Wednesdav. October 17. 1979 University Daily Kansan 9 BRIAN STOTLER/Kansas Final pickup Frank Visoczy, a postal maintenance worker, pulls a local delivery mailbox on the campus. The customer service manager Hill Beyrook, customer service manager Lily Hancock, and a Postal Service lawyer, Lawrence, were removed because of the low volume they carried and because automated mail sorting made two boxes unnecessary. A local box is still located at the post office in UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN On Campus TODAY: COMPANIES INTERVIEWING ON CAMPUS in the School of Business will be Arthur Young and Company, NCR and the Union Oil Company of California. In the School of Business will be Travail Laboratories, Inc., will be interviewing. In the School of Law, Cosgrove, Webb and Omen, and Arthur Young and Company, will be interviewing SERVICE SERVICES DEADLINE for entries in intramural tractor at a 5 p.m. in Room 208 of Robinson Gymnasium. DBN BLAESLURG, religious studies, will speak on "Clarifying The Myth" at 11:45 a.m. at the ECM Center at 1049 Oracle. TONIGHT: RUIL SAILING CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in the Kansas Union parlor. LATIN AMERICAN CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in the Kansas Union parlor. CARLILLON RECITAL by Albert Gerek will begin at 7 p.m. WOMEN IN COMMUNICATIONS will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the International Room of the Union A Union Hall, 75 West 42nd Street, Michael Kimber, viola, at 8 p.m. in Swar- ward recital Hall of Murphy Hall. SIERRA CLUB will meet at 3:30 p.m. on the second day. BASKETBALL OFFICIALS in the city league will meet at 7 p.m. in the Community Building for an organizational meeting. TOMORROW: GERMAN CLUB will meet at 4:30 p.m. in 4865 Westapen, Australia. GENERAL ROOM of the Union, AUHR GENERAL ROOM of the Union, AUHR GENERAL ROOM of the Union, AUHR SOME OF THE SMARTEST YOUNG EXECUTIVES DON'T WORK FOR BUSINESS. They get responsibility faster in the Navy. An ensign, less than a year out of college may run a division of thirty men, a lieutenant (j.g.) a department of fifty or more. By the time he makes full lieutenant - age 24 or 25 - an officer can have more managerial experience than most civilians do at thirty. The Navy has officer programs in Aviation and Nuclear Propulsion, Supply, Law, Medicine and many others. If you'd like to know more about them, speak to your local recruiter or send your resume to: 610 Florida Street Lawrence, KS 66044 913-841-4376 NAVY OFFICER. IT'S NOT JUST A JOB,IT'S AN ADVENTURE SayCheese! Senior Pictures have been extended until Oct.26 Call the Jayhawker Yearbook for your appointment. 864-3728 Only $1 sitting fee Only $1 sitting fee The KU Student Senate will vote on supplementary funding for 25 student organizations at its meeting at 6:30 tonight in the Bie Eight Room of the Kansas Union. Senate to earmark extra funding Fourteen of the organizations are being funded by the Senate, but the remaining groups have not been funded for the 1980 [year] data. After deliberations on the requests during fall supplementary budget hearings last week, the Senate Budget Committee unbudded allocations totaling $191.84M. According to Matt Davis, committee chairman, about $5,000 was available for the student Senate, and half of the Student Senate allocated fund, he said, from which supplementary funding came. The Senate also will consider a resolution supporting the sale of season tickets to KU sports events to Haskell Junior College students at KU student prices. Scott Schmalberg, sports committee representative to Stadex, said yesterday that Haskell representatives had asked to fill in season football tickets this at student press. THE RESOLUTION probably will be amended on the Senate floor to clarify what year the sales would go into effect and which sports events would be included, he said. Some of the student organizations whose original budget requests were cut by the budget committee said they would appeal to the Senate tonight for more money. Mike Pepen, student director for the Kansas Defender Project, said he thought the Senate would approve before the Senate. The Kansas Defender Project's request for $1,750 was completely approved. Committee members decided not to fund the organization because it served a limited number of KU students and members were receiving credit for their work. In addition, LAST SPRING, Pepon said, the organization's request also was completely cut by the budget committee, but it was funded $2,000 when it appeared before the Senate. a rider on the organization's request last year stated that it should seek funding from other sources. "Although we were successful last year, I don't know about this year," he said. Janet Justus, second-year law student and a representative to Women in Law, said her organization probably would appeal its cut from $50.20 to nothing. The organization did not appear at budget hearing, but Justus said she had not been contacted. THE CUT IN budget came primarily because of other sources of funding that could cover the club's expenses, committee members said. The following allocations for student organizations were recommended by the budget committee; Operation Friendship, $322; Alpha Phi Omega, $255; Architecture and Urban Design Student Council, $0; Association of Students Interested in Asian Studies; $106; Friends of Headquarters, $46; University of Michigan, Masters of Public Administration Graduate Students, $0; KU Karate Club, $100; and TaW Kwn Club, $128). Speech Communications and Human Sciences, $130; Physiology and Biology Cell Biology Graduate Students, $130; Consumer Affairs Association, $4,850; KU Concert and Performing Arts Counting Club, $290.80; Microbiology Society, $180.45; Women's Field Hockey, $27.58; Organization of Black and Minority Athletes, $19.60; KU Falk Dance Club, $30.49; Native American Alliance, $704; Chancyce Club, $220; KU Weather Service, $20.24; or SCMBME, AAUP opposes tenure proposal Bv KATE POUND The amendment, proposed by the Regents Council of Chief Academic Officers, concerns the requirements for teaching experience in other institutions. It is opposed by the AUP, "Sainthai said, Staff Reporter Members of the state association of American University Professors will try to stop a proposed amendment to the Board of Regents tenure policy, before the amendment reaches the Regents, P. Srinivasan, and the KU AAUP chapter, said yesterday. Ralph Christoffersen, vice chancellor for academic affairs, is the KU representative to COCAO. Credit is given to new faculty members for teaching experience in other institutions and is counted as part of the seven-year probation period for faculty members. At the end of the seven-year period, faculty members may be released. Faculty members with more than three years experience at other institutions may be given a probation period. period of no more than four years under the old tenure policy. The amendment, however, states that in exceptional cases institutions may give faculty members with previous experience up to seven years of probation. "The amendment does not list the exceptional cases," Srinivasan said. "It is too vague and undermines the效力 of tenure." A November 1788 AUAP report recommen- died in any KU Regents' tenure Srinivasan said. The exceptions are prior deposition of office from the faculty members KU positional service at an institution that is not considered comparable to the University of The AAUP, with the Faculty executive committee, has planned to meet with members of COCAO to ask that the ex-commissioner be added to the amendment. Sinervasan said. "I'm sure this was an oversight. The COCAO members must not realize the vagueness of the amendment," Sinvassan You can help increase the safety of our campus. The Campus Safety Service needs men and women volunteers to provide escort teams for those people on campus who request them. For more information see the ad in the Notice column of the classified ad section and call KU-INFO, 864-3506. SUA films rare comedy films with film historian bob deflores bob hope, bing crosby, betty grable, harpo marx, frank sinatra in "all star band rally" (1944) george burns, bob hope in "the jack benny show" (1954) groucho marx in "tell it to groucho" bing crosby in a mack sennet short thursday, october 18 7:30pm forum room $100 sponsored by SUA films, african studies, KANU4m, and radio-tv-film said. "We just want to correct it before it goes all the way to the Regents." Christofferson said yesterday that he had not met with the AAUP, but that he was familiar with the AAUP resolution. The amendment will go to the Council of Presidents, which comprises the executive officers of all of the Regents schools. If the president of the school, the council, it will go to the Regents, Srivenan said. "It is a very straightforward amendment," Christoffersen said, "and I'm sure it will be discussed further." He said, however, that the COCAO amendment was a "step in the right direction" toward clarifying the tenure policy and serving the best interests of faculty members. Strivamus also said that some sort of amendment concerning exceptions to the prior service credit policy was needed. By offering specific exceptions, he said, faculty members who needed the full seven-year probation period to earn tenure would benefit. However, he said, the possibility of an extension period could not be arbitrarily by the administration. "We would like a relaxation of the probation period policy, but he COCAO amendment is a sweeping relaxation that requires the unlimitted probation," Srivnasan said. SUN TRAVEL to Chicago November 20-25 $101.00 See "Annie" or Neil Simon's "Chapter II" See Toulous Lautrec Exhibit See the sights of Chicago Enjoy Chicago's life For more info call SUA Office 864-3477