10 Friday, December 3. 1976 University Daily Kansan Junkyard screening proposed By JOHN MUELLEP Lawrence's junkyards may be hidden from public view soon if city officials can decide how far a proposed screening or observation areas are unsightly left on strata areas. City commissioners Carl Mibeck and Donald Binnis will meet Monday with Myles Schachter of the Lawrence-Douglas County law enforcement district to discuss the defense proposed at Tuesdays' regular city commission meeting by a special mayor's study committee. The committee, led by Travis Glass, 106 Wellington St., proposed an 80-bath unkayed that are within 200 feet of houses. Lawrence now has no ordinance on screening junkyards, Glass has said that his committee's proposal was "a start, just a start, toward an answer." BUT COMMISSIONERS have disagreed with the proposed ordinance, not because they didn't like it, but because they said it didn't do enough to beautify the city. Mibec said that the proposed ordinance should include a ban on open storage of certain new materials, not just on storage of items after they were used. According to the committee's report, only open-storage areas that contain "savaged materials, salvaged motor vehicles, used furniture or used appliances" would be fenced. Bism's agreed with Mibck's evaluation of the open-storage areas, and also said the committee's proposal wouldn't beautify unsightly storage areas near major roads. The view from houses is protected, and no roadside parking on streets were included in the proposal. GLASS HAS SAIED he didn't think all open storage areas needed to be screened. Another issue in the committee's findings centers on what happens to houses that are built by junkyards that were there before the houses were. Commissioners said that under the committee's proposal, such houses wouldn't be protected because the Xmas parcels should go out immediately Christmas packages should be mailed immediately to insure that they reach their destination by Christmas, John Harris, Office 643, Vermont Street, said yesterday. Suggested mailing deadlines for overseas packages have already passed. He said that packages for the 48 continental states should have been mailed by today. Cards and letters should be mailed by December 10. Harris said parcels could be mailed as late as Dec. 21 by express post, but at a latency of several days. He said the Christmas rush began soon after Thanksgiving and would last until mid-April. He also announced a United Parcel Service in 14 eastern states will increase the volume of holiday mail for customers. Some suggestions for mailing packages are: All items should be mailsled in a strong cardboard box and be cushioned with tissue paper to keep them dry. ... include mappings, keep each item separate from one another; cartons for individual items should be reduced as much as possible to prevent rattling. —Fragile or perishable items should be clearly marked and should have a one-inch thickness. - Cover and firmly secure all packages with strong tape or twine. - -Books and records should be marked fragile. 'Don't ship more than 25 pounds of book.' - Print address, zip code and return address on both the inside and outside of zip code. ROTC day is today Today has been proclaimed KUOTR Day by Chancellor Dyke the Deli Information concerning all ROTC programs will be available at a booth in the Kansas University. A formal tea for ROTC students, KU administrators and Student Senate leaders will be at 2 p.m. in the Union's Centennial Room. In a proclamation statement, Dykes and Shankel stated that "the University wishes to publicly acknowledge the contributions of students and staff to the life of the University." The military ball will end the day's activities at 7:30 p.m. in the Knights of Colonel junkyards wouldn't have to put up any new screening. Schachter said that he and commissioners wanted "to take great care" not to include too many screening restrictions on too many commercial areas. "We have to draw the line somewhere. Where are the views offensive?" he said. Where are the views offensive?' he said, SCHACHTER SAID THAT requiring screening had to be done carefully because of the cost of putting up fences. "For the heavy screening, with the masonry and all, it might be as much as $20 a linear foot. For lighter screening, the cost could be a fraction of that." Schaubert said. acanacter praised the work the committee had done in studying the proposed ordinance and said that the committee had reviewed slides of all possible visually offensive commercial areas in Lawrence before making its report. THE NEW ORDINANCE apparently will apply to the entire city. Previous speculation about the ordinance concerned its impact on east Lawrence, but Schachter said that "this will affect north Lawrence as much as we have to apply this to all, not just one or two, businesses and classes of (commercial) users." Survey by CAA says ice cream prices up This week's Consumer Affairs Association (CAA) market basket survey indicates a slight fluctuation in some food prices in Lawrence. Judy Kroeger, CAA director said yesterday that the average price for a half gallon of ice cream rose eight cents this week, from 95 cents to $1.03. This increase follows a sale on ice cream during the Thanksgiving holiday. butter and for frozen orange juice dropped by one cent last week. The average price of 12 ounces of peanut butter was 73 cents this week, compared with 74 cents last week. Six ounces of frozen orange juice cost an 8-cent per ounce week, compared with 22 cents last week. However, the average prices for peanut Other prices remained stable, the survey indicated. There was no in-depth food survey this week. ITEM Milk - 2 per cent, v.s. gal., b.1. Eggs - Grade A cheese, b.1. Garbanzo beans, b.1. Colby cheese - 1 lb., b.1. Cohy cheese - 1 lb., b.1. Ground beef - 1 lb., b.1. Chuck roast - blade-out, b.1. Egg oil - wheat flour, b.1. Turkey beef - self-basting, b.1. Turkey beef - self-basting, b.1. Porch filch - frozen, b.1. Orange juice - frozen, 6 oz. Ice cream - 6 oz., gal., b.1. Ice cream - 6 oz., gal., b.1. Fruit - Foiler's fruit, b.1. Coffee - Foiler's coffee, b.1. 3.49 - 2.49 - 2.49 - 2.49 - 2.49 - 2.49 - 2.49 - 2.49 - 2.49 - 2.49 - 2.49 - 2.49 - 2.49 - 2.49 - 2.49 - 2.49 - 2.49 - 2.49 - 2.50 - 2.50 - indicates sales item S.B. indicates Store Brand or cheapest brand --- During finals, try the SANDWICH SHOPPE Subs, Burgers, Dogs & More Fast service, Call in, Carry out 7th & Mass. Next to Bugsy's. Above the 7th Spirit Open till 2 a.m. all nites but Sun. --- Present this ad for a free Coke thru Jan. 1st Events **TODAY:** KUOTDAY will be all day in the Kansas Union lobby, CAMPUS CHRISTMAS, OR "BINGLE JELLS", begins at room in Strong Hall lobby. BLACK HEADS IN MIDDLE SCHOOL at 12:30 p.m. in the Union's Council Room. THE CHANCELLOR'S OPEN MEETING begins at 1 p.m. in the Union's Forum Room. MUSLIM STUDENTS meet at 1:15 p.m. in the Union's Big Eight Room. The COMMITTEE meets at 3:30 p.m. in the Union's Council Room. CAMPUS VETS meet at 4:30 p.m. in the Union's Meadowlock Room. TONIGHT: AEROSPACE ENGINEERS meet at 5:30 in the Union's English Room. SUA AUDIUTIONS for the musical-comedy *The Forum*. The production will be presented next spring as part of SUA's Accent the Arts festival. A KU WOMEN'S Gymnastics forum, Holborn gymnasium, CAMPUS CRUSADE 7:30 p.m. in the Union's Jayhawk room. SATURDAY: PANHELLENIC COUNCIL OFFICERS meet at 12:30 p.m. in the Union's Walnut, Regionalist and Oread rooms. A FOOTBALL BANQUET begins at 5 p.m. in the Union's Ballroom, IRIANAN STUDENTS' DAY will be observed at 6:30 p.m. in a Forum Room, ALPHA II. MEGA will be held in a ceremony at 8 p.m. in Danfort Chapel. THE ART ESCAPADES DANCE begins at 8 p.m. in the Union Ballroom. SUNDAY: THE SUA CHESS CLUB meets at 2 p.m. in the 'inion's Parians B and C. The annual CHRISTMAS VESPERS are at 4 p.m. and 8 p.m. in Hoch Auditorium. INTRAMURAL BASKETBALL OFFICIALS NEEDED An organizational meeting will be held Mon., Dec.6 at 5:00p.m. in Room 205 Robinson Gym For more information contact Recreational Services, Room 208 Robinson Gym. 864-3546. "WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?" Psalms 2 and Acts 4:25 THE VOICE OF RETRIBUTION: "FOR I THE LORD YTH GOD A JEALOUS GOD, VISITING THE INQUIRY OF THE FATHERS ON THE CHILDREN UNTO THE THIRD AND FOURTH GENERATION OF THEM THAT HATE ME: AND SHOWING MERCY UNTO THOUSANDS OF THEM THAT LOVE ME, AND KEEP MY COMMANDMENTS." From the Second Commandment, Exodus 20:5-6. Perilous it is indeed to a man's well being in this life - to his peace, his reputation, his best interest - to do wrong. Perhaps the wrong doer may not suffer himself, yet most certainly his children, and his family, will be harmed by the wrong. Doubly so constituted, 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 fall to secure to him a high and continual state of earthly happiness. The wrong, the unperverted use of up in beautiful harmony with the same benevolent end. Every jar of human happiness, every arrest or curtainment or extinction of it, is the fruit of transgression or perversion. The violation of a natural law is as sure to be followed by retribution as the violation of a Divine Law. 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 competed to become, at an early age, an exile from his father's house — to lie before the aroused wrath of his master, and then die in the wilderness of his kisman; and no sooner is he relieved from these domestic attifctions, than suddenly he is bereaved of his favorite wife — Joseph is violent torn from his embrace by his own sons — and at length Benjamin, the only object on which the affections of the aged father can be heard, is that the ruined dynasty, and his cry is heard: "All these things are against met" David was a good man, yet he sinned a great sin. And his sin was of a domestic character. And how grievously was he afterward afflicted in his domestic relations. His subsequent history remains the sad tale of the young man who was sent away to depart from your house! His son Ammon raped his half-sister Tamar. Absalom, her brother, killed Amnon! Onlah on Absalom usurped his father's throne and drove him out, etc., etc. Yet David was a "man after God's heart" — a man after God's heart in the way he repented and forgave his sins. And as he wrote of the words of Job: "Yea, though He lay me, will I trust Him." Pilate, vaccinating between the monitions of conscience and a miserable time serving service, delivered up Jesus to be crucified. He believed Him to be innocent; yet that his own loyalty to Caesar might not be suspected, he did violence to his own conscience and condemned the innocent. He must secure his friendship to 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 illness to the punishment of the crime. He hesitated at nothing to please his impatient master at Rome. Yet two years later he returned to Rome, with a double misery, where, in disgrace and abandonment and with a burden on his conscience, which was the burning steel, he put an end to an existence which was too wretched to be borne"1 "Be sure your sin will find you out!" He that confesseth and forsaketh his sin shall find mercy." P. O. BOX 405, DECATUR, GA. 30031 **B BE SURE YOUR SIN WILL FIND YOU OUT!** *Numbers 32-13* **IT SHALL BE WELL WITH THE WICKED.* *Ecclesiastes 8:13* **AS I HAVE DONE, SO GOD HATHE REQUIRED ME.** *Judges 7:1* **OLD CONSIDER THE LATTER END.'** *Deuteronomy 32:29* The dealers of Quantrill's Flea Market invite everyone to join our Christmas Celebration. This Saturday & Sunday, Dec. 4 & 5 ★ Live Music Saturday & Sunday ★ Bargains throughout the Market ★ Home cooked Food 811 New Hampshire Open every Saturday & Sunday 10:00----5:00 p.m. 842-6616 Lawrence, Kansas