P 6 Friday, February 17, 1989 / University Daily Kansan Help us make a Hoagie! List the makings of your favorite hoagie and if your sandwich is selected as the winner-your specialty will be added to the Family Affair Deli menu! Plus, you'll receive 12 free hoagies!! Bring this completed form in and receive a free yogurt! meats 1. ___ 2. ___ 3. ___ 4. ___ cheeses condiments 1. ___ 2. ___ 3. ___ 4. ___ 5. ___ 6. ___ 1. ___ 2. ___ 3. ___ 4. ___ Mon-Thurs 10 am-8 pm Fri & Sat 10 am-9 pm Sun closed 'till spring 6th & Kasold Westridge Mall 841-4363 Special assembly, ingredients & what makes this your favorite hoagie. I call this hoagie Regents discontinue program; students must finish by 1992 University allowed to change Med Center employee status by Thom Clark Kansan staff writer TOPEKA — The fate of KU's personnel administration major has been sealed. The Board of Regents voted unanimously yesterday to discontinue the program. The Regents also gave the University the authority to change classified employees, who work as health care professionals at the University of Kansas Medical Center, to unclassified employees, and received details about a new Regents center in Manhattan. In discontinuing the personnel administration program, the Regents followed recommendations from Chancellor Gene A. Budig and Del Brinkman, vice chancellor for academic affairs. adjudicate Brinkman told the Regents that the developments of psychology, sociology communications studies and political science had not indicated any interest in continuing the personnel administration program. James Drury, professor of political science and director of the undergraduate program, accepted the Regens decision. Regents decision. "I'm not bearing any malice at all," he said. "I feel the students are he administration helped. He also informed the Regents of University Council's resolution requesting the Regents to consider reopening the program if sufficient financial sources were located. Budig has ordered the program to be discontinued effective Monday. He said that all students currently enrolled in the program would have until the end of the spring semester 1992 to complete all requirements for the degree. hurt. They are the ones losing, in my book. I am sorry about the program not being continued. It opened a group of young people to government. Personnel administration exists in business and government and is of increasing importance." The Regents also approved the Med Center's request to change patient care workers from classified to a special form of unclassified employees. Dick Mann, University director of information resources, said the employees still would be eligible to receive the same benefits, including vacation time and overtime shift difference. He said there were critical vacancies involving nurses and other health care officials, and the option would allow the Med Center to be more competitive in the health care labor market and retain employees. "It (the decision) is being done for the extreme situation which addresses health care employment at the KU hospital," Mann said. Mann said the University might be adjusting salaries. Eugene Staples, vice chancellor for hospital administration at the Med Center, said the Med Center still was able to accommodate its patients, but areas such as respiratory therapy had 10 vacancies. had to vacate. Kay Clawson, executive vice chancellor for central administration at the Med Center, said it was in the best interest of the state to accept the proposal. "If we have to close units of the hospital because of a lack of faculty, (we eventually) will not have a Med Center," Clawson said. Center, Crawford. The Board was also informed about the Kansas Regents Educational Communication Center, scheduled to be built at Kansas State University in April. Mel Chastain, director of the center, said the center would be a complex of studios and laboratories dedicated to the task of distance education through telecommunications. Chastain said that 40 of the state's 304 secondary school systems currently had satellite receivers. The National Telecommunications Information Administration of Washington D.C. has provided funds for the new center during the past four years, Chastain said. four years. Evaluate the "They plan to expand and (utilize) the media to advance education in states." Chastain said. It will be summer before he knows whether the project will receive the full amount it requested this year from the administration, he said. Chastain said that if the project received the full $824,000 it requested, it would install receiver dishes at each Regents institution and public television station that served the state. Chastain also said that it would place dishes in another 40 schools throughout the state. The Regents also unanimously approved a lease agreement between KU and the Kansas University Endowment Association for a new 10,000 square-foot, one-story building at Campus. The building will house a core sample library for the Kansas Geological Survey. News footage causes trouble at S&L The Associated Press "We got a flood of phone calls, at least two dozen," said Jack Lloyd, vice president of Savings of America. "We told the right story and showed the wrong picture. We made a mistake, and we regret it," Colleen Dudgeon, WBBM news director said yesterday. "We ran a correction last night at 10 o'clock and will again at 5 today." "We got a look of pride at least two dozen," said Jack Lloyd, a vice president of Savings of America. CBS-owned WBBM mentioned debt-ridden First Savings of America in suburban Orland Park in a report on its 5 p.m. news Wednesday. But the videotape showed Savings of America, which is on the same street. CHICAGO — A TV news story about troubled savings and loan associations used footage of a healthy Chicago S&L, prompting a flurry of calls from worried depositors, officials said yesterday. Savings of America received "a lot of curious calls" said Lloyd. "The report was at 5 o'clock and we were open another two hours." Wried callers were told that a mistake had been made. "Some heard the other name and were confused because the names are very close. We tried to allay fears, and those that needed more convincing were given appointments," Lloyd said. "We had to mobilize overnight. The executives of the 17 branches in the Chicago area got together by phone," he said. "We wanted to address the financial information right away." financial information coming in Anxious depositors coming in yet- deray were shown a videotape of WBBM's retraction. They also were given the SKL's financial reports and copies of favorable newspaper articles, including one in USA Today that quoted a stock analyst as saying Savings of America was the best-managed thrift in the nation, Lloyd said. DENON AT DCD-61 ARE YOU SERIOUS ABOUT YOUR MUSIC? $299^{00} - Real-time D/A converter system - DC configuration audio amplifier circuits - High-precision deemphasis circuit - Pickup with newly developed floating suspension - Highly accurate 4-times oversampling digital filter - 6-digit flourescent (FC) display KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS AUDIO/VIDEO the CRAMOPHONE shop - Headphone jack - Timer Playback - Auto Edit and Auto Space functions *Bean Burritos *Bean Tostadas *Pintos & Cheese BEAN SALE! Everyday Prices effective everyday at both Taco Bell locations in Lawrence, Ks. 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