Page 6 University Daily Kansan, July 14, 1980 Heat . . . from page one spiration is the body's cooling system, the body temperature of heat stroke victims begins to drop as the body temperature as 110 degrees. Both Berthelson and Hope said that when this happened the chance for recovery was slim. Ice baths and evaporative cooling are most common methods used to combat heat stroke. According to Don Wilcox, director of the Bureau of Epidemiology at the Kansas Department of Health and Environment, with heat exhaustion, common among young people, the body actually over-perspires, causing the loss of important minerals. This results in headaches, confusion, loss of appetite and possible cirrhosis. During heat exhaustion the body must be cooled down before fluids replaced. Medical officials recommend water or juices with salt added, or Gatorade. HEAT CRAMPS, a localized condition involving the abdominal and skeletal muscles, are caused by excessive perspiration and mineral loss. Hope said anyone in the sun too long could be affected. The hand massage of the cramped hands is the spasm. Body fluids must also be replaced. With heat cramps, as with heat exhaustion, a heat stroke victim has warm, dve body clammy. A heat stroke victim has warm, dve body clammy. Illness due to the high temperatures can be avoided. Wilcox said, "The main thing to do is try to not have to go outside, don't have to go outside, then don't be outside." Wilcox said other ways to beat the heat included eating lightly with more meals but less food at each meal; wearing light colored clothes, preferably cotton, and avoiding nylon and polyester; wearing a hat to protect the brain from the heat of the sun and avoiding alcohol. HOPE SAID alcohol countermands the body's attempts to maintain the blood flow to the vital organs. He said that during the heat wave, people should drink water. fruit juice or Gatorade. When alcohol enters the system, it tends to constrict the blood vessels, negating the constriction of the heart. He explained, in the case of heat exhaustion, the body heats up and there is a shift in the blood pressure. The change is caused by circulation to the vital organs, the heart and brain, is disrupted because of an increased blood flow to the extremities. The capillaries in the exertive muscles stimulate for the blood not going to the vital organs. Both Hope and Wilcox said that high temperatures should be taken into consideration when exercising, because the body's recovery potential is not the same as when the temperature is 80% and 90%. It takes longer for the heart rate to return to normal and the body to cool down. Gura, Royals beat Orioles 5-1; McRae gets 2 doubles, 2 RBI BALTIMORE(UPI)—Hal McRae drove in two runs with a single and a pair of doubles Sunday to lead the Kansas City Royals to a 5-1 victory over the Baltimore Orioles. The Royals collected 14 hits to back Larry Gura, 11-4, who allowed seven hits. M McRae's third-inning double scored Willie Wilson and George Grett and gave the Royals a 3-4 lead. McRae singled, stole two and scored on Frank White's second-inning single and White doubled in the fourth and scored on a single by Rusty Torres. Brett drove in Wilson with a double in the eighth for the Royals' final run. Baltimore scored in the fourth. Ken Singleton, Eddie Murray and Benny Ayala signed to load the bases and Rick Dempsey delivered a three-pointer before Javon Lauderdaleasted three and a third jumps and took the loss. Late in the game, an unidentified man caused concern when he climbed to the top of a light pole in Baltimore's Memorial Stadium. Perched on the left field light tower, in back of the left field bleachers, the man climbed down when Baltimore City Police surrounded the pole. The man was taken to police headquarters, but was not charged. Police would not release the man. Athletes compete for NFL as training camps kick off As National Football League training camps open across the country this week, five members of last year's KU football team will get a chance to play against headings in the world of professional football. Bv TOM GRESS Staff Reporter The five, Kirby Criswell, Leroy Irvin, Mike Hubach, Jim Zidd and Lloyd Sobeck, were draft last May in the NFL college player draft. According to KU head football coach Don Fambrough, Criswell and Irvin rate as the best bets to make it through the squads cut and be around when the NLicks kick off its regular season Aug. 31. "I think Kirby and Leroy probably have the best chances to make their teams," Fambrough said last week. "The other three will need some help." There are always a lot of surprises in these camps. Criswell was an All-Big Eight honorable mention at defensive end last season, after spending his sophomore and junior seasons as a star. Criswell has been the best thing to happen to Criswell. Criswell agreed. "I went to tight end because it gave me a chance to play, but defense is more to my liking." Criswell said. "I feel comfortable there." Criswell has no illusions about the Cincinnati Bengals training camp, which opens Friday in Wilmington, Ohio. He summed up what he expects the camp to be like in two words. "I'm looking forward to getting back into it, playing football again," he added, "but it will be really different hitting against professionals. And the coaches won't be too easy either." "I think I'm as good as anybody physically, but it will be the mental part of the game that will be different," Criswell said. "Learning to play is the most difficult part about the pros." "He's not moody, he's a happy go-luck kind of guy," Farnham said. "Sometimes that the bad guys are in charge." A FACTOR in Criswell's favor, Fambrough said, is his personality. person might worry about a mistake, Kirby just goes on to the next play." The other player Fambrough gives a better than average shot at making it, Irvin, was chosen by the Los Angeles Rams. He was KU's free safety and lead tackler the last three years, but will have his work cut out to earn a job in the Rams' secondary. Los Angeles' defensive backfield includes all-airlops like Dave Eldendorf and Rod Perry plus veterans Pat Thomas and former KU star Nolan Cromwell. Lerov Irvin **IRVIN WILL** have to count on his ability to return kicks and punts, Fambrough said. He led the Big Eight in punt returns, averaging over 11 skill times, but he thinks this skill may be Irvin's ticket to the NFL. "His best shot is to become a picknick and kickoff return, then击入 as on a fifth defensive back," he added. Punter Mike Hubach handled both the place kicking and扑打 tasks for the Jayhawks last season and was named All-Big Eight as a punter. He was drafted by the New England Patriots. "As a field goal kicker he's too inconsistent," Fambrough said. "It's tough to do both, and we might have fouled him up trying to have him do both." But Fambrough said Habuch had to have a good shot at the Patrons' punting job. Rookie Eddie Hare averaged a medicaire 98.6 yards per round. He also hit Hubach. Hubach led the Big Eight with 42.6 average. THE LAST TWO Jayhawks selected-Zidd by Kirby Criswell the Cleveland Browns and Sobek by the Buffalo wolves. 2dd is a linebacker and Sobek is a tight end. "Zidd's biggest problem will be lack of speed." Fambrough said. "He's very physical and is a very intelligent football player, but he lacks speed. "Sobek's really an unknown," Fambrough said. "He's had a lot of illness and that makes him a question mark but he's got the physical tools." KU's only black policeman weathered prejudice Staff Reporter By SUSANA NAMNUM But he is quick to say that he patrolled unscathed through the violent campus political demonstrations a decade ago that sent many police cars to the body shop. "I guess sometimes prejudice works the other way," LL. Waldo Monroe said. A 15-year veteran of the campus police, Macro contends that a policeman's race "misunderstands" his job. Morroe, who sports a dapper gray moustache, said last week he never thought 'be'd a moustache.' BEFORE JOINING the Douglas County Sheriff's Department in 1958, the 56-year-old Lawrence native had been a musician, a barber and a factory worker. "I joined the sherif's department because they wouldn't quit asking me," he said. His acceptance led to an eight-year stint with the sheriff's department—first as a dispatcher, then as a deputy—during which time his qualms about to police work dwindled. 'I never once was forced to use my night stick or my pistol," said Monroe, who had previously worked for seven years at the Sunflower Munitions plant in Lawrence during World War II. It was on amateur music nights at the Sunflower plant that Monroe discovered he had a way with a guitar, a song and an audience. He learned how to play and contests and turned down an offer to travel to Memphis as part of an aspiring three-piece professional band. MONROE HAS NOT GIVEN up music altogether. He finds time to strum and sing at church and when he and his friends are "clawing around" at occasional am趴 sessions. On Satdays he cuts hair at his east Lawrence barber shop, which, he said, was spared on a violent spring night a decade ago by angry young neighborhood rioters. "We sat in out front of the barber shop all night, just waiting, while the police cars kept driving by," Monroe said. "I think they never hurt my shop because a couple of the kids lived across the street from me and I'd known them since they were babies." During those troubled times in the early 1970s, the embattled Lawrence community turned to Lt. Waldo Monroe Monroe for advice restoring peace. He was invited to the East Hights Baptist Church to attend a service at the Monroe church. **WITH BIBLE IN hand he gave a sermon "straight from the Scriptures." He reminded his listeners that the rage of young bishops in east Asia was deeply rooted in years of discrimination.** On that occasion, Monroe's words were a mirror image of his own serenity, which is pierced only by bitter memories of racial discrimination in Lawrence. During the 1940s, Lawrence High School blacks weren't allowed to play football. Although track was integrated, basketball teams remained separate until the 1950-51 school year. Monroe, who played basketball for three years in high school, helped coach the last all-black basketball team in 1950. His younger brother was one of the players. Monroe recalled that his brother, a former Lawrence High School track star, was invited to join the KU indoor track team and go to college on a scholarship. "He was a quarter-miler and a fast one," Monroe said. "But when he showed up to get his equipment, they wouldn't even let him go out for track." But Monroe's bitterness is balanced by his almost biblical philosophy of life. "Jesus said you should love one another the way He loves you," he said in closing, ten years and a half later. MONROE SPECULATED that black KU students were "prijudged against my uniform," and therefore often shunned him on campus. Although Monroe said that racial prejudice always lurked in the background, he described himself as a campus policeman as enjoyable and rewarding. He remembers one episode with particular clarity. He responded to a call from a KU student's mother who warned that her son was about to kill himself. When he reached the student's dormitory room, the man was sitting at his arms with his cross arms and a pistol in his hand. MONROE SAID he felt as though he were walking on eggs. He coaxed and soothed the young man and finally managed to prevent a suicide. "It's been years of dealing with people and helping them," he said. "What could be better than that?" Time Out The Huddle Join us for our happy hour specials. $1.50 PITCHERS 5-8 Mon-Thurs. 3-6 Friday take TIME OUT 2408 JOWA 50* OFF ALL DRINKS 4-7 Mon-Thurs. ... 1/2 OFF ALL DRINKS 4-7 Friday THE HUDDLI 2408 IOWA The Music Man B by Amanda Wilson 6:00 pm Thursday, 10 Friday, 12 Saturday, 19 Sunday, 27 Hotel Paradiso By George Fredeau 8:00 p.m. Friday July 11 Saturday July 19 Thursday July 24 Sunday July 27 Luann Hampton Laverty Oberlander ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ B. Place Jones and The Fire Trinity 8:00 p.m. Saturday June 12 Thursday June 17 Wednesday June 23 July 10 Luann Hampton Laverty Oberlander The Music Man Hotel Paradiso By George Feydes 8:00 p.m. Friday, July 11 Saturday, July 19 Thursday, July 24 Sunday, July 27 By Mined-World 8:00 p.m. Thursday, June 10 Friday, July 14 Saturday, June 26 Sunday, June 30 Saturday, July 7 Franchised Dealer For: RALEIGH-PUCH-AUSTRO-DAIMLER CENTURION The Music Man Bee Mayer Winged 4:00 p.m. Friday, July 10 Friday, July 18 Saturday, July 26 2:30 p.m. Sunday, July 27 Luann Hampton Laverty Oberlander Hotel Paradiso By George Repso. 6:00 p.m. Friday, July 11 Saturday, July 18 Thursday, July 24 Sunday, July 27 By Presson Jones Part of the Texas Trinity Journal Saturday, july 11 Thursday, july 13 Wednesday, july 23 All performances will be held in the University Theatre/Murphy Hall Tickets go on sale Monday, June 9, in the Murphy Hall Box Office. The University of Kansas Kansas Repertory Theatre 1980 Summer Season For reservations, call 913/684-3982 All seats are general admission Public $3; ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ Public $3. KU Students with Summer ID Free Summer Season Coupons Are Available: $15 for six admissions Cheap Transportation Get around town with PUCH, the #1 moped. "WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?" "AND THAT ROCK WAS CHRIST!" The spirit of God tells us in the 11th chapter of *1st Corinthians* regarding the Angel of God that conducted Moses and the Children of Israel to the Promised Land. We are also told that some of the people were idolators and committed fornication, with the result that 23,000 life in one week were "tempted Christ" who was destroyed of the destruction. Psalms 2:1 and Acts 4:25 On the basis of the above we are safe in saying that it was Christ who appeared to Moses at the Burning Bush in the land of Midian where he was a shepherd, and sent him into Egypt to deliver the Promised Land. Moses objected and resisted the assignment to the point where God got angry with him and demanded that he go, promising "SURELY I WILL BE WITH YOU." AND WHEN YOU HAVE DELIVERED THE PROMPT, YOU SHALL WORSHIP ME HERE WE ARE TALKING Moses obeyed and went. After many signs and wonders, Moses led forth the people towards the Promised Land, and later they stopped and worshipped God at the place of The Burning Bush. It may have been in the neighborhood of this same place where Moses and Aaron ran into the same devilment and spirit of hell that is plagues our country and the world: demonstrators and strikers. Children telling their parents they should be raised; and they should teach them what would be taught: Servi- vants telling their Masters what they would do; possessors of their own property they will do and what they must pay, and devils raging against lawful and moral conduct. Is not that just the same spirit with which Moses was confronted in the demonstration and strike against his authority recorded in the 18th chapter of the Book of Numbers — Read and meditate upon it! Lord, all who preside over your command will promote this affair, and just about the entire nation approved of their action and gathered together for a great march on Moses headquarters. When the demonstrators and strikers got to Moses headquarters, God appeared on the scene and took over. The remainder of this article tells what happen when I am by reading the 18th chapter of the Book of Numbers. A sudden earthquake, the earth opened up, several families were displaced. It is likely that good weather affects, went down alive, into the pit. Next day, the people instead of repenting and seeking God's forgiveness, blamed Moses. As a result, about 100 people were killed. "Let us hear the conclusion of the whole matter: 'FEAR GOD AND KEEP HIS COMMANDMENTS. . .' P. O. BOX 405 DECATUR, GEORGIA 30031 The Empire Strikes Back Granada Downtown 843-5788 Eve: 7.00 and 9:45 Dady Matinees: 2:00 Varsity Downtown 843-1065 The Blues Brothers Starring John Belushi and Dan Ackeyd Eve. 7.30 and 9.30 Hillcrest 9th & Iowa 842-8400 1. Airplane Fax 7:30 and 9:15 2. Fame 7.10 and 9.35 3. Urban Cowboy Starring John Travolta 3. Urban Cowboy Starring John Travolta Eve, 7:15 and 8:40 Cinema Twin 31st & Iowa 842-6400 1. Herbie Goes Bananas New from Walt Disney Eve, 7:30 and 9:30 How to Beat The High Cost of **How to Beat the High Cost of** **Living** John Carter Jones, Jessica Lange, and Stuart James Eve 3.00 and 9.00 Sunset Hotel West 81st St 843-8172 Coal Miner's Daughter Plus Harper Valley PTA Harper Valley PTA Shows start at dusk 6 1 K1