8 Monday. September 16. 1974 University Dallv Kansan Blind student . . . From Page One When he entered the state blind school at Austin, he had to learn English quickly. Guadalupe was Spanish-speaking children often received at school, but said some of his 11 brothers and sisters were blind. HIS PARENTS were migrant workers at the time, so the family traveled quite a bit. Gutterzeer left the blind school after about a month and attended series of schools as the family moved about. "After the third move, my dad just called it quits," he said. "My father realized how hard it was on the family, educationally and otherwise. "It was pretty tough during the migrant mothers. My brothers and sisters helped up what they did." After his freshman year at the blind school, Gutierrez enrolled at a regular school and later was graduated from Roosevelt High School in Kansas City, Kan. The family moved to Kansas City, Kan. in 1960 where his father worked for a rendering company. Gutierrez entered another state blind school. He received a four-year scholarship from an Italian organization in Kansas City and has been awarded scholarships. GUITERREZ HAS been blind since birth, but he had some light and light periphery. "I could see faces, but couldn't identify the person," he said. He had a few operations when he was young, but he said they really didn't help much. "If we had had more money to work with, my blindness might have been corrected," Gutierrez considered using a guide dog but didn't feel the need for one. "I want to feel free and independent," he said. "I don't want to enslave a dog to lead a blind man around and I don't want to hassle with caring for a dog." He receives state and federal assistance for tuition, books, supplies and living expenses. The state also employs students to read text material to him. I have six or seven readers who come over for a few hours a day, he said. "They read my studies to me. I like to take breaks and just spend time talking, not really human just using them to read." GUTIERREZ CONSIDERS himself an average student and maintains a B or C average in his studies. He likes to read and subscribes to the traille editions of Consumers Research Magazine and Popular Mechanics. Gutterrez sometimes thinks his blindness is an advantage to him. He uses a braille writer and a regular typewriter to complete his schoolwork and occasionally uses the Audio-Reader service at the University. "Sighted people miss things because they tend to overlook them," he said. "They don't use their senses to the fullest capacity. They just rely on sight." Football fan club On Campus The Lawrence Jayhawk Quarterback Club will have its first meeting of 6:30 a.m. Tuesday in the Trophy Room of the Allen Field House, Ampter. Any interested football fan is invited to join the club. A season membership is $10, which is good for all 11 Tuesday morning meetings, including continental breakfasts. Fans may join by mailing a $10 check payable to the club to P.O. Box 545, Lawrence. As in the past head football coach Don Fambour will attend the meetings and comment on films of the previous Saturday's game. Kid's tickets cost $1 Youngsters in grades four through nine may buy tickets to four KU football games for $1 each. Tickets to the four games are offered as a package deal by the KU athletic department and the Lawrence Parks and Recreation Department. The games are Florida State, Sept. 28; Texas Tech, Oct. 28, and Oklahoma, Nov. 16. Tickets may be bought at the Parks and Recreation Office or the Community Building, 11th and Vermont streets. Also on campus This afternoon, an open door meeting with the athletic director will be at 3:30 in Parlor A of the Kansas Union, and women interested in intercollegiate sports will meet at 3:30 in Robinson Gymnasium. Students interested in swimming will meet in the south gym and those interested in游泳 will meet at the pool. Tonight, Robert Bennett, candidate for governor, will speak at 8 in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. Tomorrow, College Assembly will meet at 4 p.m. in Woodruff Auditorium. PITCHER NIGHT PRICES Tonight & Wednesday Swinton visited the William White School of Journalism before travel to New York. $110 8-Midnight The Ball Park Hillcrest Shopping Center The American press is more accepted overseas than it is in America, Stan Swinton, director of Associated Press world services, said Friday. Swinton has been chief of the Associated Press bureau in Italy and a World War II correspondent. He also worked in the Far East, where he supported impairments in North Vietnam, and Indonesia. Men and Women Teams. Come in and join the fun of bowling on your own team. the credibility of the American press overseas is demonstrated by the popularity of the magazine "Much of the press overseas is pretty bad." he said. Foreign correspondents for the AP must speak the language of the country they work in, Swinton one. One correspondent for the AP speaks nine languages and writes in five languages. Tryouts will be held each Tuesday in September at 4:00 p.m. KANSAS UNION 864-3545 Varsity Bowling Tryouts U.S. prestige down, AP man says Watergate has had good coverage in the foreign press, Swinton said, because everything the United States does has an effect on the rest of the world. Watergate has diminished American prestige, he said, but the growth of Europe and Japan as world power forces has also lessened American power. "We are not the world power, we are a world power," Swinton said. Swinton said he traveled about five months a year and had written stories in 110 books. For journalism graduates, Swinton said, the job is going to be a touch ticket. He said specialized writers in needs such as science, economics and ecology would have a better chance of getting a job than other journalism students. Swinton told the person who wanted to study journalism should learn as much about it. By Kansan Photographer JIM THOMAS Financed with Student Activity Fee 3:30-5:00 p.m. KANSAS UNION—PARLOR A KU Director of Athletics Mr. Clyde Walker Monday, Sept. 16 AP comes to KU . . . a chance to express your opinions and ask questions Stan Swinton, director of Associated Press world services, stopped to visit students in New York City for a visit and half of his time travelling, said the American press was received favorably overtone. with OPEN DOOR MEETING CLIP OUT Buy three (3) of either of our Large Sandwiches and you will Big Shef(s) or Super Shef(s) receive the fourth one FREE TRUCK LOAD SPECIAL! Buy Three—Get One Free Purchase must be accompanied available for instruction. by this coupon. Good thru Sunday, Sept. 22, 1974 He suggested that all journalism schools teach the new methods to better prepare journalists. 814 Iowa Many of the new developments in press technology, Swinton said, such as the cathode-ray tube, which transits a picture of news copy onto a screen, should be Nixon promises . . . From Page One of Kenneth Cole, who succeeded Ehrlichman as Nixon's top domestic adviser. Haag said Cole wanted to return to private life. The resignations of Haig, Cole and Jones would leave no Nixon appointees in positions of major or direct influence on the administration, paper and people into Fork's Oval Office. A WHITE HOUSE aide said this week he expected Ford to replace Jerry Jones, staff secretary, who holds a position of importance in the transition team set up by his company's resignation to coordinate the reshaping of the White House bureaucracy. Although a number of Nixon appointees have been assured of job security by Ford, the mood among many of them is one of satisfaction as they see their numbers shrink. "Don't call us holdovers," one suggested. "I think 'hangouts' is more descriptive." THE FIRST five weeks of the Ford administration have produced sharp frictions between some veterans of Ford's vice president and his Nixon staff members, notably Haig. Although Haig has publicly said the frictions were minimal, reportedly he is not afraid of being involved in columnists and others that seemed intended to discredit him and to picture him as more concerned about the welfare of the old Nixon team than about the operations of the current administration. Some Ford appointees have hinted that Haig played an important role in the Nixon pardon, by Philip Buchen, Ford's counsel, describing Haig's role as essentially pennant. Kansan Classifieds Work For You! Jerald F. terHorst, who resigned to Ford's press secretary in protest over the pardoning of Nixon, wrote in his first syndicated column published yesterday that he needed to spend an inordinate amount of money squabbles among members of his staff. Consider an Alternative . . . Consider ACTION/PEACE CORPS/VISTA Representatives on Campus Thurs. & Fri. / Sept. 26 & 27 UNION Business Placement/Liberal Arts Placement (Seniors/Grads sign up for interview - new) —ATTENTION— MUST 2) Sign a CAPITAL DISPOSITION CONTRACT with the Senate. 3) Obtain ADVANCE WRITTEN AVOKATION from the Senate. All Organizations Allocated Funds by the Student Senate All officers who are to be authorized to spend allocated funds 3) Obtain ADVANCE WRITTEN AUTHORIZATION from the 'Treasurer's Office for each and every expenditure of these funds. 1) attend a TRAINING SESSION conducted by the Student Senate Treasurer's Office. See the schedule below. The last training session will be held Tuesday, September 17 7:00 p.m. and Thursday, September 18 7:43 p.m) between 11:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m. to sign up for this session. In accordance with the Student Senate rule & regulations as revised February 2014, you are responsible to any organization which does not comply with the above requirements. Movie Info Dial 842-4000 SUMMER HARRAD First the "Harrad Experiment," and now a Eve. at 7:30-9:30 Sat.-Sun. Mat. at 2:30 Varsity DEALER ... Tacoma NF 710-2655 THE BEST FORM HOLLWOOD! COMMONWEALTH THEATRES MOVIE MARQUEE "THE Omar Julie Sharif Andrews SEED" PG TAMARIND Eve. at 7:30:9:30 Sat.-Sun. Mat at 2:30 Movie Info Dial 842-4000 George C. Scott Granada 104711 - Negracho 1 / 386 "Bank Shot" A Funny, Funny Movie "The Super Cops" Show Starts 0:25 Where were you in'62? Sunset DANCE IN THEATER - Start on Dightway K4 See It "One More Time" Eve, 7:20 & 9:30 Sat.-Sun, Mat. 2:00 "The LORDS of FLATBUSH" Hillcrest Eve. at: 7:45 a.m. 9:40 Sat. Sun, Sat. Maat. 12:10 The Hillcrest "The coach says, it's hard to get the team up and win a big game. That's fun. You have any problem." The Wildest Funniest Ever. Eve. at 7:35 & 9:15 Sat., Sun, Mal. at 2:20 GIVE US AN X