Section B · Page 6 The University Daily Kansas Tuesday, February 24, 1998 Over the years Fifi's has established themselves as the finest eating establishment in the Lawrence area. Reasonable prices and remarkable cuisine has made Fifi's the ultimate dining choice for the college student. 841-7226 good beating. PRECISION POWER AMPS ROCKFORD FOSGATE SUB WOOFERS JL AUDIO SUBWOOFERS Let us give it to you. 23rd & Louisiana UNIVERSITY AUDIO 841·3775 K-State's Dies, Bishop arrested MANHATTAN, Kan. Kansas State's star quarterback Michael Bishop and standout basketball player Manny Dies were arrested after separate weekend incidents, one in connection with a brawl that sent three men to the hospital and Associated Press ANHATTAAN Kop Dies: Will face disciplinary action by K-State coach. No formal charges had been filed yesterday, said Bill Kennedy, Riley County attorney. the other involving marijuana. Bishop, 21, was arrested because he was suspected of committing aggravated battery and battery after a fight in Aggieville, Manhattan's bar district. One person suffered a broken tooth and another had a facial wound that required 38 stitches. A few blocks away, basketball player Manny Dies, 20, was arrested after police stopped his car and allegedly found marijuana, alcohol and related items, police said. They said he was arrested on suspicion of possessing marijuana, drug paraphernalia, transporting an open container of alcohol and obstruction of the legal process. Riley County Police released both men Sunday, Bishop on $3,000 bond and Dies on $1,500 bond. "The personal involvement of Manny Dies, if any, in illegal activities is currently under close consideration and may need further investigation." Kansas State basketball coach Tom Asbury said in a news release. "Manny will be disciplined for his lapse in judgment. Even if it's eventually established that he had absolutely no knowledge of illegal activity. I must still impose discipline." He said Dies still was practicing with the team. Asbury will announce his lineup today for tomorrow's home game against Texas A&M. Asbury said the disciplinary action would be kept confidential and that he would not comment further. football coach Tom Snyder, who is out of the country, was aware of Bishop's arrest, said Kansas State representative Kent Brown. Brown said Snyder and the school would not comment until their own investigation was finished. Police stopped Dies' car after they spotted a passenger drinking what appeared to be beer, said Alvin Johnson, director of the Riley County Police Department. Dies' car stopped once and then apparently drove off when a police officer instructed Dies to move out of traffic, Johnson said. The car traveled a few blocks before it was stopped by campus police. A passenger in Dies' car also was arrested on suspicion of possessing marijuana, drug paraphernalia and open container of liquor. Just hours before, Dies had been on the basketball court playing for the Wildcats in a losing effort against Oklahoma State. Police said more arrests were likely in the brawl involving Bishop. In Bishop's arrest, police said they responded to a call of a fight and found three people with cuts on their faces. All three were treated at a hospital and released Sunday. Bishop, a junior, led his team last season to an 11-1 record, pushing the Wildcats into the top 10. Their only loss was to then-No. 1 Nebraska. Dies has been a powerhouse for the Wildcats on the basketball court, averaging 16.3 points. Dies pleaded guilty in November to a misdemeanor charge of criminal property damage after he and another player, Pero Vasiljevic, kicked in the apartment door of a columnist for the Kansas State student newspaper. The columns," Todd Stewart, had written two columns criticizing Dies, including one in which he called Dies the worst player in the history of college basketball. AP TOP 25 The top 25 teams in The Associated Press' men's basketball poll, with first-place votes in parentheses, records through Sunday, total points based on 25 points for a first-place vote through one point for a 25th-place vote, and previous ranking: rank team rec pts pvs 1. Duke (42) 25-2 1,708 2 2. Arizona (19) 25-3 1,652 3 3. N. Carolina (6) 26-2 1,634 1 4. Kansas (3) 29-3 1,584 4 5. Utah 22-2 1,404 6 6. Connecticut 22-4 1,377 7 7. Kentucky 24-4 1,275 8 8. Stanford 24-3 1,225 10 9. Princeton 23-1 1,223 9 10. Michigan St. 20-5 991 14 11. Purdue 22-6 919 5 12. Arkansas 22-5 882 16 13. Mississippi 19-5 871 15 14. S. Carolina 20-5 794 13 15. Texas Christian 24-4 781 19 16. New Mexico 21-4 756 11 17. Cincinnati 21-5 670 17 18. UCLA 20-6 650 12 19. W. Virginia 22-5 497 20 20. Massachusetts 20-7 340 18 21. Michigan 19-8 332 22 22. Illinois 20-8 237 23 23. Syracuse 17-0 170 21 24. Temple 19-6 117 — 25. Oklahoma St. 20-4 111 — Others receiving votes: St John's 108, Maryland 66, Tennessee 82, Xavier 69, Rhode Island 43, Murray St. 38, Detroit 32, George Washington 24, New Mexico St. 16, Nebraska St. 17, South Carolina St. 31, Long Island U. 3, Georgia Tech 2, Indiana 2, Iowa 2, Maryland 2, Pacific 2, Dayton 1, Gonzaga 1, Hawaii 1, Miami 1, Oklahoma 1, Michigan 1 The top 25 teams in the USA Today-ESPN college basketball poll, with first-place votes in parentheses, records through Sunday, total points based on 25 points for a first-place vote through one point for a 25th-place vote, and previous ranking: ESPN/USA TODAY TOP 25 | team | rec-2 | pts | pts | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | 1. Duke (28) | 252 | 748 | 2 | | 2. Arizona (2) | 24-3 | 700 | 3 | | 3. N. Carolina | 26-2 | 695 | 1 | | 4. Kansas | 29-3 | 676 | 4 | | 5. Utah | 22-2 | 613 | 5 | | 6. Connecticut | 24-4 | 599 | 7 | | 7. Princeton | 23-1 | 537 | 8 | | 8. Kentucky | 24-4 | 535 | 10 | | 9. Stanford | 23-3 | 496 | 11 | | 10. Purdue | 22-6 | 431 | 6 | | 11. S. Carolina | 20-5 | 409 | 13 | | 12. Michigan St. | 20-5 | 397 | 15 | | 13. Mississippi | 19-5 | 373 | 14 | | 14. Arkansas | 22-5 | 340 | 16 | | 15. New Mexico | 21-4 | 309 | 9 | | 16. UCLA | 20-6 | 308 | 12 | | 17. Cincinnati | 21-5 | 304 | 18 | | 18. Texas Christian | 24-4 | 263 | 22 | | 19. W. Virginia | 22-5 | 208 | 19 | | 20. Massachusetts | 20-7 | 179 | 20 | | 21. Michigan | 19-8 | 155 | 21 | | 22. Syracuse | 20-6 | 122 | 17 | | 23. Illinois | 20-8 | 61 | — | | 24. Xavier | 18-6 | 53 | 24 | | 25. Maryland | 16-9 | 40 | — | Others receiving votes: George Washington 36, Oklahoma State 24, Pacific 18, Rhode Island 16, St. John's 16, Temple 15, Murray St. 13, Iona 10, Tennessee 10, N.C. Charlotte 8, Iowa 1, Utah St. 6, Gonzaga 4, W.Michigan 4, Dayton 3, Ball St. 2, Minnesota 4, Arizona 2, Wyoming 2, Akronas 7, Detroit 1, Detroit 1. Hoosiers' coach, team surprised about loss The Associated Press BLOOMINGTON, Ind. — The loss was so thorough, even Bob Knight was baffled. "You know, it's ... I don't know, I wish I could figure it out," Knight said after Michigan's 112-64 rout of Indiana, the second-worst defeat in his 27 years at Indiana. Andrae Patterson, who had strong second halves against Purdue and Northwestern, missed all seven shots he took in the first half and rode the bench in the final period. A. J. Guyton, the team's leading scorer for the season, hit two three-pointers during the first half. Freshman Luke Recker, second in scoring, had only 10 points. By halftime, Michigan led 54-25, and the Hoosiers just went through the motions the rest of the way. The result was a 66-point turnaround from the teams' first meeting, which Indiana won 80-62. But it was a different Michigan team that showed up Sunday. "The thing that really hurt us was a combination of our not paying attention to defensive conversion and Michigan really going at the offensive end of the floor to start with." Knight said. "That got things going in the absolute wrong direction for us and certainly the right direction for them." Indiana (18,8, 9-5 Big Ten) is tied with Michigan for fourth place in the conference with two games to go before the inaugural Big Ten tournament in Chicago next month. CELLULAR ONE COMMUNICATIONS 3115 W. 6th Suite A 3115 W. 6th Suite A 331-3877 or Toll Free 1-886-865-8969 PRE-PAID CELLULAR - NO CREDIT CHECKS! - NO CONTRACTS! $90⁰⁰ INCLUDES PHONE, ACTIVATION & AIRTIME OFFER EXP. 2/28/98 CERTAIN RESTRICTIONS APPLY PAGERS $19.95 Limited Supply Student Union Activities is the student programming organization of the University responsible for providing more than 300 programs each year in the areas of film, lecture, live music, art exhibits, recreation and travel, public relations and special events. The organization is funded and supported by the Kansas and Burge Unions with an annual operating budget of almost $500,000. The students who are selected to serve as SUA Board members are awarded $1,000 academic scholarships and receive extensive leadership training in budgeting, advertising, program production, committee recruitment and supervision, negotiating, time management, and delegation. We are looking for high-energy students who are creative, self-motivated, enthusiastic, reliable and like to dream. VICE PRESIDENT FOR ALUMNI RELATIONS: Maintains communication with SUA alumni • initiates and monitors fundraising and cosponsorships • oversees the alumni newsletter • maintains the SUA alumni database and scrapbook • voting member of KU Memorial Corporation Board and Development Committee • attends weekly Executive and SUA Board meetings • maintains 20 office hours per week. 1998-1999 OFFICER SELECTIONS