4 Wednesday, July 9, 1975 University Daily Kansan Producer uses radio as memory tool By THERESE MENDENHALL Kansas Staff Reporter Radio should be a tool for triggering memories and showing the listener his own capacity to understand his world, a KANU strong award for the station has said. "Most people have a vast background of information and understanding," the producer, Mark K. Klugman said. "But they are so often unaware or afraid of their Dispute . . . From page 1 demolition", Clark said. "The way you say something is sometimes more important than the way you say it." PLANS ARE BEING made to obtain a new city minimum housing inspector as quickly as possible. Williams said that the position had to be advertised for a week, then, if a qualified person applied the city can hire a new inspector immediately. Watson said the items that weren't in compliance with the code should be looked at before the city issues any order threatening demolition. "We're concentrating on the hill area now, but you have to remember that these inspectors also have to inspect construction sites, and will have to do housing inspection when they can get to it until we get a new housing insurer," Williams said. "Are you going to tear a man's house down just because he doesn't have safety or a speaker or because he doesn't have a safety rail on his front steps?" Watson said. Nemchock . . . From page 1 Nernchock said he didn't think everyone would accept bodonic jewelry and feel comfortable wearing it because it forced a sort of "fourth-dimensional awareness" of the body, the jewelry and the environment on the wearer. "Wearing it is a personal thing," he said. "wearing it is a personal bung," the sait. Few people have actually had a chance to wear his space age creations in public. Only him, Patti, and a few friends have worn them. Nemchock said he couldn't predict the future of electronic jewelry. "I don't know where it's going to go," said Nermock. He said that although he couldn't say bodonics would be the standard jewelery form of the future, he thought artists should be alert to the possibilities. "Right now, this is filling a creative need (right now)," he said. "It's just my and my work." nobleway that I must trick them to make them remember and feel good about it." Klugman's one-hour program, "Charles Ives: The Unanswered Question," won first place last month in the music category of the Eleventh Annual Armstrong Awards. The program is the first one in Klugman's series of nine programs about Ives being Klugman said one of the most important techniques in his trade was editing. 25-year-old producer has worked at KANU three years. PROFILE broadcast on KANU, a University of Kansas FM station. Parts of the series, which was originally broadcast in October of 1974 as a centennial celebration of American composer Ives, have also been aired nationally by the National Public Radio network. "I edit words, phrases and sentences and arrange them in ways that have the most impact." Klugman's other honors include an award from the Corporation of Public Broadcasting for the Ives program, KANU's first portrait of American composer Aaron Copeland and special recognition when KANU won the Peabody Award in 1974. The The technique of conveying the message through sound rather than content is exemplified by Klugman's program called "Cowboys and Indians," in which music is interspersed with readings from diaries of cowboys and homeboundesters that have been used to provide the pains of these people through his grueling effort to understand the readings. Klugman said the listener's response to the program was, "My God, that was hell living through that era." This two-hour program will be broadcast Sept. 15 at 8 p.m. In accord with Klugman's goal of stimulating people to understand the world through their own perceptions, he commented, "The most important person involved in a radio program is the listener; the producer is the least important." Jayhawker Towers Apts. 2-bedroom apartments on campus furnished or unfurnished utilities paid swimming pool air conditioned on bus line security security guards covered parking bonded lock system OFFICE OPEN DAILY Monday-Friday til 5:30 Saturday til 4:00 CRAIG STOCK, WICHITA, was recognized as the outstanding journalism graduate at the University of Kansas by Sigma Delta Chi, the Society of Professional Journalists. He was one of 79 journalism students in the United States to receive the citation. CHRISTINE DAVIS, LAWRENCE GRADUATE STUDENT, received a Fulbright-Hays Grant to study in Germany. Study at the University of Heidelberg. SPECIAL ARRANGEMENTS HAVE been made for University of Kansas students, faculty and their families to attend Worlds of Fun in Kansas City, Mo. at a reduced admission charge. Those interested should contact the SUA office. 1603 W. 15th ON CAMPUS LRex Lawrence, Ks. Students from the Undergraduate Business Council started a petition drive and letter-writing campaign aimed at encouraging students to help them they thought the congeniality and convenience of the Hawklet were too valuable to lose. The second round of a student campaign to save the Hawklet cafeteria in Summerfield Hall will begin this week, Ed Rolfs, student body president, said yesterday. Hawklet proposals drawn Rolfs said the senate would present three alternative plans for saving the Hawklet to Del Shanker, executive vice chancellor, later this week. The Hawklet had been scheduled for remodeling this fall into a library and computer-work area. Supporters of the conversion, including Joseph Pichler, dean of the School of Business, said the library and work space were badly needed. The three proposals, as outlined by Rolfs, are: —to convert one-third of the Hawlet into a key punch and computer work area, and to retain the other two-thirds for food service; would do away with the planned library. to move an additional temporary annex to Summerfield, using it instead of the Hawklet to accommodate the planned changes. —to move the computer programmers and key punchers to the military science building. This would free an annex near Summerfield for the planned library and work areas and allow the Hawklet to remain as it is. Straw Hat Pizza Palace invites you to CLIP $1.00 OFF DINNER (or any other time) $1.00 off any large pizza. offer good thru July 9 Both offer 2515 W. 6th 50c off any medium pizza. offer good thru July 9 2515 W. 6th 841-2547 First Visit □ Yes □ No Coupon First Visit Yes No Coupon University of Kansas Theatre Presents LANDMARKS of the AMERICAN THEATRE DAY DATE LOCATION Fr. June 6 University Theatre Sa. June 7 University Theatre Su. June 8 University Theatre Su. June 15 K.U. Museum of Art Mo. June 16 Swarthout Rec. Hall Su. June 22 K.U. Museum of Art Mo. June 23 Sworthout Rec. Hall Fr. June 27 University Theatre Sa. June 28 University Theatre Su. June 29 University Theatre Mo. June 30 Swarthout Rec. Hall Tu. July 1 Woodruff Auditorium We. July 2 University Theatre Th. July 3 University Theatre Tu. July 4 University Theatre Mo. July 7 Woodruff Rec. Hall Tu. July 8 Woodruff Auditorium Th. July 10 University Theatre Fr. July 11 University Theatre Sa. July 12 University Theatre Su. July 13 K.U. Museum of Art Mo. July 14 Swarthout Rec. Hall Tu. July 15 University Theatre Fr. July 18 University Theatre Sa. July 19 University Theatre Su. July 20 K.U. Museum of Art Mo. July 21 William Inge Theatre Tu. July 22 William Inge Theatre Woodruff Auditorium We. July 23 William Inge Theatre Th. July 24 William Inge Theatre Tu. University Theatre Fr. July 25 University Theatre Sa. July 26 University Theatre Tu. July 29 Woodruff Auditorium *Theatre Rally* Auditions: John Brown's Body, The Time of Your Life, Oklahoma! Auditions: John Brown's Body, The Time of Your Life, Oklahoma! Exhibition: Regionalist Painters Performance: Spoon River Anthology *Lecture: The American Experience* *Lecture/Concert: Music of the American Folk* *Lecture: Regional Trends in American Art* *Lecture: The Movie-Art American Idiom* *Lecture "Come With the Wind" *Concert: American Keyboard Music* *Lecture: John Brown in Kansas* Film: The General PLAY: John Brown's Bcy PLAY: John Brown's Body PLAY: John Brown's Body *Lecture: The Black Experience AND* *Film: "The Learning Tree" Film: Dark Skies PLAY: The Time of Your Life PLAY: The Time of Your Life PLAY: The Time of Your Life *Lecture: Another American Music* *Lecture: The Indian Experience* Film: Cheyenne Autumn PLAY: Okahama PLAY: Okahama *Film: Junction City 1890-1915--Portrait of a Kansas Community* PLAY: The Mirror Man (Theatre for Children) Film: The Land PLAY: The Mirror Man (Theatre for Children) Plain: "The Plough that broke the Plains" AND "Grapes of Wrath" PLAY: The Mirror Man (Theatre for Children) PLAY: The Mirror Man (Theatre for Children) PLAY: Oklahoma! (Beneft Performance for Lawrence Arts Center) PLAY: Okahama PLAY: Okahama PLAY: Modern Times - Indicates event FREE. Monday, July 14, 7 p.m., Swarthout Recital Hall: Lecture—The Indian Experience, featuring W. Stitt Robinson. ADMISSION FREE. Sunday, July 13, 3 p.m., K.U. Museum of Art: Concert—American Chamber Music, featuring the Lawrence Chamber Players under the direction of George Boberg. ADMISSION FREE. Tuesday, July 15, 7:30 p.m., Woodruff Auditorium: SUA Film—Cheyenne Autumn. (1965) ADMISSION, 75%. THE TIME OF YOUR LIFE A Comedy in Three Acts by William Saroyan (Pulitzer Prize, 1940) THURSDAY, FRIDAY AND SATURDAY JULY 10, 11, & 12 8:00 p.m. K.U. STUDENTS, $1.50 OTHERS $2.50 THE TIME OF YOUR LIFE University Theatre-Murphy Hall----864-3982