10 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, November 28. 1979 Pinball ... From page one the profits from the machines and bar owners get the other half Generally, contracts between bar owners and the operators in Lawrence are verbal, and bar owners say they are able to break the contract and switch to anotheroperator. THE OPERATOR usually empties the machines about once a week and pays for all service on the machine. Linden said the 50 percent figure had not linden since world War II. Oakley said a bar owner's percentage of machine profits paid for the utility bill and rent of the car. The Kansas survey of bar owners and managers confirmed the importance of amusement machines to their businesses. Barry Graden, co-owner of Ichabod's RFD 3, told a KU reporting student that each of the machines in his bar took in $75 and $200 a week. "Without the machines the place would go. We'd make little over cost," he said. "But the machines help it to make a decent profit." He said the machines were essential to his business. Roy Kleveer, co-owner of Eiger Garden, 14th and Tennessee streets, told a KU reporting student that his four paniulis were the best in town and video game made about $200 a week. "WE WOULDN'T survive without them," Klewer said. "They bring in money and people." Mike Hughs, co-owned of Bogarts, 207 W. Eighth St., said his business could survive without pinball and other amusement machines. "Yes, we could make it," Hughes said. "We wouldn't go under without them, but we sure wouldn't make as much money." Hughes said his two pinball machines, pool table and jukebox were "an attraction to my bar." Tomorrow: A look at a lawsuit accusing Lawrence amusement machine operators of questionable practices. "If you couldn't play pool or pinball, what else would you do at the bars? The bar business has always had machines," he said. Arrest . . . From page one An Iranian student, who asked not to be identified, said Gerami had been standing in front of the foreign student office telling her that she was afraid of their rights regarding the INS interviews. The student said Clark Dean, dean of foreign students, then came out of the office and sat on the desk of an assistant. The student said an argument broke up, at which time the student was taken However, Coan said that several Iranian students had complained to him that they were not being treated well by students outside that office who were trying to convince them not to attend the in-room meeting. "When I left the office at about 11:30, I told the student to hold the gesture (Geranium) to be sure not to make noise with other students. He told me that it was a part of their culture to touch each other, and that I had to do so." COAAN SAID THAT an INS officer came out of the office almost immediately and asked Gerami for identification. "When the student said he didn't have his passport with him," Coan said, "the INS officer suggested that he get an attorney and have someone get his passport for him." Coan said he had heard that Gerami had been advised by his attorney not to present his passport. When Gerami did not present a passport, Coan said, he was arrested. Jane Fryman, Gerard's attorney, said they wanted to take the petted student. She released she was charged with the charges, but said she thought the arrest was an attempt to intimidate Iranian soldiers. An Iranian student, who asked not to be identified, said, "They did that to frighten us. They know that none of us have our 194 (identification forms) in hand. We don't carry them around all the time because if they show them, we can't get out of the country." SOME IRIANI students have been protesting a requirement that they have their photographs taken after the interviews. The interviews are part of a check or the Carte administration in response to a report made by hostages by Iranians in Tehran. If Iranian students do not report to the I.S. by December 23, they will be detained. Also required in the interviews are proof of enrollment, residence, up-to-date arrival and denature records and valid passports. Coan said Iranian students had been standing in the corridor outside the foreign student office trying to advise other students not to attend the interviews. Some Iranian students have said they could find no legal basis for having their photographs taken. NUTS SAID Monday that INS officials had said the taking of photographs could be justified as part of the "other information" set forth by the Commission and Regulations in the Federal Register. "Each student must have in his or her possession at the time of report: . . . (4) Evidence of current address in the United States. Students must provide such other information as INS may request in order to verify maintenance of status and verification of status. The provision reads: "We believe, and our law lawyer believes, that section (4) was misinterpreted," an attorney told reporters. "We have canceled their appointments because our lawyer suggested that we wait a few days to report. We need the time to find out why NS interpretation of the rule is correct." help to verify residence and maintenance of status. But Iranian students said yesterday that they could not see how a photograph would "IF THEY WILL just show us proof that the interpretation is correct, then we will comply with the photographs." Nuts said the order to take the communication of the INS he would not show the communication to students because he was under no obligation to take it. He said that the interviews yesterday had proceeded "as normal," and that more than 100 students had registered. None of the students refused to have their pictures taken, he said. He said no students had been found out of status yesterday. "We did have a couple of borderline cases," Nuts said. "But we're trying to deal with these cases on an individual level, helping over backwards to help people out." An Iranian student said most Iranian students were not afraid of the deportation order or of returning to Iran. "Civil rights, not deportation, is the issue," the student said. "One reason many people wanted to stay here was that the United States is supposed to practice free and civil rights. But America is not the way we place we can get to an education." Kansas oil producers may reap benefits from OPEC price raise By TED LICKTEIG Staff Reporter Oil producers in Kansas, who are snapping a 22-year slump in production, might benefit from next month's expected price increase by the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, said Carl Zarley, an accountant for the Kansas Geological Survey. That beepit will be more significant than it would have been last year because of the apparent increase in oil production in Kansas for the first time since 1968. Oil production in Kansas has increased from 42 million barrels in the first three months of 1787 to 44!4 million barrels in the first three months of 1797. Producer will benefit from OPEC's price increase, which has been predicted by oil analysts because of the large amount of oil produced in the country, which produce fewer than 10 barrels a day. Oil produced from stripper wells is not subject to federal regulation, and therefore its price closely reflects the world market price. "The price of stripper oil has responded to the world price for several years." Zarley said, but she could not say for sure whether it would react the same in December. third largest producer of such oil in the nation, behind Texas and Oklahoma. 油 ministers from the OPEC nations will meet in December in Caracas, Venezuela, to determine the new price of their oil, currently $20 a barrel). Only 6 percent of the state's wells are pumped by the major oil companies, making the benefactors of a price increase in gasoline much higher. Stripped wells now sell for $1 a barrel. SHIRLEY PAUL, a geologist for the University of Washington, on the eastern part of the state, where it is less expensive to drill wells because the reservoirs are not as deep. Most of these people are not in town. Zarley said the severity of a potential windfall profits tax now being considered by Congress would determine how much of a dammer would be put on the profits. Paul said that with the higher prices it was now profitable to drill some wells that were not money-makers before. "Some were not making enough to pay the electricity to run the wells," she said. Zarley said the state was growing increasingly dependent on foreign sources for its oil and that 23 percent of its supply came from foreign sources. ACCORDING TO THE survey's estimates, the cost of drilling a old oil well 12 percent over the last four years, the cost of drilling a new well rate for the rest of the economy of 8 percent. The Osage pipeline, which recently was built, carries most of the state's oil supply from the Gulf Coast. Paul said it was highly unlikely that any oil producer in the state would find a large new reservoir. THE AVERAGE STRIPPER well in the state produces 2.8 barrels a day, she said. She said there was only a remote monitor for the production to hold production under 10 barrels a team to draw the higher unregulated oil. Oil sold under regulated prices sells for about $3 a barrel. One of the largest oil discoveries in recent months was made in western Kansas four miles east of Dighton, where a well tested at 131 barrels a day. Conference features picture pros By JENNIFER HOLT Staff Renorter Dave Harvey, National General staff photographer, Steve Ettinger, National General staff photographer, Chris Johns, 1979 Newspaper Photographer of the Year, will be among 10 newspaper, public, and private media leaders to speak at the third annual Fritz Photo Conference today through Saturday at the National Gallery. The conference is dedicated to the late J. Fritz and of alumnus M. member in the Society corps who worked for the Associated Press photo bureau. Fritz died Feb. 26, 1977, at the age of 84. La Belle said yesterday that his slide show would concentrate on people and situations seen in everyday life. The conference will begin today at 10:30 a.m. for the workshop, "lecture-site lecture show" by Dave La Bele, La Bele has worked for the Tribute for two years and for 10 other organizations. The La Bele has worked for the Tribute for two years and for 10 other organizations. my pictures are not prize winners but they will express a great deal of emotion, getting involved and sharing." "I won't talk about layout; I won't talk about textbook photos," he said. "Most of us HE SAID HIS photographs went against the grain of many photojournalism conventions. "You're simply supposed to shoot the picture and not editorialize in photojournalism," he said. "Well, I can't do that. I use myself as a paint brush to express myself." First-, second- and third-places and honorable mentions will be awarded in each of 11 categories. Winners will receive cash rewards by the total registration fee collected The highlight of Friday's program will be the judging of entries in the annual basketball tournament at Eight Room of the Kansas Union. The deadline for the contest, which is open to KU students, is 4:45 p.m. Thursday. Each entrant must submit a Student Union Activity办公室 in the KU. "I don't want to be confined. I try to share the good things and the bad with people, to express my inner feelings." JOHNS OF THE Topeka Capital-Journal will speak at a 8 a.m. Saturday in Woodruff Auditorium in the Union. Nick Keshb at the event will discuss news pictures at 11 a.m. Harvey will speak on "Careers Before the Midwest" at 1:30 p.m. in woodruff. Ettlinger will discuss "Ideas That Make a Magazine" at 2:30 p.m. in woodruff. Other speakers for the conference will include Larry Hattemberg, National Press Club and KAKE-TV chief photographer and reporter, who twice been named NPPA Newswist Cameraman of the Year; Jim Janssen, the editor of Magazine; Carole Greenawalt, photo editor for the Kansas City Star; Lisa Thompson of Crag Advertising, Kansas City. Mo There is no charge for the first three days of the conference. The charge for the Saturday session, which includes lunch, will be $7.50 for students and $9.00 for the public. Advanced registration for the conference can be made by contacting Alice Richardson, 105 Flint. Further information can be obtained from Gary Mason, 9 Flint. Iran... Nov. 28, 1979 Free Japanese Film "Double Suicide" Dyche Auditorium 4:00 p.m. subtitled in English Sponsored by ASIAS Sponsored by ASIAS THE MILITANTS said they were especially concerned about provocations From page one The militants issued a statement yesterday saying they had planted mines throughout the embassy compound and supporters should not try to enter the area. We have someone for you to meet. He's soft, plush, and a very good listener. Come into the Zercher Photo nearest you and get acquainted. We're sure you'll want to take at least one of our friends home with you. After all, talk is cheap, but a good listener is hard to find. DOWNTOWN HILLCREST The militants had hinted previously that they were rigging explosives to kill all the hostages if the United States launched a military action to rescue them. GREETING CARDs Thursday and Friday, the emotional Moslem holy days of Tasua and Ashura, when devout Moslems here will or cut them off, signify their willingness to become part of them. NOTICE The University of Kansas Student Awards Committee is accepting nominations for the Rusty Leaf Concerned Student Award. Applications are available in the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 220 Strong Hall and the Student Senate Office, 105B, Kansas Union. The Rusty Leffel Concerned School Award was established in 1973 and is presented annually to a student who has demonstrated through his or her actions a real concern for furthering the ideals of the University and of higher education. The Chancellor selects 25 students from the school to participate in an event will be presented at the Higher Education Week banquet scheduled for February 1980. The applications for the Rusty Leffel Concerned Student Award must be received by the Student Awards Committee. % The Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 220 $8.50-9./ $8.-8.50 with kuid Thursday, Dec. 6,1979 7:30 p.m. Hoch Auditorium "Things are moving in a positive direction, although nothing concrete has been decided," Dahlman said. "We have tried to get rid of it, and things are going smoothly, and things seem to be going smoothly." The meeting was the third this month for discussion of the issue, said Bill Dahlman, housing services committee chairman of the Association of University Residence Halls. Representatives from Alpha Omicron Pi sorority met with University administrators and students yesterday afternoon, but the question of where AOPI pledges will live next fall remains unanswered, Leader of AOPI colony president, said yesterday. Housing for AOPi pledges remains unsettled question Negotiations with the sorority began after AURH voted Nov. 2 to discuss the group's housing alternatives before a floor in a building that was not contracted for the sorority's use next fall. HE SAID THAT in exchange for guaranteed housing for next year, the sorority had promised to provide housing for additional members and additional pledges by the fall of 1881. Fred McElhene, director of the office of residential programs, said that he, Ann Eversole, director of student organizations and activities, and Cary Smith, dean of the College of Applied ACPI representatives space on a floor in an unspecified residence hall next fall. MeHLENIE SAIID that the meetings with the sorority's national representatives were held at the Residential Programs Advisory Board last spring, and that no opposition to the move was needed. "I did not feel the decision would cause as HE SAID THAT THE agreement to provide housing for the sorority next fall was initially an oral agreement, but that the agreement was later spelled out in a letter. McElhenie said that giving guaranteed insurance would work to the University's benefit in the future, when the sorority were able to be members and ease the University hospitals. much sound and fury as it did. If we would have felt that, we would not have made the decision," he said. JAY SMITH, AURH president, said AURH was interested in finding a place for him, and they have been working on a large number of residence halls occupants. In the past several years, KU residence halls have been overcrowded at the times of the summer because having to live in temporary quarters. AOPi has about 56 pledges, Mebust said. The sorority plans to add more pledges during its formal rush this January. "We're talking about 60 to 80 individuals who are going to have to be housed in a new home," he said, doing this kind of work for 18 years and I still not sure it I feel that I made a wrong decision. "We are most concerned with the girls being happy," Mebust said. "We want to find a good solution for everyone involved." McElhenie said the University would have the final say as to where the sorority pledges would be living next fall. "It was in our letter that we would have the final word on where they could go," he said. "What we are searching for at this moment is to provide a way to say to the sorority, 'Come on and join us.'" Thursday night MALE DANCER NIGHT at The FLAMINGO Women only from 9 pm-1 am members & guests welcome 501 N 9th (memberships available)