University Daily Kansan, September 26, 1983 Page 5 Bedlam continued from p. 1 "We didn't want to plan anything dementia, because when we do that things have a tendency to happen." When the outcome of the game was decided, he said, Jim Barnes, the assistant director of bands, called the local radio stations to get word of meeting time to the members. "From there it was just word of mouth to get them here," Foster said. Choruses of the Rock Chalk chants united the crowd in between strains of Jayhawk fight sights. "WE WON. We've got to celebrate tonight," caste Wiltanger, Olathe freshman, said. "We're in a big league." Other reasons brought people to meet the team buses, besides cheering the team for a job well done. A representative from Pyramid Pizza and Deli, 507 W. 14th St., arrived with two large pizzas for two KU players: one for quarterback Frank Seurer Jr. and the other for kicker Bruce Kallmeyer. On the top of each box was written the final score of the game. One group showed up in tuxedos and long dresses and looked as if they had just come from a wedding. In fact, Terri Webster and Kirk Wiesner, 3232 Iowa, had been married just a few years before she was in welcome to the team back to Lawrence. WEBSTER SAID that the time of her wedding was scheduled to begin after the wedding party listened to the game. The particular interest in the game was because her brother, Craig Levra, was an equipment manager for the team and a member of the wedding. So the wedding party came to him. an exciting game. We were all estatic. We planned on coming down here since hearing on the radio that there would be a rally. We're just supporters of the team." She also said the starting time of the wedding was arranged around the game because the officiator, Homer D. "Buten" Henderson, pastor of the Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont St., was also particularly interested in the game. His son Mark plays for the Jawhaws. Shortly after midnight, enough people lined 15th Street east and west that police stopped traffic. Fans filled the street in front of the building, where hundreds of neighboring fraternity and sorority houses Tom Kelly, Western Springs, III. sophomore, said he also came to the rally to support the team Mary Tilton, Wichita sophomore, said, "It was Kristen Tomlinson-McParland, Topeka junior, said she came to the rally to support the team because she had a special tie to KU. She also helped lead the marathon quarterback and center for KU from 1953 to 1954. A STAUNCH KU FAN, Mike Davis, Colorado Springs, Colo., senior, said he was glad to see such a good turnout of the student body at the rally. "It's unbelievable," he said. "It's great the way the team came back and played today. "I'm glad for the defense and for Seurer." Davis said, "You've got to give the defense credit for the way they played. It was fourth and fifth in the league, but we were a good body right. That was just a great defensive play." when we get beat by Nebraska and Oklahoma. You have to stick with the team as it progresses. The team has worked hard in the summer and spring, and it takes courage to stand up to a team like USC when things have not been going your way." Davis also said, "A true fan waits with the program. You have to sit through the games IN THE BACKGROUND, the band played the alma mater as the rain came down. It did not dampen the spirits of those gathered, though, as they sang along. The sheet lightning in the sky was like a spotlight on the entire event. David Robin, Kalamazoo, Mich., graduate student, said he came to the rally because he thought it was good to reinforce the team when it did something good. "This is the most enthusiasm I've seen since coming to graduate school here," he said. "It is like big-time football again. This win may be just what they need." Loud cheers rang out in unison again when the announcement came that the team buses had just gotten off the Interstate 70 turnipwere headed toward campus. The team was almost an hour late, but the loyal fans waited to cheer the people that had conquered the Trojans. MOTHER NATURE'S spotlight on the event grew intense as the team neared Jahywah Towers. The rain came down harder, but the group of people surged toward the approaching buses. Mother Nature had a heart, though, as the team exited the bus, the rain stopped. The street and parking lot were so crowded that the players were in panic. They waited for the sidewalk and back up to the main entrance. Acknowledgment from the players to the Jayhawk chant and hand claps brought even louder cheers from the fans. The players acknowledged the crowd and cheers with raised hands, high fives and handshakes as they made their way to the main entrance. Cheers rang out for the two Huntington Beach, Calit, natives, Seurer and Kerwin Bell Running back Robert Mimbs carried a sign made for him with his name and jersey number. "IT'S HISTORY when you beat a ranked team," Angela Thomas, Leavenworth junior said. "We've got to support the team somehow." Mideast U. S. Ambassador Robert Dillon said the truce agreement called for restraint in the hours before the weapons were officially silenced, the final barrages poured the U.S. Marine base One Marine was slightly wounded yesterday by artillery attacks and continuing rocket fire kept U.S. forces on maximum alert throughout the evening Two other Marines were injured earlier in the day in fighting with the Shite Moslem militia surrounding their base. One was wounded by shrank and one by a sniper's bullet. A statement read on official Berut radio after Wizman's speech said the cease-fire would take effect. IT APPLIED TO the mountain fighting involving the Druse militiamen as well as the revolt by the Shite militia in the southern suburbs adjoining the Marines' position. All warring factions were mentioned in the agreement, and the official statement called for the withdrawal. President Amin Gemayel earlier in the day told U.N. Secretary General Javier Perez de Cuellar that "we would need U.N. observers at the event to check the effectiveness of the cease-fire." Gemayel is to immediately call for a meeting of representatives of all Lebanon's deeply divided religious secrecs to discuss the future relationship between Saudi Arabia and Syria are to provide observers. Addressing one of the key problems facing a nation that has known war for eight years, the president said Monday that "we have no future." tate' the return of all refugees since 1975 to their original homes; THE AGREEMENT was announced after a new round of talks in Damascus between a Saudi mediator, Prince Bandaid Bin Sultan, Syrian President Abdelaziz Khaddam and Drusse leader Waalid Jumblatt. A cease-fire scheduled to take effect at 9.30 p.m. (2:30 p.m. CDT) yesterday was "totally ineffective," in the words of senior Gemayel aide Glassam Tuni. The evening cease-fire deadline was followed by a bombardment of the Lebanese army base at Souk El Gharb, a strategic Shouf Mountain town overlooking Beirut. The first news of the cease-fire announcement came from National Security Adviser William Cain. THE MED-CARDS, which are being made by Med-Card systems, Birmingham, Ala., generally would sell for $2. But Lawrence Memorial is also selling that area residents can buy cards for $1 apiece. The vials are put in the refrigerator because it is a universal storage place and because refrigerators usually survive disasters such as fires and tornadoes. Judith Hefley, Lawrence Memorial director of community relations, said the hospital had been working on starting a medical card system for several months. The program is designed to provide more information for emergency workers who respond to a household accident. The programmes aimed primarily at the elderly. St., encouraging people to buy Med-Cards. Hefley said hospital officials hoped to have 10,000 children vaccinated by the end of 2017. In October, hospital workers and volunteers will be downtown and at Wal-Mart. 2727 Iowa Hospital volunteers are planning a distribution drive for the vivals for the end of October. They hope to distribute 5,000 vials in the next few days and to make distribution an ongoing project Pettv THE MAIN attraction at Saturday's open house was the Military Assistance to Safety and Traffic (M"A*S"T) helicopter from Fort Riley. The helicopter ambulance service covers a 100-mile radius around Fort Riley, which includes Lawrence. continued from p. 1 continued from p. 1 Hospital want," she said. "Some people do shoplift out of necessity. But I can't believe the majority of people shoplift because they don't have money." Harmon also said that some people shoplifted "on a lark." Lee Rader, a Lawrence probation officer, agreed. "They do it to it if they can get away with it," she said. "It's a game, a challenge." Danny Iraheta, an army emergency medical technician who is assigned to M*A*S*T*, said the Army had seven helicopters available to aid in rescue missions. He said he was able to ride at 136 mph and can carry six injured passengers. AND STRYKER said she thought that the apples were stolen from her home not by a transient but by neighborhood children "out of boredom." "You could tell by the way that the entry was made that they were unfamiliar with breaking a code." Harmon said that no one thing would completely shopilliping or petty larceny. "it's a problem we're going to have even in good economic times," he said. good economic times, he said. Statistics tend to prove Harmon's point. During the first seven months of this year, 97 more cases of larceny were reported to the Lawrence Police Department than during the previous year. 334 compared with 1,337, a 7.8 percent increase. Harmon said that to deter shoplifting in his store, he posted signs that warned people that theft was not tolerated. THE WARNINGS do not deter everyone. Last week a 21-year-old was arrested for stealing a 93-cent package of cigarettes from Harmon's store. Rader suggested that prevention could begin with the schools, with former shoplifters being invited "to talk about how shoplifting is not so But Harmon said he did not rely on signs only. "I find the best deterrent is to greet the customers, to let the potential shoplifter know you know they are there," he said. "They'll start ordering and picking up items, thenweise, they'll think, 'This place is a pusher.'" cool, to talk about what happens when someone is caught shoilifting." Rader suggested this because, she said, many times young people don't consider the consequences of their actions. "WE SHOULD try to make the kids stop thinking of the store as an impersonal thing," she said. "We should try to make them think of what could feel if someone stole something from them." Cobb suggested that if the consequences for shoplifting were made more stringent by the law, they would be less likely to occur. "What happens is that they are fined for twice the value of the item they stole, and then they do community service work to pay off the fine. They would make them come up with an arm and a leg." "They should make the punishment stricter, stop slapping their wrists and making them pay more." Soviets to hand over jet items today By United Press International OTARU, Japan — An unarmed patrol boat carrying a U.S. Japanese delegation arrived at Sakhalin Island early today for a rendezvous with Soviet officials to pick up material retrieved from the wrecked South Korean airliner. Meanwhile, President Reagan denounced the Soviet attack on Korean Air Lines flight 007 in a message to delegates at a world conference of travel agents in Seoul, South Korea. Reagan urged the delegates to encourage global tourism despite the "barbariac act." The message was read to the members of the American Society of Travel Agents by Richard Waugh. The seven-man delegation left Otaru in western Hokkado yesterday on the 207 mile voyage north to Nevelsk, a small port in southwestern Sakhalin, where the Soviets will hand over the unidentified cargo early today. "We have asked them the Soviets) many times. But they have not told us what they (the objects and documents) are," said Lynn Pascoe, deputy director of the State Department's Soviet Affairs. Pascoe heads the three-man U.S. mission. Stormy weather in the northern Japan Sea yesterday virtually halted a search for the crucial 'black box' containing data and audio voice recordings of the South Korean flight. "The sea is rough up there and most Soviet salvage ships have put to port in Sakhaïn," said Tashi Kawaguchi, chief of rescue operations at Otaru. The Pladium Sept. 27 Steve Walsh & The Streets Opening Act The Clique Doors Open 6:30 The Clique will start 8:00 Tickets $7 General Admission 7