Tuesday, February 15. 1977 2 d cocoa Rippa for enthuslast rent issue magazine voted ad- ood teen- n his gun of Nazi Cowan's said they allegiance declined wenn "had ill over his s "mostly s and he'd read books lborhood veteran, a son said he but rather vice, the ng absent the scene e ice at hard a $55 per from the son term. d Cowan, r rating over more accompanions actors from discharge eems. rservity seeds d/or s Of-nate, Med students fight proposed bill Staff Renorter By BARRY MASSEY KANSAS CITY, KAN—Concerned about impending action in the Kansas Legislature that could raise tuition to $13,500, University of Kansas medical students met yesterday to formulate battle plans against the proposed legislation. The meeting of about 100 first-year medical students came about because of the increasing number of cases. proposing an increased tuition had already been passed by the legislature, Marjorie Bordy, first-year student representative to the Student Assembly (MSA), said yesterday. SHE SAID the assembly thought that a meeting of all concerned first-year medical students would help to dispel rumors and inaccuracies about the response legislation. First-year students are the only medical Bonds on city agenda A resolution for the issuance of about $10 million in industrial revenue bonds to a firm that plans to open a branch in Lawrence will be held on Wednesday, Lawrence City Commission meeting. The bonds, if approved, would be used to build a Quaker Oats Company plant, which would manufacture pet foods. The plant, which would employ about 180 persons, is to be completed in a year. The proposed site for the plant is north of the industrial park. If the commission approves the bond issue, a resolution of intent probably will be voted on the following week City Manager Buford Watson said. The firm will be responsible for payment of the bonds, and the city will forgo the company's property taxes for 10 years while the firm becomes established. In other action, the commission is to consider giving the city manager authority to manage public works. Delay sought in murder case Attorneys for two brothers charged in the murder last week of a Lawrence woman have filed petitions in Douglas County Court to seek full or partial hearings delayed until early March. Charged in the death of Margaret Maxey, are Joseph Gordon Jr., and James C. James Rumsey, attorney for James Gardner, petitioned yesterday to have Gardner's hearing delayed until 9:30 a.m. March 2. Jack Maxwell, Joseph Gardner's attorney, filed for a continuance until 1:30 a.m. March 2. Preliminary hearings for the two originally were scheduled for Friday. The brothers were charged last week by the Douglas County Attorney in connection with the stabbing Jeath and mutilation of Maxey. Both have been held without ball in the Douglas County jail. and for a housing needs survey, Watson said he was in the process of creating a con- tents case study. The commission also will consider setting March 8 as the bid date for improvements in the Burcham Park area. The park is part of riverfront development in the city. Bavles dies Services for Ernest Bayles, professor emeritus of education, are pending at Rumsey Funeral Home. Mr. BAYLEYS, 79, who lived in 1911 Oxford Rd., died Sunday in Lawrence Memorial Hospital. He was born Oct. 31, 1897, at Onaga. He received undergraduate and graduate degrees in education from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Ph.D. from Ohio State University in 1922. Mr. Bayles taught science in Kansas and Iowa high schools before teaching at Central Missouri State Teachers College in Warrenburg. He joined the KU faculty in 1928. He was an assistant professor emeritus in 1968. students to meet regularly because up- perclassmen are attending clinical care. He served as president of the National Society for College Teachers of Education, the Philosophy of Education Society and the KU chapter of the American Association of Professors. He was a member of the executive board of the John Dewey Society. NOW, MEDICAL students from Kansas pay about $1,500 in tuition. The state pays for the remainder of the estimated costs of a student's education. This year, the cost of a student's education is figured at about $15,500 to $18,000. The bill that concerns the students was recently proposed by Rep. Mike Hayden, R-Atwood. It would require medical students to pay up to about $13,500 for tuition or agree to work in an area where there is a doctor shortage. He is survived by his wife, Lucie, of the home; four sons, Hugh, Fredonia, Spencer, Houston, Tex.; Lewis, Atlanta, Ga.; and Manhattan, Ohio; Andrea, Bedford, Manhattan; a sister, Mrs. Lillian Tiffin-Ottawa; 13 grandchildren; and two great-grandchildren. The $13,500 proposed in Hayden's bill is 87.5 percent of the estimated amount the hospital would receive. It would be ranked in order of their need for medical care, and students who agreed to serve in one of the highest priority areas would be waived the $7.5 percent of the total cost. Under a preliminary draft of Hayden's bill, smaller amounts would be waived for students who promised to serve in areas of lower priority. THE WAIVER wouldn't cover the costs of room and board, books and other incidental For each year the student is given a tuition waiver, he is required to serve one伏期. The waiver percentage decreases in four steps to the lowest level of 25 per cent. If passed by the legislature, Hayden's bill would take effect July 1, 1978. Mr. Bayles' body was donated to the department of anatomy at the KU Medical Center. The family requests that memorials go to the Ernest E. Bayles Memorial Fund of the Kansas University Endowment Association. DEBBIE HAYNES, another first-year representative to the MSA, said that 11 She said legislators were concerned that many medical students were leaving Kansas and that they thought a tuition waiver would help solve this problem. hearing of a Senate Ways and Means subcommittees in which questions were raised "They're really upset about it," Haynes said, and "they feel we don't have a moral偿 SOME STUDENTS were concerned that if tuition was increased to $13,500, many potentially good medical students would go elsewhere, possibly hurting the Med Center. Jana Rasmussen, a representative of NSA, asked students to work to defeat the Islamic State. "We encourage you to go out and talk to legislators and other people you know and trust." University Daily Kansan Students were reminded by Debbie Smith Wright, MSA president, that they weren't representing the opinion of the Med Center, and that the concerns individual medical students. SHE SAId that the meeting had provided a good beginning, but that students needed to present options to the legislature on how to address problems of health care needs in Kansas. Committees were organized during the meeting to provide direction of a write-in campaign against the bill, to set up small groups of students to visit Topeka and to discuss the legislation with government officials in order to find medical students concerning the status of the legislation and to establish a lobbying-type program. Student tells police of kidnaping, rape The woman told police that the man came up behind her while she was walking in front of her boyfriend's house at 1138 Ohio St., put her hand on her head and told her to hand over her money. A 19-year-old University of Kansas student reported to Lawrence police Saturday night that a man kidnapped her in a dumpster and took her to an apartment and raped her. When she said she didn't have any money, the man reportedly forced her into his car and made her wear adhesive bandages and sunglasses over her eyes. He then drove her to what he told her was his apartment, according to the police report. The woman described her attacker as a black male, between 20 and 39 years old, 5 feet 10 to six feet tall and bald. Police have no suspects. RENT-A-CAR ADMINISTRATION LEASING 2340 Alabama PLEASE COMPARE OUR RATES! 843-2931 Reflection Steve Leben for student body president Business Ginny Erdwien Brian S. Jones Brit McPherson Scott Stanley Education Bev Brown Corie Brown Bill Cannon Pam Gotsche Connie Hale Steve Hamous Beth Anne MacCurdy Beth Osborn Nathan Bultman Richard W. Durham Douglas J. Edmonds Gary Foote Alan D. Soelter Engineering Journalism Janet Ferree Jill Grubaugh Eric Morgenstern Doug Ferguson Sann Glaza Claire McCurdy Kristen Olander Kathy Russell Sybil Summers Fine Arts Special Students Wade Corey Klosterman Architecture Reeves W. Wiedeman Curt Woody Architecture Pres.—Matt Haverty V.P.-Pres.Chip Anthony Secy.—Dawn Daniel Treas.—Barbara Goolsbee Sophomore Class Leben-Munyan - WE REFLECT YOUR VIEWS * - *RESPONSIBLE USE OF STUDENT FEES ** * The Senate has allowed more than $100,000 of your fees to accumulate in a surplus, benefitting no one. Steve and Ralph say it should either be used for education benefits, or the activity fee should be lowered until the supply is full. - *FEEDBACK* ★ ★ Steve and Robp will see that a Feedback book is published, giving student comments and ratings of each course and instructor at KU. Your best advice on enquiries and instructors comes from other students—we'll see what you get it. - RECREATIONAL FACILITIES * ** Steve and Ralph will spend some of the弥补 fund to improve URS recreational facilities. more lighting for tennis courts and resodding outdoor playing fields are examples of improvements that will be made. *COMMUNICATION* ❤️ This is the area Steve and Rick know best - from experience. They will make you are involved in your training. LA&S Ralph Munyan for student body vice president Paula Bush Vicki Coulter Trinka Crossley Craig Dawson Thomas E. Graves Bruce Huffman Grant Larkin Betsy McCarley Bob Meyer Jim Muehlberger Judy Navickas Tim O'Connor Mike Pendergast Kevin White Pharmacy Teri Pollard Social Welfare Lisa Bennett Jeanne Kovac Nunemaker Dist. 1 Bruce Leinmiller Dave Bromley Gordon Geldhof Chris Redlinghafer Jan Smith Russ Tluscik Nunemaker Dist. 2 Paid for by Leben/Munyan Nunemaker Dist. 3 Mark Bernhardt Johnny Hill David Jett John Masterson Laura Trausch Nunemaker Dist. 4 Jeff Eriksen Ann Holderman Anne Judge Mary Ellen Pogson Sam Sheldon Nunemaker Dist. 5 Cheryl Engelmann Amy Gregg Mike Harper Luanne O'Dell Reggie Robinson Ed Stucky Junior Class Pres.-Craig Blessing V-Pres.-Scott Morgan Secy.-Pam Olander Treas.-Sheri Sigman