Wednesday, November 10, 1993 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Where is the best place for KU students to receive legal advice? Where it's free! Legal Services for Students 148 Burge • 864-5665 STUDENT THE UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND SENATE Camera America ONE HOUR PHOTO We Process E-6 Slide Film In Only 3 Hours!!! 1610 West 23rd Street 841-7205 NATURAL WAY - 820-822 Mass St. Drainage could cause problems Nancy Shontz, a former City Commissioner, is worried that houses are being built where streams and drainage used to be, and that could cause unexpected flooding. By Tracl Carl Kansan staff writer Shontz advised the commission to pay close attention to the problems drainage may create as the commission considered three development plans. The commission accepted the three plans. "Drainage ways exist and they are not being studied with adequate reference to what problems are going to occur," she said at last night's commission meeting. The residential development plans were a 19-acre subdivision north of Peterson Road and west of North Iowa Street; a 22-acre subdivision south of Clinton Parkway and west of Inverness Drive; and an almost 19-acre subdivision south of Clinton Parkway and east of Wakarusa Drive Mike Stultz was the developer who owned the properties. Shontz said that development plans do not usually make drainage a priority, and that developers often passed the cost of drainage on to taxpayers instead of paying the cost themselves. "You can make developers pay for improvements," she told the commission. Policy creation lacks involvement Many in the University community have expressed disappointment and even anger about the administration's method of creating the policy. Nancy Dahl, professor of biology and last year's Continued from Page 1. In September University Council formed a committee of students and faculty to examine controversial aspects of the policy, including its scope and the effectiveness. itation could act alone or make policy. "The administration goes to a lot of different groups to receive recommendations on policy," Meyen said. "There are not many occasions that a recommendation comes from governance that the chancellor does not recommend." istration could act alone on making policy. "I was appalled on how cavalier they were on deciding what was a faculty code violation," Dahl said. "The chancellor doesn't initiate these things. The faculty does." chair of the Senate Executive Committee, said she objected to the administrations revisions of the faculty code of conduct. "It probably would have been better if the administration had announced this as a preliminary policy," Friauf said. "With the policy that's presently been announced by the administration, it doesn't necessarily have faculty and student support." Bob Friedau, professor of astronomy and physics and chair of University Council, said Council members had felt frustration for not being consulted on the policy. A smart, easy way meet people in a sophisticated, safe and confidential manner. Here's how it works... Classification: 1-Men Seeking Men 2-Men Seeking Men 3-Men Seeking Men 4-Women Seeking Women To place an ad: 5-Friends Seeking Friends 6-Seeking Sports Interest 7-Mutual Hobbies 8-Shared Religion. 1. Call or come by the Kansan at 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, 864-4358. 2. You'll place an ad in the Jaytait Meeting Network section of the Kansan and call a free 800-number to record a voice message for people to listen to your ad. 3. After your ad runs in the Kansan, you call a free 800-number to listen to the messages you receive. 4. You choose the people you want to meet and set up a time and place. 2. Call 1-900-285-4560 (you need a touch-tone phone) and listen to the message. The charge is $1.95 per minute. 3. If you like what you hear, leave a message of your own so the two of you can set up a meeting. To check out an ad: 1. Read the ads in the Jaytalk Meeting Network on the back page of the Kansan. **LINES for** DAYS AB SQUATUTLY FREE! CALL 864-4358 TODAY TO PLACE AN AD FOR ON TOUR: Wednesday, November 10 The Bottleneck Tune in to KJHK 90.7 for giveaways and interviews! Streetside Records 1403 W. 23rd Street