8 Thursdav. September 10. 1987 / University Daily Kansan Campus/Area Noted education professor, Karl D. Edwards, dies at 74 By a Kansan reporter Karl D. Edwards, a University of Kansas professor emeritus of education and 1851 KU graduate, died yesterday morning at Lawrence Memorial Hospital. He was 74. Dr. Edwards was born Sept. 15, 1912, in Geary County. From 1931 to 1943, he taught at rural schools in Geary County and at Chapman High School. He was superintendent of Enterprise schools from 1943 to 1946. He and his wife, Helen, moved to Lawrence after he left that position. Dr. Edwards received his doctorate of education from KU in 1951. He retired from the School of Education at KU in 1978 as professor emeritus of curriculum and instruction. A square dance caller for more than 25 years, he organized the Barn Dancers Club in 1961, named after an old barn in West Lawrence where dances often were scheduled. Dr. Edwards was the only Kansan and one of 22 people in the nation who was accredited in 1984 as a "caller coach" by Callerlab of the International Association of Square Dance Callers. He formed two other square dance clubs before retiring from that activity in May 1986. Services are pending with Warren McElwain Mortuary in Lawrence. 842-1212 1601 W 23rd Southern Hills Mall Mon.-Thurs. 11 a.m.-2 a.m. Fri.-Sat. 11 a.m.-3 a.m. Sunday - 11 a.m.-1 a.m. MENU WE FEATURE THE UNIVERSAL SIZE PIZZA: 10 INCHES 6 Slices. FEEDS ONE TO TWO PEOPLE 1 PIZZA Our Small 2 PIZZAS Our Medium 3 PIZZAS Our Large STANDARD CHEESE A HAND JASHONED CRUST WITH A GENEROUS TOPPING OF TOMATO SAUCE AND CHEESES THE STARTING POINT FOR YOUR FAVORITE COMBINATION $400 $700 $900 EACH ADDITIONAL PIZZA $2^{00} ALL TOPPINGS 50¢ PER TOPPING PER PIZZA "NO COUPON SPECIALS" WE DELIVER DURING LUNCH! ESQUIRE BARBER SERVICE FOR MEN AND WOMEN FOR APPTS. CALL 842-3699 BRIDGE CT 2323 RIDGE CT. New e-book Tablet 1047 Lawrence Book A Fiction Handbook Product Welcome to Lawrence DEALING WITH THAT UNEASY FEELING which commonly occurs when... * you walk into a room full of strangers * you see someone you'd like to know * you're waiting for an interview to begin ...or many other social situations Thursday, September 10 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. 100 Smith Hall FREE! Presented by the Student Assistance Center. You Are Invited... to attend a seminar on microcomputer applications and products. These sessions will feature Tandon PCs which are currently on contract with the State of Kansas. These sessions are free and open to all students, faculty and staff. 9:00 - 9:30 PCs 101 - A Buyer's Guide To Microcomputer Selection 10:00 - 10:30 Compatibility - What Does It Mean? 11:30 - 12:00 Xerox Ventura Publisher Video "-IN ACTION" 12:30 - 1:00 Aldus Pagemaker Video "-Where Desktop Publishing Begins" 2:00 - 2:30 Wordprocessors - Choosing The One For You 3:00 - 3:30 Modems - Mainframe Access At Home All products will be available for hands-on demonstration between sessions. Thursday, September 10 9:00 am-4:30 pm Computer Center Auditorium Sunnyside Avenue and Illinois Street Sponsored by: We've given our brains to science. The TL-60 functions include hexadecimal/local conversions, integration using Simpson's rule, statistics (including linear regression), trend line analysis and metric to English conversions You can program 84 steps. The TI-65 has all the TI-60 functions, plus a stopwatch/timer for lab work, eight physical constants for use in thermodynamics and physics as well as Decision Programming capabilities. You can program 100 steps. TI advanced scientifics have all the right engineering and science functions to help you function better in school. When we set out to make our most advanced scientific calculators,we gave a lot of thought to what your science, math and engineering problems are. Then we designed our calculators around them. The result: the T1-60 and the new T1-65 are both packed with built-in functions. Plus, there are programming steps to speed you through repetitive calculations. But even though both can handle the hardest problems, they're easy to use. Large, color-coded keys and simple keyboard layouts mean you spend less time figuring out the calculator and more time figuring out your problems. out your problems So if you're the kind of student who's got science on the brain, get the calculators from the folks who've given their brains to science. The Advanced Sciences from Texas Instruments. ©1987 T1.