October 16, 1984 Page 3 CAMPUS AND AREA The University Daily KANSAN Investigation continuing into Haskell rape report Lawrence police are continuing to investigate the reported rape early Saturday morning of a 20-year-old Haskell Indian Junior College student. The student told police that she met a man she knew at a bar and that they went to a room at the College Motel, 1703 W. Sixth St. Two other men were in the room, the student said, and after the man she knew left, the other two men raled her. 5 named for Ellsworth honor Police said they had contacted the suspects. The suspects told police that the student had intercourse with them willingly. The University of Kansas Alumni Association has selected five people to be recipients of the Fried Elsworth Medal, an honor during campus weekend. The association will present the medalitions at a private dinner Oct 28. The recipients will be introduced to the crowd in honor of the RU Oklahoma game the next day. The recipients are Fred B. Anschutz, a 1933 alumnus and Denver oilman and rancher; Robert Billings, a 1959 graduate and president of Alamar carr. Eleanor Sisson Malott, wife of former Chancellor Deane W. Malott; Donald Slawson, a 1956 alumnus; Jeffrey Miller, "Twink" Starr, 1927 alumnus and retired businessman from Kansas City, Mo. Glass blower wins fellowship Vernon Brecha, associate professor of design, has received a $15,000 Artist's Fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts. Bregcha, a glass blower, said he was still analyzing the options he had for spending "I basically want to do some good with the award," he said. "I've been making artistic statements about the environment, and now I'll be able to reach more people." CBS vice president to speak Lou Dorfman, vice president of CBS in charge of graphic design and promotion, will speak at 6 p.m. Monday in the William P. Albrecht Auditorium, 314 Wesley Hall. Address to mark U.N. Day Dorfman, who has won two Emmy awards and two Cio awards for best television commercials and newspaper advertisements will speak about his work. in honor of United Nations Day on Oct. 24, a visiting professor in political science will speak on "u.S.U.S.R. Tensions" from the University's Jawhasky Room of the Kansas Union Andrew Contch, the professor and a former ambassador to the Soviet Union was born in 1940. Endowment position filled The Kansas University Endowment Association has named William Neidt as its development coordinator for medical affairs, a new position. Neidt will assist Robert Campbell, association vice president for medical affairs, and will work from the association with the University of Kansas Medical Center. Weather Today will be cloudy and cool with a 70 percent chance of rain and thunderstorms. The high will be in the low to mid-50s. Winds of 10 to 20 mph will be from the northwest. Tonight will be clearing and cold. The low will be between 35 and 40 Tomorrow will be mostly sunny and the high will be in the mid-to upper 50s. Compiled from Kansas staff and United Press International reports. Correction Because of a photographer's error, the title of a book written by Shel Silverstein was incorrectly given in a outline on the front page of yesterday's Kansan. The book's title is "The Giving Tree." --as the leadership styles have changed, so have campus attitudes, she said. Tim Devine, Kansas City, Mo., senior, lays brick for a class object, a tutor arch, for a practicum in architecture. He exp project behind Marvin Hall. Devine was working on the pro-ject to finish Thursday. Budig's secretary finds golf, humor help By MARY CARTER Staff Reporter Staff Reporter You might say that she keeps the University running. She manages one of the most visible, high-pressure offices on campus. Coworkers describe her as "unflappable" and "terrific under pressure." Jane Johnson, secretary to Chancellor Gene A. Budig, would rather be playing golf. On most evenings and weekends during warm weather, Johnson can be found with one of her three children or a friend on the golf course. "I just love it," she said. "You get out there and you don't think about anything, except the challenge. I'd like to be out there right now." She hit her first hole in one during a tournament at the Orchards golf course at the Alvamar Country Club in July. The ace was the high point of her summer, she said. "I just screamed." Johnson said. Her boss, however, takes credit for the accomplishment. "I PRESENTED HER a Jayhawk golf ball, and two days later she went out and hit a hole in one." Budd said. "Without that ball, she wouldn't have had a chance." "We stole her from academic affairs," said Jim Scaly, assistant to the chancellor. "She came highly recommended, and we were happy to hire her Johnson has worked at the University of Kansas for 12 years. She began as a part-time clerk-typist in the academic office officer to the chancellor's office about eight years ago. "Jane has a gift for keeping things in perspective and on an even keel. She is the kind of person who will stay the same at times when things are must hectic." said Seally. JOHNSON'S SENSE of humor is famous, her conversation punctuated with laughter. Ask co-workers about her, and they'll likely laugh first, then tell of how Johnson keeps things lively on the second floor of Strong Hall "She's cray," said Betty Grammer, secretary to University counsel. "She's a lot of fun. She can laugh off most trouble, things that other people couldn't. I couldn't just laugh if somebody jumped on me about things the way they do her." Johnson said her job was more than typing and filing and answering the telephone. "Every day is different," she said. "That's what I like about my job. It different all the time, and that keeps it from being boring. You never know what's going to happen." One of Johnson's jobs is screening the chancellor's visitors. "I TRY to refer to the proper person," she said "A lot of times students will want to talk to the chancellor for a class project. He'd like to, I'm sure, but if he did it for one, he'd have to for everyone. He is busy most day. People don't realize how hard he works." Can I tell you to see him here is someone me feel bad because I know there is someone else who could help them better than he could." Jane Johnson Johnson has worked for Archie Dykes and Del Shankel, a former chancellor and a former acting chancellor, as well as Budg, all of whom had different leadership styles, she said. But she declined to compare them. "Here when we change leaders, the secretary remains the same. In private business or government, the new person will pretty well clean out. In higher education, they have to stick with what's there. That's a credit to them." "I REMEMBER THE sit-ins and when they burned the Union in the 1960s," she said. "Chancellor Chalmers was here then I worked downstairs. They were all over in front of the entrance. We had to walk past them to get to work. They never said anything to us, but it scared me to death." "Sometimes people resent it when they Before she came to work at KU, Johnson live in Colorado and Florida, where she also worked at universities. She also spent 27 years as a professor of computer science her husband worked for an engineering firm. "It was really different," she said of Saudi Arabia. "Women don't do much there. When we were there, 15 or 16 years ago, women weren't allowed to drive or to work in offices, and they were veiled. When we went shopping at the marketplace, I wore long sleeves." Her lifestyle has changed during recent years, as her two older children, Jenny and Justin, moved into their own apartments. Only her younger son, Jeff, a sophomore at Lawrence High School, lives at home. "I have a whole new life," she said. "The older ones have moved out, and as much as I miss them, it's easier. I don't have to cook anymore." Kansas senators to appear on campus this week a 4 p.m. ceremony concerning a $9 million federal grant the University of Kansas received for a research center on the needs of students in mathematics. A Budig announced the grant Thursday. Both senators from Kansas will be on campus this week in separate appearances. From 6 to 8 p.m. Dole will attend a fund-raising dinner at the residence of Stan and Lois Zarabaem south of Lawrence, Elizabeth Dole, transportation secretary and the senator's wife, also will attend the dinner. Dole then will go to the computer center for She said Dole was donating his $1,333 fee from a recent speech to the fund. Republican State Headquarters in Topeka said tickets for the barbecue dinner cost $25. Sen. Bob Dole will participate in two ceremonies tomorrow. At 3:30 p.m. he will be at 106 Green Hall to present a check to the Vietnam Memorial Fund, said Margaret Berlin, a member of the Vietnam Memorial Committee. Sen. Nancy Landon Kassebaum will speak about drinking age legislation at 8 p.m. Thursday in the Kansas Union Ballroom. Carol Bell, communication director at Her speech is a Student Union Activities Forum and is free and open to the publite. Kassebaum will speak again at 12:30 p.m. Friday in 104 Green Hall in a noon forum sponsored by the Student Bar Association. Violent clash in Aggieville stirs officials From Staff and Wire Reports Riley County authorities yesterday ordered new riot gear and pledged to crack down on illegal liquor sales in response to a weekend clash between police and football fans in Manhattan's Aggieville. The violence erupted early Sunday when as many as 8,000 people, many of whom were students, packed the streets of Agigieville, a two-block business district including several taverns and clubs, located Kansas State University, after the archival University of Kansas, 24.7 "It is no longer acceptable for the law-abiding citizens to say 'kids will be kids.'" Eugene Klingler, Riley County Law Enforcement Board chairman, said yesterday at the board's monthly meeting. He said that it was no longer acceptable for that type of activity to take place in a civilized society." Colt Knutson, Riley County attorney, promised to crack on illegal liquor sales in the Manhattan area. He also pledged that he would lift laws prohibiting drinking on state property. Alvin Johnson, director of the Riley County Police Department, said he had ordered 50 new helmets and gas masks. The police did not have any available for use during the weekend meetle, he said. "I am angry," he said. "I went down there as the sun was coming up, and it looked like a war zone. When I went down there Saturday night, I wanted to believe it was some out-of-town bikers or student-age people and not students. But it wasn't." "Everyone has an immediate reaction to what happened, but we'll be discussing long-term options as well," said Mike Kuhn. "I think it's a good thing we are always going to be KU/Stark weekends." Among the steps that merchants might consider for future KU/K-State weekends would be closing Aggieville's taverns early in the evening, banning the sale of beer by the bottle or restricting sales of all liquor. Kuhn said. Sixty members of the Aggieville Merchants Association will meet at noon today to discuss ways to prevent violence from recurring on future game weekends. "I'm sure we'll discuss a wide range of options," he said. "We need to make our patrons aware that we don't condone the type of activity that went on over the weekend." Aggieville tavern owners and merchants are preparing for another busy weekend beginning Friday. K-State plays Missouri for homecoming on Saturday. Police and students won't easily forget the confrontations of the weekend, Kuhn said, but the K-State/Missouri game probably won't happen on edge like the annual showdown with KU "There's just something in the air when KU and K-State play," he said. "I doubt it we'll see the same type of alterations. There won't be a huge influx of Missouri fans comparable to the influx of KU fans we saw last weekend." Dianna Wellner, president of the Merchants Association, said the incidents over the weekend weren't all that different from what usually happened on a KU/K-State weekend. "I've lived in Manhattan for 12 years, and aside from the violence, the crowds weren't any different," she said. K-State officials said they would cooperate with law enforcement officials and Aggieville businessmen to improve security during future KU/K-State game weekends. Police arrested 24 people Sunday morning, including two KU students and one Lawrence resident. Andrew Duncan, 19. Mission Hills freshman, was charged with fleeing and eluding a law enforcement officer. Duncan was released on $300 bond Sunday and appeared yesterday morning in Riley County Court. A court date has been set for Nov. 8. Douglas Swenson, 22. Osawatomi senior, was charged with criminal damage to property. Swenson was released on $1,000 bond Sunday and is scheduled to appear tomorrow in Riley County Court. FOOD SERVICE EMPLOYEES NEEDED Must be available 8 a.m.-4 p.m. 2-3 days a week — some experience necessary good starting salary - 6 month raise extra quarterly profit sharing Apply at: Schumm Food Co. office 7191/2 Mass. "above the Smokehouse" between 9 a.m.-3 p.m.