10 Monday, January 29, 1990 / University Daily Kansan ATTENTION ALL NEW K.U. STUDENTS FALL `89-SPRING` 90 ON LAWRENCE CAMPUS Many new students have failed to document their immunizations with Watkins Health Center. All new students $ ^{*} $ are required to provide documentation of the mandatory immunizations to Watkins Health Center by March 2,1990. Failure to do so will result in a hold placed on the student's permit to enroll and they will be unable to enroll for the fall semester until the hold is removed. MANDATORY IMMUNIZATIONS MANDATORY IMMUNIZATIONS MMR {measles, mumps, rubella} -received after 12 months of age RECOMMENDED IMMUNIZATIONS - Tetanus-Diptheria booster within last 10 years -Polio -basic series [usually completed prior to entry into elementary school] Immunizations are available at Watkins Health Center on a walk-in basis: Monday Friday, 8 A.M.-4:30 P.M. at no charge to Lawrence Campus students. *Students born before 1957 are exempt. Halls to increase awareness By Christine Reinolds Kenneen staff writer Starting today, KU students will have a chance to become more familiar with scholarship halls during Scholarship Hall Week. Kansan staff writer Although slightly hidden and sometimes hard to find, each of the eight halls house 50 students who play in a cooperative environment "The main reason for scholarship week is to let the average student get to know more about the scholarship hall," said Shan Schwartz, coordinator of the event. Display cases containing information about the halls will be in the Kansas Union and at bus stops during the week. If students want to tour the scholarship halls, they can stop by any time during the day. Schwartz said, There are four men's and four women's scholarship halls. The residents are responsible for general cleaning and upkeep of the halls. Hall activities include study skills workshops, concerts, theater productions, international dinners and intramural sports. Residents pay $208 a month in every hall except Wattins Scholarship Hall, 1506 Lilac Lane, and Miller Scholarship Hall, 1518 Lilac Lane, where residents share kitchenettes with roommates and buy their own food. Miller and Watkins hall residents pay $66 a month. Students are required to maintain a 2.5 grade point average. This requirement is not a problem because hall residents average a GPA of 3.0, said Cheryl Triola, Watkins director. "People who live in the scholarship halls aren't all super intelligent, they are just people who happen to live here because it is affordable and convenient," Triola said. Triola said Scholarship Halls Week would increase student awareness of the halls. "I know a lot of people who don't even know where they are or that they even exist," she said. Names of halls represent the past By Christine Reinolds Kansan staff writer Each of KU's eight scholarship halls are named after their benefactors. Although their names are familiar, few people know much about the people behind these names. Don Alderson, who died in 1981, was the dean of student services. He compiled a history of the benevolent college's scholarship and residence halls. hall bearing his name opened its doors in 1940. J. R. Battenfeld and his wife donated money to build Battenfeld Scholarship Hall, 1425 Alumni Place, in memory of their son, John Curry Battenfeld. The younger Battenfeld was a KU junior who was fatally injured in an auto accident in 1939. The scholarship Lelia Douthart, a teacher at Wyatothet High School, Kansas City, Kan., graduated from KU in 1889. Douthart and her sister, Ava Douthart Chronister, both willed money to the Kansas University Endowment Association. Douthart Scholarship Hall, 1345 Louisiana St., is named after the sisters. It opened in 1954. Watkins Scholarship Hall, 1560 Lilac Lane, and Miller Scholarship Hall, 1518 Lilac Lane, were established by R. B. and Elizabeth Miller Watkins. Watkins, which was built in 1926, is the oldest scholarship hall at KU. As a result of the success of this first hall, Miller was built in At the 1945 graduation ceremony, Joseph R. and Gertrude Sellars Pearson donated $201,000 for housing, Pearson Scholarship Hall, 1425 Alumni Place, and Sellars Scholarship Hall, 1443 Alumni Place, opened in 1951, bearing their benefactors' names. 1937. After Elizabeth Watkins' death, the Watkins' house was donated to KU to be used as the residence of future chancellors Stephenson Scholarship Hall, 1404 Alumni Place, was financed by a donation from Grace Stephen- son and her late husband, Lyve Stephenson Stephenson was a Kansas City insurance executive who was known for his advertising slogan, "Leave it to Lyle." Stephan is candidate for fourth term The Associated Press Stephan said. TOPEKA — Robert Stephan, who already has been in the office of Kansas attorney general nearly three times as long as anyone in state history, formally declared his candidacy. Saturday for Republican renomination to a fourth four-year term. Stephan made his announcement at a meeting of the Republican State Committee. "As with any worthwhile endeavor, there are thorns that lie in the path, but laughter and friends and well-meant critics and accomplishments far outweigh any negatives," He apparently referred to personal problems that have befallen him since he won a third term in 1986, including a $200,000 judgment against him in federal court in a breach-of-contract suit; filing for bankruptcy because he could not pay the judgment; an ethics complaint filed against Mr. Johnson at Kansas Bureau of Investigation Director Dave Johnson, his appointee, for telling what some considered a racist joke. "The past is done and can be used for learning but cannot be changed." Stephan said. "And so, to the future." Despite his personal problems, Stephan remains popular with Republicans and appears to have no challenge in the August primary as he goes for his fourth term. No Democrat has declared for the office so far. However, Democratic State Chairman Jim Parrish of Topeka said Saturday that he believed his party would field a strong opponent for Stephan. One possible candidate is state Racing Commissioner Bert Cantwell of Kansas City, Kan., an attorney and former superintendent of the Kansas Highway Patrol. Why SAC'S ? SPECIALS U CLOSURES To save on namebrand specials and close-outs. Where is SAC'S? Next to Food-4-Less in Lawrence. What is SAC'S? Prices from another dimension. 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