8 Tuesday, April 15, 1975 University Daily Kansan Foreign study forms due Today is the deadline for filing applications for the Summer Institutes and the Academic Year programs. Contact the Foreign Study office, 206 BALC. Tonight... THE COLLEGE ASSEMBLY will meet at 4 in Wooldruff Auditorium. CARL LEBAN, associate professor of Oriental Languages and Literature and East Asian Studies, will present the first part of a two-part lecture on "Understanding the Chinese Archaeological Exhibition." That exhibit will be displayed April 20 to June 8 at the Nelson Art Gallery in Kansas City, Mo. The first part will be at 7:30 in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. The second part of the lecture will be at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in the Council Room of the Union. THE SLAVIC CLUB will sponsor a public lecture by Irina Corten, the author of *The Russian War* on Russian humor," at 7:30 in the Room of the Union. THE SOCIETY OF PROFESSIONAL JOURNALISTS, Sigma Delta Chi, will have its initiation ceremony at 7:30 in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union. A Journalism Careers Night, in which members of the journalism faculty will answer questions about journalism, will follow the MICHAEL STORMS, assistant professor of psychology, will speak on the altered state of consciousness at 7:30 in 306 Fraser. Wednesdau . . . A SEISMIC-STRATIGRAPHY meet will be held all day in the Council Room of the Union. KUO will hold its open house from 1 to 6 p.m. at 1120 W. $^{114}$ From Page One people on the list have received children, Boulton said. Barkhurst said she had heard the agency was no longer taking applications for adoption. She said she hoped the people who got on the list wouldn't get discouraged. Orphans . . . There are still children coming into the United States, she said. Agencies not affiliated with Friends for All Children might offer advice on their prospective parents find children, she said. Boulton said she told people unable to get on the adoption list to contact a local adoption agency and begin work on a home study. A home study is a gathering of information about a couple and their home. All adoption agencies require that a home study be completed before a child is adopted. she said. Boulton said she suggested that people try to adopt an older child or one that was of mixed blood or handicapped. Agencies are likely to accept the same person who will adopt older children, she said. Rod Barkhurst said he and his wife had decided to adopt a Vietnamese child because they had been opposed to the war and thought adopting an orphan was the least they could do. They adopted a child whose father was black because the Vietnamese people are very prejudiced against blacks, he said. Vietnam. She said she hoped the children wouldn't experience as much prejudice in the US. Boulton said children who were fathered by blacks had a special need to get out of Dorothy Frazum, whose two Vietnamese children are full Vietnamese, said she had been in Vietnam from abroad. She has thought a great deal about the assertion that full Vietnamese should remain in Vietnam because the country's future rests with its children, she Erazmus said she wondered whether it was right to remove a child from a culture, especially one so different from the United States, and give him a new culture. She thinks they did the right thing at the time by adopting their two girls, she said. n never felt I could pressure to do what we have done because of this," she All three couples have also adopted children from the United States, including Amy, Luke and Jake. During the last year, the three couples raised money for the Friends for All Children agency. Boulton said that through bake sales and car sales and by selling refreshments during band concerts last summer, they had collected about $1,500. 23rd & Alabama P.O. Box 667 Lawrence, Ks. John Haddock FORD Call 843-3500 BEAT INFLATION NOW! RENT-A-CAR Make Daily Weekly Weekend Rates Overtime Pinto 9.00 plus 1c a mile 59.00 plus 1c per mile 7.00 plus 1c per mile 1.50 hour Maverick 10.50 plus 10c per mile 65.00 plus 10c per mile 7.50 plus 10c per mile 1.50 hour Mustang 10.50 plus 11c per mile 90.00 plus 11c per mile 9.00 plus 10c per mile 1.50 hour Grandra Pick-up 11.00 plus 11c per mile 90.00 plus 11c per mile 9.00 plus 10c per mile 1.50 hour LTD 17.00 plus 12c per mile 75.00 plus 12c per mile 10.50 plus 10c per mile 1.50 hour Station Wagon 13.00 plus 12c per mile 89.00 plus 12c per mile 11.00 plus 10c per mile 1.50 hour Above Rates Include Insurance Insurance Laws Require You Must Be 21 The Commission information sheet said it was an organization that represented the public in the commission. Services offered by the Women's Coalition are self-defense training for women, speakers, gay women's caucus, birth control and problem pregnancy counseling, feminist information and child care. necessary for it to stay in operation. The Commission on the Status of Women, which received $999 of a requested $3,750, said that $431 more is necessary for the group to survive. Among the programs sponsored by the Commission are career and human sexuality symposiums, speakers, social action workshops, Beyond High School (a one-day orientation for high school women) and lectures to nontraditional women students. From Page One The Douglas County Legal Aid Society, which received $2,070 of the requested $6,750, said $1,330 more was necessary to continue operation. Douglas County Legal Aid handled 62 student cases and advised 84 students last semester, according to its information sheet. KU-Y. WHICH WAS allocated $428 of a number asked for $19 more to continue operations. Business Discount The team's Coalition was allocated $223 of the requested $3,068. To survive, the organization had to find a new manager. Headquarters requested $8,871 and was allocated $1,103, which was $1,712 short of the minimum amount the organization had designed. The sheet says that Douglas County Legal Aid supplied about 1,966 man-hours of work to 438 students, who are about 39 per cent of its total clientele. MECHA was granted $200 of a request $40 in the order $110 short of the amount required for surgical bursal Headquarters said the services it offered to KU students were crisis intervention, accurate and nonbiased drug information, referral services, sexuality information and wound care, united wheels (emergency transportation), speakers and library facilities. SERVICES OF VOLUNTEER CEEAR house are referral of volunteers to appropriate agencies, promotion of the concept of volunteering, encouragement of the role of volunteers and sponsorship of the Big Brother-Big Sistar program with the KU-Y. Services provided by the KUY- are speakers in the advocacy series, discussion groups and seminars for use by students, informal counseling, workshops, cosponsorship of the Big Brother-Big Sistar program and support of other student programs, such as the Rock Woodbury said the ambudsmen office, unlike other groups, didn't have the time or the desire to lobby for funds from the Student Services Committee. Scott Siebels, cochairman of the Senate Services Committee, said the committee decided to cut off funding of the ombudsmen office after much consideration. SORMEBE, an organization of black engineering students, was allocated $999 of a requested $3,950. $681 more is necessary Volunteer Clearing House, which received $373 of a requested $193, needs no additional money to keep its doors open. Siebel's said he thought the services provided by the ambulance office could be combined with another group such as the Senate or the House or the Senate's own complaint service. MECHA is an organization designed to assist and assimilate Chicano students to the University. David Woodbury, one of the six ambudsmen, said the office was understandably upset with the Student Ser vice committee's decision not to give it money. The orbissionsen office had requested the amount for rent, office supplies and a telephone. OMBUDSMEN, which ISSUED no information sheet, received none of its requested $464. The organization needs $50 to cover the cost of the budget prepared by the Council. Sell it through Kansan want ads. Call the classified department at 864-4358. SIGMA DELTA CHI presents "Journalism Careers Night" The program will be geared toward informing undergraduate students about the School of Journalism journalism courses and journalism as a career. Pre-enrollment in journalism courses for students not in School of Journalism will be available. April 15 8:00 p.m. Jayhawk Room—Union Don't Get Stuck! 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