Thursday, September 26. 1974 9 Better food raises costs for residents By KEN STEPHENS Renorter University of Kansas students living in residence halls will notice slight improvements in food service this year after an $80 fee for restaurant fees, according to food service officials. University Daily Kansan Wilson said that $1.40 a day for food is encouraged each resident. This is 25 cents a day for food. $60 for the 80 increase over last year's fees, $60 is for food, J. J. Wilson, director of the residence halls system, said yesterday. The fee was required to offset skyrrocketing expenses. The University spent $127,000 more on food last year than in the 1972-73 school year. Students receive second helpings of juice, cereal, milk and toast at breakfast, Wilson said. At lunch seconds may be obtained for soup, gelatin salads, cottage cheese and vegetables; seconds may have seconds on gelatin, cottage cheese, vegetables and potatoes. Students are served an eight-ounce steak one night each month. Wilson said food service officials planned to offer shrimp as an option on steak night. A cafeteria at Tempell Hall said the students might be eating better than last year. "They are definitely getting better food, simply because the meat situation is better than last year," Jesse Stires, food supervisor at Templin, said. "All items are available this year, and we don't have to serve as many of the frozen entrees." Wilson said it was difficult to determine whether students were receiving larger portions than last year because there were many different methods of measuring food. "We try to select popular items that are in season and on and in reasonably good quantities," she said. Deane Reeves, Paola junior and a Templin resident, said he didn't think students were receiving larger portions of food than last year. Preparation of the food wasn't better either, although several "fancy" items had been prepared for the residents, he said "They don't have a lot to work with, though." Reeves said. Wilson said every dollar collected for food was being spent for food and none was being used for food. Wilson said that food services tried to serve chicken at least once a week because it was cheaper than beef. He said chicken was better when often because students would get tired of it. Wilson said the food service managers had talked to a vendor who wanted sell熟肉. "I told him to get it," Robot heads to the University last year. "At the time we didn't know how serious "At the time we didn't know how serious the meat situation was going to be," he said. "We were through all but beef supplies were short last year, rabbit meat never was seriously considered." By Kanaan Photographer DAVE PETERSON Making a point Albert Ravenholt, member of the American Universities Field Staff, told the Faculty Forum yesterday that newspapers in Southeast Asia faced several obstacles. The Security and Parking Department will lose $1,500 to $2,000 because of the loss of 440 X-zone parking lot spaces to University of Kansas Athletic Association contributors, Executive Vice Chancellor Del Shankel said last night. However, Security and Parking probably will more than make up the loss with a projected increase of revenue from the revised parking fine system. Shankel said An earlier estimate made by John Beisner, student body president, indicated that the acting department would lose $15,000 to the fund over a four-year period. Beisner said the loss would be in fees that would have come from the fund if they had been available for open parking. Shankel said the parking spaces were given to the athletic association in return for funds from the athletic and endowment associations for resurfacing and relighting S-zone parking lot, the lot southwest of Memorial Stadium. The S-zone resurfacing and relighting the two associations $27,000, Stainless steel. The athletic association will pay Security and Parking personnel manning the X-zone lot during the five home football games, Shankel said. Before this year, Security and Parking personnel in the X-zone collected one dollar for each car parked in the lot. The collected money went to Security and Parking Department budget. Although the Security and Parking Department will lose the $1,500 to $2,000 in parking lot revenue, the department won't be paying the department personnel in the lot, thus the University joined the work done on S-zone, Shankel said. Sports parking cuts funds He said the lost parking lot revenue probably would be more than made up by the increase in gas prices. Asian press stifled, speaker says Obstacles to free expression in Southeast Asia include government restrictions, financial problems and multiple languages, cultural differences, and universities Field Staff, said yesterday. Ravenholt, speaking to the Faculty Forum, said expression of ideas in the region was made difficult because of these problems. He said the trend in Southeast Asian countries was toward more government control of the press. He cited the example of Lee Kwan Yiew in Singapore. The View government has closed a newspaper and put many publications under pressure. Newman are required to provide the information licensed yearly, Reavenholt said. Reporters in other Southeast Asian countries are being rubed, he said. The best defense against this government control is for the media to attain a higher level of awareness. "Unless this trend of increasing domination through government control of communications is reversed," Ravenholt said, "we must inevitably anticipate a continuing drift toward tyranny in varying forms in Southeast Asia." He said Southeast Asian economics presented another major obstacle to the expression of ideas for newspaper owners as well as individuals. The high cost of newsprint, ink and presses makes the newspaper business in Southeast Asia an unprofitable one, Ravenholt said. Because all of this cost can't be passed on to the consumer, newspapers lose money, he said. newspapers were sold for every 100 people in Southeast Asia, excluding Japan. According to Ravenholt, a school teacher must work three weeks in the Philippines to pay for a one-year subscription to a newspaper. He said that only about two The language barrier in Southeast Asia is another obstacle to the expression of ideas, of language. Jon Jossenand, assistant presiding officer of the University Council, said last night he was sending a letter to Shankel asking him to reconsider his decision. In the Phillipines alone there are eight different languages and 156 different ethno-linguistic groups. This language barrier exists because of expression except radio, Ravenholt哼。 by the revised parking fine system. The system requires student and faculty violators to go to city court if they don't pay fines within a certain time. Shankel said. Reserving parking spaces for athletic contributors in the parking lots next to Allen Field House during the basketball season is under consideration, Shankel said. The number of parking spaces that would be affected isn't known, he said. Reserving parking spaces for athletic association contributions has been a notable success. The sponsored site The money could have been used to reduce student football ticket prices substantially, he said. Athletics should be as much of a part of the management of the University, Joesand said. Josserand said that he would have the matter put on the agenda of the council if Shanker didn't consider and that he also was aware of the decision before the University Judiciary. "The apparent rationalization for this was the paving of that lot and that never was the building of it." "The regular University process has been abused by this decision," he said. "It appears to me that the Parking and Traffic Control Board is board and that they never consulted. Bridge Players! "We are playing again." That's Right! THE KU BRIDGE CLUB Featuring: DUPLICATE BRIDGE is meeting every Sunday Afternoon from 4:30 to 8:00 Info: Call SUA Office 864-3477 SUA Indoor Recreation Parlor A Kansas Union High court judge to speak at KU William H. Rehniqt, associate justice of the U.S. Supreme Court, will be on campus today and tomorrow for speeches and visits to the School of Law. Rinnhquin will continue the Judge Nelson Timothy Stephens Lectures at 4 p.m. today in Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the Union Ballroom. The speech tomorrow night will follow a dinner with the KU Law Society. The topic of Rehquish's speeches is the difference between effective law enforcement and citizen police. Rehmann will tour Green Hall tomorrow morning after a breakfast meeting with law He will have lunch tomorrow with the federal judges for the district of Kansas and San Francisco. The lecture series honors Nelson Timothy Stephens, a district judge in Kansas in the 1870s and 1880s. Stephens played a major role in the formation of the University's law school. Nixon nominated Rehman to be an associate justice of the Supreme Court in October. After the Senate had refused to vote on his two objections for that and another open court position. He was in the U.S. Army Air Corps from 1943 to 1946 and received his bachelor's and master's degrees from Stanford University, graduating with great distinction. Rehqunit was born Oct. 1, 1924, in Milwaukee. Rehniqust later practical law in Phoenix with an emphasis on civil litigation and was appointed by former President Richard M. Kaiser to preside over the general office of the Office of Legal Counsel. He later received a second master's degree from Harvard University and a law degree from the Stanford University School of Law. Research post vacant Rehnquist was sworn in Jan. 7, 1972. The position of director of the Office of Institutional Research and Planning probably won't be filled in the near future, Chancellor Archie R. Dekes said last night. Dykes said that the present director, Robert T. Aanengenburg, on was sabbatical leave and that Lawrence A. Sherr, associate director, was serving as acting director of the office. There are several studies that need attention, Dykes said. He said that the present staff might work on these under the guidance of a specialist in the instrument of a director would be postponed. --presents A CONCERT starring SUA's KU/KSU Football Trip October 12 at Manhattan Price $1600 Attention Sophomores A Bus Exclusively for Sophomores will make the trip to Manhattan PRICE INCLUDES 1 reserved seat ticket round trip charter bus free beverages on bus one evening in Aggieville without driving & parking problems Deadline for sign up—October 3 Indicate that you are a sophomore when signing up FREE STATE OPERA HOUSE Jimmy Spheeris AFTER THE CONCERT DANCE TO Mud Creek ALL IN ONE NIGHT! ALL FOR THREE DOLLARS Adv. Ticket Thursday, Sept. 26 Party Starts at 8 p.m. Doors Open at 7:30 One Show Only 3.OO Advance $3.75 at the Door KIEF'S Advance Tickets at: BETTER DAYS RAY AUDIO