go into the kitchen to get dirt and smudges up high on the bat.
"The fact that I hit it off Gooze in New York is probably what magnified the experience."
After McClelland ruled Brett out Sunday, the Kansas City infielder charged the home plate umpire and had to be restrained. McClellan will be behind home plate Friday when the Royals take on the Tigers in Detroit.
Golfers battle heat, greens in Kansas Open tournament
Extreme heat and fast greens took their tell on many of the 176 golfers who competed in the first round of the 1983 Kansas Open Golf Championship yesterday at Alvamar Golf and Country Club.
"In that kind of heat, it's difficult to concentrate on your game," said KU coach Ross Randall, who shot a 3-over-75. "It just wears you out."
"When the greens are as fast as they are, and they are as fast as they have ever been, you have to stay mentally alert," he said. "You can't let up."
Only six players managed to break par on the sun-baked 7,200-yard course on a day when temperatures reached 107 degrees.
"I finished playing at 6 p.m. and it was still 102 degrees." Randall said. "I can't wait until I play at 8 a.m. Friday."
Three players - Mike Cunning, Mike
Hulbert and Jeff Walser — shot 3-under-par rounds of 69 and shared the lead going into today's second round.
The heat also took its toll on KU golf team members entered in the tournament. Only junior Mark Punteney was able to break 40, shooting a 77.
Other scores of KU golfers were Chris Hamman's 80, Ken Gustafson's 81, James Hegarty's 82 and Chris Ceika's 67.
Defending champion John Lyons, a 1981 KU graduate, turned in a three-over-75, as did 1983 graduate Rob Wilkin. Sam Chapman, who signed a letter of intent to play golf at KU this fall, shot a 5-over-par 77.
Crescent Apartments
OAKS & GASLIGHT
APARTMENTS
start at $240
water and gas paid
paid by owner
The University Daily
ALL ON BUS ROAD
2357 Ridgecount
842-4461
Professionally managed by
KANSAN WANT ADS
Call 864-4358
ACPARTMENTS
start at $265 - utilities
ACORN APARTMENTS
start at $285
water paid
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five six seven eight nine ten
15 ounces weight $2.00 $2.50 $3.00 $3.50 $4.00 $4.50 $5.00
$6.00 $7.50 $8.00 $8.50 $9.00 $9.50 $10.00
AD DEADLINES
ERRORS
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Monday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Friday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
The Kansas 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 items can be placed in person or simply by calling the Kansas business office at 864-4558.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE
118 Flint Hall 864-4358
Spinner's books now has AIR CONDITIONING,
Lawrence's womenism, womansm, and children's
booksets for ALL women, collectively operated by
bibendum M- P 12, Thursday 8 Oat 5., 104-110 I/I
I/I
FORRENT
1 bedroom apartment just 2 blocks from union.
Stave, refrigerator included. $303 843-2528 after 5 p.m.
2. bedroom apartment, just 2 blocks from union.
Stove and refrigerator included. $290. 843-2528 after 5 p.m.
3 three bedroom homes available for August 1 occupancy. Perfect for students. Located across from stadium. Call 841-2116 for appointment.
OPEN HOUSE
Brand New Sunrise Place 9th & Michigan
> From $375-$475 a month.
- Two bedroom highly energy efficient units, finished basement and fireplace available.
* Townhouse living.
Open daily 9:00-12:00 a.n.
& 1:00-5:00 p.m.
Call 841-1287 (office)
or 841-5787
For rent. West of Washy on the 9th. three bedroom ram-
dage with appliances, A/C. Pferrier marrige
cabine. Bills $865. 800-341-2500.
Duplex for rent . just n.w. capp. off University Drive. One bedroom duplex . appliances. car $150
Apartments complex next to campus. Brand new apartment with shared living room, private sleeping rooms. Laundry facilities & off street parking.
Need help?
Advertise it
in Kansan
want ads.
Call 864-4358
MED. STUDENTS, NURSES, THEAPISTS.
OTHERS: Are you coming to the KU Med. Center in KC this Spring or Fall? We have a beautiful duplex available. Completely refurbished with ac app,www.med.edu/kc/. Contact us for more information or preface. Free rent incentive for early birds. Call Shirley 1-823-7633.
KU STUDENTS &
FACULTY
Still looking for that perfect home?
Consider these completely humiliated studios
1 br, 2 br, 4 & 8 br apartment locations . . .
br. 2 br. 83 br. apartment locations ...
HANOVER PLACE
between 14th & 15th
on Massachusetts
841-1212
SUNDANCE APARTMENTS
7th & Florida
841-5255
TIBURON
9th & Emery
841-5255
SUMMIT HOUSE
1105 Louisiana
841-8280
COLDWATER FLATS
413 W. 14th
841-1212
4 — PLEXES
922 Tennessee * 916 Indiana
841-8280
Aligned by
Mastervitae Management
Professional Management &
Management
842-4455
Hanover Townhouses, spacious 2 BD unfurnished
with balcony. Enjoy the amenities at 15th &
Kentucky. 10 months leave available.
Mature, upper-level roommate to share large 2 bed apartment for next school year. Carpet, gas-run AC, dishwasher, pool laundry. Own room. Kitchen with island and 12/24 seating. Against free rent: 740.2 ask for 326.
APARTMENT SHOPPERS
CHECK LIST
NAISMITH HALL
On KU Bus Route Utilities (except phone) paid Maid Service Social Activities Food Service with Unlimited Seconds Fully Furnished, Carpeted, Air-Conditioned Rooms Close to Campus
Drop by and look us over
if your apartment doesn't offer the above it's not Naismith Hall!
NAISMITH HALL
1800 Naismith Drive
One bedroom apartment, sleeping room, 5 bedroom
house, no pets. 843-1601, 842-8971.
Plan Abel? I know available for summer, spring
Aheloi! We are at the community close to campus
community close to campus
ROOM ALLOWED at HAINOW COOPERATIVE
HOUSE. 110 Tennessee $12 per month, including
accommodations and meals.
Studios
One Bedrooms
Two Bedrooms
All Utilities Paid
Eldridge House Apartments
Rent now or reserve for fall - furnished uplands or room near university or downtown, with off street parking. No pets please. Phone 814-5000.
Room for rent: Clean, quiet, private air. Air conditioner. Minimum age: 21 years. Bedroom: 814-5000.
The Place To Live In Downtown Lawrence
Jayhawker Towers Apartments
APMETMENT and room available for fall
camp. Meet Mr. Dropper, who came to
See 120m Ohio. First come gets choice.
Don't miss it!
Save money, rent a, or 1 or 2 bedroom, or studio apartment next to campus. No pets. phone 843-4185.
Two bedroom apartment. Close to campus. $260.
843-7339
Now taking applications for fall leases
KMstations only
Roomsmaken needed: 4 bedroom room, $94/month plus 1/4 utilities. Close to bus route. Call 740-8033.
SOUTHERN PARKWAY TONIHOUSE spaces, featuring all appliances, wash-dryer hook ups, atached garages with attic and a swimming pool. Call 749-1527 evenings and weekends for an
Apartments
- Studios, Apartments.
SUBLEASE 3 bed apartment just one block from Union $200 - cheap utilities. 1875 sq ft.
TRAILRIDGE
- Furnished or Unfur-
nished
Townhouses
Sample
* All Utilities Paid
* Ten Month Leases
* Air Conditioned
* Swimming Pool
* On Bus Line
* Free Cablevision
* Laundry Facilities
* Furnished or Unfurnished
Tower A - Grad Students Only
Tower B - Grad Students Only
Tower C B D A K U. Students
Office Hours
Mon-Fri. 8:00 to 5:00
- Laundry Facilities
- Excellent Maintenance Service
1603 W. 15th 843-4993
- 3 Pools, Tennis, Athletic
- KU Bus
2500 W. 6th 843-7333
FOR SALE
Need a place for in-faith? one room left on second floor of an old home near campus. share knowledge and experience. References requested. Deposit required. $185/month. Room paid by landlord. B4-82403 (evenings)
1973 Buck Station Wagon - good tire. Run good.
- Mint condition.
1834 Capsac, only 31,000 miles, very good condition
1200 or best price. After A. 842-2567
1974 Mercury, Comet, $110.00, OK, Interior;
6.4 cylinders, Rumet: great 749-210.
1998 Brown Chevy Chevette. Standard transmission.
AM FM radio. $6,900. in good shape. Make me
inquiries.
Live-in female companion aide wanted for elderly woman within walking distance of campus. Room and board in exchange for housekeeping duties, including some room preparation. Phone 841-5231.
170 Manda, 30,000 miles, A/C, Excel $1,990 180 Bucky Skechl, A/C runs, good. $200 Two AM/FM band-turbleable stoves $90 or each. Seven Christmas lights $45. Lamp with Christmas lights, $45. 81-991 81-991
1979. ITO LANDA, P/S, P/B, A/C power seals,
power windows, crane control, excellent condition
and service.
1990 Honda Express Moget. Good condition. Runs fine.
Price: $110,841. 890-2673.
22" American raceway, full alloy, $535.00 748-6036. Days.
"American Accordies Lab, loudspeaker system,
A.A.L. 500, 100 v ill, fitt, funded, 4-way. Wax $40 new,
new only $20, 843-607 6
Blonde bedroom suite. Includes dresser w/mirror and bed / backboard. Must see M41 6488 evening room. Bedroom suite includes dresser w/mirror, bed / backboard, 30" top deck, 60" sleeper SOPA, QUEEN size bed. "Jamison" Traditional veneered wood bed frame. Two accent tables. TABLE AND 2 END TABLES, all 3 have door enclosures, massive wood, all for $75. SECTIONAL FREES DELIVERY to your Lawrence柜 843-3080. Dresser with large mirror, suitcase, large backpack.
HONDA CVCC 72, 5 speed A/C; Stereo, excellent condition, best offer. Call after 5 p.m. F-497-5183.
Harman Kardon h120 receiveur $140. BIC 602 meet card $160 (or best offers). 749-5454
Homette, 12' x 10', BK, W/D, N.C. A/skirted, tied down, large wood floorbed, # 2600 or will consider as a partial payment on a small raiser in NW 18th, 4500 sq ft., Let 3, 8 and 3, Ahanensis, or weekends.
For housebound back to school steps, stop by 800 Michigan. See Aug. 14 Journal World uncleavable for details.
Moving sale - must sell single bed, sofa & desk - all in good condition. Phone 841-1908.
R. N. Patient care supervisor needed to do patient assessments, interviews, and community relations. Expense account on homes, and your own hours. Call Experience 222-1168 on Monday or Tuesday between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m.
Mant Sale! 1,900 Yamaha 400 special, 4,000 mile, excellent condition; only $750. Call 824-7250 or 842-6258
Visiting faculty member must still clerk two-times
after the day of birth, after an office visit,
baccalaureate condition, offers may be denied.
Must-see. Benni Hawk 1980 - 880. Windsurf BC16
Calm. Call: K437-725
COMPUTER SCIENCE INTERN Qualifications:
knowledge of assembly language programming; ex-
perience in using a computer Science or a related field; current
enrolled student at KU. Preferred Working
Environment: Research, network line protocols, and networking concepts; experience with mini and micro computers; experience with
Dave Northwell, University of Kansas, Academic
Computing Services, Computer Center, Lawrence
State College.
R. N. Pediatric IU Nurse needed for home care. Immediate openings, excellent wages, referral bonus, malpractice and bonding provided. Local work hours vary. Applicants to Topeka 322-188 Monday through Friday 9 to 5.
HELP WANTED
LOST AND FOUND
Gateman's Nightclub is looking for intelligent, hard-working students. The team at the club's nightclub in Lawrence will take on Mr. Gateman's group.
LORT. 1 woman's gold watch. No face, but 12:00 mark. Merger's cardnote. Bali 844-086-186.
Science writer. The Office of University Relations of the University of Kansas seeks a science writing position in the Department of Science thereafter, 815,000 miles. Minimum required qualifications: B.A. or B.S. degree in print content management or related experience that includes feature writing; publication at least five articles on scientific topics written in a journal; and experience with general news articles. Duties include science writing (not technical writing) in a popular style, general knowledge of current events, application material (cover letter, resume, work samples) must be received by 5 p.m. August 12, 1988. Applicant must have experience of Faculty Union Relations. P.O. Box 2239, Kemeny, Missouri 65043, USMA 60843, and AAI employs.
EAST JOAST ADVENTURE - BOSTON. Families seek live-in child care workers. Live in lively, suburbs close to Boston or in townhouses in heart of city. Flexible starting dates, many openings, one year commitment necessary. Write or call, Alise McIntosh, Mountain House, Brookfield, MA 02164 (617) 277-5620
Frame Woods is accepting applications for full time picture-frame trainee. Job includes sales and assembly work. Must be available to work Saturdays at Frame Woods at Holiday Flora 845-900
PERSONAL
Clerk to work starting August 1 through fall 2014.
Workdays include:
bars, hospitals, Ag in person, Skillers Liaison Stats,
and other client services.
investant passport, portfolio, naturalization,
immigration, vita, ID, and of course fine portraits.
Remember last year gala THE ETAC SHOP 10 W
conserve jewelry, good quality. Sidley Walsh sale
Y
NURSING STUDENT needs ride to KUMC for fall 1933. Will share expenses. 432-4244.
The Etc. Shop
The Etc.
Shop
Vintage & Classic
Contemporary Clothing
Unisex
10 West 9th St.
Closed Wed
9:31 a.m. 9/11
OVER 180,000 FEMS FOR SALVE Super low price w/
guaranteed prices. 825 Vermont. 794-2698
pictures. 825 Vermont. 794-2698
student staff custom cionship printing. T-shirts for students in the classroom. Special for students. Haircuts $7 and perm $15. Special for students. Haircuts $7 and perm $15.
NEW YORK
$1.58
OCEAN BENZ REPRIENT!
4
Get a “taste” of New York 9th & Mass. in Downtown Lawrence. All beef hot dogs, super dogs and fabulous Polish sausages in pita bread garnished with your choice of pickles, fresh chopped onions, ketchup, hot sauce, pickle relish and celery salt at no extra charge!
Cool down with a Dr. Brown's cream soda, black cherry, root beer, orange or a unique Cole-Rey—all direct from NYC
Deliciously served from an authentic N.Y. vendor's cart.
10:30-3:30, Tues.-Sat., weather percussion
Phyllis'
Fabulous
Franks
The views of the JOJO WHITE COMMUNITIE do not necessarily reflect those of the KU student body. Use furniture bought and sold. Pick up available. Everything But Ice. 6th and Vermont.
carries
INDIAN EARTH
11. 30 PITCHERS 4-7 p.m. everyday. Also enjoy scrimmating submarine sandwiches, great tunes, video & pikachu games, and the sunshine on our front lawn. Saturday through black north on the Union, Hawks Crossing 831-600-6000.
021 images:
927 Mass
Western Civilization Notes. Now on sale! Make sense out of Western Civilization to use in your classroom for a first class presentation. For exam preparation. "New Analysis of Western Civilization" available now at Town Clerk. The notes are free of charge.
Impress your datage with the total environment of the Hawks Crossing. Groove on the front perch to great tunes, total sunshine and mega splas. Happy Hawks Crossing for 47.4 lbs. 47.4 lbs. the Hawks Crossing for sure, and then.
BAR and LAUNDROMAT 749-4132
Balinute? For balinu or other food-related problem, call 843-5298
50c Draws
DRIVERS THAT DRY!
wet end heat Place.
INDOORMA 749.4132
JO JO WHITE: we are your friends forever. We are powerful but want you to stay. We serve Brown with no notice. If you expect support as a coach, don't bother. If you expect support as a friend, old brace. We are OLYMPIAN TO US!
Leaving Town?
Airline Tickets
At airline counter prices
no extra service charge
Make your travel
arrival schedule
on campus
- ne lowest airlines--Complete
travel arrangements-
- rental cars--Passes
- Car rental--Hotel confirmations
* Student semester break holidays*
See Maupintour Travel
Service for:
ON CAMPUS LOCATION in the Student Union and 900 Mass.
Maupintour travel service
740 9768
749-0700
HOSSES: long stem, assorted colors, $10 each.
CLEARANCE: one for $20 each, 1 each for $6 each, 1 each for $1 each on Echoenabled Planet, 1 W25 Stubby
Berry, 1 W30 Stubby Berry.
Twight - Partly like it '1999! You're old, out beats some healthy taste fruity at Yello Sun. Open late: Mon - Thurs till 11 p.m. Fri - Sat, till 1 a.m. Sun. Wed - If you party at dinner, Salman delivers 841.3268
S W E S U P T O R 30 JO J 30J abamu! M. J, H. B. P, J.
John (Wills Fund Member) Willm J. J, S. J.
Yuri Andropos would love Lawrence's Volo Sho. The submarines are disarming. Furishing fast delivery guaranteed to knock out your taste bud! Call 841-3268.
SERVICES OFFERED
HOME PET CARE. Personal service; reasonable.
B40-149 or B45-697
Beginner. Adult琴房 Class. Special & week
call. Call 842-9705 for class times. Olsen & Plane
MOPID & 'MOTORCYCLE REPAIR' Honda,
Wheeler, Wheelman, Manual transmission,
wheelman transmission, electrical repair,
pack up and delivery available. By appointment only.
Pcallen call 812-3230 no 6 p.m. to 9:30. Tueu. tibu Sat.
Tueu. tibu Sat.
Luarra Ternnellii schummer from expertised university staff in the UK to produce commercial software.
Raqueteball, tennis, squac raquet stringing,
specializing in new graphite-hybrid stringing. Tennis racquet for sale since - Head, Prince, Dusun, Jakarta.
**Davies Bowers**, *Point & Penalty*; 601.8248
**Bawar Bowers**, *Point & Penalty*; 601.8248
TUTORING, Math, CS-200, French, individual sessions
TYPING
42 Hour Testing, Fast, accurate, dependable. All Day. Hardware. Includes: ACL, RTLCD, AAA TYPING Service, IBM MAG, Card. IU. Unlimited storage with easy retrieval and archiving of documents in themed and documentation. Call 845-1942 after 3 p.m.
AFORDABLE QUALITY for all your typing needs.
Call Lady, 848-7945 after 6 p.m.
Accurate, affordable typing. Ask about speedy night service (under 28 pages. Call Mgmt. 841-6873.
Absolutely LETTER PERFECT typing - editing Your work in our only business ProfessionalEx! works with our clients.
Medicaid, arrhythmia typing by
Medical School secretary Call Nancy. 841-3219.
BJM on IBM-Precise personal typing,
evenings/weekends. 841-5600. Barbara's special summer
permanent, 640-10-91.
Accurate, affordable typing by former Harvard
University professor
MBA, NYU, MIT, 1975
Call TIP TOP TYPING - 1200 Iowa. Experienced
TIP TOP TYPING 601 memory magazine. Right-correcting
TIP TOP TYPING.
Experienced typist. Term, paper, document, all types of documents. Must have excellent typing skills. Pricia, Paula and will correct spelling. Phone 843-9544. Mail resume to: W. H. Gorman, 1234 Main Street, New York, NY 10024.
It's a Fact, Fast. Affordable. Clean Typing. Word Processing. You can afford it! 483-2800.
Experienced tcp/ip will type term paper, thesis, etc.
Willing to send resume and/or CV
II. Cull student: BH 847 4754 9600 * 6 to 10 p.m.
Saturday, July 22 from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Elvin could shake. Shakespeare could write Mr.
talent, typing. Call 8429-6493 after 5 o'clock & weekends.
Experienced typist will type letters, themes and
texts. IBM Correcting, Correctional. Call 8427-2744
ON TIME, PAPERS TYPED, FAST & EFFICIENT
841-3510
Professional secretary will do your typing, themes,
themes courses 644-8877 between 5:00 and
9:00.
TYPING - Call Speed. 40 pp. & up, overnight $9,
80 pp. & up, a day after p. 68. $15 pp.
TYPING PLUS. Themes. Dissertation letters,
applications, resumes. Assistance with com-
mendation grumman, sparse resume for buil-
ling a thesis. American University.
WANTED
1 or 2 male roommates needed, starting August 1
Along bus route. $135 per utilities. 10 or 12 month
lease. 749-3662
Empty room, vasant place-setting at gourmet table house/share enlisting atmosphere (CarolA. 841-7921)
Female roommate wanted starting August for 8 bedroom apartment, on room 10. Route reasonable rent.
Female roommate wanted for Park 25 apartment
Two bedrooms, one bath, 815 a.m. plus sleep plus
bathroom. 260 sq ft.
Female roommate needed to share nice, fully furnished West Hill Apt. 115a a month plus 17 us/ettes.
or female roommate would charge $135/mo plus 12
utilities. Call Eric or 1-469-7822 or 749-2155.
House to house with mature individual or couple.
Non-smoker preferred. Walking distance to KU 1600
300-450 feet. Private rooms for Junior,
Junior, needs room to rent. Prefer 1-2 room,
roommate, non-smoking. 740-1000 5 p.m.
Male roommate, mine 2 bldm. apt. on bus route B8. plus 1/2 utilities 842-7967 after 6 p.m. on bus route.
Nonstaining female roommate starting Aug. 1 for roommates. Roommates have to be down and downstown. Call Lisa. I-234-6631.
Non-smoking male housemates $150, share use all $33.
Missouri 749-276 or 843-422, ask for Tom.
Nonnapping, neat, male roommate to share two bedroom apartment. Pool, laundry, dishwasher, standard equipment 10 minutes from campus by car or bus. Call Mark at 841-4027 after 6 p.m.
Non-smoking male roommate for nice, clean, a bedroom apartment and a kitchen. Student student preferred. $120 plus 1/2 utilities plus deposit. Call 842-5498. Keep trying. One female roommate to share nice house with other girls. Very close to campus. Private bedroom. @842 am plus 1/2 utilities. Move in after August 1
HIDE Wanted - any point along route to Charlevaux,
Mich. (Cochrane, Laming, etc.) Early August, share
expenses and driving, Georgia, 364 1100 or 749 2315.
ROOMMATE NEEDED: to drive 3 b townhouse
aprt at 810 & Albana with 2 others. Rent at 14 000
& 10 000. Call Dan 424 with {1323-3127 or
686-5499}
ROOMMATE WANTED Roommate to share 3 bedrooms A/C洗衣 and dryer $135/mo
Bathroom B/G Kitchen B/G
Washroom B/G
Kitchen B/G
Bathroom B/G
Bespoke renovations to show beautiful 3 bedroom flat with en-suite, large kitchen, large living room, clean and bright bedroom, £190/week plus 19/week tax. Call 0845 279 6343.
Roommate wanted for next school year, tth & Ava,
$1300, Ava/m/P/PC, own room, pool, CAL
*PLEASE READ ADVERTISING BACK COUNTER*
Roommate to share two bedroom duplex,
Dishwasher, C/A, a cat, your downstairs and carpeted
kitchen. Welcome to your new home! Storeage.
Prefer female grad. student who is easy
to get along with. Must be 24+ years old.
plus MCI cable. Available Aug. 1 or Nov. 1.
Wanted: Christian male roommate to share space
bedroom house loan: $100 per month, plus 1/4
monthly rent.
2470
Classified Heading:
Write Ad Here: ___
Don't want to drive across town in the summer heat to send in your classified ad? Take advantage of this form and save yourself time and money while still receiving the satisfaction of placing your ad in the Kansan. Just mail this form with a check or money order payable to the Kansan to: University Daily Kansan, 118 Flint Hall, Lawrence, Ks 66045. Use rates below to figure costs.
Address
Date to Run: ___ to ___
Classified Display:
1 col x 1 inch—$4.00
1 time 2 times 3 times 4 times 5 times
15 words or fewer $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00 $3.25
Additional .02 .03 .04 .05 .06
Page 8
University Daily Kansan, July 29, 1983
OMNI ELECTRONICS
30-HOUR
We're open extra hours this weekend with special prices every hour. Below are just a few of our stereo specials. (Sorry, no layaways at these low prices!)
SALE
Friday 10 a.m.-11 a.m.
Sony SSU-660
Friday 11 a.m.-12 p.m.
8
Magnadyne M-1950
MAGNADYNE
3-way system with 12" woofer, 4"
midrange, 2" balanced driver. Handles up to 110 watts of power.
Friday 12 p.m.-1 p.m.
JVC JLA-100
Friday 1 p.m.-2 p.m.
Fox XK-60
Regular Price 30-Hour Sale 1-Hour Sale
500.00 400.00 300.00
JVC
Friday 2 p.m.-3 p.m.
Sony STR VX22
SONY.
SAMSUNG
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0
AUX INPUT
USB INPUT
MICROPHONE OUTPUT
CD MIDI INPUT
FM AMPLIFIER
AUX REMOTE CONTROL
AUX TRANSISTOR
AUX ADAPTER
AUX CABLE
Semi-automatic belt-drive turntable with new design tonearm.
Regular Price 30-Hour Sale 1-Hour Sale
109.95 89.95 79.95
Mini size AM/FM indash cassette with locking fast forward and rewind.
COMPUTER HISTORY
1950s - Early 1960s
Computer history in the 1950s and early 1960s was marked by rapid growth in technology and the advent of new hardware and software. The first commercial computer, the IBM-404, was introduced in 1955. It was an 8-bit, single-digit processor capable of performing basic arithmetic operations on data stored in flash memory. The IBM-404 was followed by the IBM-404A, which featured a more complex architecture with additional processing units and expansion slots. In the 1960s, the computer industry experienced a boom in demand for advanced computing capabilities. Companies began to invest in high-performance processors, such as the Intel 386, which was widely used in the 1970s and 1980s. The 1970s also saw the rise of personal computers, which became widely available to the public. These computers were equipped with the latest technology, including graphics processing units (GPUs) and integrated circuits (ICs). As computers became more powerful, they began to replace traditional mainframes and microcomputers in business applications. The 1980s saw a continued growth in computer hardware, including the introduction of the Supermicro Xeon处理器. The Xeon processor was known for its high performance and low power consumption. In the 1990s, computers started to become more affordable and accessible to the general public. This led to increased use of computers in education, business, and entertainment. Today, computers are used in a wide range of industries, including healthcare, finance, manufacturing, and transportation. They play a crucial role in modern society, enabling people to perform a vast array of tasks efficiently and effectively.
WEATHERPROOF
Regular Price 30-Hour Sale 1-Hour Sale
99.95 69.95 59.95
Omni carries the full line of radar detectors.
Friday 3 p.m.-4 p.m.
Linear 401
LINEAR POWER
30 watt per channel receiver with direct access control system, 8 random access preset stations.
Friday 4 p.m.-5 p.m.
Hitachi TRK-7000
Regular Price 30-Hour Sale 1-Hour Sale
129.95 99.95 89.95
Regular Price 30-Hour Sale 1-Hour Sale
249.95 169.95 149.95
Linear builds the highest quality car stereo amplifiers — the model 401 has 20 watts per channel.
Regular Price 30-Hour Sale 1-Hour Sale
169.95 139.95 129.95
Friday 5 p.m.-6 p.m.
Friday 6 p.m.-7 p.m.
Sharp RT-100
AudioTechnicaAT-105
Friday 7 p.m.-8 p.m.
Magnadyne K-50C
AIRCRAFT RECORDING
241-7508
Saturday10 a.m.-11 a.m.
JVC DE-3
1.5
489
2013-05-27 10:49:56
Dow Jones Indices
AM/FM stereo portable with cassette recorder.
1
Saturday 11 a.m.-12 p.m.
Toshiba KTS-3
Regular Price 30-Hour Sale 1-Hour Sale
149.95 119.95 99.95
MAGNADYNE
Dual magnet stereo cartridge.
Regular
Price
30-Hour
Sale
1-Lour
Sale
49.95
29.95
19.95
JVC
Component stereo cassette deck with
Dolby noise reduction.
Regular
Size 30-Hour
Sale
139.95 99.95 89.95
Regular Price 30-Hour Sale 1-Hour Sale
79.95 39.95 29.95
2-way box speaker with adjustable bracket for home or car use.
Slim line component cassette deck with motorized door, LED readout and ANRS noise reduction.
Saturday 12 p.m.-1 p.m.
Formula 69.3
Regular Price 30-Hour Sale 1-Hour Sale
299.95 199.95 149.95
Saturday 1 p.m.-2 p.m.
Sony Walkman 4
Stereo cassette player with metal tape capability and FM stereo tuner.
Regular Price 30-Hour Sale 1-Hour Sale
199.95 129.95 119.95
Saturday 2 p.m.
3 p.m.
BENZ
Saturday 3 p.m.-4 p.m.
Clarion 3100/315OR
Saturday 4 p.m.-5 p.m.
Magnadyne EQ35B
3-way speaker system with aluminum voice coll, lifetime warranty, and high power handling.
Gusdorf 5425
MENU
WINE
BAR
Saturday 5 p.m.-6 p.m.
Sony SRF 30W
Regular Price 30-Hour Sale 1-Hour Sale
149.95 99.95 79.95
OMNI stocks 14 different types of Walkman products and all accessories.
Walkman products and all accessories.
Regular Price 30-Hour Sale 1-Hour Sale
89.95 79.95 69.95
Clarion
HISTORIC SAFETY CENTER
OMNI carries over 20 different types of video furniture video furniture such as the Guadord 5425
MAGNADYNE
AM/FM indash cassette with mini-size
chassis and locking fast forward.
Builder Price 3hr Sale 1hr Sale
139.95 109.95 99.95
Regular Price 30-Hour Sale L-Hour Sale
149.95 99.95 89.95
Saturday 6 p.m.-7 p.m.
Clarion 5100/5150
20 watt per channel booster with 5-band equalizer, front-to-rear fader
SONY.
Regular Price 30-Hour Sale 1-Hour Sale
89.95 59.95 49.95
Saturday 7 p.m.-8 p.m.
JVC RK-10
FM Walkman with stereo headphones.
Regular
Regular
30-Hour
Sale
1-Lone
Sale
79.95
59.95
49.95
Sunday 10 a.m.-11 p.m.
Altec 4C
Clarion
Sunday 11 a.m.-12 p.m.
Sony XR-45
10:30 10:40 10:50 10:60 10:70 10:80 10:90 11:00 11:10 11:20 11:30 11:40 11:50 11:60 11:70 12:00 12:10 12:20 12:30 12:40 12:50 12:60 12:70 13:00 13:10 13:20 13:30 13:40 13:50 13:60 13:70 14:00 14:10 14:20 14:30 14:40 14:50 14:60 14:70 15:00 15:10 15:20 15:30 15:40 15:50 15:60 15:70 16:00 16:10 16:20 16:30 16:40 16:50 16:60 16:70 17:00 17:10 17:20 17:30 17:40 17:50 17:60 17:70 18:00 18:10 18:20 18:30 18:40 18:50 18:60 18:70 19:00 19:10 19:20 19:30 19:40 19:50 19:60 19:70 19:80
Sunday 12 p.m.-1 p.m.
DVD-ROM DVDR-ROM CD-ROM DVD-RAM USB-ROM
ALTEC
LANSING
Indash AM/FM cassette with mini-size chassis, auto reverse, locking fast forward and rewind.
1904
SONY.
Sunday 1 p.m.-2 p.m.
Numark FLS-10
AM/FM quartz-locked receiver.
Regular Price 30-Hour Sale 1-Hour Sale
199.95 159.95 149.95
JVC KRS-15
JVC
AMI. Quarter-locked receiver.
Regular Price 30-Hour Sale 1-Hour Sale
249.95 189.95 149.95
2-way speaker system, with deep bass reproduction, lifetime warranty.
Regular Sale 30-Hour Sale 1-Hour Sale
149.95 109.95 99.95
indash AM/FM cassette with digital scan and pushbutton auto reverse, separate boss & trable, 4-way trable.
Ragular
Bike 30-Hour
Bike 1-Hour
Bike 299.95 269.95 249.95
100%
indash AM/FM cassette with Sendtun
alloy head, 4-way fader, separate bass
& treble, music sensor and Dolby noise
reduction.
Numark
Regular Price 30-Hour Sale 1-Hour
269.95 229.95 219.95
Lightweight headphones with adapter plug for Walkman type use.
Sunday 2 p.m.-3 p.m.
Hitachi TRK-5360
HITACHI
Regular Price 30-Hour Sale 1-Hour Sale
39.95 19.95 14.95
Sunday 3 p.m.-4 p.m.
JVC QLA-51/61
Sunday 4 p.m.,-5 p.m.
Formula 5.2T
JVC
Sunday 5 p.m.-6 p.m.
Sony PSL X5
Omni carries a large selection of portables. The Hitachi TRK-$350 has AM/FM with cassette player/recorder
Quartz-locked automatic turntable with speed control and new straight line tonearm.
SONY.
5" post-mount coaxial speakers — aluminum voice coll, high power handling, slim design to fit all doors.
Speed control and new straight line tonearm.
Regular Price 30-Hour Sale 1-Hour Sale
229.95 159.95 129.95
Regular Price 30-Hour Sale 1-Hour Sale
75.95 59.95 49.95
SONY.
Sunday 6 p.m.-7 p.m.
EQL 802
$ ^{\circ} $
Fully automatic turntable with anti- resonance base, straight line tonearm, and quarts lock.
Regular Price 30-Hour Sale 1-Hour Sale
69.95 49.95 44.95
Sunday 7 p.m.-8 p.m.
Empire LTD-550
Regular Price 30-Hour Sale 1-Hour Sale
219.95 169.95 139.95
8" 2 way home speaker with 5 year warranty.
MPVC
Regular Price 30-Hour Sale 1-Hour Sale
129.95 79.95 69.95
Eliptical stereotaxic cartridge.
Regular 30-Heur
Price Sale 1-Hour
99.95 49.95 39.95
A
ALL PIONEER CAR SPEAKERS
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
APRIL 1982
50% OFF
ALL JENSEN SERIES II CAR SPEAKERS
PIONEER
(while supplies last, no layaways.)
JENSEN
CAR AUDIO
50% OFF
Maxell UDXL-C90 or TDK SA-C90
ALLISON ACOUSTICS Designing for Accuracy
Beauty may be a matter of taste, but technical performance is not. Our primary performance goals are:
(Choose from 14 different models.)
- **Uniform (flat) acoustic power output capability over a wide audio frequency range**
2. 89...
- High output capability with lowest possible distortion
- High output capability with lowest possible distortion
* Very broad bandwidth with little distortion
- Maximum reliability through sophisticated engineering and rigid quality control
During the 30-Hour Sale, buy 10 and get . 2 FREE
- Convenience and flexibility in placement
* Room matched design for all listening areas
MIXBILISM C90
MAXVISION C90
idspeaker manufacturer to offer a Full Warranty for Five
Years, and it still applies.
On display at OMNI is all 9 of the Allison Acoustics loudspeakers. During the TAX-FREE sale, all 3-way models come with the electronic subwoofer, a $290.00 value.
Warranty
FreedomPhone
OMNI carries the full line of remote telephones and telephone, acc-
cidental telephone, TA-FREE sale, all telephones are.
10% OFF
Prices start at just 29.95 for a replacement telephone.
MasterCard
AVAILABLE
EXISTING
Carde
Welcome
VISA
FREE
Alspor III Cassette Cleaner . . . . . . . 50% off
Discwasher Record Cleaning System . . . . . 50% off
Loran Cassette Tape . . . . . . . 50% off
Beta & VHS Tape . . . . . . . 25% off
We've got a world of entertainment just for you.
10 a.m.-8 p.m. Friday-Saturday-Sunday
Special weekend hours:
841-1073
OMNI ELECTRONICS
6th & FIRESIDE COURT, LAWRENCE, KS ACROSS FROM SUNSET DRIVE-IN
1