Friday, November 22,1974 5 Food price survey * indicates sale price * indicates item not available When no brand is specified, lowest available price is taken Bread, White, 16 oz. Store Brand Soap, White, 5 lb. pkg. Gold Medal X bag Sugar, granulated, 5 lb. pkg. CAH Store Brand Store Brand Cod, froomed 1 lb. box Pernch, froomed 1 lb. box Milk, part cent half gallon All Star Milk, part cent half gallon All Star Cheddar Cheese, mild–dil. S.B. Garlic, white, 2 lb. pkg. Carrots, 2 lb. pkg. Potatoes, red, 3 lb. sock Marigold (no lavender), sticks 30 can. S.B. "But I don't know what percentage of the Indian population I am seeing, as opposed to percentage of the rest of the population I am thinking, think the program is having good effects." Indians with alcohol problems to the program. He said many but not all Indians have problems with alcohol. From Page One Haskell opens alcohol center University of Kansas students who work part-time for the program. When students are referred to the program, Golden said, they attend classes taught by Tahmalkera on alcohol, participate in group talk sessions, do research on alcohol and eventually help counsel other students. Golden said the paid staff consisted of Clark Inkernick, director of the program, Golden and six Haskell student counselors. Golden said she is hiring another professional counselor The program is housed in Monka Hall on a bushy campus, Golden said. There are 18 dormitories. Golden said the program was divided into four areas: education, research, treatment and prevention. The program is still in the beginning stage and its running out of organizational problem Godind. Femal merit for Valentine A. Czech, 58.2154 W. 26th St. who was doing graduate work at the University of Kansas, will be said at 10 a.m. Tuesday in Chicopee, Mass. A memorial mass will be scheduled at 9 a.m. in St. John's Catholic Church, Lawrence. Grad student's funeral Tuesday Mr. Czech was pronounced dead Wednesday night at Anderson County Hospital, in Jacksonville. Prof grades U.S. schools in Germany Army dependent schools in Germany and the students attending those schools are very much like schools and students in the Army, so the education to Milo Suckler, professor of education. "In some areas, the overseas schools have an advantage, particularly in the foreign languages," Stucky said yesterday. Stucky was chosen by the North Central Association of Secondary Schools and has been appointed to spend a month in Germany and evaluate U. S. Armed Forces dependent schools. Mr. Czech was a counselor for the Neighborhood Youth Corps Operation Mainstream of the East Central Kansas Community Action Program in Ottawa. His widow, Elizabeth Czech, is an associate with radio, television and film at the University. Though an official report hasn't been written, Stucky said he would recommend the team try to find a way. He said the average period of time each teacher stayed in these schools was eight to 10 days. "Generally speaking, teachers in these schools are well prepared and their credentials are just as good as those that find in the state side schools." Stucky Teachers are paid about the same as state side teachers and have the advantage of a residential allowance or can live in military quarters, he said. He said test scores and various accomplishments of the students were satisfactory and comparable to scores by students in the U.S. "There are students there, in high school that, that have attended as many as 12 during their time here." One problem the students had was transportation. Stucky said. Some students spend as much as three or four hours a day commuting to school. Some students, he said, who live The percentage of students who go to college after they graduate from high school is slightly higher than state side students. he said. There are also students, he said, who live at the school in dormitories. Stucky said there were students who lived in the dormitories who went home on weekends and others who went home only on holidays. Bilch said he didn't like to erect snow fences on campus. But he said he was at Harvard and Yale last week and saw many temporary fences at those schools. Path locking, he said is a universal problem because the surface is too nearly as hardy as the problems. Lawton then he wished that no remedies were needed at all and hoped that "students will recognize the beauty of the University, and not be burdened by not having the tendency to put across." "There is a curb for all the kids," he says. "They are outside and there is no TV." Most of the contacts made by the American students are other Americans, he said. But the majority of them are students from China. He said students had extracurricular activities and would sometimes have to travel hundreds of miles to play another school in a sports activity. Stucky did the evaluation of high schools gave him an insight into a fascinating in- "There is nothing like the American high school in the world," he said. Thorns . . . Bilch and Lawton both said they thought the shrubbery was doing its job and that paths were healing, with a few exceptions. Temporary fences may be erected for these exceptions, to help the shrubbery until it grows. Lawton said many sidewalk corners had been widened and curved in an effort to stop people from making paths inside the corpers, but this didn't always work. From Page One After a prickly encounter or two with berbers thunbergia erecta, perhaps they would grow in their new habitat. During University vacations, Bliitch said, path re-solving has been tried to coax returning students to abandon a route. The path is being used as remedy. The paths are soon cut again. Now Delivering 5-12 Daily 5-1 a.m. Fri. & Sat. 5-10 p.m. Sun. Call 841-3233 Records & Tapes In Lawrence at 15th West 9th [between Mass. and Vermont] Open from 10:35 a.m. to 8:35 p.m. We have an excellent selection of top quality used LP's and tape-s All Guaranteed Our prices: LP's $1.75 Doubles $2.60 Triples $3.85 Tapes $2.00 We BUY!!! LP's $1.00 Doubles $1.50 Triples $2.20 Tapes $1.00 --- Mister Donut's 1c SALE! In addition to his widow, Mr. Czech is survived by three brothers, Stanley, West Springfield, Mass.; Peter and Ted, both of Chicopee; and a sister, Sister Mary Assumpta, Holye, Mass. He was a World War II Army veteran an a member of St. John's Catholic Church and the Knights of Columbus, Hackettstown, N.C. He was also a member of the Ameri- gian Guild of Virtue Artists and a graduate of Shaw University, Raleigh, N.C. 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