2 University Daily Kansan Friday, October 19, 1973 Women Making Use Of Graduate Study By ELISE RITTER Korean Staff Reporter The number of women in the University of Kansas Graduate School will increase in the years ahead, according to Howard J. Galloway, executive director of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. a 1 percentage of women in the Graduate masters program was 35 per cent in fall 1992, he said, up from 26 per cent in 1987. During spring 1973, a total of 1,069 women were enrolled as graduate students, he said. Total enrollment in the Graduate School was 3,378. Graduate School enrollment figures show breaking by sexes for fall 1973 "We're getting a different type of woman now." Buangmartel said, "competent, motivated and liberal—not just someone who knows what to do after she graduated from college." One of the reasons for the slight increase in the number of women graduate students here is that the job market is opening up for women, he said. However, universities are falling behind industry in hiring women, he said, also citing discrimination in admitting women to graduate schools at universities. Many admissions offices have thought that the dropout rate of women graduate in nursing would be higher. and that women didn't bring the department a good name, he said. The important question considered in years past, he said, was whether women would be as likely to complete their degrees and enter a field as often as men. The newer and less prestigious fields are more likely to admit women than the older, established To facilitate graduate work the graduate School rescinded recently the award of full-time. Bungarrette said part-time enrollment should work to the advantage of women and the entire Lawrence community. It will make education more flexible, he said. Time limits on earning a graduate degree still remain, he said. But these limits may soon be reviewed by University committees. Baugartel said that though he encouraged the admission of women students to the Graduate School he favored even more the admission of students from racial minorities. According to the 1972 Statistical Abstract of the United States, the percentage of women students receiving masters degrees has increased almost five-fold in the past 20 A survey of Fall 1972 enrollment statistics indicated that women graduate students still favor the School of Education, the humanities and the social sciences. City Committee to Study Feasibility of Bike Routes By LYN WALLIN Kansas Staff Reporter The Lawrence Traffic and Safety Commission decided last night at a special meeting to study the feasibility of establishing bicycle routes in the city. The commission appointed a sub- committee to examine the possibilities of developing bike lanes on four thourfaresh used by University of Kansas students going to and from the campus and to the commission to carry the heaviest bicycle traffic on to the campus. The streets studied will be Crescent Road, Oakland Avenue, 12th and 13rd Streets, Angel Street, 12th and 13th Streets. The subcommittee will make proposals regarding the possibility of painting lanes for cyclists on these roads at the next commission meeting. E. W. Fenstermaker represented KU Security and Parking at the meeting. He presented figures to the commission complied over a 10-day prorail this month giving the number of bicycles entering the campus. One some days, he said, more than 1,300 cyclists entered the campus. Leonard Hoover, city engineer, said that our university needed to get involved in the development of a new Elizabeth Goetz, a member of KU's human development and family life department, represented the University Parking and traffic Board. She mentioned two efforts the University was making concerning the bicycle issue. "The board has ordered international bicycle traffic signs to be posted at all traffic control points on campus. The University Daily Kansas has also made an informal commitment to print bicycle rules and guidelines on the Mount Oread Bicycle Club." Goetz said. Hover presented information he had received on other cities on how they had changed. He urged the commission not to take any action until it had studied other cities' "We're limited in what we can do because of the relatively narrow width of the wall." Kansan Photos by JIM ZIX Trek—a strange name, but a great shoe. Made by Clarks of England. For getting around the campus in comfort try a pair of Treks. In brown leather or sand suede. In both men's and women's sizes. Ravmond Stuhl Efforts are being made to renew interest in the University of Kansas chapter of Alpha Phi Omega, a national service fraternity for meg. KU's chapter, Lambda, was founded in 1929 and is the sixth oldest chapter in the United States. Membership here reached a peak of about 30 in the 1960's. Service Group To Reorganize Music Prof Recruits, Guides KU Students APO used to restrict its membership to tender Boy Scouts, but now any male KU student. Interest has waned in the past two to three years, according to John Glinka, associate director of Watson Library and group adviser. APO members met for an organizational meeting. Oct. 15 to revive interest in the He looks at how the student holds the instrument. He decides whether the student has a natural rhythm and a freedom of motion in his body. And Raymond Stuhl, professor of music who has taught cello at the University of Kansas for 37 years, knows how to spot those sigmets. A few performances won't necessarily unscowake how much musical talent a student has. Glinka is enthusiastic about renewing the chapter's activity. By JIM McNICKLE Kanan Staff Register "It's a mistake to be choosy in your choice or students." Stuhl says. "No one can ever make you choose." Before coming to KU, he studied with Paul Hermann, noted Hungarian virtuoso, and with Hugo Becker at the Hochschule fur Musik in Berlin. STUHL HAS been head of the department of cello and ensemble at the Kansas City Conservatory and a member of the Kansas City Philharmonic under Karl Kruger. Stahl is regarded as the No. 1 recruiter of talent for KU's music department. "Raymond Stuhl is an excellent instructor." "With his wide knowledge of Kansas music programs and his fine teaching reputation, he always has a good income of cellists." He is something of a perfectionis "As long as I can, I will always attempt to obtain a high degree of efficiency from my students and to create great enthusiasm in them." I see seeing how fast I can make things grow. He joined the music faculty at KU, Stuhl has appeared as soloist with his wife usually the piano accompanist in many colleges in the Southwest. He has specialized in introducing and promoting interest in stringed instruments and in playing and lecturing in primary and secondary schools in the Midwest. "HALF OF what I teach is what I swore I do to alter my own teachers' methods" He says he considered many of his teachers unreasonable prima donna but they demanded and received deserving respect. The atmosphere in European schools is rigid, Stuhl says, but still very conducive to study. "I wouldn't be in Kanaa if it weren't for it," says Mary Ann Dresser, San Antonio, Texas. "I don't want to be there." patient and keenly aware of a person's capabilities." Stuhl is known for guiding students who have gone on to prestigious music positions. Alan Harris, a 1980 KU graduate and former student of Stuhl, is professor of cello and chamber music at the Eastman School of Music in Rochester, N.Y. Linda Juda, a recent graduate and former Stuhl student, won a music award given by the Oklahoma City Symphony and was named the winner with Isaac Stern for the symphony's season. Lyle Wolf, also a former Stuhl student, won a similar award from the Kansas City Philharmonic and soaked during their young people's concert in 1972. Richard Maag, a 1954 graduate, is professor of cairn at Furman University in Brooklyn. Stuhl says he believes a musician must be intelligent, but he sees discipline as vital. "Until you have attained great discipline, you have no freedom," he says. "Freedom attained without discipline is indulgence; failure can be found on anyone's doorstep." Stuhl says he thinks KU is a great place for a person to enjoy bot freedom and disability. He attributes the success of anyone who succeeds in the artistic or intellectual world to "90 per cent sweat and 10 per cent talent." "The gaining of personal security is the indispensable quality of every successful person." Student Tour To KC Planned Foreign students and interested American students will be touring parts of Kansas City, Mo., Sunday on a tour sponsored by People-to-People, a service organization connected with foreign students. Aimee Anderson, assistant to the dean of foreign students, and 35 students will visit the Kansas City Zoo, eat lunch in the River Quay area, tour the Kansas City Museum of Science and History and see a show at the Planetarium. FRIDAY and SATURDAY the MAD HATTER 704 New Hampshire presents for your listening & dancing pleasure: Friday and Saturday Nites TREE FROG BAND 8-12 p.m. ZERCHER PHOTO Unicolor Printing Systems Printing Paper—Chemistry BogenPaterson OmegaBeseler Enlargers ZERCHER 1107 Mass. PHOTO The publi has r The Wichi join (ASK orgar four y do so F The again inclu time Su Ab nigh reno 9th Brass Beds Walnut Chair Oak Roll Top Desk Cherry Bed Walnut Dresser Walnut Beds Oak Drop Leaf Tables Oak Secretaries Carved Walnut Mirror Oak Commodes Mahogany Dash Victorian Lamp Oak Hall Tree Brass & Iron Beds Th the | the | Oak Fern Stands Oak Child's Roll Top Mahogany Secretary Walnut Cascade Stands Oak McBoy Haviland Unfinished Furniture Poseur Silver & Silver plate Copper Brass Ankara Clothing Dinette Sets Oak Rockers Mobile Pill Safe Oak Pile Safe Photo Equipment Books Oak Buttrot Iron Beds Roseville Pottery McCoy Pottery Handicrafts Depression Glass Bisque Flourines Jeremy Oak Box Mahogany End Tables Square Oak Dining Tables Oak Floor Tables Stained Glass Leaded Glass Redwood Desks "Ice Cream" Sets Rylyn's OakDressers Sets of Dining Chairs Maple "Lincoln" Rocker Sewing Rockers Dressing Screen Quilts Walnut Hi-Boy And Much Much More THE WHITE ELEPHANT MARKET 737 New Hamp. 841-5656 10-5 Sat. & Sun. 1-5 Mon.-Fri.