University Daily Kansan, September 17, 1980 Page 3 On Campus TODAY I OLD KU FACULTY RECITAL ROBERT STANTON, ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR OF OBOE AND SAX- PHONE, will present a concert as part of the KU Faculty Recital Series at 8 p.m. in Swarthout廊馆 Hall. He will play the oboe, English horn and bassoon. The performance will be panied by eight members of the music performance faculty. HPER PROFESSOR SPEAKS STUDENTS CONCERNED WITH DISABILITIES will meet from 7 to 9 p.m. in room 305 of the Satellite Union. Jean Pyter, HPER professor, will speak on "Physical Education at KU for People with Disabilities." KU SAILING CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in the Kansas University Parlors. SIERRA CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in the Regionalist Room of the Kansas State University. STUDENT SENATE will meet from 6:30 to 11 p.m. in 100 Smith Hall. ALPHA CHI SIGMA will meet from 7 to 8 p.m. in room 2011 Malet. THE ECUMENICAL CHRISTIAN MINISTRIES CENTER will hold three meetings. A contemplative prayer session will begin at 7:45 a.m. and will be guided by Thomas Merton's meditation of "Seeds of Contemplation, Part 1." The University Forum at 8:45 a.m. by Dr. Sandra Zimdare-Swartz, associate professor of religious studies. Her lecture addresses the topic "Visions of Men and Women in Contemporary Novels." The Theological Seminar at 7 p.m. will discuss readings on peace and nonviolence by William S. Shaver, Chavey and William Staree Coffin. KU WATER POLE TEAM will hold the event at 7 p.m. at the Ropahon Center Pool. KU VOLLEYBALL CLUB TROUTUS the south gym of old Rickman (Gymnasium) INTRAMURAL SINGLES TENNIS TOURNAMENT has an entry deadline of 5 p.m. Register in 298 Robinson Center. TOMORROW MUSLIM STUDENT ASSOCIATION all day at the Kaunas University Lobby. KU GRADUATE WOMEN'S GROUP KU GRADUATE WOMEN'S GROUP In Cork Room #18 in the Kangaroo Union. KU BIG BROTHERS/SISTERS will hold a training workshop for volunteers from 7:30 to 9 p.m. in 4033 Wescoe. KU GERMAN CLUB will meet at 4:30 p.m. in 4965 Wescoe. THE LIFE-ISSUE SEMINAR ON SEXUALITY at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center will meet at 7 p.m. to examine Bible visions on sex- SCREMEB will meet at 6 p.m. in 2007 Learned. CO-REC VOLLEYBALL MANAGER will meet in 150 Robinson Center. THE JACOB BRONOSKI FILM SERIES will continue with the showing "Ascent of Man: Grain in the Stone" at 7:30 p.m. in 3140 Wesco SUA ART EXHIBIT AND SALE will have the Level 4 Gallery of the Kansas University Lawrence police have no suspects in a bomb threat that was telephoned in to Hillcrest School, 1045 Hillcock, Monday afternoon, police said. On the Record According to police, a tran called the was a bomb in the school and hung up. He did not ask for any ransom, nor did he make other demands, police said. Shortly after the first call, the man died. As soon as the bernb was set to go off in an hour, no one was there. According to police, no search of the building was conducted, but the children in the school were given an apparent threat that came apparent the threat was a fake. LAWRENCE FIREFIGHTERS were unable to find the cause of smoke detected on the second and third floors of the building, said Jim McSwain, chief of the Lawrence Fire Department said yesterday afternoon. According to McSain, smoke from an unknown source inside the building set off smoke detectors at about 10 a.m. Lawrence said. The Lawrence Fire Department, he said. Four firetrucks responded to the alarm. Firemen hooked hoses to a fire hydrant and took a hose to the second floor. McSwan said the firefighters searched in vain for about 45 minutes for the cause of the smoke, but ended up thinking that she was the smoke in the building dispatched. Three firefighters returned to their stations, McSwain said, and a small group of firefighters continued to the building for about 30 minutes. McSwain said the building, which contains offices, laboratories and children's workshops, had been occupied by the time the firestruck arrived. Anderson criticizes Carter's turnabout By United Press International DENVER-President Carter has not helped the United States' foreign policy by his 24-hour reversal on whether there is increasing optimism for the release of American hostages in Iran, candidate John Anderson said yesterday. MEANWHILE, President Carter, said that the "stirring" of racial hatred could be seen in Republican nominee Ronald Reagan's campaign. "You've seen in this campaign the stirring of hate and the rebirth of code words like 'states' 'rights' in a speech in Mississippi and a campaign reference to the Ku Klux Klan," the president told 400 black leaders in Atlanta. "This is a message that creates a cloud on the political horizon. Hatred has no place in this country," he told the cheering crowd. Anderson, when asked about Carter's reason he did not consider Raeghan a racist. Monday, in Corpus Christi, Texas, Carter said he saw hopeful signs that the American hostages in Iran might soon be released, but yesterday the president conceded he had been too optimistic. Secretary of State Edmund Muskie Monday had refused to go along with Carter's optimism. "It seems to me that unfortunately the president has once again illustrated his talent for pointing up disarray within his own administration on important questions of foreign policy," Anderson said. "I don't think it it's terribly helpful to use a presidential policy to have the president, speaking." Candidate Watkins to appear at KU Dan Watkins, Democratic candidate challenging Rep. Larry Winn, R-Kan., for the 3rd District seat in the U.S. Congress, will hold a press conference on Wednesday at Union University to speak later this evening in the Pine Room of the Kansas Union. The press conference, at 10:30 a.m. has been previewed by Watkins as a major address regarding Winn's legislative attendance record and his sponsorship of legislation during his 14 years in the House of Representatives. Anderson also said he suspected that Carter's remarks Monday were more politically motivated. "I think we have a fair right to be a little suspicious as to his political motives," Anderson said of Carter's statements. The meeting in the Kansas Union, scheduled for 7:30 p.m., is with the KU and Douglas County Young Democrats. and another way the following day, or to have him in disagreement for even a single day with his own secretary of state." In Atlanta, Carter spoke from the pulpit of Martin Luther King's Ebenezer Baptist Church before moving on to Spartanburg, S.C., for a mission trip. He also scheduled to campaign in Cleveland before returning to Washington last night. THE PRESIDENT's remarks about Reagan referred to a recent Reagan speech in Mississippi and the GOP candidate's comment on Labor Day in Detroit when he incorrectly identified Tucumbia, Ala., where Carter kicked off his campaign, as the birthplace of the Klan. The GOP contender, campaigning in San Antonio, Texas, said that it was true that he did not support the act when it was passed by Congress in 1964, but that he had since become an advocate. The president blistered Reagan's record on social issues and warned blacks that it was more important than white; it moved 4 because "the choice is so clear." "You remember 1968—how a divided Democratic Party deprived Hubert Humphrey of the presidency and elected Richard Nixon," he cautioned. "don't believe that the way to be president is to turn its leadership over to some who thought the Civil Rights Act of 1964 was a bad bill." "Back then," Reagan said, "there were a great many people who questioned some things—not the fact of the need for civil rights, but provisions that might be setting precedents for everyone to have a voice in the world." Marked and. "I'm satisfied with it. If anything, I just like to see it better." Production increases may signal recovery WASHINGTON (UPI)—U.S. factories increased production in August for the first time in seven months, the government said yesterday in a report that suggests it might be pulling out of the recession. The 0.5 percent gain in industrial production was the largest since output sputtered 1.1 percent in May 1979. It also ended six straight months of declines, which began in November when the recession took hold. The production figures, released by the Federal Reserve Board, were the latest in a recent string of indicators that suggest the 1980 recession may have run its course in only about six months, making it the shortest of seven economic downturns since World War II. In recent weeks, government reports have shown retail sales rising, housing construction increasing, businesses rebuilding businesses and the United States exporting more and importing less. The August increase in industrial production, which followed declines of 1.1 percent in July, 1.6 percent in June and 2.9 percent in May. "Once industrial production starts going up, it's very unlikely that you'll see anything but a slight bounce up in unemployment," said David Erstad, senior economist with Evans Economics in Washington. The industrial production numbers lend some support to Commerce Department chief economist Courtenay Slater's contention last week that the recession is over. But economists say disagreement among economists over how robust the recovery will be. Alan Greenspan, New York economist who advises Republican presidential nominee Ronald Reagan, and Lawrence Chimerine, top forecaster at Chase Econometrics, think high inflation and escalating interest rates might hold back or stall recovery. The industrial production index now stands at 140.5 percent of its 1972 base of 100. Production remains stable where it was when the recession began. CPA MCAT GRE GRE PSCH GRE BIO GMAT DAT OCAT PCAT VAT MAT SAT NAT'L MED BDS ECFGM FLEX VQE NDB NPB I NLE Stanley H KAPLAN EDUCATIONAL CENTER Test Preparation Specialists Since 1938 For information, Please Call: 913.341.1230 913-341-1220 2120 W. 9th Street 842-2930 CALL TODAY! Maupintour travel service - AIRLINE TICKETS - HOTELRESERVATIONS - CAR RENTAL - EURAIL PASSES - TRAVELINSURANCE - ESCORED ICURS Sunburst September 17th 6:00-12:00 p.m. Potter's Pavillion Music by Moffet-Beers Band Gary's Country Western Band Tickets are $4.00 in advance purchase from any KU sorority. $5.00 at the gate. Souffle) SUA FILMS Wednesday, Sept. 17 Breathless (A Bout de (1978) Thursday, Sept. 18 Orchestra Rehearsal Jean-Luc Godard's breakthrough New Wave film, an amoral tale of a petrock and his gift friends, which ignored all the rules of editing in its fast-paced, exciting story (written by Troutman). Plus: Godard's *Catch-22*; *Calling Parish*. (8/924) 8:BW. 7:30. in the middle of rehearsal an orchestra break, down. Some want different music; some don't want to play at all. Fellini's Fitellina's adaptations in part by the band are a delight in dapping. In a clever, thanks to Fellini's light touch and clever, thanks to Fellini's delicate palpity of his other work. After prey to the historical-pischecture impetus which grabbed Viaconti and Rossellini, with a great sense of funny as ever. Plus: "Two." Ramez's fayreary parody of "82%" (12 min.) Color. Friday, Sept. 19 Rich Kids (1979) “Do you think it's easy sneak in enough so easily that your daughter won't get into it?” Mr. Benson's perceptive film, which convincingly shows the materialism is not related to age and lack of experience, directed with a sharp eye by Robert M. Young, a protege of Robert Altman (who wrote the script) and Alvarado, Ires Worth and Paul Dooley, color 3:300, lr red, “Balloon.” (87 min), Color 3:300, lr red. Fedora (1978) Billy Wilder's latest film is a descendant of his Sunset Boulevard. A down-and-out film that feels almost impossible to stage a comeback by luring the elusive, mysterious Fedora—obviously based on Garbo from her retirement movie, *The Miserable Heads*; this is a complex, sinister film. With Martha Keller, Hildegarden Kriel, and David Blythe, it concludes Monday's *14 8th Century*; 7/00. 2001: A Space Odyssey In the last twelve years, men landed on the moon, Skyll lab, fell, and Star Wars came out. But Stanley Kubrick, a prolific artist of gained stature. In space has only special effects are brilliant, but here for once they are secondary to the speculations on man's place in the universe. Experience. See it again. 138 mih Color. 12:00 Midnight. Saturday, Sept. 20 Rich Kids Fedora 3:30, 8:30 2001: A Space Odyssey 12:00 Midnight Unless otherwise noted; all tiffi will be shown at Auditorium in the building on Monday, Friday, and Friday, Saturday, Popular and Sunday films are $1.00, Midnight films are $2.00, Serenade films are $3.00, Union, 4th level, Information 864-3477, no smoking or refreshments at Union, 4th level. I