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PUBLIC ince Junior bough April. ETPLACE Nunley, versmithing. GALLERY High art. ALLERY Mo...Robert and Robert in the Sales ry, Sunday -H. J. Bott, monumental April 28 ESEARCH Designs." Kansas Por- Collection. ation." Ar- By JOHN WHITESIDES Staff Reporter YER MU- The Sallie Section, Main May 29. Staff Reporter Drug Store fights to retain name STATE and South Valley West April. A bearing in Douglas County District court today will be the first legal test in a case involving a former resident. The hearing will concern a petition for a restraining order filed by the owners of the Drug Store, 708 Massachusetts st., against the state and its board of health. The owners are seeking to halt Mike Malone, county attorney, from filing charges against them for the illegal use of the word "drugstore" in their name. iRug Drug Store, which sells pipa, sachet papers, incense and other drug paraphernae. Mallone warned store owners Kim Kearn and Milane Jozbacz April 8 that they were in danger of losing their jobs. Hike four miles beneath towering cottowoods without retracing your steps, listen to the gentle lappage of water against a fallen log and perhaps catch a glimpse of an industrious beaver all within the boundaries of Lawrence's newest city park. Riverfront Park offers escape from noisy crowds The park, which opened in June 1976, was a project of the Horizons subcommittee of the Lawrence Bicentennial Committee. The park was made available by the city. Riverfront Park lies along the east bank of the Kansas River north of Lawrence between the river and the levee. It extends from the park entrance, directly west of the junction of U.S. highways 24 and 40, north to the edge of the city landfill. THE FIRST EFFORTs to turn the junk-littered woodland into a park began in November 1975 when Horizons subcommittee members marked a trail for the Riverfront Park, Dan Palmquist, a member of the subcommittee, said recently. The trail was cleared of underbrush and more than four tons of trash in the following months by Girl Scouts, Boy Scouts, the Sierra Club, the Audubon Society, the Denver Under Squadron and the Douglas County Environmental Improvement Council. Arnold Janusek, scoutmaster of Boy Scout Troop S2, said, "We found cooksocks, chairs, scrap lumber and batteries in the park." Besides cutting underbush and clearing litter, Janusek said, one of the boys built a footbridge across a ravine as his Eagle Scout community service project. The trail is a flood plain forest trail, which passes through a variety of forest and wildlife communities, including a willow macronereforest and a lush river bottom field. A map of the trail is available at the Lawrence Public Library. Except for the trail, the 900-acre park remains unimproved. Hikers and picnickers must bring in drinking water and carry out trash. FRED DEVICTOR, director of the the use of "drugstore" in the title of a company employed a full-time registered pharmacist. Spray damages student's car A University of Kansas student reported to KU Police Wednesday that the buildings and grounds department had accidentally sprayed an anti-bacterial spray, it with, chemicals 1st Thursday. The car was parked at the northeast corner of a Zone parking lot, behind Joseph Barbieri. According to police, damage to the car was caused by spray chemicals used on trees. Lawrence Parks and Recreation Depart- ment camps might be put in the this summer. The car's paint was damaged on the hood, trunk and right side, and necessitated a dent repair. KU police wouldn't identify the student. The buildings and grounds department said the spraying of the car was accidental, as the police section, while the trees were being sprayed. DeVictor said the development of Riverfront Park was a joint project of the city of Lawrence and the Army Corps of Engineers. The city's contribution was to provide the land, the trail markings and the park maintenance. The warning gave the owners 10 days to comply with the statute. Glotzbach and Kern filed the petition for the restraining order agains the state April 15, along with an injunction that enjoined the state from enforcing the statute and challenged its validity. Plans call for the Corps of Engineers to establish parking space, overnight camping areas, a bicycle trail, a boat ramp for boating activities, toilet, pots, picnicking areas and fire rings. DeVictor said the Corps of Engineers would begin its work on the park this fall or early 1978. The project is in President Jimmy Carter's proposed budget, he said. UNTIL THESE improvements can be made, he said, vehicles wouldn't be allowed in the park. Groups that want to stay overnight must make reservations with the Parks and Recreation Department. The fire rings are built, he said. Perhaps because of these restrictions, Riverfront Park now offers a quiet hawey away from noisy crowds. The lakers' only home is the Dartmouth and a chattering squirrel or a saucy bluey. THE OWNERS' PETITION claims protection under the First, Fifth and 14th Amendments to the Constitution, stating that the statute violates the owners' right to freedom of speech, due process and equal treatment under the law. Eric Kjorlie, a Topeka lawyer who represents the owners, said yesterday that the statute was a "denial of professional freedom to use a business name and prohibits application of an English word with common usage." He said that the 1925 Kansas legislature, which passed the statute, had intended that it be applied to businesses that sold prescription drugs. "We're saying that this is an unfair application of the statute to a business that doesn't sell or dispense drugs," Kjorlie said. THE PETITTION also claimed that the business would suffer permanent and irreparable damage without the restraining order. "They've invested in the business name, they've developed an advertising format for it and they've already used it for several weeks," Kjollie said. "They can't lose it Kern said the store had expressly stated in its advertising that it didn't employ a registered pharmacist or sell prescription drugs in order not to mislead the public. However, he said, he thought the name was perfect for the store. "I've tried and I can't think of a better one," he said. "It gets the point across." Malone said he wasn't sure whether he would file criminal charges against the owners if the restraining order wasn't upheld. POSITIONS ARE AVAILABLE FOR THE UNIVERSITY SENATE COMMITTEES, which are joint student and faculty committees that consider questions concerning KU: Libraries Financial Aid Human Relief Human Relations Foreign Students Foreign Students University Daily Kansan —Calendar PARKING AND TRAFFIC BOARD UNIVERSITY JUDICIARY HEARING BOARD HEALTH ADVISORY BOARD Applications available at the Student Senate Office, Level 3, Kansas Union Applications must be returned by Fri., April 29, 1977. The Brewery 714 Massachusetts presents An Easy Listening Folk-Rock Experience Destiny Steve Rose & Barry Coken Fri. & Sat. Nite 9-12 No Cover Charge. He said he first became aware of the problem after receiving complaints from several local pharmacists who thought the store was jeopardizing the integrity of their profession. He had never heard of the statute before. "IT'S ONE of those obscure statutes that just pop up occasionally," he said. "I'm sure the owners of the store were as unaware of the statute as I was. "I'm not out to get them or anything. If the restraining order isn't upheld, I'll see whether the owners change the name. If the pharmacists would probably file a complaint." Volators of the statue, which is an unclassified misdemeanor, face a $25-$50 fine for a first offense and a $50-$100 fine for a second offense. This could be charged for each day in business. Kjorlie said that if the restraining order was approved today, the courts eventually would rule on the constitutionality of the statute. He said that if a formal complaint were filed he would have to press charges. "WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?" Psalms 2 and Acts 4:25 THE VOICE OF RETRIBUTION: "FOR I THE LORD THY GOD AM JAEUSOLG GOV. DISHING THE INIQUITY OF THE FATHERS UPON THE CHILDREN UPON THE THIRD AND FOURTH GENERATION OF THEM THAT HATE MEE; AND FOURTH GENERATION OF THEM THAT HAVE LOVE, AND MEKE MY COMMANDMENTS." From the Second Commandment, Exodus 20.5. 6. Peritious it is indeed to a man's well being in this life — to his peace, his reputation, his best interest — to do wrong. Possibly the wrongdoer may not suffer himself, yet most certainly his children, and his children's children will pay the price. There are other ways of asking whether regard be had to his physical, social, intellectual, and moral nature, as to make him a happy being. The right, the unperverted use of all his powers and susceptibilities would not tailor to secure to him a high and continual state of earthy happiness and property. And not only is the human nature a barrier to success, but the whole external world, the theater in which man has to live, act, and enjoy, is fitted up in beautiful harmony with the same benevolent end. Every jar of human happiness, every arrest or curtailment or extinction of it, is the fruit of transgression or perversion. The violation of a natural law is therefore the very act that constitutes a Divine Law. The history of individuals, families, communities, nations, is full of such retributions! The domestic peace and prosperity of the good old patriarch Jacob was sadly marred. He is compelled to become, at an early age, an exile from his father's house — to file before the aroused wrath of his brother — to suffer a long oppression and wrong in the family of Leban, his kinman; and no sooner is he relieved from these domestic afflictions, than he finds himself more vulnerable, violently torn from his embrace by his own sons — and at length Benjamin, the only object on which the affections of the aged father seemed to repose, must be yielded up an uncertain灾理, and his cry is heartless. *All these things are David was a good man, yet he sinned a great sin. And his sin was of a domestic character. And how grievously he was afterward afflicted in his domestic relations. His subsequent history remains the sad memorial. The Voice of God anointed him at the altar and then he surrendered his Son Aaron押赎 his half-sister Tamar. Abalom, his brother killed Ammon Later on abalum usured his father's throne and drove him out, etc., yet EtDavid was a "man after God's heart." — a man after God's heart in the way he repented and accepted the severe judgment of God, reminiscent of words of Jeea. "Yea, though He lay me, my will I trust Him!" Platez伏脆 between the monitions of conscience and a miserable time serving policy, delivered up Jesus to be crucified. He believed Him to be innocent; yet that his own life was wrong, he would be buried with his conscience and condemned the innocent. He must secure his friendship of Caesar, though it be at the expense of the most appalling crime. But how miserably he failed; and there was in the retribution which followed a striking fitness for death. His brother, who is also he, please his imperial master at Rome. Yet but two years afterward he was banished by this same emperor into a distant province, where, in disgrace and abandonment, and with a burden on his conscience which was as the "burning blood" end to an existence which was too wretched to be borne." "Be sure you sin will find you out." — Numbers 22:33, "It shall have the wicked with the wicked." — Ephesians 8:13. "I am have done, so God hath requited me." — Judges 17:7, "O that they would consider their latter end!" — Deuteronomy 32:29. 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