Wednesday, August 25, 1976 University Daily Kansan 5 By MARY MYERS Staff Writer Media coverage, stereotypes anger Yippies s had a in i Qc- partisan y Rep. D-Mo, ilining of and a pressmen or com- almost power. using his he was moved to of the intimates minated ¢ Office I. The 1. The their current craters in their influence pig plan, pig plan, cirk of the almost the almost and most inet and most inet onite on ity onite on ity are, as such, must remain, must remain power, power power, power, with the rith with the rith over handleurance, insurance, ing way ing way gets merning g staff counts, passional sections needed, and mittee first. Y are i be be 400 100 mida-ja i be must i be own; the pro- "Nobody for President," the Yippies killed in Kansas City. Hadn't the demonstrators proceeded any further than the march of 1986, when they nominated a pig? Some say they have, and they're angry at the media's failure to show it, according to a study by researchers at Columbia University. Most of the people at the Penn Valley Park demonstration site were there to be heard on important and varied issues, Jon Duncan, Midwest coordinator of the Cannabis deCRIMINALization Lobby, said Monday. convention" in Kansas City last week. But the press didn't go beyond the information he said. Many of them, weren't involved. spitting and bottle-throwing that occurred, he said. Most wanted serious discussion on the environment, the ERA and amnesty for draft-dodgers, Duncan said. IF THERE WAS A common denominator that brought all the people together, it was marjiana, Michael Moran, another member of the lobby, said. And it was the issue of marjiana that the Republicans ducked best, he said. Residents get say on golf course By CAROL LUMAN Staff Writer A 10-year-old mistake was corrected night by the Lawrence City Commission. The mistake, a part of the Planned Unit Development (PUD) of Alvamar Estates, was recently brought to the attention of city officials when developers of the area requested revision of the development. It was discovered that the original 1966 paperwork for the development didn't state whether the Alvamar Hills golf course was a part of the original PUD. If the golf course was included in PUD, it couldn't be used for future development TODAY: Those interested in participating in WOMEN'S VOLLEYBALL should attend a meeting at 2:30 p.m. in 121 Robinson. AN ROOT CERTEMY will begin at 3 p.m. in Woodruff Auditorium of the Kansas Union. A WOMEN'S BASKETBALL meeting is at 3:30 p.m. in 121 Robinson and a WOMEN'S SOFTBALL meeting will follow at 5:30 p.m. SOFTBALL TRYOUTS will be Aug. 30, 31 and Sept. 1 at a site to be announced. On Campus TONIGHT: ALL-SCHOLARSHIP HALLS COUNCIL will meet at 6:30 in the International Room of the Union. Those interested in the KU-K-STATE CANOE TRIP are asked to meet at 7 in Ewellsboro cafeteria. KU COLLEGE REPUBLICANS will have a membership meeting at 7 in the Council Room of the Union. SUA SPECIAL EVENT COMMITTEE will meet at 7 in the Governor's Room of the Union. Those interested in TRANSCENDENTAL MEDITATION should meet at 7:30 in the Pine Room of the Union. CONSUMER AFFAIRS BOARD will meet at 7:30 in the Regionalist Room of the Union. Events TOMORROW: A MICROBIOLOGY LECTURE on "The Replication and Transcription of Herpes Simplex Virus" will be given by Yechiel Becker of the department of molecular virology at Hadassah Medical School, Jerusalem, at 4 p.m. in 610 Haworth Hall. The KU SCIENCE FICTION CLUB will have an organizational meeting at 7 p.m. in Parlor C of the Union. The STUDENT SENATE COMMUNICATIONS COMMITTEE will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Regionalist Room of the Union. The developers had indicated that the house would expand the housing area into the golf courses. without the approval of Alvamar Estates residents. Studies of original development plans by Dick McClanathan, Lawrence-Douglas county planning director and his staff. He concludes conclusive evidence, McClanathan said. But McClaanathan said that, in his opinion, the golf course wasn't a part of the original PUD; therefore it could be used for future development. "I think even a court would have difficulty reaching a decision as to what is included in the original PUD." Allen said. McMianana asked Milton Allen, Lawrence city attorney, for a legal opinion. Allen recommended that the commissioners decide once and for all whether the golf course should be included in the Alvamar ESDS PUD. After listening to more than two hours of discussion, in which representatives from both sides admitted that they had no proof for their arguments, the commission voted 5-4 in favor of keeping the golf course in the Alvamar Estates PUD. "Grass is a Republican issue to us," he said. The decision was a provision of a use permitted upon review request granted Alvamar Estates developers to allow for PUD revision. In other action, the commission vetoved a twice-deferred request by owners of the Green Pepper pizza shop on behalf of 2nd Street Terrace. adjacent to the present lot. The request was denied after commissioners listened to arguments from area residents who said the lot would bring a storm of noise, lights, and even trash" to the area. He said the Nixon administration ignored a Presidential commission's report that marijuana wasn't particularly harmful, California spent a half-billion dollars to felonize 300,000 users under Gov. Ronald Reagan and President Ford failed to take a stand on the issue. Jimmy Carter has stated he favors decriminalization. Moran said. MORAN'S LOBBY spoke to Iowa Gov. Robert Ray, chairman of the platform committee, and Kansas and Missouri deliberations. Nothing came of it, he said. He said it was important for people to know it was "not just the scum who are using it." Marjiana crosses class lines, he said, as was indicated by the many different types of people who used it at the Kansas City demonstration. Duncan said, "This issue has to get out in public debate." Duncan, Moran and Dave Gypy, head of the Kansas City Yippies, emphasized that demonstrators disliked the disruptive tactics used by a few demonstrators. They said that most of the spitting and four-letter words came from the National Yippies, who were probably die-hard because potential members would be put off by their methods. Gypsy said that the Kansas City Yippies were a completely different organization. Only 30 or 400 protesters attended the demonstration because it was tainted by the Yippee label, Duncan said. All three men said that if the tainted were removed from 1980, 5,000 realistic, serious demonstrators should attend national party conventions. IT'S A REALISTIC attempt, too, he said. After Reagan's loss to Ford, 20 percent of the western states' young Reagan supporters came out in favor of Roger McBride, the Libertarian party Presidential candidate. Moran said nothing could be more serious than the campaign for "Nobody for President." The campaign attempts to persuade alienated Americans to vote for alternative or "none of the above" candidates, he said. Moran said that if a substantial number of Americans would demonstrate their alienation by voting for someone other than the two major parties' candidates, "the media would start recognizing that were not all a farce." Major problems averted in Med Center blackout A power outage at the KU Medical Center morning afternoon inconvenience hospital facilities. Richard Von Ende, executive secretary to the chancellor, said yesterday a crane working along 12th St. in Kansas City, Kan., struck three electric powerlines. Emergency power generators at the Med Center were started automatically and provided with a power operating and emergency rooms and the care unit. An automatic switch not on the Med Center grounds, which should have switched the hospital's another power source, however. Although essential hospital services continued without interruption, some elevators were halted between floors. campus remained out until power was restored. the elevator was restored. STUDENTS Von Ende said that the emergency power generators worked well during the blackout, but that they couldn't be run for long periods of time. The generators were installed to deal with power levels used 10 to 15 years ago, he said. 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