Thursday, August 28.1975 University Daily Kansan A. B. C. D. Yearbook sales up after'71 low Nearly 500 more Jayhawker yearbooks were sold during enrollment week than during the same sales period last year. Also Brown, Jayhawker business manager. Brown said 3,444 students purchased the Jayhawk while paying their fall semester tuition and fees. One student, who fall 1974 sales of 2,891, he said, in spite of the fact that Jayhawk option cards were omitted from the enrollment packets of all incoming students who participated in normal orientation. "I attribute the great increase to last year's campaign," Koloman, 1978. Jabayeh, editor said yesterday. He said he thought it was the best Jiahyawker published in years and the increase also reflected a trend towards the influence of the yearbook on college campuses. "The Student of '78" will be the theme of the 1976 Jawhayker, McCollam said. "Everyone is going to be bicentennialed out, I know," he said, "but still you can't ignore it." He said he thought the theme combined a bicentennial awareness with a focus on the student and a documentation of University life in 1975-76. "Our biggest complaint is that we don't show rge students," he said, "so we're going to include as many pictures, candidis and groups as we can." Mccollain said that in 1971 many students became disenchanted with the Jayhawk者, and now they have featured senior photographs, which the students submitted themselves, and listings of faculty members made like baseball cards, all enclosed in a cardboard box, he That year the yearbook lost $9,000, he said, and the only reason it was solvent was the fact that it was made of glass. After two format changes, from box to magazine and magazine to book, the Jayhawker has reestablished itself, McCollam said, and last year made a $2,000 profit. That money, as well as all other profits, will be funnelled into a special fund that has been established to guard against another bad business year and to fund expensive capital equipment such as cameras, he said. A newly created public relations committee is in charge of campus sales, Brown University's first female faculty has been a fall sales push, but that this year, sales people would accompany camera personnel to each living group to give them a look at how books when their group picture is taken. "There's always a hard core group of yearbook people who would buy it no matter what," McCollam said, "but we're interested in the people who would buy but have never thought about it. We want to show them what a good deal it is." Brown said he thought the 1976 Jayhawker, priced at $8, was the least expensive yearbook in the Big Eight. He said students who didn't purchase a Jayhawker office at 117B in the Kansas union between 1:30 and 5 p.m. daily. Ideal school to be reviewed The school is being developed by professors in the department of human development under a federally funded program. Professor Jackson, professor of human development. The project was authorized under an 832,882 contract given to the University by a developer and developed by a compensatory education program. Compensatory education programs seek to provide equal educational programs applegate, Jackson said. A review by a federal agency of Century School, a proposed ideal elementary school stressing individual student instruction, will be in early September. KU and three other universities were given the contracts to develop new ideas in compensatory education for the federal agency that was reviewed by Congress in 1977, he said. KU submitted a draft of its plan last spring and began work on it July 1. The school was designed by Jackson, Don Meyer, Lin Lm, Kim Gass, all professors of human development. Century School will exist only on paper during the 15 months covered by the NIE contract. The school is a plan for a local elementary school of about 100 students that exists as an alternative to regular public schooling, Jackson said. The school will cost less than normal phasize individual instruction, he said. At the end of the contract period, September 1976, the university committee working on the project will submit a final report to be presented to Congress, Jackson said. ACME Dry Cleaners and Launderers PRIMARILY LEATHER 812 Mass. We've been serving KU for 28 years. Lawrence, Ks. And now we serve you at 3 easy locations: Downtown - 1111 Mass. Hillcrest - 925 Iowa Mallis - 711 W. 23rd 10% Discount on Cash and Carry Dry-Cleaning. Elwell set Sept. 3 as the date for a preliminary hearing in the McNish case. McNish was released on a personal recognizance bond. Gary Lee McNish, 21, 830 Connecticut, was charged with two counts of burglary and several related charges in connection with the burglary of Otto's Recapping, 792 N. 2nd, and the Lawrence Performance Center, 790 W. 2nd. 2 local men arraigned in felonies Charged with grand theft in connection with an incident at the Derby gas station at Bathgate. Two Lawrence men were arraigned Probate Court Judge Mike Ewallman, Court Judge Linda Fitzgerald. is being held over the $1,500 bond in the Douglas County jail. Ellswel set a preliminary hearing date of Sept. 10 for Bear. He is accused of grabbing a money bag containing about $300 in cash from the attendant at the Derby gas station. 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All add $2.00 Handlg/Shipp C.O.D.'s a accepted with 20 deposit. All sales final. UNIVERSITY CALCULATOR CO. Dept. CD 86 Debby Lane P.O. Box 476 Warrensburg, MO. 64093 Friday, August 29 Saturday, August 30 7:00 p.m., 9:30 p.m. Weedruff Aud.— Kansas Union $1^{90}$ SUA Films Presents a film about JIMI HENDRIX Dynamic Show Group RICHARDS & RIGLER Direct from L.A. TV and Club Appearances. This Thursday, Friday, and Saturday only at PAUL GRAY'S JAZZ PLAC 926 Mass. Enter from Alley Behind Jenkins Music Call 843-8575 for Reservations DO YOU COMMUTE? If so, why not share the costs and driving with other commuting students? A carpool file matching students commuting from particular areas is available in the Student Senate office, 105B Kansas Union. SIMILAR FILES ARE KEPT FOR STUDENTS SEEKING TUTORS AND ROOMMATES. If you would like to take advantage of these services simply fill out the form below and include any information you feel is pertinent. Name___ Phone___ Address___ Roommate □ Carpool □ Tutor □ A Student Senate Service Financed with Student Activity Fees Bring to Student Senate office, Room 105B Kansas Union 864-3710 Information___ REDUCED SEMESTER RATE KANSAS CITY STAR WAS $18 NOW $10 plus sales tax You receive Morning-Evening-Sunday from the present until Dec. 19. Offer limited to full-time students. Start your subscription today. Offer ends soon. Addresses west of Iowa St. and north of 15th St. phone 842-3049 All other addresses phone 843-0181.