University Daily Kansan Friday. November 2. 1979 11 From bage one Braces... **IT SUCH HELP him to do some things he can't do now, like playing catch without falling down. It's almost impossible.** The ground or gravel. This should help." The Shewmaker's have been waiting nearly two months for the braces to arrive from Tennessee. A broken part of the brace delayed the final fitting until yesterday. Paul Trautman, director of Orthodontics, said the Med Center's brace shop planned to begin making the orthosis brace if there was a large need for it. BARB KINNEY/Kansan staff Bob Sowse, staff orthotrips-pressthetist at the University of Kansas Medical Center, fits 10-year-old Andy Shewaker with a set of implants. Walkina aid of Hip, Knee, Ankle and Foot Orthosis. The braces, shown right, may enable Ankle or to walk for several years before she is confined to a wheelchair. After being fitted at the brace shop, Andy was wheeled to the MD clinic so the clinic's physician and therapist could examine the brace. Stove said the orthotist, physician and therapist worked as a team to get Andy walking with the new brace. DESPITE THE LONG wait for the braces, Andy said he was not happy to have them on. "I know they are stiff, they're like a new pair of shoes. Let's see if you can walk in them." "I'm not going to wear them all the time anyway," he said. "He probably will wear them for an hour or two in the morning and then again in the afternoon." Trautman said, as he helped Andy out of the wheelbarrow. "They're just too tight," he said, setting down his sack of Halloween "boot" to give the braces a closer examination. Once again Andy lifted his upper body upright to get his balance. Depending on the table for support, he took a deep breath and walked about three feet. Both jaws pinned were released and he fell back into the security of his wheelchair. "THAT'S ENOUGH for today," Redford said. "We are really hopeful, but we don't know yet if he will be able to keep wearing them," he said. "We won't know for about a week." Redford said he planned to put Andy in the hospital Sunday for a week to teach him how to use the braces. In the meantime, Andy will be getting used to them at home. "We have to anu and our new that will fit out the brace and also new shoes," Mrs. Shewmaker said. "Then it's right to show the teacher the new braces." She said she wasn't sure how Andy would handle facing his school friends. Mrs. Shewmaker said a special teaching assistant was hired at Andy's school to help him move around and also to help him with school work. "When he got his first set of braces he went to school and rolled up his pants legs to show everybody. I'm not sure what he will do this time." Council wants exigency redefined Bv DAVE LEWIS BY DAVILLE HELC Staff Renorter Evelyn Swartz, president of University Council, said the recommendations would be forwarded to the Regents. The University Council approved recommendations years ago that differences between financial exigency and a financial problem that could be rectified without further investigation. Some faculty members have contended that the effectiveness of KU's exigency policies could be limited by a recently applied policy. We do not specify what constituted financial exigency. Financial exigency is a state of financial crisis. It would be declared by Chancellor Archue D. Hykes if budgetary difficulties were unavoidable because of tenured faculty members necessary. T. P. Srivamina, chaperone president of the American Association of University Professors, said there was a good possibility that the Regents would specify its policy. REGENTS OFFICIALS were not available yesterday for comment on the council's recommendations. "I'm optimistic," Srinivasan said. "The Regents would not have adopted this definition had they been appaied ahead of time of the reaction from the faculty and the strength of the faculty on this issue." Srinivasan said the council's approval of the recommendations was a major step in changing the Regents policy. The council's recommendations were adopted from a report released Friday by the University Senate executive committee to the hc committee on financial exigency. ROBERT FRIAUF, a member of the ad hoc committee, said the recommendations were formulated because the KU faculty should voice its disapproval of the Regents policy in an official document. The SEnx committee recommended that the Regents policy be changed to say, "Financial exigency will be declared only as a last resort after all possible alterations in the curriculum or survival of the University as a quality institution of higher learning have been explored." William Kauffman, legal counsel for the Regents, wrote a letter to Dykes Oct. 11 saying that the more general Regents policy on external exigency would not conflict with Ku's policies. THE REGENTS POLICY, approved Sept. The committee also requested that the Regents policy provide at least a year's notice to instructors being released. 21, says, "It will be the responsibility of the chief executive officer of each Rogers Group to oversee the groups, to develop a plan for reductions in financial exigency related by conditions of financial exigency." KU's policy, approved in 1976, states that the release of tenuous faculty is to be used "only as a last resort ... after all possible benefits have been examined, and cited or rejected." In related business, the council referred back to SenEx an amendment to KU's financial exigency policy that authorizes elected committees from each department to recommend tenured faculty members released if financial exigency was declared. The amendment was passed by SenEx last spring and forwarded to the University Council Sept. 6 for its approval. Imagine the taste of . . . a steaming mug of cinnamon-laced apple cider to toast the victory, a hearty portion of rich lasagne in spicy tomato sauce to restore your vitality or a "Hot Fudge Lover's Banana Split" to ease your disappointment. Picture a pizza that captures the zesty taste of a taco, a mug of Cappicello coffee for a pre-game meal, a slice of orange sandwich that will astonish the hungriest group (12 or more). Dream of old-fashioned chocolate soda in a turn-of-the-century atmosphere. Julie's it all. Come in and indulge! Sell it through Kansan want ads. Call the classified department at 864-4358. سم المالية الإيرانية Hours: 11 a.m. to Midnight Monday to Thursday 11 a.m. to 1 a.m. Friday and Saturday 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. Sunday نموذج شامل أجهزة النظام الرئيسي ، برنامج داخل الكيان المعلوم في الإعدادات الخاصة بالكيان المعلوماتي وليس مطلوب للتعامل معه ! . إذا كان لديك أي من الخبرات المعلوماتية تستخدم لإدخال البيانات : Holcolm Complex behind Gibson's الربح : نموذج سليم النظام الرئيسي : " وإذا كانت لديك أي من الخبرات المعلوماتية تستخدم لإدخال البيانات " * With the Name of Allah On Saturday, November 3, 1979, at 6:30 PM to 10:30 PM, the MSA will sponsor an Eid-ul-Adha “Potluck” dinner and film at Holcolm Sports Complex behind Gibson's. All are cordially invited! برنامه سومی سیستم ساختمان : من شعرا 1 M.S.A. میسا مسیب فتوک نونکو میشم مسیب فتوک نونکو میسا مسیب فتوک نونکو پارسان : مسا میسا mسیب فتوک نونکو - صدا ; ۵۸-۱۵-۲ ماشین : Holcolm Sports Complex behind Gibson's استریم در حافظه متدنامات آدرس هر مرور تکنیک "الفایل اضافی" را استریم می‌کند. AUCTION ORIENTAL AND PERSIAN RUGS SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 4,1979 RAMADA INN LAWRENCE, KANSAS 6th AND IOWA STREETS - HASKELL ROOM VIEWING TIME: VIEWING TIME: 1:00 P.M. AUCTION TIME: 2:00 P.M. AZAD, INC., INTERNATIONALLY KNOWN AS DIRECT IMPORTERS OF THE BEST QUALITY ORIENTAL AND PERSIAN RUGS, WILL OFFER AT AUCTION A WIDE RANGE OF HAND KNOTTED TRIBAL AND HIGHLY PRIZED COLLECTABLE RUGS. INCLUDED IN THE SALE WILL BE ISFAHAN, NAIEN, OUM, (WOOL & SILK), KERMAN, TABRIZ, ARDEBIL, BOKHARA, BELOUTCH, AFGHAN, AND MANY DIFFERENT TYPES OF TURKISH, SILK HEREKE, AND MAIN LAND CHINESE. OTHER VARIETIES FROM OUR INVENTORY OF HAND LOOM DUED RUGS, OFFER A FINE SELECTION OF SIZES, DESIGN, AND A WIDE RANGE OF PRICES. AZAD ON THE COUNTRY CLUB PLAZA 410 NICHOLS ROAD KANSAZ CITY. MISSOURI YOUR OLD ORIENTAL RUGS CONSIDERED FOR PURCHASE, AFTER AUCTION SALE, ON SITE APPRAISALS PHONE 931-631-9425 Cash and carry please Pence Garden Center & Greenhouses - 15th & New York • West -914 W. 23rd 4 blocks East of 842-1596 Mass, on 15th Street '843-2004 $2.50 OFF Bring this coupon to any participating Pizza Hut® restaurant and get $2.50 off the regular price of your favorite large pizza. 1979 One coupon per pie slice. One coupon per pizza, please $1.50 OFF Bring this coupon to any participating Pizza Hut* restaurant and get $1.50 on the regular price of your favorite medium pizza. Offer expires Nov. 16, 1979 One coupon per pizza, please. ---