Monday, October 21. 1974 Decisions 3 University Daily Kansan From Page One rammed the videotequipment down the throats of the MPs, members and that same group of MPs are paying for it. The students pay an additional $50 facility fee to live in McColum Hall. This fee covers costs of special equipment provided for the students. The staff is as special staff, materials or remodeling. Wilson responded to Katz' ramming allegation by saying that he ordered the videotape equipment when he decided the students weren't going to reach an agreement on any equipment requests before the end of the spring semester. Wilson said he ordered the equipment May 10, 1974, to insure its installation in McCollum before the beginning of the fall semester. There usually is a three-month wait between the time an equipment requisition is submitted and the time the requested equipment is delivered, he said. --being used for the center. He said that part of the $50 resident fee was going toward the debt service on these rooms being used for the center and that he wondered whether the students were supporting the entire center. "I said, 'J. J. Wilson uses for his guest room.'" Katz also referred to the fact that a previously occupied wing of McColum is In answering Katz' allegations, Wilson first explained debt service. He said that for every space in McColm Hall, $14 a year would be required to the revenue bonds used to build the hall. This means that almost $5,000 a year must be paid in debt service on the 14-first floor rooms occupied by the communications center is considered two spaces, Wilson said. McCollum has about 100 residents paying $50 extra a year, Wilson said. This raises about $25,000 a year to support the operation of the center. However, if all the residents now in McCollum were students who had lived in a resident hall last year, their $50 facility fee would have been cancelled by an automatic The debt services on the 14-room center amount to about 20 per cent of the total revenue raised by the special facility fee. These facilities equip maintenance and personnel for the $50 credit extended to all returning residents, providing they have lived up to the obligations of their contracts, Wilson said. "We have a lot of expensive equipment in there and have to be able to keep an eye on it." Wilson said that the students' fees weren't paying debt service on the six-floor floor. Wilson said that some people had wanted to use the main lobby for the communications center but that he and his staff had thought the lobby should remain unchanged. The first-floor wing offers accessibility and is easily controlled, he said. "We view this as a service to the University," Wilson said. "We feel like the rents charged on these rooms pay their debt service." Regents OK requests . . . From Page One will increase $100, from $1,055 this year to $1,185 beginning in the fall of 1975; Pearson, Corbin and Joseph R. Pearson halls will increase $85, from $1,070 to $1,155; McColum Hall will increase $85 from $1,120 and increase $85 from $1,190; will increase $120, from $1,210 Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, sald yesterday that the increased were- mities would be a major burden. The Regents also increased the expenditure limit for research in fiscal year 1975 from $1,$727,688 to $1,$672,688 and authorized a $650,501 legislative request for the University's Capitol Complex Center, which teaches classes in Topeka. Chancellor Archie R. Dykes said that enrollment at the center, a division of the university, the emperors, had been estimated at 25 for this department but that 83 persons had actually enrolled. The Regents authorized the KU Medical Center to spend increased hospital revenue it will collect from increased room room charges. The hospital revenue expenditure level was increased $893,000 for fiscal year 1975 and $1,079,850 for fiscal year 1976. A proposed memorandum of agreement between the University and Public Service Employees Union Local 1123, AFL-CIO, will be resubmitted to the Regents when pay for lunch breaks and final binding authority of the memorandum are worked out. In other action the Regents: Peace Corps —approved $4,000 for modification of the south portion of the basement of the Kansas Union to provide more student organization offices. -established an organizational skeeping account as provided by state law. AFRICAN STUDIES Continue Your Education, in Africa, by Helping Africans Through the Normaly is "to be good, dumb and silent—the good walking wizard or the good decent German," Berrigan said. "It takes a bit of digging to find hope around." -approved a leave without pay for Rose Grower professor of history, for a spring semester. (For more than a decade—from Morocco to Lesotha, from Kenya to Zaire) "If the normal is a horrible and death scene, where is the life scene? I submit it's at the edges where the action is . . . where the money is not. I think if we encourage people to be un-American—that is, Christian—others also be encouraged." "The Bible gives us clues about being human," he said. "It offers us . . . clues about being human beings together. Hope is so very important." A good norm existed in the Bible, he said, where friendly tension existed between women and men. Berrigan said that society was "undergoing the brutal pressure toward normalization. But what is normal? Do we want to be normal? Who is same anyway?" (Seniors/Grads—Sign Up for Interview—Now!) Union-Placement (L.A.S.) November 4-8 Turning to government and bureaucracy, Berrigan said "institutions have an enormous effect on how we live and die. The people who that socialized adults will keep it going." Creating balance between work and hope in Primary is a primary concern of Father Daniel Dennett. In 1968 Berrigan and his brother, Philip, broke into Selective Service Local 33 in Cattoussia, Mt., and burned more than 300 troops in the Vietnam War. Both served time in prison. "Our work is hopeful and our hope has sweat on it," he said. Berrigan, pacifist and author, conducted a workshop for 100 people "Norman's Week," where he is Here, Our Hope is Elsewhere, Saturday the United Ministries Building in Lawrence Balance is key, Berrigan says SUA Presents THE LADY EVE GUADALCANAL DIARY (7-30) with Ernest Eaton Comedy Series with Henry Fonda and Barbara Stanwyck with Preston Foster and Oct. 22, Tuesday Ballroom 75c 7:30 He compared the dream to an egg that must be cracked soon to reach the ground. SANDS OF IWO JIMA (9:30) with John Wayne Hollywood on Asia Series CASQUE D'OR Citing Revelations 13 in the New Testament, two solutions were offered. permitted the dream to an egg that must be closed open to reveal the world. Of the world situation, Berrigan said, "the whole food situation, forming the same as the Vietnam symbol of the 1868. We are pricing people out of existence in the cities." "It is in the interest of the American ethos to have poor people. It's troublesome. To raise the superstate is not to raise food but ultimate weaponry. It's not in their interest." Oct. 21, Monday Woodruff $1 admission to both films or 75c to one film Berrigan said. The first solution is to kill the hungry. The second is that the hungry will be "rendered impossible to function in the state. They're pushed over the edge. Film Society Director: Jacques Becker with Simone Signoret Gct. 24, Thursday Woodruff 75c 7:30 Admission 75°—Woodruff Auditorium Oct. 23, Wednesday Woodruff 75c 7:30 Classical Series Director: Luchini Viscini with Claudia Cardinale SANDRA Place a Kansas want ad. Call 864-4358. a man who listens ... and understands BUZZI 45th District State Representative Pd. for by Citizens for Buzzi, Steve Matthews, Treas. PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT QUICK-PRINT PRICE LIST: cash prices for consecutive copies of the same original printed in black ink on white, 20 lb. bond. Please inquire about quantity discounts. | Quantity | Price | Quantity | Price | Quantity | Price | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | 20 | $1.49 | 225 | $5.09 | 625 | $9.39 | | 25 | $1.62 | 250 | 5.40 | 650 | 9.64 | | 30 | 1.76 | 275 | 5.72 | 675 | 9.89 | | 35 | 1.85 | 300 | 6.03 | 700 | 10.13 | | 40 | 1.94 | 325 | 6.30 | 725 | 10.38 | | 45 | 2.03 | 350 | 6.57 | 750 | 10.63 | | 50 | 2.16 | 375 | 6.84 | 775 | 10.88 | | 60 | 2.43 | 400 | 7.11 | 800 | 11.12 | | 70 | 2.70 | 425 | 7.38 | 825 | 11.37 | | 80 | 2.97 | 450 | 7.65 | 850 | 11.62 | | 90 | 3.24 | 475 | 7.90 | 875 | 11.87 | | 100 | 3.51 | 500 | 8.15 | 900 | 12.11 | | 125 | 3.83 | 525 | 8.40 | 925 | 12.36 | | 150 | 4.14 | 550 | 8.65 | 950 | 12.61 | | 175 | 4.46 | 575 | 8.90 | 975 | 12.86 | | 200 | 4.77 | 600 | 9.14 | 1000 | 13.10 | IBM COPIER II / DISCOUNT PRICES Prices are per copy for the total number of copies from unbound originals, 8% × 11. Copies made from bound originals and discounted originate are ten cents each. Add one cent for legal use. Quantity Per Copy Quantity Per Copy 1-69 10 100-199 075 -79 10 200-499 07 80-89 085 200-999 07 90-99 08 100-up 06 COPY SERVICE - THESIS BINDING We Want Your Business--Please Try Us! 838 MASSACHUSETTS TELEPHONE 841 4900 MONDAY - FRIDAY, 8:00 - 5:00 SATURDAY, 9:00 - 1:00 Dear Senior: An Open Letter to Graduating Seniors From WORK FORCE '75 Graduation is not far away, and for most seniors future employment is at best, uncertain. The Student Senate, in recognizing this general concern, has established the "Work Force '75' job placement program. Over 15,000 business interests throughout the nation (special emphasis in the Kansas, Missouri and Illinois region) are being contacted. From these contacts, we can provide you with the specific information needed to locate and secure employment. If you haven't received a mini-resume card or if you've misplaced the one we sent, stop by the Student Senate Office, 105-B Kansas Union. It will only take a few minutes to fill out your mini-resume card. We will match your card with jobs you may be interested in, based on specific job descriptions furnished by our business contacts. Work Force will provide you with the complete list of firms, during the first ten days of December. You may also pick up our booklet "Job Hunting Tips" at the Student Senate Office. "Job Hunting Tips" will serve you well in preparing a resume, correspondence with prospective employers, as well as offering other helpful tips. If you need assistance of any kind, or experience difficulties using your school's placement center, contact our office! We are open Monday thru Friday, 1 to 4. Work Force is located at 103 Wesley Center (behind the School of Religion). Our phone number is 864-3752. Please feel free to stop by. Let Work Force work for you! Sincerely, Pete Kanatzar Director