6 Friday, September 28.1979 University Daily Kansan Repairs will slow football traffic By ANN LANGENFELD Staff Reporter Football fans arriving in Lawrence tomorrow for the KU-North Texas State football game will find several construction projects blocking their path. Construction on Iowa Street probably will cause the most problems, Darrel Stephens, Lawrence assistant police chief, said yesterday. Stephens said that police were asking local residents to avoid congestion on Iowa Street by using alternate routes to the stadium. City police plan to have three extra patrolmen on Iowa Street to help direct traffic, he said. Construction on Iowa Street is from Stratford Road to 1,000 feet north of Ninth Street. The construction will widen Iowa Street to provide a left turn lane. The city had considered placing sign, near the west turnip exit that would outline alternate routes to the stadium, but the city was not known for sure if that would be done. Besides the Iowa Street construction, the construction at the Kansas River bridge will slow traffic entering Lawrence from the east turnout exit. Stephens said that last year the bridge construction had slowed the traffic during home football games and that it was expected to do the same this year. In addition, some streets will be closed because Saturday's game is KU Band Day. At 8 a.m., the intersection of Seventh and Tennessee streets will be closed to allow high school bands to unload their instruments and assemble in Central Park. At 9 a.m., the bands will march on Seventh Street to Massachusetts Street and on to South Park. Another traffic problem will exist for northbound roadway on Highway 59 one mile north of the Franklin County-Douglas County line. Because of bridge construction, the railroadmoves to one lane at the bridge flow controlled by traffic lights at both ends. Stephens said, "Personally, I am not looking forward to tomorrow or any of the home games this fall." MASS. STREET DELI INC 1941 MASSACHUSETTS Hot or Mild smoked sausage sandwich $1.00 reg. price $2.00 you select the cheese and bread served with potato chips and dill pickle spear. Massachusetts Street. More than 200 students make up her school. The top 11 dancers compose the troupe. Ballet . . . From nage one "WHAT DISTINGUISHES ballet from other sports is that you need to refine the all of what you do. To program every part of your body in terms of what the whole body does. For instance, the neck, which you have to keep aloof, but also has steps taking and stares across the room. "You can't be perfect," she says slowly, "but it is a fascinating challenge to work on isolated parts of your body." Perfect might be the word many people would use to describe bullet on television or video games. What is the most accurate muscular bodies floating on a stage, but what a spectator does not see is what goes off? Ballet, upole. it is brute strength combined with grace. it might be a lifen, when a wrist might be a simple wave of the wrist and fingers—both are equally important to the ballet. A SPECTATOR SEES grace and symmetry, but does not hear the grunting and straining or the pounding of feet, and does not smell the heavy odor of sweat. A good dancer not only has to dance but also must be able to act—to act when moving were not painful when it really is. A ballet dancer should be able to run six hard miles and then smile between gaps for air. He should then couple his energy with another dancer. "You almost have to become a novelist your partner," Manley says. "I have had partners that didn't give me much on stage and I was miserable." Although the Kaw Valley Troupe has only been dancing together for about a month, their debut is scheduled for Nov. 3 at Central Junior High in Lawrence. Tonight the troupe has worked for one hour on a 15-second segment. "We aren't polished yet," Manley says. But what excites me is the experience between being in college and being a teacher. Because of the age and experience of the members there is a maturity in the perseverance. She walks back to the record player and replaces the needle. Vivaldi begins in front of the room again and the dancers ready themselves for a late practice. Cuban talk planned at faculty forum Howard Handelman, a Latin American expert with American University Fields Staff, will speak on revolutionary change in Cuae at next Wednesday's faculty forum, Charles Stansifer, director of Latin American studies, said yesterday. Sanifier said the 11 45 a.m. speech at the United Ministries building, 204 Earead Ave. will be Handelman's only public speech the week-long series of classroom lectures. Handelman has been involved in Latin American research since 1985 when he used a year research pausal life in Peru. He emerged in Mexico and politics in Uruguay. He has written one book, "Struggle in the Andes: Peasant Political Mobilization in Peru," and several magazine articles about Latin America. AUFS is a non-profit organization financially supported by 12 American universities, including KU. All of the universities du research in Latin America. "WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?" Psalms 2:1 and Acts 4:25 School and colleges open their doors, their arms to em- milions, and their "mutuals upwain" of millions of millions of students. WHAT MANNER OF CHILD SHALL THIS BEFORE So said thoughtless all the hill country of Judes when John the first. What manner of people will these myriads of millions of young people now entering schools turn out to be? "And Jesus called a little child unto Him, and as he smiled in the midst of them, his mouth was filled with tears, and become as little children, ye shall not enter into the kingdom of heaven.—But whose shall offend one of these little ones which believe in Me. TE WERE BETTER FOR MEE AND that HE WERE HANGED ABOUT HIS NECK, AND THAT HE WERE DROWNED IN THE DEPTH OF THE SEA!" MEAN 18:2. Over seventy years ago a young man sat in a class at a university and heard an eminent Doctor Professor say regarding the first part of Genesis: "IT IS MYTH" About the people who have gotten beyond the idea that the Bible is inspired. Having been raised in the atmosphere and climate of 'taht' that "The Scriptures of The Old and The New Testaments" were taught to him, he believed that God 'glorify God,' such statements troubled this young man, for he considered that these men had more sensed than he did and that they probably were better educated than his former students. But the realism that he is thankful for one reaction he immediately had towards the prominent doctor, for the boy seen to "smell a ltt," or the odor of the patient, to administer and a prominent officer in his office. How might they get the out? For his own profit, and for that any he might have the opportunity to influence, later on he would probably be a prominent officer. This analysis was suggested by a question God asked Job—Job 38,4 etc. . . . Where were you when I laid thefoundation—and all the sons of God shouted for joy? The answer is together—and all the sons of God shouted for joy! The question was so, where were he just about 30 years before He was in his father's stones—a rather difficult to imagine what he looked like? What is it that he has been? He was a he who was a little blessed life, unconscious of being alive, and unable to utter intelligent speech. About 27 years ago he asked, "What was this why? what that? or what that? what that?" Why? why this? what that? or THE BIBLE! BOOK OF BOOKS, which has endured through the centuries, and has borne the heat and burden of its own suffering. It is a book since the 'snake in the garden' (Genesis chapter three) lifted up its voice against it. Yet it has come forth voracious over all and still stands. You just ought to read and get familiar with it. When you have read it, but rather aim at seeing how it applauses you, yourself. P. O. BOX 405 DECATUR, GEORGIA 30031 HIGHLANDER SERIES SCOTCH RECORDING TAPE. THE TRUTH COMES OUT. Join Gibson's, 96X Radio and Scotch Brand Recording Tapes for "ROLL BACK THE ROCK" The Best of 25 Years of Rock'n Roll on 96X Radio Every Sunday at 7:00 p.m. Accessories