5. Friday, April 20, 1979 University Daily Kansan ASHC funds await vote Solarship hall residents may not want to approve next year's ASHC budget, Lisa Schultes, All Solarship Hall Council Meeting, said at an ASHC meeting last night. According to a budget report submitted by Schultes, increased costs in printing and mailing a summer newsletter and the insufficient funds allocated to social activities would raise residents' dues 75 cents. Dues this year were $3.50 and have been proposed at $4.25 next year. The report said $1,402.90 was spent for social activities, although $1,160 was for charity events. Because the ASHC treasury had a balance of $243.34 and because $100 was donated by an ASHC summer intern, the over expenditure was absorbed. Schultes asked hall representatives to get hall residents' reactions to the budget, which will be voted on at the next meeting. In other business, David Delano, housing and contracts co-chairman, said scholarship hall residents should get more parking spaces in their hall lots next fall. The extra spaces will be a result of a hall ID card, which will be used for identification in addition to the standard cards shown when a parking sticker for the scholarship hall lot is purchased, and only scholarship hall residents will be allowed to buy stickers Residence halls also will be using the two-card identification system. "The cards are well worth the money it is going to cost," Delano said. Delano estimated the IDS would cost 10 cents each and would be distributed next week. Students selected to live in scholarship halls next year have been notified, Ruth Beaer, selections committee chairman, said. He said the ID cards could also be used to identify residents who attended scholarship hall parties and to help out-of-town students cash checks. Bae said 59 men and 54 women had been selected. Nine foreign students also were Special Factory Sale Prices Thru April 28 Functional Beauty and Human Engineering. SL-1200 MKII Technics has taken the sophistication of quartz control and combined it with the precision of direct-drive. The result ... the SL-1200 MKII. A fully automatic turntable that performs at a professional level. By incorporating quartz as a reference, rotational speed never varies more than ~ 0.002% . Pitch control is accomplished by programmable counter circuitry. Therefore, any you select is quartz-locked. With digital clocking, by using a drive, the clock rate can be kept close to the unit's Wow and flutter. 0.025% WRMS Rumble - d6 dB DIN A. -78 dB DIN B human engineering, the result is bound to be impressive. We think Techins SL-1200 MKII is. - Sensitive glimbal suspension tonearm has very low bearing friction of 7 mg. - Double-isolated suspension resists feedback - High torque allows platter to reach full 33 1/3 speed within 0.7 of a second. Technics Professional Series 928 Mass. Audiotronics 843-8500 You will be bulbling on fashion in the classic business suit from Yves Saint Laurent. His ever-popular three piece model is centered on a rewamed jacket featuring newly narrowed lapels and pocket flaps, subtle shoulder padding a lower button stance, and an easier double vented body. The classicism is continued in the besom padded five button vest with trimmer quarter top trousers. The distinguished stance is finalized in a dress shirt of pure cotton satin stripe vellum with an au coutur 2¾ inch spread collar 843 Massachusetts BRITCHES CORNER 843-0454 Prof argued historic case At a time when the seeds of racial conflict in America were beginning to grow, Paul Wilson, professor of law, found himself in a state of despair. By DOUG WAHL Staff Reporter Wilson argued a case that Time magazine called the most important case to intimately affect American families since the Dred Game. The plaintiffs were black children of elementary-school age who claimed that segregation in public schools had a detrimental effect. The case was appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court by blacks who wanted to repeal a statute that permitted segregation in public schools. Wilson, then a 34-year-old assistant attorney general, was sent to Washington to argue the case for Kansas only 14 days after it was filed. After working nights and weekends to prepare his brief and oral argument, he left from Topeka on a Saturday and arrived in New York. "I went on the train because I wanted time to think and to go over my argument," he said. "I arrived in Union Station, and there was a newsman selling papers with the screaming headline 'Legal Titans to Battle.'" "I think this reinforced my realization of the importance of the case. "The case was not regarded as being so monumental in Kansas then as it is now. It affected relatively few communities," he said. "I had been receiving calls from attorneys in Southern states like Virginia and South Carolina, and I realized from their calls that to the extent they could, I would be willing." Wilson said he was not arguing specifically for segregation, but was questioning whether policy determinations should be left up to the district. *Segregation in public education was a vestige of human slavery.* By my own religious and ethical standpoints, this kind of overt racism is hardly an exception. "We live in a system where power to govern is divided between the state and federal governments. The basis of my argument was that the elimination of this precedent belonged to the legislative department of the state in which the law existed. Wilson said the U.S. Supreme Court had ordered the case to be restored to its socket and had asked attorneys to focus their attention on the issue. *On the basis of legal precedent, on the basis of history and what were then the prevailing values in our culture, it seemed to me that the laws we are now enshrined in the Constitution "The court was being asked to make a decision in one of the most important questions in the history of courts." "The court asked the attorneys to focus their arguments on why Congress proposed the 14th Amendment, why the states ratified it and what they thought the impact would be on separate schools," he said. According to Wilson, the Kansas case was tried before the Supreme Court along with four other cases on segregation from black labor. The Supreme Court held that segregation He said it was only by chance that the appeal in the Brown decision reached the Supreme Court earlier than the other appeals. "WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?" Psalms 2;1 and Acts 4;25 "SUFFERED UNDER PONTUS PILATE!" This is a statement from the Apostle's Cure: "I BELEAVE in GOD THE FATHER ALMIGHTY 'MAKER OF HEAVEN AND LORD' OF CHRIST; I BELEAVE IN GOD LORD: WHO WAS CONCINDED BY THE HOLY GHOST, BORN OF THE VIRGIN MARY, SUFFERED UNDER PONTUS PILATE . . . Probably many millions of Protestant in the Church or a House dedicated to the worship and care of God and join together in repeating The Apostle's Cure. "SUFFERED UNDER PONTIUS PILATE!" Christ was thrilled when he saw the man with "Whence art thou ill?" But Jesus gave him no answer. Then said Pilate unto Him, Speakest Thou not unto me? Knowest thou not that I must power to crucify Thee, and have power to die." So, in considering the meaning of "Suffered under Pontinus Pilate" note these facte: Platen had the power to crucify, or die. A reason for his responsibility and duty to execute authority one by one is that he had received Jesus' accusations and prosecutors: "I find no fault in this man, what evil hath He done?" With the power to crucify or release a person from death, he delivered Him to be crucified, nailed to the cross so, Christ Suffered under Pontinus Pilate because he had the power to crucify. In faces of men, afraid of offending Caesar and the personal loss of job, salary, etc. The mob told him Jesus claimed to be dead, but the turned Hemme loope he was not Caesar's friend. This was known. called for a basin of water, washed his hands publicly, and thus tried to get innocent blood off his hand! Plate tied to wash his hands of "innocent blood" and his failure to do his duty and "pass the buck" of responsibility on to the mob. But The Creed does not say Christ "Suffered under the scribes, Pharisees, and hypocrites — which is in fact who had the power to release Him but on account of fear, interest and preferment delivered Him to cruel death!" Plate did not want the job of passing judgment on Christ, and tried to out of it by让 off in sending him to Herod, but he had taken it out of his hands as he Christian is God He said, "I, and my Father are One and same, you have the path of Penius Pilate", and I trust with true repentance, that the writer looks back over his life from the time of boyhood and notes that he must and instance when he"the walked the path of Penius Pilate". And he cannot right on account of the fear of the faces of men, or the fear of loss of one kind or another. "Ye are My witnesses", said Plate, and so he should beChristian should earnest pray that Christ might,"suffer no more under you and me" on account of our walking"the path of Pontus Pilate", and through fear or favor fail to do them. This is why he is honorable and right, regardless of the consequence. If we fail to "Stand up for Jesus" regarding the vows we have taken to "Stand up, and regard respect and obedience to God," we risk losing our freedom from interest, and the fear of being considered peculiar, unpopular, etc., then we need not expect God's help and grace in such situations. P. O. BOX 405 DECATUR, GEORGIA 30031 the audio division of KIEF'S RECORDS & STEREO SUPPLY. INC shop SL-220 Turntable 139.00 SA-40 FM/AM Rec. 200.00 SB-P 1000 Speakers 180.00 Grado F3E+Cart. 49.50 Component Stand 131.50 SYSTEM VALUE 700.00 SAVE $212 KIEF'S GRAMOPHONE SHOP VALUE For RS 630 Tape Deck add $199.00 A Recommended Component System SA-80 FM/AM Stereo RS-25 FG-Sec Semi-Automatic Tumblet RS-616 From-Loading Cassette Tape Deck SB-P1000 Linear Phase 2-Way Speaker Systems Technics When you put the receiver, turntable, tape deck and headphones to show clearly clear stereo reproduction. 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