10 Thursday, May 5, 1977 University Daily Kansan Summer storage areas available If you can't take it with you, don't despair. Store it. Storage facilities are available in Lawrence on students who want to leave for college. Some residence halls will store things for those currently in residence who have contracts to return in their place, be freed in clearly marked boxes, suitcases or trunks. Residence hall offers this service don't charge for it. Students can check with their residence hall director for storage information. Local dry cleaners will store clothing for the summer. Acme Dry Cleaners and Laundrers will store clothing brought in for cleaning. The price for summer storage is $39 for a box that will hold about 25 garments or for 50 cents a hanger. A week's notice is required in the fall before the clothing is picked up. THIS SERVICE is available at three cm. location, Massachusetts St. 105, Tallahassee, FL 32789, and Lake Winnipesaukee, NJ. Lawrence Launders and Dry Cleaners, 1029 New Hampshire St., offers three summer storage plans. A five cubic foot storage box costs $7.99. Hanger storage is 75 cents a hanger. Clothing stored in these ways need not be dry-cleaned. The cost of their clean, press and store plan depends on the cost of the cleaning bill. If the cleaning bill is less than $10, the cost of storage for the summer is $3.99. If the cleaning costs $15 to $20, storage costs $1.99. Clothing is stored free if the cost of cleaning is more than $25. Clothing is insured for up to $100 without cost. In the fall, 24-hour notice must be provided. LARGER TEAMS may be stored at A-1 laboratories or at local moving and commercial facilities. A-1 Rental. 29th and Iowa Streets, will store anything that isn't explosive, inflammable or illegal to possess. Concrete building. In the mail. In the month and are available in four sizes--8 reeup ny $1 feet for $1, 8 feet by 10 feet for $20, reeup ny $5 feet for $7.50 and 20 feet by $25 for $30. Eubhan Smith Moving & Storage, Inc., 721 E. 9th St, store less than 1,500 pounds of belongings for $7 paid when the items are returned, and when the items are removed from storage. Insurance is available at $1.91 a month for $1,000 coverage. Lawrence Transfer & Storage Co., Inc. 609 Massachusetts St, will store anything except cars. One hundred cubic feet of storage space costs $14 and cubic feet of space costs $11 and 300 cubic feet cost $14. Items are insured for up to $7 a cubic foot at no cost. Council closer to people voters indicate in survey In the April 5 city election Lawrence voters decided to retain the city manager-commission form of government with their rejection of proposed mayor-council government. However, a survey conducted by University of Kansas students indicates that voters favored certain aspects of the proposal. The recently completed survey indicates that a majority of Lawrence residents think the mayor-council government would be more responsive to public opinion than the present city manager-commission form and would increase voter turnout. A fulltime mayor also was preferred by a maturity of those surveyed. However, the survey results indicated that the approved manager-commission form is considered more efficient and more able to keep city taxes down. CONDUCTED BY 35 political science students, the survey was part of a project involving two political science courses: Power in American Communities, taught by Paul Schumacher; Political Analysis, taught by Russell Gert, assistant professor. The voters interviewed were selected from a sample of 836 names, chosen at random from the Lawrence telephone directory. On election night and the following evening, the students completed 373 interviews. Skip Liepman, Lawrence junior, who is analyzing the data, said 373 interviews were sufficient to assure the survey of a high degree of accuracy. All the questions were accurate from three to five percentage points, he said. the results of the survey are extremely close to the election results, Lieman said. For example, the results show 68.7 per cent of those sampled favored the manager-commission system and about 70 per cent actually approved it at the polls April 5. HOWEVER, SCHUMAKER and Getter said that the voting was subject to a class bias and that homeowners, professionals and white collar workers were overly concerned with 68 per cent of all homeowners voted; only 22 per cent nonhomeowners voted. Survey data also indicate that media coverage of the campaign issues had a negative impact. about 36 per cent of those sampled said that the media presented the issues "pretty well." Of these, about 51 per cent voted. Twelve per cent said the campaign was Of all residents sampled, 21.6 per cent said that the amount of media campaign coverage was very low. Nonvoters made up 87 per cent of this group. LET US HELP YOU PLAN AHEAD TO BECOME A CPA Kansas City 816-561-6776 OUR SUCCESSFUL STUDENTS REPRESENT 1/3 OF USA Film Noir (1945-47) Dir. Edward Dmrytik. The original dir. of Raymond Chandler's "Farewell My Loyal." Dick Pewell as Defective Philp Marlowe, MURDER MY SWEET (1945) OUT OF THE PAST covered "very well" and 76 per cent of this group voted. Dir. Jacques Tourneur with Robert Mitchum, Jane Greer, Kirk Douglas, Rhonda Fleming, Film Society May 5, 2017 p. 75 (1947) THE BIG SLEEP (1946) Other results indicated that 38 per cent of those surveyed thought that the commissioner should be elected from wards, as in a mayor-council system. A combination of the two systems was favored by 18 per cent. Dir. Howard Hawks with Humphrey Bogart, Lauren Bacall plus CASABLANCA (1943) Among those who didn't vote, 41 per cent favored straight ward representation. Although this is less than majority support, Schamaker and Getter said they considered it to be a possible indication that a change towards and a fulltime man mayor non-voters of a lower social status into the larger political system to a greater extent. Dir. Michael Curtiz with Humphrey Bogart, ingrid Bergman. Fri, May 6 & Sat., May 7, 3:30, 8:00 p.m., $1. Regardless of the varied support in different areas and relatively uneven turnout, support for the manager-commission form of government was quite high in almost every segment of Lawrence's population. The survey indicated that even if all eligible voters had voted, the results would have been the same. --starts Paperwork prevents rental deposit losses Woodruff Auditorium Kansas Union Failure to follow specified procedures when taking leave of a landlord or utility manager. A landlord is required to give written notice if part of his damage deposit is withheld for damages, Jim Sanders of the Legal Aid Society, Inc., said recently. What is damaged and how much is being deducted for damages must be in writing. The balance of the deposit must be returned to the tenant within 30 days of the termination. William Salome, general manager of the Kansas Public Service Gas Co. Inc., said the final gas bill will be subtracted from the deposit. Money won't be refunded at the deposit, and a check will be sent if a forwarding is left with the company, he said. Forms necessary for filing a case in small claims court may be obtained from the clerk of the specialized division of the Court at the Douglas County Judicial Center. A tenant shouldn't expect the last month's rent to be taken out of the deposit, he said. If a tenant fails to pay the last month's rent, he said, the entire deposit will be forfeited. The final bill will be subtracted from the deposit, he said, if the deposit is greater. Otherwise, the customer will be billed for the amount by which the service exceeds the deposit and a forwarding address is necessary in either case, he said. Ceramic Dept. Spring Sale Fred Bryan, division manager of Kansas Power and Light Co., said that two days' notice should be given before service is discontinued. Tenants should check with their landlord, he said, to see if the landlord wants service continued. If a tenant disagrees with what a landlord has charged for damages, the case may be handled differently. The tenant is more likely to have a good case, he said, if a property inventory form specifying the condition and ownership of the property was filled out when the tenant moved in. Thursday Friday 9-5 Student Union Lobby A DAY AT THE RACES By Marx Brothers DATE: May 8 TIME: 7:00 p.m. PLACE: Woodruff Auditorium PRICE: $1.00 Sponsored by International Club arts at nin The Lawrence Opera House show of the year! Only two days left for the Allen Field House Saturday, May 7, 8:00 p.m. Tickets at SUA, Kief's An Amusement Conspiracy Production An SUA Special Event By contract with ZZTOP, no cameras. No drinking or smoking on main floor. 1 De: Stude progi an u F