Page 8 University Daily Kansan, November 11, 1982 Workers kept busy yesterday on construction at the K.S. "Boots" Adams Alumni Center, left, and the Summerfield Hall addition, right. The Alumni Buddy Mangine/KANSAN Center is expected to be completed by June 1983, and Summerfield is expected to be completed by August 1983. Speaker says Russia occupies by formula by VERONICA JONGENELEN Staff Reporter Michael Pauli, a librarian specializing in Slavic studies, spoke at the Ecumenical Christian University Noon Forum. About 50 people gathered to hear. The activities of Russians in Poland are based on formulas that the Russians have used in the overtaking of other countries, such as the Ukraine and Lithuania, a KU specialist in Ukrainian history said yesterday. hear his speech titled "The First Experiment of National Communism in Ukraine in the 1920s and 1930s." Afterward, Palij said that the Russians learned from experience which formulas worked and which did not. The formulas involve weakening the people of a country and then taking that country over. In his speech, Palj detailed the effects of Russia's expansion into the Ukraine, which included famine and death. AN ARTIFICIALLY caused famine began in the Ukraine in 1933, Pali said. After its removal, the grain was placed in state elevators and then shipped to the world market at a dumping price, he said. Those in impatient pasts who tried to prevent the shipments were removed from their jobs. when Stalin overtook the country. Stalin ordered all grain removed form the country, including seed stocks. Many people died, and some entire villages were wiped out, he said. Russia began to move its own people in, and the Ukraine was occupied. Poland, he said, because the Russian government wants to take away what the country produces. the country produces. Little by little, the people in Poland are beginning to feel the effects of the formulas, he said. in those countries where the Russians have taken over, an abundance of policemen are needed, he said. This is a challenge that the police do not produce anything. "Anytime when you have a lot of people who do nothing but eat, you will feel it," he said. Broker tells students to learn about market By JEANNE FOY Staff Reporter The best way for students to learn about the stock market is to become actively involved in it, a stockbroker who works as an investor in a speech at Summerfield Hall. A stockbroker can tell a customer when to buy and sell in order to make a profit, he said. "I have a guy in telecommunications who calls in to ask what company to invest in. He knows better than I do," he said. "There's the old saw 'I can pick stocks better than a brokerage firm.' I held to that once, but it just isn't true." he said. HE SAID brokerage firms employed technical and fundamental analysts. A fundamental analyst looks at who is running a company and its probable earnings, he said, and a technical analyst charts statistical information about the company. Fay said Dean Witter Reynolds had 100 analysts researching every field from telecommunications to retail sales. But in areas that are unfamiliar to investors, a broker's research is useful. Fay said. Fay said he knew of a client who was going to invest in a Wichita company, but after he wrote a letter requesting information, he found that the company's president had been cited for security violations. Timing is the important factor in making a profit on the stock market, and a stockbroker should be able to get timely information about company's stock is going to change. Pay said "STOCKBROKERS' research is valuable to an investor, Fay said, but the best way to find a company to invest in is to look in one's back During the first hour of trading yesterday, the Dow Jones industrial average soared 10 points to 1.078 but ended the day by closing at 1,044.52, down 15.73. Tuesday was a near record day. Ted Fay, a stockbroker for the brokerage firm of Dean Witter Reynolds Inc., said an active dealer in the stock market was always learning new things about it. Even though Fay has been working with his broker, the company was surprised by the latest bull market on Wall Street, he said. As Fay was delivering his words, Wall Street was closing on a down note after surging past all-time highs earlier in the day. THE SLIDE was prompted by analysts' warnings that the market was banking on too strong an economic recovery and a government report showing an anemic 6.4 percent rise in October retail sales. Fay said one key to being successful in the stock market was having the advice of a stockbroker. He said people should go to a stockbroker for two reasons — to receive sound advice and to take part in the brokerage firm's research. "We're deluged with reports, all from our research department," he said. He said anyone who had a stockbroker should keep in touch with the broker often, because most of their deals deal with about 1,000 clients. UFS PRESENTS: The Greatest Challenge a ROBERT CHARTOFF-IRWIN WINKLER production - 'ROCKY III. VSLYSTER STALLOW-TALIA SHURE BURT YUING-CARL HEATERS AND BURGESS MOREIDIN-Micley as director of photography BILL BUTLER, A.S.C. music by BILL COMIT-produced by IRWIN WINKLER and ROBERT CHARTOFF written and directed by SYLVESTER STALLOW United Artists MA THIS FRI. AND SAT. NOV. 12 & 13 AT 7, 9, & 11 PM IN DOWNS AUD. (DYCHE HALL—NEXT TO THE UNION) TICKETS: $1.50 GO FOR IT!!! GO FOR IT!!!