Tuesday, Oct. 1, 1985 From Page One University Daily Kansan 5 Freshman Continued from p.1 "We get along pretty well, but I think we're a lot different from each other," Holloway said. "But that's one of the things that helps us to get along." Lindsey shares her room with Ginny Holloway, American Samoa freshman. Lindsey has not decided on a major, but said she was considering chemical engineering because she enjoyed mathematics and chemistry. The only real difficulty she has with her Mathematics 121 class is seeing over the heads of her taller classmates. "Generally, I hope for them to be absent," she said. "It's a 4:30 class, so there are more people absent than usual, I imagine." Most of all, Lindsay enjoys being her own boss. She has yet to skip any of her classes, she said. found out," she said. Lindsey said her mother and father both were "My mother would kill me first of all, if she ever found out," she said. Lindsey said her mother and father both were enthusiastic about her decision to come to KU. "My mom was really proud," she said. "I think she kind of brags about it a little bit." And now, six weeks after the beginning of her college career, Lindsey saves she has few regrets. High Tech "The thing I hate is the 8:30 classes," she said. "The only good thing about it is that it gets me up for breakfast." Continued from p. 1 an issue that Kansas had neglected for too long. "High technology is not just a pretty buzz word used by politicians," he said. "It is now an economic imperative for Kansas." Winter said Kansas must go forward with technology because that was where the jobs would be in the future. Tax credits for businesses involved in research and development was another of the recommendations the state had not approved. Bradford said the tax credits would help attract industries to Kansas as well as keep existing industries here. Not only does Kansas need to spend more money on high technology, Bradford said, the state needs more continuity in spending. "There are about 120 companies that would benefit from a research and development tax credit," he said. "They are not receiving this tax credit, and that is a disincentive for them to stay in Kansas." "We can't have high technology development overnight," Bradford said. "We need continuity for long-term development." On the Record **Property valued at $873 was stolen Sunday from an apartment rented by two KU students. Lawrence Police said a sliding glass door at the apartment at 2300 W. 26th St. had been prized open. Missing items included a typewriter valued at $150 and jewelry valued at $510.** A purse valued together with its contents at $310 was stolen from a KU student between 12:30 and 1 a.m. Sunday morning at the Mad Hatter, 700 New Hampshire St. The student told Lawrence police the purse was stolen from a booth while she was dancing at the private club. By Jill White Of the Kansan staff More than 900 migrating birds that were killed on electrical wires in Topeka last week will be used as specimens for research in the KU Museum of Natural History in Dyche Hall, a museum official said yesterday. Bird migration to be studied The birds apparently were electrocuted after they flew into Topeka television towers and cables on Sept. 23, when rain and overcast skies covered the area. Eulalia Lewis, of the Topeka Audubon Society, retrieved the remains of the birds on the 24th and 25th and took them to her home before she transported them to KU. Marion Mengel, adjunct curator of the museum, said the birds would be used to analyze migration patterns and then skeletonized during the next four to five months. Of the 54 bird species identified, the two most abundant were catbirds and rails, Mengle said. Bob Chandler, curatorial assistant of the museum, said 170 of them were catbirds and 135 were seras, a type of rail. On a clear night, birds fly from 3,000 to 8,000 feet above ground and rarely hit structures. The accident is typical during this time of year when birds are migrating and skies are cloudy, Chandler said. But if it's overcast, the cloud cover is so low that it obscures the 1,400- to 1,600-foot television towers. As birds try to fly below the ceiling of the cloud cover, they often run into the wires, Chandler said. The birds almost always die instantaneously. He said the migration analysis by KU ornithologists would include a study to determine which species migrated and when, and the proportion of sexes in each species. Generally, the male birds leave first and the young birds and females leave later, he said. "Nine hundred is a very large catch," he said. "Once we got 1,000 birds, but that was from a series of 12 accidents during late September and early October." He said the skeletonized birds would be kept in the ornithology freezers as part of the museum's research collection. Resort explosion kills woman United Press International HALSTEAD — A propane explosion rocked an office building at a camping resort yesterday, killing a woman, injuring 17 other people and scattering debris for 75 yards. by Country Parks Inc. about 40 miles north of Wichita and 10 miles southwest of Newton on U.S. 50 in central Kansas. The explosion occurred about 10 a.m. in the office of Spring Lake Resort, a private campground owned The woman killed in the explosion was later identified as Helen Lamark, 35, although she was known to be Babe Hacker, investigators said. 17 others were treated for injuries, some of them serious. Some of the injured were flown by Life-Watch helicopters to hospitals. The cause of the blast is under investigation although a witness and Harvey County Sheriff Galen Morford said the explosion occurred while an employee was trying to light the propane-fueled, floor furnace. 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