10 Thursday, March 29, 1979 University Dafly Kansan Preliminary budget suggestions determined for 29 organizations In budget hearings last night, four Student Senate committees made preliminary recommendations on funding for 29 student organizations. Budget hearings began Monday night. All committees recommendations will come before the House. The Finance and Auditing Committee gave its approval to a $21,245 line allocation to the Student Senate's operating budget. This amount will be supplemented by all summer activity fee revenue for fiscal year 2013. The total budget is an estimated $42,845. Finance and Auditing also ruled that there was no duplication of services between the Douglas County Legal Aid Society and the KU legal services program. In the past, Legal Aid has relied on the Student Senate for 8 percent of its budget. Representatives of the society said they felt that the legal services program could not. DURING THE present phase of legal services, Steve Ruddick, legal services lawyer, and his staff are not allowed to represent students in court. Legal Aid can represent a student only if he falls below a $350-a-month income level. Finance and Auditing also voted to approve an amendment to the Senate revenue code that would tight restrictions on spending from the Student Senate Unallocated Account, which is used for fail budget hearings. The Student Services Committee made preliminary cuts in budget requests from 16 organizations. The groups' recommended allocations and original requests were: Douglas County Legal Aid, $3,450 from $3,300; Academic Freedom Coalition, $250 from $44; Volunteer Clearinghouse, $44 from $1,843; Alpha Phi Omega, $55 from $1,661; Students Concerned with Disabilities, $365 from $396; Consumer Education and Student Union, $2,189 from $7,976; and Amnesty International, $295 from $155. KU CAMPUS Veterans, $1.135 from $1.702; Commission on the Status of Women, $1.348 from $2.500, KU Ecology Club, $1.149 from $2.735, Women's Coalition, $785 from $995, KU Students for a Radioactive Free Kansas, $250 from $688, Non-Traditional Student Organization, $1.035 from $2.220; and KU-Y, $1.585 from $2.160. The Culture Committee made preliminary cuts in budget requests from five student organizations. The groups requested allocations and original requests were: Operation Friendship, $490 from $555; Tau- Sigma Dance Ensemble, $1,807 from $2,107; University Dance Company, $1,151; Fiction and Fantasy Club, $335 from $1,500. THE COMMITTEE tendedatively decided not to fund the KU Chinese Martial Arts Club and the KU Gung Fu Club on the other group had shown signs of permanence. The Academic Affairs Committee heard budget requests from five groups. The groups' recommended allocations and original requests were: Architecture Engineering Association, $240 from $616; Student Bar Association, $90 from $880; Philosophy Club, $300; Student American Pharmaceutical Association, $109 from $150; and Association of Students interested in Asian Studies, $210 from $65. Two paintings by Norma Gnage, Guamica, Puerto Rico, sophomore, valued at $100, were stolen last weekend from a studio in the Visual Arts Building. But administrators say thefts of student work in the building are not a problem. Theft rankles artists Gnage said she placed her paintings on her rack in Room 420 of the building when she left Thursday, and by Sunday they were gone. She said she thought losses like hers were a problem that the administration should solve. "I was supposed to hand them in by this week and now I don't have them at all," said Gaugh. "Now I can only turn in three days." He placed on. But somebody took my best ones. "I pay my tuition and I am entitled to one rack to keep my paintings on," she said. "You feel confident enough to leave art in your studio." She walks in and takes your semester's work." OTHER STUDENTS said the lockers were too small for large works and the studio doors were always open and unlocked. They agreed that thefts of student work and supplies were frequent, but seldom reported. Kaylyn Munro, Colorado Springs, Colo., junior, is a printmaking major but she frequently works in the painting studios. She said printmaking students could leave school and drawers that were unlocked but less exposed than the painting storage racks. "The doors are always open and anyone could walk in and take off with a lot of stuff." she said. "There's no way to get there without unless you cart them home every night." Faculty and administrators in the Visual Arts Building said that the problem of stolen student work was not new and that little could be done. DWIGHT BURNHAM, associate professor of art and Gage's painting instructor, said that the theft of Gage's work was the first he had heard about this. He said he considered having studios locked or than having studios locked for security. "There's no security in the studios, but then if you lock things up nobody can work," he said. Peter Thompson, associate dean of the School of Fine Arts, said that the thefts were not bad enough to require any measures to be taken. "We don't have much work stolen," he said. "I would venture to say that more pursues are stolen out of classrooms than work out of studios on campus. "However, students can always take things home even though I know it's convenient to leave them. It's not really a problem." A career in law without law school. Bus service to start on Saturday After just three months of study at The Institute for Paralegal Training in exciting Philadelphia, you can have a stimulating and rewarding career in law or business — without law school. As a lawyer's assistant you will be performing many of the duties traditionally handled only by attorneys. And at The Institute for Paralegal Training, you can pick one of seven different areas of law to study. Upon completion of your training, you'll be able to apply Service will find you a responsible and challenging job in a law firm, bank or corporation in the city of your choice. The Downtown Lawrence Association will be sponsoring a Saturday bus service to carry students and faculty to and from campus, with the director of the association, said yesterday. The Institute for Paralegal Training is the nation's first and most respected school for paralegal training. Since 1970, we've placed over 2,500 graduates in over 85 cities nationwide. If you're a senior of high academic standing and looking for an above average career, contact your Placement Officer online at info@chapman.com. We will visit your campus on: Tuesday, April 3 The Institute for Paralegal Training Approved by the American Bar Association 235 South 17th Street Philadelphia, PA 19103 (215) 732-6600 "Quality of Life For Lawrence" Quality Education I help achieve the highest degree of professionalism in our public schools. Vote II. Continued support for Kansas University Schumm City Commissioner-April 3 Pd. Pol. Adv. Pd. for by the Robert Schumar for city Commission. Committee Steve Edmonds, Ed. Box 1194 Announcing: The first official SUA Academy Awards Contest Give us your best guess! Prizes include: 1st prize: 10 free movie passes + *Gone With the Wind* poster 2nd prize: 6 free movie passes + choice of limited posters 3rd prize: 4 free movie passes + choice of limited posters 4th-30th prizes: 2 free movie passes + choice of limited posters Mark one in each section. Coming Home The Deer Hunter Hawsean Can Want Mills Mill An Unmarried Woman BEST PICTURE BEST ACTOR Warren Beatty Heaven Can Wait Gary Busey The Buddy Holly Story Robert De Niro The Dear Hunter Laurence Olivier The Boys From Brazil Ion Voight, Coming Home BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR BEST DIRECTOR BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR Bruce Coulson. Coming Home Rolls-Royce. Coming Home Comes a Horseman John Hurt. Midnight Express Christopher Walken. Tucker Hart. Hart Jack Warden. Heaven Can Wait Anyone is eligible to enter, but may enter only once in a case of a tie, the entry received earlier will win. All decision are final. The game will be played in the Kansas Union, DEADLINE FOR ENTRIES IS WEDNESDAY. April 4th, 4:30 PM. The game will be announced Wednesday. April 11th BEST DIRECTOR ___ Hal Ashby, Coming Home ___ Michael Cimino, ___ The Deer Hunter ___ Woody Allen, Interiors ___ Warren Beatty & ___ Buck Henry, Heaven Can Wait ___ Alan Parker, Mastery Express Contest rules: BEST ACTRESS BEST SCHOOL MEMBER ___ Ingrid Bergman, Aultum Sonata Ellen Burley Same Time, Next Year Iill Clayburg. Unmarried Woman Jane Fonda, Coming Home Geraldage Page, Interiors BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS Dryan Cannon, Heaven Can Wait Penelope Milford, no oague Smith, California Suite Maurene Stapleton, Interior Meryl Streep, The Deer Hunter Name_ Phone "The Downtown Merchant Express will begin service on Saturday, March 31, and it will continue through the rest of the spring semester." Schumm said. Schumm said the merchants had received many requests for the service. The merchants will pay the Lawrence Bus Co., the company KU on wheels rents its buses from, for the service. KU on Wheels bus passes therefore will not be honored. The KU bus service, KU on Wheels, runs Monday through Friday, but no service has been offered for Saturdays. The new service may not be provided by Student Senate funds. "Student and faculty who want to ride that will pay 25 cents ride," Schumann said. Use Kansan Classifieds The bus will begin its service at 10 a.m. in front of Eldsworth Hall. From there it will go by Jayhawk Boulevard to GCS-Porlin Hall on the way to Ninth and Massachusetts streets. The service will make its final return from downtown at 3:45 p.m. Schumm said the buses would operate twice an hour and would stop at all scheduled stops on the route. Bus schedules will be available on all KU buses tomorrow and schedules will be advertised in The Kansan today and Friday. Dairy Queen Sponsors LAWRENCE HIGH SCHOOL BAND DAY BENEFIT Friday thru Sunday 10% of all our sales will go to help send the band to Portland, Oregon SPECIAL: