4.1.1.1 Tuesday. November 20,1973 University Daily Kansan Conservation Kansas Staff Photos by CORKY TREWIN Corridors will grow dimmer because of KU's latest attempt to save energy; buildings every other day; buildings on left, Robert Allen, buildings and grounds employ, removes light bulbs in Haworth Hall. At right, two students stand under the results of his handwork. It will be about two weeks until lights are removed from all hallways. Workshops, Discussions Highlight SUA Symposium on Nonviolence Noviilience will be the theme of a weeklong symposium entitled "Alternatives and Community" that will begin at 7:30 p.m. in Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. The Institute was created in 1965 to examine the possible needs for radical change in drug policy. Monday's program will include a accession and film as an orientation to the museum, and demonstrate the need for the development of new living and working patterns, Larry The symposium will be co-sponsored by SUFora Diane Laber of the Friends of the Farmworkers, Otto Zingg of the United States, and Kirkland, assistant instructor of design. Daily workshops will be led by area people and by Wendy Bantaill and Will Kirkland, staff members of the institute for Palo Alto. Nonviolence, based in Palo Alto, Calif. ONE TOPIC TUESDAY will be farming and agribusiness problems. I, J. Stoneback. The media will be the other topic at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in the Council Room of the Library, where videos of videotape as a means for political and cultural change, how a radio station can be run on less than $4,000 a year and how easier can be for community education. Douglas County commissioner, will join Batson and Wirk Killirand as leaders of the program at 7:30 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room of the Library. A film on farmworkers will be shown. A slide and tape show entitled "The Irish Battlefield" will be presented at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Big Eight Room. The show will be presented by Baton and Will Kirkland, who spent several months living in Ireland, on the Northern Ireland, studying the Irish conflict. ALSO ON WEDNESDAY, Paul Friedman, assistant professor of speech and drama, will lead a discussion about living in the U.S. at 3 p.m. in the parlors of the Kansas Union. Ross H. Copeland, associate director of the Bureau of Child Research, has been appointed as a consultant to the President's Committee on Mental Retardation. The committee is responsible for the secretary of the Department of Health, Education and Welfare, followed Copeland's temporary appointment as a special adviser to the committee. The committee is composed of more than 20 parent-educators, who advise the President on matters relating to the national effort to combat mental retardation. David Fisher, Lawrence junior, has been named an additional recipient of the Vesta B. Lear Award, given annually by the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences to students in the college who have achieved the highest academic record after their first year at KU. Fisher is one of 32 students to receive the award this year. A paper by Grant K. Goodman, professor of East Asian studies and history, has been selected for publication in the first volume of *The International Journal of Proceedings of the International Netajai Seminar*. Goodman presented the paper, "Japanese Sources for the Study of the Indian Independence Movement," at the conference which met in Calcutta last January. Consultant Named Paper Selected Huddleston Memorial E. F. and Lena Huddleston, long-time residents of Lawrence, have been memorialized in a gift to the University of Kansas Endowment Association to establish an engineering scholarship fund. The fund has been endowed by Opal Jayne Wren and a life-long Mitre Kuudtla and a life-long Lawrence resident. The income from the invested gifts will provide scholarships for students majoring in engineering. John Podzro, professor of music theory, has received one of the annual cash awards given by the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers. Podzro has received one of the awards every year since 1966. The awards are based upon the unique prestige value of each writer's catalog and the performances of his compositions. Lear Award Given Music Award Faculty Letter Fails to Stop Parking Meters Despite one letter in opposition, the KU Parking and Traffic Board is proceeding with plans to put parking meters in several locations on campus, according to Capt. Joseph Marzulff, professor of Navy ROTC and board chairman. The meters will only be installed in present loading zones, or areas where cars stop for short periods to drop off or pick up, Marzullluad said. The letter was signed by 21 faculty members of the School of Social Welfare. They opposed putting meters in the circle because they thought until they could propose an alternate plan. Marzulff said it would take several months to get the meters installed because of the long process of drawing up notions and receiving bids on installation. Regents, Dykes Protest . . . The meters tentatively will be placed in front of Robinson Gymnasium, behind Flint, Haworth and Summerfield halls and behind the Kansas Union. Marzullo said the board released the news of its decision to install the meters hoping to receive any reactions that students or faculty might have. He said the board had received several verbal comments in favor of the plan. From Page One been granted to students on athletic scholarships. The regents supported the women's intercollegiate athletics request, Danen-barger said, because of increased demands by women athletes to have financial assistance from sources other than student fees. Danerbanger said more funds were needed for the coordinated computer plan so that obsolete computers could be replaced and so that more effective resource sharing among the colleges and universities could be continued. THE FEE WAIVER for students participating in athletics, music, drama and debate has been an area of controversy over the past decade that would be given to athletic programs. "This request is made largely due to the fact that the athletic departments are finding it difficult to maintain financial resources for a competitive market," Daanenberger said. Danaburger said the additional funding was aimed at supporting athletic programs that weren't self-supporting—such as swimming, tennis, archery, wrestling and baseball—as well as supporting students to be配音 in music, drama and debate programs. THE SALARY INCREASES would allow the University to provide better teaching, advising and service, Dykes said, as well as to correct inequities in women's salaries. Chancellor Archie R. Dykes, who also spoke at the budget hearing, asked for the reinstatement of the 10 per cent faculty salary increase. "if inflation continues in 1974 as it has in 1973," Dykes said, "the recommended increase of five per cent will not cover the increase in the cost of living." KU's request for additional operating funds was $440,281. The recommendation by funds is not provided. inadequate in the areas of library acquisitions and utilities, the modest increases received by the University in recent years, and the need to keep abundance of inflation," Dykes said. Dykes said the request for increased operating funds was necessary to recover from the loss. He said the libraries were having to pay 12 to 15 per cent more for books because of inflation. Utilities rates, which are paid by the government, fundesd funds, have also gone up, he said. While the current budget is most All requests for increases based on estimated increases in KU's enrollment were cut by Bibb because he thought the enrollment figures wouldn't be reached. DYKES SAID he thought next year's enrollment would reach 18,350 or 100 more than this fall, because students were refused admission to some visual arts, law, architecture and social welfare programs this semester. Thursday, a workshop at 7:30 p.m. in the United Ministries Center will feature discussion of local and regional alternatives to treatment of Housing, Education and Welfare. The University had requested $117,180 to cover the costs of increased enrollment. A request for $135,501 to hire 15 more maintenance men for new buildings on campus. All requests for improvement of programs and for new programs at KU were deleted, too. These requests included $88,732 for Supportive Educational Services (SES), $68,497 for women's intercollegiate athletics, $125,290 for the coordinated computer plan and $100,000 for library book purchases. Dykes said stable funding for SFS was necessary to implement the University's faculty. SES has been supported on an emergency basis, Dykes said, by student funds from the Kansas Union Bookstore and by funds from the Wisconsin Union Bookstore. Funds aren't available any more, he said. will begin at 1:30 p.m. at the United Ministries Center. BIBB ALSO REDUCED the University's base budget by $105,177. Included in this reduction were salaries for the director of the Student Center and the master sessior and 17 summer-session instructors. "One of the underlying assumptions of the Institute is that a person is nonviolent only if he is actively committed to the struggle to build a nonviolent society, a society without any form of racism, war and exploitation." Mr. Sandall said last week about the symposium. Dykes asked that these items be restored, too. Dykes said the director of the union provided coordination of the union with the governor. "We're not bringing (Batson and Will Kirland) here to saturation the campus with nonviolent ideas. We're just presenting that these things do exist," he said. A celebration of the possibilities of a new world will begin at 9:30 p.m. after the world **WE WANT TO SHOW people that there is an alternative to what we're doing now. I think most people see a need for change. But most people don't want to take the trouble to change over from a very comfortable life style.** Sen. George McGovern will speak on "Beyond the Watergate" at 8 p.m., Friday in the State Capitol Building. Saturday, Batson and Will Kirkland will lead an all-day workshop on the relationship between sexuality and violence. The event will be at 10 a.m. at the United Ministries Center. A POT LUCK SUPPER is scheduled for a pain at the center, followed by an event. The reduction of the teaching staff was because of a leveling off of summer session enrollment this year, Dykes said, which seemed inconsistent because, although summer session enrollment increased, no new instructors were added. Sunday, Batson and Will Kirkland will be joined by Angie O'Gorman and Bob Calvert, both from War Tax Resistance in Kansas to the Obama administration, new politics for a new society. The program "I hope the week of alternatives will spark some interest in this area," he said. Larry Paul Kirkland said if any group, club or class wanted Batson or Will Kirkland to talk to them, they should contact Otto Zingg at the United Ministry Center. Dr. William O. Rieke, vice chancellor for health affairs, appeared yesterday to justify requests by the KU Medical Center. Medical center budget increases rejected by Bibb included requests for additional money to hire more personnel and to acquire more land in Kansas City, Kan., for the center. Although University of Kansas dormitories won't be serving food until Monday, students returning early from vacation will still have places to leave. Frank Burge, director of the Kansas Union, said yesterday that the Union cafeteria, delicatessen and the Hawk's Nest would be open Saturday. Union Food Service To Reopen Saturday The Oread and Kansas Union bookstore will also be open from 9:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Saturday and for one hour after the KU-Missouri football game. Union operating hours will be from 9 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. Saturday, Burge said. Student Union Activities will sponsor a reception in the main lobby of the Union xxxxxxxxxx Let's count our blessings, for a change. Yes, there are problems yet to be solved but we have much to be grateful for, just as the early Pilgrims did.Let's concentrate on the pluses this Thanksgiving. HAVE A SAFE HOLIDAY UNIVERSITY STATE BANK 955 Iowa 843-4700