Tuesday, September 24.1974 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 5 University Daily Kansan FEATURES The best protection against fraudulent magazine sales is to save all sales receipts and signed papers, Carol Bone, director of the Consumer Protection Agency said recently. Salesmen draw complaints Boone said she had received several calls about magazine solicitations recently. Quadagno mixes teaching, Most of the calls received, she said, were about the conduct of the salesmen. Phil Fricke, president of the Association of University Residence Halls, said that residence hall contracts prohibited room-to室 soliciting. He said enforcement would usually amount to the staff asking the solicitors to leave. By JEFF HILL Reporter Editor's Note: This is the third in a series of articles Honor to the Outstanding Progressive Eagle Award winner will be announced Oct. 19 during the halftime of the Kansas-Nebraska football game. David Quadagno, associate professor of physiology and biology, thinks universities should generate information as well as teach. Quadagno, a 1974 HOPE Award finalist, applies that maxim to his own professional life. "I like to try to attain a balance of research and teaching," Quadagno said. He emphasized that his first priority was teaching. "I work hard to make the presentation interesting." "Quadagno said. 'It's easy just to go up and read. It's hard to find interesting examples.'" Quadagano teaches an undergraduate course in human anatomy. He thinks his teaching of the anatomy course won him nomination for the HOPE Award. Quadagno, who reorganized the anatomy class when he came to the University in 1970, said the course was going well because of his team of assistants. He singled out John Hough, a teaching assistant who helps with the class, as an excellent lecturer. "Credit is due to these people," Quadrugano said. "The TA's were sneaked, then kids would say that the TA's were stolen." Glass... From Page One of sponsorship does raise a question that must be resolved." However, no legal actions have been brought to force cancellation of the retraining program. Glass has faced similar objections to his talks in the Lawrence Public School District. Faced with a possible injunction against him, he said the doctrine of separation of church and state, Glass voluntarily decided to call off his talks. However, a petition for the injunction was filed yesterday, and Federal Judge O'Connor set a hearing for 10 am. today. Charles Kahn, dean of the School of Architecture and Urban Design and a litigant in the move against Glass, said that with Glass' decision not to appear in the Lawrence schools, he thought the suit should be dropped. "We offered a lot of people at us, but we offered a very broad range to them." Gleim said to Kahn. This compromise, Kahn said, was that if Glass' speech was truly motivational and without evangelism, the program could be set state property, but after school hours. "Because he refused, we had to take it to court, where he chose not to appear," Kahn said. "We've been in court all afternoon, and the best thing to do would be to quash the suit." However this action will have no effect on camp use of the field house, or the legal prohibition against it. David Quadagno Quadagno explained his teaching method by referring to the anatomy class. "Anatomy is very straightforward information and hard to keep interesting since you are dealing with straight fact," he said. Because of the amount of material the course covers, Datagno rigidly organizes "It can be overwhelming and in- teresting," he said about the amount of informa- tion he received. The class `sylabus` lists what the lectures cover each day. It is the size of a small spacer in the window. "I like to be organized." Quadagno said. "All the material the students will have to know is organized. This way it's easier for them to learn it." Quadagno used a syllabus from the School of Medicine at the University of California at Los Angeles as the model for his syllabus. He did post-doctoral work for a year at UCLA before coming to the University of Kansas. In spite of his renown as a teacher of anatomy, Quadagmo said anatomy itself didn't interest him. But he enjoys applying of anatomy to particular problems. "I like the clinical applications," Quadgado said. He regularly invites guest lecturers to his class to teach anatomy's applications. Quadagono is involved with more than teaching. He directs three research projects at KU and continually helps graduate students with their research projects. "If you want to do a good job and be enthusiastic, you need a change of pace," Quadagno said. "Though it's still work, it is something different." Quadrogan also likes his research because it keeps him informed about the latest findings in the field. The first of his three research projects is paid for by the National Institute of Mental Health with a grant of $48,000 for three years. "We're studying the effect of hormones, administered during infancy, on later behavior." Quadagano said. "We inject more hormones and study the effects on the young." The second research project studies the effects of hormones on the adult behavior, educating children. The study might be financed by the National Institute of Health, Quadgno said, but he won't know until December. He is writing a review of part of his research to compare his animal data with any human data available. "I've always been interested in behavior and the control of behavior," Quadagno said. Quadagone's third research project deals with the effects of isolation on behavior of animals. Quadagono's research aims at making animal modern models and proper propositions will apply to humans. Each summer, Quidagao and his family leave KU so he can study in other areas. This summer he studied at Williams College, where heMass., and hopes to go back next summer. Quadagno came to the University in 1970 Business Grads & Seniors needed to serve as small business consultants and economic development advisors overseas or in the U.S. **ACTION / Peace Corps / VISITA** Representatives on campus Thurs. & Fr., Sept. 26 & 27 Union & Business Placement (Sr./Grads. Sign up for interviews- now) We are a personal, full service bookstore. We will special order any book in print. We will search for books out of print. We accept phone orders from individuals or classes. No fee, no deposit. We gift wrap and mail. Come in and get acquainted. FINE SERVICE for an interview with some of the staff of the department, and I thought it would be like Kansas research ADVENTURE a bookstore "I even told my wife I didn't think I would get a job in Kagas," he said. Quadrogan was graduated from Pennsylvania State University in 1963, and then worked in his father's store until he decided to pursue a Master's degree from the State University in 1966 and a Ph.D. from the University of Illinois—Urbana in 1969. I would get a job in Kansas," he said. But he loved it and has bought a house and "They're no cars to run over the kids," Quadagno said, smiling. KU Mountaineering/Back-pack Club: Organizational Meeting FORUM ROOM KANSAS UNION 7:30 p.m. September 25 HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER Ninth and Iowa—Phone 843-6424 Plans for: Backpacking Workshop October 4,5 Trips October 12 and November 2 For Further Information Call SUA----864-3477 to the sirloin Best Place in Town To Bring Your Parents and Guests featuring . . . - DELICIOUS FOOD - EXCELLENT SERVICE - PRIVATE CLUB FACILITIES AVAILABLE - PRIVATE ROOMS FOR BANQUETS Phone 843-1431 for Information Our motto is and has always been . . "There is no substitute for quality in good food." FINE BOOKS 1 1/2 Miles North of the Kaw River Bridge Phone 843-1431 Closed Mondays Dining From 4:30 p.m. WE THOUGHT PEOPLE KNEW BETTER We've had a couple of phone calls lately that really bother us. For example, customers call and say things like: "Fifty cents for a delivery? Hell! I'll order from someplace that gives free delivery." But there's an even deeper reason we're disturbed. Do people really believe the myth of "five billion" travellers you'd be smarter than that. We thought people knew that when someone advertises "free delivery," you end up paying for delivery anyway. There is an old adage: "Nothing in this world is free." By paying for the food, you've covered the cost of delivering it. That bothers us for the obvious reason. And yet, we still get phone calls accusing us of everything under the sun short of highway robbery. And sometimes even that. We pay $1.50 an hour to our delivery men. We also pay expenses on our delivery car (15c mile average, according to latest Dept. of Transportation figures). In fact, we barely break even. So next time you see "free delivery," think twice. And then decide what you really want to eat. And buy it, whether it's their product, or ours. Because, as far as delivery costs go, **it all costs the same.** If it takes an average of fifteen minutes (45c for labor) and five miles roundtrip (75c for cost), you can plainly see that we don't make any money on deliveries. 50c delivery charge anywhere on "The Hill" Our policy is: 75c charge between 19th and 23rd streets Are Free Deliveries REALLY So Free? $1.00 south of 23rd street FUJI MICRO SAFETY N