Bicycle riders join nuclear protest rally About 15 bicycle riders from Lawrence will ride south to Burlington tomorrow where they will join a group of nuclear power generators and nuclear generator site Saturday afternoon. The bikers, among them City Commissioner Marci Francisco, will leave Lawrence in two groups at 2 p.m. and 4 p.m. Friday and will camp overnight at Pomona Lake. A van will follow them on the road to Pomona Lake where they provide resting space for weary bicyclists. "The ride will be a good demonstration of an efficient low energy alternative," said Mike Almon, who will participate in the bike trip. Radioactive-free Kansas, a local group opposed to the plant at Wolf Creek, will sponsor the riders, who will join the 3,000 people exeusted at a rally near the plant. At least 50 Lawrence residents will share car ride to Burlington Saturday morning, Dee Tolar, a representative of the group, said. THE RALLY IS sponsored from noon to 4 p.m. by the Sunflower Alliance two miles north of Burlington at John Redmond Reservoir on the west side of U.S. Highway 106, approximately up, as well as boosts sailing anti-nuclear aerospace, such as T-shirts and buttons. The rally will begin with Lawrence resident Peegy Hillman singing her own compositions, followed by singer Danny Cox Jeanne Green, a Salina resident former of Lawrence, and Pet Slick, a KU graduate student, will speak at the rally, as well as representatives from the National Organization for Women and the Mid-America Coalition of Energy Alternatives Tolar said the rally would discuss alternate energy sources as well as nuclear power. "THIS ISN'T GOING to be an ant-type event," she said. "We want to discuss feasible solutions to the energy problem. Of course, we'll talk about Wolf Creek, too." "The power plant's argument right now is that they've spent so much money on the project they can't stop." Al Nelson, another member of Radioactive-free Kansas, said. The price of uranium fuel had gone up tenfold since the plant was been he, said. Saturday's rally will be held in cooperation with law enforcement officials around Burlington. The Sunflower Alliance said it supported about 70 "peacekeepers" for the rally. Tolar said no civil disobedience was planned for the rally, unlike the demonstration in Burlington last January, which was organized by the generator's arrival at the Wolf Creek plant. Fed guidelines rule landlords BY ROBIN ROBERTS Staff Reporter Students looking for housing in lawrence this summer and fall can expect a wide range of options. "We're within the guidelines," she said. "We're within about 7 percent." AT PARK 25 Apartments, 2410 W. 25th, this year's rent increases will exceed 30% of the average rent. KANSAN THE SUMMER SESSION Thursday, June 7, 1979 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Vol.89,No.149 Furniture, dirt disputes at Jayhawker Towers go on By MARY JO HOWARD Staff Reporter Differing interpretations of a designation on the Jayhawker Towers' rental agreement and uncle apartments continue to bring complaints from KU students. The ambiguity in the agreement concerns the presence of an 'a" F2" or 'o" F4" written in a blank on the document after "furniture." Tenants say they expected to receive furnishings that were designed and leased and thought the designations legally bound the Towers in providing furniture for two or four persons. But the Towers management said the designations were irrelevant aids for the apartment complex's manager and are not legally binding. Barbara Fendley, Towers manager, said this week that the 'F-2' and 'F-4' are preferences indicating that the tenants want to move out. Most of her persons. This helps her assign apartments. When tenants signed their leases, they were told they would have to take the apartments as they were, she said. All Towers, 1603 W. 15th St., this summer, furnished or unfurnished, rent for $200. HOWEVER, CONNIE Hale, Kansas City, Mo., graduate student, said yesterday that she will be receiving a furnished apartment when she signed her lease. Ann Cowlley, Russell junior. Fendley said she did not specifically remember Covall signating a lease, but said she gave each prospective tenant the same information about the apartments. Another spokesman for the Towers also said that the desiminations were locally meaningless. According to a legal representative for the Towers, John Brand, the designations are only references. The students should have taken the course if they had not understand it, he said. HOWEVER, DARYL Stone, public relations director for the Consumer Affairs Association, does not agree that the designation is merely a reference. "Obviously when you write a letter and a number, it's just a reference." Reard said. "I think it's reasonable to conclude that it means they were going to get furniture." on the lease, most people would conclude that they're going to get furniture." The Consumer Affairs Association has had several complaints about the Towers, Stone said, but he did not think it was the Towers' intention to defraud. "Somehow, somewhere, people got the impression that they get furniture," he said. "It's not really a big thing but it's a real problem." He explained it's fair to say the people have been ruined. "If there's some kind of pressure applied, 'if there has never been nested an apartment before and they're given any misrepresentation, it's possible that they could break their agreement under the Kansas Landlord-Tenant Act,' he said. A LEGAL representative at the Consumer Affairs Association said that the tenants involved could possibly get out of their contracts by citing unconsonability. But Brand said that the unconsciousability clause could not be applied to these cases because unconsciousness means that the brain is not active. The absence of the parties that a court would refuse to IN ADDITION to the F-2 and F-4 designations resulting in furniture problems, Hale said her apartment was filthy when she moved in. Other tenants reported similar problems to Consumer Affairs. Fendley said that each apartment was cleaned. them. "Each apartment is gone through by myself or an assistant she said. "We do not have a backup." Hale said her apartment hadn't been occupied and that food was caked on the cake. "This wasn't the kind of dirt that you come in and dump. It was 'use dirt,' Hale Although Kansas law requires that the tenant and landlord jointly inspect an apartment, take inventory and make repairs in the report, Hale said that this was not done. June, 1979 "They wouldn't even give us a copy of the inventory sheet." Hale said. Karen McKinney, agent for Lawrence Property Management, which manages the Towers, said that Hale had been given an inventory sheet, but had not turned it in. Ampersand Now a car stereo that can fix flats and sharps. Panasonic Component Systems $ ^{\mathrm{II}} $ with graphic equalizer. Music from some car stereos can sound like a retread of the original. Because with most car stereos you can't fix the bass without affecting the treble. Or fix the treble without affecting the bass. Add these problems to the problems your car's interior creates and you have an acoustic condition hazardous to your music. Panasonic Component Systems Is solves the problem with a 5-band graphic equalizer. The Panasonic graphic equalizer, CJ-3600, gives you 5 separate tone controls. That's one bass and treble control for every two musical octaves. So you can change the music that sounds too flat or too sharp. And the graphic equalizer is also a power booster, giving you 30 watts of total power. So you'll have both the power and control to steer clear of the many musical bumps caused by your car's interior. And there’s a lot more to Panasonic Component Systems II. There’s a stereo cassette player with auto-reverse, the CX-7200. It has a built-in 2-stage preamp and dual channel power amp for clean stereo separation. And a sensitive AM/FM stereo tuner, the CA-9600, with AFC plus local/DX and auto-stereo/mono switches. They are all-designed to fit neatly on your dash. The Panasonic Component Systems II. Also available with repeattrack cassette or 8-track. They'll give your ears one of the smoothest rides they ever had. Panasonic just slightly ahead of our time. eland built his machine in 1965 and has taken it to steam engine shows all over the vest. See story and other photos on back page. likely at KU or that pre-enrollment not be dat the present time." I stated in the letter that further 1 of pre-enrolment should be d until "some other matters can." EASONS given in the letter in"the costs involved, the high being placed on other activities for nation systems and a lack of ad agreement regarding the ty of it." inquis, a member of Senate Committee, said he had not given the pre-enrolment issue for a lieutenant in favor of lized pre-enrolment. he thought Shankel was right in here was not widespread support a. t detect a strong feeling in the r, for that fact, in the fact, and student support is cony its absence," Marquis said. **RESET system of enrollment greater flexibility. Decisions on idules could be made late by both y and students, Marquis said. If have had a pre-enrollment for the idules would have been ready by January and students would have preenrolled in April. "When I did work enrollment it was always 'hi, how was your summer'—kind of a nice social thing," MrQuuis said. "With a computer, you do away with all of that." But Student Senator Ed Bigus disagrees. Bigus, also a member of the pre-enrollment committee, said pre-enrollment might be an incentive for students to choose KU. "Or there could be a loss if we keep this same antique way of doing things. I think the administration needs to take this seriously." AS FOR student support, Bigus said that in a petition he presented to students in Allen Field House last fall during enrollment, he received signatures from every student that passed him-1,000 to 1,500 of them. Also, he said, it was evident that there was faculty support because the assembly that recommended the proposal was made up primarily of faculty members. Margaret Berlin, body student president gave a contrasting student view. She said that most students do not realize what pre-enrollment would mean to them financially. "Hundreds of students are now employed at schoolhouses, but with a corporatized over- See COMPUTERS back page