Page 6 University Daily Kansan, September 22, 1980 Senate panel starts budget hearings The Student Senate Finance and Auditing Committee will hear requests from 12 student organizations tonight in the morning of for nights of tense discussions. According to the committee's time schedule, each group will be allowed five minutes to present its request, eight minutes to answer questions from the committee and making the presentation is scheduled to begin at 8:30 p.m. in the Kansas Union Walnut Room and end at 11 p.m. with a 15-minute informational session, a 15- minute mid-session break and a 15- minute discussion after all requests have been presented. FOLLOWING A SIMILAR schedule, 14 groups are to make presentations on each of the next three nights. Bren Abbott, Senate treasurer, will meet with the committee would meet with the following Monday night. Besides packing 55 organization presentations into four nights, the committee also is faced with meeting requests totaling $85, $183. 3 with only $16, $097. 3 available for funding. Mikl Gordon, Finance and Auditing Committee co-chairman, said, "In the past, we have been able to make groups if not happy at least satisfied. This year not everyone is even going to be satisfied." The Iranian Student Association is the first organization on the agenda. A discrepancy on the budget request form, however, showed a total request of $419 but only $372 was itemized, a committee requirement for funding. On the Record Lawrence police arrested a 56-year-old DeSoto man Saturday night and charged him with two counts of indecent exposure and two counts of enticement of a child. The man is being held in Douglas County Jail in lieu of $55,030 bond. According to police, the man enticed two 5-year-old girls playing in Edgewater Park, 1600 Haskell, into his apartment about 10:00 p.m. and sexually accosted them. Neither girl suffered physical injuries, police said. Police said the man gave three girls toys, and then persuaded two of them to go to his car. The girl hid her mother and had her mother that the man had given her the toy, police said. THE CHILD'S MOTHER went to the park and saw the two girls in the park and the man leaving in his car, police said. Aided by a description of the man and the car, police found the man in Deto. Soto. Police said the man had been seen in the park before. IN A ONE-CAR accident about 11:45 Saturday night at Ninth and Tennessee streets, a driver knocked over a traffic light, contributing to an injury accident at the intersection 15 minutes later, Lawrence police said yesterday. Police are still looking for the driver of the car involved in the first accident, and to help remove the pole from the hood of his car before driving away. By ROSE SIMMONS State economy makes gains Staff Reporter The Kansas economy is showing signs of recovering from the dive it took in the first six months of 1980, according to Mokhtee Ahmad, financial economist for the state of Kansas. Total employment in Kansas during July declined by 13,600, or 1.1 percent, from June, Ahmad said, but recent employee recalls by the Cessna in Winnipeg could begin of a reversal in that employment trend. Initial unemployment claims decreased by 4,003, or 4.5 percent, from June to July, according to a report released in August by the Kansas Department of Human Resources. In Lawrence, 1,500 An early indicator of a change in the direction of the Kansas economy was the number of initial claims for unemployment insurance payments, said Bob Glass, researcher for KU's Economic and Business Research. people filed unemployment claims in July, down by 200 from June. However, layoffs at the Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. in Topeka and the General Motors Corp. plants in Kansas City, Kan., can not depress Kansas employment figures, Glass said. Crop losses caused by the summer drought should not hinder economic recovery. In Kansas, Jarvis at Kansas State University, said Grain prices, which have increased 15 percent since July, should offset the decline in income from the crop losses, he said. Higher grain prices also should stimulate growth in the farm machinery industry, Emerson said. Employment in Lawrence is up, according to the Department of Human Resources report. The increase is mainly due to a recall of laid-off workers by manufacturing plants and schools, the report said. STUDENTS RETURNING to school and leaving the labor market, and recent graduates entering the labor market also are factors. The employment outlook in Lawrence continues to improve as students create more demand in sectors such as the food industry. But escalating interest rates and a dramatic increase in the cost of energy could temporarily choke off economic recovery. Ahmad said. As interest rates go up, consumers are reluctant to purchase durable goods such as automobiles. Without consumer demand for automobiles, the prices will increase and production which in later days to employee laffoffs. "The OPEC nations helped out by not increasing oil prices drastically." Ahmad said. A sharp increase in oil prices would mean that more would be spent on gasoline and heating oil, and less would be spent on other goods to economy, such as housing, clothing and cars, according to Ahmad It's Tacorrific! MONDAY SPECIAL 3 Tacos $1.30 Reg.$1.92 1101 W. 6th 1626 W. 23rd Holiday Flights Are Filling Fast! Sun.-Thur. 10:30 a.m.-midnight Fri.-Sat. 10:30 a.m.-2:00 a.m. Make Your Reservations TODAY! "There is no extra charge when you buy your airline tickets at Maupintour." Maupintour travel service K. U. Union or 900 Massachusetts 843-1211 15 West 9th KODACOLOR Film DEVELOPED AND PRINTED 12 EXP. 110-126 20 8 & 24 EXP 126-110-135 $2.50 36 EXP-135MM $4.50 $150 Enclose 25* more per roll for special handling and 1st class return. 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