答: University Daily Kansan Med Center supports rural plan A University of Kansas task force committee designed to study rural health problems relating to the planned Chanate health center is expected to meet this week. The committee, headed by executive vice chancellors of both the Lawrence campus, Del Shankel, and the Med Center, Robert Kugel, will investigate possibilities for private foundation grant support to continue the committee's study. "THE INITIAL CHARGE to the task force was to study how the institution (KU) might be supported by a cloud-like atmosphere that would be more attractive to doctors," Meek said. Directing would include a study of the library facilities, the availability of fine arts within the community and the distance to a larger city, he said. Plans to establish the Chanute health center were released last week. The center will be designed to distribute medical facilities from KU to other areas of Kansas. Besides helping communities recruit and retain medical services, the center will house and care for patients who are ill and who require rehabilitation. The health center in Chanute will use the former Southeast Kansas Tuberculosis Hospital in Chanute, John Radford, chairman of the medical center's rehabilitation department, is studying the hospital's facilities. The 80-bed Chamite hospital was closed in 1975 and now houses several district and hospital hospitals. "From all indications," Meek said, "it is encouraging." Meek said that southeast Kansas was such a well-defined area that it was a very logical place to begin the health distribution program. Meek said that significant progress had also been made in developing the educational programs to be offered at the health center. "CHANUTE MADE IT SO attractive that it would have been silly not to capitalize on the excitement of the community," Meek said. Although the center will offer a continuing educational service, Meek said, it should not be confused with the affiliated family practice programs. Four sites for this program have been partially appropriated for by the Kansas Legislature. Two sites—Salina and Garden City—have already been selected and approved, but the KU Medical Center, Meek but the other two have not been decided upon. The Legislature also appropriated $34,000 to hire a director for the center and for initial planning work. Future funds will be allocated to legislatures and federal and state agencies. Part of the Chanute facility will probably be operating this year, Meek said, although it will take some time to develop all three areas. Nine counties will be served by the center. They are: Neosho, Labette, Allen, Bourbon, Wilson, Woodson, Crawford, Cherokee and Montgomery. Pipeline to bring oil and turmoil THE STARS LOOK DOWN (1920) Dir. Carol Reed New York Times 10 Best List Monday, June 20, 7:30 p.m. B/W 96 min. $1.00 AP Business Writer By MARTIN MERZER AB Business Writer FILMS WITH SO MUCH ADDITIONAL oil, consumers might expect prices to decrease and supplies to increase. But that will not be the case because of a government decision to permit the sale of Alaskan oil at the foreign rate for domestic consumption, the highest domestic price of $11.28 a barrel. The high cost of pipeline transportation determined the government's decision. Ironically, in the midst of an energy crisis, some oil companies have said the Alaskaan oil will create an oversupply problem on the West Coast, where oil is imported from the Mideast and Indonesia. They have estimated the surplus mini-mills in Alaska will be used to supply the West Coast lacks refineries to process Alaska's high sulfur content oil. NOTHING SACRED (1937) Dir, William Welman Wednesday, June 22, 7:30 p.m. Color 78 Min. $1.00 NEW YORK (AP)—The millions of barrels of oil from Alaska's North Slope will create new problems for America's complex energy industry. Oil won't lower consumer prices. After nine years of controversy and after nine years of controversy and oil will begin moving through the trans-Alaska pipeline today. The first shipment by tanker will reach California in The pipeline is expected to carry at least 1.2 million barrels of oil a day—seven per cent of the nation's daily consumption of 17 million barrels—by the middle of next year. "The difference seen by the consumer will be zero," said Doug Robinson, Alaskan oil project coordinator for the Federal Energy Administration (FEA). "What he is getting is a more secure source of supply, but not a price break." WASHINGTON (AP)—The Carter Administration is pressing for expansion of television for the deaf with a caption system that most people would never see. A BOY AND HIS DOG The administration is pressing for wider use of closed captioning, which allows the captions to be seen only when a special attachment is fitted to a television set. Contact Recreation Services Room 208 Robinson Gym 864-3546 Need summer softball officials. Jagoda, a former CBS producer, said Carter had asked Health, Education and Welfare Secretary Joseph Califano to take charge of efforts to make captioning Carter side Barry Jagda said a conference on television for the deaf would be held in the late summer or early fall for a conference of executive executives and other interested persons. (1974) Dir. L, Q. Jones Winter Warner Awards Friday, June 24, 7:30 p.m. Color 91 Min. $1.25 Captioned TV sought for deaf Many viewers are familiar with open captioning, which involves printing captions on the bottom of the picture. It is often used with foreign language films. But closed captioning is favored because persons who can hear could not be bothered by the captions, while the dest could obtain attachments and begin enjoying television. Woodruff Auditorium Kansas Union NOTHING SACRED (1937) The 800-mile, $7.7 billion pipeline was built by a consortium of eight companies, called Alyses Pipeline Service Co., to transport their own oil from the northern field. Three firma-Sohio, Exxon and ARCO—are the major partners. Spokesmen for all three said their shares would replace foreign oil used by refiners. The advantage, simply, is that the tundra belongs to the United States, so the money—more than $ 5 billion a year—will remain in this country. TWO ALTERNATIVES have been under consideration for months as solutions to the oversupply problem on the West Coast: to ship it by tanker or pipeline to Gulf Coast refineries or to ship it overseas, most likely to Japan. money going to the oil firms and the per- million dollars of taxes are figured on the profit at the well. John Lichbain of the Petroleum Industry Research Foundation has said he preferred exportation to improve the U.S. balance of trade. Mr. Lichbain law fords exportation of American oil. Ben Cooper, a member of the staff of the Senate Subcommittee on Energy Conservation and Regulation, said there was little chance that Congress would change the law, even if President Jimmy Carter recommended a change. The paradox of more oil but at the same price is complex. To understand the current pricing structure, one must go back to the oil shortages of the early 1970s. Along with the price increase, the shortages resulted in federal government regulation of oil prices. That leaves shipment to the Gulf Coast. But oil companies have not been able to win approval from local authorities for construction of a West Coast-Gulf Coast pipeline, or even permission to convert an existing, unused natural gas pipeline. Tankers would have to take the oil through the Panama Canal to the Gulf Coast, and oil company officials say there are not enough tankers available UNDER CURRENT U.S. law, the ceiling on domestic oil found before 1972 is $5.25 per barrel. On domestic oil found after 1972 it's $11.28. In addition, the so-called "entitlements program" protects oil companies with large reserves of pre-1972 oil. Under the program, the cost of oil is averaged every month. The refiner who pays more than the average gets money from the company; the refiner who pays less must contribute money. Refiners who buy foreign oil at $14 per barrel get entitlements, which lower their costs. But the Alaskan oil is special because of the transportation factor. "Transportation of most domestic oil costs about 50 cents per barrel; it $1.50 a barrel to ship from the Mideast, because it is refined near where it is found," said Doug Robinson, the FEA project leader. "But with North Slope oil, instead of costing 50 cents or so, it will probably cost roughly 2.50 per barrel on the pipeline tariff alone." "Then by tanker to the West Coast, we estimate another 75 cents, or $2.75 to the tanker." Based on the total price of $14 a barrel, California, and $5 a barrel it goes to California, and $5 a barrel it goes to Last week, the Justice Department urged the Interstate Commerce Commission to reject what Justice officials called inflated bribery practices involved in Alyska. The Justice Department said the proposed tariffs might be as much as $2-per-barrel beyond what is needed for a fair return on investment, a claim simply denied by most of the companies. However the dispute is resolved, the only change would be the percentages of the "WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?" Psalms 2 and Acts 4:25 This question is the opening words of the Second Palm of the Bible, God's Almighty Relief of Himself to man. The Palm tells who the heathen are, why they rate, and the results of this rage, which is a pretty good blueprint of the conditions of our world. When we come to meet us the acceptance of His invitation to come out of adversity, vexation, and confusion into peace and blessedness. However, it appears that we prefer to continue to rage Someone wrote us and said they had a friend who said if someone did not tell him "what in the hell" this column was raving about he was "going crazy". We replied "Yes", because we were going crazy and please tell him the object of our raiving was to help and others "out of hell" rather than "in hell". We quote from another letter received from one who does a splendid job of "stitting in the seat of the scornet," witness: "The Holy Bible which you call The Word of God is one of the most obscene books published and it is surprising someone hasn't used its pornography commercially. The entire history of the Christian religion is one of the most obscene things in human history, perhaps of a godly mother, or father, or friends, joined some Protestant Christian Church in years gone by, we certainly hope he has had the honesty and sincerity to resign and get out and ask that his name be taken off the church roll. We wish to comment on this since we believe that this is not a rare and isolated case but is shared by great numbers today, even by many who remain in the church to stay with their families. And those who have attained to high and leading positions in the ecclesiastical world. For example, in recent years a Bishop who was honored by one of the largest Protestant denominations by being promoted the We replied to the "sitter in the seat of the soctum" quoted above that our reaction to his views concerning God's Book, The Bible, might be illustrated as follows: Suppose here is a soctum in which there is an animal he out is himelled with their awful odor, and for a time ifoks did not see but him only smelt him they would think he was a palacet. But he is not one, but on the contrary deserves to be honored for suffering a while in order make his home more comfortable and loved ones decent and free from the horrible stench. "There is a fountain filled with blood, drawn from immigrant's veins, and sinners plunged beneath that flood lose all their guiltry." This is the "Grace of God" of Jesus. And in Christ's speech, I beechou, you be ye reconciled to God." The unpleasant things in The Bible the "sisters in the seat of the scourn" mock at, appear in order to allow to all men that the natural man in the eyes of the "Holy, Holy, Holy, Lord" is under pressure by the authorities not noting the marginal translation for "Illity", who Romans 1:21-32 — and the only way to get clean from our vileness and avoid being cast into the fires of eternal hell is by being washed in the stoning blood of The Lord Jesus Christ, shed on Calvary the blood of the one Clean and Perfect Man The highest office his church could give wrote that The God of the Old Testament was a "dirty bully." And another who was advanced to the top position of his great Protestant denomination likened God to Hitler. Of course these men were generally approved and supported by the majority of those in the church, but then they would never have reached high positions. P. O. 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