Thursday. April 3. 1975 University Daily Kansan 3 Senate begins hearings The annual marathon of student budget hearings got underway Wednesday night when two Student Senate committees heard requests from six student groups. The Academic Affairs Committee heard requests from five groups which requested $7,851 of the $9,673 committee to手持 a file. It must still hear requests from 15 other groups. The Black Arts Alliance request of $450 for an upcoming production was tabled because the funding couldn't reach the group in time for the production, according to Chuck Fisher, chairman of the Cultural Affairs Committee. The Senate's Cultural Affairs Committee table and board will immediate informative brief on Black Arts Alums. Bill Billing, chairman of the Academic Affairs Committee, said he saw items in the groups' requests he would be willing to cut. He said he was during the committee's final deliberations. The number of organizations the committee must consider was cut from 37 to 21. Blessing said, because various graduate student groups withdrew their requests and will submit them to the Graduate Student Council, which will have $9.290 to distribute. The production is tentatively scheduled for April 17, James Eirch, treasurer of the alliance, said. However, the Senate won't meet before April 16 and no action was taken on the request at the March 26 Senate meeting. "The members of the committee will have to decide whether they want to fund a few programs strongly or fund many groups in order to minimize they can survive on," he said. Mary Lou Reece, Senate vice president, said the request had to go through StudEx or a committee before the Senate could act, but no StudEx or committees existed between March 19 and March 26 because new members hadn't been appointed. Birch said, "The show will go on, even if we do not get the money from the Senate." John House, Senate treasurer, said faster action on the request, received March 19. However, he said he was unsurge where the money for costumes, lighting and props would come from because the Senate who was to have covered those expenses. The groups appearing before the Academic Affairs Committee were asked to justify their specific budget requests and to explain their purposes and activities. Rick Miller, student director of the Kansas Defender Program, said the group THE "DAISY HILL" SPRING FESTIVAL, "originally scheduled for April 4 and 5, at Lewis Hall, has been postponed until April 25 and 26. Applications for ADMINISTRATIVE SUBMITTORS submitted by Friday in 225强 Hall. Gallup, NY. ORIGINAL WORKS in literature, art and music to be shared at a three-day “Exploration in Loneliness in mid-April should take today to the KU-Y office, 10B Kansas University. REPRESENTATIVE MARTINA KEYS, D-Kan, will speak at the Annual Spring Symposium of the KU Commission on the Music at 7 tonight in Woodrud Auditorium. THE SAILING CLUB will meet at 7:30 tonight in Parlor A of the Kansas Union. THE AAPU EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE will meet in Atlanta at tonight the home of Joan Dewey. A LECTURE ON the "Upper Paleozoic Carbonates and Evaporites in the Sverdrup Basin, Canadian Arctic Archipelago" will be given by Graham R. Davies of the Geological Survey of Canada at 7:30 on the Anello Room at Nichols Hall. THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF CIVIL ENGINEERS MID-CONTINENTAL CONFERENCE, will be held all day Friday in the Kansas Union. F. SHERWOOD ROWLAND, professor of chemistry at the University of California at Irvine, will speak on "Aerosol Threat to Stratospheric Ozone" at 8 tonight in 3140 THE SCHOOL OF SOCIAL WELFARE tall instructors will meet at 8 a.m. Friday through Saturday, Jan. 29-30 for the School of Social Welfare. HEADPHONE RADIOS provided services to inmates at Lansing and Leavenworth prisons. Miller said the approximately 15 law students in the program had handled 228 cases in the last year, and had about 90 applications for help now. Members don't want to wait, but merely initiate suits for inmates to have their sentences revoked or lowered. The program is requesting $1,040 and received $1,455 last year, making it one of only two groups requesting less than it received last year. Hobart Jackson, faculty advisor for BlackTect, said his group's request for $2,005 would be used to interest minority high school students in architecture, help place architecture students in jobs and contact practicing minority architects. Miller said that last year's request had been too high and that the program, by Charles Taylor, student spokesman for the group, said they were published and distributed to high schools and board schools. requiring carpooling for trips to the prisons, bad cut, travel expenses. The Academic Affairs Committee will conclude its hearings on requests at 6:30 tonight in the Jayhawk room of the Kansas Union. While the commander was alive, the soldiers owed him loyalty unto death. If the commander was killed, the soldiers were denied to avenge his death or die in the attempt. Pull-tabs recycled for movie Maybe that's not true in today's Army, but that was the way battles were fought in eighth century England, and that was the rule at the Battle of Maldon. The Battle of Maldon will make a great script for a movie, Shelley Swoyer, Lawrence graduate student, and MaryKay Mahonte, Pittsfield, Mass., graduate student. thank them. They are collecting pulls from cans to make costs of mail for the actors. The two women have taped sacks to pop machines in Wesco Terrace and the basement of Strong Hall to collect pull-tabs. They plan to make coats of mail, Mahonie said, by making strings of the tabs and sewing the strings together with thin wire. Mail was the armor used in the Battle of Maldon, a minor skirmish fought between the English and invading Dames in the summer of 991 A.D. Mail was made of metal plates linked together and was flexible, but Mail's armor also gave less protection than armor plates. The Battle of Maldon was very bloody, according to Swyer and Mahone, and the battle lasted for two hours. "the hero, Byrthon, commander of the demonstration," ormodered, or too much pride", Swayner said. Byrthyn and many of his men were killed in the battle with the Danes, she said. Sweyer and Mahonie decided to make a movie of the battle after studying the poem "The Battle of Maldon" in a class in Old English literature last semester. This summer they will organize their paints for making the film, Mohanie said, and they'll work on a story. Sweyer said the movie might last 20 minutes. As many as 40 actors might be used, she said, depending on how many pulltabs they can collect. Lawrence Surplus Won't Put You On... 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