Friday, Jan. 24, 1986 Campus/Area University Daily Kansan 7 Dole aide considers AG race By Leslie Hirschbach Staff writer John Petersen's legal career had a humble beginning at the University of Kansas, where, as a dispatcher for the KU police, he tracked down streakers in the early 70s. Now Petersen is state director and legal counsel for Senate Majority Leader Robert Dole and is considering running for attorney general in the Aug. 5 primary election. As Dole's legal counsel, Petersen said, he handles economic development and legal matters affecting Kansans, and gives speeches on Dole's behalf. Petersen, who lives in Overland Park with his wife, Terry, and their two children, came to the University in 1971 after graduating from Shawnee Mission South High School in Overland Park, Kan. He immediately joined the KU police department, he said. to eight in the morning shift, if you can believe that "he said yesterday. "Generally, I worked the midnight His police work left little time for sleep, he said, and being a member of the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity didn't help matters. "I came back to the house and tried to sleep during the day, which is extremely difficult when you're in a fraternity," he said. Petersen remembered some of his experiences while in manning the switchboards in the early morning hours. He said, "During the streaking craze that was at its height at the time, at about one in the morning we'd get a call that someone naked was running around campus. "The absurdity of it makes it stick in my mind." Petersen said the KU police was an impressive outfit that was taken for granted by most students. He left the University in 1973 because it didn't have a criminal justice department, he said. He then went to Topeka, where he earned an undergraduate degree in criminal justice and a law degree from Washburn University. During his undergraduate years at Washburn, Petersen said, he attended a five-week law enforcement training academy. He served as a reserve police officer for the Topeka police while he was in law school. After law school, Petersen said, he was a partner in a Kansas City, Kanlaw firm for six years before accepting the position as legal counsel to Dole. Petersen said he would resign his position on Dole's staff if he decided to run for attorney general. He said he recently established an committee composed of businessmen, elected officials and leaders in the Kansas Bar Association to evaluate whether his campaign for attorney general could be a success. Trust fund to create new professorships By Debra West Staff writer comprehensive health associates * free pregnancy tests * abortion services/ counseling * gynecology * contraception Oral Health RX 916-328-1600 THE CASTLE TEA ROOM 3.037 Mass phone: 843-115 A memorial fund has been established to provide for one or more distinguished professorships, the University of Kansas Endowment Association said Wednesday. fessorships for the KU School of engineering or for professors who are associated with the KU Center for Research. Inc. Steve Menaugh, director of public relations for the Endowment Association, said funds for distinguished professorships provided a supplement to the state salary the professor received. Overland Park, KS / 913-345-1400 The $482,000 fund is from the trust of Josephine R. Servey, who graduated from KU in 1910 and died in 1981. The fund will establish the Dan F. Servey Memorial Fund "The salary enhancement is how we keep our best professors or lure top professors away from other institutions," he said. The main areas of research are remote sensing technology, energy, environmental quality, aircraft performance improvement, structural analysis, communications systems, technology transfer, microprocessing, transportation. Mr. Servey, Josephine R. Servy's husband, graduated from the University with a degree in engineering in 1910. He was president of the Haydite Corp. in Kansas City, Mo., when he died of a heart attack in 1942. Interest from the fund will be used to finance distinguished pro- FREE FRIDAY DANCE CONCERTS AT THE BURGE UNION - 9 P.M. 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