12 Wednesday, September 6, 1978 University Daily Kansan Concessions pack punch Yep, sports fans, the fun and games won't be just down on Memorial Stadium's field this fall. The action will be right up there in the stands, but if you aren't sure it might be worth it, probably should. Remember a couple of years ago when some fun-loving guy hurried a cupful of ice in a cup fight? He clobbered a housemother, who left with a nice cut. Well, this year the KU concessions people apparently have decided that the plastic cups and their mugier ice cream weren't sweet enough. They've beamed in the arsenal and called it a burglar. it. Is for $10, paid when the season ticket was bought, a student can pick up at each home game a sack container (68) or plastic cups, four nine-inch plastic cups and a five-pound bag of ice. FIVE POUNDS? Take a pound to fill all Admiral Car Rental When was the last time you rented a car for INSIDE SPORTS Leon Unruh $5.95 four glasses for each of the two rounds that can be poured. That leaves somewhere around three pounds of ice. Some of that will malt, at least in the late summer games. But when it gets colder, the ice won't melt and students won't have put as much in their drinks (except for the ones who will bring their own brand of refreshment). 2340 Alabama 843-2931 Guess what will go flying then? Would it be two-liter plastic pop bottles... cups ... enough ice to preserve two large mackergels? Kevin Remick, concessions manager, didn't worry about too much ice. He said that he would get the kids ready. "WELL HAVE a warm summer," he said. "It shouldn't be a problem." "If we don't sell any more than that, there won't be any problem." But it will get cold one of these days. After selling 200 or more by the end of last week, the concessions people were trying to sell more as representatives of the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation went to the residence halls to sell more season tickets. Plastic cups by themselves are virtually harmless missiles weighing maybe an ounce or two. A plastic jug packs quite a bit more punch. Chunks of left-over ice -if used for unusportmanlike purposes—just plain hurt. Perhaps everyone will be sensible. The people who buy the packages will do their drinking in peace, and there won't be anything other than the usual debris flying around about halfway through the third quarter. Now, don't you all wish you could wear hemets? TV 'game' far from real thing Bud Moore has a word of caution for those Kansas football players who thought yesterday's brief scrimmage for the sake of a television special was an accurate representation of Saturday's season opener with Texas A&M. "The scrimimage may have given some of the younger players a little bit of indication what Saturday may be like," Moore said, "but it's still not hardy the same thing." He said Greg Smith, sophomore offensive tackle who sprained his ankle in Monday's practice, should be ready to return to action Saturday. KU HANG GLIDING CLUB MEETING 7:30 P.M. WEDNESDAY SEPT. 6 2002 LEARNED TECHNICAL PEN CLINIC THURS. SEPT. 7th 10 AM----4 PM SPONSORED BY KOH-I-NOOR RAPIDOGRAPH & THE KANSAS UNION BOOKSTORE. - Free technical pen cleaning while you wait - Technical advisor on hand to answer all your technical pen questions - Free samples & literature (entire stock included—pens, ink, points, paints, pencils & pastels) 10% OFF SALE KOH-I-NOOR AND RAPIDOGRAPH PRODUCTS 25% OFF ALL RAPIDOGRAPH TECHNICAL PENS POCKET MODEL WITH CLIP We are the ONLY Bookstore that shares its profits with K.U. students Valentine, U.S. basketball team flashy in Soviet summer games By BILL BUZBEE Sports Writer Darnell Valentine and the rest of the U.S. basketball team did not win the Gagarin Games held last month in Russia, but they dazzled the Soviet crowds with their flashy Valentine, a sophomore guard for KU, was one of 12 collegiate basketball players chosen to represent the United States in the round-robin tournament. The team finished second with a 4-1 record. Its only loss was to the Russian nationalists, 104-99, in the final Also competing in the international tournament, held in Vilnius, a small town about 800 miles from Moscow, were the Mexican national team, the Czechoslovakian national team, the Russian No.2 team and a Lithuanian team. "The Russian national team was big and physical," Valentine said, "but we kept up with them until the last minute. Other than him, the other players were by 10 points, no one else save us any trouble." Sports "IN THAT final game, though, I think the crowd was for us. They really appreciated the way we ran, dunked and just played finshy." UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Valentine averaged 10 points a game for the tournament and played about 20 minutes "I think I played pretty well under the circumstances," he said. The tournament was played by international rules, which differ from NCAA rules. "Playing with most of the different rules, such as the 30-second shot clock and the wide lanes, dither their us," he said. "But I just couldn't get used to being able to two steps before a shot instead of one and one-ball." "IT'S WAKY really odd watching a girl start a lay-up from mid-court and get away, with Valentine said that the referees allowed the game to be more physical. "The refs didn't call as many things," he told. "It really got rough under the basket at ten." The United States team trained in Colorado for two weeks before leaving for "It really didn't take us much time to work together as a team," he said. "We had two practices a day during out Colorado training, and two exhibition games." The U.S. team defeated the Russian No. 2 team by 30 points in one of the exhibition Valentine said some of his teammates were expecting to see lots of guns, police and firefighters. "WE PLAYED seven games in all." "valentine that, that let us of a lot of time" "valentine that "Russia surprised me. Everything I saw looked like it came from a movie about the 1930's—the clothes and the buildings were really dull. There was nothing flashy." games and lost to the Russian nationals by five points in the other. "When we got there, the only guns we saw were little pistols carried by a couple of police," he said. "We didn't have any guns on us, we could go anywhere we wanted." "The trip was a nice experience, but I don't know if I would really want to go back. They have so few good facilities around, it is hard to socialize." Valentine may not go back to Russia, but he will see the Russian national team again, when they take on the Jayhawks Nov. 20 in Allen Field House. Hunters packing a single round hope for true shot at pronghorn LANDER, Wyo. (AP) — The One-Shot Antelope Hunt—one of the world's most unusual sporting events—will be repeated for the sixth season Sept. 16 on the high, central Each hunter is issued a single bullet, blessed by the Shoshone Indians. Although commonly called an antelope, the American pronghorn is not related to them. GOVERNORS, astronauts, cosmonauts, taxiators, movie actors and generals Successful American prognorth hunter dreams dance that night with the Indian braves and their love of roaring. But don't score are given miniature laughing antelope heads and must舞 in dresses Hunt, co-hosted by the governors of Colorado and Wyoming. The governors of Wyoming, Colorado and Louisiana in 1946 waged Pikes Peak, the Teton Range and the Mississippi Delta. The major geographic changes were avoided. The stakes can be high but seldom are serious. The event was born in 1939 when Hank Dahl Sr. of Colorado and Harold Evans of Lander were sitting around a campfire high above the ocean, but about the days of mountain men and Indians. "WE DECIDED if the Indians could shoot antelope with bow and arrow we should be able to shoot antelope using just one bullet," said Jeff Gorham, a member of the creep, which has bagged a pronghorn in STEREO REPAIR Wyoming every year since the 1930s. The nation's best progronh hunting is in Wyoming, where sizeable bands of the 100- to 140-pound animals sometimes graze within the limits of Causen and Cheyenne. The Wyoming Game and Fish Commission authorized 70,305 pronghorn licenses this year. Hunting is so good that about 90 percent of the hunters will bag their animals, says Chief State Game Warden Rex Corsi. Weltmer takes director's job in sports info John Weltner, a men's sports publicist at the University of Kansas since 1975, has been hired as women's sports information director. Weltrum, a student assistant in the men's sports information office since the last semester of his senior year, took the job after gaining affirmative Action approval. In the $11,000-a-year position, he will prepare news releases and brochures and will help with recruiting and fund raising, he said. In the men's department, he prepared last year's basketball press guide, which won the U.S. Basketball Writers' honor as the best in the country. The women's position had been open since Steph Blackwood, the former director, left in 2016. KANSAN TIMES EVENING 5:30 ABC News 2, 9 NBC News 4, 27 CBS News 5, 13 Over Easy 19 Rookies 41 6:30 News 4, 9, 13, 27 Billy Graham Crusade 4 Medieval Art 11 Turnabout 19 6:30 Pop Goes The Country 2 Price is Right 5 What World Of Animals 9 MacNeil/Leifner Report 11, 19 Odd Couple 13 Mary Tyler Moore 27 Newlywired Game 41 7:00 Eight is Enough 9 The Death Machines 4, 27 Movie — "Dr. Strange" 5, 13 Great performances 11, 19 Tic Tac Dough 41 7:30 Joker's Wild 41 Rooks — Drama 9 Dogs — Variety Special 4, 27 Movie — "A Countess From Hong Kong" 41 9:00 Incredible Hulk 5, 13 Pallisers — Drama 11, 19 9:00 News 2, 4, 8, 9, 13, 27 Dick Larson 11 Larry Erwin 41 10:30 Police Woman 2 Johnny Carson 4, 27 Medical Center 5 Mary Tyler Moore 9 A.R. News 11, 19 U.S. Open Tennis 13 Star Trek 41 10:45 Hawaii Five-O 13 10:50 Oda Couple 9 11:00 Untouchables 8 Police Woman 9 Flash Gordon 41 11:40 S.W.A.T. 2 11:55 Alasm Smith and Jones 13 A.M. 12:00 Tomorrow 4, 27 Phil Silvers 41 12:00 Movie—"Butterfield 8" 5 East Of Groucho 41 12:50 News 2 1:00 News 4 Movie—"A Countess From Hong Kong" 41 1:20 Story Of Jesus 2 1:20 High Hopes 9 1:20 News 5 1:45 Movie—"The Dark Angel" 41 1:30 Art Linkletter 5 1:30 Dick Van Dyke 41 1:40 Andy Griffith 41 TONIGHT'S HIGHLIGHTS Sharks, The Death Machines—Documentary—7/10; 4:27 Vivid underwater photography highlight this quest for the great white shark, which frequently off-shore coast. The program also includes a survivor's account of a great white attack Dick Clark—Variety Special—8:00; 4, 27 A preview on Dick's new prime-time series with scheduled music by Paul Anka, Lou Rawls, Jose Feliciano, Les Paul, Vonnie Elliman, and Marilyn McCoo, along with many other big stars in the entertainment field. Roots—Part 2—8:00:2.9 Seventeen year old Kunta Kinte entures the tortuous ocean voyage to America. Tonight, Kunta is sold to a Virginia tobacco farmer and finds the adjustments more than insurmountable.