University Dally Kansan, November 20, 1980 Page 3 uding Party of the end to nined a Polish that be iny. lt the n press 'e's at-velop- everal ve oc- f tools fowers . The between moon. sworth mounts masses. A afts. of left of d floor from N ill; and neph R. Road. On Campus TODAY TONIGHT The KU GERMAN CLUB will discuss its Christmas party and will hold a German Christmas carol practice at 4:30 in 4065 Wescoe. THE DUNGEONS AND DRAGONS 7 in the Trail Room of the Kansas Union The Ascent of Man film series will begin with *THE GENERATION*" at 7:30 in 3140 Waco TOMORROW Dixie Glenn will give a watercolor demonstration and workshop at the Museum of Modern Art on 7:30 in 109 Bailey. Members are to bring watercolors, brushes and paper. THE BIOLOGY CLUB will meet at 4 p.m. in the Sunflower Room of the An information table sponsored by NEW LIFE CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP will be set up in front of 3139 Wesco from 1 a.m. to 3 p.m. THE INTERVARSITY CHRISTIAN gymnasium, in the Regimental Room of the Unit SOUL PURPOSE will present a program titled "Intimacy; Agony or Ecstasy," at 7 p.m. in the lounge of Lewis Hall The KU FOLK DANCE CLUB will teach beginners dances at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday. The Kansas welcomes items for inclusion in "On Campus." Organizations should submit written information on scheduled free activities to the campus editor at least two days before the events. By BRIAN LEVINSON Staff Renorter From its cramped, one-room office in 105 Strong Hall, the center's 15 staff members answer an average of 500 telephone calls a day. Questions range from "Is it the Hare Kraihna's were on campus today?" to "How do I get to Kemper Arena?" Information Center a phone call away "We get a lot of calls for information concerning things in Kansas City." Pat Kebde, the center's coordinator, said recently. We are the only place around where someone can get that information." The center, which was started in 1970 to provide rumor control during The KU Information Center is a savior for anyone with a question. Despite efforts to double check for accuracy all the information the center receives, sometimes an incorrect answer is given. Kehde said the center really had problems when it received inaccurate information regarding the needs for dropping and adding classes. "Although we see ourselves largely as a referral agency, when someone in trouble calls we have to talk to them for a while to find out the seriousness of the problem," she said. campus unrest, has shifted its focus over the past 10 years to meet the changing times. The only way the center will be able to do more double checking of IN ADDITION to answering questions, the center also provides some counseling. Kebde said. Albough she would like funds for additional staff, Kehde said her top priority is to get more office space for the center. "I would like the center to be expanded and to become more involved in interrelationships between the university within the University," Kehde said. phone: 843-1151 THE CENTER is funded by the University and operates on an annual budget of almost $250,000. Most of that is for salaries. Kehle said. The center is now used mostly by students, Kehde said. A recent survey of callers, conducted by the center, showed that less than 30 percent of the calls the center receives are from faculty or staff. The center's telephone number is 864-3506. Prints tell artist's mood, expert says THE CASTLE TEA ROOM information is if it gets additional funding for more staff. Keble said Art is a way of experiencing another person's mood and seeing the world through another's eyes, Roger Keyes, a scholar of Japanese woodblock prints, told a crowd of about 100 people at the art museum Spencer Museum of Art last night. Keyes lectured on Hiroshige's woodblock prints of the Tokaido, a road that connected the cities of Kyoto and Tokyo in 19th-century Japan. The Tokaido prints are on exhibit in the Kress Gallery of the museum. Keyes said he attended Harvard and keyes but did not learn about prints in school. "You don't learn about these things by studying them," he said. "You learn by looking at them." THE SCENES show travelers walking in the rain, snow or mist, stopping for a nap or picnic, or being taken by guests by inn girls who want their business. century Japanese artist, did more than 1,000 prints about life along the Tokaido. Hirohige's Tokaiado road prints are characterized by people who are not classically graceful and well-proportioned. Keves said. KEYES SAID that when he looked at a feeling for the picture that became a feeling for the picture. The Hiroshige tried to capture the real and result of the Japanese war with China. A quiet mood helps in understanding the prints Hiroshige did before his Tokaido works, Keyes said. Hiroshige's early prints are mostly landscapes. "The quality these pictures have is no people. They're very quiet, very quiet. They're very quiet, very different from the bustle and gaiety of the first Toko-taiko pictures." The students, more than half of the school's 1890 enrollment, met with the panel in an auditorium in Wescole Hall. Members of the panel included Dennis Domer, acting dean, and members of the faculty, including and undergraduate studies committee. More than 250 students met with a faculty panel from the School of Architecture and Urban Design yesterday to ask questions about the school's new master five-year degree program, its design progress on the Marvin Hall renovation. At the top of the agenda was the school's decision last week to make its five-year Bachelor of Architecture mandatory for next fall's freshmen. The program, which now is optional, is chosen by about one-third of KU's architecture students, Skwe Grabow, the school's undergraduate studies, said. Keves said that Hiroshige, a 19th THE FACULTY decided to make the five-year program mandatory after the National Council of Architecture Boards ruled that architects who graduate after July 1984 would be certified as professionals only if they earned a professionally accredited degree. Dorner said the five-year Bachelor of only professional degree in architecture. KU's four-year program produces Environmental Design degrees. Students who earn that degree often find that graduates of five-year programs are offered more responsible jobs, Craig Patterson, an architecture instructor, said. IN THE EXTRA year of study, instances will take 30 hours of design classes. There still are problems with the five-year program, Grabow said. For example, the school isn't sure how to extra year to its December graduates. Those students may have to sit out the spring semester and wait until next fall, when the optional fifty year will be offered. All students now enrolled in the school. By VANESSA HERRON Staff Reporter Next fall, there will be many other changes at the School of Architecture, the University. Students, faculty discuss School of Architecture That means that the school's administration, faculty members and 449 students, who now are scattered in Robinson Gymnasium, Lindley Annex and the Design Building, will meet again under one roof. MARVIN HALL renovation should be completed by September, Domer said, but the school faculty and students will be in into building when classes start in August. By that time, the school will have a new dean, said Chris Thies, chairman of the school's board. This month, the committee is sifting through 31 applications, he said. The top five or six candidates will be invited to attend the school's faculty and students this spring. Staff Reporter Acting Chancellor Del Shankel will choose a new dean, who will take off his shirt. COMMONWEALTH THEATRES 3 INFORMATION HALL CHARLINTH HESTON I. NEW YORK THE AWAKENING THE AWAKENING Mid Sat Sep 2-18 Mon Sat Sep 2-18 INEXPENSIVE-PERSONALIZED CHRISTMAS GIFTS We can turn almost anything into an enlarged, colorful limited edition T-shirt or Jacket transfer. Send us your favorite wallet size photo, 35mm slide, Polaroid print, or magazine picture. We will professionally enlarge your original into a colorfully unique, one-of-a-kind gift, for yourself or anyone on your gift list. Send Us Your FAVORITE PHOTO T-SHIRT TRANSFERS HAVE THE ONLY ONE OF ITS KIND! Make us your one stop shopping headquarters. Remember how good it feels when you receive or give something special. A one-of-a-kind gift. Limitless possibilities for inexpensive, unique gifts for your family, friends, and neighbors. Size limitation: From 2" x 3" (wallet size) to 8" x 10" (portrait size), horizontal or vertical, color or black and white. Most enclosures will be between 6" x 10" and 8" x 10" in the finished size, depending on the size of your original. Save $2.00 on additional copies of the same original. That's a Christmas gift for less than $5.00. Order now for guaranteed speedy service delivery before Christmas. We return your original. SEND TODAY! RETURN POSTAGE PREPAID BEFORE NOV. 30, 1980 How to Order VARSITY DOWNTOWN TELEPHONE 843-1085 Eve. 7:25 & 9:20 Mat Sat & Sun 2:00 Mail to Limelite • Photo P.O. Box 3405 Lawrence, Ks 66044 (Please Print) Name Address City State Zip 1st color transfer $6.95 Additional Transfers $4.95 ea. Of The Same Original) Pay KMH Enclosed $ JUK/1K residents add 1% Sales Tax Or Charge To My: VISA MasterCard Card No. Expiration Date ORDERS SHIPPED WITHOUT CARD Expiration Date (NO ORDERS SHIPPED WITHOUT CARD EXPIRATION DATE) RENTAL 29th and Iowa Streets, Lawrence, Kansas 66044 Phone 842-8282 (SIGN HERE) INSURED WINTER BICYCLE STORAGE HAS COME AT LAST TO K.U. & LAWRENCE, A-1 Rental, 2900 Iowa, will store your bicycle in INSURED WEATHER TIGHT STORAGE for the winter. Bicycles may be taken to A-1 Rental at anytime. Free pick-up of bicycles will be made at all dorms & sororities the week before Thanksgiving vacation. Check your bulletin board & the U.D.K. for scheduled pick-ups. Bicycles will be stored until the last week of March (23rd to 30th), which is the week after spring break. INSURED SAFE—WEATHER TIGHT FRIDAY NOVEMBER 21st THURSDAY NOVEMBER 20th Alpha Gamma Delta 4:00-4:30 Pi Beta Phi 4:30-5:00 BICYCLE PICK-UP SCHEDULE SATURDAY NOVEMBER 22nd McColum Hall 10:00-12:00 Templin Hall 12:00-1:00 Lewis Hall 1:00-2:00 Hashinger Hall 2:00-3:00 Ellsworth Hall 3:00-4:00 FRIDAY NOVEMBER 21ST Grace Pearson 3:30-4:30 Douthart 3:30-4:30 Stephenson 3:30-4:30 Battenfeld 3:30-4:30 Pearson 3:30-4:30 Sellards 3:30-4:30 Watkins 3:30-4:30 Miller 3:30-4:30 SATURDAY NOVEMBER 22nd SUNDAY NOVEMBER 23rd Naismith Hall Oliver Hall JRP Hall GSP-Corbin Hall MONDAY NOVEMBER 24th Chi Omega 3:30-4:30 Gamma Phi Beta 3:30-4:30 Sigma Kappa 3:30-4:30 Kappa Alpha Theta 4:30-5:30 Kappa Kappa Gamma 4:30-5:30 TUESDAY NOVEMBER 25th Alpha Chi Omega 3:30-5:30 Delta Gamma 3:30-5:30 Alpha Phi 3:30-5:30 Alpha Delta Pi 3:30-5:30 Delta Delta Delta 3:30-5:30 ANY GROUP OF 4 OR MORE BICYCLES PICKED-UP FREE A-1 RENTAL 842-6262