University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas The University Daily KANSAN ] 00000+1 ~56015 Wednesday, October 8, 1980 Vol. 91, No. 33 USPS 650-640 Before the motion was passed, the senators listened to presentations by eight of 10 Douglas County candidates for the state Legislature. The Classified Senate voted yesterday to endorse candidates for the Kansas Legislature in the November election. Classified Senate votes to endorse candidates By CINDI CURRIE Staff Reporter Jan O'Neill, Classified Senate president, also announced her resignation, effective immediately. O'Neill said she resigned because of personal reasons. Joseph T. Collins, classified senator, said a new president would be chosen in a few weeks. The Senate voted to endorse candidates only if a candidate received 80 percent approval of the senators. A mail ballot will have to be answered by at least 27 of 30 senators for a candidate to be ministration to recognize the group as part of the University. However, Collins said he doubted whether the Senate could get an 80 percent endorsement of one candidate for each of the representative districts. The Senate will vote to endorse candidates from the 43rd, 44th, 45th and 46th representative districts and the 2nd senatorial district. THE CANDIDATES for the representative districts are Marlin Joe Hanning, a Democrat, and Davie Miller, a Republican, for the 4th; Jim O'Connor, a Republican, for the 3rd; Jr., a Republican, for the 4th; John Solobach, a Democrat, and Kent Snyder, a Republican, for Democrat, and Willie Woolley, a Democrat, and Willie Woolley, a Democrat. The candidates for the 2nd senatorial district are Arnold Berman, a Democrat, and Jane Goulden. Endorsements will be announced after ballots Candidates seek classifieds' endorsement By BRIAN LEVINSON Staff Reporter John Solbach, incumbent Democratic state representative for the 45th District, said yesterday that he would support legislation to increase funding for an official group by the KU governance system. with the economic problems facing classified employees and said that Solbach voted against a proposed state spending lid in the last legislative session. "Your representatives have a responsibility to put a hold on economic problems," Snyder said. "State government must take the bull by the horns." "I feel it is important to have a balanced budget with an adequate tax base to support the operation of government," Solbach said. Willie Amison, Republican challenger to Democrat Betty Jo Charlton in the 46th District, said continued support of education was his most important concern. "I don't promise anything, but I will work to Ampersand October,1980 MOST CAR STEREOS SHOULD NEVER LEAVE THE SHOWROOM. No matter how powerful your receiver is, no matter how sensitive it is, once you is, no matter how sens hit the road, you're in for trouble. It's a jungle out there. Mountains. Buildings. Tunnels. Telephone wires. They all add up to fuzzz, fading and overlapping stations. Some real earbogling interference. But Craig has changed all this with a whole new line of stereos based on one crucifix. channel rejection and capture ratio. So you get clean, clear sound on almost any road you drive. The road is one mean obstacle course, but the car has to be held back or receiver to handle it. stereos based on one crucial fact. Cars move. And the Craig Road-Rated Receivers were made to move with them. While the Road-Rated Receiver is protect your music from the outside world, add a Road-Rated Equalizer and you've got control over the inside world. With its ambience expander, you can turn your car into a rolling rock concert. The engineers at Craig turned a new corner in car stereo by carefully balancing the sensitivity, RF intermodulation, alternate Now prove it to yourself. Listen to ours. Listen to theirs. yourself. Listen to ours. Listen to theirs. In the showroom, they sound good, too. But out on the road, they just won't move you like Craig. skies and a few high clouds, according to the KU Weather Service. Winds will become north easterly at 10 mph by afternoon. Fair skies with light easterly winds and a low near 52 are forecast for tonight. Tomorrow and Friday will be mostly sunny with highs in the low 80s. The Senate voted to allocate Blacks in Communication an additional $240 for a tape recorder and cassettes for use in the group's radio show, releasing its total supplementary allocation to $290. The Senate also voted to eliminate KU's Model UN allocation of $86.76 for postage and printing. THE BLACK STUDENT UNION last night requested an additional $3,748.90 to their $213.75 allocation for travel expenses to send its chair to that will present you the knowledge you could be funded with that generates could not. Robin McClellan, Student Senate executive committee chairman, said that ASK was a revenue code allocation and therefore was financed differently than Black Student Union. She also said that it was unfair that some groups such as Associated Students of Kansas could be allotted travel money but that the Black Student Union could not. The student organizations' budget requests are returned Oct. 14, Lewis Armstrong, classified senator, said. Debate on the motion included whether senators could accurately represent the 1,400 classified employees at the University and College of Applied Science, who would actively support a candidate's campaign. In other action, the Senate voted to write a third letter to the Kansas Board of Regents requesting that it place a member of the boarded staff on the chancellor search committee. O'Neill said there had been no response from Bernard Franklin, Regents chairman, to a letter sent in July requesting the addition to the committee. The search committee is made up of faculty, students and alumni and was chosen by the Board of Regents. O'Neill said the third letter would say, "I would like the courtesy of a response." She said that Acting Chancellor Del Shankel recommended the search committee allow classified members to meet with finalists if the Regents did not approve the change. Jacob Kleinberg, search committee chairman, he has not heard from the chancellor about the Classified representatives would submit their recommendations for chancellor to the search committee after meeting with the finalists, O'Neill said. The American Association of University Professors also has asked for meetings with the finalists for chancellor, and one senator suggested the groups work together. n Field House. The KU women host Emporia State dget requests were divided into two bills by the Finance and Auditing Committee. The Senate acted last night only on groups that had been funded in the prior year, and not all of them not currently funded will be considered tonight. OTHER GROUPS that were turned down for funding last night were Alpha Rho Gamma, Architecture Student Council, Biology Club, Engineering Student Council, Fencing Club, German Club, KU Crew Club, KU Folk Dance, Minority Business Students Council, Thai Association, University Daily Kansan and Iranian Student Association. Other groups allocated funding last night were Consumer Affairs Association, $1.546; Friends of Headquarters, $3,294.43; KU-Y, $191.44; Psychology Club, $114; Sushi Expeditional Tau Sigma Dance Ensemble, $201.50; Women's Council, $164. The Senate allocated $11,842.42 last night. According to Brett Garrison, the treasurer, the Senate allocates $400,000 to allow this