University Daily Kansan, October 7, 1982 Page 11 Senate adjusts seat allotment The schools of Architecture and Engineering each will gain a seat in the Student Senate, according to Senate redistribution figures released yesterday by Elena Brito, Elections Committee chairman. But the schools of Business and Fine Arts, both hit hard by recent drops in enrollment, each will lose one Senate seat. Nunemaker seats, which totaled 17 last year, will be reduced to 15, also because of enrollment decreases. THE FIGURES are based on 20th day enrollment totals provided by the office of admissions and records. Enrollment on that day was 24,040. The School of Architecture, which has two seats in the 68-member Senate this year, will elect three senators during the election on Nov. 17-18. The Senate of Engineering will have five Senate representatives after the election. But the School of Business, which suffered a 15 percent decline in enrollment this fall, will drop to two Senate seats. The school's fall enrollment dropped from 811 last year to 686 this year. The School of Fine Arts, which has three seats this year, also will have two seats two years later. Enrollment in the Fine Arts department dropped 7 percent, from 1,104 to 1,020. THE NUMBER OF Senate seats for special students will increase from one to two. Special students are defined by the University of Kansas an students attending college but not seeking degrees. The number of seats in the university will also increase, from nine to 10, because of small enrollment gains. The number of Senate seats for other schools were not affected by enrollment changes. They are: School of Education; 2, Graduate School; 12, School of Journalism; 1, School of Law; 1, School of Pharmacy; 1, School of Social Welfare; 1, and the School of Allied Health, 1. THE SENATE is also composed of one representative from each of the following organizations: Panhellenic, the Association of University Residence Halls, the All-Scholarship Hall Council and the Interfraternity Council. In addition to these, one off-campus students from the previous administration are designated to remain with the Senate as holdover senators. The deadline for filing for the November Senate elections is Oct. 25. Student body presidential and vice candidates, however, must file by Oct. 18. Applied English Center moves to its final home The Applied English Center will make its fourth move in four years next week from its present building on 1400 Louisiana St. to the old law reading room on the second floor of Lippincott Hall. Elizabeth Soppela, director of the center, which specializes in teaching English to foreign students, said the move was needed because the present building was too small and in an inconvenient location. New international students trying to find their way around campus had a doubly hard time looking for the current off-campus address, she said. SHE SAID the present building, which is next to the Wagon Wheel Tavern, was crowded. The building must provide office space for 36 graduate teaching assistants, three full-time faculty instructors, four administrators and four resident assistants, she said. "Lippincott is a nice location," she said. "We'll have three times the space." Administrators will have their own offices in Lippincott Hall, she said, and partitions will separate the rest of the space. Students do not feel the center is part of the University because the building is off-campus, said Gabrielefolio. She also estimate teaching assistant for the center. Soppelaa said the location of the center made it difficult for students who must conduct business between the school and the services in Strong Hall and the center. THE CENTER was first in Carruth-O'Leary Hall, then moved to Blake Hall in 1978, and then to the present location in 1800, she said. "It's very hard to pack up every year. Some time is lost moving into a new apartment." SOPFELSA SAID that Lippincott Hall would be a permanent location, and that the present location always had been intended as temporary. The move to Lippincott will take place Oct. 13 and 14, she said, and the center has been trying to notify customers service will be disrupted for a few days. All systems 'go' for fifth shuttle flight By United Press International SPACE CENTER, Houston — Members of the first four-man crew ever to fly an American space mission said yesterday that they were "99 percent ready" to fly the fifth space flight Nov. 11. "I'm enthused and excited," said mission command Vance Brand, 51, a veteran of the 1975 Russian-American Apollo-Soyuz mission. "We're 99 percent of the way there. The final 1 percent is tuning up." The men will take off from Florida's Kennedy Space Center and will land five days later at Edwards Air Force Base, Calif. and Bill Lenoir — would continue working on preparations to deploy two communications satellites for the shuttle's first two paxing customers Brand said he and his crew of space rookies — Bob Overmyer, Joe Allen support EVA (extravehicular activities) including the suits themselves." THE TWO companies are paying about $10 million each to have satellites launched from the shuttle. "The primary objective is to deploy two commercial satellites. Everything else is really secondary," said Kline, a 45 mission specialist on the flight. - Telesat Canada and Satellite Business Systems of Virginia. PREPARATIONS FOR the space walk turned up a glitch in mission planning. The astronauts hd planned to adjust Allen and Lenoir to the pure atmosphere of the space suits by changing the normal atmosphere of the shuttle cabin. orbit 23,000 miles above Earth. Television viewers on the ground will see pictures of the satellites springing from the cargo bay, but will not see the satellite rockets fire because NASA wants to protect the shuttle windows from the blast. The two satellites will spring out of the cargo bay on the first and second days of the mission. The shuttle will then move 12 miles away and rockets it from the space shuttle them from the space shuttle Columbia's 600-mile altitude to a parking THE SHUETTLE arm, which could point a television camera in that direction, will not be aboard the shuttle this mission. Lenoir and Allen, 45, a non-pilot mission specialist, are scheduled to take the first space walk from the shuttle. Although they will do the mission, they will inside the shuttle cargo bay, the doors will be open and they will be in space. But because tests suggest the risk of a physiological effect called "the bends," Allen and Lenoir now will have to spend 3 + 12 hours sitting in their suits pre-breathing the pure oxygen. "The space walk is a fairly simple one," Allen said. "The main purpose is really to test the systems that The crew will be the most crowded in the space air history, but Overcrowding 46, a Marine colonel, said he expected that the facilities without any problems. WOLFE'S ANNIVERSARY SALE 12 PAGES OF BARGAINS - BUY NOW AND SAVE $389 99 OUTFIT YOUR COST SALE PRICE $419⁹⁹ LESS REBATE $30.00 FROM OLYMPUS Olympus OM10-FC With 50MM F1.8 Lens, 80-200MM F4.5 Sequence 7 Macro Zoom Lens, Dedicated Pro/Alton Electronic Flash, And Genuine Olympus Eveready Case. OM-10 FC Camera Features Automatic Off-The-Film Exposure, Manual Override, Winder Option. $259 For OM-10FC With 35-70MM F3.5 All-Purpose Compact Zoom Lens $25999 SALE $189 99 Cost On OM-10FC With Normal F1.8. 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