3 Local Briefs Daniloff to talk about Soviet experiences Nicholas Dandi洛, U.S. News & World Report diplomatic editor, will speak at 8 p.m today in Hoch auditorium. Daniloff was the magazine's Moscow correspondent in the fall when he was arrested and tried on charges of espionage by Soviet authorities. He was freed 30 days later. Stolen computers found under bridge He will speak about that experience and the influence it has had on U.S.-Soviet relations. Three hunters found two stolen computers belonging to the University of Kansas on April 5 under a bridge in rural southeastern Douglas County. Lt. Jeanne Longaker, a KU police spokesman, said last week. The hunters, all from the Kansas City area, had been scouting for new hunting ground when they discovered two boxes wrapped in brown plastic trash bags under a bridge, said Loneaker. Inside the boxes were two Apple MacIntosh computers, each with a keyboard and mouse, valued at $1,500 each, and two Macintosh disc drives, valued at $350 each, Longkaer said. She said the computers were engraved with "University of Kansas." The computers had been stolen from the department of computer science in Strong Hall on March 27 or 28, Longaker said. She said that all the stolen equipment was recovered but that no fingerprints had been found on the equipment. KU police have no suspects in the case, she said. Graduation gowns provided to faculty Faculty members who do not own hoods may rent them. Charges for 1987 are $14 for a hood and $15 for a doctoral hood. Lawrence campus faculty and staff should send their orders to Cap & Gown, Kansas Union, level four, and may contact Robert Derby at 864-4099 or 864-3515 for more information. KU Medical Center faculty and staff should return their cards to the Student Activities Office, room 3018, third floor, Student Union and may contact Dorothy Siebenhain at 368-2597 for more information. Faculty must return their order cards by April 24 to take advantage of the offer. Positions available on fall Kansan staff Applications for news and business staff positions for the fall Kansan are available in 119 and 200 Staufer-Flint Hall. The deadline for news applications is 5 p.m. Wednesday, and the deadline for business applications is 5 p.m. Friday. Those with questions may call the Kansan newsroom at 864-4810 or the Kansan business office at 864-4358. Campus and Area University Daily Kar From staff and wire reports. Senate allots money to student organizations By LISA A. MALONEY The Student Senate allocated a total of $78,694 to 42 student organizations last week. The Senate treasurer said. Staff writer "I thought it was a very responsible distribution of student organization funds," said Tom Woods, treasurer. The Senate could allocate no more than $65,000 to student groups. Student organizations received $83,119, and $6,881 was placed in the student organizations' unallocated account. The remaining $20,575 that was allcated was taken out of the Senate unallocated account to finance large capital expenses for some groups, Woods said. Two student organizations were denied financing; the Rocky and Bullwinkle Fan Club, which publishes the parody magazine Travesty; and AIESEC, an international group that locates foreign internships for students. Michael Foubert, graduate senator, said the Fan Club had said last year it would produce two issues of the magazine but that it had produced only one, so the Senate decided Woods said that because AISEEC's main purpose was to locate internships for a small number of students, the Senate denied financing. not to finance it this year. "That's kind of using Senate money for personal gain," Woods said. The student organizations and the amounts approved by the Senate were: Pharmacy Student Organization, $909; HALO, $555; Free Theatre Company, $1,720; KU India Club, $432; International Folk Dance, $580; Korean Student Organization, $330; KU Slavic Language, $350; KU Squash, $160; and KU Vietnam Association. $520. Also financeeed were Model United Nations, $2.515; Le Corte Francais, $295; NSAE, $149; SCOfMMEBE, $250; Amnesty International, $657; Jayhawk course Source, $7.940; Biology Club, $190; Chinese Student Association, $291; Committee on the Status of Women, $978; KU Rugby, $7.024; KU German Club, $245; and KU Table Tennis, $870. Senate allocated to KU Hockey Club, $9,630. Enviro, $860. Free China Club, $440. Latin American Student Association, $242. Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas, $355. International Club, $439. KU Crew, $22,415. KU Coalition for Peace and Justice, $171; KU Amateur Radio Club, $1.342; KU Cricket Club, $952; and Slightly Older Americans for Freedom, $370. Senate financed the Men's Scoce- Club, $2.375; Women's Soccer Club, $1.071; Society for Fantasy and Scien- ce Fiction, $281; Society of Women Engineers, $210; Student Health Organization Officers, $2,472; Student Health Advisory Board, $1,309; Women for Educating KU, $245; Expressions, $540; Malaysian Asso- ciation, $305; and Engineering Student Council, $2,320. Amy Rhoads/KANSAN Moodv Bluebooks David Gottlieb, professor of law, left; Tanya Treadway, Lawrence law student; and Stan Davis, associate professor of law, perform to a standing room only crowd with their band. The Moody Bluebooks. KU faculty and students gathered last night for "Pub Night" at the Jazzhaus, $926^{1/2}$ Massachussetts St., to relax and see law professors and students perform to raise money for scholarships. Engineering groups to compete in olympics Staff writer By TIM HAMILTON Students and faculty from the School of Engineering will give up their calculators for ball gloves this week. The Engineering Olympics, a two week athletic competition among the faculty and students of the school's departments, begins this week to determine which engineers are the best outside the classroom. The competition is sponsored by the national engineering honor society, Tau Beta Phi, to raise money for Special Olympics. Mark Russell, Kansas City, Kan. senior and president of Tau Beta Phi, said he hoped the event would raise more than $500. He said the event also was a good opportunity for the different departments to become better acquainted and to relax before finals. "The main goal is to get people to participate," Russell said. "The last day is kind of like a field day for the students. We hold it on the lawn of Learned Hall." Preliminary softball, basketball and volleyball competition will be this week, with the finals next week. On the last day, April 24, the competition will culminate with the special field events in front of Learned. The special events include a gunny sack race, tug of war, scavenger hunt, water balloon toss, calculator race, a nerd look-a-like contest and a faculty pie-eating contest. Departmental teams win points for their finishes in each event, and the team with the most points wins. Departmental teams win teams that include faculty members. Don Green, Conger-Gable distinguished professor of chemical and petroleum engineering, said he would compete on his department's softball team and would enter the faculty pie-eating contest, as he did last year. New city commissioners poised to take posts By TODD COHEN Staff writer Students of government can witness a democratic transfer of power tomorrow night when three new members of the Lawrence City Commission are sworn in and a new mayor is chosen. The commission will meet at 7 p.m. in Hall, Sixth and Massachusetts street. The outgoing commission will act on business left on the agenda from last week's meeting. Then City Clerk Valeria Mercer will administer the oath of office to Bob Schumm, Mike Johnson, and Jonathan's selection in the winners last week's contest. Schumm, a restaurateur, and Rundle, a secretary in the KU design department, will serve four-year terms. Constance, the new house manager of Oliver Hall, will serve a two-year term. Mike Amyx, whose terms expire in 1989. They will join the two remaining commissioners, Sandra Praeger and Praeger, who has served in the most ceremonial post of mayor for the past year, also will relinquish her position and center seat on the commission. Either Schumm, who finished first in last week's election and served on the commission from 1979-81, or Amyx, who was mayor from 1985-86, is expected to be elected mayor by the new commission. The brief inaugural in the commission's chambers will dramatically shift the commission's majority opinion against a proposed enclosed mall in the 600 block of downtown Lawrence. In the election last week, voters overwhelmingly rejected the mall proposal and elected the three new commissioners, all of whom opposed the mall. Police play basketball for hungry By PAUL BELDEN Staff writer That could have been Manning, Hunter and Turgeon running that fast break. It wasn't, but Larry Brown would have approved of the way the KU police basketball team beat the New England 46 underdog in Allen Field House. The KU team, in the best KU basketball tradition, scored most of its points with fast break layups. My team did the off the long pass after the rebound. In scoring, three KU players stood out. Mark Rutledge scored 30 points, and Sylvester Birdson and Ralph Oliver each had 12 points. Jim Miller was the high scorer for the Lawrence police team with 19 points. Vic Schmile help out with ten points and Fred d'Ercole with six. Lt. Jeanne Longaker, KU police spokesman, said that about 400 cans of food had been donated for the Ballard Community Center, 708 Elm St. The food will go to feed hungry people in Lawrence. Although the players played seriously and hard, there were several lighter moments, such as the end of the first half. Not a player or coach made it out the door, to the amusement of the crowd. The two squads were heading toward the locker room when the half-time entertainment was announced; the finalists for the KU Crimson Girls. in the second half, one referee waved his arms and loudly booed a traveling call made by his counterpart that nullified Rhonda Birdsong's only basket for the KU team. It was the one time in the game the KU fans cheered a referee. But underneath the frivolity, the game was for real. Tim Cochran of the KU team could attest to that. Although he scored only seven points coming off the bench, Cochran sacrificed his body again and got up smiling each time. At the end of the first half, Cochran, chasing a loose ball, dove headlining into the KU bench. Several bone-jarring colllisions here, he got the ball at the top of the key, drove the lane and was hit by a crossfire of bodies and slammed to the floor. Twenty seconds later, on KU's next possession, Cochran again drove the lane and ate the wood. Most of Cochran's teammates applauded this gutsy display, but someone on the KU bench shouted, "You want to get killed?" The violence was all accidental, however, and both teams took it and dished it out. Everyone was in good spirits at the end of the game. "They cheated," Dave Davis of the Lawrence team said, "And we did not." THEY MIGHT BE GIANTS two Johns from NYC a duo-cum beatbox rock attraction NY's version of Timbuk 3 Musician 3/87 what do they sound like? Don't ask me CALL (718) 387-6962 T.M.B.G. song of the day hotline ask for John Sure they're in ROLLING STONE isn't everybody? they're in Lawrence ... on their "Bring Me the Head of Kenny Rogers" Tour 8 APRIL 15 HOMESTEAD GRAYS THE BOTTLENECK a premium drinking establishment Attention Graduate Students! A meeting of the Graduate Student Council has been called for Monday April 13th,5:30-7:30 p.m. in Alderson Auditorium of the Kansas Union. All graduate students are welcome. for further information call 864-4914 Teams Sponsors Contributors 1. ATΩ K.C. Comets All-Star Dairy 2. ΔT (WSU) Miller Lite All-American Indoor Sports 3. ΔTΔ KLZR Brands Mart Kansas, Inc. 4. BОII John & Janet Patterson 5. KΣ (Baker) Ken and Betty Scott 6. ΦΚΘ David & Stephanie Schipser 7. ΦΚΨ Leroy & Diane Seiler 8. ΦΔΘ Dan and Mary Williams 9. ΣAE G. Nelson Van Fleet 10. ΣΕE (KSU) John H. Shore 11. ΣΕE (KU) ADΠ 12. ΣX AXΩ 13. TKE (Rockhurst) AΓΔ KAΘ KKΓ XΩ AOΠ