Vol. 99, No.19 (USPS-650-640) THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN PUBLISHED SINCE 1882 BY THE STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANNAS Thursday September 22,1988 Flag defaced in Korean riot against Games The Associated Press SEUOL, South Korea - Radical students hurled firebombs and rocks at riot police yesterday in a protest against Olympic flag during a protest near a soccer camp used by them. Olympic teams. Rt police blocked about 300 students when they tried to march out of Kyunghee University in Suwon, 25 miles south of Seoul. Protesters pelted the police with firebombs and rocks but did not break through the lines of troopers. The school is next to a soccer training camp used by some 350 teams (measures not appear to be in use at the time). "Oppose the dictator's Olympics!" the students shouted. Police said there were no arrests and no reports of injuries Gate便于招财到中庭 the school gate便是贴于中庭的墙面 the garden is soool. They are scrawled on the ground. The school street. Cement is then spread out. The students then attacked the troopers blocking the way with a stick and rocks for about 10 minutes. Police hurled back some rocks, but none. Not police are under orders not to use tear gas during the Olympics, especially near any of the Games facilities. The Games run through Radical students have mounted anti-olympic protests to demand the Games he shared with communist leaders in 1984 and divided Korean peninsula. The radicals also claim the Olympics are being used to cement authoritarian ties. Only a handful of hardliners have taken part in the protests and support for them has dwindled in recent days. Lansing prisoners redo KU furniture Bv Debbie McMahon Ann Weck's couch just got back from doing time at the Kansas State Pentientary at Lansing. Furniture in the office of Weck, the dean of social welfare who last hired last spring, was refinished and replaced with new furniture for Kansas Correctional Institute. "They've always done a very nice job," she said. "We're pleased to be able to let them practice a skill for when they return outside." Like a lot of furniture on campus, Wick's was sent to the posteriority to be worked on by inmates. The same thing happens in the private sector. When Watson Library was remodeled in 1962, much of the new neighbourhood or refurbished at Lafayette. Most students and faculty have seen the work and its quality at Watson, without knowing it. Leonard Ewell, director of Kansas Correctional Industries for the Kansas Department of Corrections, only tax supported county, city or town. All churches and churches were allowed to make purchases from the industries. Furniture refinished by inmates is scattered throughout such campus buildings as Strong Hall, Murphy Hall and the residence hall. "Really, we could not have had it done were it not for the price," Zah said. "The budget was very small and almost non-existent in 1982." Jim Kunz, dean of University libraries, said that between 100 and 200 tables, bookshelves, about 1,200 chairs, and most of the 60-strong card catalogues at Wadson were refinished by inmates during the prison. Our charges include costs of materials, transportation, supervision wages and overhead. Ewell has three staff members self-supporting, though even we have 51 state employees, their salaries are paid on a cost to taxation. Last year, the industries made $6 million through the sale of their products, he said. Ewell said Kansas Correctional Industries also made soap, new furniture, paint and road signs, and copied them at its location. Upbiling is one of the most popular jobs with inmates, who are paid between 65 cents and $10. Immatures must request positions in the program. Not outy are the skills required, and immatures are released, but they also can earn a journeyman card after completing a course. Dotty Miller, a buyer in KU's purchasing office, said departments at the University dealt directly with the university industry. "It doesn't seem like the thing people in prisons should be doing," she said. "I would think they would be making license plates." "Anytime we can save the state money, we should try to," Willer said. D) Wathnow, Olathe graduate student, said that teaching the inmates skills was a good idea. Many students were surprised that the furniture they used was refinished at the pensionary. Lori Connon, Garden City fresh man, said while at Watson yesterday that the work looked good. "I guess it gives them something constructive to do," she said. Watchful eye TOP: Robert Muzzy, a crossing watchman for Union Pacific Railroad, gets out of the sun by sitting in a little shed by the crossing near Fifth and Locust streets. Muzzys, right, said he assisted children and motorists through the crossing because an average of 40 trains passed through daily. Two KU students died from AIDS, official says By Barbara Joseph At least two KU staffers have died from AIDS since Oct. 1, 2008, an official at Watkins Hall in Oakland has said. "Since we have been keeping track of students with AIDS, which is since October 1996, there have been three students diagnosed with HIV. They are both under the two-hive and we presume the third has also. We have lost track of him because he didn't re enroll this semester. He was critical." Yockey said other KU students might have died from the syndrome but that he knew of only these two. He expects that a few KU students will be diagnosed as having AIDS in AIDS is short for acquired immune defi- cency syndrome. AIDs is fatal. He said the three KU students with ADJ initially seemed to show general symptoms. Yackey said that AIDS symptoms weren't discussed much, except in medical journals. That is because not all AIDS cases start out the same way. "All had fever, general fatigue, slow, progressive weight loss and recurrent upper respiratory problems," he said. "The first two were seen for several weeks on no descript - Charles Yockey Watkins chief of staff AIDS is not a disease, but a syndrome caused by the breakdown of the immune system. The break-down makes the body vulnerable to a variety of infections. illnesses before they were diagnosed.1 Annette Wild of the Good Samaritan Project in Kansas City, Mo. which operates an AIDS hotline, said that the 20 or so calls the project made to her when she was pregnant was, "What are the symptoms of AIDS?" "We tell them the symptoms are much like cold or flu symptoms," she said "I mostly hear how you can get it," said Lisa Schmitz. Witachi freshman. "I'd like to know more about the symptoms so I could see the person who has it and take care of it." thought the symptoms were extreme weight loss and sore in the mouth Some KU students would like to know more about AIDS' symptoms. Jay Read. Hutchison sophomore, said he bought ADS education focus more on art. Schmitz, whose mother is a nurse, said she He said he thought the symptoms were weight loss, feeling sick, little red bumps on the chest. Robert Seaman, Lansing freshman, said he knew AIDS destroyed the immune system, and thought that people with AIDS got the symptoms of whatever disease they caught. Yorkes agrees. ALTIS is not a disease, but a syndrome caused by the breakdown of the immune system, he said. The breakdown is body vulnerable to a variety of infections. The American Red Cross and Yorkshire, say that typical AIDS symptoms were a persistent cough, diarrhea, and unexplained night sweats or weight loss; lumps in the neck, armpits or groin; and discolored skin. But Yockey said that only hair those infected with AIDS showed typical symptoms. The other half might show such typical symptoms as shrunken, venereal disease and grape warts. He said focusing on symptoms would be helpful only to those who had a combination of symptoms. might lead instead to unnecessary anxiety "We see hundreds of students a day with these (typical) symptoms, and none have AIDS," he said. "Ninety-nine percent of the time it will be the flu." African behavior, as described by the Ameri- can Red Cross and Yvette, is defined as fo- lld in Table 1. - Having engaged in homosexual or bisexual behavior since 1977. Having ever had an injection of an illegal drug. Having AIDS symptoms. Having lived in Haiti, Africa or some surrounding areas since 1977 Having had heterosexual sex partners who are prostitutes Having had sex with someone who has AIDS or who has tested positively for the virus. *Being a hemophilia or someone who has received a lot of blood transfusions Yockey said statistics indicated that 98 percent of all AIDS patients were biracial and 15 percent were heterosexual. Women contract AIDS more easily than men because women are exposed to HIV more. Shootings provoke fiery riot Racial tensions build in Louisiana after 2 blacks die "People want protection," said Jackson, who is black. "I call on citizens to restore law and order." The Associated Press " we're sitting on a powder keg, said state. Rep Alphonse Jackson, who called for a biracial anti-crime committee. SHEVENPORT, LA. Hundreds of angry blights burst in stores and cafes across the city as a woman fatally shot a black man, men black leaders warned yesterday. His pica followed a meeting of city officials and black leaders to discuss the situation. The meeting, until 3 a.m. yesterday, officials said the rating was retreated to "good." The outbreak was triggered by the shooting of a black man, identified as William David McKenney, 20 who shot and killed himself in his home where the riding took place. He was described by a witness as aystrain caught in gattitude when he shot and killed him. A white teenager, Tamala C Verg, 17, and Greenwood was looked on a charge of second-degree murder said police Col. E.L. Rushing Stores were locked and burned, and ratters threw rocks and bolted at whites. There were reports of racial violence when a black teenager in a restaurant where a white teenager killed a black teenager Aug. 4. An incident that set off racial tension in this northwestern Louisiana city of 280,000, the state's second largest Mayer John Hussey and Police Chief Charles Gruber acknowledged at a news conference that the sparers both but also said that there were deeper causes. The Rev. E. Edward Jones, pastor of Gailer Baptist Church, said he and others Jones said he and other black leaders believed the chief deserved credit for ordering officers to pull out of the road area so the crowd could dispense water. On Tuesday night, police cordoned off a seven block area and warranted the arrest of five people who reached 1,000 people at its peak, said Gruber, but other police estimates were lower. No serious injuries were reported, attributed in part to Gruber's decision to let the disturbance run its course. New dean named for med school By a Kansan reporter The University of Kansas Medical Center has named Martin L. Pernell as the new executive dean of the School of Medicine. Pernoll, who now is chairman of the department of obstetrics and gynecology at Purdue University, will assume his new post in mid-January, said Mary Harrison, director of University Relations at the university. Permill will replace Jane Henney, associate vice chancellor of administration at the Med Center, who has been serving as intern dean. She is a professor in the School of Medicine, former dean of the School of Medicine, left office in January. Pernoll received his undergraduate degree from the University of Oregon and attended the University of Texas Medical School in Galveston, Texas. He joined the faculty at Tulane in 1983. He served his internship and residency at clinics and the University of Oregon Medical School. Permiled served as a member of the fertility and maternal health drugs advisory committee of the Food and Administration from 1804 to 1897. Chancellor Gene A. Bulgad said about Pernoll in a prepared statement. "This appointment is in the University of Kansas tradition of research, faculty to fill our teaching, research and administrative positions."