University Daily Kansan Wednesday, October 24, 1979 5 Man gets sentence for kidnaping-rape A Lawrence man, found guilty Sept. 26, knotting and raping an 18-year-old in Douglas County district court yesterday to five to 20 years in prison for each of the three charges. Robert W. Brown, 1612 Tennessee SL, was sentenced for a kidnapping and rape that occurred in May. The sentences will run concurrently. Rondel S. Southard, 408 Indiana St., who pleaded guilty to aggravated sodomy in the same incident, was sentenced to one for five years in prison. Judge Ralph King also recommended that both men receive evaluations at the Kansas Reception and Diagnostic Center in Topeka. AURH to negotiate plan to house sorority By BOB PITTMAN Staff Reporter After nearly three hours of debate last night, the association of University Resilience Hall adopted a proposal to negotiate with Alpha Omicron Pi sorority housing policies in accordance with its rules. Alpha Omicron Pi is reorganizing on campus and has been premised a floor on a second-story balcony in its own house in the fall of 1981, according to Fred McElain, director of the office of FCC. The proposal included a friendly amendment that requested negotiations be held between representatives of the sorority, AURH and KU officials to discuss the issues and provide housing for the sorority pledge next year in a University residence hall. About 70 people, including McEhlene, Jay Smith, AURH president, Ann Eversole, director of student organizations and academic advisers, and the director of the office of residential programs, crowded into Hashinger Hall's floor. Dover dance to attend the meeting. The meeting followed a debated at宴 in an AURH meeting last week over the procedure for promising spaces in a University residence hall to the sorority. The committee's proposal was drawn up by Miriam Edelman, president of Elworth University, and Judy Levy, AURH Campus Affairs chairman. The proposal should come up for AURH approval at the next full assembly meeting. The chairwoman is Bald Dahlman, housing services chairman. The proposal stated that members of University residence halls objected to the "preferential treatment" used by the university in contracting rooms for the pledges. Because pledges would be guaranteed rooms in one of the halls, the proposal said, the students could meet over both previous residents of the halls and new students who wanted to live in them. The proposal also criticized the University for promising rooms to the pledges during a campus housing shortage and said the move meant state support of a private organization. Although the proposal recognized a need for new housing for sorority members, it stated that introduction of a sorority into the community was an unquestioned uniqueness of the residence hall way of life. Smith, AURI president, said the decision to house members of the sorority was made last spring by McEhlenne, Everele and Carl Smith, dean of student life. made at that time that promised the sorority living spaces on a floor of a University residence hall next year. "Unless we would be so crass an to back away from our agreement with AOE, plus I will have been treated that really been agreed that they will have a place in the University residence hall." McElhenie said a verbal agreement was GRADUATING ENGINEERS Leslie Welch, traveling consultant for Alpha Omicron Pi, said last week that the sorority would prefer not to move into a hall that did not welcome it. Have you considered these factors in determining where you will work? 1. Will the job offer challenge and responsibility? 2. Will your future employer encourage job mobility? 3. Will your future employer encourage, support and reward continued professional education? 4. 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